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Perbandingan -- BSD operating systems

There are a number of Unix-like operating systems based on or descended from the Berkeley Software Distribution (BSD) series of Unix variants. The three most notable descendants in current use are FreeBSD, OpenBSD, and NetBSD, which are all derived from 386BSD and 4.4BSD-Lite, by various routes. Both NetBSD and FreeBSD started life in 1993, initially derived from 386BSD, but in 1994 migrating to a 4.4BSD-Lite code base. OpenBSD was forked in 1995 from NetBSD. Other notable derivatives include DragonFly BSD, which was forked from FreeBSD 4.8, and Apple Inc.'s iOS and Mac OS X, with its Darwin base including a large amount of code derived from FreeBSD.

Most of the current BSD operating systems are open source and available for download, free of charge, under the BSD License, the most notable exceptions being Mac OS X and iOS. They also generally use a monolithic kernel architecture, apart from Mac OS X and DragonFly BSD which feature hybrid kernels. The various open source BSD projects generally develop the kernel and userland programs and libraries together, the source code being managed using a single central source repository.

In the past, BSD was also used as a basis for several proprietary versions of UNIX, such as Sun's SunOS, Sequent's Dynix, NeXT's NeXTSTEP, DEC's Ultrix and OSF/1 AXP (now Tru64 UNIX). Of these, only the last is still currently supported in its original form. Parts of NeXT's software became the foundation for Mac OS X which, together with iOS, is among the most commercially successful BSD variants in the general market.

Contents

Aims and philosophies

DragonFly BSD

DragonFly BSD aims to be inherently easy to understand and develop for multi-processor capable infrastructures. Starting with FreeBSD 4.8, the main aim is to radically change the kernel architecture, introducing microkernel-like message passing which will enhance scalability and reliability on symmetric multiprocessing platforms, and also be applicable to NUMA and clustered systems. The long-term goal is to provide transparent single system image clustering. DragonFly BSD currently supports both the IA-32 platform and the x86-64 (or AMD64) platform.[1] Matthew Dillon, the founder of DragonFly BSD, believes supporting fewer platforms makes it easier for a project to do a proper ground-up SMP implementation.[2]

FreeBSD

FreeBSD aims to make an operating system usable for any purpose.[3] It is intended to run a wide variety of applications, be easy to use, contain cutting edge features, and be highly scalable on very high load network servers.[4] FreeBSD is free and open source, and the project prefers the BSD license. However, they sometimes accept non-disclosure agreements (NDAs) and include a limited number of closed-source HAL modules for specific device drivers in their source tree, to support the hardware of companies who do not provide purely open source drivers (such as HALs to program software-defined radios so that vendors do not share their proprietary algorithms). To maintain a high level of quality and provide good support for "production quality commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) workstation, server, and high-end embedded systems", FreeBSD focuses on a narrow set of architectures.[5] A significant focus of development over the last five years has been fine-grained locking and SMP scalability. Other recent work includes Common Criteria security functionality, such as mandatory access control and security event audit support.

NetBSD

NetBSD aims to provide a freely redistributable operating system that professionals, hobbyists, and researchers can use in any manner they wish. The main focus is portability, through the use of clear distinctions between machine-dependent and machine-independent code. It runs on a wide variety of 32-bit and 64-bit processor architectures and hardware platforms, and is intended to interoperate well with other operating systems. NetBSD places emphasis on correct design, well-written code, stability, and efficiency. Where practical, close compliance with open API and protocol standards is also aimed for. In June, 2008, the NetBSD Foundation moved to a two clause BSD license, citing changes at UCB and industry applicability.[6]

OpenBSD

OpenBSD aims at security, correctness, and being as free as possible. Security policies include revealing security flaws publicly, known as full disclosure; thoroughly auditing code for bugs and security issues; various security features, including the W^X page protection technology and heavy use of randomization; a "secure by default" philosophy including disabling all non-essential services and having sane initial settings; and integrated cryptography, originally made easier due to relaxed Canadian export laws relative to the United States. Concerning software freedom, OpenBSD prefers the BSD or ISC license, with the GPL acceptable only for existing software which is impractical to replace, such as the GNU Compiler Collection. NDAs are never considered acceptable. In common with its parent, NetBSD, OpenBSD strives to run on a wide variety of hardware.[7]

The OpenBSD project has spawned numerous child projects such as OpenSSH, OpenNTPD, OpenCVS, OpenBGPD, PF and CARP. Many of these are designed to replace restricted alternatives.

