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<head>
<!-- Copyright (c) 2004
	The NetBSD Foundation, Inc.  ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. -->
<title>NetBSD testimonials</title>
</head>

<sect1 id="top">

<para>
If you would like to share your NetBSD experience please <ulink
url="http://www.NetBSD.org/cgi-bin/feedback.cgi">contact us.</ulink>
</para>

<sect1 role="toc">


<sect2 id="testimonials">
<title>NetBSD testimonials</title>

<sect3 id="stephen_borrill">
<title>NetBSD and my life</title>
<para>
This is a testimonial by Stephen Borrill on how NetBSD helped him in his
professional life and on the products that he created based on it.
</para>

<para>
Back in the pre-1.1 days (1993?), I was doing a PhD and I was introduced to 
Unix for the first time (using Masscomp machines - anyone remember those?). It 
blew away Windows (or DOS as it was mainly then) and every other OS I'd used. I 
had an Acorn RiscPC and I wanted to run some form of Unix-alike on it. RiscBSD 
(which later became NetBSD/arm32) was very early on and not part of the NetBSD 
tree, but was the only option (interestingly RISCiX was a 4.3BSD OS written by 
Acorn for their older machines, but it wouldn't run on the RiscPC). Armed with 
about 40 floppies, I trudged elsewhere in the uni and downloaded it (a slow 
job!). Got it installed and I never looked back.
</para>

<para>
After the PhD, I decided that academia wasn't for me and so got a job at Acorn 
in tech support. The company then merged with Apple to become Acorn and Apple's 
sole provider to education in the UK. A new client came out which booted using 
bootp and NFS with no local storage. I took it and got it to boot from NetBSD. 
The company ran with this and we launched in January 1997 (using 1.2G IIRC). We 
sold these systems to schools all over the UK (so Apple UK were effectively 
selling BSD boxes into schools years before Mac OS X). In 1999, Apple bought out 
the whole company and anything non-Apple got dumped. I took all the IPR and set 
up my own company to continue development. We rebranded it and moved to Intel 
hardware. NetBSD's single source tree and cross-platform ability meant this was 
very easy). We expanded the services it provided and to this day continue to 
sell Internet/security servers to schools throughout the UK (In fact, I'm 
currently typing this on such a machine out on site while their Windows server 
rebuilds after a crash).  See
<ulink url="http://www.netmanager.info/">http://www.netmanager.info/</ulink>.
</para>

<para>
We are also heavily into Citrix and thin-client computing. We sell a product 
based on NetBSD which converts pretty much any old PC into a centrally-managed 
thin-client. This is installed in the hundreds at some schools. We are also due 
to launch our own range of thin-client hardware at the end of the month which 
is, once again, NetBSD based (this time running 3.0_BETA and waiting for a full 
release!).
<ulink url="http://www.thinit.info/">http://www.thinit.info/</ulink>.
</para>

<para>
I like to think that in our small way, we are introducing people to NetBSD 
(even if they don't see much of it). Many tens of thousands of pupils and 
teachers throughout the UK use NetBSD every day because of us.
</para>
</sect3>

<sect3 id="tobias_ernst">
<title>NetBSD/alpha on DEC 3000/300 (Tobias Ernst)</title>
<para>
We are running <ulink url="../ports/alpha/">NetBSD/alpha</ulink> on a DEC
3000/300 used as a Webserver for the homepages of about 300 students
and as CVS server for several open source projects. It runs rock
solid and performs exceptionally well even on this elderly hardware.
Support from the NetBSD team in the rare case of any problem is
fast and very helpful.
</para>
<para>
[Tobias Ernst, Physics CIP Pool, University of Stuttgart, Germany]

</para>
</sect3>

<sect3 id="mcmahill">
<title>NetBSD/sparc on an IPX (McMahill)</title>
<para>
    "Well, my IPX has been happily running 1.4.1 since it came out.
    It runs a low traffic web server, a samba server, plus I sit
    at it for 8-15 hours a day with 25 windows open, play CD's with
    xmcd, run a scsi scanner...
</para>
    <para>
    "So, I guess that's a glowing recommendation for <ulink
    url="../ports/sparc/">NetBSD/sparc</ulink>"
</para>
</sect3>

