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| General software and network General OS-independent software and network questions, X11, MTA, routing, etc. |
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Hi,
I've been using Slackware Linux for many years, but want to install a *BSD onto an older computer. I tried to search but got no comparison for what I want: What is the RAM usage for the default installs of the last versions fo OpenBSD, NetBSD and FreeBSD? |
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FreeBSD requires at least 24 MB of RAM. The other BSD probably have similar requirements.
But that's not very interesting. It all depends on what you want to do with it. A server and a desktop system have very different requirements. Same goes for a desktop system with Xorg and a lightweight WM and software collection (or maybe even without Xorg and just console applications) versus Xorg and one of those big DEs.
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May the source be with you! |
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I recommend you play with the BSDs and determine which ones meet your needs with your small memory sizes. Use virtual machines to determine what your application set requires, and what is possible.
The monolithic OpenBSD/i386 kernel (uniprocessor or multiprocessor) is 8.5MB. So 8MB would be too small. I have not run a 16MB Intel based machine in some years, but I would suppose that 16MB could be a possible minimum. Note that for OpenBSD, Intel 386 CPU support was dropped some years ago. The oldest technology supported is Intel 486 and its clones. Don't use the memory requirements outlined in my OpenBSD live media FAQ -- that memory requirement is significant due to memory based filesystems. (link in my .sig.)
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OpenBSD LiveCDs/LiveDVDs |
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I should add I edited my post for clarity ... and that for OpenBSD, some non-Intel older tech is still actively supported -- suc as Vax, HP 9000s, and VMEbus systems. Some of these have 2-3MB kernels.
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OpenBSD LiveCDs/LiveDVDs |
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For NetBSD, have a look at one of the INSTALL.* files under the architecture of your choice. E.g., for i386 INSTALL.html says
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Ooh, IdOp, I hadn't considered looking in the INSTALL.* files for OpenBSD. According to INSTALL.i386, 40386 or better processors and 24 or 32MB of RAM and 200MB of disk are the minimal configurations.
Of course, the older architectures have lower minimums. For example, the mvme68k architecture (Motorola 680x0 VME) minimum is 12MB of RAM and 160MB of disk. For Vax, the lowest amount of tested memory is 8M.
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OpenBSD LiveCDs/LiveDVDs |
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I also recalled an old thread here:
What should I put on ... It may be of some relevance, but probably not a lot. |
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Thank you guys!
I want the computer to behave as a file server, mail server (for now only fetchmail or equivalent) and also to wget or curl some files for me and to feed some of the text from those files to a rss/atom service (that I still have to find out how). I asked for the default memory footprint, because the memory requisites for these services don't seem to be great. |
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