FreeBSDCon Quickies 72
There've been a bunch of FreeBSD Con submissions since the Conference started. kken notes that sendmail.net have an early report from the conference. Upside also talk about the conference, concentrating on FreeBSD's position re: Linux (thanks to wozz for that). On the pictures front, we have pics from Bill Fumerola and Gianmarco Giovannelli (here's a much faster mirror for those). Enjoy.
You traitor! (Score:1)
Don't you know all us Linux users are supposed to be irrational zealots who think we're the only "one true way", situations be damned.
Come on. Get with the program.
(Yes, that was sarcastic)
Re:Bleah (Score:1)
Re:FreeBSDCon (Score:1)
Re:Why so anti-Linux? (Score:1)
Every article on Unix gets Linux thrown in. Nowadays, even articles on Win2k have the obligatory Linux mention about halfway through. So BSD isn't being picked on here. It would be nice to see more BSD mentions in Linux articles however.
... (Score:1)
Daemon v. Penguin :: Showdown on 10110100 IO Lane, film at 11!
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Re:Advocating *nix in schools. (Score:1)
It's always been my opinion that a course called "Computer Science" should be something which is 'spread around,' rather than just focusing on one operating system. Admittedly, it's only a sophomore course, so I shouldn't expect anything remotely amazing, but the text book seems to focus around step-by-step instructions, rather than explaining why you're selecting so-and-so to do such-and-such.
This seems to be the case with quite a few highschools, that I've heard about.
Ohwell, it is as it is, and I really shouldn't be expecting *n*x in a HS compsci course.
... even if that would be really neat.
BSDs vs Penquins (Score:1)
Does anyone have a link to this article or know to whom I can attribute the quote ?
Re:"Re:1st" is a loser (Score:1)
The "first post" crap would go away if everyone would just ignore it all around. Hell, I rarely see them since they get moderated down to -1 quite fast. The only reason they seem to hang around is that people then bitch about people posting "first post" BS, and there's simply not enough moderator points to moderate these down further. Let them slide, and place your trust in the moderator system. Don't respond, ignore. Use the points, Luke...
This is the last post I hope to ever see regarding first post lusers.. please let it be the last...
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LOL (Score:1)
What is a device driver:
-Interface layer between kernel and hardware
-Abstracts device implementation from kernels idealised view of a class of device
-Assists developer with hair loss
Re:Microsoft, Unix... (Score:1)
Right, when I was at linkexchange we TRIED to get
them to be a sponsor, but the marketing morons
decided it would be a bad idea to push the competitors product.
Needless to say I'm no longer there and I hear they are having a horid time trying to impliment everything on NT.
Re:FreeBSDCon (Score:1)
Always so quick to point the finger at anyone who says anything bad about Linux, but never to give credit to anyone who says anything good about it.
What do you believe more, Jordan's words in his keynote re: Linux, or a comment made in jest during the beer bash (or wherever?)
You got out of the experience what you wanted to. There seemed to be Linux bashing all over the place to you, because that's what you wanted to see. Don't be so sensitive.
More real work was done on FreeBSD last week than could have been accomplished in several months via mailing lists and e-mail. Core members and committers sharing ideas and being able to convey meaning with perfect clarity. Several commits were made from the terminal room itself, and I wouldn't be surprised to see a rush of new ones in the weeks to follow. FreeBSD scapegoating and blaming indeed! Pffft.
Linux user, FreeBSD advocate & FreeBSDCon Attendee.
Re:One thing about Red Hat et. al. (Score:1)
Re:One thing about Red Hat et. al. (Score:1)
You might be thinking of CVS, for which your comment is accurate.
Re:OpenBSD v FreeBSD (back to the original questio (Score:1)
And yes, it also has Linux Binary compatibility.
I swear, your average Linux user has absolutely *no* respect for their Unix Heritage.
Re:Pioneers and Settlers (Score:1)
It was much larger than they supposed it would be. Didn't you hear Jordan say there were more people than they thought? When we were waiting in line for the dinner cruise, he walked down the line and I heard him say "I didn't even think there were this many people AT the Con."
