OpenBFS Reaches Beta
Bruno G. Albuquerque writes "The OpenBFS Team (part of the OpenBeOS project that aims to recreate BeOS from scratch) has moved the project status to early beta. This means OpenBFS is now a 100% complete (but barely tested) replacement for the original Be File System (BFS). It is a 64 bit, multithreaded and journaled file system that supports unlimited number os extended attributes and has support some database-like functions (like ultra-fast searches based on an index). OpenBFS is written in C++ and is licensed under the MIT license."
When (if?) this is ported to other OS's (specifically linux) we will have yet another great filesystem. Im starting to see all those 'linux/bsd/whatever' isnt ready for the enterprise arguments slipping away. Still, why a boat needs a OS is beyond me.
Clever guy 1: Why on earth should I try OpenBeOS ? What could it do for me that Windows/OSX/Linux/BSD can't do?
Clever guy 2: Why on earth should I try BSD ? What could it do for me that Windows/OSX/Linux can't do?
Clever guy 3: Why on earth should I try Linux ? What could it do for me that Windows/OSX can't do?
Clever guy 4: Why on earth should I try OSX ? What could it do for me that Windows can't do?
Clever guy 5: Why on earth should I try Windows ? What could it do for me?
Have you ever tried Opera for BeOS? http://www.opera.com/beos/
;)
It's still in the 3.62 version, but has 128-bit encryption, SSL 2 and 3, TLS 1.0, HTML 3.2, JavaScript 1.1, CSS1, and plug-in support.
While it is neither free nor up to standards compared to Opera for other platforms, it is certainly better than NetPositive, imnhso.
Besides, it never hurts to have an alternative
One thing that bothers me about most filesystems is limited metadata support. BFS is a notable exception. One hopes that KDE and GNOME developers could use this to improve on the primitive file handling tools desktop users are currently stuck with.
Was funny the first couple hundred times you posted it. Now it's beginning to get stale.
I hear this news, and decide maybe it's a good idea to try it out. So I install BeOS 5.04 Dev Edition (from BeOSOnline.de), get it all set up, compile OpenBFS, and transplant it in.
:(
I restart my system, and lo and behold, it works. I type in 'touch t', and it successfully creates a file called t. However, I then see a box on the screen saying, "BeOS was unable to initialize a swap file." I realize something's wrong - and when I try to create another file, or do anything really, it refuses, on the account that it's a read-only file system. Of course, write support is implemented, but for some reason it was inaccessible to me.
At the end of all this, I finally manage to corrupt my filesystem, and despite replacing the original BFS driver, it refuses to boot. So I'm going to have to reinstall.
OBOS, sadly, just isn't ready for primetime yet.
Don't make the same stupid mistake I did!
If you browse the OBOS source hierarchy, you'll notice a BeFS module. Do not download that one. Strangely enough, the correct module to download is current. Why the other modules remain there, I have no idea.
If you download the wrong one, you'll get a two-month old driver; it can't write, and it will not take its time in screwing up your BeOS installation.
Just as with Linux!
It's OSS, no one is tring to make monney from it.
Wow, I should not post when knackered.