Interesting benchmarks, dragonfly did surprisingly well.
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DragonFlyBSD, CentOS, Ubuntu, Solaris Benchmarks
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Originally posted by Cthulhux View PostActually it is System V which always has been proprietary.
The rest is still BSD. So it effect, it's a closed BSD with the BSD init replaced by the system V init which makes it slightly less shitter then the BSDs still using the BSD shitting init.
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The GraphicsMagick tests shouldn't be legal. It uses OpenMP to scale and the DragonFly compiler in 3.2 doesn't have support for OpenMP and is therefore much slower than Linux in this test. The current development version of DragonFly has GCC 4.7 and OpenMP is enabled on that. In every other test, it is competitive to Linux.
One other thing should be noted as well - tests like Dhrystone are not testing the OS at all, but they test the compiler and optimization. DragonFly's default compiler settings produce less optimized code (for greater stability).
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Originally posted by BSD BullShitDistro View PostWrong, it's BSD and what they did was they just remove the BSD init system because it was so old, slow, pathetic and shittingly complex and replace it with the more superior, flexible and easy to use system V init when they renamed SunOS to Solaris.
The rest is still BSD. So it effect, it's a closed BSD with the BSD init replaced by the system V init which makes it slightly less shitter then the BSDs still using the BSD shitting init.
Solaris was based on System V SVR4.
Originally posted by BSD BullShitDistro View Postthey just remove the BSD init system because it was so old, slow, pathetic and shittingly complex and replace it with the more superior, flexible and easy to use system V init
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Originally posted by joe_gunner View PostThe GraphicsMagick tests shouldn't be legal. It uses OpenMP to scale and the DragonFly compiler in 3.2 doesn't have support for OpenMP and is therefore much slower than Linux in this test. The current development version of DragonFly has GCC 4.7 and OpenMP is enabled on that. In every other test, it is competitive to Linux.
One other thing should be noted as well - tests like Dhrystone are not testing the OS at all, but they test the compiler and optimization. DragonFly's default compiler settings produce less optimized code (for greater stability).
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Originally posted by BSD BullShitDistro View PostThis is how DragonflyBSD performed in previous benchmarks so these actually no improvement which is classic BSD.
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