FreeBSD 5.0-RC2 Now Available
An anonymous reader writes "FreeBSD 5.0-RC2 has been uploaded to ftp-master and is showing up on most of the primary mirrors. ia32, ia64, pc98, and alpha images are
available now; sparc64 will be pushed out once it becomes available.
The plan going forward is to cut an RC3 in early January, followed by 5.0-RELEASE a week later."
Its not a dupe. Compare the 2 articles. The earlier one this morning said that the FreeBSD developers said its compiled and should be available shortly and put up the release schedule, where as this new said its definitly available now, and even on mirrors, which normally take a while to get up to date. If anything, at the farthest, this is more like a partial dupe, but figuring CmdrTaco posted it, he most likely reads his news everymorning and noticed the previous one.
Does this release candidate have a native pthreads implementation that uses rfork to provide kernel level threads?
65 kps, ....... just a bit more and I'll have a new toy to play with... ;}
I call computer-illiteracy job security
Tomorrow: Freebsd 5.0-RC2 one day old.
Cute...it didn't post in HTML as i selected.
If you'd like to use cvsup to get to this release, change your current
*default release=cvs tag=
to:
*default release=cvs tag=RELENG_5
Note: You may have to run this 2 times - the first time it will DELETE the contains of your existing src dir, the second time it will inflate it.
Not to start a flame war, but for certain things, FreeBSD is just better. Not to mention it makes my life a lot easier as an admin because of the excellent organization of the entire operation system. I switched my current company (along with the admin who was a Linux lover since 1.0) to FreeBSD and so far it has been perfect. The comment from the original admin: "Why didn't we do this sooner?". When you need something that just works, FreeBSD is there to do it.
Scott
As a fren' of mine sez: "BSD is a nice mature 30 yrs old, while Linux is still a very young 10 yrs old. Now, who do you want running your rig? A youngster or a flexible battle scarred adult?" Remember, BSD is Unix, not Linux! HMMMM? The question contains the answer as far as I"m concerned.
I call computer-illiteracy job security
People's Front of Judea, anyone?
News flash: for most intents and purposes, the
similarities between Linux and BSD are far more
significant than the differences.
Ben "You have your mind on computers, it seems."