[GTALUG] curious... Linux vs BSD ?

Christopher Browne cbbrowne at gmail.com
Thu Sep 29 16:14:07 EDT 2016


On 29 September 2016 at 11:00, Myles Braithwaite via talk
<talk at gtalug.org> wrote:
> William Park via talk wrote:
>> To those who knows/uses both BSD and Linux...  Should I learn BSD, and
>> which one?
>
> If you read to HackNews we are currently in the systemd apocalypse and
> Linux's user base is shrinking every day and good ethical people are
> moving to BSD to the warm embrace of init.

There is something to be worried about there...

Though the answer seems unlikely to keep heads in the sand, as the reasons
that systemd emerged include some pretty valid ones....

> Without sarcasm, learning another system is always a good idea because
> it gives you more insight on how others work. As an example I would have
> never been able to understand how Google's open source Python code
> worked without some knowledge of Java.

There's a Debian port to FreeBSD
<https://www.debian.org/ports/kfreebsd-gnu/>, so you could have a
mostly-GNU userspace that presumably lacks systemd.

I'm occasionally attracted to take a peek at Dragonfly BSD, as it has
been trying to do some substantial reimplementations of some of the
internals with particular view to improving performance and supporting
clustering.  The HAMMER filesystem is one of the interesting bits;
some data deduplication capabilities, and a BSD flavour on the
"advanced" stuff like snapshotting, journalling, et al.

Mind you, the idea hasn't been interesting enough to lead to my having
any systems running such.  I considered throwing Debian/kfreebsd onto
my media box, but the curious inability to get it to boot off CDROM
wound up curbing experimentation.  (I wound up using PXE to pull a
recent Debian image off another machine; "thanks Scott for your PXE
talks!!!")
-- 
When confronted by a difficult problem, solve it by reducing it to the
question, "How would the Lone Ranger handle this?"


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