FreeBSD 4.1 Released 223
Dr. Banana writes "Jordan Hubbard announced that FreeBSD 4.1 is now available on ftp.freebsd.org.
You can read the release notes here.
The ISO will be available on August 1."
"The voters have spoken, the bastards..." -- unknown
So what's new? (Score:1)
Mother-son-of-a-bitch! (Score:4)
I wish they would not release anything for atleast 60 days after I buy it/install it/upgrade it!
I should have majored in Art, where nothing changes for atleast 20 years and the old stuff gets more valuable!
Drivers? (Score:1)
Re:oops! (Score:1)
Re:So what's new? (Score:1)
BSD and GNU utilities (Score:3)
The more(1) command has been replaced by less(1), although it can still be run as more(1).
I see they're getting with the GNU bandwagon, but I hope that the original BSD sources for csh, more, etc. get kept somewhere for posterity - when/if all BSD's switch to using GNU userland software, we lose the original BSD software, which wouldn't be a good thing.
I wonder if it could still be made an option to have a FreeBSD 4.1 kernel without the GNU utilities but with original BSD utilities. Anybody from FreeBSD care to comment?
Excellent! (Score:4)
The revolution has begun! IPV6-->and you thought the internet was already big enough.
like kernel xxx.xxx (Score:1)
Doah! wouldn't you believe on tuesday I installed 4.1 RC3? oh well at least my sblive card works.
Haiku (Score:1)
Released a new version, for
You to use and love.
Upgrades (Score:1)
Oh poo. (Score:1)
I guess my notification was passed over.
Re:So what's new? (Score:1)
--
BSD (Score:2)
Re:Drivers? (Score:1)
I have a machine that I do a lot of media work on that has many devices in it. Multiple network cards, multiple capture cards, video, sound, etc. I could not get Linux to detect the in-busisness ethernet card (nor the tulip card). And it wouldn't load the SoundBlaster driver. FreeBSD detected everything and works great. I just need a port of bttvgrab to *BSD now.
Overall the *BSD's (I use OpenBSD and FreeBSD) seems extremely stable and detect hardware nicely. And the installs are a snap compared to any Linux install (not as pretty but very simple).
If VMware would run under FreeBSD then I'd switch my desktop to it.
Good Deal! (Score:1)
It now supports an IPv6 ONLY network. no more IPv4. How kewl is that.
And basically the only other differences (besides hardware compatability) that i noticed were tcsh is there now, It uses less i/s of more and ls is color! (yay)
Yea, i'm sorta karma whoring, but no one else is posting. so shut up.
ok, nevermind. this is now redundant. Remind to not go on a coffee break before posting...
(try to save face....)
Anyway, to provoke discussion....Does anyone else have any opinions on FreeBSD(or Open or Net, for that matter) vs. Linux? I'd be interested to know...
-Superb0wl
Re:Upgrades (Score:1)
How does FreeBSD work for that?
---
Re:BSD and GNU utilities (Score:3)
As long as the CVS repository [freebsd.org] is still around, you can always check them out. I know FreeBSD's goes back to 2.0, which was the first unencumbered-by-AT&T release.
Haiku2 (Score:1)
a haiku but doesn't have
any poetry
Slashdot.org cluster (Score:2)
Then, if this post is no longer valid, I still would like to know why FreeBSD was used in the past. Thanks, --
BSD and GNU true utility (Score:1)
Re:Upgrades (Score:1)
--
Brandon Hume
hume -> BOFH.Halifax.NS.Ca, http://WWW.BOFH.Halifax.NS.Ca/
Re:BSD and GNU utilities (Score:1)
http://www.free bsd.org/cgi/url.cgi?ports/shells/44bsd-csh/pkg/DE
http://www.freeb sd.org/cgi/url.cgi?ports/misc/44bsd-more/pkg/DESC
Uhhh (Score:1)
Slashdot Bug? (Score:1)
Re:Upgrades (Score:1)
Re:FreeBSD... (Score:2)
Re:Drivers? (Score:1)
Re:So what's new? (Score:1)
Anyways, not too much reason for most people to cvsup other than to be leading edge.
