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What's New In FreeBSD 7.0
Posted by
kdawson
on Tue Feb 26, 2008 05:40 PM
from the what-indeed dept.
from the what-indeed dept.
blackbearnh writes "FreeBSD is about to release the much-anticipated version 7, and as usual there's a comprehensive interview with over two dozen of the major contributors over at O'Reilly's ONLamp site. Federico Biancuzzi interviewed the developers to discuss all the details of FreeBSD 7.0: networking and SMP performance, SCTP support, the new IPSEC stack, virtualization, monitoring frameworks, ports, storage limits and a new journaling facility, what changed in the accounting file format, jemalloc(), ULE, and more."
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no nvidia on amd64 yet (Score:2, Interesting)
No Xen Support? (Score:2, Redundant)
* Did they fix ZFS RAID-Z2 (double parity) support yet?
* Is KDE 4 is ports yet?
* What version of X.Org are they using, did they fix the dri/drm problems with ATI cards yet?
Re:No Xen Support? (Score:4, Informative)
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I really like the addition of ZFS in FressBSD 7.0 (Score:5, Informative)
Re:I really like the addition of ZFS in FressBSD 7 (Score:5, Interesting)
I was toying around with Freebsd 7.0 RC3 just a few days ago, well actually I was testing it to see if ZFS was really working as claimed. A very basic installation to a 40gb disk went pretty quick (5 to 10 minutes). Rebooted into the installed system and everything was fine. Took an old 1.6gb drive I had and plugged it right in, recognized as /dev/da1 or whatever. Ran "zpool create tank da1" and BAM! /tank already mounted and ready to go. No stupid fdisk, no stupid format command, no fstab nonsense.
Now I wouldn't run out and switch everything to freebsd 7 and zfs because work isn't finished. For example there's no ACL support since ZFS supports NFSv4 ACLs while freebsd only supports Posix1e. My next test will involve getting samba working and this may be a little tricky since there are some reports of issues with running samba on ZFS. But all of the available reports are quite old (half a year or older). I don't really care about the ACLs because I just intend to use the system as a single user and a convenient area to dump my files on a bunch of disks that all conveniently appear as one along with some redundancy (better than just a bunch of disks and raid5).
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Re:I really like the addition of ZFS in FressBSD 7 (Score:4, Interesting)
Parent
I have to ask... (Score:3, Interesting)
Why would I choose FreeBSD over, say, Solaris x86 or Linux?
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You probably wouldn't unless you were one of those people who gets all excited about the difference between GPL an BSD licensing.
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Re:I have to ask... (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually, in most other cases it's even easier, because there often is an industry standard - e.g. half (warning: that's an educated guess, that is, a number pulled out of my, er, back pocket, representing something close to reality in a simplified, but suitable way) of the banks and other financial institutions tend to use Solaris a lot (the other half using IBM stuff) just because a tried way of doing things for them and there's no point in changing that.
And if you want an OS for personal use, feel free to choose on any basis you like, from the license to the number of lines of code to the project founder's hair color - just be careful not to become a brainwashed zealot...
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Re:I have to ask... (Score:4, Informative)
I work for a company that solely employs FreeBSD at financial institutions across the US (and one site in Hyderabad, India). Here's the run-down (warning, these statistics were compiled in less than an hour, solely for this post; I just did a quick head-count via our named DNS records):
3,483 FreeBSD systems employed by Bank of America
1,544 for PNC
872 for Wells Fargo
around 100 or so for Mellon
around 500 or so for JPMorgan Chase
I'm forgetting a few... but you get the point.
Seems to be a big hit in the financial institutions. BTW, all systems mentioned are used for check processing in wholesale lockbox sites.
(crossing my fingers that this information isn't confidential, lol)
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Some interesting info on jemalloc (Score:4, Interesting)
http://ventnorsblog.blogspot.com/2008/02/beta-3.html [blogspot.com]
More info on jemalloc:
http://ivoras.sharanet.org/freebsd/freebsd7.html [sharanet.org] (near the bottom, under "Userland enhancements")
http://people.freebsd.org/~jasone/jemalloc/bsdcan2006/jemalloc.pdf [freebsd.org]
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I couldn't play Starcraft D:. I hear WoW works with it though.
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The Wine breakage is most likely down to how Linux implements pthreads - there are some grey areas in the POSIX threads spec, where things could be more strictly enforced such as double locking or freeing of mutexes. Linux takes a less stringent approach than FreeBSD and NetBSD, accepting such common coding mistakes, whereas the kernel and libc threading code in the BSD's will print an error and dump core. Being a fan of such things as rigidly type safe languages and compilers that offer a high degree of wa
I know this is /. and all but ... (Score:2, Interesting)
Linux Vs BSD is a moot argument, I have my preference, and I'm not going to change because yours differs. Similarly, no amount of bible bashing is going to convince me that man and dinosaurs walked together 2000 years ago!
