Hi Pau,

I'm not familiar with UFS as of yet (haven't had the need).

AFAIK, you can mount an ext3 partition as ext2 _as long as it was
unmounted cleanly_.

> ...since in GNU/Linux there is not
> such a strong (and nice) unification; OS is kernel + software, whilst
> in o'bsd I've got the feeling (so far, after 1 week) that the kernel
> and the system are almost a single thing.

It is a system. Not a kernel with some random pieces of software stuck
onto it.

More on topic: personally, I'd rather deal with ext2/ext3 than fiddling
with non-GENERIC kernel configs.

I can't even remember how much valuable time I must have lost tinkering
with Linux and (to a lesser extent) FreeBSD kernels... Using OpenBSD, I
haven't yet faced a problem that couldn't be solved by throwing more ram,
cpu power or a better nic at it. Or man page reading. :-)

Buhbye... Nico
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