FreeBSD As A Workstation For UNIX Newbies 78
JT writes: "OSNews features an article introducing the FreeBSD operating system to newbies and Windows users. The article describes the installation, its GUI, application base and it has some more information about Unix and *BSD in general." Since Linux (at least the varieties with cute installation routines) is often presented as the *nix beginner's best choice, it's good to see articles like this one pointing out a broader range of choices.
Maybe, maybe not... (Score:5, Interesting)
The partitioning, as the article points out is mostly manual, but only if you can't dedicate your drive... if you can dedicate you press one key and it does a default partition scheme, ditto mount points. This is not a problem for any but the types who can't RTFM long enough to find out what page of the FM they're on.
The package system vs. ports is slightly confusing, especially since so much stuff appears in both places, how do you know which to use when and why? I'm sure this confusion is cleared up by reading the Handbook in depth. Ditto the fact that the ports system isn't just a system for getting and compiling tarballs-- it's a whole packaging system unto itself, just a bit more CPU intensive than rpm.
Speaking of the handbook, here's my favorite line (from memory, may not be exact) "recompiling a kernel is a rite of passage for Unix users". There, they said it, plain and simple you *will* recompile the kernel... and they're right, the generic kernel has no support for sound, so off to the config files you go. Hello make and make install! FWIW, they're 100% right, compiling a custom kernel is just too important not to learn to do it on either BSD or Linux systems.
IMHO, FreeBSD is not a suitable system for a computing newbie, unless they have a patient, available hacker friend. It might be a good introduction to x86 Unix for someone who's used a Unix mainframe at school/work (where someone else was the sysadmin). And it might be a good introduction to Unix for an advanced Windows user. And for the hacker? Of course it's a great choice, especially that ports system. I've not seen a Linux distro with that level of commitment to the offsite code base.
But best of all, no one's running around saying it should be called GNU/BSD! And with good reason, if you're used to the GNU binutils and BASH, you're in for a bit of a surprise with FreeBSD.
Re:Maybe, maybe not... (Score:2, Interesting)
It supported all the hardware out of the box on my notebook, with the exception of APM (and obviously not ACPI).
Still, I agree, to get the most out of FreeBSD you need to build a custom kernel
Re:Maybe, maybe not... (Score:1)
Re:Maybe, maybe not... (Score:2)
There's an ACPI module in 4.4-RELEASE? (That's what he's running, not 5.0-current.)
Re:Maybe, maybe not... (Score:2, Informative)
I tried installing Slackware but gave up in disgust. It's disorganized as hell, but at least it only needed 1 cdrom for the (re)install. For some reason it had trouble finding and/or mounting my plextor cdrw that I use regularly with freebsd without a hitch.
Unix is not for people who want to be spoon-fed everything.
Re:Maybe, maybe not... (Score:1)
Re:Maybe, maybe not... (Score:1)
Re:Maybe, maybe not... (Score:1)
the ports tree - a complete piece of piss to automatically download/compile/install anything in it (and there's a lot...)
compiling the kernel - complete piece of piss... 2 lines or somethings...
pratical stuff like setting up NAT, firewalling, stuff like that, takes seconds...
Re:Maybe, maybe not... (Score:1)
'piece of piss' = 'very easy'
isn't language a wonderful thing...
Re:Maybe, maybe not... (Score:1)
It was almost 5 years ago when I as an advanced windows user who had used unix at college (mainly for USENet.) Anyways, at the time I got my second PC and began to network the two, and for a few months it worked fine until an update to dial-up networking changed my network config and broke the network. I wasn't able to resolve the issue, so I looked into linux. Well after about a few days of trying linux I had heard about FreeBSD. I went out and tried it, and it worked a lot better for me. I was able to understand it a lot better, and even got sound working (eventually.) The important thing is that I got it to dialout to my ISP automatically and share the internet connection across to my other computer something I hadn't figured out how to do with windows at the time.
While I have tried other linux distros since then FreeBSD has still been my favorite OS. While I ditched the dialup a long time ago, I still use FreeBSD at the heart of my home LAN.
as of posting this my uptime on my server is
10:01AM up 134 days, 22:50
Linux has it's merits too, but if you're not satisfied with it try BSD.
