Out of a conversation on users@, Oliver Fromme gave a list of the ports used by NFS. Someday, you may be on the other side of a firewall wondering what those ports are…
‘walt’ gave some details on configuring X to use DMPS, so that your monitor turns off when your console is inactive for extended periods. Good for conservation, but not as fun as the alternative.
Will Backman wrote a journal of his experiences at the recent NYCBSDCon. (Thanks, Undeadly)
Matthew Dillon is planning major cleanup in the kernel files, in part because it’s been historically inconsistent, and in part to support virtual kernels. The part that will affect most people is a new location for the kernel config file, and ‘i386’ is now the more relevant ‘pc32’. (or maybe not. I’ll post when it’s defined.)
leaf.dragonflybsd.org, which hosts the mail archive and developer accounts, has a dead power supply. The drive has been moved to a slower backup machine, so it’s still reachable until the original is resurrected.
Seen several places: Jason Dixon’s humorous “BSD is dying” talk from NYCBSDCon06 is available with audio and slides online on Google Video and in other formats from his site.
An oft-touted benefit of the GNU Public License is that it forces organizations that use GPL code to republish their changes, so that improvements to open code can be shared. That sounds good, in principle.
According to Harald Welte, founder of the gpl-violations.org project, this clause in the GPL has never resulted in any useful code ever being returned to the community. (Thanks, HubertF)
The call is out for papers for the 2007 USENIX Tech conference. Submissions are due by January 9th, 2007.
This week on UnixReview.com: a writeup on Tile, a new GUI toolkit for Tcl, “Exploring the CCNP Certification“, and “Test Your Knowledge of CCNP Topics“
Sys Admin Magazine is looking for writers. They want it enough to send out an email mentioning the needed topics:
Security
Server Virtualization
Linux Administration
Training and Certification
Backup and Recovery
Clustering
Database Management
Networking
Information Security
Storage
Server Management
Performance Tuning
Scripting
Last call for feedback on a new site design for dragonflybsd.org! (My fault, too.)
Matthew Dillon posted some details on how the problems of traffic were solved at BEST Internet using commodity hardware, which led into a discussion of zero-copy and also why a separate cgi-bin is good for speed.
EuroBSDCon is happening very soon. The early bird discount is ending in a few days, so sign up quickly. Attendance is planned to be in the triple digits.
BSDCan 2007 has been moved back a week because of a scheduling conflict with the hosting organization, the University of Ottowa.
Sam Smith is looking for DragonFly developers who live in the UK and would be willing to present to the UKUUG Large Installation System Administration conference next spring.
