joekiser writes:
"Antoine Jacoutot has given a status update for GNOME users of OpenBSD, including a short video. The GNOME release has been updated to 3.10.2, and auto-mounting of devices is now supported through a new helper program, toad. Now is a great time for desktop users to test the upcoming OpenBSD release. The ports tree was recently locked for stability testing ahead of the 5.5 release, meaning that recent -CURRENT builds are very close to what will be released in May. Antoine also addresses the upcoming issues non-Linux systems face with GNOME, such as the upcoming hard dependency on systemd."
[ED Note: I ran an OpenBSD router box years ago when tinkering about with an old PII with four NICs seemed worthwhile. The OS lived up to it's rep, but it never occurred to me to use it for a desktop system. Are any Soylentils using OpenBSD for a GNOME-based workstation?]
(Score: 2, Interesting) by bobintetley on Friday February 21 2014, @09:42AM
I don't feel too strongly about systemd.
I've only read a little and it seems to solve some security and other problems inherent with the old sysv init. It also seems to allow logging earlier in the boot process and uses the standard syslog, so why wouldn't it still produce text logs? Moving to declarative, config based scripts seems like (ostensibly) a good idea since all distros end up with their own libraries of bash functions to try and standardise init scripts anyway.
I'll reserve judgement on systemd until I've played with it a little and read more, but in general I think progress is to be encouraged!
You're right though, OpenBSD seems like an odd choice to use for a desktop given the distribution's niche - I'm surprised they even bother packaging X for it :)