<sect3 id="specialolympics2000">
<title>Canadian Special Olympics 2000 Winter Games</title>
<para>
    The Canadian Special Olympics 2000 Winter Games used several NetBSD
    servers to provide connectivity, file storage, and backup.  At the
    main office, a NetBSD server provided shared and secure Internet
    dial service for up to 20 machines, as well as file storage
    and automated off-site backups from June 1999.  As the Games
    approached, several other NetBSD servers were set up on lan's
    at the various event venues to provide Internet service for
    event officials, the media, and the athletes.  These servers
    allow officials to post results to the web site immediately
    after the results are finalized, media to communicate stories
    and results to their offices, and athletes to send email back
    home and check out the results.
</para>
    <para>
    The CSO 2000 Winter Games ran from January 25th to January
    29th, 2000 in Ottawa, Ontario.
</para>
</sect3>

<sect3 id="seebs">
<title>NetBSD/alpha scratch space server and portability (Seebs)</title>
<para>
    "I use <ulink url="../ports/alpha/">NetBSD/alpha</ulink> with a PCI
    Ultra-DMA controller, and a 100Mbps network card, as the scratch
    space server for my personal network.  I also use it to test
    so-called `portable' programs against a system where `long'
    isn't exactly 32-bits.  The system is fast and stable, and it
    builds from the same exact source tree (shared over NFS) as my
    <ulink url="../ports/i386/">i386</ulink> systems."
</para>
</sect3>

<sect3 id="isildur">
<title>NetBSD/alpha file and other servers (Isildur)</title>
<para>
    "I use <ulink url="../ports/alpha/">NetBSD/alpha</ulink> both at home
    and at work. I have two file servers (on alphastation 200's)
    running NetBSD for over a year and a half now, and one system
    for software development and testing, as well as occasional
    number/huge data file crunching. I just upgraded to 1.4.1 after
    a very long time with 1.3, and I've had nothing but smooth
    uninterrupted operation with both! never a crash, never an
    instability, it has been great. I also run it on a DEC3000/600
    and a DEC3000/300XL at home for software development, and have
    nothing but good things to say about it.  its stable and fast!
</para>
    <para>
    "The file servers serve a mix of win9[58] and NT clients using
    <filename role="pkg">net/samba</filename> and 
    <filename role="pkg">www/apache</filename>, with pretty heavy
    use. I've never had any downtime on the machines (the netbsd
    boxen, that is ;) aside from power failures."
</para>
</sect3>

<sect3 id="anders_magnusson">
<title>Research and products at Effnet (Anders Magnusson)</title>
<para>
    <ulink url="http://www.effnet.com/">Effnet</ulink> uses NetBSD as its
    main research platform and also bases many of its products on
    NetBSD. Effnet is a router and firewall manufacturer with most
    of its development in Lule&aring; in Sweden, with sales offices in
    Stockholm, Sweden and Boston, MA. Effnet have designed the
    world's fastest firewall.
</para>
    <para>
    Effnet's primary reasons for selecting NetBSD were:
    <itemizedlist>
    <listitem>Well-functioning IP stack.</listitem>
    <listitem>Full source availability.</listitem>
    <listitem>Confidence in developer knowledge.</listitem>
    <listitem>Available for more platforms than x86 (such as
	<ulink url="../ports/arm32/">Strongarm</ulink>).</listitem>
    <listitem>Ability to keep certain locally developed source private. (No GPL).</listitem>
    </itemizedlist>
</para>
</sect3>

<sect3 id="manuel_bouyer">
<title>NetBSD at ASIM/LIP6 (Manuel Bouyer)</title>
<para>

