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If you meant the /usr/sfw outdated/incomplete collection, I'm going to chuckle. :p
I'm hoping they filled it out a bit more, and actually included relatively up to date versions of the GNU userland. /usr/sfw is a bit laughable at the moment. No offense intended! I do realize the "issues" behind a lot of the outdatedness, but there has been sufficient time to get that sorted (assuming it was a priority, which I somehow doubt it was. gcc 3.4 here I come!)
$ /usr/sfw/bin/gcc --version
gcc (GCC) 3.4.3 (csl-sol210-3_4-branch+sol_rpath)
$ /usr/sfw/bin/gmake --version
GNU Make 3.80
$ /usr/sfw/bin/wget --version
GNU Wget 1.9.1
Etc, etc.
Most of the userland is 2+ years old, if not older. A lot of useful utilities are missing, so on and so forth. I don't mean to be harsh, I just look forward to the day it's more complete and more "updated". I know stability is paramount (I run servers, trust me - I understand) - but it can be hard to live without some of the "new" functionality, and with some of the tools being as old as they are - it's not just stability considerations keeping them crufty, it's lack of resources being applied to that area of the userland. There are arguments for both positions. 






Member since:
2005-07-06
but the userland upgrade is great.
The most significant portions of the GNU userland were already available with Solaris 10. The next version just makes it easier to use them and brings new versions.
Edited 2007-01-17 00:53