PC-BSD 7.1 Released With Integrated Software Manager 81
Death Metal writes "PC-BSD 7.1 is built upon the FreeBSD 7.1-STABLE operating system. FreeBSD is a UNIX-based operating system that provides a high level of security and stability. The Galileo Edition of PC-BSD includes updated versions of KDE (4.2.2) and Xorg (7.4). The latest version of KDE includes new window effects, screen savers, and better 3D Acceleration. PC-BSD exclusively features the Push Button Installer, a software installation wizard with a wide range of applications. The latest version improves PBI self-containment to increase reliability. The Add / Remove Programs tool and the Update Manager have been consolidated into 'Software & Updates.'"
10 gigs? (Score:5, Insightful)
i have the disk space (500gigs), but i would have to re-arrange some disk partitions which means i would have to burn several DVDs of backup so i don't lose data, you would think any OS would keep t3h bloat below 5 gigs!
Re:10 gigs? (Score:4, Interesting)
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a) a startup script that is auto-run on launch,
b)the
c) some images, etc. that the application needs to display, and
d) the executable itself.
If you spend any time at all looking through the guts of an OSX system, you'll notice that all the shared dependencies reside within the
The reason that a lot of OSX apps are large (not many are huge) is because the developers choose to make one big ap
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You should look at most that use libraries *on top of* the base OS X libraries. Most will include the thid party .framework bundle within the .app bundle, very few will install or use an existing third party .framework in ~/Library or /Library.
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Well, first off, dependencies are, much more often than just the "Library" directories, in their own "Framework" directories. Check /System/Library/Frameworks for the important core Mac OS X frameworks and /Library/Frameworks for your basic system frameworks. You've also probably got a ~/Library/Frameworks directory but there's probably nothing interesting in there unless you're a developer. The rest of the "Library" directories consists more of non-reusable stuff.
However, plenty of applications do jus
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This is inaccurate. OS X apps link to shared system frameworks in /Library/Frameworks. They can, if they wish, embed a framework in their bundle which will appear in the bundle's internal Frameworks directory. There is no /usr dependency hierarchy in every app
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No, there is not a "substantial amount of applications" that bundle their own frameworks.
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Vista default installation ~= 15GB
Obligatory M$ analogy = FAIL
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Bloated, or featureful? Does Vista include a decent text editor? Compilers? Server software?
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
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Reconciling "Average user" with "BSD installation" ... *pzzzt* *poing* *fotz* (mushroom cloud erupts from brain)
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Yes.
Re:10 gigs? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:10 gigs? (Score:4, Insightful)
My new SSD drive is 64 GB and 10 GB is NOT a small amount.
Ubuntu works just fine with a fraction of that space.
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Then PC-BSD 7.1 is not for you. Good thing other operating systems work for you, isn't it?
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I thought IPv6 was implemented first on a BSD distribution before Linux?
Hell, NFSv3 ( a completely open standard! ) still doesn't work correctly 14 years later...
Re:10 gigs? (So what?) (Score:1)
Welcome to the 21st century. Downloading 10GB takes a while, but I've got 80GB free on my *laptop* -- and I have three 20GB disk images for virtual machines. Disk space is cheap. If you've got 500GB and you don't have 10GB of contiguous free space... no, you probably don't want to install a new operating system.
Most operating systems (I'm not talking about Haiku or FreeDOS obviously) are meant to be installed on a clean system with a significant amount of hard drive space. What's the problem? I see non
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i would have to burn several DVDs of backup so i don't lose data
Ah, the naiveté of youth ...
Real BSD users set up an rsync box.
Depending on burned dvds for backup is like depending on pulling out to prevent contraception. Ask Bristol Palin how well that form of "safe sex" worked out. When you lose your data, be sure to post the story to fmylife.com so we can all laugh at your angst- and hubris-filled story [fmylife.com].
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Obligatory nitpicking. (Score:5, Informative)
I'm pretty sure it's based on 7.2 PRE, not 7.1. The summary also makes it look like the software manager is a new feature, which it is not. The PBI system has been around for a while in PC-BSD.
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I'm pretty sure it's based on 7.2 PRE, not 7.1.
That is correct.
The official website states 7.2-PRERELEASE, but the press release says 7.1-STABLE. Depending on how you track and merge FreeBSD, both may be correct (tracking 7.1-STABLE and backporting functionality from 7.2 would do the trick).
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Both 7.1-STABLE and 7.2-PRERELEASE are in the same branch; stable/7 or RELENG_7.
