List of BSD operating systems explained

There are a number of Unix-like operating systems under active development, descended from the Berkeley Software Distribution (BSD) series of UNIX variants developed (originally by Bill Joy) at the University of California, Berkeley, Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science.

, there are four major BSD operating systems–FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD and DragonFly BSD, and an increasing number of other OSs forked from these, that add or remove certain features; however, most of them remain largely compatible with their originating OS—and so are not really forks of them. This is a list of those that have been active since 2014, and their websites.

FreeBSD-based

FreeBSD is a free Unix-like operating system descended from AT&T UNIX via the Berkeley Software Distribution (BSD). FreeBSD currently has more than 200 active developers and thousands of contributors. Other notable derivatives include DragonFly BSD, which was forked from FreeBSD 4.8, and Apple Inc.'s macOS, with its Darwin base including a large amount of code derived from FreeBSD.

Active

Name Description
ClonOS[1] Offers a complete web UI for easily controlling, deploying and managing FreeBSD jails, containers and Bhyve/Xen hypervisor virtual environments.
DragonFly BSDOriginally forked from FreeBSD 4.8, now developed in a different direction
TrueNASPreviously known as FreeNAS.
GhostBSDGhostBSD is a FreeBSD OS distro oriented for desktops and laptops. Its goal is to combine the stability and security of FreeBSD with OpenRC, OS packages and Mate graphical user interface. GhostBSD comes as livecd for users to test before installing.
HardenedBSDHardenedBSD is a security-enhanced fork of FreeBSD. The HardenedBSD Project is implementing many exploit mitigation and security technologies on top of FreeBSD.
helloSystemA desktop system for creators that focuses on simplicity, elegance, and usability.
Junos OSFor Juniper routers
MidnightBSDMidnight BSD forked away from FreeBSD 6.1 Beta
XigmaNASPreviously known as NAS4Free, is a network-attached storage (NAS) server software. It is a continuation of the original FreeNAS code.
NomadBSDPersistent live system for USB flash drives
OPNsenseOPNsense is a FreeBSD-based firewall tailored for use as a firewall and router that was forked from pfSense.
pfSensepfSense is a FreeBSD-based firewall tailored for use as a firewall and router.
CellOSThe PlayStation 3 operating system
Orbis OSThe PlayStation 4 operating system
ZrouterFreeBSD based firmware for embedded devices
ULBSDULBSD is a Unix-like, desktop-oriented operating system based on FreeBSD. It aims to be easy to install and ready-to-use immediately by providing pre-installed graphical KDE5 user desktop environment.
ravynOS (formerly airyxOS)ravynOS is a FreeBSD-based OS aimed at providing "the finesse of macOS".

Discontinued

Name Description
AskoziaPBXDiscontinued
BSDBoxDiscontinued
BSDeviantDiscontinued
BSDLiveDiscontinued
Bzerk CDDiscontinued
ClosedBSDDiscontinued
DesktopBSDDiscontinued.[2] Was a desktop-oriented FreeBSD variant using K Desktop Environment 3.5.
EclipseBSDDiscontinued
EvokeDiscontinued. Formerly DamnSmallBSD; a small live FreeBSD environment geared toward developers and system administrators.[3]
FenestrOS BSDDiscontinued
FreeBSDLiveDiscontinued
FreeBSD LiveCDDiscontinued
FreeSBIEDiscontinued
Frenzy Live CDDiscontinued. A "portable system administrator toolkit". It generally contains software for hardware tests, file system check, security check and network setup and analysis.
FuryBSD[4] Discontinued in 2020. Paid homage to desktop BSD projects of the past like PC-BSD and TrueOS with its graphical interface and adds additional tools like a live, hybrid USB / DVD image.
Debian GNU/kFreeBSDDiscontinued[5]
GingDiscontinued
Gentoo/FreeBSDDiscontinued. Gentoo/*BSD was a subproject to port Gentoo features such as Portage to the FreeBSD operating system.
GuLIC-BSDDiscontinued
HamFreeSBIEDiscontinued
HeXDiscontinued
IronPort AsyncOSDiscontinued. security appliances
miniBSDDiscontinued
m0n0wallDiscontinued. Successor is OPNsense. m0n0wall was an embedded firewall distribution of FreeBSD, one of the BSD operating system descendants. It provided a small image which can be put on Compact Flash cards as well as on CDROMs and hard disks. It ran on a number of embedded platforms and generic PCs.
NetBozDiscontinued
Nokia IPSODiscontinued. Nokia IP security appliances
PacBSD[6] Discontinued. A lightweight operating system that aimed to bring the flexibility and philosophy of Arch Linux to BSD-based operating systems. The Project has been inactive since 2017.
PaxymDiscontinued. FreeBSD for Cavium Networks OCTEON
PicoBSDDiscontinued
RelaxBSDDiscontinued
RoFreeSBIEDiscontinued
SnarlDiscontinued
The Dark StarDiscontinued
TheWallDiscontinued
ThinBSDDiscontinued
Triance OSDiscontinued
TrueBSDDiscontinued
TrueOSDiscontinued. TrueOS (formerly PC/BSD) was a Unix-like, desktop-oriented operating system based on FreeBSD based on ZFS boot-environments, Lumina (desktop environment), and the sysadm administration framework; reinvented as Trident OS on top of Void Linux, retained many BSD aesthetics.
TrustedBSDDiscontinued. Many of its extensions were integrated into FreeBSD. Only activity on trustedbsd-discuss mailing list is spam (as of 2020-12-22).
WarBSDDiscontinued
WiBSDDiscontinued
WiFiBSDDiscontinued
XORPDiscontinued
BSDTahoeBSD 4.3 Tahoe for VAX

