OpenBSD has native limitations on hypervisors. Disabling default measures will lessen security, unfortunately.
Xianshi@lemm.ee 7 months ago
Not sure what works best in your case. I’m a Debian cat myself but I have been considering openbsd as a future option.
MigratingtoLemmy@lemmy.world 7 months ago
sundaylab@lemmy.ml 7 months ago
I’m a long time user of Debian myself. No cutting edge fuzz, just a working, stable OS all of the time. What else do you need for a server? It always did the job.
But then I stumbled on FreeBSD, and man, that’s a server OS. Simple design and blazing fast. No Docker but I never liked it anyway. My Docker is called Jails and in my opinion is they’re superior. Service isolation on the next level.
On my laptop? Debian due to hardware and software support. And I’ll stick to that for now. I feel home on that distro.
I can’t say anything about OpenBSD as I never tried it but it sure is a perfect fit for a server as well depending on your needs and preferences. BSD just rocks!
MigratingtoLemmy@lemmy.world 7 months ago
I love Debian too. Could you tell me what you mean FreeBSD being a faster and better server OS? Is there such a difference in speed in operations?
TBH I’d run alpine VMs on Bhyve to get K8S running and that’s it.
sundaylab@lemmy.ml 7 months ago
My feeling is that there is. I think it all started with the speed I can login over ssh. Debian always seems to have a short delay but FreeBSD feels instant. When it comes to rating FreeBSD as a better OS for servers I may be biased as Debian has served me so well over the years. I was never a Docker fan but instantly liked Jails for isolating services. Then we have native ZFS support which simplifies my backup needs. A simple zfs send | zfs receive and you have an exact copy of your service instance on a remote node. Everything feels integrated and not stacked. Again, just a personal opinion.