Showing posts with label ZFS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ZFS. Show all posts

BSD News 05/09/2016

BSD News 05/09/2016

Last week in BSD

Releases: DesktopBSD, HardenedBSD, OPNsense, GhostBSD, OpenBSD
Other news: OpenBSD, BSDnow, ZFS, Let's Encrypt, g2k16, DragonFlyBSD,

BSDSec


Releases

DesktopBSD-2.0 Gnome test version

We are pleased to announce that DesktopBSD-2.0 Gnome test version is available,  more flavours will come soon.

Based on FreeBSD-10.3 amd64, mainly because UEFI is supported by FreeBSD only for amd64 architecture.

Before burning the ISO to a DVD, please check the md5 or sha256 of the downloaded ISO against those  from our repo

DesktopBSD ISOs are hybrid, UEFI enabled, and can be written to USB sticks using the 'dd' command:
dd if=DESKTOPBSD-2.0-FBSD-20160903-152502-gnome-amd64.iso of=/dev/daN bs=1M conv=sync

(where /dev/daN is your's usb stick)
Bsdstats is included as in DesktopBSD-1.7 Release, so DesktopBSD will be counted in www.bsdstats.org.
Bsdstats can be launched or is launched from console using bsdstats.send, via rc.conf or via cron from /usr/local/etc/poeriodic/monthly/300.statistics.

We have included tools to:
  • Connect to desktopbsd irc channel to get help using desktopbsd-irc
  • Open bugtracker page in forums using desktopbsd-bug-report
  • Get system information using inxi scripts ported from linux

Inxi can be run from console, terminal and even under irc client to send informations in irc channel directly.
desktopbsd-irc plus inxi are great tools to help users in #desktopbsd channel.

ISOs are installable using gbi (GhostBSD Installer) and includes another GhostBSD tools.
Please notice that Eric Turgeon ( GhostBSD founder and developer ) is also in our's dev team.
 
Please test and send bugs using desktopbsd-bug-report to be able to fix them.

To enable desktop icons on desktop please run dconf-editor and go to org.gnome.desktop.background and check show-desktop-icons. (desktop icons are not enabled by default due to a gnome bug)

We'll use for support www.desktopbsd.weebly.com website, desktopbsd.boards.net forum and #desktopbsd irc channel on irc.freenode.server.


New stable version: HardenedBSD-stable 11-STABLE v46.2

HardenedBSD-11-STABLE-v46.2 - https://github.com/HardenedBSD/hardenedBSD-stable/releases/tag/HardenedB...
Installers: http://installer.hardenedbsd.org/pub/HardenedBSD/releases/amd64/amd64/IS...
Git repo: https://github.com/HardenedBSD/hardenedBSD-stable.git
Highlights:
libarchive update (CVE fixes, FreeBSD SA candidate)
sqlite update (CVE fixes, FreeBSD SA candidate)

OPNsense 16.7.3 released

Patch notes:
  • system: allow selection of secondary console
  • system: added EFI as a console option
  • system: fixed status display of tiered gateway groups
  • system: allow to configure sudo usage for administrators
  • system: package manager can no longer uninstall the GUI package (marked as “vital”)
  • system: also beep on factory reset
  • system: added opnsense-code command line utility
  • interfaces: do not store packet captures in /root
  • interfaces: sort interface listings by name only
  • interfaces: do not prevent configuring an IP used by the PPTP and L2TP plugins
  • firewall: add normalisation options for source port and direction
  • firewall: improved parsing of alias input
  • firewall: fixed nesting of aliases with underscores in their names
  • openvpn: fix script mismatch on export page
  • openvpn: added reneg-sec option to server to allow persistent TOTP sessions
  • openvpn: added option to prevent usage of username-as-common-name
  • services: fix WOL widget link
  • services: aligned backend calls of DNS and DHCP
  • services: fix writing of DNS resolver host entries
  • services: simplify configuring of DNS resolver listening addresses
  • services: allow proxy to match against SSL URLs only (contributed by Fabio Mello)
  • lang: updated Source Sans Pro font to improve the cyrillic experience
  • lang: Italian is now a release language (contributed by Antonio Prado)
  • lang: minor updates for Russian (contributed by Smart-Soft Ltd.)
  • lang: minor updates for German and French
  • ports: haproxy 1.6.8[1], php 5.6.25[2], sqlite 3.14.1[3]
  • ports: openvpn 2.3.12[4], libxml 2.9.4[5]