DragonFly BSD-based

Name Description
Gentoo/DragonFlyBSDGentoo/*BSD subproject to port Gentoo features such as Portage to the DragonFly BSD operating system
FireFly BSD[7] Was a DragonFly based distribution.

NetBSD-based

NetBSD is a freely redistributable, open source version of the Unix-derivative Berkeley Software Distribution (BSD) computer operating system. It was the second open source BSD descendant to be formally released, after 386BSD, and continues to be actively developed. Noted for its portability and quality of design and implementation, it is often used in embedded systems and as a starting point for the porting of other operating systems to new computer architectures.

Name Description
BlackBSDNetBSD-based Live CD, with security tools on it and Mate as a window manager
EdgeBSD[8] NetBSD fork with main goal to be more modern in some aspects than NetBSD itself. Looks like some of the differences will be back-committed to the main project.
Force10 Networks FTOSthe operating system for Force10 TeraScale E-Series switches/routers
Debian GNU/NetBSDDebian GNU/NetBSD was a project to combine Debian with the kernel of NetBSD. It was abandoned in 2002 and has not seen active maintenance ever since.
Gentoo/NetBSDDiscontinued. Gentoo/*BSD was a subproject to port Gentoo features such as Portage to the NetBSD operating system.
JibbedLive CD based on NetBSD
OS108OS108 is a desktop-oriented operating system based on NetBSD.
PolyBSD / pocketSANMultipurpose framework for building embedded systems based on NetBSD.
SEOSThe operating system for the Ericsson SmartEdge router series

OpenBSD-based

OpenBSD is a Unix-like computer operating system descended from Berkeley Software Distribution (BSD), a Unix derivative developed at the University of California, Berkeley. It was forked from NetBSD in 1995. OpenBSD includes a number of security features absent or optional in other operating systems and has a tradition of developers auditing the source code for software bugs and security problems.

Name Description
ÆrieBSDOpenBSD fork which tends to be free from GPL-licensed software.[9]
adJDistribution of OpenBSD for Spanish speakers,[10] since 2005 new versions are released around 3 months after OpenBSD's releases, source in GitHub,[11] to learn how to install there is a challenge with badge on P2PU[12]
Anonym.OSDiscontinued.
Bitrig[13] Discontinued.[14] Was an OpenBSD fork with main goal to be more modern in some aspects than OpenBSD.
BowlFishCustomized OpenBSD installation script for embedded systems, intended to make OpenBSD fit into small media like compact flash cards.
BSDanywhereLive CD featuring the Enlightenment DR17 window manager
ComixWallA firewall with UTM features
ekkoBSDekkoBSD was a Unix-like operating system based on OpenBSD 3.3, also incorporating code from other BSD-like operating systems. Its focus was on security and easy administration.
EmBSD
FabBSDOpenBSD fork with main application in CNC field. It is almost inactive.
FuguItaProviding both LiveDVD and LiveUSB for i386/amd64/arm64. Highly customizable by user. Tracking errata on OpenBSD-stable.
Gentoo/OpenBSDGentoo/*BSD was a subproject to port Gentoo features such as Portage to the OpenBSD operating system.
MarBSDLiveCD of OpenBSD
LibertyBSDFork of OpenBSD with all non-free binaries removed.
MicroBSDFork of the UNIX-like BSD operating system descendant OpenBSD 3.0, begun in July 2002. The project's objective to produce a free and fully secure, complete system, but with a small footprint.
MirOS BSDCore system based mostly on OpenBSD and some NetBSD code for 32-bit i386 and SPARC, updated via infrequent snapshots and by following "current". Additional packages via MirPorts and pkgsrc are no longer updated.
OliveBSD[15] Was a live CD originally based on OpenBSD 3.8
PsygNATFirewall and NAT router tool
Quetzal[16] Was a live DVD/CD system, based on OpenBSD
SONaFRSONaFR is a small system with router/NAT/firewalling capabilities that fits on a single floppy.
UTMFWSuccessor of ComixWall, a firewall with UTM features
LiveUSB OpenBSDLiveUSB OpenBSD is a project started around 2009 for creating OpenBSD based bootable USB flash images. There are 3 variants, one with Gnome, a minimal text only version and an XFCE desktop image.
LiveCD OpenBSDLiveCD OpenBSD is sister project of LiveUSB-OpenBSD and this gives users a Live CD/DVD bootable distribution where the user gets to experience OpenBSD without installing to disk. There are 3 flavors, one with XFCE, one with MATE desktop and one with KDE.

