GNU/Linux is the term promoted by the Free Software Foundation (FSF), its founder Richard Stallman, and its supporters, for operating systems composed of the FSF's GNU operating system and the Linux kernel. For historical and other reasons, most people use the term "Linux" for the whole system, one notable exception being Debian GNU/Linux.
The main argument for "GNU/Linux" is that Linus Torvalds' kernel was only the final small part of an otherwise complete system, GNU, written and assembled over many years with the explicit goal of creating an integrated free operating system.
The disagreement over the naming is related to a general debate over the primary purpose of free software: the free software movement, led by the FSF, emphasizes the "free" (as in freedom) aspect of software as an important right akin to freedom of speech, in contrast with the open source movement's argument that higher-quality software is the main goal, freedom being merely a means to an end. The FSF argues that the "GNU/Linux" name is important to credit the importance of their philosophy in addition to their technical work. No legal requirements or trademark restrictions to use or not use the terms "GNU", "Linux" or "GNU/Linux" are stipulated by the individual software packages or an aggregate distribution.
The controversy is also a reflection of a wider confusion over the distinction between "Linux" the kernel and "Linux" the operating system as a whole — of which the kernel is typically only a small part.
The history of Linux is closely tied to that of the GNU operating system. Plans for GNU were made in 1983 and in September of that year they were announced publicly. Software development work began in January 1984. GNU was to be a complete Unix-like operating system composed entirely of free software. By 1991, when the first version of the Linux kernel was released, the GNU operating system was almost complete. The early Linux kernel developers adapted Linux specifically to work with GNU, and later, when the GNU developers learned of Linux, they adapted parts of GNU to work with it. Linux thus filled the last major gap in the GNU operating system. The GNU kernel, GNU Hurd, was still in its infancy. The Hurd followed an ambitious design which proved unexpectedly difficult to implement and has only been marginally usable.
In 1992, the Yggdrasil distribution adopted the name "Linux/GNU/X". The name "GNU/Linux" was first used by Debian in 1994. In GNU's June 1994 Bulletin, Linux is referred to as a "free UNIX clone (with many GNU utilities and libraries)". In the January 1995 edition, the term "GNU/Linux" was used instead. In May 1996, Stallman released Emacs 19.31 with the system target "Linux" changed to "Lignux", also suggesting the alternatives of "Linux-based GNU system" or "GNU/Linux system". Stallman later used "GNU/Linux" exclusively.
The FSF advocates "GNU/Linux" not simply because of the large number of GNU components used in Linux-based systems or the quantity of GNU code, but because the goal of the GNU project was specifically to develop a complete operating system:
The FSF argues that the name issue is important as a way of crediting both the technical contribution of the GNU project and the idealism of the GNU free-software philosophy:
The ordinary understanding of "operating system" includes both the kernel — the specific subsystem that directly interfaces with the hardware — and the "userland" software that is employed by the user and by application software to control the computer. Moreover, both the name "GNU" and the name "Linux" are intentionally related to the name "Unix", and Unix has always conceptually included the C library and userland tools as well as the kernel. In the 1991 release notes for versions 0.01 to 0.11 of Linux (which was not released under the GPL until version 0.12), Torvalds wrote:
The use of the word "Linux" to refer to the kernel, the operating system, and entire distributions, often leads to confusion about the distinctions between the three. (Many of the important GNU packages are a key part of almost every Linux distribution.) Media sources frequently make erroneous statements such as claiming that the entire Linux operating system (rather than simply the kernel) was written from scratch by Torvalds in 1991; that Torvalds directs the development of other components such as graphical interfaces or the GNU tools; or that new releases of the kernel involve a similar degree of user-visible change as do new versions of proprietary operating systems such as Microsoft Windows, where many things besides the kernel change simultaneously.
Because of this confusion, legal threats and PR campaigns apparently directed against the kernel, such as those launched by the SCO Group or the Alexis de Tocqueville Institution (AdTI), have been misinterpreted by many commentators who assume that the whole operating system is being targeted. These organisations have even been accused of deliberately exploiting this confusion:
In response to suggestions (see below) that Stallman's renaming efforts stem from egotism or personal pique, RMS has responded that his interest is not in giving credit to himself, but to the GNU Project:
Stallman has admitted to irritation, although he believes it to be justified:
In response to another common argument (see below), the FSF acknowledges that many people have contributed to GNU/Linux and that a short name cannot credit all of them, but argues that this cannot justify calling the system "Linux":
"Linux" is by far the most widespread name, and most people therefore simply adopt this usage, while references to the naming controversy appear only infrequently in mainstream sources. "Linux" has the most historical momentum because it is the name Torvalds has used for the combined system since 1991, while Stallman only began asking people to call the system "GNU/Linux" in the mid 1990s, some time after the "Linux" name had already become popular. "Linux" is shorter and easier to say than "GNU/Linux", particularly given Stallman's suggested pronunciation Guh-NÜ-slash-Linux or Guh-NÜ-plus-Linux.
Eric S. Raymond writes (in the "Linux" entry of the Jargon File):
Linus Torvalds has said in the documentary Revolution OS, when asked if the name GNU/Linux was justified:
An editorial in the Linux Journal (#30, Oct. 1996) expressed the common speculation that Stallman's advocacy of the combined name is an attempt to unfairly ride on the coattails of Linux's fame:
(See above for Stallman's response.) The same Linux Journal article quotes Linus Torvalds as saying:
In a similar vein, the debate over the name for the operating system is sometimes characterized as a trivial distraction; e.g. John C. Dvorak wrote:
Others have suggested that, regardless of the merits, Stallman's persistence in what sometimes seems a lost cause makes him and GNU look bad. For example, Larry McVoy (author of the proprietary software Bitkeeper, once used to manage Linux kernel development) opined that "claiming credit only makes one look foolish and greedy" *.
Many users and vendors who prefer the name "Linux" point to the inclusion of non-GNU, non-kernel tools such as the Apache HTTP Server, the X Window System or the K Desktop Environment in end-user operating systems based on the Linux kernel. As stated by Jim Gettys, originator of X:
(See the FSF response above, which acknowledges practical limits in credits but draws a different conclusion.)
In mainstream usage, the name "Linux" on its own is often used as the standard example of the concept of software or other content that may be freely modified and redistributed, even if such usages generally do not mention GNU or "free software" specifically.
In some embedded systems such as handheld devices, the Linux kernel is used with few or no components of GNU, with alternatives like uClibc and BusyBox replacing the GNU tools, or even a single application running as process 1 on a bare kernel. Everyone, including the FSF, agrees that "GNU/Linux" is not an appropriate name in such circumstances (FSF, "GNU/Linux FAQ", *). Almost all Linux-based desktops and servers do use the GNU components, such as glibc (the GNU C Library), coreutils, and bash.
Although "GNU/Linux" is often pronounced "GNU Linux", Richard Stallman has advocated explicit pronunciation of the slash to prevent the confusing implication that the Linux kernel itself is a GNU project:
Given that Stallman pronounces GNU as "guh-NÜ" ("pronounce the hard 'G'") *, this would make it "guh-NÜ-slash-Linux" or "guh-NÜ-plus-Linux".
Free Software Foundation | Linux | Controversies
Linux-GNU/Linux-navnestriden | GNU/Linux-Namensstreit | Controversia por la denominación GNU/Linux | Linux ou GNU/Linux | Controversia sul nome GNU/Linux
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"GNU/Linux naming controversy".
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