On 2006/03/14 00:01, Ramiro Aceves wrote: > When I first discover OpenBSD after some years using Linux, I got in > love with it, I liked its philosophy very much, its correctness, its > documentation, the way the kernel boots, Everything is where you spect > it to be.
Follow the cvs-changes and ports-changes mailing lists for a while and you'll see what is involved with this. It doesn't take long to notice that this doesn't just require skill, it also requires a lot of time, effort, and attention to detail. > Sometimes linux is a mess. No surprise that apps written primarily for Linux sometimes follow the same philosophy. Often it seems that people prefer to write how-to work around a problem than document it and report it to the people that might be able to fix it. > > Just before the code freeze for 3.9, for example, there was a request on > > the OpenBSD lists to test stuff *now*. That would've been the best time > > to try out everything you'd possibly like and report back on it. That'd > > have ensured that the port would either be fixed or marked BROKEN in > > time. > > Yes, I would have liked to help, but I have not had enough free time. It takes, what, a couple of hours to install a snapshot, set PKG_PATH appropriately and upgrade the pre-built packages if you haven't done it before...well under an hour real-time if you have. For next time: With OpenBSD, running -current is quite low-risk in the first place, running snapshots even safer. Running snapshots in the weeks building up to a release is like running a release candidate from many other software projects, any big problems would be both surprising and important to report. It seems like a simple thing to just test and report success or failure, but a few dozen people doing this and using sendbug or writing to ports@ or the maintainer where appropriate really extends the number of environments that get tested. The OpenBSD community is small enough that *you* can make a difference.