Why FreeBSD?
The differences between the major Unix variants (*BSD, Linux, Solaris, OS X, etc.) are subtle. In day to day usage, an experienced Unix admin can comfortably and efficiently work on any of them, with little regard to the specific differences between variants.
But despite the great similarities, the choice of a Unix server operating system can be hugely significant. While I support Linux, Solaris and all the other Unix variants, I have been using FreeBSD for myself, and recommending it to the majority of my clients, for many years now. Why not Linux? Here, in order of importance, are the primary reasons.
Clarity
Choice is good, but with dozens of available major distributions and two competing package formats, one of the problems with Linux is that there are far too many incompatible alternatives. The software and configuration files used in one distribution are often completely different from those available in another. Linux is, technically speaking, an operating system kernel. Any particular Linux distribution consists of this Linux kernel with other software and packaging on top of the kernel. Even two distributions that are RPM-based (Red Hat and SuSE, for example) typically cannot use the same RPM without difficulty. FreeBSD, on the other hand, is a complete operating system. The components of this system (kernel, libraries, user programs, booting subsystems, etc.) are a unified piece of software. If you need a program, or technical support, for a particular FreeBSD release, you can find precisely that relatively easily.
The Ports System
Documentation
Performance, Reliability and Security
- Multi-threaded SMP architecture capable of executing the kernel in parallel on multiple processors, a multi-threaded network stack and a multi-threaded virtual memory subsystem.
- Soft Updates allows improved filesystem performance without sacrificing safety and reliability. Features such as background filesystem checking and file system snapshots are built on the consistency and performance foundations of soft updates.
- Support for IP Security (IPsec) allows improved security in networks, and support for the next-generation Internet Protocol, IPv6.
- FreeBSD's GEOM-Based Disk Encryption (GBDE), provides strong cryptographic protection using the GEOM Framework.
- Vinum implements virtual disk drive management, and can support RAID 0, RAID 1, and RAID 5.
- Support for access control lists (ACLs) and mandatory access control (MAC) modules.
- File system snapshots, permitting administrators to take atomic file system snapshots for backup purposes using the free space in the file system, as well as facilitating background fsck, which allows the system to reach multiuser mode without waiting on file system cleanup operations following power outages.
- Netgraph pluggable network stack allows developers to dynamically and easily extend the network stack through clean layered network abstractions. Netgraph nodes can implement a broad range of new network services, including encapsulation, tunneling, encryption, and performance adaptation.
- Accept Filters allow connection-intensive applications, such as web servers, to cleanly push part of their functionality into the operating system kernel, improving performance.
- A merged virtual memory and filesystem buffer cache continuously tunes the amount of memory used for programs and the disk cache. As a result, programs receive both excellent memory management and high performance disk access, and the system administrator is freed from the task of tuning cache sizes.
- Kernel Queues allow programs to respond more efficiently to a variety of asynchronous events including file and socket IO, improving application and system performance.
Compatibility
License
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