Re:Maybe, maybe not... (Score:3, Informative)
Yes, the binutils are surprisingly different from the GNU ones:
(No, that hasn't changed in later releases.)
Yes, it's not GNU/BSD in the sense that most of the utilities are not GNU utilities, but the BSDs do use the GNU toolchain.
Re:Maybe, maybe not.../ What about mailing lists? (Score:1)
Kudos to OSnews (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Kudos to OSnews (Score:1)
Altho - I wouldn't mind if FreeBSD stays in obscurity to most. Popularity could result in more complex hack attempts, exploits, etc. So go ahead, give linux to the world and lets keep FreeBSD to ourselves ;)
Let's get things straight here (Score:1)
I've been using FreeBSD since early 1994 and have grown up with ti, so to speak. Even back then, I tried Linux and ended up learning FreeBSD. I'm really glad to see people writing for newbies.
Re:Tried running FreeBSD 4.4 TWICE recently... (Score:1)
Oh and
I would say rtfm, but oh well, I was just as stupid to reply to this obvious troll post. Please give me a -1 for that.
Re:Tried running FreeBSD 4.4 TWICE recently... (Score:1, Interesting)
No, I didn't type
Oops.
And I already knew that the bootloader was in
As for RTFM -- how the hell do you think I even got the kernel to compile right in the first place? It wasn't by guess-and-check, that's for sure. No, it was by reading Chapter 9 of the handbook at www.freebsd.org, following every word, and reading every word of LINT and determining what I needed based on what was in MYKERNEL and what wasn't (but was in LINT). If there's a better way than RTFM'ing, I don't know what it is.
Oops.
What's more, it was hardly meant as a troll post - it was a brief user's experience post. It just happens to be a bad experience, which follows past experiences (tried FBSD-4.3 in September - couldn't even get a kernel compile to work then, so we're making progress here).
I didn't even mention how the amazingly-useful updatedb binary (and the corresponding locate command) is stored in a directory that isn't even in root's path by default - thus, to find these normally-standard tools, you need to do a find / | grep updatedb. This shouldn't be necessary...
What amazes me most about the BSD community is just how arrogant its userbase semes to be (prisonernumber7 isn't the only BSD user I'm including), regardless of how much documentation somebody reads. I have yet to meet a helpful, non-egotistical BSD user. Linux users aren't much better (and in general, IMHO aren't quite as knowledgeable as *BSD users) but the difference is that Linux users are generally more smug about their OS choice rather than acting like complete assholes...
I didn't learn Linux by not reading documentation. On the contrary, that's all I did - I learned by reading docs I found online -- the HOWTO's in particular. In a little over a year I've gone from knowing nothing about any of the UNIX variants, to breezing through a Linux certification and simultaneously teaching other students in there (thanks to docs I'd read earlier on the 'net), to teaching a friend of mine how to run a Slackware box (and used a number of my own scripts to compile & install the latest KDE sources, along with tons of other packages, since it was Slack7.1, which is rather old).
If it weren't for the vast ocean of Linux documentation online, I would've never been able to setup a 486 as a router with some strong iptables rules and a DNS server...
I wanted to move on from Linux to FBSD because I'd read that it was even more stable, reliable, and faster than Linux, all while having a packaging system that puts Linux package-management to shame. And all of those things seem to be true.
But there's no useful info available (except in some big, recently-released book that sells for $50 in Borders that discusses using FBSD4.4) on how to exploit that power. And for as similar as FBSD and Linux are, there are far more differences than I was originally expecting.
Funny I couldn't find much documentation beyond the FBSD handbook. Yes there are several email lists and Usenet groups - but when you're looking for an answer to what should be pretty simple problems, it should be pretty easy to find - after all, it's been asked thousands of times in the years since FBSD was started, right?
So why is it that literally hundreds of searches on Google, manual sifting through Usenet, and searching through freebsd.org's mail archives don't turn up answers?
Christ man, you remind me of my roommate last semester. Snide, arrogant, and always "looking down" at those whom he talked to.
No wonder that one guy here is always posting that *BSD is dying...
Mod me down, I don't care - I'm going to play with a *nix that has real support without such absurd levels of geek chest-beating.