Manuel Bouyer, who works at the <ulink url="http://www-asim.lip6.fr/" lang="fr">
Architecture des Syst&egrave;mes int&eacute;gr&eacute;s et Micro
&eacute;lectronique</ulink> of <ulink url="http://www.lip6.fr">LIP6</ulink>, explains how
NetBSD is used in a mixed network:
</para>
<para>
NetBSD performs quite well in mixed environments. The network here
is built around NetBSD and a few Solaris 7 servers for windows (95, 98, NT4
and 2000), Linux, SunOS4, Solaris 7 and a few Mac OS 9 clients. The local
network is built around cisco 295x and 35xx (including a 3508G 8 gigabit
ports), with 4 vlans. Some servers are using IEEE 802.1q tags to be
connected to multiples vlans from one physical interface.
</para>
<para>
The main fileserver is an <ulink url="../ports/alpha/">Alpha DS20</ulink> running
NetBSD 1.6_STABLE serving NFS (v2 and v3) and smb requests through a gigabit
ethernet.  It has 30 SCSI disks spread over 6 scsi busses and can handle more
than 1000 NFS operations per seconds, serving about 150 clients. During our
tests we could have 3 or 4 clients doing NFS or smb access at almost full
speed over a 100Mbs interface, without noticeable slowdown for the others
clients.
</para>
<para>
All Unix stations and shell servers are part of a Nis domain. The master is a
<ulink url="../ports/i386/">NetBSD/i386</ulink> system, with 2 slaves (a Solaris 7
and a <ulink url="../ports/i386/">NetBSD/i386</ulink>).
All windows NT4 and 2000 machines are in a windows domain. The domain controller is a
NetBSD/i386 server running the samba package, which also handles
authentification for other samba servers. The profiles are stored on the DS20
fileserver.
</para>
<para>
For users using a windows desktop and to provide powerful machines to users
we have a few shell servers: 6 dual-PIII/1ghz boxes running Linux, one running
NetBSD/i386 (1.6_STABLE+unofficial SMP patches), a Sun E420 (quad-CPU) running
Solaris 7, an alphastation 600 running NetBSD, and a Sun SS10 running SunOS4.
For users using a Unix desktop, we provide access to a windows 2000 terminal
server.
</para>
<para>
All printing goes through a centralized print server. Clients can print via cups,
lpd, netbios/smb or netatalk. The print queues themselves are managed via the
cups server.
</para>
<para>
We have 2 NetBSD/i386 boxes acting as router: one routing between internal
networks (with a gigabit ethernet connected to the different VLANs via
802.1q), one acting as a filtering router (using IPF) beteen the internet,
local networks and subnets dedicated to the public servers (mail/web/ftp and
the ssh gateways), connected to 5 different networks.  The "internal router"
is also a NFS/smb/appletalk translator (for, among others, the public server
which is running NFS only), the windows domain controller, NIS slave server,
dhcp server and provides services to do unattended installs of Windows, Linux or
Solaris workstations over the network. The filtering router isn't running any
other services, for security reasons.
</para>
<para>
The filtering router has, in addition to some 10/100 ethernet interfaces, a
dual-port gigabit interface. It is able to route a TCP flow (between 2
gigabit-connected NetBSD boxes) at 20700KB/s with ipfilter disabled, and
19750KB/s with ipfiler enabled and 660 rules loaded (31500KB/s between the 2
NetBSD boxes without router in the path). CPU is only used at 40% on the
router, so the slowdown is most likely related to latency. Unfortunably my
setup doesn't easily allow testing with several 100Mbs flows from different
hosts though the gogabit router.
</para>
<para>
A NetBSD/i386 box is running public services: mail (sendmail as MTA, Procmail
for delivery, which allows to run some spam filtering rules, and the procmail
sanitizer which defangs attachements, to protect windows boxes from some
viruses; NFS, pop3, imap for MUAs, including horde and squirrelmail web mail
agents), web (apache as server, with php4 for mysql as backend storage for
dynamic contents), anonymous cvs and ftp.  It is connected to the filtering
router via a gigabit ethernet.
</para>
<para>
To give ssh access to the local network from the internet we have 3
hightly-secure boxes. These are running <ulink
url="../ports/sparc/">NetBSD/sparc</ulink>, with a highly customized setup: system disks
are read-only (physically, via a switch connected to the write enable jumper),
log files are append-only (via system flags and kernel security level), users
logging in from network are in a restricted, chrooted environnement. Users
can't execute anything else than system binaries by the use of the noexec
mount flag on all partitions which are not on the read-only disk. All users
commands are logged through accounting. In 6 years this setup has never been
breaken, and unauthorized accesses (from stolen passwords) have been detected,
with the affected accounts and source IP addresses. The downside is that all
administration tasks have to be done from console, with the server in
single-user mode.
</para>
<para>
Network monitoring is done from a dual-PIII box running NetBSD 1.6_STABLE +
unofficial SMP patches. It monitors all the ethernet switches using mrtg and
cricket. It catches ethernet address changes with the arpwatch tool. It also
manages the serial consoles of all the non-i386 boxes around with the rtty
tool (using PCI 8-ports serial adapters).
</para>
<para>
All UPSes in the machine room are managed by NetBSD boxes via the apcupsd
software. UPS paramters are recorded using mtrg. This also allows to cleanly
shut down the servers in case of power failure (which unfortunably happens
quite often on this site), and bring services back up without manual
intervention when power is back. As the UPSes provide temperature
informations, a custom script can deliver alarms in case of overheat, and
eventually shut down and power off the machine room if noone is there to take
care of the problem.  Backups are done by a NetBSD/i386 box (also acting as
the master NIS server) driving a 15-slot DLT library, using the amanda
package.
</para>
<para>
<html:img src="../images/gallery/asim_lip6.jpg" width="535" height="400"
  border="1" alt="Server Room Picture"/>
</para>
<para>

