D
Deleted member 63539
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It even has a handbook modeled upon FreeBSD's handbook:
and a Ports system, too:
My experience with it is, it's too minimalist. Even if FreeBSD requires me that much labor to install it, I will just back to Debian (SparkyLinux). And the way the packages tools was named it reminds me of the SVR4 package system more than of FreeBSD (pkgadd, pkgrm,...). So overall, I found it to be a mix of pre-modern FreeBSD (before pkgng was born) and old Solaris (Solaris before Solaris 10).
p/s: Now I think I love the FreeBSD installer.
Update: I only have experience with FreeBSD and it derivatives, but after a quick look at OpenBSD I found this Linux to look like it more than FreeBSD.
and a Ports system, too:
My experience with it is, it's too minimalist. Even if FreeBSD requires me that much labor to install it, I will just back to Debian (SparkyLinux). And the way the packages tools was named it reminds me of the SVR4 package system more than of FreeBSD (pkgadd, pkgrm,...). So overall, I found it to be a mix of pre-modern FreeBSD (before pkgng was born) and old Solaris (Solaris before Solaris 10).
p/s: Now I think I love the FreeBSD installer.
Update: I only have experience with FreeBSD and it derivatives, but after a quick look at OpenBSD I found this Linux to look like it more than FreeBSD.