Date: Tue, 26 Aug 1997 10:42:24 -0400 (EDT) From: rdkeys@csemail.cropsci.ncsu.edu To: softweyr@xmission.com (Wes Peters) Cc: rdkeys@csemail.cropsci.ncsu.edu (), questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: 2.2-STABLE ---THANKS for the detailed info! Message-ID: <9708261442.AA133031@csemail.cropsci.ncsu.edu> In-Reply-To: <199708260516.XAA22495@obie.softweyr.ml.org> from "Wes Peters" at Aug 25, 97 11:16:41 pm
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> Some of > us even have older, slower hardware than the core team. ;^) (This > message is being chiseled into the electrons on a 486/66, for instance.) Well, this dummy's boxes are half a dozen lowendian 386/486 junkers, and I really can't complain, at all, since 2.1.7.1/2.2.x/3.0.x is up and running fine on all of them. What I was after was a rock stable unchanging system for the home boxes (2.1.7.1 is fine there), a good carefree system for the office boxes (2.2-RELENG is fine there) and one 3.0 play box (current is fine there). Your detailed explanation helped immensely. What was confusing me was what the 2.2 stable actually was. > (Yes, this is a mild slam directed at Linux, the various SVR4 PC > platforms, and especially SCO.) I run aix/minix/linux/FreeBSd, and support your slam, although there is one source that I can compile fine on suns/aix/linux but it blows up every gcc on every version of FreeBSD (runs fine on gcc on the sun and the linux box, tho). I am still scratching my head on that one. Krazy parsing error with no evident code anomalies. > We also have a 2.2-STABLE release, based on post-2.2.2 code, which > is approaching this level of reliability and features the performance > and system administration pluses found in the 2.2 release. Where does one start the build of this? I would assume it is built on the 2.2.2-RELEASE and cvsup the stable tag? > That's the nice thing about FreeBSD: you make the choice which is most > appropriate for you. Hopefully now you have enough information to make > a good decision. Yes, I like the choice, but for a while it was quite confusing to find out what exactly was stable and what was almost stable and what was release and what was development. Now it is quite clear.... Thanks! > Wes Peters Thanks Wes..... Bob Keys rdkeys@csemail.cropsci.ncsu.edu le unix dummie, par excellance.
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