OpenBSD 7.2 Released 21
Longtime Slashdot reader lazyeye writes: The 53rd release of OpenBSD, version 7.2, has officially been released. Support for new platforms such as the Ampere Altra, Apple M2 chip, and support for Lenovo ThinkPad x13s and other machines using the Qualcomm Snapdragon 8cx Gen 3 (SC8280XP) SoC are now included, along with various kernel improvements. The announcement with all the details are available at the link [here] from the openbsd-announce mailing list.
Nice (Score:5, Interesting)
Going to run sysupgrade this weekend. Couldn’t be easier. Also unlike Linux, *BSD won’t rewrite all of /etc for “reasons”.
Re: (Score:3)
I ran sysupgrade today. So impressed with how easy it is to upgrade OpenBSD.
And I love doing package updates in 7.2. They really seem to have sped it up.
Re:Nice (Score:5, Informative)
Re: (Score:1)
With modern linux I consider about half of /etc to be off limits, its really a gut feeling sort of thing but I’m never surprised to find that files are no longer used, maintained by other programs or something like that.
I know it doesn’t have to be this way, its not a linux problem its more an issue if you want to run any well supported distribution but it still sucks.
Re: (Score:3)
I meant the structure of /etc changing. Go back in time 8 years. How do you set a static ip address? Is it netplan, connman, networkmanager, ip, or ifconfig? Want to bet the next Ubuntu release will use neither of those? What if I want to change my DNS servers? Well some random systemd daemon will probably overwrite my changes.
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I've never had a Linux distro version upgrade ever rewrite all of /etc. RedHat, Fedora, Debian, Ubuntu, Mint. Sometimes an update will allow you to replace a file in /etc if you choose (usually because the old file may not be compatible with a change).
Re:Nice (Score:5, Informative)
Is obsd better these days? (Score:1)
I came here to make fun of Obsd users but you got me intrigued!
Hows the hardware support and general quality of life? I probably have zero shot at running this on an intel NUC and getting it to work with a 10gbe thunderbolt3 adapter do I? Last time I played with obsd was about 10 years ago, I remember bitcoin was a nerds only thing, lulzsec was the news of the day. and obsd was missing enough drivers that I’d basically have to build my machine specifically to run it. I did get it booting even if a
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> Also unlike Linux, *BSD wonâ(TM)t rewrite all of /etc for âoereasonsâ.
Linux is a kernel - it doesn't write to /etc.
Make a specific allegation about which Linux distro overwrites /etc on upgrade.
We'll wait.
great! just what i need (Score:5, Funny)
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So... you also consider your TV remote secure?
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If you used UNIX back in the 80's & 90's it would be a breeze! Long Live AT&T UNIX!
If one used BSD UNIX back in the 80s and 90s it would be even easier. :-)
Re: great! just what i need (Score:1)
If only someone would professionally make BSD... (Score:1)
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macOS is not BSD. The kernel has some BSD components in it - or it used to. They've probably been rewritten. The command line is basically BSD but that is a small part of what macOS is these days.
The kernel source is available at
https://github.com/apple/darwi... [github.com]
Good luck getting it to build and run on anything not a Mac though. I'm sure it's possible in principle but there would be a lot of work needed.
OpenBSD is my favourite (Score:2)
BSD is so long in the tooth (Score:3)
At this point it's fair to say: Netcraft is dying, BSD confirms it.