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edit by Matthias

FreeBSD

February 2, 2007
“icon only”
New Icon New Image Previous Icon Old Image
Undo this change because:
editing undone by alex

Method of Maintaining Currency?

October 2, 2006

Fuck all :D

[marc]

» complete change

Anybody have any good strategies on how to keep a system up to date? I've been currently just using as little of the base system as possible and then upgrading components (ssh, etc) as they are updated by outside people.

This lets me run muuuuuch older versions of the operating system, but I wonder if there are any serious problems with this? I don't really want to have to run cvsup and rebuild the entire OS on a regular basis.

What do you do here?

Fuck all :D

[marc]

Undo this change because:
editing undone by alex

Method of Maintaining Currency?

October 2, 2006

i am Mother fucker ahahahahahah

[marc]

» complete change

Anybody have any good strategies on how to keep a system up to date? I've been currently just using as little of the base system as possible and then upgrading components (ssh, etc) as they are updated by outside people.

This lets me run muuuuuch older versions of the operating system, but I wonder if there are any serious problems with this? I don't really want to have to run cvsup and rebuild the entire OS on a regular basis.

What do you do here?

Fuck all :D

i am Mother fucker ahahahahahah

[marc]

Method of Maintaining Currency?

October 2, 2006

i am Mother fucker ahahahahahah

[marc]

» complete change

Anybody have any good strategies on how to keep a system up to date? I've been currently just using as little of the base system as possible and then upgrading components (ssh, etc) as they are updated by outside people.

This lets me run muuuuuch older versions of the operating system, but I wonder if there are any serious problems with this? I don't really want to have to run cvsup and rebuild the entire OS on a regular basis.

What do you do here?

Fuck all :D

i am Mother fucker ahahahahahah

[marc]

Method of Maintaining Currency?

October 2, 2006

Fuck all :D

[marc]

» complete change

Anybody have any good strategies on how to keep a system up to date? I've been currently just using as little of the base system as possible and then upgrading components (ssh, etc) as they are updated by outside people.

This lets me run muuuuuch older versions of the operating system, but I wonder if there are any serious problems with this? I don't really want to have to run cvsup and rebuild the entire OS on a regular basis.

What do you do here?

Fuck all :D

[marc]

edit by alex

FreeBSD

June 26, 2006

FreeBSD is one of if not the most popular BSD, of the BSDs, and serves as the basis for [[Apple]]'s Apple's [[OSX|Mac OS X]] operating...

» complete change

FreeBSD is a [[BSD]] [[os|operating system]] - the project includes a kernel, drivers, and utilities such as a shell.

FreeBSD is one of if not the most popular BSD, of the BSDs, and serves as the basis for [[Apple]]'s Apple's [[OSX|Mac OS X]] operating system. FreeBSD is also quite commonly used on web servers, as it is known for reliability.

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edit by alex

FreeBSD

May 15, 2006
New Icon New Image Previous Icon No Icon.
edit by alex

FreeBSD

May 9, 2006
OS BSD Operating System
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edit by alex

FreeBSD

May 9, 2006

FreeBSD is a [[BSD]] [[os|operating system]] - the project includes a kernel, drivers, and utilities such as a shell.

FreeBSD...

» complete change

FreeBSD is a [[BSD]] [[os|operating system]] - the project includes a kernel, drivers, and utilities such as a shell.

FreeBSD is one of the most popular of the BSDs, free and serves as the basis for Apple's [[OSX|Mac OS X]] fully open source (BSD-License) operating system. FreeBSD is also quite commonly used on web servers, as it is known for reliability.

edit by alex

FreeBSD

April 22, 2006
[[BSD]] BSD License (original)
Undo this change because:
deleted by alex

asda

January 16, 2006
The page and its contents were erased.
FreeBSD

sdasdasd

Undo this change because:
created by 137.205.113.174

asda

January 16, 2006
The page was created.
FreeBSD
asda
Article

sdasdasd

edit by alex

About

October 19, 2005
Article Links

FreeBSD is a free (license), Unix-like operating system. Back in 1993 when development of 386BSD stopped, two projects were...

