Lol funny how someone can say; I don’t want to start a fire but
... then puts a lit match to dry grass. J
Chris: +257 76 91 83 83
From: Odhiambo Washington
[mailto:odhiambo@gmail.com]
Sent: 18 August 2010 1:34 p
To: Skunkworks forum
Subject: [Skunkworks] Fwd: BSD vs Linux Appreciate the differences
I'm glad to share this (BUT NOT
AS A FLAME WAR IGNITER< PLEASE), thanks to Paul M.
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Paul M <CENSORED@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, Aug 18, 2010 at 2:28 PM
Subject: BSD vs Linux Appreciate the differences
To: odhiambo@gmail.com
Hello Odhiambo!
I hope you are not turning this into a flame war for there are zealots on both
sides of the OS wars and as this BSDer will tell you there is no end or
peace treaty in sight :-)
I personally have an affinity for FreeBSD and use it ALWAYS. I am also adept in
the OpenBSD security arcana and deploy in hardened security boxes and paranoid
settings for ambitious security measures. That's not to say I don't use Linux
which I will highly recommend to anyone coming from a Windows environment
(UBUNTU for newbies offcourse!). Linux is way ahead in hardware and driver
support and not to mention its advances in the X windows and GUI environments
make PC or DesktopBSD look quite timid. Speaking of the tech republic article
you posted here are my comments:
1. Licences
The article is spot on in identifying the licenses. However GPL a copyleft
license while the BSD license a copyfree license differ fundamentally in their
utilization.The GPL license is restrictive and in order to ensure the copyleft
philosophy is not violated requires that any changes are transmitted to the
greatest possible audience whenever shipping or distributing your source code.
It also forbids the shipping of binary only code. This can be problematic
especially if one wants to ship source code that could be used in confidential
or sensitive systems that require a high degree of discretion. The BSD license
affords the use of privacy/confidentiality in sensitive systems and in shipping
code even using your source code in proprietary application. MacOSX a
proprietary operating system uses a BSD license when shipped with Darwin.
2. Control
Linus Torvalds is the benevolent master of the Linux Kernel, he works with a
small team of developers to initiate changes in the Linux Kernel. What the
article fails to mention is the diversity of the BSD projects; FreeBSD,
OpenBSD, NetBSD,PCBSD, DragonFlyBSD, Darwin. These projects have different
goals; usability, stability,security,portability etc. These projects are
decentralized without having any one leader (perhaps with the exception of Theo
De Raadt of OpenBSD) calling the shots, they each have a core team of
developers and committers who are geographically distributed and share the
objectives and vision of the project. Committers usually have read and write
access to the source code tree of the respective BSD project and release
changes to the tree periodically mostly biannually.
As to whether having a benevolent dictator or an autonomous team to lead a
project remains debatable. What matters is the quality of the code and
objectives each project accomplishes.
3. Kernel Vs Operating System
It is correct that Linux is a kernel and it is shipped in one of several
distros. BSDs are complete operating systems and contain many more utilities
than a core kernel. What the article fails to explain is the design of the Linux/
BSD kernel; microkernel vs monolithic kernel. I would recommend you read the design and implementation of FreeBSD by Marshall Kirk
Mackusik and Understanding the Linux Kernel by Daniel Pierre Bovet and
Marco Cesati.
4. UNIX-Like
Besides the *NIX platitude "BSD is what you get when a bunch of UNIX hackers
sit down to try to port a UNIX system to the PC. Linux is what you get when a
bunch of PC hackers sit down and try to write a UNIX system for the PC."
The BSDs are direct descendants of the original research UNIX version 6 from
AT&T Bell laboratories. The hackers at the University of California at
Berkeley heavily modified UNIX6 to include virtual memory management, TCP/IP
(Yes! the first implementation of the protocol that changed the way Internet
runs was done in Berkeley back 1983),BIND implementation of DNS (Another
achievement from Berkeley that transformed the mapping of IP addresses into
domain names and vice versa). By the late 80s BSD was such a mature operating
system it differed markedly from the UNIX of AT&T. Maybe you may wonder then
how come it didn't make waves like Linux? This is because of a lawsuit AT&T
brought against Berkeley in 1992 where the former sued the university for IPR
infringements do note however the hypocrisy of AT&T in this matter
(it had an incestuous relationship with Berkeley as they used a lot of
code from the BSD hackers to ship into their products) this suit dragged on for
2 years and was eventually settled out of court in 1994. Linux at this time was
making inroads, unlike BSD, Linux is not a direct descendant of UNIX but a
clone of UNIX known as MINIX version 3 designed by Andrew Tanenbaum. A lot of
work was done to integrate the GNU compiler into MINIX and incorporate MINIX to
run on the X86 platform. Because of the openness and wider contribution from
hobbyists, users, academics and the open source movement Linux launched into
hyperspace and became by far the most successful open source project to-date.
BSD did go open source (it never was a closed system as Berkeley distributed
the code for free) after the lawsuit (around 1994) but by then IMHO it was too
late to make waves like Linux did.
The UNIX trademark is owned by the OpenGroup.
5. Base System
Here I concur with the tech republic article Linux is an amalgamation of parts:
A kernel, userland utilities, packages etc. A kernel by itself is meaningless
unless it provides the interfaces and tools needed to interact with it. BSD on
the other hand because of its 'source tree' centralized model of development
incorporates a kernel with utilities and libraries to make it a complete
operating system. Read more on this
6. More On Source
Packages and even the kernel on both BSD and Linux can be compiled from source.
However they both fundamentally differ on package management where Linuxes
greatly utilise prepackaged binaries and although BSD also uses prepackages, a
great deal of third party applications are installed from the ports which allow
compilation of packages from the sources. However some distros of Linux e.g
Debian-kFreebsd and Slackware do use ports for installation of third party
packages.
7. Upgrades
I personally have not upgraded a Linux installation from the source tree.
This is not the case with BSD variants as upgrading from the source is
sometimes the only option you have available. Still a vast majority of the
Linux upgrades I have done is through optic media and FTP upgrades.
8. Bleeding Edge
I disagree with the tech republic author's observation on this one. Like
Linux, BSD particularly FreeBSD does involve some bleeding edge version.
Usually FreeBSD has a stable and current release. The stable release is either
a major or minor upgrade on the source tree. A current release is the latest
changes on the source tree which in most cases is done for testing and
debugging purposes. Usually it not recommended to use a currrent release. The FreeBSD
current release in my opinion in equivalent to a bleeding edge version.
9. Hardware Support
Hands down to Linux. Hardware support and drivers written for Linux is
quite impressive. Its true the latest hardware drivers are unlikely to be
available for many BSD variants.
10. User Base
I don't agree at all with this observation
MAC->Win->Linux->BSD->UNIX. MacOSX runs a modified version of
FreeBSD known as Darwin. What is UNIX anyway? BSD is UNIX so is Solaris or
HP-UX. Each operating system serves a specific purpose (I luv Windows for
games!!!) and such a transition implied by the author is naive at best.
Feel free to share my comments on SkunkWorks. All the Best!
--
:-) Paul M
--
Best regards,
Odhiambo WASHINGTON,
Nairobi,KE
+254733744121/+254722743223
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"If you have nothing good to say about someone, just shut up!."
-- Lucky Dube