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  2. DragonFly BSD - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DragonFly_BSD

    DragonFly BSD is a free and open-source Unix-like operating system forked from FreeBSD 4.8. Matthew Dillon , an Amiga developer in the late 1980s and early 1990s and FreeBSD developer between 1994 and 2003, began working on DragonFly BSD in June 2003 and announced it on the FreeBSD mailing lists on 16 July 2003.

  3. List of BSD operating systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_BSD_operating_systems

    DragonFly BSD: Originally forked from FreeBSD 4.8, now developed in a different direction TrueNAS: Previously known as FreeNAS. GhostBSD: GhostBSD is a FreeBSD OS distro oriented for desktops and laptops. Its goal is to combine the stability and security of FreeBSD with OpenRC, OS packages and Mate graphical user interface.

  4. Comparison of BSD operating systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_BSD...

    The DragonFly BSD logo, designed by Joe Angrisano, is a dragonfly named Fred. [37] A number of unofficial logos [38] by various authors also show the dragonfly or stylized versions of it. DragonFly BSD considers itself to be "the logical continuation of the FreeBSD 4.x series."

  5. vkernel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vkernel

    In DragonFly, the vkernel can be thought of as a first-class computer architecture, comparable to i386 or amd64, and, according to Matthew Dillon circa 2007, can be used as a starting point for porting DragonFly BSD to new architectures. [12] DragonFly's vkernel is supported by the host kernel through new system calls that help manage virtual ...

  6. Matthew Dillon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matthew_Dillon

    Concerned with problems he saw in the direction FreeBSD 5.x was headed in regards to concurrency, [10] and coupled with the fact that Dillon's access to the FreeBSD source code repository was revoked due to a falling-out with other FreeBSD developers, he started the DragonFly BSD project in 2003, implementing the SMP model using light-weight ...

  7. HAMMER2 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HAMMER2

    DragonFly BSD HAMMER2 is a successor to the HAMMER filesystem, redesigned from the ground up to support enhanced clustering . HAMMER2 supports online and batched deduplication , snapshots , directory entry indexing, multiple mountable filesystem roots , mountable snapshots, a low memory footprint , compression , encryption , zero-detection ...

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  9. HAMMER (file system) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HAMMER_(file_system)

    HAMMER is a high-availability 64-bit file system developed by Matthew Dillon for DragonFly BSD using B+ trees.Its major features include infinite NFS-exportable snapshots, master–multislave operation, configurable history retention, fsckless-mount, and checksums to deal with data corruption. [5]