Hi Misc,

Even though this article: http://bulk.fefe.de/scalability was many years ago
and performance in OpenBSD had improved greatly since that time, I still
hear people (mostly younger people) complain about OpenBSD performance. They
cite poor threading, unused cores, no bigmem support, etc. Yet, when asked
outright to demonstrate their issue, no one can show numbers or reproduce a
performance issue. How do others defend OpenBSD in these conversations? I
normally cite the things I admire most about OpenBSD:

1. Simplicty - (IMO, this is by far its greatest attribute... simple is
secure)
2. OpenSSH
3. pf, carp, OpenBGPD
4. built-in security
5. ports collection

But, I'd like to have hard technicaly data to demonstrate that while Linux
and FreeBSD may scale to a gazillion CPUs and PetaBytes of Memory that
OpenBSD makes a fine firewall or desktop or mail server, etc and point out
that the old article so many people cite is indeed *old*.

Thanks for any suggestions. I hate seeing such a fine OS so easily dismissed
by folks (many of whom) have never even tried it!

Reply via email to