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190 points psxuaw | 3 comments | | HN request time: 0.755s | source
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nine_k ◴[] No.43536856[source]
If systemd is the reason, there are several good distros without systemd (I run Void Linux in particular).

If "kubesomething" is the reason, there's no requirement to use it. I think most people don't run it on their home servers.

If containers are the reason, then again, they are not a requirement. But they are pretty similar to BSD's jails. I don't think they are particularly complex.

FreeBSD has a number of strong suits: ZFS, a different kernel and network stack, a cohesive system from a small(ish) team of authors, the handbook, etc. But the usual Linux hobgoblins listed above are a red herring here, to my mind.

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charcircuit ◴[] No.43541384[source]
Linux has ZFS too. FreeBSD actually switched over to using the Linux implementation a few years ago.
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1. ksec ◴[] No.43549126[source]
It is more like the ZFS started supporting Linux, not FreeBSD uses Linux implementation.
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2. charcircuit ◴[] No.43553401[source]
>The switch to [ZFS on Linux] as upstream

https://papers.freebsd.org/2019/eurobsdcon/jude-the_future_o...

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3. ksec ◴[] No.43556190[source]
Oh I missed remember OpenZFS started on FreeBSD. Thank you for the correction.