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Date:      Fri, 16 Jan 2015 06:05:07 +0000
From:      Jamie Landeg-Jones <jamie@dyslexicfish.net>
To:        lev@freebsd.org, decke@bluelife.at
Cc:        emulation@freebsd.org, freebsd-current@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: DigitalOcean offers VMs with FreeBSD!
Message-ID:  <201501160605.t0G6581D014006@dyslexicfish.net>
In-Reply-To: <CAE-m3X3Gy=dzT7nHfDnZ53oOKQda3NAihXd7OZdFT3x%2Bo%2Bmnrg@mail.gmail.com>
References:  <54B7A494.50205@FreeBSD.org> <CAE-m3X3Gy=dzT7nHfDnZ53oOKQda3NAihXd7OZdFT3x%2Bo%2Bmnrg@mail.gmail.com>

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Bernhard Fröhlich <decke@bluelife.at> wrote:

> I had a quick look at it and the result is
> quite poor considering the time it took them to get it done.
>
> They had to install quite a few packages (perl, python27, libX11, avahi
> ...) and modified the stock FreeBSD image quite a bit. At startup they send
> an arping otherwise you do not even have network access in their network.
> This looks all a bit hackish and error prone. I am really wondering how
> long it will take that a regular update breaks their scripts and let's you
> back with a non accessible box.

I use http://www.vultr.com/ for FreeBSD - their packages are similarly or
better priced than DO.

With Vultr, you can run their automated install, (which in itself just
automates a typical FreeBSD install - there are no OS hacks) or just
install off an ISO etc.

I don't know what's unusual with the DO virtualisation, but vultr just
works like a normal server (though they do restrict to virtio devices
where applicable rather than emulated harware)

You can even install a windows ISO (as long as you've sideloaded virtio
drivers onto the install disk), or with FreeBSD, "it just works"

Cheers, Jamie



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