31: Edgy BSD Users
This week we'll be talking to Richard Stallman about the upcoming GPLv4 and how it will protect our software from being stolen. After that, we'll show you how to recover from those pesky ZFS on Linux corruption issues, as well as some tips on how to explain to your boss that all the production boxes were compromised. Your questions and all the latest GNUs, on Linux Now - the place to Lin.. ux.
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Headlines
- The 2nd edition of The Design and Implementation of the FreeBSD Operating System is up for preorder
- We talked to GNN briefly about it, but he and Kirk have apparently finally finished the book
- "For many years, The Design and Implementation of the FreeBSD Operating System has been recognized as the most complete, up-to-date, and authoritative technical guide to FreeBSD's internal structure. Now, this definitive guide has been extensively updated to reflect all major FreeBSD improvements between Versions 5 and Versions 11"
- OpenBSD 5.5 preorders are also up, so you can buy a CD set now
- You can help support the project, and even get the -release of the OS before it's available publicly
- 5.5 is a huge release with lots of big changes, so now is the right time to purchase one of these - tell Austin we sent you!
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- This year's pkgsrcCon is in London, on June 21st and 22nd
- There's a Call For Papers out now, so you can submit your talks
- Anything related to pkgsrc is fine, it's pretty informal
- Does anyone in the audience know if the talks will be recorded? This con is relatively unknown
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- The monthly BSD magazine releases its newest issue
- Topics this time include: deploying NetBSD using AWS EC2, creating a multi-purpose file server with NetBSD, DragonflyBSD as a backup server, more GIMP lessons, network analysis with wireshark and a general security article
- The Linux article trend seems to continue... hmm
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- We've gotten a few questions about ECC RAM with ZFS
- Here we've got a surprising blog post about why someone did not go with ECC RAM for his NAS build
- The article mentions the benefits of ECC and admits it is a better choice in nearly all instances, but unfortunately it's not very widespread in consumer hardware motherboards and it's more expensive
- Regular RAM also has "special" issues with ZFS and pool corruption
- Long post, so check out the whole thing if you've been considering your memory options and weighing the benefits
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EdgeBSD (slides)
Tutorial
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Published on 11 years, 8 months ago