While reviewing some of Debian’s documentation, I found some very interesting articles on how Debian supports non-Linux kernels; hence, the term ‘universal’ comes more into play. Ironically, I had made several comparisons between FreeBSD and Debian, as Debian seems to share both the structured documentation of FreeBSD (ex: Handbook, Wiki, etc), as well as kernel support that was previously unknown to me.
Debian’s website refers to this support as ‘kFreeBSD‘ and describes it as follows:
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“Debian GNU/kFreeBSD is a port that consists of GNU userland using the GNU C library on top of FreeBSD’s kernel, coupled with the regular Debian package set.”
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“This is a release in progress. It has been released with Debian 6.0 (Squeeze) as a technology preview and the first non-Linux port.”
From my perspective, a greater level of knowledge sharing between FreeBSD and Debian contributors can potentially improve both OSes in the long run. Again, I would highly recommend revisiting Debian as an open source operating system. The project is one of the greatest enduring open source community projects. It is incredibly stable and well documented. It is easy to see why other distributions have used Debian as a foundation for decades. Best of all, it has become much easier to install and use, offers more configuration choices during setup, and requires minimal tuning to end up with a super-responsive system.
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