GhostBSD 10.3 Enoch Finally Available

After a year of development, testing and debugging we are pleased to announce the release of GhostBSD 10.3 MATE & XFCE which is available on SourceForge and torrents for the amd64 and i386 architectures.
What's new in GhostBSD 10.3
  • ZFS support
  • UEFI support
  • Installer custom partition creation subjection
  • VirtualBox support get setup at boot time if needed.
  • 4k partition alignment by default
  • GhostBSD Software will be updated Quarterly which will bring more stability to GhostBSD still user will be able to change it to latest to have the latest software update.
What changed in GhostBSD 10.3
  • The installer partition editor UI and partitioning have been improved
  • VirtualBox additions would be uninstall after installer if it is not runnig in a VirtualBox
  • Slim is replacing GDM.
  • Networkmgr display the full SSID
  • Replaced the HTML/CSS installation slide with a GTK/CSS the slide.
What has been fix.
  • Networkmgr SSID list
  • VirtualBox supports
  • Installer MBR partition issue
  • Some installer text error
  • Keyboard layout after installation with MATE
  • Network Manager slowness to open the menu
  • Network Manager icon tray crash
  • Localtime time as been fix
  • Fix boot partition for GPT to supports freebsd-boot, bios-boot and efi
  • System Update duplicating the whole install under /boot/kernel.old
  • sudo configuration
  • Wifi down by default
  • Locales are not correctly set up on installation
Where to download:
The image checksum's, hybrid ISO(DVD, USB) images are available here:
http://www.ghostbsd.org/download


OpenBSD 6.0 released

September 1st, 2016: The OpenBSD team announces the availability of 6.0!
We are pleased to announce the official release of OpenBSD 6.0.
This is our 40th release on CD-ROM (and 41st via FTP/HTTP).  We remain
proud of OpenBSD's record of more than twenty years with only two remote
holes in the default install.

As in our previous releases, 6.0 provides significant improvements,
including new features, in nearly all areas of the system:
Read more...

News

ZFS, The “Universal” Filesystem | BSD Now 157

This week on BSDNow, we have an interview with Richard Yao, who will be telling us about the experience & challenges of porting ZFS to Linux. That plus the latest news & feedback is coming your way, on your place to B….SD!

Let's Encrypt client imported into -current

Kristaps Dzonsons' Let's Encrypt client, letskencrypt, has been imported into OpenBSD-current as acme-client.
letskencrypt, which has previously been available as a port, is a privilege-separated Let's Encrypt (ACME protocol) client written in C.


Code stuff


Interesting articles


BSD News 14/03/2016

BSD News 14/03/2016

Last week in BSD

Releases:OPNsense, HardenedBSD, SoloBSD, FreeBSD
Other news:BSDnow, BSDSec, OpenSSH, OPNsense, FreeBSD, ZFS, VAX, OpenBSD, Netflix


BSDSec



Releases 

HardenedBSD-stable 10-STABLE v42.1

HardenedBSD-10-STABLE-v42.1 - https://github.com/HardenedBSD/hardenedBSD-stable/releases/tag/HardenedB...
 

SoloBSD 10.3-PRERELEASE-v42.1

There is a new build of SoloBSD 10.3-PRERELEASE based on the latest HardenedBSD stable branch version 42.1
- Changelog v42.1

 

FreeBSD 10.3-RC2

Marius Strobl has announced the availability of the second release candidate for the upcoming stable release of FreeBSD 10.3: "The second release candidate build of the 10.3-RELEASE release cycle is now available. Noteworthy changes since 10.3-RC1: under certain circumstances, 'zfs send -i', i. e. incremental ZFS send, could lead to data corruption, which has been addressed by importing an upstream fix; boot loaders and kernel have been taught to handle ELF sections of type SHT_AMD64_UNWIND just the same as SHT_PROGBITS when loading modules; while not directly relevant for 10.3-RELEASE, CLANG as of version 3.8 started to produce sections of the former type in amd64 modules and this changes will simplify upgrades from 10.3-RELEASE to 11.0-RELEASE later on; as part of closing or syncing a hash(3)-based database file, fsync(2) now is called on the latter - this ensures that changes are on disk when shutting down a machine, which previously was not always the case with soft updates in place." See the complete release announcement for further details. Download the amd64 and i386 installation DVD images from here: FreeBSD-10.3-RC2-amd64-dvd1.iso (2,636MB, SHA256), FreeBSD-10.3-RC2-i386-dvd1.iso (2,446MB, SHA256).

OPNsense 16.1.6

This time around, DHCP and DNS have been freshened up thoroughly, removing both potential and real problems from the GUI and underneath. Additionally, the proxy server gained ICAP support and a category-based remote block list selection. Our firmware mirror support has finally been extended so that it is now possible to pull all updates from a single mirror, which will very soon make it possible to run a local mirror for your internal installations. We are also shipping the original FreeBSD OpenSSL patch, although the security issues cannot not surface on OPNsense.   

News



New Video Tutorial on the Pipelight Plugin and Netflix in PC-BSD

We recently looked at the pipelight port that recently received a patch in the ports tree and made a video for you guys.
I’ll just leave this here…
Watching Netflix in PC-BSD



The VAX platform is no more

After much internal discussion, OpenBSD has officially discontinued support for the VAX architecture. In a series of commits, Theo de Raadt puts the platform to rest. Read more... 
 

