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  3. Hey everyone, first post here on bsd.cafe!

Hey everyone, first post here on bsd.cafe!

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  • ahze@mastodon.bsd.cafeA This user is from outside of this forum
    ahze@mastodon.bsd.cafeA This user is from outside of this forum
    ahze@mastodon.bsd.cafe
    wrote last edited by
    #1

    Hey everyone, first post here on bsd.cafe! 👋

    Link Preview Image
    Beyond make install: Why I Love FreeBSD Ports (And Why We Need Native OCI)

    There is a distinct, visceral satisfaction in typing make config && make install clean. If you’ve spent any meaningful amount of time in the Unix world, you know exactly what I mean. The FreeBSD Ports tree is an ethos—a commitment to understanding exactly what is running on your metal. But let’s be honest: while Ports are a masterpiece for traditional software, they hit a brick wall with modern, cloud-native applications. I’ve been running into this wall a lot lately while building daemonless.io—a project dedicated to bringing first-class, native OCI images to FreeBSD.

    favicon

    Michael Johnson (ahze.net)

    I've actually been sitting on this blog draft since January, but after getting a well-timed poke in Discord to just publish it already, I finally hit the button.

    I wrote down some thoughts on the Ports tree—which I still have a ton of love for from my committer days -- and the reality of deploying massive modern apps (like Immich) natively. I really think we need a solid path forward with native OCI, without just falling back to Linux VMs.

    It's the main reason I've been hacking on http://daemonless.io -- I'd love to hear what other folks in the community think!

    http://ahze.net/posts/why-i-love-freebsd-ports/

    #Introductions #FreeBSD #Jails #OCI

    marzlberger@neander.socialM alelab@mastodon.bsd.cafeA kedara@mastodon.bsd.cafeK 3 Replies Last reply
    2
    0
    • ahze@mastodon.bsd.cafeA ahze@mastodon.bsd.cafe

      Hey everyone, first post here on bsd.cafe! 👋

      Link Preview Image
      Beyond make install: Why I Love FreeBSD Ports (And Why We Need Native OCI)

      There is a distinct, visceral satisfaction in typing make config && make install clean. If you’ve spent any meaningful amount of time in the Unix world, you know exactly what I mean. The FreeBSD Ports tree is an ethos—a commitment to understanding exactly what is running on your metal. But let’s be honest: while Ports are a masterpiece for traditional software, they hit a brick wall with modern, cloud-native applications. I’ve been running into this wall a lot lately while building daemonless.io—a project dedicated to bringing first-class, native OCI images to FreeBSD.

      favicon

      Michael Johnson (ahze.net)

      I've actually been sitting on this blog draft since January, but after getting a well-timed poke in Discord to just publish it already, I finally hit the button.

      I wrote down some thoughts on the Ports tree—which I still have a ton of love for from my committer days -- and the reality of deploying massive modern apps (like Immich) natively. I really think we need a solid path forward with native OCI, without just falling back to Linux VMs.

      It's the main reason I've been hacking on http://daemonless.io -- I'd love to hear what other folks in the community think!

      http://ahze.net/posts/why-i-love-freebsd-ports/

      #Introductions #FreeBSD #Jails #OCI

      marzlberger@neander.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
      marzlberger@neander.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
      marzlberger@neander.social
      wrote last edited by
      #2

      @ahze Welcome and have fun!

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • ahze@mastodon.bsd.cafeA ahze@mastodon.bsd.cafe

        Hey everyone, first post here on bsd.cafe! 👋

        Link Preview Image
        Beyond make install: Why I Love FreeBSD Ports (And Why We Need Native OCI)

        There is a distinct, visceral satisfaction in typing make config && make install clean. If you’ve spent any meaningful amount of time in the Unix world, you know exactly what I mean. The FreeBSD Ports tree is an ethos—a commitment to understanding exactly what is running on your metal. But let’s be honest: while Ports are a masterpiece for traditional software, they hit a brick wall with modern, cloud-native applications. I’ve been running into this wall a lot lately while building daemonless.io—a project dedicated to bringing first-class, native OCI images to FreeBSD.

        favicon

        Michael Johnson (ahze.net)

        I've actually been sitting on this blog draft since January, but after getting a well-timed poke in Discord to just publish it already, I finally hit the button.

        I wrote down some thoughts on the Ports tree—which I still have a ton of love for from my committer days -- and the reality of deploying massive modern apps (like Immich) natively. I really think we need a solid path forward with native OCI, without just falling back to Linux VMs.

        It's the main reason I've been hacking on http://daemonless.io -- I'd love to hear what other folks in the community think!

        http://ahze.net/posts/why-i-love-freebsd-ports/

        #Introductions #FreeBSD #Jails #OCI

        alelab@mastodon.bsd.cafeA This user is from outside of this forum
        alelab@mastodon.bsd.cafeA This user is from outside of this forum
        alelab@mastodon.bsd.cafe
        wrote last edited by
        #3

        @ahze Welcome aboard!
        I am sure you will find this instance nice and helpful. The community is incredible.
        Take a seat and have fun

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • ahze@mastodon.bsd.cafeA ahze@mastodon.bsd.cafe

          Hey everyone, first post here on bsd.cafe! 👋

          Link Preview Image
          Beyond make install: Why I Love FreeBSD Ports (And Why We Need Native OCI)

          There is a distinct, visceral satisfaction in typing make config && make install clean. If you’ve spent any meaningful amount of time in the Unix world, you know exactly what I mean. The FreeBSD Ports tree is an ethos—a commitment to understanding exactly what is running on your metal. But let’s be honest: while Ports are a masterpiece for traditional software, they hit a brick wall with modern, cloud-native applications. I’ve been running into this wall a lot lately while building daemonless.io—a project dedicated to bringing first-class, native OCI images to FreeBSD.

          favicon

          Michael Johnson (ahze.net)

          I've actually been sitting on this blog draft since January, but after getting a well-timed poke in Discord to just publish it already, I finally hit the button.

          I wrote down some thoughts on the Ports tree—which I still have a ton of love for from my committer days -- and the reality of deploying massive modern apps (like Immich) natively. I really think we need a solid path forward with native OCI, without just falling back to Linux VMs.

          It's the main reason I've been hacking on http://daemonless.io -- I'd love to hear what other folks in the community think!

          http://ahze.net/posts/why-i-love-freebsd-ports/

          #Introductions #FreeBSD #Jails #OCI

          kedara@mastodon.bsd.cafeK This user is from outside of this forum
          kedara@mastodon.bsd.cafeK This user is from outside of this forum
          kedara@mastodon.bsd.cafe
          wrote last edited by
          #4

          @ahze interesting post, so far I've been able to manage my web apps with jails, but I can see how this'd be useful. Welcome to the café and have fun!

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