Hi all,
I am a long time Debian user. I use Debian professionally and personally for almost 20 years now.
I know nothing about FreeBSD, but I am exploring alternatives for a specific use case I have, and FreeBSD is a candidate.
I work for a software agency, we do very different kind of projects with very different stacks and requirements.
For the past couple of years I am using nix on top of Debian to manage different development environments, one per project.
Before nix, I was using virtual machines.
Nix is nice and much more convenient than virtual machines, but I feel like trying alternatives.
Docker containers are no fun to me, don't know why, they just aren't among the things I want to try.
- Does FreeBSD fit that use case?
- Will I be able to manage development environments which needs different versions of runtimes and libraries?
- Is Jail the tool for the job? <<- shooting in the dark here
PS: I am aware that even the answer is yes, a long road is ahead of me, as I have to start from the beginning of the handbook.
Cheers!
Carlo
I am a long time Debian user. I use Debian professionally and personally for almost 20 years now.
I know nothing about FreeBSD, but I am exploring alternatives for a specific use case I have, and FreeBSD is a candidate.
I work for a software agency, we do very different kind of projects with very different stacks and requirements.
For the past couple of years I am using nix on top of Debian to manage different development environments, one per project.
Before nix, I was using virtual machines.
Nix is nice and much more convenient than virtual machines, but I feel like trying alternatives.
Docker containers are no fun to me, don't know why, they just aren't among the things I want to try.
- Does FreeBSD fit that use case?
- Will I be able to manage development environments which needs different versions of runtimes and libraries?
- Is Jail the tool for the job? <<- shooting in the dark here
PS: I am aware that even the answer is yes, a long road is ahead of me, as I have to start from the beginning of the handbook.
Cheers!
Carlo