Phoronix reports
The inaugural release of ubuntuBSD is now available, which the developers have codenamed "Escape From SystemD". [It] pairs the Ubuntu userspace with the FreeBSD kernel.
... This first ubuntuBSD beta release is based off Ubuntu 15.10 Wily Werewolf and the FreeBSD 10.1 kernel.
This Ubuntu+FreeBSD operating system ships with the Xfce desktop, is designed for both servers and desktops, and offers complete ZFS file-system support.
The project's SourceForge page
N.B.
The ubuntuBSD Web Site link is currently a circular trip back to SourceForge.
[Additional coverage at softpedia. For the impatient/adventuresome here is a direct link to download the latest ISO (893.8 MB ubuntuBSD 15.10~BETA2-amd64.iso). -Ed.]
(Score: 2, Interesting) by Francis on Tuesday March 22 2016, @07:48AM
Perhaps they really love gnu, but hate Linux.
(Score: 1, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday March 22 2016, @09:30AM
That person is already running GNU Herd.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday March 22 2016, @09:38AM
*Hurd
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday March 22 2016, @02:59PM
*Turd
(Score: 2) by Joe Desertrat on Tuesday March 22 2016, @04:09PM
Yeah, you can't really call one person a herd.
(Score: 2) by VLM on Tuesday March 22 2016, @12:05PM
Lots of GNU stuff runs great on freebsd. Just for big apps I roughly daily use emacs, R, ...
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday March 22 2016, @09:51PM
Yes it's a simple matter of installing the GNU utilities from ports then aliasing ls to gls and tar to gtar etc. Should be less than an hour's work.
(Score: 1) by Francis on Wednesday March 23 2016, @12:36AM
It doesn't make much sense to me as it looks like the worst of both world. You get the inconsistent userland of Linux without the complete compatibility with Linux programs and drivers.
I assume that some people have a reason for doing it, but it doesn't make much sense to me to use a BSD kernel with a non-standard userland.
(Score: 1) by Arik on Wednesday March 23 2016, @02:43PM
I don't think I'd do that today though. I'd just install BSD and start working with it, and expect to add a bit of GNU here and there when I run into a *reason* that I need it.
The main reason I quit running BSD years ago was because of advances in the linux kernel, not because of userland which is after all easily modified. The main reason I'd consider returning would be if the linux kernel does become systemd dependent. But as much as systemd folks like to think it already is - it is not. There are lots of linux distros that function perfectly without it.
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