FreeBSD 5.0 Available
Vegard writes "Although not yet officially announced, the 5.0 version of FreeBSD is beginning to appear on the FreeBSD FTP site and mirrors world wide." Congrats to the developers. Update: 01/19 17:44 GMT by T : Some more detail -- Dan writes "Scott Long of FreeBSD Release Engineering team has officially announced the availability of FreeBSD 5.0 release. Improvements include second generation UFS filesystem, GEOM, the extensible and flexible storage framework, DEVFS, the device virtual filesystem, Bluetooth, ACPI, CardBus, IEEE 1394 and many more! FreeBSD is also available on 64-bit sparc64 and ia64 platforms."
If you want to see what is new in FreeBSD 5.0 then click to view the release notes.
l
http://www.freebsd.org/releases/5.0R/relnotes.htm
Does the name Pavlov ring a bell?
The release hasn't been announced, which would mean it hasn't reached the mirrors yet, which would mean they need the master FTP server to be up and running. How very convenient of Slashdot to link directly to the master FTP server before this has happened! This is sabotage.
"Oppression and harassment is a small price to pay to live in the land of the free." -- Montgomery Burns.
Now why would you link directly to a FTP server? We all know that a lot of people will begin to download a +600MB ISO file and that no single FTP server would be able to handle the Slashdot crowd. Now I hope that the people here that wants to download FreeBSD has the brain power to check the mirror list first, if they not already has a favorite mirror. Still the proper thing to do, would be to link to the mirror list directly.
Also by using the mirror list, our US friends wouldn't have to download from a server in Denmark, but maybe a local one instead. Oh, well I guess that's just me, but I really think that in the lengthly, time consuming screening process of each article, someone would show a bit of responibility, knowing the effects, posting a article with links have.
my sig
I use Linux and Free BSD. BSD was my first real delve into the Unix fold. A damn fine server OS and used by more people than most would think. SMP at its finest IMHO.
The team takes its time with updates, does them right the first time and make it a true pleasure to work with.
Kudos guys.
Puto
The Revolution Will Not Be Televised
The ISOs are not yet on all mirrors, but at least on the following servers:O -IMAGES-i3 86/5.0/O -IMAGES-i 386/5.0/S O-IMAGES-i 386/5.0/I MAGES-i386 /5.0/A GES-i38 6/5.0/
ftp://ftp.uk.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/IS
ftp://ftp2.uk.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/IS
ftp://ftp5.uk.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/I
ftp://ftp6.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/ISO-
ftp://ftp14.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/ISO-IM
Please look also if the files appeared on the other mirrors.
I managed to get a free copy of freebsd thanks to my status as a journalist, however I was sadly disappointed by this product.
I attempted to install freebsd on my IBM laptop, however I discovered my particular model was not compatible (which is odd, since it runs win2k just fine, which has many BSD elements in it). I decided to try it on my p4 system which I use for games occasionally. Unfortunately I discovered that BSD refused to be installed on my NTFS partition, and I was required to create a new partition! I have never had this problem with windows before and was baffled at the amount of work BSD forces one to take on just to get it installed! I decided to abort my attempt at reviewing BSD since it didn't seem to work on any of the systems I had! Furthermore I discovered that not only does Freebsd not run any new games, it doesn't even run Microsoft office, the standard office program! A truly terrible computer product!
I give FreeBSD 1/10
Stanley Feinbaum, professional journalist and master debater! God bless the USA!
ah so you're the one to blame for all of the borked links I'm running into on yahoo?
just kidding..but seriously...what particular package did you run into problems with?
Time and time again everyone says DO NOT LINK DIRECTLY to the main site, link to a mirror list. The fact that you still linked to the primary site and even said it has not been announced makes me wonder do you ever fucking read our comments. You guys need to develop a checklist before you post news items. 1. is it a dupe? 2. did i spell check this? 3. if there's a link to an product that was just released did i post the mirror link instead of the primary link? 4. And finally ask yourself this question, is this news the slashdot crowd really cares about? (*note this does not pertain to the current story)
Good to hear the final 5.0 release is out. I installed FreeBSD 5.0 RC3 on my Pentium 100MHz with 32MB of RAM and I must say I'm really impressed how well the system performs. I'm a console freak so I try to do everything I need to do using console programs. It's been a really great thing to notice all of the utilities I have needed are also available as console programs.
I use "slrn" to read the Usenet news, "lynx"/"links" to surf the web, "mutt" to read/send e-mail, "mpg123" to listen to music/internet radiostations. Truly great experience and imagine it works _really_ smoothly and fast on computer which was bought in 1995. I am impressed and a happy FreeBSD user!