Re:BSD (Score:1)
That said, the heritage is different, yes; BSD came from the original source, but it wound up being totally rewritten to avoid heat while AT&T was suing Berkeley. Linux, of course, was written ground-up (okay, actually started on Minix, which was itself a re-implementation) to mimic Unix.
Different lineage, same result in the "purity" of the code. They're both good.
--
wtf? (Score:1)
what? (Score:1)
Re:BSD and GNU utilities (Score:1)
Why would this be a bad thing? If the BSDs switch, this means the GNU stuff is better. And if that's true, then there would be no reason to continue using the BSD stuff.
Unless I'm missing something...?
Re:Drivers? (Score:1)
If you need the newest spanking video or sound though, then that sounds more like valid reasoning.
All that said I can offer no insight into the status of driver development.
Re:BSD and GNU utilities (Score:1)
Re:FreeBSD... (Score:2)
block in on ed1 all
pass in on ed1 proto tcp from any to any port = 21 keep state
pass out on ed1 all keep state
I don't believe passing incoming on port 20 is terribly useful, since that's the ORIGINATING port for ftp-data (it connects OUT, not in).
Also, you might find it useful to use a 'pass in quick from
There's extensive documention that comes with IPFilter, you shoudl check it out. Once you know how to use it, you'll see how ipchains and ipfw are pale imitators.
--
Brandon Hume
hume -> BOFH.Halifax.NS.Ca, http://WWW.BOFH.Halifax.NS.Ca/
Re:Upgrades (Score:1)
Nah... (Score:5)
Re:Upgrades (Score:1)
From what I gather while sitting in irc it's amazingly simple once you've "cut your teeth" on it. btw: a good number of Debian like features seem to be modelled after *bsd features (I hope I got that right and not backwards).
Re:FreeBSD... (Score:1)
I MEANT,
'pass in quick from [your workstation's ip]/32 to any'
--
Brandon Hume
hume -> BOFH.Halifax.NS.Ca, http://WWW.BOFH.Halifax.NS.Ca/
Re:Excellent! (Score:1)
Re:Drivers? (Score:1)
Re:Who cares? (Score:1)
Re:Mother-son-of-a-bitch! (Score:1)
b) there is no b, because you would be installed fbsd-4.1 right now!
Ivo
Re:BSD and GNU true utility (Score:2)
Not a haiku (Score:1)
a haiku but sorely lacks
poetic value
That's a haiku!
Anyone for Renga?
As I said before (Score:1)
Nooo! (Score:1)
Re:Applixware ceases FreeBSD development. (Score:1)
I don't think I would fault FreeBSD for Applix shortcomings. To sustain a market share, you have to be competitive, that has nothing to do with FreeBSD support, and everything to do with other office suites avaliable!
Re:BSD (Score:1)
But my question is... (Score:2)
IPv6 am big (Score:1)
Personally I won't be satisfied until every particle in the universe has its own
Re:BSD and GNU utilities (Score:2)
I consider this a mistake. On my Linux system at home, less is more useful than more, but more has its place. In particular, ls -l --color | less is ugly on the terminal and various xterms, while ls -l --color | more looks like it's supposed to.
I suppose that trying to keep the distribution compact is a justification for some of these replacements, but the old commands should be kept around, even if not installed by default. Someone, somewhere, may need to use both csh and tcsh, without the one substituted for the other. What's next, dropping vi for emacs?
Re:But my question is... (Score:2)
In early 2001 [apple.com].
Re:Slashdot.org cluster (Score:3)
It's also centrally organized with a strong core team which gives it focus and prevents a lot of splintering (exceptions being Net and Open which are strongly focussed in their own right). I suppose some consider this to be a drawback but most people seem happy with the end products.
Also it has a great ports system where people maintain src and binary pacakges for easy installation. I've seen the Debian package system and it's exactly like that. Not sure which came first but BSD is where I first saw it. You install a hierachry of application skeletons. The it's run by a system of Makefiles. You want openssh on your system? You go to
More info at http://www.freebsd.org/ports/
You can also upgrade your whole system via cvsup. Similar in simplicity to the ports collection you automatically download any sources that are needed and diff and patch things until your system is upgraded.
