48: Liberating SSL
Coming up in this week's episode, we'll be talking with one of OpenBSD's newest developers - Brent Cook - about the portable version of LibreSSL and how it's developed. We've also got some information about the FreeBSD port of LibreSSL you might not know. The latest news and your emails, on BSD Now - the place to B.. SD.
This episode was brought to you by


Headlines
- FreeBSD has gotten quite a lot done this quarter
- Changes in the way release branches are supported - major releases will get at least five years over their lifespan
- A new automounter is in the works, hoping to replace amd (which has some issues)
- The CAM target layer and RPC stack have gotten some major optimization and speed boosts
- Work on ZFSGuru continues, with a large status report specifically for that
- The report also mentioned some new committers, both source and ports
- It also covers GNATS being replaced with Bugzilla, the new core team, 9.3-RELEASE, GSoC updates, UEFI booting and lots of other things that we've already mentioned on the show
- "Foundation-sponsored work resulted in 226 commits to FreeBSD over the April to June period"
***
- Work has begun on a new HTTP daemon in the OpenBSD base system
- A lot of people are asking "why?" since OpenBSD includes a chrooted nginx already - will it be removed? Will they co-exist?
- Initial responses seem to indicate that nginx is getting bloated, and is a bit overkill for just serving content (this isn't trying to be a full-featured replacement)
- It's partially based on the relayd codebase and also comes from the author of relayd, Reyk Floeter
- This has the added benefit of the usual, easy-to-understand syntax and privilege separation
- There's a very brief man page online already
- It supports vhosts and can serve static files, but is still in very active development - there will probably be even more new features by the time this airs
- Will it be named OpenHTTPD? Or perhaps... LibreHTTPD? (I hope not)
***