» complete change

<a href="http://dev.gentoo.org/~citizen428/doc/gentoo-freebsd.html">

What is FreeBSD?</a> (gentoo.org)

FreeBSD is a free (license), Unix-like operating system. Back in 1993 when development of 386BSD stopped, two projects were born: NetBSD, commonly known to run on a huge number of architetures and FreeBSD which focuses mainly on the x86 platform. FreeBSD is renowned for its stability, performance and security, thus being used from small to huge companies all over the world. FreeBSD's current production release version is 5.3, which is also used as the foundation for the Gentoo/FreeBSD project.

<strong>FreeBSD and Linux</strong>

Users migrating from Linux to FreeBSD commonly consider the two operating systems "almost the same". In fact, FreeBSD really shares a lot of similarities with Linux distributions in general. Nevertheless, it has some key differences that are worth noting:

<ul>

<li> Contrary to Linux, which actually only refers to the kernel, FreeBSD is a complete operating system, consisting of a C library, userland tools and much more. This development approach makes the overall system very consistent.</li>

<li> Contrary to the Linux kernel, FreeBSD development is not led by one person, but instead managed by a small group of people called "Core Team".

</li>

</ul>

Besides that, FreeBSD also has some technical differences which set it apart from Linux. Some of them are very important to know, even if you don't plan on developing for Gentoo/FreeBSD:

<ul>

<li> Dynamically linked executables are not linked against libdl, like in Linux + glibc systems. Instead they are linked against libc.</li>

<li> FreeBSD doesn't have an official tool for kernel compilation, thus you'll have to resolve feature dependecies on your own.</li>

<li> FreeBSD uses UFS/UFS-2 as its filesystems and has no support for e.g. ReiserFS.</li>

</ul>

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Active Projects

September 26, 2005

There are a number of interesting projects related to *FreeBSD* FreeBSD or making your FreeBSD installation(s) work better for you:

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edit by alex

Is FreeBSD A Superior Server Operating System?

September 23, 2005
FreeBSD Review FreeBSD4.1 FreeBSD4
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edit by alex

A stable, secure, Open Source operating system.

September 23, 2005
Descriptions
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edit by alex

A stable, secure, Open Source operating system.

September 23, 2005
Descriptions
Undo this change because:
edit by alex

Debian vs FreeBSD

September 23, 2005
freebsd debian webserver versus
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edit by 70.24.229.54

FreeBSD

September 22, 2005

FreeBSD is a free and fully open source (BSD-License) operating system. its fun try it.

edit by 70.24.229.54

FreeBSD

September 22, 2005
miker
Undo this change because:
edit by 70.24.229.54

FreeBSD

September 22, 2005

FreeBSD is a free and fully open source (BSD-License) operating system. its fun try it.

edit by 70.24.229.54

FreeBSD

September 22, 2005
miker
editing undone by 64.81.182.155

FreeBSD

July 26, 2005
OS BSD Operating System OS
Undo this change because:
editing undone by 64.81.182.155

FreeBSD

July 26, 2005
BSD License (original) BSD
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edit by 64.81.182.155

FreeBSD

July 26, 2005
OS BSD Operating System
edit by 64.81.182.155

FreeBSD

July 26, 2005
BSD License (original)
editing undone by alex

Wikipedia Description

July 9, 2005
“not sure how adding 'ok' adds to this entry”

Wikipedia has a pretty good run down of the operating system, its history, and other interesting facts about it. In particular,...

» complete change

Wikipedia has a pretty good run down of the operating system, its history, and other interesting facts about it. In particular, they're good at describing how it relates to other OS projects and listing the basic structure. structure.ok

There's also a neat picture of the BSD daemon (originally drawn by Marshall Kirk McKusick).

Undo this change because:
edit by 209.13.235.58

Wikipedia Description

July 9, 2005

Wikipedia has a pretty good run down of the operating system, its history, and other interesting facts about it. In particular,...

» complete change

Wikipedia has a pretty good run down of the operating system, its history, and other interesting facts about it. In particular, they're good at describing how it relates to other OS projects and listing the basic structure.ok structure.

There's also a neat picture of the BSD daemon (originally drawn by Marshall Kirk McKusick).

About

June 9, 2005

FreeBSD is a free (license), Unix-like operating system. Back in 1993 when development of 386BSD stopped, two projects were...