Lots of info at http://www.freebsd.org/handbook/
There's also NetBSD and OpenBSD which focu on running on multiple architectures and security respectively. They're all great server OSes imo.
kewl (Score:2)
:)
sig:
Re:Slashdot.org cluster (Score:2)
That's a direct quote from http://slashdot.org/faq/tech.shtml [slashdot.org]. Slashdot has never run on FreeBSD. Yahoo does though.
Re:BSD and GNU utilities (Score:3)
Please, check your facts before you complain--it's as simple as going to the ports tree and doing a 'make'.
'less' is licensed as follows (from LICENSE):
and 'tcsh' is licensed as follows (from README):
Please, check your facts before posting.
Jeremy
Re:But my question is... (Score:2)
The sysinstall program is very easy and allows you to customize your install the way you want it.
Re:But my question is... (Score:3)
On a LAPTOP, none the less.
It autoprobed my PCMCIA NIC, which both Debian installers threw up their hands at. fdisk and disklabel have 'Do it for me' settings. There's more than adequate documentation for each step, and although I had some issues due to my laptop's BIOS permenantly having LBA on, they were quickly resolved.
On a slightly offtopic note, IMHO, the ports tree is superior to ALL linux packaging systems, even apt/dpkg.
"If ignorance is bliss, may I never be happy.
Re:But my question is... (Score:2)
I haven't had to try with a major upgrade; my BSD box suffered severe hardware failure a few weeks ago; bad luck. But I imagine it's up to the job...
"If ignorance is bliss, may I never be happy.
Re:BSD and GNU utilities (Score:3)
Try ls -l --color | less -r instead. Maybe even alias it.
Paul.
Already out of date... (Score:2)
Still...who am I to resist the march of technology?
Anyway, I'm dipping my toe in the FreeBSD pool by installing on an old laptop I came by. I've been digging around for information on how FreeBSD handles laptop issues like power management and PCMCIA, but haven't found much yet. The BSD nomads pages are pretty large, but pretty out of date as well.
Anyone out there have any advice or pointers on FreeBSD on (i386) laptops?
--Lenny
Re:So what's new? (Score:2)
A new event notification facility called kqueue was added to the
FreeBSD kernel. This is a new interface which is able to replace
poll/select, offering improved performance, as well as the ability
to report many different types of events. Support for monitoring
changes in sockets, pipes, fifos, and files are present, as well as
for signals and processes.
Re:An answer (Score:2)
--
Re:Mother-son-of-a-bitch! (Score:2)
I just did a cvsup of my 4.0-release a few days ago, and it defaulted to 4.1-stable.
--
Re:Already out of date... (Score:2)
gnuls -l --color (Score:2)
Then you should try using the colour option correctly. Memory fails me, but one of the below is right:
ls --color=autols --color=tty
I forget which of these is correct (a few years ago, the situation was such that one of these matched the man page, and the other matched actual behavior).
----------------------------
Re:Already out of date... (Score:2)
My experience with it has been wonderful. On my desktop, I have an SBLive and struggled for a while to get OSS working with 4.0-release. Then, I looked around a little and realized that support for the emu10k had already been dropped in to 4.1-stable. All it took was a cvsup, make world and a new kernel to get my SBLive working flawlessly.
This doesn't really apply to laptops of course, but it's an indication of how smoothly FreeBSD works. Frankly, I'd be surprised if you ran into any real difficulties unless you're running some very obscure hardware.
--
Re:An answer (Score:2)
Make sure you have an up to date /usr/ports, then cd /usr/ports/x11-wm/enlightenment && make install
There you go, done. Oh, and the procedure for sawfish is cd /usr/ports/x11-wm/sawfish && make install
----------------------------
Re:So what's new? (Score:2)
Silly package users ;>
---
Re:Drivers? (Score:2)
Hell, FreeBSD even detects my MS Sidewinder USB joystick!
Gotta love it... the least you can do is try it out. The install is painless.
--
Hey troll (Score:2)
----------------------------
Re:BSD lacks native software. (Score:3)
Re:Hey troll (Score:2)
4.1 BSD (Score:2)
Re:But my question is... (Score:2)
Re:But my question is... (Score:2)
Feed it a couple of boot disks have the CD Rom In Drive.
