The NAS Fleet - BSD Now 299

submited 23 May 2019

Running AIX on QEMU on Linux on Windows, your NAS fleet with TrueCommand, Unleashed 1.3 is available, LLDB: CPU register inspection support extension, V7 Unix programs often not written as expected, and more.

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18 March 2024
A FreeBSD user Tries NetBSD 10-RC5  

In this video we'll have a look at NetBSD 10 RC5, and get a feel on how things are going from the FreeBSD user perspective.

The FreeBSD Project Participating in Google Summer of Code 2024  

FreeBSD Project has again been selected as a mentoring organization for the Google Summer of Code 2024. This year marks the 20th year of GSoC, and also marks the 20th year that the FreeBSD Project will be participating as a mentoring organization. Contributor applications will open on Monday, March 18, 2024, and close on Tuesday, April 2, 2024.

15 March 2024
NetBSD 10.0 RC6 available  

RC6 fixes a few issues with the new named/bind imported for RC5 plus several minor issues.

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12 March 2024
BSD Now 550: Not to late  

This week on the show, you're not too late to develop the future, netmap on czgbe, OpenZFS 2.2.3, SSH Brute Forcing, some unknown OpenBSD Features, Release notes for the latest Omni OS, and more...

Valuable News – 2024/03/11  

The Valuable News weekly series is dedicated to provide summary about news, articles and other interesting stuff mostly but not always related to the UNIX/BSD/Linux systems.

11 March 2024
NetBSD Security Advisory 2024-001: Inadequate validation of user-supplied hostname in utmp_update(8)  

The issue allows malicious users to inject arbitrary data into utmpx(5) database due to the absence of proper filters for provided hostnames. The behaviour can be exploited by the attackers to force tools which display hostnames from utmpx(5) databases such us w(1) or who(1), to unexpectedly inject escape sequences into terminal of the user invoking the program.

BSD Now 549: htop Tetris  

FreeBSD Foundation Statement on the European Union Cyber Resiliency Act, DragonFly BSD on a Thinkpad T480s, How FreeBSD Employs Ampere Arm64 Servers in the Data Center, FreeBSD Yubikey authentication, that time I almost added Tetris to htop, and more.

Guiding the future of FreeBSD releases: Colin Percival, the new Release Engineering Team Lead  

In November 2023, after completing all the necessary work to bring FreeBSD 14.0 to fruition, Glen Barber, the Release Engineering Team Lead for FreeBSD, passed the leadership baton to Colin Percival, the former Deputy Release Engineering Team Lead.

Connect FreeBSD 14.0-STABLE to FreeIPA/IDM  

In the open source world everything lives/evolves/changes. This is why the new version of connecting latest FreeBSD 14.0-STABLE system to the FreeIPA/IDM is needed. One of the things that changed is that security/sssd is now deprecated and security/sssd2 is its successor. Also new version of ports-mgmt/poudriere-devel is available – with needed fixes already merged – and also with new restyled web interface.

10 March 2024
The Berkeley Software Distribution  

The Berkeley Software Distribution (BSD), developed by the Computer Systems Research Group (CSRG) at the University of California, Berkeley, was an operating system based on Research Unix. It allowed programmers to learn and improve on the software by distributing its source code for free, making it a pioneering moment in the open-source movement.

FreeBSD 13.3: What’s new, and how did we get here?  

FreeBSD is an outstanding choice for those seeking a modern, enterprise-class open source operating system. Its permissive licensing, superior security, exceptional performance, and rock-solid stability make it an ideal solution for businesses and organizations of all sizes. FreeBSD 13.3-RELEASE offers significant enhancements to infrastructure, hardware compatibility, and security, further demonstrating its value to the industry. This version builds upon the strong foundation established by previous versions within the 13.x series and aligns with the development timeline that includes the FreeBSD 14 branch, which was introduced in November 2023.

Valuable News – 2024/03/04  

The Valuable News weekly series is dedicated to provide summary about news, articles and other interesting stuff mostly but not always related to the UNIX/BSD/Linux systems.

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