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Years ago, I switched from Windows to Linux to get a more lightweight and stable desktop environment. It worked out well, but I'm having enough problems with Linux to consider another change. Specifically, I'm looking for better stability in the system libraries.

I use Debian Unstable (argh..I meant Testing) because I need to track development in some Linux applications. Since they are in active development, I expect occasional bugs in them. My problem is with the frequency of breakage in basic system utilities, like hdparm or halevt. In the past year, every time I have updated a system or done a fresh install, some different utility has been broken.

The best alternatives seem to be FreeBSD and Solaris. (Solaris is free for development use, which is all I care about). I'm asking here which would be better for my use and/or whether they have enough of their own problems that I would be better off sticking with Linux.

My usage:

  • Java development, programming style is carefully system-independent, desktop apps, target users mostly on Windows and OS X

  • Virtualization to run apps on various OSes

  • General destop stuff: wordprocessing, web, music

  • Not used as a server

So far, it seems to be:

  • FreeBSD Pro documentation, community, clean design, extensive ports Con Java support

  • Solaris Pro Java and virtualization support Con see FreeBSD pro stuff

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  • Not really programming related, can someone migrate to superuser?
    – richo
    Feb 15, 2011 at 22:03
  • Wouldn't mind migrating to superuser, but I found similar questions here but not over there. :-/
    – user287424
    Feb 15, 2011 at 23:07

9 Answers 9

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Well, obviously, Java on Solaris is well supported and really stable. It is (or at least was) a primary development platform for the Java team.

Solaris is pickier about hardware than certainly Linux is, in terms of compatibility and available drivers. It would behoove you to check against the compatibility lists, especially for your graphics card, to make sure it works well for you. Solaris has a pretty rock stable userland, and it also has the other interesting Solaris features that you may or may not want to use (ZFS, DTrace, SMF, etc.).

At a stability level, FreeBSD is super stable as well, being as the kernel and userland track each other as a whole. I can't speak to Java compatibility on FreeBSD. I can say I didn't have a good experience years ago, but...that was years ago. Linux I believe has/had better Java support than FreeBSD.

Both systems have large suites of available software packages available, FreeBSD is likely larger, and there's a better chance something may have been ported to FreeBSD over Solaris (depending on the niche of the package, of course).

Solaris I believe has a bit higher base resource requirements than FreeBSD, if that matters, most likely not. "Solaris on the desktop" is a bit of an oxymoron. It certainly does the basic stuff, but it's not it's dominant area of success (things like sound, flash, video, etc.)

If your hardware works with Solaris (or you're willing to buy hardware), then I would go with Solaris. If the "multi media" desktop is really important to you, FreeBSD may be better assuming the Java works.

Me, I use a Mac. I don't say that in some smug way or anything, but if you want a Unix workstation environment to develop Java on, a Mac is really hard to beat, especially now with Oracle picking up the SDK support to keep Java (ideally) up to date more timely than Apple did. (Yes, there are lots of reasons to not like a Mac, but if "unix" and "java" are high on your list of requirements, the Mac actually meets those pretty well.)

I used Ubuntu for about a year and half. 8.x was nice. 9.x not so much, never upgraded to 10.x. I'd use any of these over Windows.

So, in my priority list: Mac, Solaris, Linux, BSD unless BSD's Java support has gotten completely hassle free and functional with no "Oh, you're using BSD"isms. Then I'd try BSD before Linux.

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  • I've been a Mac man all my life, but my next laptop is inexorably shaping up to be a linux box. Believe it or not, i find the UI preferable - GNOME's Scale is a great Expose replacement, and GNOME has proper virtual desktops, which OS X still lacks. And then there's the linux goodies - primarily, the GNU userland rather than an out-of-date BSD one, and a much bigger and more integrated package collection. It's a really weird feeling. I wish Apple would do something about it, so i could buy a Mac in good conscience! Feb 15, 2011 at 22:35
  • Nice summary. Mac: Polished interface and good hardware support, but I prefer a lighter environment (use IceWM over GNOME or KDE) and I find Darwin a kind of odd Unix. FreeBSD: Even users on forums.freebsd.org still discourage people from using it for Java dev. Solaris: Popular for enterprise dev, but I didn't see much benefit for desktop dev. Solaris didn't seem to have any greater integration of Java than Linux, and it is a lot more work to configure a lightweight environment.
    – user287424
    Sep 21, 2011 at 18:55
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I suggest you to stick to linux. instead of using unstable Debian, you might want to consider something like Fedora. it gets updates frequently. You have Java IDE's(Eclipse, Netbeans) and Linux java support. you can also use virtual machines like virtualbox.

