TrueOS


TrueOS is a discontinued Unix-like, server-oriented operating system built upon the most recent releases of FreeBSD-CURRENT.
Up to 2018 it aimed to be easy to install by using a graphical installation program, and easy and ready-to-use immediately by providing KDE SC, Lumina, LXDE, MATE, or Xfce as the desktop environment. In June 2018 the developers announced that since TrueOS had become the core OS to provide a basis for other projects, the graphical installer had been removed. Graphical end-user-orientated OSes based on TrueOS are GhostBSD and Trident. TrueOS provided official binary Nvidia and Intel drivers for hardware acceleration and an optional 3D desktop interface through KWin, and Wine is ready-to-use for running Microsoft Windows software. TrueOS was also able to run Linux software, in addition to FreeBSD Ports collection, and it had its own.txz package manager. TrueOS supported OpenZFS, and the installer offered disk encryption with geli.
Development of TrueOS ended in 2020.

History

TrueOS was founded by FreeBSD professional Kris Moore in early 2005 as PC-BSD. In August 2006 it was voted the most beginner-friendly operating system by OSWeekly.com.
The first beta of the PC-BSD consisted of only a GUI installer to get the user up and running with a FreeBSD 6 system with KDE3 pre-configured. This was a major innovation for the time as anyone wishing to install FreeBSD would have to manually tweak and run through a text installer. Kris Moore's goal was to make FreeBSD easy for everyone to use on the desktop and has since diverged even more in the direction of usability by including additional GUI administration tools and.pbi application installers. PC-BSD's application installer management involved a different approach to installing software than many other Unix-like operating systems, up to and including version 8.2, by means of the pbiDIR website. Instead of using the FreeBSD Ports tree directly, PC-BSD used files with the .pbi filename extension which, when double-clicked, brought up an installation wizard program. An autobuild system tracked the FreeBSD ports collection and generated new.pbi files daily. All software packages and dependencies were installed from inside of the.pbi files in their own self-contained directories in /Programs. This convention was aimed to decrease confusion about where binary programs reside, and to remove the possibility of a package breaking if system libraries are upgraded or changed, and to prevent dependency hell.
On October 10, 2006, PC-BSD was acquired by enterprise hardware provider iXsystems. iXsystems now employs Kris Moore as a full-time developer and leader of the project. In November 2007, iXsystems entered into a distribution agreement with Fry's Electronics whereby Fry's Electronics stores nationwide carry boxed copies of PC-BSD version 1.4. In January 2008, iXsystems entered into a similar agreement with Micro Center.
On September 1, 2016, the PC-BSD team announced that the name of the operating system will change to TrueOS. Along with the rebranding, the project also became a rolling release distribution, based on the FreeBSD-CURRENT branch.
On November 15, 2016, TrueOS began the transition from FreeBSD's rc.d to OpenRC as the default init system. Apart from Gentoo/Alt, where OpenRC was initially developed, this is the only other major BSD based operating system using OpenRC.
In July 2018, TrueOS announced that they would spin off the desktop edition into a separate project named Project Trident.
Development of TrueOS was ended in 2020 and the developers recommended users move to other BSD-based operating systems.

Release history



Define $dx = 25 # shift text to right side of bar
Define $dy = -3 # shift text to right side of bar
Define $now = 31/12/2016
Define $start = 29/04/2006
ImageSize = width:160 height:720
PlotArea = width:50 height:700 left:50 bottom:10
DateFormat = dd/mm/yyyy
Period = from:$start till:$now
TimeAxis = orientation:vertical
ScaleMajor = unit:year increment:1 start:2007
PlotData=
bar:Leaders color:red width:26 mark: align:left fontsize:S
from:29/04/2006 till:$now
from:29/04/2006 till:29/04/2006 shift: fontsize:XS text:1.0
from:29/05/2006 till:29/05/2006 shift: fontsize:XS text:1.1
from:12/07/2006 till:12/07/2006 shift: fontsize:XS text:1.2
from:31/12/2006 till:31/12/2006 shift: fontsize:XS text:1.3
from:24/09/2007 till:24/09/2007 shift: fontsize:XS text:1.4
from:12/03/2008 till:12/03/2008 shift: fontsize:XS text:1.5
from:23/04/2008 till:23/04/2008 shift: fontsize:XS text:1.5.1
from:19/09/2008 till:19/09/2008 shift: fontsize:XS text:7.0
from:17/10/2008 till:17/10/2008 shift: fontsize:XS text:7.0.1
from:10/12/2008 till:10/12/2008 shift: fontsize:XS text:7.0.2
from:10/04/2009 till:10/04/2009 shift: fontsize:XS text:7.1
from:06/07/2009 till:06/07/2009 shift: fontsize:XS text:7.1.1
from:23/02/2010 till:23/02/2010 shift: fontsize:XS text:8.0
from:21/07/2010 till:21/07/2010 shift: fontsize:XS text:8.1
from:24/02/2011 till:24/02/2011 shift: fontsize:XS text:8.2
from:13/01/2012 till:13/01/2012 shift: fontsize:XS text:9.0
from:18/12/2012 till:18/12/2012 shift: fontsize:XS text:9.1
from:07/10/2013 till:07/10/2013 shift: fontsize:XS text:9.2
from:29/01/2014 till:29/01/2014 shift: fontsize:XS text:10.0
from:14/11/2014 till:14/11/2014 shift: fontsize:XS text:10.1
from:21/08/2015 till:21/08/2015 shift: fontsize:XS text:10.2
from:04/04/2016 till:04/04/2016 shift: fontsize:XS text:10.3
from:01/09/2016 till:01/09/2016 shift: fontsize:XS text:TrueOS


