OpenBSD Ports and Packages Explained
jpkunst writes "As reported on undeadly.org: an interesting interview with OpenBSD developer Marc Espie about the internals of and the philosophy behind the OpenBSD ports and packages system."
← Back to Stories (view on slashdot.org)
There's a lot of very intelligent people working BSD. I'm a Linux zealot myself, but I really enjoyed reading this interview with Theo de Raadt, and Christos Zoulas. It's very interesting how much they seem to different in what they believe. One of the more striking ones was:
-vs-
It's hard to imagine that they are even talking about the same things.
Like some
I've been very happy with several concepts:
- The dependency trees are spot-on and very automated. Correct versions and complete coverage.
- The ability to undo or rollback a package is smooth (like when I took a 7.x Postgres package and pkg_delete'd it to try the port)
- The published docs, man pages and organization of the system is superb. I picked up "Absolute OpenBSD" and "BSD Hacks" and have been toured confidently around the system by these and the man pages they point to.
- The post-install notes are a great help.
For me, it's a great "warm and fuzzy" to gather the documentation sources into a list and be able to dive down rabbit holes for long periods without feeling like a flea market is on my box. Cheers to the BSD folks, especially the package maintainers.