Date: Fri, 15 May 2015 08:32:30 -0500 From: Brandon Wandersee <brandon.wandersee@zoho.com> To: freebsd-stable@freebsd.org Subject: Re: poudriere jail as root on nfs? Message-ID: <20150515133230.GA1190@WorkBox.Home> In-Reply-To: <20150515084232.0d94f17f@efreet> References: <20150514152111.6d900adb@efreet> <20150514143629.GA17136@WorkBox.Home> <20150515084232.0d94f17f@efreet>
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On 05/15, Marko Cupać wrote: > On Thu, 14 May 2015 09:36:29 -0500 > Brandon Wandersee <brandon.wandersee@zoho.com> wrote: > > I believe the answer may be "Yes," but why? > > Because creating a jail with poudriere takes a minute, while creating > it in a traditional (buildworld/buildkernel) way takes an hour. Correct, because poudriere's "ftp" method creates the jail using the pre-built world and kernel packaged with the FreeBSD-RELEASE distribution. If you were to use the "svn" method the jail would be compiled from source and take longer to create, while using the "src" method would pull the compiled world and kernel from `/usr/obj` if it exists (and thus take less time than even the "ftp" method). I'm fairly certain poudriere itself doesn't perform any magic here---if what you want are jails that don't need to be compiled from source then using poudriere would probably be doing it the hard way, as the latter would add another layer of complexity to jail creation and management. Just download the FreeBSD 10.1 distribution tarballs (or grab them from the installation image) and knock yourself out. ;) -- ============================================================================= :: Brandon Wandersee :: brandon.wandersee@zoho.com :: ============================================================================= "A common mistake that people make when trying to design something completely foolproof is to underestimate the ingenuity of complete fools." - Douglas Adams =============================================================================
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