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    Fedora is the weapon of choice for Java development. The stable version gets updates at a decent rate (unlike Debian) but doesn't break (unlike Ubuntu). There's a testing version if you want to get closer to the bleeding edge, and it's straightforward enough (although laborious) to install packages from testing on a stable box. It doesn't have all the bells and whistles of an Ubuntu by default, but it does have a clean UI that's ideal for development. Plus, it's very similar to RHEL, which simplifies going into production on JBoss/RHEL. And the JDK comes as an RPM. What more could you want? Feb 15, 2011 at 22:27
  • I spent some time investigating Fedora. Its popularity seems to be due to the carefully chosen set of open tools included. It saves a little time in setup, but I see no benefit other than that. Finding and installing packages is really much more convenient with Debian.
    – user287424
    Sep 21, 2011 at 18:36
  • That's true. Debian and debian based distributions like Ubuntu are known for having large repositories. But the problem with Debian (stable) is that the packages are a little bit outdated. Fedora has the advantage of using cutting edge packages. You might find Ubuntu useful since it has large repository and packages are much more updated than Debian. You can also use the community site such as lauchpad to find the newest packages. Oct 1, 2011 at 13:25
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I would suggest separating concerns.

Choose a stable distribution as the host operating system and then install a virtual machine environment in it (like vmware player). Then install those unstable ones you need to track inside it, plus perhaps even a Windows instance.

You can then run those you need to, when you need to, while keeping your stable distribution unharmed.

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  • Yes, I've been thinking about this. The question then would be which OS for the host. It seems that FreeBSD or Solaris might be better than Linux for that.
    – user287424
    Feb 16, 2011 at 7:44
  • @user28, the important part is that the virtual machine environment runs well as well as support your desired guests - it is not enough just with a robust host platform. I have worked on a daily basis for six months with vmware player under Ubuntu and found it to work very well. Feb 16, 2011 at 23:23
  • I switched the chosen answer to this, because I eventually found this to be the best advice. After trying every virtualization option for Linux, I settled on VirtualBox because it was the most stable and easy to administer.
    – user287424
    Sep 21, 2011 at 18:27
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At the risk of sounding heretical, you should re-consider Java development on Windows.

Windows XP is VERY stable [0].

The only problem is that the "main" Java IDE for Windows (Eclipse) is VERY VERY memory hoggish.

[0] this comes from someone who installed his first Slackware to replace Windows 3.11 at the very first part time office job he had and have run Linux nearly non-stop for ~15 years

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    Well, compared to Vista, XP is lighter and stable, so I wouldn't exactly downvote this. But having settled in *nix land, there's no going back to Windowstan for me. :-)
    – user287424
    Feb 15, 2011 at 23:29
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    @user287424 - "Linux is only free if your time has no value" - Jamie Zawinski (jwz.org/doc/linux.html)
    – DVK
    Feb 15, 2011 at 23:58
  • Completely agree. I use Linux because I like it better than Windows, not because the price of a Windows license is an issue. Now, the price of a commercial Unix license IS an issue.
    – user287424
    Feb 16, 2011 at 7:47
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FreeBSD's main weaknesses here are Java and virtualization support, which happen to be Solaris' strengths. I wouldn't recommend Solaris 10 as a desktop OS, but try Solaris 11 Express, the descendent of OpenSolaris. It's a great OS, whose main weakness in my mind is its small user base. The documentation from Oracle is good, and there is an active mailing list, but you'll find less in the way of Google results for that one obscure issue etc.

I'd expect that FreeBSD would be more stable (least changing from release to release) than either Linux or S11E.

In terms of general desktop use, S11E might have the edge, but neither is near the level of say Mac OS X.

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Consider the latest Ubuntu (10.10?) instead of debian unstable. Ubuntu is far less conservative than Debian, so you will get closer to the bleeding edge.

Debian unstable is labeled as so for a reason...

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Of all the thousands of Linux distributions out there, you picked the one with the word "unstable" in it ;)? Get Ubuntu / Fedora / OpenSuse / Slackware or something equally well-tested and stable. Go to Distrowatch if you need help choosing.

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Debian testing will do what you want, it's unstable + 10 days if there are no bugs, and you can still use sid sources with pinning if you need some up to date packages.

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It really have to be one machine ?

It would be much simpler to divide work on 2-3 machines. I have Win7+Office on laptop, Centos6 on PC (plenty of RAM and VM's), older PC with Centos5 (with OpenVZ, plenty of linux distros on it), old laptop with gentoo (newest soft etc... and i'm more careful when OS is direct on hardware), and two more old PC's just in case.

If it have to be one computer then I think RHEL6 + OpenVZ would be the best solution. OpenVZ containers can run without problem with other types of virtualization at the same time. So if you will need Windows on VM, there is no problem for doing that.

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