Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Comparison of open-source operating systems

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

These tables compare free software / open-source operating systems. Where not all of the versions support a feature, the first version which supports it is listed.

General information

More information Name, License ...
  1. No for single line development model.
  2. For I/O Kit.
Remove ads

Supported architectures

More information Name, x86 SMP ...
  1. work in progress
  2. with Linux-libre kernel and others, but not on Hurd kernel
  3. Pistachio supports AMD64; Fiasco only in the CVS version.
  4. Support is outdated or unmaintained.
Remove ads

Supported hardware

General

More information Name, ATA ...
  1. Proprietary Software is not officially supported on GNU system
  2. Proprietary Firmware blob is not officially supported on GNU system

Networking

More information Name, Networking support ...
Remove ads

Network technologies

More information Name, Firewall ...
Remove ads

Supported file systems

More information Name, FAT16, dosfs; FAT32, vfat ...
  1. Read only kernel driver.
  2. read/write access without journaling; HFS+ with journal either be opened read-only or be written with journal ignored (potentially corrupting the file system).
  3. 2.6 and later.
  4. With patch Archived 15 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine.
  5. Read/Write support via NTFS-3G.
  6. Experimental.
  7. Read only.
  8. OpenSolaris also has an in-kernel, native SMB server built directly on the ZFS DMU.
  9. Ext2/3 read and write support for Haiku (jvff's blog).
  10. The GSoC 2009 project assignment was never completed (Obaro Ogbo's blog Archived 17 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine).
  11. Ext3/4 is not supported on Hurd kernel for now
  12. Default in series 028.
Remove ads

Supported file system features

More information Name, RAID ...
Remove ads

Security features

More information Operating system, Mandatory access control ...
  1. available as a patch(not integrated into the linux kernel or the userland utilities), see the security features of the Linux distribution for more details
  2. LXC is a front-end to this; also see lwn.net
  3. not integrated into the operating system
  4. see here for more details
  5. ProPolice/Stack-Smashing Protector has been enabled in base system since FreeBSD 8.0 release.
  6. see here for more details
Remove ads

See also

References

Loading content...
Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads