Adrian Nida happened to mention that his employer is looking to hire, down in South Carolina, USA. It’s not DragonFly work, but mostly Redhat.
Matthew Dillon is planning for a release on Monday, so that he can squash two remaining bugs. Simon ‘corecode’ Schubert has already started a bulk build of pkgsrc so that 1.10 binaries will be available.
This release will come with a pre-built virtual kernel, too.
If you wanted to tackle something difficult, Simon ‘corecode’ Schubert has suggestions around multiprocessor development and also what is essentially a devfs. (Follow the threads for more information.)
1.10 has been branched in CVS, with release coming soon. From the followup post, while the development branch will be 1.11, the next release will be 2.0, so this is the end of 1.x.
Is it that time already? The Call for Papers for the USENIX 2008 Technical Conference is online, with the papers due by January 7th, 2008, for the June 2008 event.
Because of some bugs that were just fixed, Matthew Dillon is waiting one more week before releasing 1.10.
An article on undeadly.org lists what Echothrust Solutions has done to move to OpenBSD for their client and server needs. What I find interesting is the list of all the applications they use to solve various problems, including some nontraditional (for open source) things like project management and CRM.
Noah Yan is working on porting DragonFly to AMD64, with some notes on the wiki. He and Simon ‘corecode’ Schubert have set up a Git repo of the DragonFly code for this.
Newest on BSDTalk: Fast IPSec, with George Neville-Neil.
As part of a larger discussion of large size memory pages, called ‘superpages’, Oliver Fromme linked to a 2002 OSDI article that talks about implementation.
DragonFly just turned 4 years old!
Wiger Van Houten made even more original wallpapers.
There’s two new BSDTalk podcasts since last I checked: one on IPv6 testing (15 minutes), and one interviewing Isaac “Ike” Levy (26 minutes).
There’s a post by the ZDNet Technical Director, George Ou, talking about the recently found issues with the Core 2 Duo processor. Rather, he’s talking about people’s opinions about it.
I’m not linking it because it necessarily has more information, as it’s already been covered here, but rather to show the difference in speed and depth that can be found between what more annoying people like to call old media (print magazines) and new media (this Digest).
Leonardo Baldelli posted a link to a number of DragonFly desktop backgrounds he created.
Noah Yan has volunteered himself for porting DragonFly to AMD64; Simon ‘corecode’ Schubert, who has worked previously on this, suggested using git for handling changes, what with the next release coming soon. Simon even gave a short writeup on git.
Joerg Sonnenberger asks: could someone fix the Java 1.4 (or later) JDK so that it builds on DragonFly? Many would thank you.