PC-BSD

PC-BSD aims at user friendliness for the layperson. KDE was the default desktop environment up to PC-BSD8, but as of PC-BSD9 a range of enviroments including KDE, GNOME, Xfce, and LXDE , and many window managers are available to choose from during the installation.[8] An easy to use software manager that is included, downloads and installs binary packages. Each version of PC-BSD remains directly descended from the same version of FreeBSD. The FreeBSD community will typically point users looking for an "easy" BSD to the PC-BSD project.[9]

Popularity

Bar chart showing the proportion of users of each BSD variant from a BSD usage survey from September 2005.[10]

In September 2005, the BSD Certification Group, after advertising on a number of mailing lists, surveyed 4,330 BSD users, 3,958 of whom took the survey in English, to assess the relative popularity of the various BSD operating systems. About 77% of respondents used FreeBSD, 33% used OpenBSD, 16% used NetBSD, 2.6% used Dragonfly, and 6.6% used other (potentially non-BSD) systems. Other languages offered were Brazilian and European Portuguese, German, Italian, and Polish. Note that there was no control group or pre-screening of the survey takers. Those who checked "Other" were asked to specify that operating system.[10]

Because survey takers were permitted to select more than one answer, the percentages shown in the graph, which are out of the number survey of participants, add up to greater than 100%. If a survey taker filled in more than one choice for "other", this is still only counted as one vote for other on this chart.[10]

Another attempt to profile worldwide BSD usage is the *BSDstats Project, whose primary goal is to demonstrate to hardware vendors the penetration of BSD and viability of hardware drivers for the operating system. The project collects data monthly from any BSD system administrators willing to participate, and currently records the BSD market share of participating FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD, DragonflyBSD, Debian GNU/kFreeBSD, PC-BSD, and MirBSD systems.[11]

DistroWatch, well known in the Linux community and often used as a rough guide to free operating system popularity, publishes page hits for each of the Linux distributions and other operating systems it covers. As of June 2011, using a data span of the last six months it placed FreeBSD in 15th place with 484 hits per day; PC-BSD in 24th place with 346 hits per day; GhostBSD in 53rd place with 171 hits, OpenBSD in 58th place with 164 hits per day; DragonFly in 62nd place with 142 hits per day; and NetBSD in 100th place with 94 hits per day.[12]

Names, logos, slogans

The names FreeBSD and OpenBSD are references to software freedom: both in cost and open source.[13] NetBSD's name is a tribute to the Internet, which brought the original developers together.[14]

The first BSD mascot was the BSD daemon, named after a common type of Unix software program, a daemon. FreeBSD still uses the image, a red cartoon daemon named Beastie, wielding a pitchfork, as its mascot today. In 2005, after a competition, a stylized version of Beastie's head designed and drawn by Anton Gural was chosen as the FreeBSD logo.[15] The FreeBSD slogan is "The Power to Serve."

The NetBSD flag, designed in 2004 by Grant Bisset, is inspired by the original NetBSD logo,[16] designed in 1994 by Shawn Mueller, portraying a number of BSD daemons raising a flag on top of a mound of computer equipment. This was based on a World War II photograph, Raising the Flag on Iwo Jima. The Board of Directors of The NetBSD Foundation believed this was too complicated, too hard to reproduce and had negative cultural ramifications and was thus not a suitable image for NetBSD in the corporate world. The new, simpler flag design replaced this.[17] The NetBSD slogan is "Of course it runs NetBSD", referring to the operating system's portability.