SCSI is sorta dead if you are looking a win9x point of view....you will get faster performance from an IDE drive there.
But for a server (and I hope you aren't using BSD to play games on) SCSI is where it's at (although SATA shows promise, the tech still has a little maturing to do)
SCSI sub-systems handle loads much better and are much better at dishing out data.
The /. 'editors' do it again..
http://bsd.slashdot.org/
N.B. I realise that the post mentioned it hasn't been officially released- but I suspect the FreeBSD team don't want it to be unofficially released to the general public yet.
Although not yet officially announced
Uh, maybe there's a reason? Like they want to finish pushing everything out to the mirrors?
--saint
Has been available for a couple of days now, since the mirrors are gonna get hit bad now i figure i could contribute with my unofficial 100Mbit mirror.
ISOs for i386 here:
mirror
Dont forget to check the md5sums, I could be an evil blackhat after all. Enjoy.
just go to filemirrors.com and put in the file names.. I am getting 225k from european mirrors... hehe
Freaky Schitt always happens to me... WHY God WHY!!
... the main ftp server gets Slashdotted, here are some mirrors.
Quote from the 4.6 (non)release story:
Murray Stokely writes "We have gone over this for the past 2 releases now. I thought I had made it clear that you were not to publish information about FreeBSD being released until you saw a signed PGP message from one of the release engineers. Are you trying to help the spread of trojanned copies of FreeBSD? The release is not ready yet, and will not be until the front page of FreeBSD.org is updated and a PGP signed announcement message is posted to announce@FreeBSD.org."
Unless the rules have changed, slashdot screwed up again.
Tarsnap: Online backups for the truly paranoid
Despite being idiotic, this behaviour is really harmful. FreeBSD takes care to let their mirrors prepare for the traffic peak when a new version is released. The early "announcements" on slashdot of course mean that the people managing the mirrors - voluntarily, people not only FreeBSD but lots of free software projects depend on - don't have this time to prepare, and might get major problems, which in turn might mean that they decide not to support FreeBSD and other projects by providing bandwidth for free any more.
Unless this is some funky plan of VA Software or whatever their name is this week to push SourceForge, it would be really nice if slashdot could just stop damaging the Free Software infrastructure.
Programming can be fun again. Film at 11.
'Mmmmmm, dead pig tastes good'
Homer J. Simpson
If you don't want the public to spot your releases until they are officially announced, then you should keep them hidden. Upload your files with restricted access to the master ftp and all mirrors, issue the press release, THEN make the files public.
Vegard
When FreeBSD 5.0 is officially released you should be able to get it from one of the FTP sites in the official list.
FTP Sites
Would be great if those who already completed their downloads of the iso files could share them using their favourite peer2peer program to take some load off of the FTP servers.
-- I love the smell of Blue Screens in the morning.
because if we didnt keep them under control they would eat us!
I know you are psychotic, but please make an effort.
his site is hosted on a FreeBSD server.t =www.stal lman. org
http://uptime.netcraft.com/up/graph/?hos
I like FreeBSD and Linux. They're absolutely great OSs both, but there's one thing I miss when I use FreeBSD. Linux has a console mode where you can have a smooth scroll. For example if you use "cat ", the text scrolls smoothly pixel by pixel not character by character. Also, I would like to customize my FreeBSD box so that when it boots, there would be a graphical logo on the left upper corner of the screen. I know FreeBSD supports splash screen at boot time but it occupies the whole screen.
Stupid mods, parent is not a troll. RMS really is looking for a woman and that ad is real. It's in here.
but couple that with new unforeseen FreeBSD bugs
Please list the PR's to these 'bugs'
Got mine yesterday.. THEN submitted a story, dont want my rates blown away by everyone on here :).
Interesting how my submission was rejected..
---- Booth was a patriot ----
Those little fuckers would kill you if they were given the chance.
they're evil, and tasty
we have gotten rid of that devil mascot logo? I really hoped it was this release, but perhaps the next one. A major number of people refuse to use FreeBSD because of that devil logo. Devil is linked to satan, no matter how hard you try to deny it and say that FreeBSD devil is friendly daemon from Greek mythology. Too bad this major mistake happened in the first place back in the early days of FreeBSD.
I read all the tutorials and so on, and I had to learn what was going on with all my partitions. I created a new primary partition for FreeBSD to install to, and selected it in that screwy partition selector bit.
It took ages to install each little package thing, and I was horrified when I restarted my computer. The primary FreeBSD partition had set itself as bootable (this was only fixed later by setting the Windows XP partition back to bootable using FreeBSD's installer again). No effort had been made at any kind of dual-booting. My computer booted, started up FreeBSD, spewed senselessness at me and then dropped me at a command prompt with no clue as to what to do next. I promptly set about removing FreeBSD.