Sure, it would have been nice to see more exhibitors, but that wasn't my reason for being there.
A little reasoning would explain why it was small compared to a modern Linux con.
FreeBSD is older than Linux, but it's younger in many other ways. This was a learning experience. Next year's will be bigger, and the next, and maybe when the BSD's are accepted more by the media as a part of the Open Source community, there *will* be a BSD Con.
I *seriously* doubt that any exhibitors were excluded. If NetBSD and OpenBSD weren't present, it's because they probably didn't ask.
So, Per Bergman's comments, and your agreement, aren't quite as on target as you think.
Moron Moderator doesn't understand apache logs (Score:1)
Re:OpenBSD v FreeBSD (back to the original questio (Score:1)
Re:OpenBSD v FreeBSD (back to the original questio (Score:1)
Why so anti-Linux? (Score:1)
Yeah. No one runs Linux sites....
Seriously, though, I found this whole article rather disturbing. It's so Linux vs. BSD. We are all open source. We are all part of the community. Why is that so hard to grasp?
Yes, BSD is a much clique-ier world. Yes, Linux has more trigger-happy flame-kiddies. But, that's not what either effort is about. Let's just choose the right tools for the job, and at some point we'll all have a beer together....
Re:Advocating *nix in schools. (Score:1)
That is my rant:)
Binary Upgrades (Score:1)
Actually... (Score:1)
Re:First Posts and Double Stories (Score:1)
FreeBSD is pretty secure out of the box. Perhaps not as encrypted as OpenBSD, but it's secure.
Re:Why so anti-Linux? (Score:1)
To sum up, I don't think this statement is anti-linux so much as an attempt to distinguish FreeBSD from Linux while still associating the two. As well as an attempt to sell (not the right word, but it's early) FreeBSD without launching into a technical rant and losing the people you are trying to sell to. NT sells very well mostly because people are familiar with the Microsoft name, not based on technical merits. FreeBSD is just trying to use this strategy and piggyback on Microsoft, Yahoo and yes, even Linux. Is this bad, I don't think so.
#undef RANT
DWMR
Re:Advocating *nix in schools. (Score:1)
:-)
Re:One thing about Red Hat et. al. (Score:1)
My idea was to provide an alternative to cvsup for RELEASE users who do not know or care to grapple with
Current users have to be kind of proactive on updating their system though, so an update portal may be a good idea. I was implying that such a system would take a lot of time to implement -- not that it was relatively complicated.
As far as upgrading the entire system as per daily builds as mentioned below; all I can say is yuck
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Re:One thing about Red Hat et. al. (Score:1)
If someone could get something running like the USWest hosted current.freebsd.org with daily -CURRENT and -STABLE builds -- but instead have up to date binary updates for the latest release with specified high, medium, low security/stability/features/upgradeability settings that the user could interact with; it would be very nice. Too bad I'm up to my ears in about 6 months worth of work -- otherwise I'd try and write some preliminary proposed specifications
Don't get me wrong here though; I love cvsup. I use it daily to upgrade certain parts of the system and to make sure they agree with the 50+ personal patches I have on my systems (which then eventually gets distributed to the src on all the other servers). It's just that I could use binary upgradeability for certain things that I don't get my hands wet with (as well as the preferred setup for most end-users)
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Yummy (Score:1)
FreeBSDCon Cookies
Not that I'm complaining.
Re:Advocating *nix in schools. (Score:1)
Re:One thing about Red Hat et. al. (Score:1)
The upside to the loss of fine-grained control is a better guarantee that the system will work together as one piece, and you don't have to play the dependency game getting it all interoperable.
Re:One thing about Red Hat et. al. (Score:1)
Dependency checking isn't an issue when you upgrade the system this way, because it comes as one cohesive unit, not n+1 parts which you have to do separately. For some this is a plus, others like the fine-grained control.
Re:One thing about Red Hat et. al. (Score:1)
Or you can do binary upgrades. It's true that it's not as easy to just do a binary update of, say, libc, but on the other hand you rarely need to.
