> 1. In general how stable is -current? I know it goes through periods of > instability, but assuming that I'm following the lists and know when not > to build, could I put a 4.x box up and not be embarrassed?
I run my own machine off -current, have been doing so for months now, and it's hardly an idle machine given the number of release builds and other crap I run on it. It's been a less painful -current than many a -current I could think of in the past, that's for sure. :) > 2. Our architecture is *highly* dependent on NFS. I know that the good > work on NFS is happening in -current, which is why I'm considering it. > How well does -current NFS mix with an almost all-Sun network? Any > plans on MFC'ing the NFS fixes to -stable? Matt's submitted some patches for this which I've asked the core team to review. Anyone else looking for -stable relative NFS patches to test should send Matt Dillon or I some email and we'll provide you with the diffs if you'll provide us with the testing. :) > 3. How good and how stable is SMP currently, and does -current offer any > big advantages over -stable in SMP? I think SMP is pretty good in either branch, though Luoqi and Alan have been working to improve it in -current lately. - Jordan To Unsubscribe: send mail to majord...@freebsd.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-current" in the body of the message