BSD just lost a potential user (and now an outspoken critic of BSD). But knowing BSD users, they don't care - they're too busy pretending they're God to help potential users understand how their system works.
Re:Tried running FreeBSD 4.4 TWICE recently... (Score:2)
So why is it that literally hundreds of searches on Google, manual sifting through Usenet, and searching through freebsd.org's mail archives don't turn up answers?
<Sigh>... Sadly, your experiences are all too common. Particularly the impatience of the poster whom you responded to. In general, *bsd users are no more or less arrogant than *linux users. However, it's the outspoken minority that cause troubles.
I've said it before, but it bears repeating: the single most valuable resource you can get when installing/trying out a new OS is access to a friendly expert who doesn't mind you asking potentially dumb questions - and who'll let you repay them with a few beers or equivalent.
I, too, have struggled with the -questions archive, searching for answers. Eventually, I found them, either in the archives or in sections of the documentation. But it wasn't easy. Nowadays, I just drop a line to one of my mates who knows lots about FreeBSD, and make a note to thank them later in some tangible form.
If you've not got a similar friend, some of the IRC channels may help. FreeBSD-questions tends to be rather overwhelming, although there aren't too many arrogant answers there.
Personally, I find FreeBSD to be a useful OS and a rewarding learning experience. But I doubt I'll stop asking dumb questions of my friends any time soon. I hope you'll find some similar form of help, and not be discouraged by a few terse lines from a less patient person...
Re:Tried running FreeBSD 4.4 TWICE recently... (Score:2)
I think you real problem is that you want FreeBSD to work just like Linux. Well it doesn't. Otherwise it would be called FreeLinux. It took you a while to figure out all the arcana under Linux, so expect to spend some time figuring out the FreeBSD arcana. On the plus side, FreeBSD has top notch documentation. Try perusing it.
Re: .. I've ran since 4.3 as a production workstat (Score:5, Informative)
Starting with 1 distribution, the OS has benefits out of the box. All kernel code is under peer-review. One person can't just say I want this to be this way. Any major additions are under peer scrutiny. Also the members of the core development team only got there because they have been and were submitters to FreeBSD for a long time. With have 1 distribution all the channels of the distribution talk to on another. You don't see Suse talking with RedHat. I didn't think so.
The stability issue is tied into the 1 distribution also. I feel sorry for Linus. He make a great kernel, but he can't do squat to make the surrounding distribution work if it breaks. The distro is only as good the surrounding subsystems. In my opinion FreeBSD leaves newer features in the CURRENT tree structure a little longer than Linux. Thus when a release version is created the release versions tend to have less problems.
Finally the ports and packages. It took me a few months to fully understand ports versus packages. I actually install the bash-2.05 package on any new installation so I can use the shell from the start. The packages can be accessed from
"You must unlearned what you have learned!" - Yoda
Re: .. I've ran since 4.3 as a production workstat (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Tried running FreeBSD 4.4 TWICE recently... (Score:2)
The kernel wouldn't boot. And the instructions in the FBSD handbook on how to recover from a bad kernel didn't work, because the sendmail daemon kept locking up whenever I tried to run the original generic kernel.
You couldn't boot into single-user mode?
Preferances (Score:2)
I've even gone out of my way to pay for CDs etc.
Re:Preferances (Score:2, Informative)
So FreeBSD is a good choice but not the best for newbies.
FreeBSD myths. (Score:5, Informative)
"The ports collection sure is great! I just wish that FreeBSD had some kind of package management that didn't require building from source."
It so happens that FreeBSD does have package management that won't ever invoke gcc.
Try the package management tools (man pkg_create(1), pkg_delete(1), pkg_info(1), pkg_update(1), pkg_version(1) for more specific info).
In fact, FreeBSD is so bad-ass that you can type something like "pkg_add -r mozilla" and the system will download and install the latest mozilla. Carefull though, some packages require that you specify the whole version (i.e. pkg_add -r lyx-1.1.6.3). This will get all the dependancies you need in most cases.