Originally, OpenBSD used the BSD daemon as a mascot, sometimes with an added halo as a distinguishing mark, but OpenBSD later replaced its BSD daemon with Puffy. Although Puffy is usually referred to as a pufferfish, the spikes on the cartoon images give him a closer likeness to the porcupinefish. The logo is a reference to the fish's defensive capabilities and to the Blowfish cryptography algorithm used in OpenBSD. OpenBSD also has a number of slogans including "Secure by default", which was used in the first OpenBSD song, 'E-railed', and "Free, Functional & Secure"[18] and OpenBSD has released at least one original song with every release since 3.0.[19]

The DragonFly BSD logo, designed by Joe Angrisano, is a dragonfly named Fred.[20] A number of unofficial logos[21] by various authors also show the dragonfly or stylized versions of it. DragonFly BSD considers itself to be "the logical continuation of the FreeBSD 4.x series."[22] FireflyBSD has a similar logo, a firefly, showing its close relationship to DragonFly BSD. In fact, the FireflyBSD website states that proceeds from sales will go to the development of DragonFly BSD, suggesting that the two may in fact be very closely related.

PicoBSD's slogan is "For the little BSD in all of us," and its logo includes a version of FreeBSD's Beastie as a child,[23] showing its close connection to FreeBSD, and the minimal amount of code needed to run as a Live CD.

A number of BSD OSes use stylized version of their respective names for logos. This includes Mac OS X, PC-BSD, DesktopBSD, ClosedBSD,[24] and MicroBSD.[25] The Mac OS X logo is the roman numeral for 10. This is intended to emphasize the change from previous versions of Mac OS, which were not based on BSD and had version numbers expressed using the arabic numerals up to 9. PC-BSD's slogan is "Personal computing, served up BSD style!", DesktopBSD's "A Step Towards BSD on the Desktop." MicroBSD's slogan is "The small secure unix like OS."

MirOS's site collects a variety of BSD mascots and Tux, the Linux mascot, together, illustrating the project's aim of supporting both BSD and Linux kernels. MirOS's slogan is "a wonderful operating system for a world of peace."[26]

