A number of notable software packages were developed for, or are maintained by, the Free Software Foundation as part of the GNU Project.

General aspects of GNU packages

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Summarising the situation in 2013, Richard Stallman identified nine aspects which generally apply to being a GNU package,[1] but he noted that exceptions and flexibility are possible when there are good reasons:[2]

  1. The package should say that it is a GNU package.
  2. It should be distributed via ftp.gnu.org, or another site offering access to everyone.
  3. The package's homepage should be on the GNU website.
  4. The developers must pay attention to making their software work well with other GNU packages.
  5. Documentation should be in Texinfo format, or in a format easily convertible to Texinfo.
  6. Should use GNU Guile for its extension language, but exceptions are explicitly possible in this regard.
  7. Should not recommend any non-free program, nor refer the user to any non-free documentation or non-free software.
  8. Use GNU terminology, including referring to GNU/Linux systems and free software in situations where other observers would write Linux and open source.
  9. The maintainer should be contactable, at least infrequently, to discuss problems in the software or fixing compatibility issues.

Base system

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There is no official "base system" of the GNU operating system. GNU was designed to be a replacement for Unix operating systems of the 1980s and used the POSIX standards as a guide, but either definition would give a much larger "base system". The following list is instead a small set of GNU packages which seem closer to being "core" packages than being in any of the further down sections. Inclusions (such as plotutils) and exclusions (such as the C standard library) are of course debatable.

Name Description Provides Latest release[Note 1]
Version Date
bash GNU's UNIX compatible shell bash 5.2.37[3]   2024-09-23
coreutils base commands 9.5[4]   2024-03-28
cpio archiving program cpio 2.15[5]   2024-01-14
diffutils contains utilities to compare files diff, cmp, diff3, sdiff 3.10[6]   2023-05-21
findutils contains search utilities find, locate, updatedb, xargs[7] 4.10.0[8][9]   2024-06-01
finger user information 1.37 1992-10-28
grep search for strings in files grep 3.11[10]   2023-05-13
groff document processing system (groff) groff 1.23.0[11]   2023-07-07
GRUB GRand Unified Bootloader grub 2.12[12]   2023-12-20
gzip compression program (gzip) gzip 1.13[13]   2023-08-19
hurd[Note 2] microkernel-based set of servers that perform the same function as a UNIX kernel 0.9[14]   2016-12-18
inetutils useful utils for networking ftp, telnet, rsh, rlogin, tftp 2.5[15]   2023-12-29
linux-libre kernel that is maintained from modified versions of Linux to remove any software that does not include its source code, has its source code obfuscated, or is released under proprietary licenses 6.12.1-gnu[16]   2024-11-22
plotutils useful utils for plotting to different devices graph, libplot, libplotter 2.6   2009-09-27
readline useful library for reading command lines readline 8.2[17]   2022-09-26
screen a terminal multiplexer screen 5.0.0[18]   2024-08-28
sysutils[Note 3] system utilities to manage users, groups, passwords, shells add-shell, chage, chfn, chgroup, chgrpmem, chpasswd, chsh, chuser, cppw, expiry, gpasswd, grpck, gshadow, hwclock, isosize, last, lastlog, login, lsage, lsgroup, lsuser, mkgroup, mkuser, nologin, passwd, pwck, remove-shell, rmgroup, rmuser, setpwnam, vipw, wall, write 0.1.6[19] 2009
tar archiver able to create and handle file archives in various formats tar 1.35[20]   2023-07-18
texinfo documentation system for producing online and printed manuals 7.1.1[21]   2024-09-07
time program to determine the duration of execution of a particular command time 1.9[22]   2018-03-12

Notes

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  1. ^ Stable versions. Note that some distros (e.g., Gentoo) use some development versions in case the stable versions are a bit old.
  2. ^ Note that because GNU Hurd is under active development, there is no stable version. The Hurd is distributed through version control systems.
  3. ^ No stable version yet. Current version is alpha and is not suitable for use in production systems.

Software development

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The software listed below is generally useful to software developers and other computer programmers.

GNU toolchain

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Other libraries and frameworks

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The following libraries and software frameworks are often used in combination with the basic toolchain tools above to build software. (For libraries specifically designed to implement GUI desktops, see Graphical desktop.)

Other compilers and interpreters

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The following packages provide compilers and interpreters for programming languages beyond those included in the GNU Compiler Collection.

Other developer tools

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User applications

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The software listed below is generally useful to users not specifically engaged in software development.

Graphical desktop

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The following packages provide GUI desktop environments, window managers, and associated graphics libraries.