Scaling up with BSD | BSD Now 132

This week, Allan & I are away at AsiaBSDCon! (If you aren’t there, you are missing out). We will be back with a live episode next week. However, we’ve been asked for Allan to tell us about ScaleEngine’s use of BSD for a while now & we want to take this time to share it with you.
That & some Beastie Bits for your consumption, all this week on BSDNow.
 

Code stuff 



Interesting articles

 
 

BSD News 29/02/2016

BSD News 29/02/2016

Last week in BSD

Releases: OPNsense, FreeBSD, HardenedBSD
Other news:FreeBSD, NetBSD, ZFS, DragonFly BSD, Linux, BSDnow, OpenBSD, talks


BSDSec.net

none warnings

Releases

OPNsense 16.1.4 released

Here are the full patch notes:
  • ports: squid 3.5.14
  • dhcp: fix menu expand with IPv6 configuration
  • captive portal: fix database timeout lock message
  • interfaces: fix expand/collapse on status page for Edge
  • proxy: add maximum_object_size setting for squid
  • load balancer: improve filter reload to prevent traffic lockout (contributed by Frank Wall)
  • layout: fix searchable dropdown truncation with IE
  • firewall: fix action buttons on alias edit
  • menu: updated help menu entries
 

FreeBSD 10.3-BETA3 Available

The third BETA build for the FreeBSD 10.3 release cycle is now available. ISO images for the amd64, armv6, i386, ia64, powerpc, powerpc64 and sparc64 architectures are available on most of our FreeBSD mirror sites.

New stable version: HardenedBSD-stable HardenedBSD-10-STABLE-v41

HardenedBSD-10-STABLE-v41 - https://github.com/HardenedBSD/hardenedBSD-stable/releases/tag/HardenedB...

News

 

FreeBSD for High Density Servers

In this session we will talk about how to install FreeBSD to MicroModularServer and how to manage and control those servers. To install FreeBSD to High Density Servers including NEC MicroModularServer or HP Moonshot, you need another skill compared to install to common PCs and rack mount servers. This kind of servers (low energy consumption, low computing power and high space efficient) are good for too many edge servers/web servers at limited rack space, for example, as an alternative system for Blade servers or many cores servers like Sun Fire T1000/T2000.
 

The NetBSD Core Team

After a number of years on the NetBSD core team, Alan Barrett (apb@) has decided to step down for personal reasons. I'm sure we'd all like to thank Alan for his contributions, including some late night meetings for him, due to the geographical locations of all the core team members. Thanks, Alan! Please join me in welcoming Martin Husemann (martin@) to the core team. Martin is a long-time NetBSD developer who has played his part on the NetBSD Foundation board of directors, but now brings his considerable skills to the core team, the technical management for the project; helping us define where we want to take NetBSD over the next 2 years and beyond. His background in portmastering the mac68k and sparc64 ports, as well as his participation in the release engineering team, means that he is well-placed to help us with this. The current core team now looks like: Alistair Crooks (agc@) Christos Zoulas (christos@) Chuck Silvers (chs@) Martin Husemann (martin@) Matt Green (mrg@) Matt Thomas (matt@) Yamamoto Takashi (yamt@) Congratulations, Martin! With best wishes, Alistair Crooks The 

 

FreeBSD and ZFS

ZFS has been making headlines lately, so it seems like the right time to talk about the longstanding relationship between FreeBSD and ZFS.

For nearly seven years, FreeBSD has included a production quality ZFS implementation, making it one of the key features of the FreeBSD operating system. ZFS is a combined file system and volume manager. Decoupling physical media from logical volumes allows free space to be efficiently shared between all of the file systems. ZFS introduced unprecedented data integrity and reliability guarantees to storage on FreeBSD. ZFS supports varying levels of redundancy for tolerance of hardware failures and includes cryptographic checksums on all data to guard against corruption.

Allan Jude, VP of Operations at ScaleEngine and coauthor of FreeBSD Mastery: ZFS, said “We started using ZFS in 2011 because we needed to safely store a huge quantity of video for our customers. FreeBSD was, and still is, the best platform for deploying ZFS in production. We now store more than a petabyte of video using ZFS, and use ZFS Boot Environments on all of our servers.”

So why does FreeBSD include ZFS and contribute to its continued development? FreeBSD community members understand the need for continued development work as technologies evolve. OpenZFS is the truly open source successor to the ZFS project and the FreeBSD Project has participated in OpenZFS since its founding in 2013. FreeBSD developers and those from Delphix, Nexenta, Joyent, the ZFS on Linux project, and the Illumos project work together to continue improving OpenZFS.