General information

Primary developersFirst public releaseBased onLatest stable versionCost (USD)Preferred licensePurposeShort description
VersionRelease Date
FreeBSDThe FreeBSD ProjectDec 1993386BSD, 4.4BSD-Lite9.1December 30, 2012; 2 months ago (2012-12-30)FreeBSDServer, Workstation, Network Appliance, EmbeddedAims for maximum performance.
OpenBSDThe OpenBSD ProjectSeptember 1996NetBSD5.201 November 2012FreeISCServer, Workstation, Network Appliance, EmbeddedAims for maximum security.
NetBSDThe NetBSD ProjectMay 1993386BSD, 4.4BSD-Lite6.0.126 December 2012FreeBSDServer, Workstation, Network Appliance, EmbeddedAims for maximum portability.
DragonFly BSDMatt Dillon12 Jul 2004FreeBSD 4.83.0.1February 22, 2012; 12 months ago (2012-02-22)FreeBSDServer, Workstation, Network Appliance, EmbeddedEmphasis on multiprocessor systems and clustering
386BSD [Note 1]William and Lynne JolitzMar 19924.3BSD Net/21.01994FreeBSD?Historical
BSD/OS (BSD/386) [Note 1]BSDi, Wind River SystemsMar 19934.3BSD Net/2, 4.4BSD5.1Oct 2003?Proprietary?Historical
SunOS [Note 1]Sun Microsystems19824.xBSD, UNIX System V[27]4.1.4Nov 1994[Note 2]?Proprietary?Historical (Solaris is a different code base)
Ultrix [Note 1]Digital Equipment Corporation19844.2BSD, SVR24.51995?ProprietaryGeneral PurposeHistorical (ran on DEC VAX & MIPS systems or emulators).
Tru64 UNIX (DEC OSF/1, Digital UNIX)DEC, Compaq, HP19934.3BSD, 4.4BSD, Mach 2.5, UNIX System V5.1B-6October 2010Non-free $99 (non-
commer-
cial)
ProprietaryGeneral PurposeOnly runs on HP Alpha systems or emulators.
OS XApple Inc.Mar 1999Darwin10.8 "Mountain Lion"25 July 2012Non-free Client: $19.99
Server (add-on application): $19.99
Open source core system (see Darwin) with proprietary higher level API layersWorkstation, Home Desktop, ServerShips with Apple hardware and is locked to it.
iOSApple Inc.June 2007Mac OS X6.0.11 November 2012Non-freeProprietaryEmbedded mobile deviceShips with Apple iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch, Apple TV
DarwinApple Inc.Mar 2001NeXTSTEP, FreeBSD, Mac OS13.0.0June 11, 2012; 9 months ago (2012-06-11)FreeAPSL, GPL and othersWorkstation, Home Desktop, ServerThe kernel and certain userland components of OS X
PC-BSDiXsystems, Inc.29 Apr 2006FreeBSD9.1December 18, 2012; 3 months ago (2012-12-18)FreeBSDDesktopEasy to use while maintaining full use of FreeBSD base
GhostBSDEric Turgeon and Nahuel SanchezMarch 2010FreeBSD2.5 (FreeBSD 9.0)January 24, 2012; 13 months ago (2012-01-24)FreeBSDDesktop, WorkstationEasy to use, full FreeBSD w/ GNOME or LXDE desktop; Live-CD/USB image.
DesktopBSDPeter Hofer, Daniel Seuffert25 Jul 2005FreeBSD1.707 Sept 2009FreeBSDDesktopEasy to use
ClosedBSDJoshua Bergeron and various contributors?FreeBSD1.0B (floppy), 1.0-RC1 (CD)?FreeProprietary?firewall/NAT, boot floppy, Live CD
FreeSBIE??FreeBSD2.0.1Feb 2007Free??Live CD of FreeBSD. DistroWatch lists as discontinued.
PicoBSDMichael Bialecki?FreeBSD0.42?FreeBSDboot floppy?
Anonym.OS?beta as of Jan 2005OpenBSD 3.8none?Free?Anonymous browsingLive CD
MirOS BSDThe MirOS Project?OpenBSD 3.1#1016 Mar 2008Free??European
ekkoBSD [Note 1]Rick Collette?OpenBSD 3.3????Servereasy to administer
MicroBSD [Note 1]Bulgarians?OpenBSD 3.0/3.40.627 Oct 2003Free?General purposeSmall, secure
OliveBSDGabriel Paderni?OpenBSD 3.8??Free?Live CDDistroWatch lists as discontinued.
Gentoo/FreeBSDGentoo Linux developers?FreeBSD??FreeGPL, BSDServer, Workstation, Network Applianceuses Gentoo framework
Gentoo OpenBSDGentoo Linux developers?OpenBSD??FreeGPL, BSDServer, Workstation, Network Appliance, Embeddeduses Gentoo framework
Gentoo NetBSDGentoo Linux developers?NetBSD??FreeGPL, BSDServer, Workstation, Network Appliance, Embeddeduses Gentoo framework
Gentoo DragonflyBSDRobert Sebastian Gerus (project not yet officially supported by Gentoo)?DragonFly BSD??Free?Server, Workstation, Network Applianceuses Gentoo framework
Debian GNU/kFreeBSDThe Debian GNU/kFreeBSD team6th February 2011GNU, FreeBSD6.06th February 2011FreeDFSGGeneral purposeGNU userspace on FreeBSD kernel
Debian GNU/NetBSDThe Debian GNU/kNetBSD teamAbandonedGNU, NetBSDAbandonedAbandonedFreeDFSGGeneral purposeGNU userspace on NetBSD kernel
MidnightBSDLucas Holt?FreeBSD 6.0nonenoneFreeBSDDesktopGNUstep based Desktop Environment
pfSensevarious contributors1.0FreeBSD2.0.120 Dec 2011FreeBSDSecurity appliancefirewall/NAT, Live CD
Paxym FreeBSD for OcteonPaxym Inc.4.0 - 11-Dec-2007FreeBSD 7.04.713 Aug 2008?ProprietaryNetwork, Storage, Security Applications: Routers/UTM/Firewall/NASFor Cavium Networks Octeon MIPS architecture multicore processors [28]
MaheshaBSD [29] ?FreeBSD 8??FreeBSDFreeBSD multipurpose 
KarmaBSD [30] ?FreeBSD 8
OpenBSD
??FreeFree softwareFreeBSD, OpenBSD Firewall, MP3 player, backup, others 
Jibbed [1]  OpenBSD, NetBSD  FreeBSD Live CD of NetBSD
DeveloperFirst public releaseBased onVersionRelease DateCost (USD)Preferred licensePurposeShort description
  1. ^ a b c d e f 386BSD, BSD/OS, SunOS, and Ultrix are historic operating systems that are no longer developed. BSDeviant and ekkoBSD do not exist anymore either, although BSDeviant is still available for download (see external links). MicroBSD ended, then started again in 2003, but it does not seem that any progress has been made since then, though the website still exists.
  2. ^ This article only refers to SunOS through version 4.x. SunOS from release 5.x forward is based on SVR4, and is most commonly referred to as the Solaris Operating System.