The only real reasons to build from the ports are:
"FreeBSD is less user friendly than Linux"
This is highly subjective. I taught a class this summer to a group of people at my University who had never installed Windows, much less anything else. By the end of the first week, they were able to install FreeBSD, compile a kernel, and successfully manage packages. By the end of the second week, they all had their desktops going with the productivity apps they wanted. By the middle of the third week, I couldn't hold their attention because they were having too much fun playing with the OS.
FreeBSD belongs to the "it just works" school of computing. I don't know how to describe it. I've never had to worry about whether or not FreeBSD would correctly auto detect my USB optical mouse during the install (I've had a number of Linux distros both succeed and fail). FreeBSD Just Works(tm). No dicking around. "Does your system have a USB mouse attached to it?" "Yes?" "OK, we'll make sure and load usbd." If I've had "device pcm" in my kernel config file at build time, my sound has always worked.
As a workstation, FreeBSD performs very well. I don't have benchmarks for you, but I've never had a FreeBSD machine that has felt slower than any Linux distribution on the same hardware. Incidentally, FreeBSD starts notably quicker than any Linux distro newer than Slack 2.0.
I feel really good about the state of FreeBSD. They have made things easy by design, not by GUI abstraction. If you judge ease as being a point and click installer, then Linux will win every time. If you judge ease as simplicity and consistancy, FreeBSD is a clear victor.
-Peter
Just my $0.02
Re:FreeBSD myths. (Score:3)
Touche!
Incidentally, I had the opportunity to install and play with NetBSD the other day (I'm thinking about ditching my PC for an iBook.), and I found it to work much the same way as FreeBSD. That is, it found all my hardware, and Just Worked (tm). In the past when I've used OpenBSD, it has done well too. I should take a look again as they've released a few times since I've played with OpenBSD.
-Peter
It just works? (Score:2)
Re:It just works? (Score:3, Informative)
Really? What modem do you have? I've got the ActionTec Call Waiting PCI modem and it worked fine.
Check your dmesg (dmesg |more). Look for something like the following:
sio0: [ActionTec 56k FAX PCI Modem] port 0xdc00-0xdc07,0xd800-0xd8ff,0xd400-0xd4 ff mem 0xe2001000-0xe20010ff irq 11 at device 7.0 on pci0
sio0: moving to sio4
sio4: type 16550A
Actually, a good place to start would be to type "dmesg |grep sio" at the command prompt. I bet that FreeBSD has probably found it already. Remember that the serial interface "sio4" corresponds to
I hope this helps. If not, you can always send an e-mail to questions@freebsd.org. They are generally quite helpful.
-Peter
Re:FreeBSD myths. (Score:1)
I have been using Linux & Free/OpenBSD for many years.
It have never had so much trouble installing an OS as FreeBSD on my laptop. The USB keyboard was recognized, but wouldn't work, no matter what I tried. It would also be nice if they gave the option of installing X 4.1 or 3.3.6 (?)
After 3 days of fighting, with a system that never worked properly I installed Mandrake 8.1. Everything worked first time (X, USB, PS/2, digital camera,sound etc)
Using urpmi to install apps and dependencies makes it a breeze.
I'm sure FreeBSD would make an excellant webserver, probably faster and more stable. However on a laptop, or a home system with more 'exotic' hardware Mandrake Linux was up and running fully in less than hour.
Re:FreeBSD myths. (Score:1)
I re-compiled my first kernel to get the sound card to work, adding a line like "device pcm" or something.
The only problem I have is KDE start up takes two/three "startx" to start. Some kind of DCOP server startup problem. Hunting through google didn't help. Anyone?
KDE and DCOP error. (Score:2)
Check your
Hope this helps.
-Peter
Re:BSD is WINNING (Score:1)
They making games, videos for them?
Linux is joke because they make applications for it ??
I think you're the joker here...:-)
waiting for 5.0 (Score:2, Informative)
One thing not many people have mentioned is how clean and simple the base installation is (after you've installed it). Core system with X windows, add what you need afterwards. This is a clean methodology, it allows a newbie UNIX user to find out exactly what the system *is*. if they went for a default linux install, however, they'll end up with 500+ packages to deal with. I have problems telling what is a 'system' package and what is an 'add-on' package on my linux laptop. If it wasn't for up2date or ximian's red carpet, a user would be screwed, security-wise.
mike [mailto]
Re:waiting for 5.0 (Score:1)
Re:waiting for 5.0 (Score:2)
This is partly true. However, even the minimal install does contain programs that you can rip out in special-purpose systems, like firewalls. The annoying part is that they don't get included as ports, but rather just left there. I wish the default sendmail install was listed in /var/db/pkg to make it more removable.