Re:Pioneers and Settlers (Score:1)
Re:Bleah (Score:1)
I'm pretty sure it was SVR4 which merged in a lot of the BSDisms.
Gah.. (Score:1)
The entire analogy is stupid. Software has absolutely nothing to do with people settling land. Same thing with hardware, like game consoles. First there was Nintendo and Sega. Then Sega came out with the Genesis. They had the lead. Then the Super Nintendo came out and threw down the gauntlet. They won the market. Later, the PlayStation came out, and wiped the floor with everyone. After that, several other high-end game systems came out, like Nintendo64. Guess who's still cleaning up? Yup, the PSX. So how come PSX doesn't have a lot of pointy arrows in its ass? Isn't the N64 a better technology anyway? Isn't the PSX only 32 bit? Yeah, sure, great analogy.
Similarly, GNU was started a long time before NetBSD ever came out. And then NetBSD did come out, and it didn't really have a lot of competition from any other free OSes (they had a nice legal suit to deal with, but that was cleared up fairly easily). At around the same time Linux first began development. Then Linux became fused with GNU to form GNU/Linux. By this time, NetBSD was already a stable, functional technology (and had been since its inception, at which point GNU was still vaporware), having descended directly from the original Unix. GNU/Linux, however, was just born from scratch (more or less) and was still in its infancy. I'd imagine GNU/Linux attained a large driving force behind it because of two things: 1) the licensing and 2) the development model. So, who's the pioneer? Who's the settler? Why can't something be, well, both?
The problem with analogies is that they are usually short-sighted and narrow, and likely to make one look rather stupid unless chosen carefully. I sort of doubt *BSD is suddenly going to dethrone GNU/Linux. While I'm all for the various BSD teams marking their mark upon the world, I tend to look down on hubris such as McKusick's. Licensing issues are a key reason why J. Random Hacker will or will not work on a given project. While many hackers disagree with RMS, not nearly as many disagree with his preference of licensing. If that was not the case, well, then *BSD would be where GNU/Linux is right now, don't you think..?
In short, McKusick can have whatever pipe dream he wants, but I, for one, thinks he makes some pretty damn odd extrapolations.
Re:One thing about Red Hat et. al. (Score:1)
rpm -U *libc* *kernel* is fast even there.
Re:One thing about Red Hat et. al. (Score:1)
Actually I have an RPMified FreeBSD testbox. (not finished though - but I do have libc RPMs and such).
Re:One thing about Red Hat et. al. (Score:1)
I disagree about the dependency checking part though - stuff that is not part of the operating system (compiled by hand, "installed" by copying files from a different computer, or stuff from the ports collection in FreeBSD) can depend on a specific version of a library or such. make world isn't designed to address this sort of thing.
Re:Advocating *nix in schools. (Score:1)
Microsoft, Unix... (Score:2)
Second, that pioneer/settler quote also works well for Microsoft. Chilling, really. The people who don't innovate win? I hope it doesn't work that way. Of course there's a big advantage to maintaining a stable system, but that shouldn't mean that you can't invent anything. BSD used to be the 'development arm' of Unix. It looks like Linux has pretty much taken over this role.
Oh, and to all those people talking about "Unix heritage": Unix is a standard nowadays. Whoever can implement it best, wins. (and those who don't are doomed to reinvent it) Any code that matters in FreeBSD has been rewritten from scratch (to be free), therefore it's as much Unix as any good Unix clone is. (and less so wherever it isn't compliant to one of the three+ major standards.
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pb Reply rather than vaguely moderate me.
Pioneers and Settlers (Score:2)
Why I have the deepest respect for Mr. McKusick (he's a smart guy), I think he might have misinterpreted his own analogy:
BSD and the FSF pioneered Unix and open source respectively.
Linux came and settled, by the millions.
Re:Advocating *nix in schools. (Score:2)
Double Post Explanation (Score:2)
First Posts and Double Stories (Score:2)
Anyway, this is also sort of offtopic, but I've been playing around with OpenBSD and I was wondering if any of the FreeBSD gurus out there could point out some advantages I might have in switching over. I'm not really concerned about security, so that's not a staying point. Any advice would be appreciated, because I just keep hearing people say how much better FreeBSD is, but I'm not getting any hard arguments for it.
