FreeBSD Status Report March-April 2004
Anonymous Coward writes "The FreeBSD project has posted a new status report
for March and April of 2004. Work continues on locking down the network
stack, ACPI made more great strides, an ARM port appeared in the tree,
and the FreeBSD 4.10 release cycle wrapped up."
Nope, this is a different Alan Cox.
;-)
Something tells me I once saw an FAQ list once that involved this same question but I could be wrong
Well, These are two different people. Alan L. Cox is a FreeBSD commiter. Here is his homepage : http://www.cs.rice.edu/~alc/
Most of the bugs in your list are marked closed, and one is for a package that has nothing to do with disks or the OS. That leaves two entries that are relevant. Guessing the geometry is a lot harder than it sounds, especially if you already installed Windows or another boot loader and it guessed the geometry differently (as is the case with at least one of the entries in your list). This is a common problem in Linux, too. Windows is 'immune' to it because it'll choose whatever geometry it wants and leave any previously installed OS's stranded.
Cat, the other, tastier white meat.
Where is the PPC port? I am amazed that I can't install freebsd on my mac.
evil is as evil does
The current status of the FreeBSD on PowerPC is here
Short version: It's a Tier 2 architecture which means it's not quite there yet. According to the project page it's "on the verge of booting to single-user mode".
The reason why FreeBSD's port system has grown so quickly is probably because there's only been one architecture they had to 'port' applications across to. It would be slowed down if they had to unify the ports system to support not only multi-platform architectures, but also the differences between the kernels for each BSD project.
However, this reminded me of this. NetBSD's package collection actually has released their pkgsrc collection to both FreeBSD and OpenBSD.
Man watching 6 MSCE's around a sun box, looks alot like the opening scene's of 2001:space odyssey...
Pkgsrc is available for many OSes. It's most matured on BSD/Linux. It would be cool if several of the BSD's and Linux would use it. Check it out www.pkgsrc.org
Darwin (OS X)
NetBSD
OpenBSD
FreeBSD
Linux
Solaris
Irix