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FreeBSD 14.0 Released: Supports Up To 1,024 CPU Cores, OpenZFS 2.2 & Adds Fwget

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  • Brittle2
    replied
    the linux say in the changelogs how many core it can handle?, or there a way to see that?

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  • kylew77
    replied
    Originally posted by Volta View Post
    ASLR seventeen years after Linux, PIE eight years after Fedora. Theo was right.
    I know that is bad, but better late than never I guess? Theo is normally right about things so yeah OpenBSD's early adoption of these technologies is great, but FreeBSD is slow to change.

    Why did Michael say that this is leading? Probably because historically FreeBSD has had the most users, see the graph on Wikipedia. Though, even I admit that that is so far out of date to not be reliable now possibly.

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  • Volta
    replied
    Originally posted by kylew77 View Post
    So many security options are now the DEFAULT, such a PIE and ASLR.
    ASLR seventeen years after Linux, PIE eight years after Fedora. Theo was right.

    phoronix
    FreeBSD 14 has been released as stable today as the newest major release of this leading open-source BSD operating system
    Leading? OpenBSD and DragonflyBSD don't agree.

    Leave a comment:


  • kylew77
    replied
    FreeBSD 14.0 is the first major release of FreeBSD I've been excited for in a LONG time! So many security options are now the DEFAULT, such a PIE and ASLR. Long time coming, but after doing some reading and talking to people here on Phoronix it seems that FreeBSD is finally good enough for day to day use on workstations. I fully intend over the Christmas Holiday to get FreeBSD 14.0 setup on one of the computers at home and kick the tires. Hats off team for a super exciting release!

    FreeBSD just has some things that OpenBSD and NetBSD don't have like great wine support and a great Linux emulator. Now with their own version of the iwx, called iwlwifi​, driver found in OpenBSD you can use AX wifi cards easily. I don't know what BSD is the general purpose best BSD, but FreeBSD now makes a strong case at least in my book, though OpenBSD continues to make a strong case too!

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  • FreeBSD 14.0 Released: Supports Up To 1,024 CPU Cores, OpenZFS 2.2 & Adds Fwget

    Phoronix: FreeBSD 14.0 Released: Supports Up To 1,024 CPU Cores, OpenZFS 2.2 & Adds Fwget

    FreeBSD 14 has been released as stable today as the newest major release of this leading open-source BSD operating system...

    Phoronix, Linux Hardware Reviews, Linux hardware benchmarks, Linux server benchmarks, Linux benchmarking, Desktop Linux, Linux performance, Open Source graphics, Linux How To, Ubuntu benchmarks, Ubuntu hardware, Phoronix Test Suite
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