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DevSummits, Core and the Baldwin | BSD Now 125

This week on the show, we will be talking to FreeBSD developer & former core-team member John Baldwin about a variety of topics, including everything you wanted or needed to know about running a DevSummit. Coming up right now on BSDNow, the place to B…SD.

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– Show Notes: –

Headlines

FreeBSD server retired after almost 19 years

“In its day, it was a reasonable machine – 200MHz Pentium, 32MB RAM, 4GB SCSI-2 drive,” Ross writes. “And up until recently, it was doing its job fine.” Of late, however the “hard drive finally started throwing errors, it was time to retire it before it gave up the ghost!” The drive’s a Seagate, for those of you looking to avoid drives that can’t deliver more than 19 years of error-free operations.

“It was heavily firewalled and only very specific services were visible to anyone, and most only visible to our directly connected customers,” Ross told Vulture South. “By the time it was probably due for a review, things had moved so far that all the original code was so tightly bound to the operating system itself, that later versions of the OS would have (and ultimately, did) require substantial rework. While it was running and not showing any signs of stress, it was simply expedient to leave sleeping dogs lie.”


Roundup of all the BSDs

“This might sound cumbersome, but is actually pretty straightforward and at the end produces a finely tuned aerodynamic system that does exactly what you want it to do and nothing else.”


OpenBSD Laptops


Significant changes from NetBSD 7.0 to 8.0


Interview – John Baldwin – jhb@freebsd.org / @BSDHokie

FreeBSD Kernel Debugging


News Roundup

Dragonfly Mail Agent spreads to FreeBSD and NetBSD


ZFS UEFI Support has landed!


How three BSD OSes compare to ten Linux Distros


OPNSense 15.7.24 Released


Beastie Bits

A FreeBSD 10 Desktop How-to (A bit old, but still one of the most complete walkthroughs of a desktop FreeBSD setup from scratch)

BSD and Scale 14

Xen support enabled in OpenBSD -current


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