FreeBSD’s unique open source infrastructure, copyfree license, and engaged community support the integration of a variety of free software components, including OpenZFS. FreeBSD makes an excellent operating system for servers and end users, and it provides a foundation for many open source projects and commercial products.

We're happy that ZFS is available in FreeBSD as a fully integrated, first class file system and wish to thank all of those who have contributed to it over the years.

 

DragonFly default shells and library changes

I see this bite people irregularly over the years: if your default shell on login can’t run, what do you do?  I’ve seen it happen because of a missing /usr/lib, and it can happen with out-of-date library references, too.   There’s several different ways to deal with it:
That last one may be useful if your dports setup gets mangled, somehow – though ‘pkg upgrade’ has always worked for me.

Linux Emulation goes to the great bitbucket of the sky

It's been a long time coming, but Linux Emulation is going away.
CVSROOT: /cvs
Module name: ports
Changes by: naddy@cvs.openbsd.org 2016/02/26 09:05:12

Modified files:
 emulators      : Makefile 
 games          : Makefile 

Log message:
Linux emulation is going away, unhook the Fedora userland and the last
port depending on it
Only useful on i386, with a super-old userland port available; Goodbye sweet COMPAT_LINUX, we hardly knew ye.
naddy@ also sent in a patch that fully removes COMPAT_LINUX from the tree, which is expected to land soon.

 

Store all the Things | BSD Now 130

Allan is back from the Storage Summit in Silicon Valley! We are going to get his thoughts on how the conference went, plus bring you the latest ZFS info discussed. That plus the usual BSD news is headed your way right now!


Code stuff


Interesting articles

BSDCan: OpenBSD presentations


Wallpaper of the week 

check https://www.flickr.com/photos/63771152@N07/6028472922/


BSD News 01/02/2016

BSD News 01/02/2016

Last week in BSD

Releases: OPNsesne, HardenedBSD
Other news:Talks, HardenedBSD, NetBSD, Minix, FreeBSD, DragonFly BSD, ZFS, HardenedBSD, PC-BSD, OPNsense, LibreSSL, BSDSec, BSDTalk

BSDSec


Releases 

OPNsense 16.1 Released

It has been more than a year since OPNsense first came out. Back then it was FreeBSD 10.0. Not even two months after, 10.1 was introduced along with the opnsense-update utility. Today is the day for FreeBSD 10.2, the latest and greatest release currently available for broader driver support and stability improvements. 16.1 is nick-named “Crafty Coyote” in honour of our beloved childhood TV sessions. It is the accumulation of 6 months of work, having had our focus on reengineering the captive portal, native intrusion prevention, plugin support, and transforming the reporting frontend into something more modern and flexible just to name a few[1]. Apart from the recently published security advisories (see patch notes below), we have included a quick navigation feature which can be activated by pressing (TAB) followed by search keywords and hitting (ENTER) to go to the desired page. Last but not least, a larger batch of improvements and fixes went into assorted sections of the GUI that certainly help to get your work done without ending up dazed and confused.
 

HardenedBSD New development versions.

New stable versions: HardenedBSD-stable 10-STABLE and 11-CURRENT v40

New stable versions: HardenedBSD-stable 10-STABLE and 11-CURRENT v40.1

HardenedBSD-10-STABLE-v40.1 - https://github.com/HardenedBSD/hardenedBSD-stable/releases/tag/HardenedB...
---------------------------------------
[hardenedbsd] HBSD: Don't check for ZFS KLD when non-root.
[hardenedbsd] HBSD: Harden KLD-related syscalls
[hardenedbsd] HBSD: Add /proc to the hbsd-update's skipped files list.
[hardenedbsd/freebsd] HBSD: ktrace: tidy up ktrstruct
[freebsd] Merge OpenSSL 1.0.1r.
[freebsd] Add EFI ZFS boot support
[freebsd] e1000 driver update
HardenedBSD-11-CURRENT-v40.1 - https://github.com/HardenedBSD/hardenedBSD-stable/releases/tag/HardenedB...
------------------------------------------
[hardenedbsd] HBSD: Don't check for ZFS KLD when non-root.
[freebsd] Merge OpenSSL 1.0.2f. (SA candidate)
[hardenedbsd] HBSD: Add /proc to the installer's skipped files list.

News

A Reimplementation of NetBSD Using a Microkernel

This talk covers some of the history of Minix 3, what it is and why Andrew started the project, and how after years of fighting it why he realized that Minix 3 should be more like BSD than being its own thing.
Join the discussion  on site. 

New Member - CTurt

We've added a new member to the HardenedBSD team! CTurt will be working with us to research, exploit, and produce patches for kernel-level vulnerabilities. We'll be working on getting these kernel security enhancements upstreamed to FreeBSD after the fixes have been deemed stable in HardenedBSD first.

