Matthew Dillon posted a thorough description of that the different tags mean when using cvsup
to update your DragonFly system.
shiningsilence.com will be going down for a short period today, due to a repositioning of an exterior power line.
If you are running bleeding edge DragonFly code (HEAD), you will need to have COMPAT_DF12 in your kernel config file, unless you’re using the GENERIC kernel. This is because of the stat(2) work Joerg Sonnenberger plans to commit.
‘walt’ found what may eventually be a nice way to manage pkgsrc packages: pkgmanager.
FreeBSD, as one of the Google Summer of Code projects, is going through a networking code cleanup. Would DragonFly benefit from this? Yes, except it’s already happened.
Matthew Dillon wrote a little explanation of how the kernel and userland schedulers interact.
Chris Pressey sent a recent announcement about the BSD Installer infrastructure, and changes thereto. I don’t see web-accessible archives of the message, so I’ll paste it here as an extended entry.
Continue reading “BSDInstaller internal changes”
There is a preview of the next version of GNOME (2.12), found via Slashdot.
Anyone compiling GNOME from CVS on DragonFly? It’d be interesting to know how compatible it is.
Matthew Dillon and Hiten Pandya outlined their plans for what goes into the next PREVIEW revision.
The first version of the BSDInstaller on FreeBSD is available.
Matthew Dillon mentioned a couple of obstacles in booting with a Shuttle board.
Sam Smith (I assume) wrote in a comment that his monthly BSD summaries for OnLAMP/BSD have become a blog, with June being the latest entry.
FreeBSD’s been ported to the XBox, interestingly enough. It’s more proof-of-concept right now – once networking works, it could be very useful.
Seen on Hubert Feyrer’s blog: The BSD daemon used for sex toy vending machines. Wierd.
Simon ‘corecode’ Schubert committed a fix to 1.2-RELEASE for the recent zlib security problem.
UnixReview.com has three new articles: a review of the book on 60’s culture and PCs, “What the Dormouse Said“, an article on Nagios, and a look at OpenSolaris.
So, if you’re using Google’s new personalization features, you can add DragonFly BSD Digest headlines using: http://www.shiningsilence.com/dbsdlog/index.rdf. Ooh, pretty.
Matthew Dillon only just noticed the Wikipedia entry for DragonFly. (It’s been linked here for quite a while.)
Also, IBM’s developerWorks has a “Why FreeBSD?” article that mentions DragonFly as the more technical alternative.
Gregory Neil Shapiro just updated sendmail to 8.13.4, which means it runs natively on DragonFly. (It no longer assumes FreeBSD.) He posted a list of changes.
Joerg Sonnenberger posted two alerts: the first is that pam.d now replaces pam.conf, and that he’s mangling the ABI in HEAD (bleeding edge code) over the next few days in preparation for moving what’s in HEAD to PREVIEW (moderately stable code).