Ubuntu Forums ubuntu.com - launchpad.net - ubuntu help  

Go Back   Ubuntu Forums > The Ubuntu Forum Community > Forum Community Discussions > Other OS Talk > Distributions > BSD Discussions
Register Reset Password Forum Help Forum Council Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read


The Ubuntu Forums have grown tremendously over the years. While we regret that we are discontinuing our Other OS Talk category, this gives us an opportunity to help other Linux distributions grow by directing traffic to the websites of these distributions.

Here is a list of the official websites for the operating systems that used to have individual forums here. We hope you are able to find further assistance from there. And finally, if you haven't yet found what you are looking for, we suggest you look for information on the DistroWatch website or you might try the multi-distribution LinuxQuestions forum.

BSD Discussions
Discuss various BSD related operating systems.

 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old February 13th, 2009   #1
SunSpyda
A Carafe of Ubuntu
 
Join Date: Feb 2009
Beans: 103
Which BSD is the fastest and most minimalistic?

I want to know which BSD you all think to be the fastest and minimalistic. When I say 'fastest' I mean how well it uses the capabilities of new hardware and how it performs at SMP and threading.

What do you all think?
SunSpyda is offline  
Old February 13th, 2009   #2
Sorivenul
Dark Roasted Ubuntu
 
Sorivenul's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: USA
My beans are hidden!
Ubuntu Development Release
Re: Which BSD is the fastest and most minimalistic?

Quote:
Originally Posted by SunSpyda View Post
I want to know which BSD you all think to be the fastest and minimalistic. When I say 'fastest' I mean how well it uses the capabilities of new hardware and how it performs at SMP and threading.
As far as using capabilities of new hardware, FreeBSD is the current winner in my book, though all the BSDs are behind Linux in this respect. The main reason I say FreeBSD is because I've had a little hardware trouble with NetBSD and OpenBSD, though NetBSD 5 should fix much of this automatically from what I've read.

As for SMP and threading, it depends. I've experienced little difference between NetBSD and FreeBSD in most of my tests, however, I've read reports that NetBSD lacks a bit in this area, mostly because of its broad range of supported architectures. I know FreeBSD's SMP implementation can be improved even more by enabling the ULE scheduler as opposed to the 4_BSD scheduler.

As far as OpenBSD is concerned, my expertise is fairly limited. The security features of the base install may have some effect on performance, but probably very little, especially on modern systems. Last I knew, OpenBSD didn't support SMP by default, though it provides a separate SMP-enabled kernel during the install that you may select, with SMP support limited to about 4 architectures.

Hope this helps!
__________________
Spiralinear: Humanity & Machines
RUNNING: Fedora | FreeBSD | Windows 7
Sorivenul is offline  
Old February 13th, 2009   #3
C!oud
Extra Foam Sugar Free Ubuntu
 
C!oud's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2008
Beans: 796
Re: Which BSD is the fastest and most minimalistic?

Quote:
Originally Posted by SunSpyda View Post
I want to know which BSD you all think to be the fastest and minimalistic. When I say 'fastest' I mean how well it uses the capabilities of new hardware and how it performs at SMP and threading.

What do you all think?
Most minimal I'd say is NetBSD, as for fastest in reference to SMP and threading I'd say DragonflyBSD. Best hardware support definitely goes to FreeBSD.
__________________
Spiralinear
C!oud is offline  
Old February 13th, 2009   #4
Sorivenul
Dark Roasted Ubuntu
 
Sorivenul's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: USA
My beans are hidden!
Ubuntu Development Release
Re: Which BSD is the fastest and most minimalistic?

Quote:
Originally Posted by C!oud View Post
Most minimal I'd say is NetBSD, as for fastest in reference to SMP and threading I'd say DragonflyBSD. Best hardware support definitely goes to FreeBSD.
I didn't mention DragonFlyBSD as it isn't one of the "Big 3", and a bit "off the beaten path" for even some seasoned BSD users. That isn't to say it isn't worthwhile. Its SMP support should be amazing though, as SMP, threading, and clustering are major concerns of the project.
__________________
Spiralinear: Humanity & Machines
RUNNING: Fedora | FreeBSD | Windows 7
Sorivenul is offline  
Old February 13th, 2009   #5
C!oud
Extra Foam Sugar Free Ubuntu
 
C!oud's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2008
Beans: 796
Re: Which BSD is the fastest and most minimalistic?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Sorivenul View Post
I didn't mention DragonFlyBSD as it isn't one of the "Big 3", and a bit "off the beaten path" for even some seasoned BSD users. That isn't to say it isn't worthwhile. Its SMP support should be amazing though, as SMP, threading, and clustering are major concerns of the project.
Personally I've never gotten DragonflyBSD to work and at least on one occasion have had some disasterious consequences. I just thought it worth mentioning since smp was one of the major reasons for the split between FreeBSD and DragonflyBSD.
__________________
Spiralinear
C!oud is offline  
Old February 13th, 2009   #6
cardinals_fan
Chocolate-Covered Ubuntu Beans
 
cardinals_fan's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Beans: 2,133
Re: Which BSD is the fastest and most minimalistic?

DragonFlyBSD! It was forked from FreeBSD precisely because the author (Matt Dillon) had his own ideas on how to implement SMP support and threading. The new HAMMER filesystem is very interesting for large systems. DragonFly is by far the most actively evolving BSD system, which is good if you want some real innovations but bad if you need total stability. It's still pretty stable though.

NetBSD is my personal favorite, but it focuses on code cleanliness over raw SMP performance. FreeBSD is pretty good.
__________________
Windows 7 + VMWare Player + TinyCore Linux

Getting the Best Help on Linux Forums | A Beginner's Guide to Filing Bug Reports
cardinals_fan is offline  
 

Bookmarks

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:35 PM.


vBulletin ©2000 - 2012, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd. Ubuntu Logo, Ubuntu and Canonical © Canonical Ltd. Tango Icons © Tango Desktop Project. lingonberry