There were a few problems with the recent 802.11 commits; they appear fixed, but doing a make quickworld
will probably not complete. Try a make buildworld
on your next update, and it should sail through clearly.
Erik Paulsen Skaalerud now has daily snapshots of source and dfports available on his site. If you are setting up a new DragonFly install, this shortcuts having to update via CVSup.
There’s been over 50 commits made in the past two days, including such things as nvidia-driver improvements from Emiel Kollof, a pkill import from Chris Pressey, and wicontrol updates from Joerg Sonennberger.
Matthew Dillon’s made a number of improvements to the booter code, so (re)installing a master boot record may help those having trouble with the basic boot system.
Hiten Pandya’s updated IPFilter to version 3.4.35
I’ve changed the front page of the DragonFly mailing lists archive. There’s now a site-specific Google search, and the by-date listings are now linked on the front page.
Jeroen Ruigrok has committed Pentium 4 Thermal Control Circuit support. Really, he has. Enable it by placing:
options CPU_ENABLE_TCC
in your kernel config file, then rebuilding.
Joerg Sonnenberger has committed the initial framework for 802.11 support. This means better support for those of us running wireless is coming soon, especially those with atheros-based cards.
In a conversation today on IRC, I ended up pointing at this PDF on Greg Lehey’s site, which does a nice job of explaining in a not-overly technical manner why BSD Is Good. (There’s also this reason, when comparing to Linux.)
Dragonflybsd.org is going to be a bit slow for the next week – the network link is being worked on.
The userland scheduling patch I referred to earlier is now in the system. This is a good reason to upgrade/rebuild, because of the positive effect of system response.
Einar Karttunen wrote a nice bit on “Maintaining local changes to the CVS tree”.
Matthew Dillon posted a patch for the scheduler that seems to improve DragonFly’s (already excellent) responsiveness. Normally, I don’t post about code until it’s in, but this can be helpful code for those willing to test it.
Previously, if you wanted to use x.org instead of XFree86, a package was your best bet. However, the FreeBSD port appears to be up to date, and may build correctly.
Scott Ullrich noted (via IRC) that there’s a DragonFly forum over at bsdnexus.com.
The software used for this page has been upgraded; there shouldn’t be any visible changes for now.
forknibbler.com is down; that’s where I host builds of material that is in doc CVS. It’ll be up as soon as I can get to the physical location.
Update: fixed.
What’s next for the installer team? They’re working on an upgrade path (a wiki, not much there yet) for the installer, from FreeBSD 4.x to DragonFly.
‘MACHINE’ pointed at a Wine mailing list discussion about problems getting WINE to compile on FreeBSD; he wondered if the necessary changes could be made in DragonFly to accomodate WINE.
When compiling Mozilla, FireFox, or Thunderbird, you should stick with gcc 2.95.