And I just downloaded the 4 ISOs of 4.7 yesterday !
But it's not a problem since many people said that it was better for me to stick with 4.7 and then switch to 5.1 or 5.2. Not a problem too since I'M on cable and I downloaded theses ISOs at 300+ kb/s :)
Extensive evidence from a worldwide network of users and servers indicate That FreeBSD ('s mirrors) are dying- and Slashdot killed them- with their inability to understand that even if there are some files on an FTP server does not mean that it is released- even. A survey of the FreeBSD newsgroups showed that 1100 posts were made today, all of them calling for the head of CmdrTaco. hence, we can extract from these numbers that Slashdot has fucked up again. That, coupled with Garner's latest survey of FreeBSD Release Engineering Team, finds 100% of Slashdot editors completely lacking in common sense, having graduated from the Matt Drudge "Skewl of Jurnalism". This is merely one of the sputtering spasms of in the last act of the dotcom comedy of VA Software nee VA Linux nee Andover. Leading us to believe that FreeBSD ('s mirrors) are dying. (et tu, Slashdot)?
I believe the 5.0-RELEASE that is out is for IA-64 only. IA-32 is still planning a 4.8 release next month.
I knew this would happen, so i uploaded it to my oc-255 server, enjoy!
You'll need to substantiate your claims a bit. FreeBSD 5.0 has been a long time in coming, hasn't officially been released, and here you are claiming its buggy. Links, package names, no fud.
Of those to whom much is given, much is required.
Open source software which is featured on a /. story should link to the Freshmeat entry for the program.
/. effect.
This would allow folks to find out what a program is, and then the mirror list, saving the author's homepage some the
5.0-RELEASE-i386-miniinst.iso
Is a great ISO to get - it includes the base system and from there the rest can be downloaded as you install. This saves you bandwidth as you only have to get the programs you need, not a whole CD full of things you will never use.
Are you serious? I work for a Fortuen 500 company and we were convinced to convert all our database and inventory servers to FreeBSD. But thanks to you, we're now planning to migrate to Windows .NET! Thanks you, /.!!
If you have a good connection you can do an HTTP/FTP/NFS install . You'll save bandwitdth and CD's. Also, you can do a decent install with just one CD.
I've installed 5.0 this morning(GMT) with no problems (it performs as fine as 4.x!). I think is stable enough for a Workstation (remember, 3 RC's behind), so I recommend you to install this version. Remember that a 4.x-5.x transition will not be easy.
See release engineering schedule on the FreeBSD web site.
http://www.freebsd.org/releases/5.0R/schedule.h
4 days before scheduled release:
"Heads up email to hubs@FreeBSD.org to give admins time to prepare for the load spike to come. The site administrators have frequently requested advance notice for new ISOs."
someone mod this down fs.
My other OS is also FreeBSD
Better watch out. If they are killing pigs, the next one could be your mom, wife, or girlfriend.
If you haven't heard already BitTorrent is a download facility that forces the downloaders to start sharing their upload bandwidth even before the download is complete.
I tested this briefly 2 weeks ago. I tried sharing a 200 meg video file (a recent anime fansub release) on my dsl at home. At one point I had thirty people downloading and some of them were reporting speeds of 40-50 kB/s even though my dsl is only 12.8 kB/s max.
Get it at:
http://bitconjurer.org/BitTorrent/download.html
and start sharing !
If I can actually get to a mirror I may try sharing here myself.
...*BSD is dead? Oh wait, it's just their ftp server...
i dont see any faqs on how to get into the official freebsd mirror...
i could setup some stable official mirrors in various countries with good ISPs...
can anyone answer there? whom to contact and stuff?
thanks.
As a full time technical employee there I can say with certainty that your post is essentially bullshit, but for the record, why not give your real name?
And if you want to read some thoughts on whether you should upgrade, then click to view the early adopter's guide.
r .html
http://www.freebsd.org/releases/5.0R/early-adopte
Summary:
"While FreeBSD 5.0 contains a number of new and exciting features, it may not be suitable for all users at this time. In this document, we presented some background on release engineering, some of the more notable new features of the 5.X series, and some drawbacks to early adoption. We also presented some future plans for the 4-STABLE development branch and some tips on upgrading for early adopters."
In SOVIET RUSSIA, *BSD says YOU are dying!
The original parent was a troll. A classic /. in fact. And you, of course, responded to it. This makes it a very highly sucessful troll. The only BSD that is dying is BSDI.
It would be kind of funny/ironic if the FreeBSD team deliberately put out ISOs with a fault or flaw in them, just to put off people who link to and download them before the proper release message.
Doubtful, but if they get annoyed at this, look out for it next time.