» complete change

<a href="http://dev.gentoo.org/~citizen428/doc/gentoo-freebsd.html">

What is FreeBSD?</a> (gentoo.org)

FreeBSD is a free (license), Unix-like operating system. Back in 1993 when development of 386BSD stopped, two projects were born: NetBSD, commonly known to run on a huge number of architetures and FreeBSD which focuses focusses mainly on the x86 platform. FreeBSD is renowned for its stability, performance and security, thus being used from small to huge companies all over the world. FreeBSD's current production release version is 5.3, which is also used as the foundation for the Gentoo/FreeBSD project.

<strong>FreeBSD and Linux</strong>

Users migrating from Linux to FreeBSD commonly consider the two operating systems "almost the same". In fact, FreeBSD really shares a lot of similarities with Linux distributions in general. Nevertheless, it has some key differences that are worth noting:

<ul>

<li> Contrary to Linux, which actually only refers to the kernel, FreeBSD is a complete operating system, consisting of a C library, userland tools and much more. This development approach makes the overall system very consistent.</li>

<li> Contrary to the Linux kernel, FreeBSD development is not led by one person, but instead managed by a small group of people called "Core Team".

</li>

</ul>

Besides that, FreeBSD also has some technical differences which set it apart from Linux. Some of them are very important to know, even if you don't plan on developing for Gentoo/FreeBSD:

<ul>

<li> Dynamically linked executables are not linked against libdl, like in Linux + glibc systems. Instead they are linked against libc.</li>

<li> FreeBSD doesn't have an official tool for kernel compilation, thus you'll have to resolve feature dependecies on your own.</li>

<li> FreeBSD uses UFS/UFS-2 as its filesystems and has no support for e.g. ReiserFS.</li>

</ul>

created by alex

FreeBSD Basics

June 6, 2005
The page was created.
FreeBSD Basics
Undo this change because:
edit by alex

FreeBSD Basics

June 6, 2005
http://www.oreillynet.com/feeds/columns_atom/?x-col=15&x-mimetype=application%2Fatom%2Bxml
FreeBSD Basics

Dru Lavigne provides practical advice for completing common tasks under FreeBSD.

created by alex

Debian vs FreeBSD

June 6, 2005
The entry was created.
Debian vs FreeBSD
Undo this change because:
edit by alex

Debian vs FreeBSD

June 6, 2005
http://lwn.net/Articles/123949/
Debian vs FreeBSD

Which is better, FreeBSD or Debian, as a web server?

edit by alex

About

June 5, 2005

Besides that, FreeBSD also has some technical differences which set it apart from Linux. Some of them are very important ...

» complete change

<a href="http://dev.gentoo.org/~citizen428/doc/gentoo-freebsd.html">

What is FreeBSD?</a> (gentoo.org)

FreeBSD is a free (license), Unix-like operating system. Back in 1993 when development of 386BSD stopped, two projects were born: NetBSD, commonly known to run on a huge number of architetures and FreeBSD which focusses mainly on the x86 platform. FreeBSD is renowned for its stability, performance and security, thus being used from small to huge companies all over the world. FreeBSD's current production release version is 5.3, which is also used as the foundation for the Gentoo/FreeBSD project.

<strong>FreeBSD and Linux</strong>

Users migrating from Linux to FreeBSD commonly consider the two operating systems "almost the same". In fact, FreeBSD really shares a lot of similarities with Linux distributions in general. Nevertheless, it has some key differences that are worth noting:

<ul>

<li> Contrary to Linux, which actually only refers to the kernel, FreeBSD is a complete operating system, consisting of a C library, userland tools and much more. This development approach makes the overall system very consistent.</li>

<li> Contrary to the Linux kernel, FreeBSD development is not led by one person, but instead managed by a small group of people called "Core Team".

