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#1 (permalink) Top |
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Geek Geek Geek!
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What are differences between the aforementioned distributions? Aside from the package management, what else is there? They all use the same file hierarchy, file systems and software. The only things I've read on this subject are trivial at best.
Also, what is BSD and how does it differ from Linux?
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#2 (permalink) Top |
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The King
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I believe BSD is based on the Unix kernel, while Linux was written as a clone. BSD has slightly better memory management. They're all POSIX compliant though.
Also, different distributions can have different kernels. Although they're all based on the plain vanilla linux kernel (www.kernel.org) they're often customized for the distribution with different features.
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#3 (permalink) Top | |
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Nonconformist Geek
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There are actually some pretty major differences between the distros you've mentioned. Probably the most important of these is the philosophy that drives each distro.
Red Hat is a large, commercial, enterprise-oriented Linux vendor. Their RHEL platform aims to be a stable, mature and easily manageable platform, which is ubiquitous as the "Corporate Linux". As a result, their distro is not well suited for use as a home desktop OS, but makes a great server (you're connected to a Red Hat system as you read this). Each release has a long life-cycle of around 5 years. RHEL typically uses either yum or up2date as the package manager for its RPM-format packages. Debian, named after the creator of the distro Ian and his wife, Debora. Debian is a completely community-driven non-profit distro with no company behind it, yet it is one of the most prolific distros out there. It is highly flexible in its possible uses, has a staggering array of packages built for it, and has spawned many famous distros not the least of which is the Ubuntu family. The directory structure is slightly different than RHEL. Debian uses the excellent apt-get package manager for their deb-format packages. Slackware is the oldest surviving Linux distro. It is designed with an old-school Unix mindset, and as such as almost zero automation. While most distros use System V style startup scripts, Slackware uses BSD-like startup scripts. Slackware is a very hands-on distro, which is difficult to manage and update. However, since it has very little going on under the hood it is also considered a rock-solid distro. Slack's file structure is more like traditional Unices than other distros. Slackware uses the slapt-get package manager, modeled after Debian's apt-get. However, there is a major caveat between the two; slapt-get doesn't handle dependencies at all. Slackware uses plain, old tgz packages. Quote:
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#4 (permalink) Top | |
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Surely Slackware wasn't the only *nix available back then? What were the alternatives and why did they fail or die out? I always like to try out different things, and I make no except with BSD. I've heard of OpenBSD and FreeBSD before. Which *BSD do you think is a good one to get started off with?
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#5 (permalink) Top | ||
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Nonconformist Geek
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FreeBSD receives the majority of attention, being the more general BSD distro. NetBSD is the distro reputed to be able to run on any hardware, and is especially targeted towards embedded use. OpenBSD aims to be the most secure operating system on Earth. Each of these systems are designed to look, feel and act like a traditional UNIX platform. However, their performance, features and usability have been far surpassed by Linux, which has a much higher rate of development. On the other hand, the BSD kernel is considered more mature than the Linux kernel found in GNU distros, so it is preferred in some circles. Also, each are released under the BSD license, which means commercial entities can utilize the code without sharing their additions. This is attractive to corperations who are not interested in making their code public, but do not wish to write an OS from scratch either. On the other hand, the BSD license is probably the greatest reason that Linux has surpassed it in so many ways and why it will continue to do so over time. When one company adds features or improvements to BSD, nobody else benefits from their work in such a case. The GPL, on the other hand, guarantees that the source code and improvements to it will always be freely available -- which is why Linux enjoys such maturity at such a relatively young age.
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#6 (permalink) Top |
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Geek Geek Geek!
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Well if that's the case, I think i'll leave BSD alone for a while!
I've never used OS X before, but I am through with proprietory Operating Systems anyway, so I'm in no hurry to try it.
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#7 (permalink) Top | |
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Nonconformist Geek
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