Get your own free personal location tracker
Seems something like this happens EVERY release of FreeBSD. While once or twice might be excuseable, *every time* HAS to make one wonder if Slashdot is doing this on purpose to harm FreeBSD.
Makes me also wonder if an undocumented "feature" of Slashdot is the posting of the FreeBSD is Dying post, as well.
What's the problem? That FreeBSD is a cometitor of Linux? Is that why Slashdot pulls this stunt time and time again? What other project does Slashdot do this to AT ALL, let alone every time.
I'm not a conspiracy theorist, but when something is done time and time again, anyone with a brain would find the "we made a mistake, sorry" line very unbelievable as the behavior is repeated time and time again.
Maybe we'll see another posting about a troll getting sued....and it will be Slashdot getting sued by FreeBSD!
Grow up and act responsibly, please. Don't do things that are harmful to others and their hard open source work, please. Thank you (I hope).
Since Slashdot had to link to the FTP, maybe this will help lighten the stress on the mirrors : http://tacos.sus.mcgill.ca/~hperes/BT_BSD5.0/ has BitTorrent files for the i386 release ISOs.
BitTorrent is a peer to peer fileswarmer. It's Free and Open Source, and comes in flavors for *ix, win32, and MacOS X. Clients are avaiable @ http://bitconjurer.org/BitTorrent/ ...
Once you have finished the download, please keep the window open as long as possible so that others can get the file as well. Thanks !
The download might be a little slow at the beginning, but as more and more people hop on, it should get really fast. Just give it a couple of minutes.
cvsup.
Though, you probably know it already.
On a slightly unrelated and very selfish note...i have XP on my notebook (came with it, runs excellent. Packard Bell igo 2640, i think nec makes it) and i want to try a unixoid OS on it. Doesn't have to have a graphical shell. Any recommendations? I need to see just how long i can get the battery to last...I've heard (rumors) that linux distros aren't *that* laptop friendly.
Looking for people to chat about multicopters, coding, music. skype: gtsiros
http://www.freebsd.org/releases/5.0R/announce.html
It just came out!!! :D
It's official
Can someone in the know post a quick rundown on the differences between UFS1 and UFS2? I've tried searching on the web, news archives, the freebsd site, etc, and the most I can come up with is that it supports file system sizes larger than 1TB, and it has native EA support. Specifically I'm wondering if it supports files larger than 2GB now, and what sort of performance changes they've made (these are hinted at all over the place but not explicitly listed). I saw mention of an actual list of expected differences from Kirk McKusick but no link.. a link to that would probably be sufficient to answer any of these questions :)
Anyone have any experience using UFS2? Would you recommend it? I'm probably going to wait for 5.1 or 5.2-RELEASE and upgrade my media server. I'd like to have large file support for obvious reasons.
Cryptic Allusion - New Mac and Dreamcast Games!
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Hash: SHA1
It is my privilege and pleasure to announce the availability of FreeBSD 5.0-RELEASE. The culmination of nearly three years of work, this
release starts FreeBSD on the path of advanced multiprocessor and application thread support and introduces support for the sparc64 and
ia64 platforms. Among the long list of new and improved features:
- UFS2, the second generation UFS filesystem, shatters the current 1TB
filesystem barrier.
- Background filesystem checking (bgfsck) and filesystem snapshots
eliminate the need for downtime to do filesystem repair and backup
tasks.
- Experimental support for Mandatory Access Controls (MAC) provide
an extensible and flexible means for administrators to define system
security policies.
- Fine-grained locking in the kernel paves the road for much higher
efficiency of multi-processor systems.
- Support for Bluetooth, ACPI, CardBus, IEEE 1394, and experimental
hardware crypto acceleration keeps FreeBSD at the forefront of new
technology.
- The GCC 3.2.1 compiler provides the latest installment of the
ever-improving GNU Compiler Collection.
- GEOM, the extensible and flexible storage framework, and DEVFS,
the device virtual filesystem, simplify storage and device
management while opening the door for new enterprise storage
technologies.
- Support for the sparc64 and ia64 platforms expands FreeBSD's
support of advanced 64-bit computing platforms.
Although FreeBSD 5.0 contains a number of new and exciting features, it may not be suitable for all users. More conservative users may prefer
to continue using FreeBSD 4.X. Information on the various trade-offs involved, as well as some notes on future plans for both FreeBSD 4.X
and 5.X, can be found in the Early Adopter's Guide, available here:
http://www.FreeBSD.org/releases/5.0R/early-adopte
For a complete list of new features and known problems, please see the release notes and errata list, available here:
http://www.FreeBSD.org/releases/5.0R/relnotes.htm
http://www.FreeBSD.org/releases/5.0R/errata.htm
For more information about FreeBSD release engineering activities, please see:
http://www.FreeBSD.org/releng/
Availability
- ------------
FreeBSD 5.0-RELEASE supports the i386, pc98, alpha, sparc64, and
ia64 architectures and can be installed directly over the net using the
boot floppies or copied to a local NFS/FTP server. Distributions for
all architectures are available now.
