/obsd/ - OpenBSD General

OpenBSD is a free and open-source, security-focused, Unix-like operating system

FAQ:
>How do I get started?
openbsd.org/faq/faq4.html

>What are the available graphics cards' drivers?
-amdgpu(4): AMD Radeon GPUs using the amdgpu kernel driver (not enabled by default yet, still a Work-In-Progress driver)
-intel(4): Intel integrated graphics chipsets
-radeon(4): ATI/AMD Radeon video driver

>What are the available wireless drivers?
man.openbsd.org/?query=wireless&apropos=1

>How do I set up Full-Disk Encryption?
openbsd.org/faq/faq14.html#softraidFDE

>Any tips for a laptop installation?
c0ffee.net/blog/openbsd-on-a-laptop/

>Why OpenBSD?
-sivers.org/openbsd
-over-yonder.net/~fullermd/rants/bsd4linux/01 (This site discusses *BSD in general)
-why-openbsd.rocks/ (shows up a random fact about OpenBSD whenever you load it)
-openbsd.org/lyrics.html (OpenBSD songs)

How do I upgrade -current to the latest snapshot?
Just run sysupgrade(8) as root.

>How do I get help?
-OpenBSD man pages
-OpenBSD mailing lists: openbsd.org/mail.html
-daemonforums: daemonforums.org/
-OpenBSD FAQ: openbsd.org/faq/

Book recommendations:
-Absolute OpenBSD (2nd edition)
-The Book of PF (3rd edition)

Feel free to ask questions and discuss topics that are related to OpenBSD.

Attached: Superfish.jpg (227x318, 95K)

Other urls found in this thread:

drewdevault.com/2019/06/13/My-journey-from-MIT-to-GPL.html
sivers.org/openbsd
over-yonder.net/~fullermd/rants/bsd4linux/01
twitter.com/AnonBabble

When feminist will be removed from the project?

BSD doesn't protect your freedoms.
BSD is one step from proprietary.
BSD is slavery.

This is *not* FreeBSD.

You do realize that many companies that use *BSD contribute back right? They don't do that because they're good, they do it because it's easier for their changes to be maintained upstream instead of maintaining them yourself.

will my mini-display port be supported

Try it out and see if it works.

why am i testing the product?
what is the apple keyboards?

how so? you can still edit the code the way you want.
and add you own stuff.
you just not forced to give away the work you done to the code for free. but you still can do with the code anything you want. so you are free

>what is the apple keyboards?
?

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I think he meant: "what is this" not "what is the". As apple keyboards are highly faulty. Thus stress testing is done by the customers, rather than apple.

That's not the case with OpenBSD though, releases get tested thoroughly by the developers before getting published.

Why focusing on the keyboards when the whole MacBook line is a dumpster fire.

I agree, don't ask me. Though a better answer than would be to check your device model with OpenBSD.

Fuck off SirCmpwn.

Does Drew DeVault hate BSD?

He hates the BSD license:
drewdevault.com/2019/06/13/My-journey-from-MIT-to-GPL.html

Who drew this Puffy?
Butch Hartman?

it's not a product

>>What are the available graphics cards' drivers?
>-amdgpu(4): AMD Radeon GPUs using the amdgpu kernel driver (not enabled by default yet, still a Work-In-Progress driver)
>-intel(4): Intel integrated graphics chipsets
>-radeon(4): ATI/AMD Radeon video driver
>no NVIDIA
dropped

>-sivers.org/openbsd
> It’s not for people who want to click a button and have the computer hide the details from you.
>-over-yonder.net/~fullermd/rants/bsd4linux/01
>It's been my impression that the BSD communit{y,ies}, in general, understand Linux far better than the Linux communit{y,ies} understand BSD. I have a few theories on why that is, but that's not really relevant. I think a lot of Linux people get turned off BSD because they don't really understand how and why it's put together. Thus, this rant; as a BSD person, I want to try to explain how BSD works in a way that Linux people can absorb.
>Not for brainlets argument
this sounds like those blogs from mid 00s when people shilled for linux. hey guys, linux doesn't hide a computer works, so you'll learn the inner workings of computer a be a l33t h4x0r. lmao


>I’ve donated $3850 to the developers to help improve the OpenBSD port of Node.js, Elixir, Erlang, Anki, Ledger, and Qutebrowser.
so partial software that doesn't work when there are perfectly viable, readily available solutions (linux/osx)