Episode Details
Back to Episodes
65: 8,000,000 Mogofoo-ops
Published 11 years, 4 months ago
Description
Coming up on the show this week, we've got an interview with Brendan Gregg of Netflix. He's got a lot to say about performance tuning and benchmarks, and even some pretty funny stories about how people have done them incorrectly. As always, this week's news and answers to your emails, on BSD Now - the place to B.. SD.
This episode was brought to you by
Headlines
Even more BSD presentation videos
- More videos from this year's MeetBSD and OpenZFS devsummit were uploaded since last week
- Robert Ryan, At the Heart of the Digital Economy
- FreeNAS & ZFS, The Indestructible Duo - Except for the Hard Drives
- Richard Yao, libzfs_core and ioctl stabilization
- OpenZFS, Company lightning talks
- OpenZFS, Hackathon Presentation and Awards
- Pavel Zakharov, Fast File Cloning
- Rick Reed, Half a billion unsuspecting FreeBSD users
- Alex Reece & Matt Ahrens, Device Removal
- Chris Side, Channel Programs
- David Maxwell, The Unix command pipeline
- Be sure to check out the giant list of videos from last week's episode if you haven't seen them already ***
NetBSD on a Cobalt Qube 2
- The Cobalt Qube was a very expensive networking appliance around 2000
- In 2014, you can apparently get one of these MIPS-based machines for about forty bucks
- This blog post details getting NetBSD installed and set up on the rare relic of our networking past
- If you're an old-time fan of RISC or MIPS CPUs, this'll be a treat for you
- Lots of great pictures of the hardware too ***
OpenBSD vs. AFL
- In their never-ending security audit, some OpenBSD developers have been hitting various parts of the tree with a fuzzer
- If you're not familiar, fuzzing is a semi-automated way to test programs for crashes and potential security problems
- The program being subjected to torture gets all sorts of random and invalid input, in the hopes of uncovering overflows and other bugs
- American Fuzzy Lop, in particular, has provided some interesting results across various open source projects recently
- So far, it's fixed some NULL pointer dereferences in OpenSSH, various crashes in tcpdump and
Listen Now
Love PodBriefly?
If you like Podbriefly.com, please consider donating to support the ongoing development.
Support Us