Please continue to support the FreeBSD Project by purchasing media from one of our supporting vendors. The following companies will be
offering FreeBSD 5.0 based products:
FreeBSD Mall, Inc. http://www.freebsdmall.com/
Daemonnews, Inc. http://www.bsdmall.com/freebsd1.html
If you can't afford FreeBSD on media, are impatient, or just want to use it for evangelism purposes, then by all means download the ISO
images. We can't promise that all the mirror sites will carry the larger ISO images, but they will at least be available from:
ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.org/pub/FreeBSD/
ftp://ftp12.FreeBSD.org/pub/FreeBSD/
ftp://ftp.tw.FreeBSD.org/pub/FreeBSD/
ftp://ftp{2,3,4,5}.jp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/
ftp://ftp.cz.FreeBSD.org/pub/FreeBSD/
ftp://ftp7.de.FreeBSD.org/pub/FreeBSD/
ftp://ftp.lt.FreeBSD.org/pub/FreeBSD/
ftp://ftp2.za.FreeBSD.org/pub/FreeBSD/
ftp://ftp.se.FreeBSD.org/pub/FreeBSD/
ftp://ftp{1,2,4}.ru.FreeBSD.org/pub/FreeBSD/
FreeBSD is also available via anonymous FTP from mirror sites in the following countries: Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Bulgaria, Canada,
China, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Japan, Korea, Lithuania, Mitchistan, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Slovak Republic, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Taiwan, Thailand, Ukraine, and the United Kingdom.
Before trying the central FTP site, please check your regional mirror(s) first by going to:
ftp://ftp..FreeBSD.org/pub/FreeBSD
Any additional mirror sites will be labeled ftp2, ftp3 and so on. More information about FreeBSD mirror sites can be found at:
http://www.FreeBSD.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/book
ml
For instructions on installing FreeBSD, please see Chapter 2 of The FreeBSD Handbook. It provides a complete installation walk-through
for users new to FreeBSD, and can be found online at:
http://www.FreeBSD.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/book
Acknowledgments
- ---------------
Many companies donated equipment, network access, or man-hours to finance the release engineering activities for FreeBSD 5.0 including The FreeBSD Mall, Compaq, Yahoo!, Sentex Communications, and
NTT/Verio.
The release engineering team for 5.0-RELEASE includes:
Scott Long Release Engineering and Building
Bruce A. Mah Release Engineering, Documentation
Robert Watson Release Engineering, Security
John Baldwin Release Engineering
Murray Stokely Release Engineering
Marcel Moolenaar IA64 Release Building
Takahashi Yoshihiro PC98 Release Building
Kris Kennaway Package Building
Jacques A. Vidrine Security Officer
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Satan? Devil?
Are you fucking crazy? No, you are simply, and I mean simply, IRRATIONAL - DEVOID OF REASON - SUPERSTITIOS - DANGEROUS.
I mean, really, you think the air around you is full of angels & devils fighting and that you are the battleground itself !!! - you need to see a psychiatrist. After that, go get an education.
I mean, I expect this from one of the junior "editors", but Cmdr Taco? Come on.
One simple rule for its versus it's
2003-01-19 04:48:49 FreeBSD 5.0 on FreeBSD ftp's, not officially annou (bsd,bsd) (rejected)
2003-01-19 05:09:15 FreeBSD 5.0-RELEASE (articles,news) (rejected)
MMMKAY!
It's supposed to be: "Your ideas intrigue me and I wish to suscribe to your newsletter."
5.0 is spreading all over world at this right moment, release the strain from master server
check mirrors please !!!!!
I want to purchase FreeBSD on DVD but also with manual. Which package am I supposed to buy? Is the DVD bootable? Would it be better to buy CD's instead? I realize I could just read the online help and download the ISO, but I want to give support.
They are rotting your brain.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
Seems like you need to lay off the drugs.. or get a life.
Stating reality isnt cause for being labled.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
Actually I would have said that motherboards that have IRQ's, and therefore IRQ conflicts, are dead. But so many people see, for reasons that amaze me, to persist in using them. Weird.
I write in my journal
But for a server (and I hope you aren't using BSD to play games on)
Why not? I have FreeBSD on my home system and through FreeBSD's Linux emulation mode I am able to play the Linux client for "Return to Castle Wolfenstein". I have a GeForce 3 and NVidia finally released FreeBSD drivers.
