...until you put a typo in/etc/fstab when you're not used to plain old vi, and get to discover the joys of learning ed. Without a man page because that was in/usr too.
No, the manual is on the file system, and they're far better than the crap documentation you get from Linux or other Unixes. It just also happens to be available, in a convenient location on the web.
YAY for BSD (Score:5, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Fire up a VM and try it out, OpenBSD is a really nice OS to work with IMO.
Re: (Score:0, Flamebait)
...until you put a typo in /etc/fstab when you're not used to plain old vi, and get to discover the joys of learning ed. Without a man page because that was in /usr too.
I wish that was a joke.
Re: (Score:0)
http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=ed&apropos=0&sektion=0&manpath=OpenBSD+Current&arch=i386&format=html
Maybe you didn't have so much as a smartphone or a wiki kindle, but you can find all of the manual pages online.
I don't even use OpenBSD, but I use this in similar situations.
Re: (Score:-1)
Re:YAY for BSD (Score:2)
No, the manual is on the file system, and they're far better than the crap documentation you get from Linux or other Unixes. It just also happens to be available, in a convenient location on the web.