Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 6th Aug 2007 21:50 UTC, submitted by anonymous
BSD and Darwin derivatives The sixth major DragonFly BSD release, version 1.10, was announced today by project creator Matthew Dillon. Billed as "more stable than the 1.8 release", it includes improved virtual kernel support, a new disk management infrastructure, improvements to wireless networking, and support for the new syslink protocol. As to what all that means, KernelTrap has just posted an interview with Dillon. Going beyond today's 1.10 release, the interview explores DragonFly's new clustering high-availability filesystem which sounds superior to ZFS, the project's goals for the 2.0 release expected in six months, and a comparison of the BSD license versus the GPL.
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we shall see
by poundsmack on Mon 6th Aug 2007 22:16 UTC
poundsmack
Member since:
2005-07-13

"the interview explores DragonFly's new clustering high-availability filesystem which sounds superior to ZFS"

sounds is one thing. as far as an actual implimentation well i guess we will have to wait and see. I wish them luck.