License corrections for DragonFly

This has no effect on the actual operation of DragonFly, but it makes me feel better that it’s done: Rimvydas Jasinskas has gone through DragonFly source and removed the unnecessary 3rd BSD license clause, which is no longer needed.

illuminating the future on PC-BSD | BSD Now 126

This week on BSDNow, we are going to be talking to Ken Moore about the Lumina desktop environment, where it stands now and looking ahead. Then Allan turns the tables and interviews both myself and Ken about new ongoings in PC-BSD land. Stay tuned, lots of exciting show is coming your way right now on BSDNow, the place to B...SD!
 

bsdtalk261 - Jails and System Management with Kris Moore

An interview with Kris Moore about the Warden jail management system, iocage, and progress on a new system management API.

File Info: 30Min, 14MB.

Ogg Link: https://archive.org/download/BSDTalk261/BSDTalk261.ogg 

Code stuff 


Interesting articles

Wallpaper of the week 

 from http://hdw.eweb4.com/out/637260.html

BSD News 14/09/2015

BSD News 14/09/2015

Last week in BSD

Releases: GhostBSD
Other news: BSDnow, FreshPorts, DragonFly BSD, ZFS, CryptoLocker

Releases

GhostBSD 10.1 Finally Available

  • GhostBSD ISO image is hybrid that can be burn on DVD or USB stick
  • XFCE is coming back
  • Users can chose to install the BSD boot manager, Grub boot manager or simply None and use their Linux Grub
  • Station Tweak a fork of Mate Tweak
  • OctoPkg GUI frontend for pkgng written in Qt
  • Station Update Manager to update FreeBSD base system and third party software
  • Software from pkg or ports can be installed in the live DVD/USB session
  • VT Console by default
  • Instant verification for user and root to know if the password is strong and match on the system installer
  • Host name and user name auto completion when typing the real name
  • Vim

News

Multipath TCP | BSD Now 106

This week, we have Nigel Williams here to bring us all sorts of info about Multipath TCP, what it is, how it works and the ongoing effort to bring it into FreeBSD. All that and of course the latest BSD news coming your way, right now!
 

FreshPorts Open sourcing the website

Today, lattera & Shirkdog and I sat down and converted the website repository from subversion to git. That repo is sitting there, ready to go. That process took about an hour. We ran this command: Yeah, I didn’t want to include all that that code in the repo. Various reasons, but mostly because they are [...]

Code stuff

Interesting articles



Wallpaper of the week

 from http://www.deviantart.com/art/FreeBSD-The-Power-to-Serve-71288066

BSD News 27/07/2015

BSD News 27/07/2015

Last week in BSD

Releases: FreeBSD, OPNSense
Other news: c2k15, OpenBSD, docker, zfs, FreeBSD, BSDSec, DragonFly BSD, BSDSec, OPNsense, NetBSD, OctoPkg, HardenedBSD

Please check Introducing BSDHistory article.
 

BSDSec



Releases

FreeBSD 10.2-RC1 Now Available

The first RC build of the 10.2-RELEASE cycle is now available.
Installation images are available for the amd64, i386, ia64, powerpc, powerpc64, and sparc64 architectures.
FreeBSD/arm SD card images are available for the BEAGLEBONE, CUBOX-HUMMINGBOARD, GUMSTIX, RPI-B, PANDABOARD, and WANDBOARD kernels.
FreeBSD 10.2-RC1 is also available on several third-party hosting providers.
See the PGP-signed announcement email for installation image checksums and more information.

OPNsense 15.7.4 Released

Here are the the full patch notes:
  • updated sudo 1.8.14p3 [1], pcre 8.37_2 [2], and FreeBSD 10.1-RELEASE-p15 [3]
  • firmware: fix upgrade when using opnsense-devel package
  • proxy: fix config write for multiple interfaces
  • crash reporter: raise PHP log level to warnings after an extensive cleanup
  • dashboard: made widgets translatable (contributed by Fabian Franz)
  • firewall logs: usability improvements (contributed by Fabian Franz)
  • languages: Simplified Chinsese 64% complete
  • languages: German 40% complete
  • menu: fixed navigation for PPPoE edit

Other news

BSD Gnow | BSD Now 99

This week we’ll be talking with Ryan Lortie and Baptiste Daroussin about GNOME on BSD. Upstream development is finally treating the BSDs as a first class citizen, so we’ll hear about how the recent porting efforts have been since.
Watch it here

HardenedBSD 11-CURRENT amd64 (x86-64) installers


Code stuff



Interesting Articles


Wallpaper of the week

 

from wallpapercave.com/w/QOUmkgJ

BSD News 02/03/2015

Last week in BSD
Releases: OPNsense
Other news: DragonFly BSD, BSDSec, SCALE, pfSense, OpenBSD, ZFS, m0n0wall, BSDTalk

BSDSec
FreeBSD Security Advisory FreeBSD-SA-15:05.bind
FreeBSD Security Advisory FreeBSD-SA-15:04.igmp 

Releases

OPNsense version 15.1.6.1 Released 
OPNsense version 15.1.7 Released 

Change Log 15.1.6.1:
  • Don’t clobber user and group settings when running opnsense-update. Caused e.g. dhcpd to refuse operation.
  • Fix a regression that would prevent e.g. sshd from starting.
  • Install opnsense-update by default.