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I just did a vmware install of it and uname shows 7.2-PRERELEASE. I wonder if that was a last minute thing.
What about XFS? (Score:2)
If PC-BSD has Sun XFS, I can't see a reason for it to tank. I know FreeBSD 7.1 has at least a beta implementation.
Re:What about XFS? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:What about [X | Z]FS? (Score:3, Insightful)
I believe ZFS has been in FreeBSD since 7.0. A quick google teaches me that PC-BSD is enjoying it since then too.
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This has already been largely fixed in 7.1, with the kernel address space expanded to 6GB.
If you're still on 32bit, well, ZFS will hate you for that in Solaris too.
FreeNAS (Score:2)
Right. It would sure be nice if the amd64 releases of FreeNAS 0.7 are continued (apparently, there's a kernel panic upon bootup preventing them from releasing the amd64 alpha versions). The current i386 version is limited to 512MB of kmem (unless the kernel is recompiled), which is DEFINITELY not enough for ZFS (even a 1GB allocation is insufficient). With my max allocation at 512MB, I've had the kernel panic about 5 times in one day while transferring large amounts of data.
My advice to those of you who are
Xorg 7.4? (Score:2)
How do I find out which version of Xorg I have?
A piece of software I wanted to install recently had two procedures - one for Xorg 7.0 and above, and one for earlier versions.
Xorg -version reports a lot of crap, but never a useful/comparable version number.
X.Org X Server 1.5.2
Release Date: 10 October 2008
X Protocol Version 11, Revision 0
Build Operating System: Linux 2.6.24-19-server i686 Ubuntu
Current Operating System: Linux UbuntuViaBox 2.6.27-11-generic #1 SMP Wed Apr 1 20:57:48 UTC 2009 i686
Build Date: 09 March 2009 10:48:54AM
xorg-server 2:1.5.2-2ubuntu3.1 (buildd@rothera.buildd)
Before reporting problems, check http://wiki.x.org/ [x.org]
to make sure that you have the latest version.
Module Loader present
I assumed I had at least 7.0...
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You want to follow the procedure for 7.0 and above.
A more decent way to check is by looking which packages are installed. Also, since you are using Ubuntu, you can check which release of X was about two months before the release of Ubuntu, that one will probably be in the di
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It appears that you're running Ubuntu, so to see your xorg version, try this:
aptitude show xserver-xorg
Re:Xorg 7.4? (Score:4, Informative)
How do I find out which version of Xorg I have?
The same as for version numbers for all your other other ports -- pkg_info(7)
pkg_info -Ex xorg
Unix based? (Score:1, Troll)
FreeBSD is a UNIX-based operating system that provides a high level of security and stability
Maybe I'm wrong (never used Free BSD) but I didn't think it was based on Unix but instead Unix-like.
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Oh, thanks for sharing.
Re:Unix based? (Score:4, Informative)
BSD can be traced back to MaBell and Unix.
This video has a decent history of BSD in a nutshell:
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=7833143728685685343 [google.com]
It's linux that advertised itself as being "Unix-like".
livecd? (Score:4, Interesting)
Can the DVD download also be used as a live-cd? I'd like to see what it's like before installing.
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I never understood the appeal of screenshots & livecd's. You can't judge an operating system or distro based on a slow & shitty disk and a half hour of un-demanding use
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It's useful to see how well it recognizes the hardware.
Re:livecd is great (Score:1)
It's vital for seeing how the OS recognises hardware. Sometimes even different versions of the same distribution will have major differences and the new one just doesn't work with a piece of hardware! Even if it only requires minor tweaking knowing that some important hardware (like a wifi card, or a RAID card!) is not going to work out of the box is pretty vital to doing a successful install.
So just like Ubuntu (Score:5, Interesting)
but with a different mascot, a different package manager, and different themes ?
Snark aside - what does this BSD do that any Linux distro or other BSD doesn't ?
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Basically, if you like FreeBSD and KDE but don't really have the time or inclination to set it all up yourself, PC-BSD is convenient.
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Well, I'm just guessing but it may be more user friendly. Last time I tried BSD I didn't complete the install because:
A) the text based install gave me lots of options I didn't understand and I couldn't Google the answer because the network wasn't installed yet
B) I've already got a fine working linux install and I wasn't motivated to do much work to really install it - i just wanted to test/play. However, my avoidance of getting really into the details would be quite parallel to a newbie who really wants to
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support base .. (Score:2)