It has nice menu's to configure devices and nicely tells you where conflcits are with IO ports...
This makes setting up something like ohh.. a NIC pretty cinchy. It has always easily found my 3Com card with the GENERIC Kernel.
Compiling the Kernel is like edit a file added a couple of lines.. typed in one command It went
There is also no way to really write over your kernel and then get locked out since at boot time you can just tell it to use a different kernel.
So is it easier to install for a newbie? Yes.
Is there documentation that explains a lot of these features and guides you through it... Not really.
I would say with just a little more decent documentation there would never be a need for GUI Installer. If you know the basics of the hardware you are setting up its very easy.
If you are talking a transition from a "I dont know what a serial port" windows/linux crowd who somehow managed to get either OS installed.. No your just gonna wipe out your partitions
Anyhow.. If you ahve installed a Linux distro and used it for a while and then you move to BSD you will fin dthat its generally easier to use than xyz Linux distro.
You want a program and you have the CD? "/stand/sysinstall" Install the package I imagine this release has KDE 2, Gnome 1.2 and all. They stay update on all of those packages.
You a program?
Lets just say it significantly cut down on the time I spent downloading libraries and compiling this and that to get Applications working to the point where it is now pretty much all I use at home for a Server.(Given that my needs are somewhat limited
Jeremy
If you think education is expensive, try ignornace
Re:BSD and GNU utilities (Score:2)
...and that, I suspect, people outside "the Linux community" worked on as well.
Do tcsh and less antedate Linux? Even if they don't, were they originally done for Linux, or were they done for other UNIXes instead or as well?
If the answer to either of those questions is "yes", then saying "they're adopting a lot of the software the Linux community worked on" may be technically true, but may not necessarily be equivalent to "getting with the GNU bandwagon" or "switching to using GNU userland software" even if you reinterpret "GNU" in your original message as meaning "Linux", so, no, I do not believe that particular idea of your original post still stands.
I'm not sure that "we lose the original BSD software, which wouldn't be a good thing" applies either, if by "lose" you mean "don't have it available as part of the system" (as opposed to "the source is unavailable" - as noted, the source is still available in the CVS tree). I don't see csh as being preferable to tcsh, or more as being preferable to less, merely by virtue of being the implementation that came with older versions of BSD - the BSDs have changed a number of things, over time, from "the original BSD software" in the sense of, say, "what came with 4.4-Lite", but I don't view that as being ipso facto A Bad Thing.
There may be other reasons to prefer csh or more, but there are probably reasons why, for arbitrary piece of code XXX in release N of operating system YYY, some people might prefer alternative ZZZ, where alternative ZZZ might have been there instead of XXX in release N-k. So it goes....
Re:Hardware support Documentation (Score:2)
Fortunately, I already have two OSes on my home machine that work with my sound card...
...FreeBSD 3.x and NT 4.0.
It's a plug-and-play ISA sound card (I saw no reason to get a PCI sound card when there was a spare ISA slot), and I didn't particularly feel like banging on isapnptools or jam a PnP ISA patch into the 2.0[.x] kernel on my Debian 2.1 partition to get the sound card to work - or to shove a 2.2[.x] kernel and jam in the patch, or shove a 2.3[.x] kernel on it - given that it worked out of the box on BSD. (It also looked like More Trouble Than It Was Worth to get it to work on the machine's fourth OS, Solaris 7.)
I.e., when it comes to hardware support, the important phrase here is "your mileage may vary"; categorical statements about FreeBSD and/or Linux support may, even if valid in general (as in "more sound cards are supported by the Linux 2.x.y kernel than by the FreeBSD m.n kernel", which I suspect may be the case for most reasonable values of "x", "y", "m", and "n", although I could be surprised) may not apply in all cases.
Re:So what's new? (Score:2)
Re:FreeBSD is Dying. (Score:2)
I am a new to running unixes on my local systems.