This is the official change log for 15.1.7:
  • Merged the latest FreeBSD 10.1-p6 patches:
    • —Fix integer overflow in IGMP protocol. (SA-15:04)
      —Fix vt(4) crash with improper ioctl parameters. (EN-15:01)
      —Updated base system OpenSSL to 1.0.1l. (EN-15:02)
      —Fix freebsd-update libraries update ordering issue. (EN-15:03)
  • Disabled OpenSSH’s High Performance SSH/SCP and None-Cipher extensions to follow up on several security-related discussions.
  • Switched from a heavy Bind installation to a lightweight one to reduce attack surface.
  • Removed and replaced the legacy `check_reload_status’ daemon with a Python-based rewrite.
  • Fixed the auto-login console lockout regression introduced in 15.1.6.1.
  • Fixed a problem associated with OpenVPN not being able to read passwords from files.
  • Notable ports upgrades: bind-tools 9.10.2, strongswan 5.2.2_1, curl 7.41 plus our LibreSSL fixes for mpd4/mpd5/libpdel.
  • Removed PHP-FPM remnants from IPv6 and OpenVPN scripts.
  • Fixed several OpenSSL invokes to use the latest port version as opposed to the base version.
  • Improved memory/disc/swap usage on the dashboard.
  • Properly set DNS Resolver Advanced defaults.
  • Fixed append of custom Unbound scrips.
  • Modified the root menu shell to pass through to a real shell when arguments are given.
  • Zapped the spurious “Array” prefix in user-defined aliases.
  • Moved the bogons files fetch location to a local mirror.
  • The core.git development boot hook has been improved to properly include /usr/local/etc/rc changes.
  • All of our packages are now annotated as coming from our mirror as well as additional safeguards potentially allowing you to use additional FreeBSD packages on top of OPNsense.




Other news 

Final message - mailing list and forum frozen

As announced earlier, the m0n0wall mailing list and forum are now frozen. This is the final message, and I would like to take the opportunity to thank all those who have sent me emails with kind words and expressions of gratitude. They were too numerous for me to reply to individually, but they were all very much appreciated!
There have been some questions on what the way forward is for current m0n0wall users. If you are happy with the current feature set of m0n0wall and just need a security patch, bug fix, hardware compatibility update or minor improvement now and then, there are two nascent projects started by former m0n0wall developers/users that may have something for you: SmallWall and t1n1wall.
For a more feature-rich alternative that is still based on FreeBSD and has the same roots, both pfSense and OPNsense (which is a fork of the former) are excellent choices. They have higher hardware requirements than m0n0wall, but on the other hand, a lot of new embedded hardware has recently become available, with 2 GB or more of memory and 1 GHz or faster CPUs, at a similar price as earlier platforms. It makes sense (pun intended) to use these additional resources - something that m0n0wall hasn't been particularly good at in recent times. Just keep that in mind for your next hardware upgrade.
 

DragonFly GUI resurrected 

Michael Neumann has switched out pkgsrc packages for dpkg packages for building DragonFly with a GUI.  There’s no built image to download right now, but I’m optimistic the next release will have it.  You can build it now on a DragonFly system using src/nrelease.  With all this video work going in lately, it will give us something to show.

OpenBSD Foundation 2014/2015 News & Fundraising

Ken Westerback (krw@) wrote in on behalf of the OpenBSD Foundation to let us know what happened last year, and what's in store for us now:
2014 was the most successful year to date for the OpenBSD Foundation. Both in the amount of money we raised and in the support we provided for the OpenBSD and related projects. We are extremely grateful for the support shown by our contributers large and small.
A detailed summary of the Foundation's activities in 2014 can be seen at
http://www.openbsdfoundation.org/activities.html
But here are some highpoints.
Read more...

From the Foundation (Part 2) | BSD Now 78 

This week we continue our two-part series on the activities of various BSD foundations. Ken Westerback joins us today to talk all about the OpenBSD foundation and what it is they do. We've also got answers to your emails and all the latest news, on BSD Now - the place to B.. SD.


bsdtalk251 - Verisign and FreeBSD: Internet Scale Services at 10 Gigabits per Server presented by Mike Bentkofsky, Marc de la Gueronniere, Julien Charbon 

 A talk from vBSDCon in 2013 titled Verisign and FreeBSD: Internet Scale Services at 10 Gigabits per Server presented by Mike Bentkofsky, Marc de la Gueronniere, Julien Charbon