I installed the new version of FreeBSD as a fresh install and got some problems. I also installed X and Enlightenment and IceWM from ports. The problem: Fonts are screwed up! You'll see it when you use Mozilla / Phoenix. Some fonts are ok, some are screwed up (the characters are OK, but the spaces between characters is totally weird and some fonts overlap eachother.) Anyone else had this problem?
Heh, I thought this was a troll, but this is on www.stallman.org. If this actually was written by him the "My 19-year-old child, the Free Software Movement" tells more about the whole GNU/Linux naming thing than a thousand Slashdot trolls ever could.
This thing is dead.
We are predators...
Obviously no pics included...
http://www.stallman.org/#personal
Maybe I subconsciously didn't want to find it...
http://www.stallman.org/rms.jpg
I'll be installing this on my laptop tomorrow. It warms my heart that they support ACPI natively.
Why can't RH, Mandrake, et al offer two kernels, one with APM and the other with ACPI, in their releases?
Configuring and compiling a kernel is a pain in the ass, and they could help jump start all those with newer laptops (mine's 3 years old now -- and you still have to jump through hoops to get the minimal benefits that ACPI in *NIX land provide).
It's embarassing that Microsoft implemented ACPI over three years ago, that ACPI is hosted at Intel and it still doesn't give you that much in the world of Linux and *BSD.
All systems with any sort of firm asynchronous timing requirements have to deal with interrupts. The only alternative is polling, which really only works if you know the inputs a priori, or there is sufficient time (buffering) that you can afford to wait. This can be done if FIFO's or other buffering circuits are used to fill the gap.
Nevertheless, polling isn't a very high performance solution, and if you don't exactly match or exceed your data rate, you risk losing data due to buffer overruns. (hence the half full, almost full and full flags on every FIFO made)
That said, there is more than one way to implement interrupts. In the past, PC cards had to share a fixed pool of 15 (or 14 depending on how they were wired) interrupts. In some cases, you couldn't fill every slot because onboard peripherals would hog the lion's share of the interrupts. Packard bell "modem+sound" cards were terrible about this, using as many as 4 interrupts (and offering little in return)
Other systems, like the original Macs, had a single interrupt line, and the cards issued a response to a query from an interrupt controller. This allowed Macs to ignore, for the most part, interrupt limitations, but imparted a slight speed penalty due to interrupt processing overhead. (it took some cycles to figure out which driver to hand control over to)
Modern architectures use a hybrid of the two approaches, combining the best of both worlds. Interrupt sharing between multiple PCI cards, for example. A NIC and SCSI controller can share the same interrupt number, but are distinguishable based on their ID's and location on the bus. There's also the "modern" APIC IO which allows up to 60 or more "interrupt" lines (it has an interrupt controller inside that remaps the lines)
IOW, interrupts aren't an issue anymore. You will run out of devices long before you run out of interrupts.
never fails, I just burnt an install cd of 5.0-RC3 yesterday.
;)
fortunately I hadn't gotten around to using it yet.
maybe if I burn a copy of Nethack, we'll get 3.4.1.
Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum sonatur.
FreeBSD itself is a very unique OS, being a real UNIX, yet very free, even for commercially modified versions (unlike the GPL license). Its focus is on robustness, yet supporting a large variety of hardware, unlike Open/NetBSD. Sure NetBSD supports more architecture, but sacrifices on many other features, OpenBSD may try to be more robust but sacrifices other flexibilities.
Linux has a motherload of features, everything from Supercomputer support to watches, more hardware than FreeBSD and many other experimental crap that most OSes didnt even think about, but at that point it sacrifices stability. Sure Ive run high-availibility servers on Linux but using newer features and drivers breaks it. Linux will take its time maturing, given attention shifts to stability more than features; FreeBSD is already there.
"Give orange me give eat orange me eat orange give me eat orange give me you." -Nim Chimpsky
Oh that's a laugh riot, Alice. Everyone knows that Stallman loves caramel skinned young boys who don't understand a lick of English but certainly know what a lick can do to an Englishman.
1. Set up formirrorsonly.freebsd.org ftp server
2. Give all mirrors a login, one ip per account (= leaked login is fairly harmless)
3. Announce a reasonable "mirroring" timeframe
4. Make mirrors run a cron job (or whatever *BSD has) at the end of the mirroring time, making it simultaniously availible on all (non-lazy) mirrors. Announce it on main website at the same time.
5. Stop whining about how everybody wrecks everything before it's ready.
6. ???
7. Benefit
Kjella
Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
to use the manufacturers handbook as the definitive guide. Imagine that, a supplied manual that actually tells you everything you need to know.