  • GNUstep – implementation of the Cocoa/OpenStep libraries and development tools for graphical applications
  • Window Maker – window manager for the GNUstep environment

General system administration

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Database

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  • GnowSys – kernel for semantic computing (a distributed agent oriented knowledge base.)
  • GNU dbm (GDBM)
  • GNU Ferret – Free Entity Relationship and Reverse Engineering Tool, an SQL database designer

Scientific software

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Internet

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A user page at a GNU MediaGoblin 0.2.0–based website

Office

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Multimedia

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Games

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Business applications

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Fonts

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ Stallman, Richard (April 3, 2013). "Re: On the subject of Git, Bazaar, and the future of Emacs development". emacs-devel (Mailing list). Retrieved 25 August 2014.
  2. ^ Stallman, Richard (April 3, 2013). "Re: On the subject of Git, Bazaar, and the future of Emacs development". emacs-devel (Mailing list). Retrieved 25 August 2014.
  3. ^ https://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/bash/. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  4. ^ Pádraig Brady (28 March 2024). "coreutils-9.5 released [stable]". Retrieved 28 March 2024.
  5. ^ Sergey Poznyakoff (14 January 2024). "cpio-2.15 released". Retrieved 14 January 2024.
  6. ^ Jim Meyering (21 May 2023). "diffutils-3.10 released". Retrieved 22 May 2023.
  7. ^ "Findutils". www.gnu.org. Retrieved 2019-04-15.
  8. ^ Bernhard Voelker (1 June 2024). "GNU findutils 4.10.0 released". Retrieved 2 June 2024.
  9. ^ Bernhard Voelker (2 July 2024). "GNU findutils 4.10.0 released". Retrieved 3 July 2024.
  10. ^ Jim Meyering (13 May 2023). "grep-3.11 released". Retrieved 13 May 2023.
  11. ^ Bertrand Garrigues (7 July 2023). "Groff version 1.23.0". Retrieved 2 August 2023.
  12. ^ Daniel Kiper (20 December 2023). "GRUB 2.12 released". Retrieved 20 December 2023.
  13. ^ Jim Meyering (19 August 2023). "gzip-1.13 released [stable]". Retrieved 20 August 2023.
  14. ^ "GNU Hurd 0.9, GNU Mach 1.8, GNU MIG 1.8 released". Retrieved 11 May 2018.
  15. ^ Simon Josefsson (29 December 2023). "inetutils-2.5 released". Retrieved 22 January 2024.
  16. ^ "6.12.1-gnu". 22 November 2024. Retrieved 22 November 2024.
  17. ^ Chet Ramey (26 September 2022). "Readline-8.2 Release available". Retrieved 26 September 2022.
  18. ^ Alexander Naumov (29 August 2024). "GNU Screen v.5.0.0 is released". Retrieved 29 August 2024.
  19. ^ subversion repository NEWS file of sysutils retrieved 2013-07-23
  20. ^ Sergey Poznyakoff (18 July 2023). "tar-1.35 released [stable]". Retrieved 26 July 2023.
  21. ^ Gavin Smith (7 September 2024). "Texinfo 7.1.1 released". Retrieved 7 September 2024.
  22. ^ Assaf Gordon (12 March 2018). "GNU Time 1.9 released". Retrieved 27 September 2019.
  23. ^ "Release of version 1.5 of complexity". 29 February 2016. Retrieved 2 March 2016.
  24. ^ "GNUnited Nations". GNU.org. Free Software Foundation, Inc. Retrieved 19 December 2018.
  25. ^ "Midnight Commander".
  26. ^ "GNU Mailutils". Retrieved 7 January 2024.
  27. ^ "GNU LibreJS". The Free Software Foundation. Retrieved December 8, 2014.
  28. ^ "GNU Software". GNU.org. Retrieved September 24, 2015.
  29. ^ "GNU Taler - Taxable Anonymous Libre Electronic Reserve". Retrieved September 24, 2015.
  30. ^ Greve, Georg C. F. (2001). "Brave GNU World - Issue #26". gnu.org. Retrieved 2022-08-14. The ancestry-line of the GNU Pipo BBS reaches over YAWK ("Yet Another Wersion of Citadel") back to Citadel, although it is completely independent code-wise. In fact it was a disagreement with Kenneth Haglund, author of YAWK, because of copyright-problems that triggered the development of the GNU Pipo BBS. The original development-team were Grégory Vandenbrouck and Sébastien Aperghis-Tramoni who worked on the GNU Pipo BBS with help from volunteers like Sébastien Bonnefoy.
  31. ^ Marston, Tim (2013-06-07). "GNU Typist 2.9.3 released" (Mailing list). info-gnu. Retrieved 2013-06-09.
  32. ^ "GNU remotecontrol". directory.fsf.org. FSF. 30 September 2013.
  33. ^ "Foliot is now part of GNU and becomes GNU Foliot". Savannah. 27 February 2016. Retrieved 2 March 2016.
  34. ^ "GNU Taler 0.0.0 Released: GNU Tries to Get into Electronic Payments".
  35. ^ "GNU FreeFont". GNU.org.
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