FreeBSD 5.3-BETA6 Available 63
ulib writes "The FreeBSD 5.3 testing cycle goes on with a brand new BETA Release. Eager for the Final? Then try this Beta out (mirrors) and help them find/fix bugs!
Here are the announcement (check it for fixes, enhancements & known issues), the schedule (could be updated soon), and the todo list."
ULE scheduler? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:ULE scheduler? (Score:5, Informative)
The open issues page shows the SCHED_ULE as "needs testing" for the 5.3 release -- the last release still used the old 4BSD scheduler. Have the issues with preemption been ironed out?
Work has been done to make it more stable, but SCHED_ULE (especially with preemption) still isn't stable enough, so SCHED_4BSD will be default in 5.3
Re:ULE scheduler? (Score:5, Interesting)
I've been using ULE since last year december (5.1) and I never had any problems with it. In fact, it performs much better, especially on the desktop (interactivity remains better while building in the background for instance). I will continue to use it for this reasons, despite not being the default.
Am I ready to take the BSD plunge? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Am I ready to take the BSD plunge? (Score:5, Informative)
Don't worry if it can't find your sound card though, install kernels don't have multimedia features.
However, as a hard core BSD user, I would say if you're looking for a desktop replacement, you may not find the joy here. First, getting BSD up and running as a desktop requires a bit of work and a certain comfort level working with the command line.
Being Bi-OS-ual (I swing Linux and BSD where necessary
If however you're wanting to setup your first server environment, I would recommend FreeBSD over everything else. You will learn unix the proper way, which is at the command line and manually configuring your service config files. (Yes I've used Debian and Gentoo for this in the past, and I still think FreeBSD is better suited).
Re:Am I ready to take the BSD plunge? (Score:2)
Re:Am I ready to take the BSD plunge? (Score:1)
Probably would have made more sense to say the latest version of Knoppix.
Re:Am I ready to take the BSD plunge? (Score:1)
2.6 is a kernel version, 3.6 is the Knoppix version.
Re:Am I ready to take the BSD plunge? (Score:5, Informative)
If only it had the desktop apps I need, I'd use it as a desktop machine. As it is, I have it on my laptop so I can learn to do more through the CLI (email, IRC, learning vi, maybe get into C programming).
And this is coming from someone who uses FreeBSD as his main workstation OS.
-Jem
Re:Am I ready to take the BSD plunge? (Score:3, Interesting)
The instant workstation meta-port may take some of the pain (fun
http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/
Re:Am I ready to take the BSD plunge? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Am I ready to take the BSD plunge? (Score:5, Informative)
See the Hardware Notes [freebsd.org] page. This page is for 5.2.1 because 5.3 is still in beta, but you can get the latest page off of CVS or on the beta ISO.
While this page isn't thorough, it should meet most people's needs. Thoroughness would require a vastly larger document. For example, not every USB flash drive is listed, but 9999 out of the 10,000 available will work with FreeBSD out of the box.
If you have hardware that is not mentioned, then ask about it on a support forum.
Re:Am I ready to take the BSD plunge? (Score:5, Informative)
Once you get your GUI running you won't notice any difference.
In terms of administration and setup I'd compare FreeBSD with Slackware Linux. You will need to do some config file editing to get stuff done, but FreeBSD has a very well documented and easy-to-understand configuration system (you can basically set all the important system preferences in the /etc/rc.conf file).
Give it a shot, you just might like it.
Re:Am I ready to take the BSD plunge? (Score:2, Informative)
I actually have a pal sitting in the lab next to me, doing Ports compiles and configuring since days because he wants to "truely evaluate" the system (he has a P4 with good horse power and HT).
Accepted: The base system is a perfect match for the kernel, lean a
Re:Am I ready to take the BSD plunge? (Score:5, Informative)
If you don't want to compile ports, then use prebuilt packages! Why is this so hard of a concept to understand?
Re:Am I ready to take the BSD plunge? (Score:1)
Besides, there are broken ports...
Re:Am I ready to take the BSD plunge? (Score:2)
Re:Am I ready to take the BSD plunge? (Score:1)
Re:Am I ready to take the BSD plunge? (Score:2)
Re:Am I ready to take the BSD plunge? (Score:1)
Re:Am I ready to take the BSD plunge? (Score:1)
or whatever you want your directory to be. The default is the directory of your release... which would be why it didn't seem to updated until the next release...
Re:Am I ready to take the BSD plunge? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Am I ready to take the BSD plunge? (Score:1, Informative)
What makes you think that? In single threaded performance, Linux 2.6 is faster than Linux 2.4, which is faster than FreeBSD 4, which is faster than FreeBSD 5.
