I'm using acme also on OpenBSD. I don't know any better editor than that. Of course, where acme cannot use, such as cui only, I use ed.
Kenji 2018年12月6日(木) 21:38 Chris Bennett <cpb_m...@bennettconstruction.us>: > On Thu, Dec 06, 2018 at 01:26:12PM +0900, 岡本健二 wrote: > > in-current means stable 6.4? > > > > No. Look in the FAQ. Look at the running -current page > Look at what release -> stable is. > > Run -current only if you need something new, are developing base/ports > or wish to help test the software/hardware being developed. > It is not always stable. It could have new security problems temporarily > before those changes are fixed or pulled out. > > However, OpenBSD runs ports and base code as a unit. You cannot run > current without making your current up to date and using the latest > version of ports/packages. Unless you find a nice spot and just stay > there. > > OpenBSD is not a jumbled mess of code all over the place. It's one of > many reasons that it has fewer bugs -> better security. Also, security > specific methods are always under active development. > > Please read the entire FAQ and PF Guide. Please read all of the man > pages for any commands you need to use or are interested in. > > Please learn what you can do with boot -s or boot -c. You will at some > point need to use them. Search the mailing list archives for interesting > topics. Figure out how to handle the filesystem when it gets hosed > during a power failure. Figure out how to arrange your disklabel at > install to let you use growfs. > > I also suggest that you learn to use ed. It's not hard to use, but it's > really, really old. It's still actively maintained because it's 100% > worth having. > > The command line is so powerful once you learn to use it. We don't want > GUI interfaces for this stuff because we expect you to truly learn what > to do and why. > > Have a good day, > Chris Bennett > > >