From owner-freebsd-chat@FreeBSD.ORG Sun Sep 11 23:55:37 2011 Return-Path: Delivered-To: freebsd-chat@freebsd.org Received: from mx1.freebsd.org (mx1.freebsd.org [IPv6:2001:4f8:fff6::34]) by hub.freebsd.org (Postfix) with ESMTP id E7C3A1065672 for ; Sun, 11 Sep 2011 23:55:37 +0000 (UTC) (envelope-from giffunip@tutopia.com) Received: from nm30-vm3.bullet.mail.ne1.yahoo.com (nm30-vm3.bullet.mail.ne1.yahoo.com [98.138.91.160]) by mx1.freebsd.org (Postfix) with SMTP id 97F0A8FC1D for ; Sun, 11 Sep 2011 23:55:37 +0000 (UTC) Received: from [98.138.90.55] by nm30.bullet.mail.ne1.yahoo.com with NNFMP; 11 Sep 2011 23:42:50 -0000 Received: from [98.138.89.232] by tm8.bullet.mail.ne1.yahoo.com with NNFMP; 11 Sep 2011 23:42:50 -0000 Received: from [127.0.0.1] by omp1047.mail.ne1.yahoo.com with NNFMP; 11 Sep 2011 23:42:50 -0000 X-Yahoo-Newman-Property: ymail-3 X-Yahoo-Newman-Id: 512861.14895.bm@omp1047.mail.ne1.yahoo.com Received: (qmail 66077 invoked by uid 60001); 11 Sep 2011 23:42:49 -0000 DKIM-Signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha256; c=relaxed/relaxed; d=yahoo.com; s=s1024; t=1315784569; bh=bZeAW05mB2ey8+voKtCafQeqWHkIQMNitPU3O3Ub4nM=; h=X-YMail-OSG:Received:X-RocketYMMF:X-Mailer:Message-ID:Date:From:Reply-To:Subject:To:Cc:MIME-Version:Content-Type:Content-Transfer-Encoding; b=Md0B4rUrUEUT9ElVjezsfGZXR7zC1VAgFN9blccitjQgXK/TEC9+u5HxTzOzy3FiJT0wpOKSfmokOYx2GfBdUfd8LedI9bn37g1MjGO79qgC6mc16IE8hyzp3FF9M1hnfYUEb59Y3+6ETHgLLQxPpd1Pvn7GUL0HWmkCYG7Z3TA= X-YMail-OSG: VAkCC.YVM1laIwnZZBZrKxffYGYTP.tq0IEzr6cF6I4zHXS APRh3jkjwetvrGLq_LDMsC2Pedm8r2t40v3g_V6hK0fUZwxEmCjoj0694Nv3 qFPrBmAzlJJvjmV4QOEbp13xvOpTeAIM40.JYwn3kUhRFd6bNP27u_QLa6lv _O9WMwsKvJKHC2tRosFq1akhhv.9QAFEq2jEGqqja9hOlc.AdQu7YfvfUae3 hm5ISWlC9YHeH0xpbAa9Zz_pP9vFzL9H5xYEaZniQoqIIGz62_MT2LLxeCop IpqN0yw..CmBfGBzMJaZ7Wk5bTyBB6ef00nkrmvJL477wm_4CcvGR2KzG1CH ffHkNw_A4arG3iUKCt7a8mVUIg7V7B8NnOmH4Y8oWLf5ZnhIsYloX7STBahZ vyLucK4Zxuxcokwy5bVsNhvPUl4GPpFP9QOuGOXNqtipj38Q7WobyEu7okjF 0V2MvBCsZBMyoRCgHDoCcfueQ_HA5wtekfh8obrsWhw-- Received: from [200.118.157.7] by web113505.mail.gq1.yahoo.com via HTTP; Sun, 11 Sep 2011 16:42:49 PDT X-RocketYMMF: giffunip X-Mailer: YahooMailClassic/14.0.5 YahooMailWebService/0.8.113.315625 Message-ID: <1315784569.65036.YahooMailClassic@web113505.mail.gq1.yahoo.com> Date: Sun, 11 Sep 2011 16:42:49 -0700 (PDT) From: "Pedro F. Giffuni" To: freebsd-chat@freebsd.org MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1 Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable Cc: johan Hendriks Subject: Re: 4.x era X-BeenThere: freebsd-chat@freebsd.org X-Mailman-Version: 2.1.5 Precedence: list Reply-To: giffunip@tutopia.com List-Id: Non technical items related to the community List-Unsubscribe: , List-Archive: List-Post: List-Help: List-Subscribe: , X-List-Received-Date: Sun, 11 Sep 2011 23:55:38 -0000 (4.x nostalgia belongs to -chat, not to -arch)=0A=0AI also have good memori= es of the 4.x era, but I tried=0Areinstalling not long ago and it didn't re= ally look=0Aall that great. Objectively I think part of the glory=0Aof thos= e days was the momentum building around the=0Aplatform (the BSDi code was m= erging, the performance=0Aand stability was way above anything else).=0A=0A= Nowadays I find 9.x extremely interesting and in=0Acertain way it's also th= e end of an era: the GNU=0Astuff and ZFS is at the top of what will ever be= in=0Abase. This means that we will have to be focusing=0Aon newer technolo= gies from now on.=0A=0AOh and We are still doing quite well in performance= =0Aand stability, and Netcraft confirms it ;) :=0A=0A"For the first time th= is year, FreeBSD has the=0Alargest share of hosting providers in the top 10= =0Awith half of them running FreeBSD servers. Of the=0Aother hosting provid= ers in the top 10, 4 run Linux=0Aand 1 uses Windows Server 2008."=0A=0AIf i= t were not for X.Org, that has become very=0Adifficult to configure, I'd su= rely recommend FreeBSD=0Ato everyone: instead now I recommend PC-BSD.=0A=0A= cheers,=0A=0APedro.=0A=0AOn Sun, 11 Sep 2011 11:42:50 +0200, johan Hendriks= wrote:=0A=0A>Hello all=0A=0A>First of all this is not a rant, just a write= down of my feel about FreeBSD.=0A>Secondly i want to thank all of the peop= le involved in FreeBSD for this =0A>fantastic OS that i use on a daily basi= s for most tasks like Mail =0A>filtering, proxy/web services and file shari= ng.=0A=0A>Here i go.=0A>In the time of FreeBSD 4.x, i would without hesitat= ing recommend FreeBSD =0A>for almost=A0 everything on the server side.=0A= =0A>You know you could take FreeBSD 4.x and start throwing rocks at it no = =0A>matter how big the rocks where, and the FreeBSD people would probably = =0A>stand in front of the crowd with the biggest rocks.=0A=0A>But with the = latest like 6, 7 and the 8 releases i have my doubts! I =0A>would still be = throwing rocks, but i will not stand in front, and would =0A>be more picky = about the rocks i pick to throw.=0A=0A>I have no data to prove this, it is = just a feeling.=0A>FreeBSD does not have the same robuust feel like it had = in the 4.x days.=0A=0A>Is this because FreeBSD does not get ironed out anym= ore like the 4.x =0A>release?=0A>We stop at x.3 or x.4 as where the 4.x rel= ease did go to .11 , and it =0A>proved to be a succes.=0A=0A>Also is FreeBS= D not to conservative in its settings?=0A=0A>For example if there is a perf= ormance battle between linux, opensolaris =0A>or whatever=A0 and FreeBSD an= d FreeBSD lacks in performance, there is =0A>always the statement that you = need to tune FreeBSD!=0A>Why?=0A=0A>Could we not set defaults to more stand= ard values that modern hardware =0A>uses.=0A>This has been asked several ti= mes before if i memeber correctly, and the =0A>answer is mostly that there = are still some users that have old hardware.=0A>Well is it not time to let = them tune the system down.=0A>Maybe an installer option, like GENERIC kerne= l and T_GENERIC kernel for =0A>Tuned Kernel, with has some settings that is= always a good thing to have =0A>on your modern hardware.=0A>And with it co= mes a more suitable /etc/sysctl.conf file or default =0A>sysctl values that= fits latest hardware better.=0A>This way if you have old hardware, you can= select your good old known =0A>FreeBSD.=0A>If you are on modern hardware y= ou can select the tuned version.=0A=0A>Samba performance is in my opinion n= ot good at FreeBSD.=0A>Windows and Linux get higher performance without any= tuning.=0A>But i do not want to start using a mix of operating systems.=0A= >Linux for Samba, FreeBSD fo web/mail filtering and Windows for exchange = =0A>and so on.=0A=0A>I know you can not suspect to be a high performance we= bserver and a =0A>samba server with the same tunings, but there must be a w= ay to find a =0A>good balance.=0A>So if you install FreeBSD, Linux and Wind= ows there are some differences, =0A>but not that huge as there are now.=0A= =0A>In my opinion we now starting to enter the storage era.=0A>FreeBSD with= ZFS could play a major role in this.=0A>But here i get a little reluctent = to use FreeBSD.=0A>If i read the maillings lists and some performance and t= rouble issues =0A>people have with ZFS, i starting to get doubts.=0A>I also= know that succes stories are not on these lists, and only the bad =0A>thin= gs are.=0A=0A>I work for a small company with three people.=0A>We do not ha= ve budgets to buy SAN and or NAS machines and do endless =0A>testing.=0A=0A= >Vmware is getting bigger and bigger, even for the smaller company's we =0A= >work for.=0A>So again FreeBSD and ZFS could really be a good solution for = a SAN/NAS. =0A>But we can not have kernel panics on the SAN/NAS!=0A>But her= e again reluctend to do so.