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by SomeOtherGuy
5260 days ago
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I don't know what you are biting or why, but your question makes no sense. I didn't say anything was wrong with FreeBSD, I simply pointed out that networking is one of OpenBSD's primary focuses, and as such it offers much more. OpenBSD's firewalling and routing support is miles ahead of FreeBSDs. FreeBSD isn't the best at everything, just as no other OS is. OpenBSD wrote the best BGP daemon around, the best firewall around, both of which integrate nicely together and with routing domains to allow perfectly fine-grained control of complex routing scenarios, created CARP for address redundancy ala VRRP but sans patent mines, had the very first IPSec implementation, etc, etc, etc. OpenBSD is used almost exclusively for routers, firewalls, VPN gateways, etc. You shouldn't take it as a personal insult that it excels in those roles. |
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I agree that OpenBSD has written some nice code, but it's hardly "miles ahead" of FreeBSD considering that FreeBSD includes pf and carp in the base system and openbgpd in the ports tree. The great thing about the BSD license is that when one project does some great work, everybody else catches up quickly. :-)
And I don't take it as a "personal insult" -- I'm just amused by your comment given that FreeBSD's network stack has vastly superior performance and support for far more 10GbE interfaces.