One link to describe the pain of creating with software/the web, and one link that will make you want to keep doing it.
(Culled from other blog’s posts – sorry, lost original entries!)
One link to describe the pain of creating with software/the web, and one link that will make you want to keep doing it.
(Culled from other blog’s posts – sorry, lost original entries!)
Dru Lavigne has posted another set of BSD links, and something I wouldn’t expect: a video presentation (Youtube) of the table of contents to the July Open Source Business Resource.
Max Lindner posted a status update and a detailed followup on his Summer of Code project, dma(8). Matthias Schmidt asked for more DMA testing; it’s worth trying if you don’t care for Sendmail.
Matthew Dillon has posted an update for the 9th on the state of Hammer. The next big question: should the Hammer code for porter be stored in Subversion or Git?
Also: Nothing earth shattering, but this post on users@ has some details on Hammer usage and how it works with large files and with backups in general.
A recent commit from Matthew Dillon enables use of at least a terabyte of swap space. Is there anyone who can actually use that much yet? Swap is traditionally 2x available memory, so that would make for 500 gigabytes of RAM. I don’t think that’s even workable, though you’d be able to build up a heck of a MFS.
Steve O’Hara-Smith found that DVD playback didn’t work unless compiling with gcc34. Matthew Dillon’s implemented a possible fix.
Aggelos Economopoulos is looking for feedback for his NetMP (meaning giant lock removal from the network stack) work.
In a similar vein, Sepherosa Ziehau has committed the first stage of the first step of his parallelization of ipfw(4).
(Thanks to Sascha Wildner for the man page correction)
Antonio Huete Jimenez has created a DragonFly Facebook group; join up, if you’re a Facebook user.
(Update: fixed the accidentally Anglicized name – sorry!)
Louisa Luciani has put up a website for her Google Summer of Code LiveDVD project. (Work history is also available.)
Caveat: I don’t know if it’s done yet, as the work period for GSoC projects is not quite over.
Today is one of those dates that’s fun to type. Anyway!
There’s something there being updated, though it just has the old icon and what looks like a default PHPNuke-ish interface. Hopefully some authorial voice will arise.
Samuel J. Greear started a new topic on kernel@: what Revision Control System should DragonFly move to, based on needs. This is a subject that can lead to lots of bikeshedding, but it has stayed pretty calm so far.
Also, ideas from me: packaging pkgsrc into releases, and zipping the release ISO.
As part of a larger discussion about PXE booting, Pedro F. Giffuni pointed at a Google Summer of Code project for FreeBSD, titled “http support for PXE“. This would be very convenient.
Matthew Dillon’s latest Hammer update, among other things, brings news of a Hammer mailing list specifically for people working on porting Hammer to other systems.
Matthew Dillon is planning for the most recent minor bugfixes for Hammer to go in Wednesday; they will also be merged to the 2.0 branch.
With all these updates going in, a 2.0.1 release, sometime soon, appears likely.
The 2008Q2 pkgsrc bulk build pn pkgbox.dragonflybsd.org has been redone; it should flow out to the mirrors normally.
These linkdumps are really kind of fun to do:
I have a tentative potential layout for dragonflybsd.org. As stated in my mail about it, I want opinions: comments plz!
Mayur Bhosle has updated his wiki page with the latest details on his Proportional Scheduler for Summer of Code.