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"You can't shake the Devil's hand and say you're only kidding."
Re:Bleah (Score:2)
More anti-Linux dribble and crap from the FreeBSD zealots. Why dont you people stop with the jealousy, get off your knees and do something productive instead of the constant jabs at Linux ("bastard OS").
"anti-Linux dribbe," "crap from...," "constant jabs at Linux." Those lead me to believe that that AC things the FreeBSD, or more correctly the BSD community is attacking Linux. The article was refering to the black-and-white structure of the UNIX famility tree.
And of course, your right on the branches. I'm not to keen on the idea of calling Linux a "bastard OS," nor would I call it a new branch. Both titles could be accurate, but I'd refrain from using them. Quick question, was it System V or System VII that incorperated BSD features? I remember something about AT&T UNIX incorperating a good deal from BSD Unix...
Re:Gah.. (Score:2)
And of course, Linus only created Linux because he didn't know a free variant of BSD was in the works, and wouldn't have bothered with Linux if he had known. He's said that, well known. BSD had a lot more to offer in te beginning, but the lawsuit did a lot of damage. Believe it, or not. (cuz either way, its true)
Re:BSDs vs Penquins (Score:2)
Re:Bleah (Score:2)
somehow i got this crazy idea that system VII existed.. but then I knew it didn't.. but... just had to ask to be sure I hadn't day dreamed and gone a bit nuts... guess I went a bit nuts.
lets see.. BSD was capped at 4.x to not conflict with AT&T.. and such... so whew. I should re-read some unix history and keep sane.
One thing about Red Hat et. al. (Score:2)
Getting back to the package management issue, I believe it's much safer updating the entire system -- kernel, C library and base utils -- but that works best in integrated, full operating systems.
Re:First Posts and Double Stories (Score:2)
I too haven't tried OpenBSD, tho I intend to. FreeBSD is great, I really like a lot of things which may or may not be in OpenBSD. I'd imagine the larger user base brings greater driver support, better SCSI system, more ports, and overall user-friendliness (I may be wrong on any of these). FreeBSD makes a great workstation or server whereas I doubt you need the extreme OpenBSD security on your workstation.
Re:First Posts and Double Stories (Score:2)
overhead....not as encumbered. Definitely give it a try if you don't feel the absolute need for strong crypto and that secure out-of-the-box feeling, although you'll find much of this in the FreeBSD camp also.
Enjoy
Even newer report on sendmail.net (Score:2)
Thanks for the link. We've posted a second update [sendmail.net] from the conference's second day this afternoon on sendmail.net.
Advocating *nix in schools. (Score:3)
First off, I'm a Linux guy myself, but I'm very happy to see any *nix group pulling together to try to attract new blood. As much as the Linux and the BSD crowd squable over things, either side gaining new ground is a Good Thing(tm). It is a win for *nix in general, especially on the school front.
The college I attent, like many others, started almost totaly *nix, but has been making more and more of a push into total windows*. I think you aren't even required to use unix until the end of your sophomore year/ beginning of your junior year.
While our LUG has been making more and more converts, the CS dept is requiring new CS majors to buy a laptop, which must run WinNT. (Blah. No choice at all. I'm glad I got there long before that rule.) It gets harder and harder to convince all but the most jaded to run a *nix platform when the CS dept requires that they run WinNT as well.
So to the BSD crowd: I hope you make it around to my school. I would personaly be proud to have you all there.
This kind of competition and recognition can only benefit all.
Re:Bleah (Score:3)
Re:Why so anti-Linux? (Score:4)
I agree, though, its pretty bad few people recognize Linux and BSD as all open source. That's not a BSD side problem, its both. With the larger userbase for Linux, there's an idea that seems to float around that open source = GPL = 'free' software.. and the rest are just annoyances that 'ride' along with Linux. It should be a joint thrust, Linux people should advocate Linux, but not condem but even advocate BSD. Same with BSD people. All it takes is education, and the will to admit we're friends with simiar ideology. Friends can always disagree on a few points.. but still friends.