Historic BSD

See main article: article and Berkeley Software Distribution. BSD was originally derived from Unix, using the complete source code for Sixth Edition Unix for the PDP-11 from Bell Labs as a starting point for the First Berkeley Software Distribution, or 1BSD. A series of updated versions for the PDP-11 followed (the 2.xBSD releases). A 32-bit version for the VAX platform was released as 3BSD, and the 4.xBSD series added many new features, including TCP/IP networking.

For many years, the primary developer and project leader was Bill Joy, who was a graduate student at the time; funding for this project was provided by DARPA. DARPA was interested in obtaining a programming platform and programmer's interface which would provide a robust, general purpose, time-sharing computing platform which would not become obsolete every time computing hardware was or is replaced. Such an operating system would allow US Department of Defense software, especially for intricate, long-term finance and logistics operations, to be quickly ported to new hardware as it became available.

As time went on, code was later ported both from and to Unix System III and still later Unix System V. Unix System V Revision 4 (SVR4), released circa 1992, contained much code which was ported from BSD version up to and including 4.3BSD.

BSD-like Systems

There are various operating systems, particularly GNU/Linux distributions that attempt to imitate the design of BSD, but do not use the code base of any BSD Operating System.

Name Description
Void LinuxVoid Linux is a Linux distribution created in 2008 by Juan Romero Pardines, a former developer of NetBSD. It uses its own independent package manager, XBPS. It also has elements inspired by NetBSD, such xbps-src, a source package management system inspired by pkgsrc, an adaption of NetBSD's wtf utility, and also uses runit as its init system instead of systemd.
CRUXCRUX is a Linux distribution mainly targeted at expert computer users. It uses BSD-style initscripts and utilizes a ports system similar to a BSD-based operating system.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Free Open-Source Hosting Platform ClonOS. 28 September 2016.
  2. Web site: Updated: FBSD based Projects and Systems page . FreeBSD News . 2010-01-12 . 2014-02-16 . 2013-12-12 . https://web.archive.org/web/20131212174547/http://www.freebsdnews.net/2010/01/12/updated-fbsd-based-projects-and-systems-pag/ . dead .
  3. Web site: evoke - Formerly DamnSmallBSD - Google Project Hosting . 2014-02-16.
  4. Web site: A Powerful, Portable, FreeBSD Desktop. 6 July 2020.
  5. Release Team Sprint Results. 2014-11-09. debian-devel-announce. Jonathan. Wiltshire.
  6. Web site: PacBSD : Homepage : A simple, lightweight distribution. Archbsd.net. 17 November 2014. 29 January 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180129195131/https://www.pacbsd.org/. dead.
  7. Web site: FireflyBSD - DragonFlyBSD . 17 November 2014 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20130908211123/http://www.fireflybsd.com/ . September 8, 2013 .
  8. Web site: The EdgeBSD Project: About EdgeBSD. Edgebsd.org. 17 November 2014.
  9. Web site: AerieBSD. https://web.archive.org/web/20150502122433/http://aeriebsd.org/about.html. 2015-05-02. dead. 2016-05-16.
  10. Web site: Novedades . Aprendiendo.pasosdejesus.org . 2014-02-16.
  11. Web site: pasosdeJesus/adJ · GitHub . Github.com . 2014-02-16.
  12. Web site: Reto: adJ como sistema operativo de escritorio . es . P2PU . 2014-02-16.
  13. Web site: Bitrig. Bitrig.org. 17 November 2014.
  14. Web site: Faq 路 bitrig/bitrig Wiki 路 GitHub . Github.com . 2013-10-04 . 2014-02-16.
  15. Web site: DistroWatch.com: OliveBSD. DistroWatch. Distrowatch.com. 17 November 2014.
  16. Web site: Quetzal::BSD Home Page . Micho Durdevich . 17 November 2014 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110512215811/http://quetzal.matem.unam.mx/ . May 12, 2011 .