=0A=0A>Maybe it is because the problems on the m= ailling list, or the whole feel =0A>of it, i do not know.=0A=0A>Now we need= to make a choice.=0A=0A>HP SANS or FreeBSD with ZFS for the SAN.=0A=0A=0A>= Again not a rant, just my writing down the feeling i have with FreeBSD =0A>= right now.=0A>And again thanks to all for making FreeBSD to what it is toda= y.=0A>A wonderful clean sytem that still does the job for me.=0A=0A>regards= =0A>Johan Hendriks=0A=0A From owner-freebsd-chat@FreeBSD.ORG Thu Sep 15 21:46:38 2011 Return-Path: Delivered-To: freebsd-chat@freebsd.org Received: from mx1.freebsd.org (mx1.freebsd.org [IPv6:2001:4f8:fff6::34]) by hub.freebsd.org (Postfix) with ESMTP id 6033F106566C for ; Thu, 15 Sep 2011 21:46:38 +0000 (UTC) (envelope-from thegorefather@comcast.net) Received: from qmta06.westchester.pa.mail.comcast.net (qmta06.westchester.pa.mail.comcast.net [76.96.62.56]) by mx1.freebsd.org (Postfix) with ESMTP id 203C28FC12 for ; Thu, 15 Sep 2011 21:46:38 +0000 (UTC) Received: from omta06.westchester.pa.mail.comcast.net ([76.96.62.51]) by qmta06.westchester.pa.mail.comcast.net with comcast id Z9YC1h00716LCl0569ZPZN; Thu, 15 Sep 2011 21:33:23 +0000 Received: from [192.168.2.2] ([68.43.224.227]) by omta06.westchester.pa.mail.comcast.net with comcast id Z9ZN1h00l4uzdYs3S9ZNwE; Thu, 15 Sep 2011 21:33:23 +0000 Message-ID: <4E726F24.8000609@comcast.net> Date: Thu, 15 Sep 2011 17:33:24 -0400 From: Allen User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; WOW64; rv:6.0.2) Gecko/20110902 Firefox/6.0.2 SeaMonkey/2.3.3 MIME-Version: 1.0 To: freebsd-chat@freebsd.org References: <1315784569.65036.YahooMailClassic@web113505.mail.gq1.yahoo.com> In-Reply-To: <1315784569.65036.YahooMailClassic@web113505.mail.gq1.yahoo.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Subject: Re: 4.x era X-BeenThere: freebsd-chat@freebsd.org X-Mailman-Version: 2.1.5 Precedence: list List-Id: Non technical items related to the community List-Unsubscribe: , List-Archive: List-Post: List-Help: List-Subscribe: , X-List-Received-Date: Thu, 15 Sep 2011 21:46:38 -0000 Before I reply I wanted to put something here about me. I'm not going to top post, as I'll respond to each section I'd like to respond to, underneath the text quoted. I started using FreeBSD what seems like quite a while ago. This post has brought back some Nostalgia for me, because I still remember the very day I saw FreeBSD for the first time. I got my VERY first Computer back in September of 1999. If you're wondering how the heck I can tell you not only the year, but the Month, it's simple; My Mom bought me a Computer from my Uncle, and I was going to use it for school. Well, after two weeks, I'd guessed my Uncle's Password to Prodigy Internet, and got online for the first time. After a few days, I signed up for an account on web site, and, well, to this day, I can log into that, and see the date I joined if I wanted to. The last time I did, I basically saw September of 1999, and remembered how I'd gotten that account. So yea, it was exactly September of 1999 that I got my very first Computer. It came with Windows 95, and it sucked. It was slow, had very little RAM, and, to this day, I have no clue what kind of Processor it had. I didn't have a bunch of manuals to look at. So anyway, within a few months, I'd started learning about this thing called a "Hacker" because I was on IRC, and talking to lots of people, and learned that someone was one of those. I looked it up, and I was amazed to see there were people who could make machines do things they weren't intended to do. Along the way, I learned he didn't use Windows at all, but Linux. Well, I started looking up Linux, and saw how it was made to be like Unix. One day, while reading an article about the guy who did the DVD cracking of deCSS or whatever it was, I learned he said something along the lines of "I don't use Linux, I prefer FreeBSD" and I was like "WTF is FreeBSD??" so I started looking THAT up. I learned that BSD was more "hardcore" than Linux, and, technically, and historically, more Unix than SysV. Well, one day, I was at Best Buy with my Mom, and I'm looking at software, seeing all the Linux stuff they have, and BeOS, and I see something that catches my attention; The BSD PowerPak. It was 59.99 and I grabbed it. It contained the BSD PowerPak, and "The Complete FreeBSD. 