BSD And Other Things

/bsd/ - *BSD General Thread
Discuss FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD, DragonFlyBSD

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Ask questions, get answers.

Other urls found in this thread:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_products_based_on_FreeBSD
sourceforge.net/p/cdesktopenv/wiki/FreeBSDBuild/
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NetBSD#Features
over-yonder.net/~fullermd/rants/bsd4linux/01
twitter.com/NSFWRedditImage

>nobody uses it

lol

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_products_based_on_FreeBSD

anyone having troubles installing cde on freebsd?
i followed the instructions at sourceforge.net/p/cdesktopenv/wiki/FreeBSDBuild/ but it just leaves me at the login screen

Anyone try openbsd on a Surface?

So who on that list is paying you shills?

>moving the goalpost AGAIN
i could really make a bingo game out of your shitposts

Where do I sign up to get paid to shill shit? Anything. I don't care what, so long as I get paid.

What about PC-BSD?

I have been using it on one of my older PCs, and it works great. I love the native ZFS.

I just want HAMMER2 to be done already.

I tried it a few years ago. It felt sluggish, and unresponsive. I keep meaning to give it another try to see if it's matured any since then.

I've been meaning to try this on OpenBSD, thanks for reminding me.

I haven't been able to get CDE to build on 5.7-5.9

CDE's build system in general is just plain broken. Don't know how it wouldn't be since the source was closed for decades.
I think some OpenBSD devs have been working on a port to fix it, but I don't know how far they got.

Yeah I didn't get very far. Fa la la.

>cuck licenses

heh

Oh it's you

Yes... yes it is.

NetBSD is my favorite. Super simple and old school.

I tried my first BSD today (Dragonfly), and I loved it.

That is all.

the problem with it is that openbsd pretty much superseded it
what is even the point of it anymore? to show us that it can be used in embedded environments?

There's a few notable features that NetBSD offers. You can sort of view NetBSD as a middle-ground between FreeBSD and OpenBSD

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NetBSD#Features

>ZFS filesystem support
>Compatibility layers for several *nix OSes including Linux, FreeBSD, illumos/Solaris
>Can read from linux, windows, and various *nix filesystems
>Security features like ASLR, restricted mprotect() and Segvguard from the PaX, GCC Stack Smashing Protection or ProPolice

They have their own projects as well like npf which is a packet filter similar to openbsd's pf and pkgsrc which is a package manager that runs on a ton of platforms.

They also have the rump kernel stuff, it's basically the netbsd kernel stripped down to the bare essentials aside from drivers and you can run it in the userspace of another OS as a compatibility layer to provide drivers to the host OS.


They're quite active they just don't really get much attention.

oh yeah, i forgot about pkgsrc
i guess having portable ports is pretty cool, i was thinking of trying out LFS one day and using pkgsrc

Oh and I'm pretty sure NetBSD also supports open source Intel and Radeon graphics so there's that too.

I was pretty happy to find out about pkgsrc, it's nice to have a backup for Tigerbrew on PowerPC OS X systems

>tfw Theo emails you
excite.png

>it's literally "go fuck yourself"

N'aww, it was actually helpful stuff since I'm generally a newb and it was just me submitting my first diff ever.

oh well im glad to hear that
i hear he's actually a really nice guy in real life but he just does that on the mailing list to keep retards out

All the quotes I've read of him being "mean" were when high-profile people tried to push code or ideas on him which he considered bad, but I don't actually have real experience with the mailing lists yet, having subscribed just today.
I'm comfy. Might go to sleep so when I wake up I can figure out how to make my stuff work with pledge better.

I'm genuinely asking, why would I choose any BSD over linux? In what aspect it is better?

it is merely preference for me, but i like the documentation, the centralization, the cohesion and more stuff that i can't think of right now
a lot of GNU manpages are fucking horrible to read but BSD ones are clear and concise and often give you examples or tell you about pitfalls in certain programs

over-yonder.net/~fullermd/rants/bsd4linux/01

I'm sold already:

>Linux has never had any sort of separation between what is the "base system" and what is "addon utilities". The entire system is "addon utilities". MySQL is no different from ls from KDE from whois from dc from GnuCash from ... Every bit of the system is just one or another add-on package.

But how good is it for desktop use? Does it have the fraction of terrible hardware support linux has?

>But how good is it for desktop use? Does it have the fraction of terrible hardware support linux has?
you have to be sure your hardware is somewhat old, unfortunately
and if you want to try openbsd/netbsd, you can't have a nvidia GPU because nvidia is greedy
i do think netbsd is actually the best at separating stuff, as config files for 3rd party programs are actually stored under /usr/pkg/etc i believe

>tfw nvidia has no drivers