To get on topic... (no I am not new here)
I am running RC1 ATM, and will upgrade to the final as soon as it is out. I'd like to know if anyone has successfully implemented RAID-z yet, and
what upgrades in TFA are old hat (Score:2)
I'm shocked to see FreeBSD claiming to be the reference implementation of SCTP. It's been in Linux for years.
Performance monitoring is of course old hat.
Heh. A "large number of CPUs" is 8+ to you. Linux is struggling to handle 16384. (yes, SMP-style NUMA with 1 OS image)
Tmpfs is way old.
ARM architecture is of course way old. Niagra is old too.
Wow, "(as seen in Solaris & others)" for the fine-grained permissions stuff. Can't ment
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Why FreeBSD??? (Score:4, Insightful)
FreeBSD is just plain ol' Unix. No bells, no whistles (except ZFS--Fancy!), just Unix as it always was. And sometimes, that's exactly the right answer to a problem.
Who really cares? (Score:3, Funny)
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Re:people still use freebsd? (Score:5, Informative)
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This fully-conformant UNIX operating system--built on Mach 3.0 and FreeBSD 5--bundles over a hundred of the most popular Open Source products.
Re:people still use freebsd? (Score:5, Funny)
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FreeBSD is not dead (Score:2)
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Re:people still use freebsd? (Score:4, Interesting)
Web serving and mail filtering, here. But it's nothing I couldn't use Linux for. It is all the same software, really. Honestly, the only reason I don't use LInux is because FreeBSD is what was here when I got here and I figured I should at least take the time to learn it. Also, if it ain't broke...
-matthew
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Re:people still use freebsd? (Score:5, Interesting)
what for?
Better performance than Linux, that degrades under load much more predictably than Linux (as does Solaris, but FreeBSD is better on commodity hardware). A better written C library (just look at the source code to glibc - it's shockingly bad, unreadable macro soup as though its maintainer hates C). A better documented userland than Linux with complete and accurate manpages.
FreeBSD is popular amongst hosting companies (the tools for security are easier to use and more mature than Linux), and is also used by companies like Yahoo! because of it's reliability and performance. Linux has outperformed FreeBSD for a while, as the fine grained locking introduced in version 5 matured, but the pain getting it right is beginnng to pay off now.
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Re:people still use freebsd? (Score:5, Funny)
Heh, don't get cocky
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The other reasons are not very convincing. Personally, I like GNU userland better ("screen" - I love you!), for example. Glibc may not nice, but it works fine (I only looked at its sources when I needed to build a cross-platform toolchain).
Oh, and Linux has much better hardware support.
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But it's not present in the 'native' FreeBSD userland.
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But hey, BSD is dead, netcraft confirms it.
I just hope 7 gives me the same speed increase over 6 as 6 did over 5.
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I have never used another OS that was as stable as FreeBSD 4.11.
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I've found 6.x to be almost stable as 4.x on the hardware I run it on, the only problems I've had have been on a couple of occasions where it didn't like USB hardware on a desktop machine getting disconnected without warning which seemed to lock up everything USB-related.
I have never used another OS that was as stable as Fr
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Contrary to popular belief, it is this parasitic nature that actually ends up profoundly improving the operating system and proliferating it. Think of the following hypothetical scenario:
1. CEO sees product XYZ and thinks to himself "Wow, we can compete with that!"
2. CTO responds to CEO with "We need to research viable means to penetrate this [new] vertical-market with a high profit margin." This all means "I'll get back to you with the cheapest possible implementation after I consult our developers."
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Either way, the answer to both is "Yes". I've run almost every conceivable version of FreeBSD in both VMware ESX and GSX and they also make vmware-tools to be installed (via the fake CD-ROM that you can mount via the menu bar) so that you can get better resolutions of video etc. etc.
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Re:FreeBSD Rant (Score:4, Informative)
According to the Guest OS compatibility table, FreeBSD 6.2 is supported on VMWare Workstation 6.0.2 and VMWare ACE 2.0.2
Having said that, VMWare guest is running on a fairly standard sort of virtualised platform. With VMWare ESX 3.5 you can use a Buslogic virtual scsi controller or an LSI virtual scsi controller. So you may have to do some fiddling to get FreeBSD to load the appropriate device driver (don't ask me how, I've only ever done generic installs of FreeBSD)
VMWare ESX Server 3.5 will (officially) support:
* Ubuntu Linux 7.04
* Solaris 10 for x86
* Suze Linux Enterprise Server 10
* Redhat Enterprise Linux 5
and various other OSs...
I've been using ESX 3.5 on an HP DL385 G2 with dual core Opterons and 8GB of RAM, I wonder if that is powerful enough to run Vista as a guest OS...
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Netcraft confirms it.