Table of Contents
What is the latest version of FreeBSD?
Version history
Version | Release date | Supported until |
---|---|---|
11.1 | 26 July 2017 | 30 September 2018 |
11.2 | 28 June 2018 | 31 October 2019 |
11.3 | 9 July 2019 | 30 September 2020 |
11.4 | 23 June 2020 | 30 September 2021 |
Where is FreeBSD used?
FreeBSD is an operating system used to power modern servers, desktops, and embedded platforms. A large community has continually developed it for more than thirty years.
What’s new in FreeBSD?
FreeBSD 13.0 has just reached release candidate 1 and is scheduled to come out at the end of March – with key new features including a complete LLVM toolchain, faster networking, and improved ZFS file system. Major new releases come every two years or so: 12.0 was pushed out in December 2018, and 12.2 in October 2020.
Is FreeBSD 13 stable?
The 13th stable release of FreeBSD is here, with major upgrades including the transition to a new OpenZFS filesystem as well as an upgraded toolchain that aims to unify FreeBSD across all architectures.
Where can I find information about the supported releases of FreeBSD?
Complete information about the release date and the estimated End-Of-Life (EOL) for currently supported releases can be found on the Supported Releases section of the FreeBSD Security Information page. For the schedule of upcoming releases, or for more information about the release engineering process, please visit the Release Engineering page.
What are the different freefreebsd releases?
FreeBSD releases are classified into Production Releases and Legacy Releases. Production releases are best suited to users looking for the latest new features. Legacy releases are for users wishing to stay with a more conservative upgrade strategy.
How long does it take you to update FreeBSD?
Since I don’t use freebsd-update, a simple FreeBSD update takes roughly about 1 hour. Most of it is waiting until world and kernel compile. Merging in configuration changes is the most work-intensive phase which takes about 2 minutes.
What is the difference between FreeBSD-version (1) and uname -U?
This is a tough one. freebsd-version (1) returns the equivalent of uname -r eg; 12.0-CURRENT (osrelease), whereas uname -U returns the equivalent of uname -K eg; 1200054 (osreldate). These values are returned from the jail (8), or “guest”; as opposed to from the host.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dlUwkQQpeyA