In SMP scalability, the last test I saw between FreeBSD 5 and Linux 2.6 had FreeBSD unable to scale MySQL to 2 Opteron CPUs (which is an inherently very scalable architecture). Linux scaled linearly.
So, can you share your facts?
Re:Am I ready to take the BSD plunge? (Score:2)
But it's not your time, it's your computer's time. So in reality it is a small investment of electricity. Unless you have a fast connection you are only trading download time for compile time.
You could, of course, download precompiled packages. The only difference really is that FBSD documents build from source as the default.
Command line is fine, but X would be nice.
X come
Re:Am I ready to take the BSD plunge? (Score:3, Insightful)
This is rather theological from the POV of a normal user. X is shipped with the system, is installed as part of the normal instalation (if you like), is declared in /etc/mtree/, it's in /usr, not /usr/local and so on.
That it isn't part of the base system is interesting for developers, but from the POV of a user you'd be hard pushed to notice any difference in status between X and, say, OpenSSH.
Re:Am I ready to take the BSD plunge? (Score:1)
Re:Am I ready to take the BSD plunge? (Score:1)
It's a troll because it's true?
It's a troll because it's a non sequitur.
K.C.
Re:Am I ready to take the BSD plunge? (Score:5, Informative)
s.
Re:Am I ready to take the BSD plunge? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Am I ready to take the BSD plunge? (Score:5, Informative)
The FreeBSD install is easy provided that you follow the documentation. If you don't have a second computer on which to view the installation guide, print it out.
Re:Am I ready to take the BSD plunge? (Score:3, Funny)
4.x series (Score:5, Informative)
Stick with the 4.x ( stable, released ) series for the moment, if you are going to try it TODAY.. so you dont get left with a bad impression by starting out with a TESTING version.....
Re:4.x series (Score:1)
Re:Am I ready to take the BSD plunge? (Score:2)
A couple of years ago I bought a cheap "MicroTel" machine from WalMart to use as a crash-test dummy. When I was done I gave it to my sister who is still using it with some variant of Winders. WalMart.com has a 1.6 GHz Duron machine with WinXP for $298, if you're looking for cheap. That's only about $120 more than the full-up fee for WinXP, in case you want that. *shudder*
Re:Release engineering? (Score:1)
IHBT, IWHAND
OT: Vmware X.org (Score:2)
Ive tried the last 2 betas, and if you try to do a 'detect/configure' it hoses the virtual system...
It may work on real hardweare, but im not ready to blow away a real box, just for testing..
Re:OT: Vmware X.org (Score:2)
Still blows me testing on anything other then real hardware thou.. i dont think bochs is up to the task due to speed.
/. is great for plungers (Score:4, Interesting)
Thanks for all the information for a newbie taking the BSD plunge. This is
BTW, entirely by accident, I found an HP site where you can try out BSD [compaq.com]. They are running FreeBSD 5.2.1. You sign up for an account and get to play on their machine. HP puts up the service as a way to show off its high performance systems [alpha's, 64-bit itaniums and other cool tools headed for obsolescence:( ]. I wonder if HP's choice of BSD as one of the OS's for testdriving their hottest boxes implys that they think BSD is less likely to get in the way of demanding computations than some other OS's we shant name.
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One /. article for every beta? (Score:3, Insightful)
If you need to follow what's going on in the CVS tree, there are mailing-lists for that.
Re:One /. article for every beta? (Score:3, Informative)
I think it's really good that FreeBSD is getting this amount of attention - the plunge from FreeBSD 4 to 5 is *huge*, and hence needs lots of testing to ensure we don't have a repeat of the 3->4 saga (if you weren't around back then, there were numerous issues in the early FBSD4.x releases, and the jump from 3 to 4 wasn't as big as it is from 4 to 5).
If you dislike seeing the BSD posts, don't worry, BETA6 is the last scheduled beta (though there will be RC1 shortly).
Also somebody menti
Re:One /. article for every beta? (Score:3, Informative)
Check the schedule again.
Re:One /. article for every beta? (Score:2)
There goes my nicely planned week-off-work-to-upgrade-everything-to-5.3-REL
Re:One /. article for every beta? (Score:1)
Re:One /. article for every beta? (Score:1)
Re:One /. article for every beta? (Score:3, Funny)
Yes, and we're going to do at least 27 more just to irritate you.
BSD is rice!! (Score:3, Funny)
(p.s.: me 3 FreeBSD and Debian)