In this photo of the server room, you can see some of the servers described:
on the first floor, on the left, we have the <ulink url="../ports/alpha/">Alpha
DS20</ulink>, with 4 of its 6 external SCSI enclosures and the associated UPS.
Next to it we have the alphastation 600 shell server, and the dual PIII/1Ghz
monitoring the network and acting as a serial console concentrator, On the
second floor we have a Sun E420 (shell server, and slave NIS server).  In the
rack (on the right of the photo), from bottom to top: 2 Linux shell servers,
the Windows 2000 terminal server (all 3 are dual PIII/1Ghz), the <ulink
url="../ports/i386/">NetBSD/i386</ulink> web/ftp/mail server, the NetBSD/i386
filtering router, and the NetBSD/i386 routing internal networks (and also
NFS/smb/appletalk fileserver, print server, etc). Then we have the 3 <ulink
url="../ports/sparc/">NetBSD/sparc</ulink> ssh servers (running with case open,
because the scsi disks would overheat). Note the add-on switch to switch the
system drives between read-only and read/write mode. On the top of the rack we
have the cisco 3500 layer 2 switches, including a 3508G (8 gigabit ports).
</para>
</sect3>

<sect3 id="brett_lymn">
<title>Running a dedicated NetBSD Game Server (Half-Life/Counter Strike and Quake3)</title>

<sect4 id="background">
<title>Background</title>
<para>
One of the things that I do for fun is to organise a small lan party
every couple of months.  About 15 or so of us get together in a hall
somewhere, hook up and play games until the wee hours of the morning.
In previous lan parties I had been serving the games from my Win NT
machine but I seemed to always run into stability problems.  Anyone  
who has played multi-player computer games will tell you there is
nothing ruder than the game server collapsing in a heap of bits just
as you are at a critical point in the game.  Due to the stability
problems I decided to investigate more reliable ways of serving the
games at my lan parties.
</para>
<para>
Most popular games these days have, at least, a dedicated server that
runs under Linux.  This would address my issues with Win NT causing me
grief but, I have never really run Linux before and I did not feel
confident in setting up a Linux server to perform such an important 
task.  Enter the NetBSD Linux emulation.  I had already been using the
Linux emulation to run Linux binaries on my NetBSD computers (most  
notably Netscape) so I was confident I could make this work.  As it  
turned out, the process was very smooth.  I simply installed the SUSE
libraries using the NetBSD packages system (if you don't now what to  
do then just install the linux Netscape, that will install all the
Linux libaries) and made sure that I had the Linux emulation support in
the kernel.  Once this was done I downloaded the Half-Life dedicated
server for Linux and also the Quake3 dedicated server for Linux.
</para>
</sect4>

