42: Devious Methods
Coming up this week, we'll be showing you how to chain SSH connections, as well as some cool tricks you can do with it. Going along with that theme, we also have an interview with Bryce Chidester about running a BSD-based shell provider. News, emails and cowsay turkeys, on BSD Now - the place to B.. SD.
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Headlines
- A status update for Shawn Webb's ASLR and PIE work for FreeBSD
- One major part of the code, position-independent executable support, has finally been merged into the -CURRENT tree
- "FreeBSD has supported loading PIEs for a while now, but the applications in base weren't compiled as PIEs. Given that ASLR is useless without PIE, getting base compiled with PIE support is a mandatory first step in proper ASLR support"
- If you're running -CURRENT, just add "WITH_PIE=1" to your /etc/src.conf and /etc/make.conf
- The next step is working on the ASLR coding style and getting more developers to look through it
- Shawn will also be at EuroBSDCon (in September) giving an updated version of his BSDCan talk about ASLR
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- Couple of pfSense news items this week, including some hardware news
- Someone's gotta test the pfSense hardware devices before they're sold, which involves powering them all on at least once
- To make that process faster, they're building a controllable power board (and include some cool pics)
- There will be more info on that device a bit later on
- On Friday, June 27th, there will be another video session (for paying customers only...) about virtualized firewalls
- pfSense University, a new paid training course, was also announced
- A single two-day class costs $2000, ouch
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- A new blog post from Matt Ahrens about ZFS stripe width
- "The popularity of OpenZFS has spawned a great community of users, sysadmins, architects and developers, contributing a wealth of advice, tips and tricks, and rules of thumb on how to configure ZFS. In general, this is a great aspect of the ZFS community, but I’d like to take the opportunity to address one piece of misinformed advice"
- Matt goes through different situations where you would set up your zpool differently, each with their own advantages and disadvantages
- He covers best performance on random IOPS, best reliability, and best space efficiency use cases
- It includes a lot of detail on each one, including graphs, and addresses some misconceptions about different RAID-Z levels' overhead factor
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