Subject: Re: what can netbsd offer more than linux?
To: grifo <grifo3000@interfree.it>
From: Hubert Feyrer <hubert@feyrer.de>
List: netbsd-advocacy
Date: 01/13/2005 23:39:31
On Thu, 13 Jan 2005, grifo wrote:
> what can netbsd offer more than linux (2.6) in term of portability features,
> functions, abstract layers apart from cross-compiling and other userland
> very nice features?
* bus_space(9)
* bus_dma(9)
* autoconf(9)?
* In-kernel device recognition and configuration, not the userland-based
"hotplug" framework used in Linux
* An existing /usr/src/sys that really works for 50 platforms, in
contrast to Linux, where you have to hunt patches here and there?
* Proper integration between kernel and userland. No hunting for userland
tools for specific kernel features as e.g. WaveLAN, etc.; all in one
place
For functions... I have a hard time to compare, as I don't know what Linux
has. Maybe some of the more interesting I think are:
* verified_exec & systrace (reminds me of NSA Linux)
* a package system that works for both source and binary on 50 platforms
* emulation layers for various other operating systems on various
CPUs: Linux/i386, FreeBSD/i386, MacOS X/PPC, Solaris/i386,
Solaris/sparc, ...
* See http://www.netbsd.org/Misc/features.html for a few more, probably
not complete.
- Hubert
--
NetBSD - Free AND Open! (And of course secure, portable, yadda yadda)