File info: 47Min, 22MB

Ogg link: https://archive.org/download/bsdtalk251/bsdtalk251.ogg



Code stuff
Radeon updates, too 
Did you upgrade DragonFly on the 25th? 
 In Other BSDs for 2015/02/28 

Interesting articles
SCALE 13x Trip Report: Michael Dexter 
SCALE 2015 Recap 
Further (a roadmap for pfSense)   
FreeBSD From the Trenches: ZFS, and How to Make a Foot Cannon 

Wallpaper of the week

as fount at http://technology.desktopnexus.com/wallpaper/845709/


BSD News 22/09/2014

Last week in BSD
Releases: FreeBSD, pfSense, GhostBSD
Other News: FreeBSD, systemd, Google Summer of Code, Unix, OpenBSD, Murmur, Mumble, WLAN, BSDSec, BSDnow, pfSense, HardenedBSD, ZFS, DragonFly BSD

Releases

FreeBSD 10.1-BETA1 Available 
FreeBSD 10.1-BETA2 Now Available
The second BETA build of the 10.1-RELEASE release cycle is now available on the FTP servers for the amd64, armv6, i386, ia64, powerpc, powerpc64 and sparc64 architectures.The image checksums follow are included in the original announcement email. Installer images and memory stick images are available here.If you notice problems you can report them through the Bugzilla PR system or on the -stable mailing list. If you would like to use SVN to do a source based update of an existing system, use the "stable/10" branch.

A list of changes since 10.0-RELEASE are available on the stable/10 release notes page.


pfSense 2.2 enters BETA

The 2.2 release has now reached the beta milestone. This means the release is feature complete, a comprehensive list of new features and changes can be found here, and should stay relatively stable throughout the remainder of the development process. That’s not to say it’s production ready though, our developers are using it in production and have been for months, but unless you have a solid understanding of the underlying system and can manually verify the configuration, 2.2 is not yet for you (young padawan).

GhostBSD 4.0 RC 3 Karine edition now available

The GhostBSD team is pleased to announce the availability the third RC build of the 4.0-RELEASE release cycle which is available on SourceForge for the amd64 and i386 architectures.

Other news

Sendmail Removed from OpenmBSD Base 


In the first of several commits, Matthieu Herrb (matthieu@) has removed sendmail from the release:
CVSROOT: /cvs
Module name: src
Changes by: matthieu@cvs.openbsd.org 2014/09/15 16:25:57

Modified files:
 gnu/usr.sbin   : Makefile 

Log message:
Unlink sendmail from the build. ok krw@ ajacoutot@
Users of OpenSMTPd can rejoice in having no work to do; others will have to install sendmail from packages.

The Promised WLAN | BSD Now 55



Coming up this week, we'll be talking with Adrian Chadd about all things wireless, his experience with FreeBSD on various laptop hardware and a whole lot more. As usual, we've got the latest news and answers to all your emails, on BSD Now - the place to B.. SD.


BSDSec.net
[FreeBSD-Announce] FreeBSD Security Advisory FreeBSD-SA-14:19.tcp


Code stuff
GSoC 2014: Systemd replacement utilities (systembsd)
In Other BSDs for 2014/09/20 
Backlight on a laptop


Interesting articles
Unix: Scripting with templates 
Install Murmur (Mumble server) on FreeNAS/FreeBSD
[09/17/2014] ZFS Corruption: Postmortem 
Proposed Q&A site for users of #BSD Variants

BSD News 01/09/2014

BSD News 01/09/2014
Last week in BSD
Releases: pfSense, HardenedBSD
Other news: DragonFly BSD, FreeBSD, libvrt, Lumina Desktop, nginx, OpenBSD, PC-BSD, VMWare, ZFS, NetBSD, BSDSec, BSDTalk, MidnightBSD, BSDnow


Releases

pfSense2.1.5 RELEASE Now Available 


The 2.1.5 release follows shortly after 2.1.4 and is primarily a security release.



New Build of HardenedBSD 

We've just published a new build, so head on over to the Latest Builds page to check it out. The new build contains a new HardenedBSD-only change (so a change we will not upstream) that adds a sysctl tunable to fully disable mmap(MAP_32BIT) support on amd64. Mappings that reside only in the 32bit address space don't have enough bits to randomize, so disabling this feature entirely removes one more attack vector. Now that pkg 1.3.7 is out, we're building our first pkg repo. Over time, we'll apply security-centric patches to the ports tree and this pkg repo will be a good developmental/test repo. My next goal is to automate the build process so we can have nightly builds of base and weekly (or semi-weekly) builds of ports.