I installed FreeBSD 4.0stable less than a week ago on my laptop. Now I run 4.1stable and keeping a fresh updated system, automatically. This is my story. First I downloaded the kernel and mfsroot disks which I found through a logical visit at www.freebsd.org. I had a problem with my nic at first (I was doing a ftp/net installation off the boot disks), but after a few minutes browsing of freebsd - mobile and friendly chats at #freebsdhelp I solved it and the freebsd installation ran beautifully. At the installation I had a clear list of choice for the base setup and I chose what suited my purpose. I chose to install X with gnome&enlightment and in a short time I was up and running. Tweaked the X setup to present my desktop as I enjoy and that was set. Next I intented to see how I have to go about maintenance and here again usenet and #freebsdhelp on efnet became quite useful. I learned about cvsup with which I could keep my sourcetree and ports updated, so now I can either issue a few commmands in which I can check for updates to the sources, do a system update of the entire system build a new custom kernel for optimal performance and install or do it all in one script which I eventually intend to activate via cron... so the system updates itself and I can concentrate on my work.
With this system I finally see a future with computing as a solution to accomplish whatever purpose one may have.
Unix in whatever form or shap it may be is the cure for Microsofts deceases which have hurt so many for so long without them knowing it and many still don't. Now think of narcotics. Do you see a pathern?. Unix, as any cure it is not successful before being spread and I certainly hope the entire world of unixes would help doing so. It is not important whether you run *linux, *bsd, solaris, whatever.. as long as you can do the same on all systems and they become compatible with each other as they will do eventually, when we start doing something about it. All unixes are in the process of making this new bright world and everyone can contribute. The Open* world of development is a result of people fighting for freedom and making things right, making them how they were supposed to be in the first place. After all its not about computers its about what you use it for.
freedom for choice, possibilities for all!
Upgrading and version numbers. (Score:2)
This much you know already. If you don't, you do now.
When it's decided that it's time for a -RELEASE, the minor version number is bumped and (in this case) 4.1-RELEASE is born. About 5 minutes later (check the CVS logs) 4.1-STABLE is born. There's no such thing as having 4.1-STABLE before 4.1-RELEASE. The official announcement of 4.1-RELEASE just came a few days after it's creation. (In reality, for a few days before a -RELEASE there are a few -RC [Release Candidates].)
So if by last little while you mean 3 days, yeah, but you're already beyond 4.1-RELEASE.
A serious question: (Score:2)
Don't get me wrong: I like FreeBSD. I use FreeBSD at work and at home. I just want to know what the point is of all the different versions being worked on at once? It's getting downright confusing.
- A.P.
--
"One World, one Web, one Program" - Microsoft promotional ad
Re:Question on the ports collection (Score:2)
- How many version numbers can you actually cross like this?
YMMV, but in my experience it works quite well. I'll make an exception for the a.out -> ELF transtion nightmare. That was bad. Rule-of-thumb: don't cross major version numbers. And read the mailing lists.
- What sorts of problems/pitfalls might the *BSD newbie run into trying this...?
Cryptic error messages. If you're not familiar with a platform, anything it throws at you will be cryptic. Not kidding: VMS sometimes really stumps me with trivial stuff. I just ask someone who has more experience. It's the way to learn.
- If your net connection is too slow/unreliable to even think about doing make world via the net
Irrelevant. You don't do a make world via the net. You do a make world from your local
Re:BSD and GNU utilities (Score:2)
Re:BSD and GNU utilities (Score:2)
Well, you did say *GNU* which in the context of BSD is guaranteed to push people's hot buttons. If you were concerned about FreeBSD changing some of their old tried-and-true utilities, then you should have said so. But when you say that FreeBSD is dumping BSD stuff for GNU stuff, you deserved all the flamage you got. I mean, you don't call the Pope a Mormon and then expect to get away with it!
The Safe Way (Score:2)
The distribution does not know YOU. They don't know what software you installed outside of the package system. They don't know what configuration files you edited by hand. They don't know that package A is still needed by you even though it is deprecated in the upgrade.
Besides which, I've never found a distribution that upgraded without problems. With delete and install you have no problems.
Explanation. (Score:3)
3.4 is just an older release of 3.x-STABLE. 3.5 is the most recent (and final) release on 3.x-STABLE, and 4.1 is the most recent release on 4.x-STABLE.
