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105: Virginia BSD Assembly
Published 10 years, 6 months ago
Description
It's already our two-year anniversary! This time on the show, we'll be chatting with Scott Courtney, vice president of infrastructure engineering at Verisign, about this year's vBSDCon. What's it have to offer in an already-crowded BSD conference space? We'll find out.
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Headlines
OpenBSD hypervisor coming soon
- Our buddy Mike Larkin never rests, and he posted some very tight-lipped console output on Twitter recently
- From what little he revealed at the time, it appeared to be a new hypervisor (that is, X86 hardware virtualization) running on OpenBSD -current, tentatively titled "vmm"
- Later on, he provided a much longer explanation on the mailing list, detailing a bit about what the overall plan for the code is
- Originally started around the time of the Australia hackathon, the work has since picked up more steam, and has gotten a funding boost from the OpenBSD foundation
- One thing to note: this isn't just a port of something like Xen or Bhyve; it's all-new code, and Mike explains why he chose to go that route
- He also answered some basic questions about the requirements, when it'll be available, what OSes it can run, what's left to do, how to get involved and so on ***
Why FreeBSD should not adopt launchd
- Last week we mentioned a talk Jordan Hubbard gave about integrating various parts of Mac OS X into FreeBSD
- One of the changes, perhaps the most controversial item on the list, was the adoption of launchd to replace the init system (replacing init systems seems to cause backlash, we've learned)
- In this article, the author talks about why he thinks this is a bad idea
- He doesn't oppose the integration into FreeBSD-derived projects, like FreeNAS and PC-BSD, only vanilla FreeBSD itself - this is also explained in more detail
- The post includes both high-level descriptions and low-level technical details, and provides an interesting outlook on the situation and possibilities
- Reddit had quite a bit to say about this one, some in agreement and some not ***
DragonFly graphics improvements
- The DragonFlyBSD guys are at it again, merging newer support and fixes into their i915 (Intel) graphics stack
- This latest update brings them in sync with Linux 3.17, and includes Haswell fixes, DisplayPort fixes, improvements for Broadwell and even Cherryview GPUs
- You should also see some power management improvements, longer battery life and various other bug fixes
- If you're running DragonFly, especially on a laptop, you'll want to get this stuff on your machine quick - big improvements all around ***


