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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.
FreeBSD maintains a complete system, delivering a kernel, device drivers, userland utilities, and documentation, as opposed to Linux only delivering a kernel and drivers, and relying on third-parties such as GNU for system software. [7] The FreeBSD source code is generally released under a permissive BSD license, as opposed to the copyleft GPL ...
The FreeBSD Ports collection is a package management system for the FreeBSD operating system. Ports in the collection vary with contributed software. There were 38,487 ports available in February 2020 [1] and 36,504 in September 2024. [2] It has also been adopted by NetBSD as the basis of its pkgsrc system.
There are a number of Unix-like operating systems based on or descended from the Berkeley Software Distribution (BSD) series of Unix variant options. The three most notable descendants in current use are FreeBSD, OpenBSD, and NetBSD, which are all derived from 386BSD and 4.4BSD-Lite, by various routes.
ATI r200 free software driver ATI r300 free software driver Nvidia free software driver Audio TV tuner, video editing, or webcam; Linux: Yes Yes Yes Yes 2.6.31+ [12] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes,nv(2d only), nouveau(3d with mesa) OSS, ALSA: V4L,V4L2 FreeBSD: Yes Yes Yes Yes 8.2+ Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No No Yes ...
Net/2 was the basis for two separate ports of BSD to the Intel 80386 architecture: the free 386BSD by William and Lynne Jolitz, and the proprietary BSD/386 (later renamed BSD/OS) by Berkeley Software Design (BSDi). 386BSD itself was short-lived, but became the initial code base of the NetBSD and FreeBSD projects that were started shortly ...
OpenBSD is a security-focused, free software, Unix-like operating system based on the Berkeley Software Distribution (BSD). Theo de Raadt created OpenBSD in 1995 by forking NetBSD 1.0. [ 4 ] The OpenBSD project emphasizes portability , standardization , correctness , proactive security , and integrated cryptography .
In FreeBSD 7.1 ULE was the default for the i386 and AMD64 architectures. [clarification needed] DTrace support was integrated in version 7.1, [12] and NetBSD [13] and FreeBSD 7.2 brought support for multi-IPv4/IPv6 jails. [14] Code supporting the DEC Alpha architecture (supported since FreeBSD 4.0) was removed in FreeBSD 7.0. [15]