The number one rule of distributing software is test everything you can to be 
sure it actually works and don't ship things that are known not to work. 

I installed FreeBSD 12.2 without issues. But when I went to /usr/ports to build 
X11 it failed part way through the build because "xmlto" was missing and one of 
the many auto**** pieces was misconfigured. However, at least it was not using 
imake.

As I have ordered the latest BSD book by McKusic et al I shall investigate 
fixing X11 after I read the book and compare FreeBSD to Solaris as documented 
in the 2nd ed of the Internals book.

Even with Sun/Oracle behind it, Solaris could not and can not compete with 
Linux. The Linux market is large enough that the leading HW OEMs make certain 
that their HW is supported. That costs a lot of money in the x86 world. Far 
more than anyone could afford other than the HW OEM. Neither *BSD nor 
Solaris/Illumos/OI are large enough markets to make it economical for the HW 
OEMs to support them.

The best we can do is target older top tier HW from IBM and HP and leverage 
their Linux support to support Illumos/OI. A 24 core, 512 GB RAM HP Z820 can be 
had for less than I paid for my Ultra 20 in 2006. It's a staggering piece of HW 
and is Oracle certified for Solaris with IIRC a caveat about the sound chip 
which is not very important on such a machine.

Better to do some things well, than everything badly.

Have Fun!
Reg  
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