<sect4 id="hardware">
<title>The Hardware</title>
<para>
The hardware I used for the server was my old 200Mhz PPro machine,
this is getting a bit long in the tooth but it was what I had to hand
and had a 9Gig SCSI drive plus 96Meg of memory.  The disk space was
great but I think I could have done with more memory to cope with both
servers running at the same time.  I loaded a recent copy of
NetBSD-current onto the machine.  The machine is actually a dual
processor beast but, at the time, I deemed running it multiprocessor
was a little too risky.  What I was looking for was stability more
than anything, pushing the envelope too much was not something I
wanted to contemplate - people were going to be counting on this
machine so I went the safe path and ran the machine uniprocessor.
Perhaps the next LAN will see this machine running in full
multiprocessor glory.  As I said above, I loaded up the Linux
libraries using the packages system in readiness for loading the game
servers.
</para>
</sect4>

<sect4 id="software">
<title>The Software</title>
<para>
For the Half-Life dedicated server it was simply a matter of
extracting the tar file into an appropriate directory, I chose
/emul/linux/usr/local/games/hlds, I followed the instructions in the
Half-Life install document, substituting paths as appropriate.  I
wanted to be able to play Counter-Strike (a Half-Life modification) so
I downloaded and installed that under the hlds directory too.  I was
very pleasantly surprised that when I ran up the dedicated server it
just worked, this was great progress.  I also installed the admin_mod
for Counter-Strike, which is a modification that allows adminstrator
control of the Counter-Strike game from, this also worked fine.  As an
extra to Counter-Strike I wanted to use the hlstats application.
Hlstats is used to track the performance of a player in Counter-Strike
(and other games), giving you detailed statistics of what a player did
and accumulating a "score" for the player.  To run hlstats I needed to
install a php aware version of apache, perl and a mysql database, all
of these were installed using the packages system.
</para>
<para>
In addition to Counter-Strike I wanted to host Quake3 games, since I
already had the Linux emulation set up adding Quake3 was a matter of
downloading it and running the install script, just adjusting the
paths as required and following the rest of the install document.  At
our LAN parties we rarely play plain Quake3 deathmatch, normally we
play a couple of mods (specifically excessive and instagib), to get
all the files required for the mods I simply copied my entire quake3
directory from my Win NT directory over the top of my NetBSD quake3
directory, since the binary names are different there was no problems
in doing this.  Much to my surprise, not only did the Quake3 server
run fine, I was able to run both the excessive and instagib
modifications with no changes.
</para>
</sect4>

<sect4 id="glitches">
<title>Glitches</title>
<para>
Of course, we are talking about computers here so there must have been
some glitches, right?  Well, yes, there were but not where I expected
them.  The thing that gave me the most grief was actually hlstats - or
rather the mysql database that underlies hlstats.  I had this problem
that if I ran the hlstats data collector I could not access the stats
from the web server and vice versa.  In the end, this turned out to be
a simple fix in MySQL.  There is a per user connection limit in MySQL,
by the looks of this it should have not come into effect (because it
was set to 0) but for some reason it was.  Anyway, setting
max_user_connections to 100 in the my.cnf file (located in /var/mysql
in the default pkg install) cleared this problem up.  This was really
the only glitch I had with the set up of the server.
</para>
</sect4>

<sect4 id="fire-testing">
<title>The Fire Testing</title>
<para>
The ultimate test for the server was at the LAN party itself, the
machine was used as the DHCP server, Counter-Strike server and Quake 3
server for about a dozen people.  Since our LAN parties are so small
most people play the same game at the same time - we had everyone in
the Counter-Strike server and about 8 or so in the Quake3 server - not
simultaneously mind you but still, the server performed without a
fault.  We did notice some glitches when playing the Excessive quake3
mod and someone tried to join the Counter-Strike server but I put this
down to the extremely high network load that the Excessive Q3 mod puts
on the network.  Also, the server seemed a little slow on changing
maps in Counter-Strike to the extent that some clients timed out but
that may be due to memory issues or processor speed more than anything
else.  All in all the machine performed like a champ - absolutely
rock-solid game serving all through the party, one cannot ask for more
than that, apart from the instances I have previously noted the
servers ran without a glitch at all, there were no complaints about
the serving of the games at all from the people at the LAN.  If anyone
is looking to host game servers on something more reliable than the
Win32 platform, my recommendation is to use NetBSD - you will not be
disappointed.  As a dedicated game server, NetBSD simply rocks.
</para>
</sect4>
</sect3>

