On Tue, May 03, 2005 at 06:34:23AM -1000, Randy Bush wrote: > > One of the reasons I ditched Linux several years ago was the way Linux > > shifts constantly. A good example is the firewalling code: once upon a > > time there was ipfw. Then that was replaced by ipfwadm. Then that was > > discarded, and replaced by ipchains. Which in turn was discarded and > > replaced by iptables. (Or was that the other way round? I don't follow it > > closely these days) > > yep. another way: this sounds as if you see freebsd as a workhorse > production system as opposed to a hobby where the more of your time > it absorbs the better it is. Yes, that's a fair summary. However, historically there was a big up-front investment in FreeBSD until you get to that point. I think this is much less so nowadays. In particular, the handbook is excellent, and a lot of essential utilities which you had to install as add-ons are now included as standard (e.g. gzip, tar with -z flag) Now the only essential package to install is a POSIX shell with interactive command history - i.e. "bash" - and it looks like /bin/sh has now gained that capability too, although sadly not tab-completion. It's still fair to say that the tools for [install, upgrade, configure] have a number of problems, especially for those new to FreeBSD. Regards, Brian.Received on Wed May 04 2005 - 07:38:21 UTC
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