Hitchhiker's Guide to Openbsd
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- 9.1 - Tips for users of other Unix-like Operating Systems
9 - Migrating to OpenBSD
Table of Contents ● 9.1 - Tips for users of other Unix-like Operating Systems ● 9.2 - Dual boot of Linux and OpenBSD ● 9.3 - Converting your Linux (or other Sixth Edition-style) password file to BSD-style. ● 9.4 - Running Linux binaries on OpenBSD ● 9.5 - Accessing your Linux files from OpenBSD For more information for Linux users, please refer to http://sites.inka.de/mips/unix/bsdlinux.html . 9.1 - Tips for users of other Unix-like Operating Systems While OpenBSD is a very traditional Unix-like operating system and will be very familiar to those who have used other Unix-like systems, there are important differences. New users to OpenBSD must look at their own experience: if your only knowledge of Unix is some experience with one variant of Linux, you may find OpenBSD "strange". Rest assured, Linux looks pretty strange to anyone who starts from OpenBSD. You must recognize the difference between "standard" and your experience. If you learned Unix from any of the good books on general Unix, understanding the "Unix philosophy" and then extended your knowledge to a particular platform, you will find OpenBSD to be a very "true" and familiar Unix. If you learned Unix using a "type this to do that" process or a book such as "Learn PinkBeenie v8.3 in 31.4 Hours", and told yourself you "know Unix", you will most likely find OpenBSD very different. One important difference between OpenBSD and many other operating systems is the documentation. OpenBSD developers take great pride in the system man pages . The man pages are the authoritative source of OpenBSD documentation -- not this FAQ, not third-party independently maintained pages, not "HOWTO"s, etc. When a developer makes a change to the system, they are expected to update the man pages along with their change to the system code, not "later" or "when they get around to it" or "when http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq9.html (1 of 5)9/4/2011 10:02:12 AM 9 - Migrating to OpenBSD someone complains". A manual page exists for virtually every program, utility, driver, configuration file, and so on on the stock system. It is expected that a user will check the man pages before asking for help on the mail lists . Here are some of the commonly encountered differences between OpenBSD and other Unix variants. ● OpenBSD is a fairly pure "BSD-Style" Unix, following the 4.4BSD design closely. Linux and SCO Unix are "System V" style systems. Some Unix-like operating systems (including some Linux distributions) mix many SysV and BSD characteristics. A common place where this causes confusion is the startup scripts , OpenBSD uses the traditional BSD4.4-style rc(8) style. ● OpenBSD is a complete system, intended to be kept in sync. It is not a "Kernel plus utilities" that can be upgraded separately from each other. Failure to keep your system (kernel, user utilities, and applications) in sync will result in bad things happening. ● As many applications are not developed to directly compile and run on an OpenBSD environment, OpenBSD has a ports tree , a system where users can easily acquire code, patch it for OpenBSD, install dependencies, compile it, install and remove it in a standardized and maintainable way. Pre-compiled packages are created and distributed by the OpenBSD ports team. Users are encouraged to use these packages over compiling their own. ● OpenBSD uses CVS to keep track of source code changes. OpenBSD pioneered anonymous CVS , which allows anyone to extract the full source tree for any version of OpenBSD (from 2.0 to current, and all revisions of all files in between) at any time, and you can access the most recent changes within hours of its commit. There is also a very convenient and easy to use web interface to CVS . ● OpenBSD produces an official release available on CD and FTP every six months on a predefined schedule . Snapshots for all supported platforms are made semi-regularly with the current development code. It is the goal that the source tree is kept fully buildable and the resultant system usable at all times. The tree is occasionally broken, but this is an extraordinary event that will be corrected rapidly, not something that will be permitted to continue. ● OpenBSD contains strong cryptography , which can not be included with OSs based in some countries. ● OpenBSD has gone through heavy and continual security auditing to ensure the quality (and thus, security) of the code. ● OpenBSD's kernel is /bsd . ● The names of hard disks are usually /dev/wd (IDE) and /dev/sd (SCSI or devices emulating SCSI disks). ● /sbin/route with no arguments in Linux gives the state of all the active routes, under OpenBSD (and many other OSs), you need the "show" parameter, or do a " netstat -r ". ● OpenBSD does NOT support Journaling Filesystems like ReiserFS, IBM's JFS or SGI's XFS. Instead we use the Soft Updates feature of the already very robust Unix Fast File System (FFS) to accomplish the goals of performance and stability. ● OpenBSD comes with Packet Filter (PF) , not ipfw, ipchains, netfilter, iptables, or ipf. This means http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq9.html (2 of 5)9/4/2011 10:02:12 AM 9 - Migrating to OpenBSD that Network Address Translation (known as IP-Masquerading in Linux), queuing, and filtering is done through pfctl(8) , pf(4) , and pf.conf(5) . See the PF User's Guide for detailed configuration information. ● Interface address is stored in /etc/hostname. (for example, /etc/hostname. dc0 for a NIC using the dc(4) driver). It can contain a hostname (resolved in /etc/hosts ) instead of an IP address. ● The machine name is in /etc/myname . ● The default gateway is in /etc/mygate . ● OpenBSD's default shell is /bin/ksh , which is pdksh , the Public Domain Korn shell. Other included shells are csh and sh . Shells such as bash and tcsh can be added as packages or installed from ports . Users familiar with bash are encouraged to try ksh(1) before loading bash on their system -- it does what most people desire of bash. ● Password management on OpenBSD is different from password management on some other Unix-like operating systems. The actual passwords are stored in the file master.passwd(5) which is readable only by root. This file should be altered only with the vipw program. ● Devices are named by driver, not by type. For example, there are no eth* devices. It would be ne0 for an NE2000 Ethernet card, and xl0 for a 3Com Etherlink XL or a Fast Etherlink XL Ethernet device, etc. All of these drivers have man pages in section 4. So, to find more information about the messages your 3c905 driver is putting out, you can do " man 4 xl ". ● OpenBSD/i386, amd64, and several other platforms use a "two layer" disk partitioning system, where the first layer is the fdisk , BIOS-visible partition, familiar to most users of IBM compatible computers. The second layer is the disklabel , a traditional BSD partitioning system. OpenBSD supports up to 15 disklabel partitions on a disk, all residing within one fdisk partition. This permits OpenBSD to coexist with other OSs, including other Unix-like OSs. OpenBSD must be one of the four "primary" partitions. ● Some other OSs encourage you to customize your kernel for your machine. OpenBSD users are encouraged to simply use the standard GENERIC kernel provided and tested by the developers. Users attempting to "customize" or "optimize" their kernel usually cause far more problems than they solve, and will not be supported by developers. ● OpenBSD works hard to maintain the license policy and security of the project. For this reason, some newer versions of some software which fail to meet either the license or security goals of the project have not and may never be integrated into OpenBSD. Security and free licensing will never take a back seat to having the biggest version number. Download 1.27 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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