Boot splash evolution in Mandriva Linux
For some time, I've been working on adding Plymouth support for our next Mandriva Linux 2010 release, as graphical boot splash and I thought it could be interested to do a recap of the various solutions we used in our distribution over the years.
Mandriva Linux (Linux-Mandrake then) was one of the first Linux distributions to ship with a graphical boot:
* in 2000 (yes, 9 years ago !!), for Linux-Mandrake 7.2, we integrated Aurora (written by Egil Möller who joined Mandrakesoft to work on it at that time), allowing users to control and follow boot with keyboard and mouse, before X was started.
* in 2002, we switched to Bootsplash, which was kernel based and allowed also to polish VT (a nice touch).
* in 2008, we switched to Splashy, mostly because Bootsplash was becoming deprecated by Splashy and could not run on non-x86 platform and was a pain to maintain in kernel.
* yesterday, we switch to Plymouth. It will be available for the first time in Mandriva Linux 2010 beta (available tomorrow).
Why did we switched to Plymouth :
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