One Handbook, One OS, One happy customer
There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
I just downloaded the mini disk and installed FreeBSD 5.0. I also installed KDE and several other applications.
All seems to be working quite well so far.
Congratulations to the Release Team.
I hope one can run GEOM filters in userland. Sounds like a way to implement a totally soft file system.
/n/FreeBSD ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD
/n/FreeBSD you got the directory listing of ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD
I'll use the eponymous plan9 example of ftpfs
ftps -m
This would mount the remote ftp site into your local namespace so that when you did ls
Shell programmers will instantly see the advantage of such a system over application level ftp clients.
You can use all the tools you presently use for files for manipulating the remote filesystem. None of your applications will have to understand ftp to operate and you can write new ones without even worrying about ftp libraries or whatever difficult protocol you can envisage.
plan9 achieves all this by employing a kind of universal protocol called 9p [now 9p2000]. It's quite a simple protocol and just does not much more than read, write, walk.
It sounds like the filtering system is a way to implement virtual file systems. I do hope so.
There are many interesting applications for such a concept. The list supplied with plan9 is here
There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
Where else is one to put a comment where the issue is with the parent that has been unjustly moderated?
Replying to my own post seemed the most appropriate to get attention. As it seems it has, evidenced by your ( somewhat worthless ) comment.
Careful about throwing stones or making ludicrous assumptions. *THINK* then react.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
- golly gee, you mean FreeBSD finally got support for FireWire?
- wow! FreeBSD must really be a sophisticated operating system!
- i'm just wetting my pants while waiting to get my hands on a copy!
- can i download it over my modem?
More mod abuse by the editors. I seriously doubt groups of people took the time to mod all of those posts "overrated".
My 19-year-old child, the Free Software Movement, occupies most of my life, leaving no room for more children
Thank God he's not going to breed!
Pike, Ritchie et.al. got a usable product out of the door and crammed with innovation that the rest of the world will eventually find is The Right Thing.
Single sign on - yup & secure too
Security included by default, not as an add on like in Unix & Windows which both evolved from single user systems and the problems that brings [I mean root - how crazy!]
Totally re-entrant in all sorts of ways [get a prompt, type 'rio', and the windowing system runs inside that window - great for testing and you can even choose to transparently run it on remote CPUs]
I hope the hurd does get something out of the door.
User level file systems are a beautiful thing.
There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
Obsolescence of the freeBSD operating system represents itself strangely. So many people don't want freeBSD that they kill half the FTP servers on the face of the planet downloading it when a new version is available. Weird. Notice: Every time a new release of any form of BSD is announced some Linuxketeer or XP drone can be depended upon to announce that '*BSD is dead!' FreeBSD looks pretty healthy considering it was first announced as dead about three years ago. To all those who feel threatened by *BSD I say relax. Competition leads to evolution.
Makes me also wonder if an undocumented "feature" of Slashdot is the posting of the FreeBSD is Dying post, as well.
You know damn well if it was a 'Linux is a failure' series featuring SuSE's begging, Mandrake's bankruptcy, TurboLinux's turbo downturn, or VA Linux flameout, the staff would be all over it.
That would be why FreeBSD and Solaris filesystems are slower than Linux, right?
nhoj@nhoj:~% telnet 130.237.77.139 22
Trying 130.237.77.139...
Connected to dumle.telge.kth.se.
Escape character is '^]'.
SSH-2.0-OpenSSH_3.4p1 Debian 1:3.4p1-1
can this version use the nvidia driver?
Huh? When did IRQs die?
Edge triggered IRQs were a bad design that somehow got into PCs.
Level triggered IRQs are so much saner and was actually supported by the x86 but the PC architecture somehow screwed that up. They can be shared easily. Devices which want to interrupt pull the level down. If the device has been served, it stops pulling down. When the level goes back up it means all devices are satisfied. So there wouldn't be a good reason for IRQ conflicts.
an article from the University of Hagen for German speaking FreeBSD newbies can be downloaded here:
Download (pdf, 45 pages)
Best Regards,
Sebastian
Congratulations to all of the folks who worked hard to make this happen. I stayed up way to late last night upgrading my desktop machine and ran into only a few trivialitiess that were straightforward to fix.
:-)
I suppose it could be psychosomatic, but it actually seems faster to me than 4.7-RELEASE.
I have a couple of public web server type sites that I plan on leaving at 4.x for now, but I'm quite pleased with the present state of the 5.x branch.
Seems I DO know how to use threaded discussions, else wed not be down in the 'threads'..
I stand by the statement that it was appropriate to comment where I did, considering the subject.
