It might be easier to recompile them for FreeBSD, instead of running the 
binaries using Linux emulation. As long as you haven't used any 
linux-specific system calls, of course. Mostly you shouldn't need to alter 
your code much / at all.

Alex

On Thursday 25 July 2002 11:52 am, Daniel Bye wrote:
> On Thu, Jul 25, 2002 at 02:12:28PM +0300, Tiago Marques wrote:
> > Dear Sirs,
> > I'm a user of Linux, and i do some programming for college, some related
> > with sockets, processes, and all kinds of linux system programming.
> > I've been thinking about moving to FreeBSD but i would like to know if
> > the programs i do in Linux will be compatible with FreeBSD.
> > I've already installed OpenBSD in another computer but due to some
> > problems here i didn't have the time to test those things yet...
> > Also, i'm a regular user, but not very experienced in Linux, i just know
> > my way around, not much more. Do you think i'll be able to use FreeBSD
> > easily or is it more complicated to mantain and admin ?
> > Sorry all this questions
>
> Provided your Linux programs don't make too heavy use of the Linux procfs
> (which is significantly different to the BSD implementation), or any of
> the extended i386 sys calls, you should be able to run them under FreeBSD,
> using the Linux emulation layer.  The best thing to do is install FreeBSD,
> including the Linux emulation bits and pieces, and try it out.
>
> (There is code in the base system to support linprocfs, but I have never
> had call to use it so cannot offer any help or opinions about it)
>
> The name FreeBSD refers to the OS as a whole, unlike Linux, which is the
> name of the kernel.  Therefore, you can consider FreeBSD in the same terms
> as RedHat or SuSE - RedHat's OS is _based_on_ a Linux kernel, but the
> specific details of the implementation of the rest of the system are down
> to the developers who put the thing together.
>
> Because of this, there is only one FreeBSD "distribution", which you can
> rely on being sane from one install to the next - whereas the multitude of
> Linux distros are effectively different OSen, and you will find
> considerable variation in the specifics.  (However, that's not to say that
> one RedHat install will be vastly different to the next...)
>
> Personally, I like FreeBSD's design.  I find it to be clean and systematic,
> and yes, pretty easy to keep it going smoothly.  It also has this list,
> which is a truly marvellous source of help and information for those who
> can't find what they need elsewhere.  Installing new apps is a breeze
> using the Ports system (which is so good, that NetBSD and OpenBSD have
> adopted it), and the documentation for the base system is, in my opinion,
> some of the best written and maintained documentation I have ever come
> across.
>
> But this is all just so much personal opinion.  Try it, break it, fix it,
> see what you think!
>
> Dan


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