</li>

</ul>

Besides that, FreeBSD also has some technical differences which set it apart from Linux. Some of them are very important to know, even if you don't plan on developing for Gentoo/FreeBSD: Gentoo/FreeBSD:</li>

<ul>

<li> Dynamically linked executables are not linked against libdl, like in Linux + glibc systems. Instead they are linked against libc.</li>

<li> FreeBSD doesn't have an official tool for kernel compilation, thus you'll have to resolve feature dependecies on your own.</li>

<li> FreeBSD uses UFS/UFS-2 as its filesystems and has no support for e.g. ReiserFS.</li>

</ul>

edit by alex

About

June 5, 2005

</ul>

Besides <li>Besides that, FreeBSD also has some technical differences which set it apart from Linux. Some of them are

» complete change

<a href="http://dev.gentoo.org/~citizen428/doc/gentoo-freebsd.html">

What is FreeBSD?</a> (gentoo.org)

FreeBSD is a free (license), Unix-like operating system. Back in 1993 when development of 386BSD stopped, two projects were born: NetBSD, commonly known to run on a huge number of architetures and FreeBSD which focusses mainly on the x86 platform. FreeBSD is renowned for its stability, performance and security, thus being used from small to huge companies all over the world. FreeBSD's current production release version is 5.3, which is also used as the foundation for the Gentoo/FreeBSD project.

<strong>FreeBSD and Linux</strong>

Users migrating from Linux to FreeBSD commonly consider the two operating systems "almost the same". In fact, FreeBSD really shares a lot of similarities with Linux distributions in general. Nevertheless, it has some key differences that are worth noting:

<ul>

<li> Contrary to Linux, which actually only refers to the kernel, FreeBSD is a complete operating system, consisting of a C library, userland tools and much more. This development approach makes the overall system very consistent.</li>

<li> Contrary to the Linux kernel, FreeBSD development is not led by one person, but instead managed by a small group of people called "Core Team".

</li>

</ul>

Besides <li>Besides that, FreeBSD also has some technical differences which set it apart from Linux. Some of them are very important to know, even if you don't plan on developing for Gentoo/FreeBSD:</li>

<ul>

<li> Dynamically linked executables are not linked against libdl, like in Linux + glibc systems. Instead they are linked against libc.</li>

<li> FreeBSD doesn't have an official tool for kernel compilation, thus you'll have to resolve feature dependecies on your own.</li>

<li> FreeBSD uses UFS/UFS-2 as its filesystems and has no support for e.g. ReiserFS.</li>

</ul>

edit by alex

About

June 5, 2005

<strong>FreeBSD FreeBSD and Linux</strong> Linux

» complete change

<a href="http://dev.gentoo.org/~citizen428/doc/gentoo-freebsd.html">

What is FreeBSD?</a> (gentoo.org)

FreeBSD is a free (license), Unix-like operating system. Back in 1993 when development of 386BSD stopped, two projects were born: NetBSD, commonly known to run on a huge number of architetures and FreeBSD which focusses mainly on the x86 platform. FreeBSD is renowned for its stability, performance and security, thus being used from small to huge companies all over the world. FreeBSD's current production release version is 5.3, which is also used as the foundation for the Gentoo/FreeBSD project.

<strong>FreeBSD FreeBSD and Linux</strong> Linux

Users migrating from Linux to FreeBSD commonly consider the two operating systems "almost the same". In fact, FreeBSD really shares a lot of similarities with Linux distributions in general. Nevertheless, it has some key differences that are worth noting:

<ul>

<li> Contrary to Linux, which actually only refers to the kernel, FreeBSD is a complete operating system, consisting of a C library, userland tools and much more. This development approach makes the overall system very consistent.</li>

<li> Contrary to the Linux kernel, FreeBSD development is not led by one person, but instead managed by a small group of people called "Core Team".

</li>

<li>Besides that, FreeBSD also has some technical differences which set it apart from Linux. Some of them are very important to know, even if you don't plan on developing for Gentoo/FreeBSD:</li>

<li> Dynamically linked executables are not linked against libdl, like in Linux + glibc systems. Instead they are linked against libc.</li>

<li> FreeBSD doesn't have an official tool for kernel compilation, thus you'll have to resolve feature dependecies on your own.</li>

<li> FreeBSD uses UFS/UFS-2 as its filesystems and has no support for e.g. ReiserFS.</li>

</ul>

edit by alex

About

June 5, 2005

<a href="http://dev.gentoo.org/~citizen428/doc/gentoo-freebsd.html">

What is FreeBSD?</a> (gentoo.org)

FreeBSD is a free (license),...