VersionRelease dateFreeBSD codebase
1.0April 29, 20066.0
1.1May 29, 20066.1
1.2July 12, 20066.1
1.3December 31, 20066.1
1.4September 24, 20076.2-STABLE
1.4.1.xVarious6.3-PRERELEASE
1.5March 12, 20086.3-STABLE
1.5.1April 23, 20086.3-STABLE
7.0September 16, 20087.0-STABLE
7.0.1October 17, 20087.0-STABLE
7.0.2December 10, 20087.1-PRERELEASE
7.1April 10, 20097.2-PRERELEASE
7.1.1July 6, 20097.2-STABLE
8.0February 23, 20108.0-RELEASE-P2
8.1July 21, 20108.1-RELEASE
8.2February 24, 20118.2
9.0January 13, 20129.0
9.1December 18, 20129.1
9.2October 7, 20139.2-CURRENT
10.0January 29, 201410.0
10.1November 14, 201410.1
10.2August 21, 201510.2
10.3April 4, 201610.3
TrueOS 11.0September 1, 2016FreeBSD-CURRENT
TrueOS 2017-02-22February 22, 2017FreeBSD-CURRENT
TrueOS 2017-06-01June 2, 2017FreeBSD-CURRENT
TrueOS 17.12December 14, 2017FreeBSD-CURRENT
TrueOS 18.03March 30, 2018FreeBSD-CURRENT

Since version 7, PC-BSD began following the same numbering system as FreeBSD.
Since version 9.0, the KDE SC, customized to support tighter application integration and the.txz package management system, was no longer the only desktop environment supported by PC-BSD. While manual installation of other desktops such as Xfce and GNOME had been technically possible in earlier releases, none of these were supported in the earlier versions, and major functionality was lost when not using PC-BSD's special build of KDE SC. Starting with version 9.0, PC-BSD added other desktop environments, including GNOME, Xfce, LXDE, and MATE.
PC-BSD used to support both amd64 and i686 architectures. Support for i686 was dropped in version 9.2.
Starting in September 2016 with the rebranding of PC-BSD, TrueOS became a rolling release distribution based on FreeBSD's current branch.

Package management

TrueOS's package manager takes a similar approach to installing software to many other Unix-like operating systems. Instead of using the FreeBSD Ports tree directly, TrueOS uses files with the .txz filename extension packages which contain compiled ports. An autobuild system tracks the FreeBSD ports collection and generates new.txz files daily.
The TrueOS package management system aims to be visually similar to that of major operating systems such as Microsoft Windows and Apple macOS, where applications are installed from a single download link with graphical prompts, while maintaining internally the traditional.txz package management systems that many Unix-like systems use. The TrueOS package manager also takes care of creating categorized links in the KDE menu and on the KDE SC desktop.

Lumina Desktop

In 2014, the PC-BSD project announced its development of a new desktop environment, from scratch, named Lumina. Ken Moore is the main developer of Lumina, which is based on the Qt toolkit.
As of July 2016, Lumina has its own web site.
The desktop environment is not an application development toolkit, and aims to be a graphical interface that only uses plugins for customization.

License

TrueOS was originally licensed under the GNU General Public License because the developers were under the impression that applications using the Qt, which TrueOS uses for its interface development, must be licensed under the GPL or the Q Public License. Upon discovering that there was, in fact, no such restriction, the TrueOS developers later relicensed the code under a BSD-like 3-clause license.
TrueOS and the TrueOS logo are registered trademarks of iXsystems Inc.

Hardware requirements

The New York City *BSD User Group runs a service named dmesgd, which provides user-submitted dmesg information for different computer hardware capable of running TrueOS.
According to the TrueOS wiki, TrueOS has the following hardware requirements:

Minimum

support has been added to the installer and the boot manager since version 10.1 with the default EFI boot manager to be rEFInd. This includes ACPI detection and setup of Root System Description Pointer, eXtended System Descriptor Table, and Root System Description Table pass-through values to the kernel. A new installation is needed in order to install UEFI support as it requires the creation of a small FAT partition. The current UEFI does not support secure boot.

Gallery