3rd Edition" and I was looking at the box almost drooling that I'd found it. I bought it obviously. I was amazed. I'd never seen anything like it before. I mean, I knew what Linux was, but this was like amazing to me. It came with FreeBSD 4.0 on CD-ROM, and the Tool Kit. To this day, I still have the Book, I still have all 6 CDs in the Tool Kit, and all 4 Installation CDs, and, I still have the box it came in with the price on it. That's how I knew how much it was. So I got home and started reading the book, and I'm like amazed by this stuff. I mean I had Unix! My Best Friend was more purist and said it wasn't Unix but BSD. I said BSD was Unix and so on, and now we both basically know. So anyway, I didn't even try to install it at first, as my machine was now a brand new Computer running Windows 98 SE. Eventually, I got another Computer, and installed Caldera OpenLinux 2.2 on it, and I couldn't quite get BSD working. I of course was making a bunch of newbie mistakes, but hey, I had it. So anyway, eventually, I tried installing FreeBSD 4.0. I screwed up the install, lost everything on the drive, and didn't touch it for a while. Then, one day, I tried again. I got it installed. I've been using FreeBSD on and off ever since. Now, I'm Married, have my own House, and we have a BUNCH of machines, and I usually make sure at least one or two are running FreeBSD. Pedro F. Giffuni wrote: > (4.x nostalgia belongs to -chat, not to -arch) > > I also have good memories of the 4.x era, but I tried > reinstalling not long ago and it didn't really look > all that great. Objectively I think part of the glory > of those days was the momentum building around the > platform (the BSDi code was merging, the performance > and stability was way above anything else). If you look on Wikipedia, they say that the 4.x line was some of the most stable stuff ever made. So I think there may very well be some truth to that. > Nowadays I find 9.x extremely interesting and in > certain way it's also the end of an era: the GNU > stuff and ZFS is at the top of what will ever be in > base. This means that we will have to be focusing > on newer technologies from now on. I'm not so sure about an Era, but, yea, as someone who hasn't used ZFS, mostly because I just don't care about it, I don't keep track of it really. I love BSD, but I only use FreeBSD and PC-BSD. I don't have NetBSD installed on anything, and don't intend to, because so far, my stove doesn't have a 16 bit processor yet. And OpenBSD... I just don't like that guy. So I don't use it. > Oh and We are still doing quite well in performance > and stability, and Netcraft confirms it ;) : > > "For the first time this year, FreeBSD has the > largest share of hosting providers in the top 10 > with half of them running FreeBSD servers. Of the > other hosting providers in the top 10, 4 run Linux > and 1 uses Windows Server 2008." > > If it were not for X.Org, that has become very > difficult to configure, I'd surely recommend FreeBSD > to everyone: instead now I recommend PC-BSD. I don't configure it. I install FreeBSD, then install some packages with pkg_add -r bunch of stuff And then, I load up GDM or KDM, and log in. I don't think I've ever configured X on BSD.... Or at least not since I last tried, with 4.0, and 5, but it works fine. > cheers, > > Pedro. > > On Sun, 11 Sep 2011 11:42:50 +0200, johan Hendriks wrote: > >> Hello all >> First of all this is not a rant, just a write down of my feel about FreeBSD. >> Secondly i want to thank all of the people involved in FreeBSD for this >> fantastic OS that i use on a daily basis for most tasks like Mail >> filtering, proxy/web services and file sharing. >> Here i go. >> In the time of FreeBSD 4.x, i would without hesitating recommend FreeBSD >> for almost everything on the server side. >> You know you could take FreeBSD 4.x and start throwing rocks at it no >> matter how big the rocks where, and the FreeBSD people would probably >> stand in front of the crowd with the biggest rocks. >> But with the latest like 6, 7 and the 8 releases i have my doubts! I >> would still be throwing rocks, but i will not stand in front, and would >> be more picky about the rocks i pick to throw. >> I have no data to prove this, it is just a feeling. >> FreeBSD does not have the same robuust feel like it had in the 4.x days. >> Is this because FreeBSD does not get ironed out anymore like the 4.x >> release? >> We stop at x.3 or x.4 as where the 4.x release did go to .11 , and it >> proved to be a succes. >> Also is FreeBSD not to conservative in its settings? >> For example if there is a performance battle between linux, opensolaris >> or whatever and FreeBSD and FreeBSD lacks in performance, there is >> always the statement that you need to tune FreeBSD! >> Why? >> Could we not set defaults to more standard values that modern hardware >> uses. >> This has been asked several times before if i memeber correctly, and the >> answer is mostly that there are still some users that have old hardware. >> Well is it not time to let them tune the system down. >> Maybe an installer option, like GENERIC kernel and T_GENERIC kernel for >> Tuned Kernel, with has some settings that is always a good thing to have >> on your modern hardware. >> And with it comes a more suitable /etc/sysctl.conf file or default >> sysctl values that fits latest hardware better. >> This way if you have old hardware, you can select your good old known >> FreeBSD. >> If you are on modern hardware you can select the tuned version. >> Samba performance is in my opinion not good at FreeBSD. >> Windows and Linux get higher performance without any tuning. >> But i do not want to start using a mix of operating systems. >> Linux for Samba, FreeBSD fo web/mail filtering and Windows for exchange >> and so on. >> I know you can not suspect to be a high performance webserver and a >> samba server with the same tunings, but there must be a way to find a >> good balance. >> So if you install FreeBSD, Linux and Windows there are some differences, >> but not that huge as there are now. >> In my opinion we now starting to enter the storage era. >> FreeBSD with ZFS could play a major role in this. >> But here i get a little reluctent to use FreeBSD. >> If i read the maillings lists and some performance and trouble issues >> people have with ZFS, i starting to get doubts. >> I also know that succes stories are not on these lists, and only the bad >> things are. >> I work for a small company with three people. >> We do not have budgets to buy SAN and or NAS machines and do endless >> testing. >> Vmware is getting bigger and bigger, even for the smaller company's we >> work for. >> So again FreeBSD and ZFS could really be a good solution for a SAN/NAS. >> But we can not have kernel panics on the SAN/NAS! >> But here again reluctend to do so. >> Maybe it is because the problems on the mailling list, or the whole feel >> of it, i do not know. >> Now we need to make a choice. >> HP SANS or FreeBSD with ZFS for the SAN. > >> Again not a rant, just my writing down the feeling i have with FreeBSD >> right now. >> And again thanks to all for making FreeBSD to what it is today. >> A wonderful clean sytem that still does the job for me. >> regards >> Johan Hendrik