The short answer: if you have an Areca card (in this case, a model 1222) and multi-terabyte drives, they will work on DragonFly.
IPSEC hasn’t been maintained in basically forever in DragonFly, so it’s been removed. It was only still mentioned in the VKERNEL configs, so if you have a custom VKERNEL config file, remove any mention of IPSEC, IPSEC_ESP, or IPSEC_DEBUG. Otherwise, nothing to worry about.
Reduce, the “second oldest computer algebra system”, has been ported to DragonFly (and there’s work on other BSDs). The post about this has lots of links to more information; if you’re a Maple or Mathematica user, this will definitely interest you.
Accidental theme this week… video games, though not strongly.
- Eaten by a Grue, the Infocom podcast. There’s a lot to listen to here. (thanks, swildner)
- Urbigenous Library. There’s a lot to read here.
- Modern-Day BBSing on an Epson CP/M-based Laptop from 1984. (via)
- Jengo, a new point-and-click game.
- Dwarf Fortress dwarves to be given memories, dev shows no remorse.
- Home automation notes, not really BSD-related.
- The Game of Everything, Part 6: Civilization and Religion.
- “Why is the kernel community replacing iptables with BPF?” On Linux, where reinventing wheels in the system is a constant. (via)
- Pinebook: An Affordable 64-bit ARM based Open Source Notebook. Linked for the source link commentary, not for the selling page.
- Weekly Command: going over Git history with tig. (via)
- Zulip, an open source team chat. (i.e. Slack and Teams category) (via)
- What Video Games Have to Teach Us About Data Visualization. (via)
Opinion time: The Reddit / Hacker News forums have reached the anything/everything point where there’s no longer a focus. Lobste.rs is worth visiting, though, for BSD content and in general.
MAP_STACKStack Register Checking Committed to -current.- Nextcloud 13 on FreeBSD. (via)
- Run OpenBSD on your web server. (via)
- Introduction to HardenedBSD World. (via)
- MirBSD Korn Shell on Jehanne. (via)
- Distributed Object Storage with Minio on FreeBSD. (via)
- Open vSwitch Overview.
- How to do math on the Linux command line. Or BSD.
- IKEV2 EAP User name/Password client on *BSD.
- Taylor Campbell, new to netbsd-core.
- [on sale] Bioware, FTL, System Shock, and more. (OpenBSD Gaming, though it may extend to other BSDs.)
- BSD Magazine wants article feedback.
- OpenBSD router/firewall?
BSDNow 242 has no interview and the normal wide range of topics: TrueOS, F-Stack, jails, SmartOS, and most interesting to me, open source business model development with iXSystems.
I like code that travels through multiple BSDs.
There’s a plugin for pkg, called pkg-provides, which will tell you what package(s) contain the filename you provide – installed or not. I didn’t even know pkg had a plugin system. Anyway, it works on DragonFly, as the author notes.
No theme grew this week.
- Conserve the Sound, “vanishing and endangered sounds”. (via)
- Why does Twitter allow third-party clients? Another walled garden approach winding to its end stage.
- z, a tool for navigating by regex. Odd, but powerful. (via)
- Ikea-style instructions for programming algorithms. Not sure if this makes them clearer, or not. (via)
- Seashells, piping CLI output to the web in realtime. (via)
- Why does”=” mean assignment? (via)
- The Game of Everything, Part 5: Civilization and War.
- Why SQLite Does Not Use Git. (via)
- XScreenSaver 5.39 is out. New hacks!
- The NES homebrew scene.
Your unrelated comics link of the week: Belfry WebComics Index. Very 90s. (via I lost it, sorry)
Totally last-minute summary, but I’m hitting every BSD category.
- Godot running on OpenBSD, though I didn’t know what Godot was.
- Finding what you’re looking for on Linux. BSD too. I link it because I always forget arguments to find(1).
- OPNsense 18.1.6 released.
- New M-Series storage devices from iXSystems.
- How to write ATF tests for NetBSD. (via)
- FreeBSD Desktop – Part 2 – Install. (via)
- Using FreeBSD Text Dumps. (via)
- Transparent network audio with mpd & sndiod. (via)
- Michael W. Lucas’s Penguicon 2018 Schedule. Several BSD presentations.
- pkg vs. underlying OS upgrades.
- The BSDCan 2018 schedule is posted.
This week’s BSDNow interviews Kevin Bowling of Greenlight Networks, plus lots of filesystem conversation.
I haven’t been able to say this in a while, but: I like cross-pollination.
For anyone wanting to try out ipfw3, there’s now a rc script. Make sure to set up a rules file, or you’ll kill all incoming traffic.
DragonFly 5.2.0 has been released. Spectre/Meltdown mitigations are in there, along with improvements for HAMMER2, accelerated video, and ipfw. My users@ post has the details on upgrading, as does the release notes.
As the title says, you can register for BSDCan 2018 now.
(Not leaving this for the weekend BSD summary cause I need to remind myself to plan for travel if possible.)
Accidental theme this week: Social media is a dead end.
- ViperCard – An open source re-creation and re-imagination of HyperCard. I… could have sworn I already linked to this but I can’t find it. (via)
- gokrazy – Go userland. Every language eventually reinvents the wheel this way. (via)
- The Game of Everything, Part 4: Civilization and Geography. First 3 parts linked last week.
- It’s Time for a RSS Revival. (via)
- Growth At Any Cost. Facebook is designed to take your data and give it to others. It will never not do that. Don’t participate.
- Cracks in the Wall. Blogging is better than social media, but of course I would say that. (via)
- And here’s some more reinforcement of that idea. (via)
- A 1970s disk drive that wouldn’t seek: getting our Xerox Alto running again. I like the platter shots.
- An oral history of the L0pht. Part 1, with subsequent parts linked. (via)
- The definitive resource for imagemagick scripts. I have needed this many times. (via)
- AlterEgo: A Personalized Wearable Silent Speech Interface. Neat but creepy creepy creepy from the illustations. (via)
- dotdrop, dotfile management. (via)
- Prince of Persia from Apple ][ to BBC Master. (via)
Your unrelated food link for the week: King Arthur test kitchen disasters. Summarized annually on April Fools Day, every year.
Losing power at home this week put a dent in my reading throughput, so to speak, but this will do.
- DragonFFI: FFI/JIT for the C language using Clang/LLVM. Not actually related to DragonFly or really BSD, but I like the synchronicity. (via)
- Simplifying Linux with … fish? Or BSD.
- New BSDMag issue – with a feature on OpenBSD Gaming. (via)
- Tarsnap pricing change.
- BSDCan 2018 schedule is up. Some people from my employer are going; I may too.
- DIY Hardware firewall on OpenBSD.
- OpenBSD 6.3 Released.
- Untangle vs pfSense.
- Nextcloud 13 on FreeBSD. (via)
- 32+ great indie games now playable on -current; 7 currently on sale! Rogue Legacy is fun, though I’ve only played the Windows version, not on any BSD.
- TrueNAS 11.1 – What’s New.
This week’s BSDNow has an intriguing title, and the show covers a number of hardware and software changes – no interview.
Shutdowns are a bit faster in DragonFly, thanks to the addition of a QUICKHALT shortcut. How much faster? It depends on what devices you have mounted, I suspect. I haven’t yet updated and tried.