A Serious Question . . . (Score:3)
As a linux user (Slackware -> Redhat (about 10min) -> SuSE -> Debian) what major changes would I have to make if I switched to *BSD.
Specifically is it source/binary compatible with linux.
Does it have a similar "feel" to linux, how hard would it be to adapt to it?
How does the hardware support compare? Will it run on the "typical" PC?
Does it have any advantage (speed, stability, security or other)?
Hopefully this won't incite a riot and hopefully I will get some answers. I just want to know if it's worth playing with.
Re:But my question is... (Score:3)
Ports is basically something that holds your hand through the usually frustrating task of
It handles all the dependencies beautifully. It applies patches that ensure your make will run smoothly. In short, it's a huge timesaver.
Not only that, but it also registers installs, so removing stuff is easy. All you need to do is go into the port directory and type 'make deinstall' or even a pkg_delete.
--
Re:Upgrades (Score:2)
That's certainly a way of installing software on FreeBSD, but I usually just do pkg_add -r package and have it download the binary package (and packages on which it depends) and install it/them. (If I care about the source, I'll download the original tarball and do the configure/make/make install myself, as I'm likely to care about the source because I want to change something, in which case I'll probably want to send it back, and patching the vanilla source rather than port-ized source seems as if it'd be a better idea.)
Re:So Hemos and Kadtz, time to deliver. (Score:2)
Cool. Here's some free IP [freebsd.org], and here's some more free IP [netbsd.org], and here's some more free IP [openbsd.org].
This page [kernel.org] also lets you get at some free IP, although you have to go to one of the subdirectories, download and unpack the tarball, and get it from the appropriate directory (kernel/net/ipv4).
Delete install no prob? (Score:2)
I am trying to figure out what I want loaded on the 16 Meg SanDisk of a new I-Opener, scheduled for major surgery soon for a vehicle app, always powered always on, but using SanDisk for emergency disk.
Trying to figure out what to load there and looking at issues like future upgrades (SanDisk is not infinately re-writable).
Anyway, in general, I like fixing the mess from a delete/reinstall much less than the mess from an upgrade.
Re:A Serious Question . . . (Score:5)
Virtually none. BSD is Unix. To the end user, it may be difficult to tell that it's even a different OS. To the admin, there's obviously going to be a difference, simply because it's a whole other kernel and the system is wired differently. But really, I had a little Linux experience and a bit more experience as a Solaris user when I started using FreeBSD and it took me less than a day to set up a nat-ing firewall/gateway.
Again, cosmetic, really. For whatever may be new to you, the man system is VERY thorough. I've seen manpages that list under BUGS "This man page is too long". =)
Specifically is it source/binary compatible with linux.
Source? It's just as source compatible as another Unix. Meaning, if your code will compile on IRIX or Solaris too... then it's pretty much a given that it will compile under FreeBSD. There are quite a few hacked programs out there that somebody may have written that will run only on Linux - but do you really need that software in the first place? Plus there's always Ports. If there's a port for the app you want (and chances are there is [freebsd.org]) then it WILL compile. =)
If you can't get the source for some app to compile, then FreeBSD does have Linux binary-compatibility. I believe it can even be compiled into the kernel. To be honest, I've never used it... simply because I haven't needed to.
Does it have a similar "feel" to linux, how hard would it be to adapt to it?
It's Unix! You can run your favourite shell, XFree86 with KDE or Gnome and Enlightenment (or any other combo under the sun). ls is ls, xterm is xterm, etc...
How does the hardware support compare? Will it run on the "typical" PC?
It's been said that Linux tends to support more of the bleeding-edge than FreeBSD. I don't know how true this is. FreeBSD has kernel-level support for PnP, PCMCIA, USB and a whole slew of other stuff. There isn't a piece of hardware in my system that isn't supported fully in FreeBSD.
On the "typical" PC, you should absolutely NO problems.
Does it have any advantage (speed, stability, security or other)?
This is kind of a contentious issue. There was an article a few days ago about this very issue. FreeBSD outperformed Linux at some disk access benchmarks, I believe. I don't put much stock in those tests though. I think it's fair to say that performance is, at the least, on par with any of the Linux distros.
