I use RIP all the time. Removing it would be a pain. What is the justification? 
Moving it to ports is an option, but now we have to compile, distribute, and 
install it.

Sent from my iPhone

> On May 15, 2024, at 07:40, Tomek CEDRO <to...@cedro.info> wrote:
> 
> On Wed, May 15, 2024 at 4:20 PM Scott <uatka3z4z...@thismonkey.com> wrote:
>>> On Mon, Apr 15, 2024 at 09:49:27PM +0100, Lexi Winter wrote:
>>> (..)
>>> i'd like to submit a patch to remove both of these daemons from src.  if
>>> there's some concern that people still want to use the BSD
>>> implementation of routed/route6d, i'm also willing to submit a port such
>>> as net/freebsd-routed containing the old code, in a similar way to how
>>> the removal of things like window(1) and telnetd(8) were handled.
>> 
>> I use RIPv2 for it's simplicity and small memory and CPU requirements.  It
>> has its place and shouldn't be considered "legacy" despite its shortcomings.
>> It's not uncommon for vendors like Cisco to produce "basic" feature sets of
>> IOS that do not include any link-state protocols.
>> 
>> Anyway, I'm a user, albeit a small user, of RIP and wouldn't object to its
>> removal from FreeBSD if there were a small footprint alternative.  I've used
>> FRR and VyOS a bit and they are overkill as replacements.
>> 
>> Your email doesn't justify its removal other than to say you are unconvinced
>> of the value of shipping it.  As a user I definitely see the value.  I
>> understand that there is always a cost to providing code, but that wasn't
>> suggested as a reason.  All APIs, modules, utilities, etc. need to regularly
>> justify their presence in the OS.
>> 
>> If it must be removed, is there any way to fork the FreeBSD routed and
>> route6d to a port?  Or would that defeat the purpose of removing it in the
>> first place?
> 
> Yeah, where did that recent trend came to FreeBSD to remove perfectly
> working code??
> 
> There are more and more ideas in recent times like this.
> 
> Architectures removal, drivers removal, backward compatibility
> removal. While basic functions become unstable and unreliable. Looks
> more like diversion and sabotage than progress.
> 
> If anything is about to be moved out from SRC for a really good reason
> it should be available in ports and not in /dev/null.
> 

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