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Linux for PlayStation 2

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Software for the PlayStation 2
Linux distribution
Linux for PlayStation 2
Cover art for Linux for PlayStation 2
DeveloperSony Computer Entertainment
OS familyLinux (Unix-like)
Working stateDiscontinued
Initial release2002; 23 years ago (2002)
PlatformsPlayStation 2 SCPH-50000 and earlier
Kernel typeMonolithic (Linux kernel)
Default
user interface
Window Maker
Official websiteweb.archive.org/web/20100524023205/http://playstation2-linux.com:80/ (archived from the original)

Linux for PlayStation 2 (orPS2 Linux) is a kit released bySony Computer Entertainment in 2002 that allows thePlayStation 2 console to be used as apersonal computer. It included aLinux-basedoperating system, a USBkeyboard andmouse, aVGA adapter, a PS2 network adapter (Ethernet only), and a 40 GBhard disk drive (HDD). An 8 MB memory card is required; it must beformatted during installation, erasing all data previously saved on it, though afterwards the remaining space may be used for savegames. It is strongly recommended that a user of Linux for PlayStation 2 have some basic knowledge of Linux before installing and using it, due to the command-line interface for installation.

The official site for the project was closed at the end of October 2009[1] and communities like ps2dev[2] are no longer active.

Capabilities

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Screenshot

The Linux Kit turns the PlayStation 2 into a full-fledged computer system, but it does not allow for use of theDVD-ROM drive except to read PS1 and PS2 discs due to piracy concerns by Sony. Although the HDD included with the Linux Kit is not compatible with PlayStation 2 games, reformatting the HDD with the utility disc provided with the retail HDD enables use with PlayStation 2 games but erases PS2 Linux, though there is a driver that allows PS2 Linux to operate once copied onto the APA partition created by the utility disc. The Network Adapter included with the kit only supports Ethernet; a driver is available to enable modem support if the retail Network Adapter (which includes a built-inV.90 modem) is used. The kit supports display on RGB monitors (withsync-on-green) using a VGA cable provided with the Linux Kit, or television sets with the normal cable included with the PlayStation 2 unit.

The PS2 Linux distribution is based onKondara MNU/Linux [ja], a Japanese distribution itself based onRed Hat Linux. PS2 Linux is similar to Red Hat Linux 6, and has most of the features one might expect in a Red Hat Linux 6 system. The stock kernel is Linux 2.2.1 (although it includes the USB drivers from Linux 2.2.18 to support the keyboard and mouse), but it can be upgraded to a newer version such as 2.2.21, 2.2.26 or 2.4.17.

Open-source applications

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Contents of the Linux kit; the hard disk is already installed inside the machine, and the network adaptor is attached to the back.

The Linux kit's primary purpose is amateursoftware development, but it can be used as one would use any other computer, although the small amount of memory in the PS2 (32MB) limits its applications. Notedopen source software that compiles on the kit includesMozilla Suite,XChat, andPidgin. Lightweight applications better suited to the PS2's 32MB ofRAM includexv,Dillo,Ted, andAbiWord. The default window manager isWindow Maker, but it is possible to install and useFluxbox andFVWM. TheUSB ports of the console can be connected to external devices, such asprinters,cameras,flash drives, andCD drives.

With PS2 Linux, a user can program their own games that will work under PS2 Linux, but not on an unmodified PlayStation 2. Free open source code for games is available for download from PS2 Linux support sites. There is little difference between PS2 Linux and the Linux software used on the more expensive system ("Tool", DTL-T10000) used by professional licensed PlayStation game programmers. Some amateur-created games are submitted to a competition such as the Independent Games Festival's annual competition. It is possible for an amateur to sell games or software that they develop using PS2 Linux, with certain restrictions detailed in the End User License Agreement. The amateur cannot make and sell game CDs and DVDs, but can sell the game through an online download.