Stability and security always depend on the admin. There are some rock-solid Linux boxes out there and there are some that can barely stay up for 20 minutes.
It's not fair to say that FreeBSD is more stable or secure, because it all depends on what services you need and run.
I just want to know if it's worth playing with.
IMHO, it is. You'll be pleasantly surprised. I installed FreeBSD 3.4-release on a whim when my Redhat installer failed on an old 486. I haven't gone back since. =)
--
Re:Slashdot.org cluster (Score:2)
Re:So Hemos and Kadtz, time to deliver. (Score:2)
Here's that particular free IP [innominate.org] in an easier-to-view form.
Re:Upgrades (Score:2)
Why am I better off doing that than just extracting the tarball? (Note: "because it works with Berkeley make" would not be a valid answer - I've installed GNU make on my machine, which is what I get by default when building stuff, which, for me, is a feature.)
If the original tarball needed patches to build on FreeBSD (other than patches to work with Berkeley make, which I don't care about), the changes should've been sent back to the maintainer of the package, so that future tarballs won't require that.
If all I'm doing is make followed by make install, I'd go for the binary package.
Re:Why it is bad (Score:2)
Anyway, FreeBSD's more(1) was a very old version of less(1).
FreeBSD branches (Score:2)
FreeBSD uses CVS to manage source code. With CVS, every time you make a change to a file you wish to integrate, a new "version" of that file is created. You can retrieve any particular version of a file, generate diffs between versions, etc.
Now, the versions are numbered in ascending order, as you would expect, but multiple "branches" may exist. For instance, "current" is the HEAD branch, 4.x is RELENG_4, 3.x is RELENG_3,and so on. Each branch progresses independently. One can ask for the latest file of a particular branch. That's what 3.x-stable, 4.x-stable and 5.x-current are.
A release, such as 3.4-RELEASE, 3.5-RELEASE, 4.0-RELEASE or 4.1-RELEASE, is a point in time. We mark the latest version of all files in a particular with a tag, such as RELENG_4_0_0_RELEASE, and those files/version with that tag are the ones that compose a particular release.
Now, why work on more than one branch at the same time? First, let's see how work is done on FreeBSD.
There are different origins to the source code found in FreeBSD. Some of it are externally maintained programs, such as sendmail and bind. These are imported from time to time, when a particular version is deemed stable enough.
Other programs are also developed externally to FreeBSD, but their developers are also FreeBSD committers. These are usually updated on a regular basis. It's the case particularly of some device drivers, shared by FreeBSD and Linux or one of the other BSD. It is also the case of code being developed by companies who sell solutions using FreeBSD, and have internal patches.
Finally, there are the programs "local" to FreeBSD, who are constantly updated. The actual development is still done out of the FreeBSD tree, and only updated at points where the code is functional.
These updates are usually done on the HEAD branch, or current, which, right now, is known as 5.x-current. Because of the very nature of software development, this results in serious bugs from time to time, and even break down of the build process. That's why people should stay away from -current, generally speaking.
As the code matures, and particular versions are deemed safe, they are merged back on the latest stable branch, 4.x-stable. This includes new device drivers and bug fixes. New features are also added in some cases, but the general rule is to leave new stuff out of stable.
Now, when a current reaches a certain point, a new stable branch is created out of it. This branch is identical to current at that point in time, though it quickly starts to diverge. But since it WAS a current up to that time, the new stable isn't *rock* stable previous stable branches. This is the
Because of that, serious users avoid the
These users expect their very reliable stable branch to continue to receive bug fixes and, particularly, security fixes. Thus, we, for a while, merge fixes to the latest two stable branches. Right now, 4.x and 3.x.
It's worth mention, though, that 3.x is at the end of it's life time, and won't be receiving many patches anymore.
Still, some people DO merge fixes all the way to 2.2.x. Usually, they have their own applications still based on such older versions, and like to keep them up to date.
HTH.
Re:B*llshit (Score:2)
Of course, if you had ever read a press release from Walnut Creek, which, as you may recall, has merged with BSDi, you would know it runs FreeBSD.