From owner-freebsd-questions Thu Nov 25 6:51:38 1999 Delivered-To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Received: from mail.bezeqint.net (mail-a.bezeqint.net [192.115.106.23]) by hub.freebsd.org (Postfix) with ESMTP id ECE971504C for ; Thu, 25 Nov 1999 06:51:25 -0800 (PST) (envelope-from sarig@bezeqint.net) Received: from asmodean ([212.179.12.71]) by mail.bezeqint.net (Sun Internet Mail Server sims.3.5.1999.07.30.00.05.p8) with SMTP id <0FLR00LQED8GJM@mail.bezeqint.net> for freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG; Thu, 25 Nov 1999 16:50:41 +0200 (IST) Date: Thu, 25 Nov 1999 16:50:12 +0200 From: Oren Sarig Subject: Re: Comparison with other POSIX operating systems To: PauloZenari , freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG Message-id: <009d01bf3754$60fae860$470cb3d4@asmodean> MIME-version: 1.0 X-Mailer: Microsoft Outlook Express 5.00.2314.1300 Content-type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit X-MSMail-Priority: Normal X-MimeOLE: Produced By Microsoft MimeOLE V5.00.2314.1300 References: <383B3D6C.95B3B63C@provide.psi.br> X-Priority: 3 Sender: owner-freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG Precedence: bulk X-Loop: FreeBSD.ORG > Hi! :) Hello :) > I've heard lot's of good things about FreeBSD from a newbie, a colleguae > > from UERJ, my university. He said that FreeBSD is made to control server > > machines. He also said that it's much, much, MUCH, MUCH better than > the other POSIX systems, such as Linux. When he said me that thing, > I became really scarred...!! "Wow!!! Linux is very good... and this guy > is > saying to me that FreeBSD is much better... it should be perfect!" Nothing's perfect, but fbsd comes near ;) > Well, I'm an addicted Linux user, but I became really interested in > FreeBSD. > I want to know the main diferences between both systems. Is there > anything > that I can't do with Linux that I can do with FreeBSD? Probably not, but fbsd would probably do it better :) >Wich one is > "older" > or "more mature"? FreeBSD. Buy a large margin. >And what about software to run under FreeBSD? We currently have 2200+ programs and libraries that are ready to run on fbsd. There are more, though these are the ones fbsd has official packages for, made by the fbsd project. >I've > heard > that FreeBSD can run Linux programs without recompiling... To a degree, yes. >If I have an > already > set up Linux box, can I simply change the kernel and stay with my old > programs? No. For a few reasons: 1) First and foremost, freebsd is NOT a kernel like linux, it is a complete system. There are no distros for fbsd but the official one. This is on of fbsd's strong points: just like only good code makes it into the linux kernel, only good code makes it into the fbsd distro. You can also be sure there would be no compatability probs ;) 2) Fbsd works best with UFS, linux uses EXT2. Maybe fbsd can work with the root filesystem as ext2 (it can do suprising things sometimes, that's why I say "maybe", but I don't think so). 3) It's recommended you use programs compiled for fbsd, you get the best results this way, even if the progs were originally intended for linux. Besides, you'd probably want to use the fbsd utils rather than GNU utils if you are running fbsd. 4) Most things don't work exactly the same way in fbsd and linux... that is, configuration won't work the same way, startup scripts aren't the same, and even elementary things like getty I don't think are the same. Well, I guess that with alot of hacking you might be able to get your linux box to run fbsd without losing your progs, though I don't think this is recommended. > Is FreeBSD better than Linux when working as an Internet server, or as > an > ordinary SAMBA or NFS/PC-NFS server on a local network? I guess in most cases the answer would be yes. > And what > about hardware support? Witch one supports *now* most of the latest > hardware? Linux supports more hardware. > hehehe... sorry about the rain of questions... > and sorry about my poor english! :) No prob :) -- Oren Sarig sarig@bezeqint.net To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-questions" in the body of the message