Dragonflies are glittering and gorgeous relics from another age. With a sheer size that distinguishes them from other less-dazzling insects, they zip, helicopter-like, in straight lines – defending their territory, and searching for food.
Dragonfly is also a distro, and unlike the majority of distros found in the hot, savage jungles, it isn’t a Linux one. It is, instead, part of a tiny and oft-overlooked subset straight from the Jurassic era of OS development, a BSD-based distro.
Forked from the primordial soup of FreeBSD in 2003, DragonflyBSD shares code with other BSD OSes, and boasts natively written AHCI and NVMe drivers, HAMMER, which is a “modern high-performance filesystem with built-in mirroring and historic access functionality”, and according to the devs, suffers, “virtually no bottlenecks or lock contention in-kernel”. Which is…