However, I know that I'm probably too obsessed with maximizing available disk space. :)
Re:waiting for 5.0 (Score:2)
Requiring sendmail is silly.
Agreed.
Plus, if you delete it, a make world will recreate it.
Not true. Uncomment "NO_SENDMAIL= true" in make.conf, problem solved.
I dunno (Score:3, Insightful)
I install and run OpenBSD and FreeBSD (as well as Redhat Linux and Windows NT/2000) on servers all the time. But I'm like a one-legged man on a pogo stick when it comes to installing either as a workstation. OpenBSD apparently even makes me manually add the X package after the install. FreeBSD is a bit better, but the configuration is all very manual. To contrast, Redhat Linux correctly detects my mouse, video card and monitor and makes it somewhat hard to continue the install unless the settings actually work.
Out of my team of 10 developers, I doubt more than 3 other guys would be able to get FreeBSD running as an X workstation without someone to help them. And all of them, even me, would lose interest before getting it working. I can feel my interest waning right now. I'd rather play with OpenBSD's new pf than pretend it's 1996 and manually configure XFree86.
Re:I dunno (Score:2)
OpenBSD apparently even makes me manually add the X package after the install.
Ok. I was wrong. Booting from the CD makes it easy to install the X packages. Well, not as easy as Redhat Linux, but easier than ftp-ing them and untaring them in the right place.
I got X running on OpenBSD on a laptop in about 20 minutes. The main problem was finding the mouse device and protocol (/dev/wsmouse0 and wsmouse). I picked the wrong video card, but the right driver (ATI) and made a wild-ass guess at the monitor clocks (not sure it matters at all).
Still not for a beginner, but frankly I found the OpenBSD 3.0 install easier than the FreeBSD 4.4 install.
Re:I dunno (Score:2)
There's a good reason for this: X isn't part of the operating system. It's a separate project with one set of sources for all supporting OSs. Many Linux distros like to write their own X configurator. But FreeBSD sees X as someone else's project and doesn't touch it. Making the base system automatically configure X would be like making the base system automatically configure sendmail. That's not its job.
X comes with some configuration utilities that work quite well, as long as you know what hardware you have. I use these, even under Linux. But that said, I see no reason with a FreeBSDXConfig port/package available for newbies. I just don't know how well it would work. I haven't installed Redhat in a very long time, but I have had problems with Mandrake, SuSE and Corel trying to detect my video cards. Come to think of it, I had a bitch of a time with Windows detecting my Rage128. The problem is that there is no standard way of determing video hardware capabilities. Methods that work for most cards can crash or reboot a system with other cards.
The way around this hassle is to do what Microsoft does: get the OEM's to preinstall the operating system. My friend had a computer that generic off-the-shelf Windows would NOT install, but where the OEM CD of Windows would. Overall, I think Mandrake, SuSE, Redhat, etc., do a *much* better job of hardware detection than Windows does, for precisely this reason.
[sorry for the rant]
Re:BSD and Linux (Score:2)
...and, like {Free,Net,Open}BSD, it's a volunteer project, not a commercial product. If somebody wants to compare the BSDs to a Linux distribution, Debian is probably the most appropriate one with which to compare them.
Re:BSD and Linux (Score:1)
If you look at Linux distributions in comparison to *BSD, Slackware is the most *BSD-like of them all. I grew up on Open Source Slackware and found it very comfortable switching from Slack to *BSD. and it is _not_ a large commercial organization, either. Patrick (as in Volderking) has maintained a good "leg" off the Linux family tree while sticking to traditional UN*X roots...
-PONA-
XP ????? (Score:1)
However, i disagree with this guy, he says XP is "the most complete OS" he's used. WHAT?? Truly HE must be a newbie., not that theres any thing wrong with that but I thought it was kind of a contradiction, i dont know about you guys?