Technical information

Supported architecturesSupported file systems[Note 1]Kernel typeGUI on by default[Note 2]Package managementUpdate managementPrimary APIs[Note 3]
FreeBSDx86, x86-64, PC98, Itanium, UltraSPARC, ARM, MIPS, PPC, othersUFS, UFS2, ext2, FAT, ISO 9660, UDF, NFS, SMBFS, NetWare (nwfs), NTFS (limited read-write), ReiserFS (read only), XFS (experimental), ZFS, FUSE, Coda (experimental), AFS, othersMonolithic with modulesNo (X.Org available)ports tree, packagessource (svn, CVSup, portsnap), network binary update (freebsd-update)BSD, POSIX
OpenBSDx86, 68k, Alpha, x86-64, SPARC, UltraSPARC, ARM, MIPS, PPC, VAX, othersUFS, UFS2, ext2, FAT, ISO 9660, UDF, NFS, NTFS (read only), AFS, othersMonolithic[Note 4]No (X.Org included)[Note 5]ports tree, packagessource (CVS, CVSup, rsync) or binary upgradeBSD, POSIX
NetBSDx86, 68k, Alpha, x86-64, PPC, SPARC, UltraSPARC, PowerPC, ARM, othersUFS, UFS2, ext2, FAT, ISO 9660, NFS, LFS, UDF, SMBFS, Coda, HFS+ (read only), EFS (read only), NTFS (read only), TMPFS, FUSE, PUFFS (BSD replacement of FUSE), ADOS (AmigaDOS file system), filecorefs (Acorn RISC OS file system), othersMonolithic with modulesNo (X.Org or XFree86 included)[Note 6]pkgsrc, packagessource (CVS, CVSup, rsync) or binary (using sysinst)BSD, POSIX
UltrixVAX, PDP-11, MIPSUFS + othersMonolithicNo (X11 included)setld?BSD, POSIX (4.0 onwards)
Tru64 UNIXAlphaUFS, AdvFS, ISO 9660, UDF, NFSHybridYes (CDE)setlddupatchPOSIX, UNIX 98, X11, CDE, others
Mac OS X / DarwinPPC, x86, x86-64, ARMHFS+ (default), exFAT, HFS, UFS, AFP, ISO 9660, FAT, UDF, NFS, SMBFS, NTFS (read only), FTP, WebDAV, othersHybridYes (Aqua)OS X InstallerSoftware UpdateCarbon, Cocoa, BSD/POSIX, CF, X11 (since 10.3)
DragonFly BSDx86, x86-64HAMMER, UFS, FAT, ISO 9660, NFS, SMBFS, NTFS, ext2, othersHybridNo (X.Org available)pkgsrc, packagesGitBSD, POSIX
PC-BSDx86, x86-64UFS, UFS2, FAT, ISO 9660, NFS, SMBFS, NTFS (read only), othersMonolithic with modulesYes (KDE)graphical installation wizard, ports treeCVSup, Portsnap, network binary update (Online Update)BSD, POSIX, X11, KDE
MidnightBSDx86, x86-64UFS, UFS2, ext2, FAT, ISO 9660, UDF, NFS, SMBFS, NetWare (nwfs), NTFS (read only), othersMonolithic with modulesNo (X.Org available)ports tree, packagessource CVSupBSD, POSIX, X11, GNUstep
GhostBSDx86, x86-64UFS, UFS2, ext2, FAT, ISO 9660, UDF, NFS, SMBFS, NetWare (nwfs), NTFS (limited read-write), ReiserFS (read only), XFS (experimental), ZFS, FUSE, Coda (experimental), AFS, othersMonolithic with modulesYes (GNOME)ports tree, packagessource (CVSup, portsnap), network binary update (freebsd-update)BSD, POSIX
  1. ^ UFS and UFS2 are descendants of the old FFS. However, many BSD operating systems refer to UFS1 as FFS.
  2. ^ Operating systems where the GUI is not installed and turned on by default are often bundled with an implementation of the X Window System. However, installing X is usually optional.
  3. ^ Most operating systems use proprietary APIs in addition to any supported standards.
  4. ^ OpenBSD contains support for modules on some architectures. They are used only to add third-party features: extracting existing functions into modules in the same manner as FreeBSD is not possible.
  5. ^ Unlike FreeBSD, OpenBSD includes the X Window System as base install sets rather than packages within the ports collection. It includes some local changes and is managed as part of the OpenBSD source tree.
  6. ^ NetBSD includes either X.Org or XFree86 (depending on platform) as a base install set and includes some local changes, maintained within the NetBSD source tree.