I was not replying to MY post, I was responding to the moderation of said post, which didn't warrant starting a new branch. Perhaps it was a tad confusing to you, but that was the intent, now spelled out rather clearly.
And don't assume the Linux connection, I use *BSD. The fact we are in the BSD forum should have given you a clue, speaking of idiot..
Now to be honest I USED to use Linux, until the community became so fragmented that its way out of control, and about to implode.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
red hat is fine to start, along with mandrake and suse. red hat isnt -bad-. its just after going to freebsd, things like the ports system, and the documentation make red hat [and most other linux distros] seem lacking.
Wow! This post is so funny. I guess it was written by a poor Linux luser, sorry, user.
...
/. bullshit.
We will see how many features from FreeBSD 5 will be
ported to Linux and presented as Linux innovations, in the same way Microsoft does
yes, this is one more example of a typical
One more crippling bombshell hit the already beleaguered *BSD community when IDC confirmed that *BSD market share has dropped yet again, now down to less than a fraction of 1 percent of all servers. Coming on the heels of a recent Netcraft survey which plainly states that *BSD has lost more market share, this news serves to reinforce what we've known all along. *BSD is collapsing in complete disarray, as fittingly exemplified by failing dead last in the recent Sys Admin comprehensive networking test.
You don't need to be a Kreskin to predict *BSD's future. The hand writing is on the wall: *BSD faces a bleak future. In fact there won't be any future at all for *BSD because *BSD is dying. Things are looking very bad for *BSD. As many of us are already aware, *BSD continues to lose market share. Red ink flows like a river of blood.
FreeBSD is the most endangered of them all, having lost 93% of its core developers. The sudden and unpleasant departures of long time FreeBSD developers Jordan Hubbard and Mike Smith only serve to underscore the point more clearly. There can no longer be any doubt: FreeBSD is dying.
Let's keep to the facts and look at the numbers.
OpenBSD leader Theo states that there are 7000 users of OpenBSD. How many users of NetBSD are there? Let's see. The number of OpenBSD versus NetBSD posts on Usenet is roughly in ratio of 5 to 1. Therefore there are about 7000/5 = 1400 NetBSD users. BSD/OS posts on Usenet are about half of the volume of NetBSD posts. Therefore there are about 700 users of BSD/OS. A recent article put FreeBSD at about 80 percent of the *BSD market. Therefore there are (7000+1400+700)*4 = 36400 FreeBSD users. This is consistent with the number of FreeBSD Usenet posts.
Due to the troubles of Walnut Creek, abysmal sales and so on, FreeBSD went out of business and was taken over by BSDI who sell another troubled OS. Now BSDI is also dead, its corpse turned over to yet another charnel house.
All major surveys show that *BSD has steadily declined in market share. *BSD is very sick and its long term survival prospects are very dim. If *BSD is to survive at all it will be among OS dilettante dabblers. *BSD continues to decay. Nothing short of a miracle could save it at this late point in time. For all practical purposes, *BSD is dead.
Fact: *BSD is dying
The hour is dark as Dr. Abraham von Stallman approaches the sinister
coffin deep within the mansion.
His bride, a delicate Hurd of pale vaporware wearing a heavily used
dress, whispers "Is it dead?"
Just then, the coffin creaks open, and up stands a monstrous beast
with three heads. It screams in blood-curdling rage at having no
good alternative to GCC.
Von Stallman raises his trusty General Public Cross and prepares
to battle the undead monster...
I'd like to kill and eat you. Fuck the pigs.
How do you like them apples? Pig?
dude, yu are sop dumb.. BSD is not dying.. why dont you get a clue man.. i bet you just made up all those facts right now.. idiot
SCSI is far from dead. While ATA/EIDE may give good performance in a single-user desktop mode, for a real server-class system, SCSI will blow it away. In fact your "smart controller card" thing shows just how silly ATA/IDE really is. In this day of offloading graphics to high-end GPU (NVidia, etc) cards, it is silly to bog down the CPU with meaningless management of disks.
Also, ATA/IDE relies on a max of two drives per cable. We've used ATA Raid controllers at work, yet even then we wind up with a mess of cables. Perhaps hanging 7 drives (15 with wide SCSI) on one cable is not "efficient" in your mind???
Just why do you think it is that real Compaq/Dell/IBM "server" class machines all use SCSI? Its because while ATA might be a good "cheap" alternative for commodity desktop machines, nothing beats SCSI on a server.
Has anyone ever considered configuring an HTTP byte server with a filter on the referrer tag for ".slashdot.org/"? With the appropriate server response, the site would appear
Yes. Just to enjoy the transient pleasure of tasting their flesh. Got a problem with that? Mmmmm... Bacon is good!
I'd rather be a conservative nutjob than a liberal with no nuts and no job.