<sect3 id="neverwinter">
<title>NeverWinter Nights Server on NetBSD under Linux emulation</title>
<para>

In <ulink
url="http://mail-index.NetBSD.org/netbsd-users/2002/06/28/0009.html">this
message</ulink> to the netbsd-users mailing list, 'sudog' reported to be running
the <ulink url="http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=02/06/28/0319229">recently
released</ulink> NeverWinter Nights Server for Linux under NetBSD's Linux
emulation.  More details:
</para>
<para>
<blockquote>
<para>
ktracing the linux executable indicated that it was trying to
mkdir two directories but failing. In order to run the linux
executable, I had to wrap it in the following:
</para>
<programlisting>
if [ ! -d currentgame.0 ]
then
        mkdir currentgame.0
fi

if [ ! -d temp.0 ]
then
        mkdir temp.0
fi

./nwserver [various options]
</programlisting>
<para>
It worked fine after that. It loads custom modules, it runs well, and
best of all, there is none of the lag associated with running the
server on the same machine you're playing on. My friends are extremely
happy about this. :)
</para>
<para>
[...]
</para>
<para>
back to NWN on a fly NetBSD server!
</para>
</blockquote>
</para>

</sect3>

<sect3 id="garyrolland">
<title>NetBSD and my life... (Gary Rolland)</title>

<para><emphasis>Taken from an email to the netbsd-advocacy mailing
list on 09/10/2005.</emphasis></para>

<para>I have been using NetBSD for about two years on my laptop and never
had any problems. I use this laptop in work and at home. I knew NetBSD
was capable of much more, and I was hell bent on using it at work too!</para>

<para>The main reason for this email is to let you guys know what we mainly
use NetBSD for - supporting over 4,800 heavy users (some remote) and
counting. It's my story about what NetBSD has done for my life, and
how it has actually improved my personal life. I hope you will enjoy
it and that it'll offer further encouragement to continue the truly
excellent work.</para>

