Bernhard Fröhlich <de...@bluelife.at> wrote: > I had a quick look at it and the result is > quite poor considering the time it took them to get it done. > > They had to install quite a few packages (perl, python27, libX11, avahi > ...) and modified the stock FreeBSD image quite a bit. At startup they send > an arping otherwise you do not even have network access in their network. > This looks all a bit hackish and error prone. I am really wondering how > long it will take that a regular update breaks their scripts and let's you > back with a non accessible box.
I use http://www.vultr.com/ for FreeBSD - their packages are similarly or better priced than DO. With Vultr, you can run their automated install, (which in itself just automates a typical FreeBSD install - there are no OS hacks) or just install off an ISO etc. I don't know what's unusual with the DO virtualisation, but vultr just works like a normal server (though they do restrict to virtio devices where applicable rather than emulated harware) You can even install a windows ISO (as long as you've sideloaded virtio drivers onto the install disk), or with FreeBSD, "it just works" Cheers, Jamie _______________________________________________ freebsd-emulation@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-emulation To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-emulation-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"