Security features

Resource access controlSecurity loggingSubsystem isolation mechanismsIntegrated firewallEncrypted file systemsData execution prevention
hardwareemulation
Mac OS XUnix, ACLssyslog, CAPP event auditing, OpenBSMchroot, sandboxIPFW2, PFYes[Note 1]Yes?
FreeBSDUnix, ACLs, MACsyslog, CAPP event auditing, OpenBSMchroot, jail, MAC partitionsIPFW2, IPFilter, PFYesYesYes[Note 2]
PC-BSDUnix, ACLs, MAC?chroot, jail, MAC PartitionsIPFW2, IPFilter, PFYes[Note 3]YesNo
MidnightBSDUnix, ACLs, MACsyslogchroot, jail, MAC partitionsIPFW2, IPFilter, PFYesNoNo
DragonFly BSDUnixsyslogchroot, jail, VKernelIPFW2, IPFilter, PFYesNoNo
NetBSDUnix, Veriexecsyslogchroot, privilege separationIPFilter, PF, NPFYesYesNo
OpenBSDUnixsyslogchroot, systrace, privilege separationPFYes[Note 4]YesYes
  1. ^ Stack-only protection for Mac OS X 10.4, stack and heap for Mac OS X 10.5 and above.
  2. ^ ProPolice/Stack-Smashing Protector has been enabled in base system since FreeBSD 8.0-RELEASE.
  3. ^ Additionally swap space may be encrypted during installation, uses memory based tmp file storage by default.
  4. ^ Swap space encrypted by default on OpenBSD 3.8 and above