<para>I'll start off by introducing myself. My name is Gary Rolland and I
live in the United Kingdom. I work in a team consisting of three other
network admins. We all work for a large UK based company. Our task is
to keep the servers up and to do maintenance. We work on shifts and
can be called out at any time, night or day. We are not responsible
for the client machines within the buildings. Sadly, I am unable to
disclose the actual company name. I received permission to give you
information about what we use NetBSD for and that only (I begged
infact). Our network is mission critical - down time costs the company
mega money. I certainly would not want to foot the bill!</para>
<para>
(Note: I have also been told not to disclose network infrastructure in
great detail. If you have any comments/questions, please do ask. I'll
try my best to answer them the best I can)
</para>
<para>
Currently, our network consists of 29 high end servers. They all run
NetBSD 2.0.2 and deal with extremely high loads. The servers handle:
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>MySQL databases - This makes up most of our traffic/resource usage.</listitem>
<listitem>Apache - Internal and external</listitem>
<listitem>Postfix - Interval and external email</listitem>
<listitem>Samba - Allow the 4,800 users to connect to the NFS.</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
<para>
(Note: Our file servers are connected to NetBSD. So it's like=20
Users->NetBSD->File server. Our file servers run Linux. Am not allowed
to touch them! However, the email and httpd data is stored directly on
the NetBSD servers. Just for your information, our file servers go
down more than our servers;-))
</para>
<para>
Data facts(avg. per day):
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>NetBSD pushes over 870GB of data per day.</listitem>
<listitem>NetBSD pushes about 1,200 emails per day (not always work related. I
have seen joke emails a while back with 12MB attachments! (12MB x 4500
:()).</listitem>
<listitem>NetBSD during peak hours, our httpd servers can deal with 35
requests per minute(internal and external). The website is wrote in
pretty heavy PHP (and bad PHP, but that's not my call).</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
<para>
Originally our network servers used Windows, running on more older
hardware than we have now. We have recently been through an upgrade.
</para>
<para>
I can describe my admining of Windows as a complete f*cking nightmare.
I was constantly worrying over when they would fall over. Here is a
small story:</para>
<para>
I had been promising my 12 year old daughter and her friend that I
would take them to Alton Towers. The night before we had planned to
go, I raced into the server rooms and checked everything was running.
I was happy things would be OK, because I was on call out the next day
and I couldn't let my daughter down again(this has happened more than
once). We was having a great time at Alton Towers and the worst thing
happened. My work phone starts to ring. My daughters face just
dropped, she knew exactly what was coming next.</para>
<para>
Boss: 'Gary, servers have all dropped to their knees. I need you here now.'
Me: 'Sure, I'll be there in a few hours' (in a 'am going to kill
someone voice').</para>
<para>
It really upset me to see my daughter let down again, including a
friend. They had been talking about going all week and Microsoft
Windows of all things messes everything up.</para>
<para>
Here I am, speeding up the motorway. My daughter completely pissed
off, and for due reasons to. This has happened many other times
before. I was even getting abit ratty at home since I'd be thinking of
anything which could go wrong. This also lead to more arguments with
the wife (which leads to a decrease in other things... ;)</para>
<para>
I knew something had to change.</para>
<para>
After I had fixed the problem, I stormed into my bosses office and
explained we need more admins or need to change our servers. Cut a
long story short, he allowed me to trial test two of our servers on
NetBSD. He didn't know anything about it - just that I promised him I
could increase the stability by a huge margin without disrupting
business.</para>
<para>
That day I was in a mood to change things(pissed), and so I took two
servers home. One was what we call a 'MySQL' server and one httpd
server(the bosses go nuts if the httpd goes down).</para>

<para>I had no room to fail.</para>

<para>I was up till 4 AM in the morning installing and configuring things to
our exact needs.   NetBSD as always installed flawlessly and I
installed most required software from pkgsrc.</para>

<para>I roled these machines into the network in the morning. I knew I had
to wait now, until something crashed on Windows and to show my boss
which machines still stood strong.</para>

<para>That day, a few  MySQL machines just decided to go for a quick break,
and rebooted themselves a few times(MySQL queries began to be far too
slow). The boss was storming(due to the day before also). I showed him
which machines did not fall down. He agreed within two hours for me to
role out more NetBSD machines slowly.</para>

<para>I was happy.</para>

<para>At first it was hard. The other admins had no clue how to use NetBSD.
However, with the time we spent fixing the Windows servers, we now had
spare time. I began to show them how to configure things and they
actually took a personal interest. They installed it at home and began
to tinker with it, making sure they understood how to compile kernels
etc etc. You know the stuff am talking about! I even printed the whole
handbook out for us.</para>

<para>Our whole Network was now running NetBSD.</para>

<para>Things changed. I was not as busy as I always was. My relationships
where getting better. I had more time with my daughter to watch her
grow up. The rest of my team agreed - this had been the best move we
had ever made. The boss also agreed. He was delighted with our
improved stability. Infact, he was so happy that none of us are now on
call out of a weekend. We're allowed to admin from home using ssh(we
take turns per weekend).</para>

<para>My team and I are constantly working and learning. We're becoming more
and more efficient with NetBSD.</para>

<para>NetBSD changed my teams life for the better.</para>

<para>Last weekend I took my family to Alton Towers to finish what we
started. We had a fantastic time! During the way home, this time not
speeding, I has thinking about the people behind it. Those who put in
time, little or large to make the project what it is. I decided to
tell you guys my story, to show your work is greatly appreciated!</para>

<para>Once more, thanks again for the all the work. Please keep it up.
Please use this email in any way you wish. Post it on your personal
website or whatever.</para>


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