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Date:      Wed, 06 Nov 2013 08:21:08 +1030
From:      Shane Ambler <FreeBSD@ShaneWare.Biz>
To:        aurfalien <aurfalien@gmail.com>
Cc:        FreeBSD Mailing List <freebsd-questions@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: Running various OS's in jail
Message-ID:  <5279684C.6070901@ShaneWare.Biz>
In-Reply-To: <374EAB96-779C-40CD-8C13-62BBF75A38DA@gmail.com>
References:  <24961C57-7514-4007-A9A2-166BC589334E@gmail.com> <17E2D86F-AEE6-445C-9BF6-CB59C1F02FE7@mac.com> <374EAB96-779C-40CD-8C13-62BBF75A38DA@gmail.com>

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On 06/11/2013 07:23, aurfalien wrote:
> Well, I've a write up on FreeBSD 8 jailing Centos 5.5.
> 
> Was hoping for something more recent.
> 
> - aurf
> On Nov 5, 2013, at 12:52 PM, Charles Swiger wrote:
> 
>> On Nov 5, 2013, at 12:32 PM, aurfalien <aurfalien@gmail.com> wrote:
>>> I've sort of a need to run Solaris in a jail..
>>
>> Jails don't support running other operating systems.  You'd need to use a VM.

If you are running 10.0 then have a look at bhyve.org - it only works on
recent hardware and is known to support freebsd openbsd and linux

There is mention that 9.x can support bhyve and I think the EuroBSDCon
video gives details of how to do that.

If that is too young then you should look at qemu or virtualbox




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