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    XFree86 is an implementation of the X Window System . It was originally written for Unix-like operating systems on IBM PC compatibles and is now available for many other operating systems and platforms. It is free and open source software under the XFree86 License version 1.1. It is developed by the XFree86 Project, Inc.; the lead developer is David Dawes. The current version is 4.6.0.

    For most of the 1990s and early 2000s, the project was the source of most innovation in X and was the de facto steward of X development. Until early 2004, it was almost universal on Linux and the BSDs.

    In February 2004, with version 4.4.0, The XFree86 Project adopted a license change that the Free Software Foundation considered GPL incompatible. Most Linux distributions found the potential GPL legal issues unacceptable and made plans to move to a fork from before the license change. At first there were multiple forks, but the X.Org fork soon took over as the dominant one. Most of the developers who were already annoyed at other issues in the project also moved to X.org.


        XFree86
            Architecture
                Early history and naming
                Rise with Linux
                2003: dissent within the project
                Disbanding of the Core Team
                Licensing controversy
                Xouvert
                The XOrg Foundation Open Source Public Implementation of X11
            Release history
            See also
    NameXFree86
    LogoImage:Xfree86.logo.gif
    DeveloperThe XFree86 Project, Inc.™
    Operating Systemmultiple
    GenreWindowing system
    License#Licensing controversy

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    Architecture
    XFree86 consists of client libraries used to write X applications ("clients"), and an X server responsible for the display. Clients and servers communicate via the X protocol, which allows them to run on different computers.

    The XFree86 server communicates with the host operating system's kernel to drive input and output devices, with the exception of graphics cards. These are generally managed directly by XFree86, so it includes its own drivers for all graphic cards a user might have. Some cards are supported by vendors themselves via binary-only drivers.

    Since version 4.0, XFree86 has supported (some) accelerated 3D graphics cards via the GLX and DRI extensions.

    Because the server usually needs low level access to graphics hardware, on many configurations it needs to run as the superuser, or a user with UID 0. However, on some systems and configurations it is possible to run the server as a normal user.

    It is also possible to use XFree86 in a framebuffer device, which in turn uses a kernel graphics card driver.

    On a typical POSIX-system, the directory /etc/X11 includes the configuration files. The basic configuration file is /etc/X11/XF86Config (or XF86Config-4) that includes variables about the screen (monitor), keyboard and graphics card. The program xf86config is often used, although xf86cfg also comes with the XFree86 server and is certainly friendlier. Many Linux distributions used to include a configuration tool that was easier to use (such as Debian's debconf) or autodetected most (if not all) settings (Red Hat Linux and Fedora Core's Anaconda, SuSE's YaST and Mandrake Linux used to choose this path).

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    Early history and naming
    The project began in 1992 when David Wexelblat, Glenn Lai, David Dawes and Jim Tsillas joined forces addressing bugs in the X11 X386 source code (written by Thomas Roell), as contributed to X11R5. This version was initially called X386 1.2E. As newer versions of the (originally freeware) X386 were being sold under a proprietary software license by SGCS (of which Roell was a partner), confusion existed between the projects. After discussion, the project was renamed XFree86, as a pun (compare X-three-eighty-six to X-free-eighty-six). Roell has continued to sell proprietary X servers, most recently under the name Accelerated-X.

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    Rise with Linux

    As Linux grew in popularity, XFree86 rose with it, as the main X project with drivers for PC video cards.

    By the late 1990s, official X development was moribund *. Most technical advancement was happening in the XFree86 project. In 1999, XFree86 was sponsored onto X.Org (the official industry consortium) by various hardware companies * interested in its use with Linux and its status as the most popular version of X.

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    2003: dissent within the project

    By 2003, while Linux's popularity, and hence the installed base of X, surged, X.Org was all but inactive * and active development was largely carried out by XFree86. However, there was considerable dissent within XFree86. It was perceived as far too cathedral-like in its development model; developers were unable to get CVS commit access * and vendors had to maintain extensive patches *. In March, long-term contributor Keith Packard was ejected from the Core Team with considerable ill-feeling * * *.
    The Core Team claimed this was for conspiracy: Keith had been trying to fork the XFree86 project, working inside the project, while trying to attract core developers to a new X Server project of his own making. Packard denied this had been his aim.

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    Disbanding of the Core Team
    XFree86 used to have a Core Team which was made up of experienced developers, selected for their merits. Due to limited innovation capacity the XFree86 Core Team voted to disband itself, on December 30, 2003, effective the following day.

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    Licensing controversy
    Versions of XFree86 up to and including some release candidates for 4.4.0 were under the MIT X11 license, a permissive non-copyleft free software license. XFree86 4.4 was released in February 2004 with a change to the license *: the addition of an advertising clause, similar to that in the old version of the BSD license. Some hypothesised this was in response to the announcement of the Xouvert fork, to ensure that any fork of XFree86 would have to notably credit XFree86.

    Many projects relying on X found the new license unacceptable * — the Free Software Foundation in particular as they held it to be incompatible with the GNU General Public License * (although XFree86 disagreed), and others simply did not wish for any code incorporated to be any further restricted than it already was. Some projects, such as OpenBSD, forked XFree86 from version 4.4 RC2, the last version under the old license. (OpenBSD later adopted the X.Org Server *.)


    Currently, NetBSD still uses XFree86 as its default X server, heavily customised for the operating system's wide cross-platform support, although it plans to migrate to the modular X.Org after the next release. FreeBSD uses the X.org server and provides XFree86 as an alternative X server. Debian Sarge (the current stable branch of that distribution) still uses a pre-split version of XFree86 but its successor Etch will come with Xorg. Apple Computer also ships an XFree86-based rootless X server with Mac OS X. No other major operating system or Linux distribution currently ships with XFree86 by default.

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    Xouvert
    An experimental branch of the XFree86 server code, Xouvert (Xopen in French), was announced in late 2003, but showed no activity after early 2004.

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    The XOrg Foundation Open Source Public Implementation of X11
    The X.Org Server is the official reference implementation of X11, produced by X.Org. The first version, X11R6.7.0, was a fork from XFree86 version 4.4 RC2, with X11R6.6 changes merged in. Version X11R6.8 added many new extensions, drivers and fixes. It is not encumbered by the XFree86 license changes. It is hosted by and works closely with freedesktop.org.

    Most of the open-source Unix-like operating systems have adopted the X.Org Server in place of XFree86, and most of the XFree86 developers moved to X.Org *.

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    Release history



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    See also

     
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    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License [copyleft]. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "XFree86". link