Distribution

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This kit has stopped being officially sold in the US as of 2003 due to the entire allocation of NTSC kits selling out. However, it is still available through somesecond-hand markets, such aseBay. Some incorrectly[citation needed] speculate that it was used as an attempt to help classify the PS2 as a computer in order to achieve tax exempt status from certainEU taxes that apply to game consoles and not computers (It was theYabasic included with EU units that was intended to do that).[3]

Model compatibility

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The original version of the PS2 Linux kit worked on only the Japanese SCPH-10000, SCPH-15000 and SCPH-18000 PlayStation 2 models. It came with a PCMCIA interface card which had a 10/100 Ethernet port and an external IDE hard drive enclosure (as there is no room inside the unit). This kit cannot be used with any later model PS2 (which includes all non-Japanese models) because these models removed the PCMCIA port.

Later versions of the PS2 Linux kit use an interface very similar to the HDD interface/Ethernet sold later for network play (the later released Network adaptor was also usable with the kit, including the built-in 56k modem.) This kit locates the hard drive internal to the PS2, in the MultiBay. With this kit, only the SCPH-30000 model of PlayStation 2 is officially supported. The kit does though work equally well with models newer than SCPH-30000 with the exception that the Ethernet connection tended to freeze after a short period of use. Thus the newer SCPH-50000 PlayStation 2 model will only work correctly with PS2 Linux with an updated network adapter driver, which must be transferred to the PlayStation 2 HDD by using either an older model PlayStation 2 to transfer the driver or a Linux PC with an IDE port. Both methods involve swapping HDDs. This is due to the inability to use USB Mass Storage devices with the relatively old kernel (version 2.2.1) shipped with the kit.

The slim SCPH-70000 PlayStation 2 model does not work with PS2 Linux at all, due to the lack of a hard drive interface, though a very few early models in this revision had solder pads of an IDE interface on the motherboard that could be used (but required modding of the console, thereby voiding its warranty.) Even so, it is possible to network boot from a PXE server.

PS2 Linux installation DVDs are region encoded, as are all other PS2 game discs. A European/PAL disc will be rejected by an NTSC PlayStation 2 game system; however this is only at boot time: if the user has a mod that allows them to load a PAL disc, then the PS2 Linux boot loader supports both PAL and NTSC Linux (read the documentation to determine the button presses), so once they are past the "DVD not supported", they can boot Linux and then later start X Window in NTSC mode.

Unofficial support

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Ever since the discontinuation of the PS2 Linux Kit and some time before that there has been a large, less active group who have tried and succeeded to run the Linux operating system through other methods, most notably using the KernelLoader Linux loader developed by Mega Man since 2008 where they have copied the necessary kernel files onto removable storage or DVDs formatted as Video DVDs due to Sony's anti-piracy efforts which restrict any data DVDs and loaded them through the program.

Through this method it has become possible to use custom Linux distros and other UNIX-like[4] operating systems compiled for the PlayStation 2 and this has enabled users to use more compatible Linux kernels with smaller footprints and programs specially designed for the console. These methods often require the use of PS2 exploits such as Free MCBoot which allows the end user to boot from the PlayStation 2 memory card and launch custom made homebrew applications packaged as ELF files and other exploits such as SwapMagic etc. Some other more invasive methods (such as the use ofmodchips or resoldering an IDE port on early 7000x models) require the opening of the PlayStation 2 console itself, voiding the warranty of the device if still applicable.

See also

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References

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  1. ^"Linux for PlayStation 2 Community: Closing down playstation2-linux.com".playstation2-linux.com. Archived fromthe original on 14 January 2010. Retrieved12 January 2022.
  2. ^"PS2DEV.ORG: Playstation Programming". Archived fromthe original on February 2, 2008.
  3. ^Smith, Tony."Sony adds Basic to PlayStation to sidestep EC import tax".www.theregister.com. Retrieved2021-05-19.
  4. ^"NetBSD port to the PlayStation 2, with references to how KernelLoader could be used to free it from Sony's HAL". Retrieved11 January 2024.

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