» complete change

<a href="http://dev.gentoo.org/~citizen428/doc/gentoo-freebsd.html">

What is FreeBSD?</a> (gentoo.org)

FreeBSD is a free (license), Unix-like operating system. Back in 1993 when development of 386BSD stopped, two projects were born: NetBSD, commonly known to run on a huge number of architetures and FreeBSD which focusses mainly on the x86 platform. FreeBSD is renowned for its stability, performance and security, thus being used from small to huge companies all over the world. FreeBSD's current production release version is 5.3, which is also used as the foundation for the Gentoo/FreeBSD project.

FreeBSD and Linux

Users migrating from Linux to FreeBSD commonly consider the two operating systems "almost the same". In fact, FreeBSD really shares a lot of similarities with Linux distributions in general. Nevertheless, it has some key differences that are worth noting:

<ul>

<li> Contrary to Linux, which actually only refers to the kernel, FreeBSD is a complete operating system, consisting of a C library, userland tools and much more. This development approach makes the overall system very consistent.</li>

<li> Contrary to the Linux kernel, FreeBSD development is not led by one person, but instead managed by a small group of people called "Core Team".

</li>

<li>Besides that, FreeBSD also has some technical differences which set it apart from Linux. Some of them are very important to know, even if you don't plan on developing for Gentoo/FreeBSD:</li>

<li> Dynamically linked executables are not linked against libdl, like in Linux + glibc systems. Instead they are linked against libc.</li>

<li> FreeBSD doesn't have an official tool for kernel compilation, thus you'll have to resolve feature dependecies on your own.</li>

<li> FreeBSD uses UFS/UFS-2 as its filesystems and has no support for e.g. ReiserFS.</li>

</ul>

created by 192.168.0.98

Community

June 5, 2005
The page was created.
Community
Undo this change because:
created by alex

About

June 5, 2005
The page was created.
About
Undo this change because:
created by 192.168.0.113

Documentation

June 5, 2005
The page was created.
Documentation
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created by 192.168.0.101

Development

June 5, 2005
The page was created.
Development
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created by 192.168.0.90

Get Started

June 5, 2005
The page was created.
Get Started
Undo this change because:
edit by marc

Method of Maintaining Currency?

June 1, 2005
Method of Maintaining Currency? Upgrades
Undo this change because:
edit by marc

Method of Maintaining Currency?

June 1, 2005

[marc]

» complete change

Anybody have any good strategies on how to keep a system up to date? I've been currently just using as little of the base system as possible and then upgrading components (ssh, etc) as they are updated by outside people.

This lets me run muuuuuch older versions of the operating system, but I wonder if there are any serious problems with this? I don't really want to have to run cvsup and rebuild the entire OS on a regular basis.

What do you do here?

[marc]

Undo this change because:
edit by marc

Method of Maintaining Currency?

June 1, 2005
FreeBSD Maintenance Upgrades Security Fixes
Method of Upgrades

Anybody have any good strategies on how to keep a system up to date? I've been currently just using as little of the base...

» complete change

Anybody have any good strategies on how to keep a system up to date? I've been currently just using as little of the base system as possible and then upgrading components (ssh, etc) as they are updated by outside people.

This lets me run muuuuuch older versions of the operating system, but I wonder if there are any serious problems with this? I don't really want to have to run cvsup and rebuild the entire OS on a regular basis.

What do you do here?

created by marc

Method of Maintaining Currency?

June 1, 2005
The entry was created.
Method of Upgrades
Undo this change because:
edit by alex

FreeBSD

May 30, 2005
OS BSD Operating System BSD OS
edit by alex

FreeBSD

May 30, 2005
FreeBSD Operating System BSD OS

Where to get Binaries

May 27, 2005
FreeBSD FreeBSD, Downloads
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Where to get Binaries

May 27, 2005
FreeBSD FreeBSD, Downloads
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Core FreeBSD CVS Repository

May 27, 2005
FreeBSD FreeBSD, CVS
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FreeBSD Problem Report Database

May 27, 2005
FreeBSD FreeBSD, Bug Tracking
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FreeBSD LiveCD

May 27, 2005
FreeBSD FreeBSD, LiveCD
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edit by alex

Active Projects

May 27, 2005