See also

Notes and references

  1. ^ "DragonFly Frequently Asked Questions". The DragonFly BSD Project. Archived from the original on 2006-06-15. Retrieved 2006-07-01. 
  2. ^ Biancuzzi, Federico (2004-07-08). "Behind DragonFly BSD An Interview with the developers.". O’Reilly Media, Inc. p. 3. Retrieved 2006-04-29. 
  3. ^ "Chapter 1 Introduction: 1.2. - What is the goal of the FreeBSD Project?". Frequently Asked Questions for FreeBSD 4.X, 5.X, and 6.X. The FreeBSD Documentation Project. 1995-2006. Retrieved 2006-04-22. 
  4. ^ "About FreeBSD". The FreeBSD Project. 2006-10-12. Retrieved 2006-10-14. 
  5. ^ "Support for Multiple Architectures: Statement of General Intent". Committer's Guide. The FreeBSD Documentation Project. ©1999-2005. Retrieved 2006-10-14. "The FreeBSD Project targets "production quality commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) workstation, server, and high-end embedded systems"." 
  6. ^ "About the NetBSD Project - What is the NetBSD project?". The NetBSD Foundation, Inc. 2006-01-08. Retrieved 2006-04-22. 
  7. ^ "OpenBSD Project Goals". OpenBSD. 2005-10-12. Retrieved 2006-04-22. 
  8. ^ Moore, Kris (March 14, 2011). "A Quick Look at the Upcoming PC-BSD 9". Official PC-BSD Blog. Retrieved November 21, 2011. 
  9. ^ "FreeBSD Form Post "Seriously"". FreeBSD Forums. 2011-04-14. Retrieved 2011-04-14. 
  10. ^ a b c BSD Certification site; PDF of usage survey results. Retrieved on 2012-09-16.
  11. ^ "*BSD Usage Statistics". The *BSD Stats Project. Retrieved 2006-09-30. 
  12. ^ "DistroWatch.com: Put the fun back into computing.". DistroWatch.com. 2001-2011. Retrieved 2011-06-12. 
  13. ^ "Chapter 1 Introduction - Why is it called FreeBSD?". Frequently Asked Questions for FreeBSD 4.X, 5.X, and 6.X. The FreeBSD Documentation Project. 1995-2006. Retrieved 2006-06-11. 
  14. ^ "About the NetBSD Project - Why the name?". The NetBSD Foundation. 1994-2006. Retrieved 2006-12-06. 
  15. ^ FreeBSD Logo Competition. The FreeBSD Project. Competition ended 2005-06-30. Retrieved on 2006-04-22.
  16. ^ Mueller, Shawn (1994). "Original NetBSD Logo" (JPEG). The NetBSD Foundation. Retrieved 2006-04-22.  Also see NetBSD Logos.
  17. ^ Mewburn, Luke (2004-01-14). "NetBSD logo design competition". Netbsd-advocacy mailing list. Retrieved 2006-04-22. 
    Linked to from:
    "Changes and NetBSD News in 2004 - NetBSD Logo Design Contest". The NetBSD Foundation, Inc. 2004-01-13. Retrieved 2006-10-14. 
    Also see:
    "The NetBSD Foundation Press Release: Announcement of New Logo - NetBSD has a new logo!". The NetBSD Foundation, Inc. 2004-10-30. Retrieved 2006-04-22. 
  18. ^ "OpenBSD 3.9 - Free, Functional & Secure" (JPEG). OpenBSD. Retrieved 2006-07-01. 
  19. ^ "OpenBSD release song lyrics". OpenBSD. 2006-04-15. Retrieved 2006-04-22. 
  20. ^ official DragonFlyBSD artwork
  21. ^ "DFWiki - DragonFly Artwork". The DragonFlyBSD Project. 2006-03-28. Retrieved 2006-04-22.  (This page was noted to be a redirect to the front page of new DragonFly Wiki on 2006-06-17, but most of the old images remain available via the Wayback Machine.)
  22. ^ "The History of DragonFly". The DragonFly BSD Project. Archived from the original on 2006-04-14. Retrieved 2006-04-22. 
  23. ^ "PicoBSD Banner - For the little BSD in all of us" (GIF). The FreeBSD Project. Archived from the original on 2006-05-03. Retrieved 2006-04-22. 
  24. ^ "ClosedBSD logo" (JPEG). Archived from the original on 2005-03-18. Retrieved 2006-10-14.  Original last retrieved on 2006-04-22.
  25. ^ "MicroBSD logo - The small secure unix like OS" (PNG). Retrieved 2006-04-22. 
  26. ^ "MirOS/MirPorts: a wonderful operating system for a world of peace". MirOS Project. Retrieved 2006-04-22. 
  27. ^ "SunOS 4.1.3: svidii - overview of the System V environment". FreeBSD Hypertext Man Pages. The FreeBSD Project. 1989-09-30. Retrieved 2006-06-14. 
  28. ^ http://www.paxym.com/FreeBSD.html
  29. ^ http://www.freebsd.nfo.sk/maheshaeng. htm
  30. ^ http://www.freebsd.nfo.sk/opbsd/karma bsdeng.htm

Other sources

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