Other news

DragonFly: New kernel and new target


You should perform a full world and kernel install if on master.
Several people (including me) have been getting bit by a problem: when performing an installworld with a changed kernel, the vn kernel module is loaded, but it was built by the previous kernel and may cause problems when it doesn’t match up.
To fix that, vn is now built in, instead of being a separate module.  The rescue initrd (which is what is being mounted when it has this problem) is now installed via a ‘make rescue‘ command that can wait until a successful installworld and reboot.
 PC-BSD 10.0.3 Preview: Lumina Desktop


As we are getting ready for PC-BSD 10.0.3, I wanted to share a little preview of what to expect with the Lumina desktop environment as you move from version 0.4.0 to 0.6.2.

ZFS support in libvirt


An upcoming release of libvirt, 1.2.8 that should be released early September, will include an initial support of managing ZFS volumes.
That means that it's possible to boot VMs and use ZFS volumes as disks. Additionally, it allows to control volumes using the libvirt API. Currently, supported operations are:
  • list volumes in a pool
  • create and delete volumes
  • upload and download volumes
It's not possible to create and delete pools yet, hope to implement that in the next release.

Heads Up: Nginx Removed From Base OpenBSD 
  
With this commit, Robert Nagy (robert@) removed nginx(8) from base:

Log message:
remove nginx from the base system in favor of OpenBSD's own httpd(8)
Read more...

bsdtalk244 – The Lumina Desktop Environment with Ken Moore 

An interview with Ken Moore about the Lumina Desktop Environment.File Info: 28Min, 14MB.
Ogg Link: https://archive.org/download/bsdtalk244/bsdtalk244.ogg

Reverse Takeover | BSD Now 52   


Coming up this week, we'll be chatting with Shawn Webb about his recent work with ASLR and PIE in FreeBSD.
After that, we'll be showing you how you can create a reverse SSH tunnel to a system behind a firewall... how sneaky. Answers to your emails plus the latest news, on BSD Now, the place to B.. SD.

FreeBSD Foundation announces IPsec Enhancement Project 

The Internet Protocol Security (IPsec) suite is used to implement virtual private networks on FreeBSD and other operating systems. As the networking world continues its transition from 1 to 10, to 40 gigabit per second speeds, and faster, improvements in IPsec’s cryptographic building blocks are necessary to keep pace. The FreeBSD Foundation is pleased to announce that long-time FreeBSD developer John-Mark Gurney is adding modern AES modes to FreeBSD’s cryptographic framework and IPsec. This project is co-sponsored by the FreeBSD Foundation and Netgate, a leading vendor of BSD-based firewalls and networking gear.


Some MidnightBSD news

0.5-CURRENT is building again.
PostgreSQL 9 mport updated to 9.0.18
Another bug was fixed where ports using unzip were using the wrong path to unzip.
A bug was fixed today with any ports using gmake. In some cases, gmake was not being used to build.

It is strongly recommended that you reinstall all perl ports if you're tracking current and update. Perl was updated in base recently.

Interesting articles
VMWare Tools on FreeBSD 10 
Time Machine backups on FreeBSD 10  
BSDNow Interview 

SpiderOak installation into a Jail (FreeNas 9.2)


Code stuff
NetBSD Security Advisory 2014-008: Multiple OpenSSL vulnerabilities 
NetBSD Security Advisory 2014-009: Multiple vulnerabilities in the execve system call 
NetBSD Security Advisory 2014-010: Multiple vulnerabilities in the compatibility layers 
NetBSD Security Advisory 2014-011: User-controlled memory allocation in the modctl system call 
Special procedure to update pkg 1.3.6 
In Other BSDs for 2014/08/30 

BSD News 18/08/2014

Releases: DragonFly BSD
Other News: LibreSSL, Haswell, g2k14, BSDnow, ZFS


Releases

DragonFly 3.8.2 images uploaded 

DragonFly 3.8.2 images are uploaded now to the main site.  Check the 3.8.2 changelog if you didn’t before.  This is a recommended upgrade for the newer OpenSSL, and should otherwise have little impact on the programs you have installed.

Other news

LibreSSL: openssl fixes backport 

Some fixes from OpenSSL 1.0.1i have been backported to 5.5 and 5.4. See http://www.openbsd.org/errata55.html

 VPN, My Dear Watson | BSD Now 50 

It's our 50th episode, and we're going to show you how to protect your internet traffic with a BSD-based VPN. We'll also be talking to Robert Watson, of the FreeBSD core team, about security research, exploit mitigation and a whole lot more. The latest news and answers to all of your emails, on BSD Now - the place to B.. SD. 

HardenedBSD: New Site

Welcome to HardenedBSD! This project aims to provide security enhancements to the FreeBSD project. We plan to upstream most, if not all, our projects. As this site is new, please expect changes and occasional downtime.


Interesting articles
Unix: Gaining network insights with tcpdump
BSDCan Trip Report: Baptiste Daroussin
Simple ZFS Backup Script

Code stuff
Haswell GPU support in DragonFly
g2k14: Antoine Jacoutot on GNOME, rc(8) and /etc cleanup
mandoc 1.13.1 Released 
In Other BSDs for 2014/08/16