OpenBSD 3.2 Available
fredrikv writes "Right on time, the files defining OpenBSD 3.2 have moved away from "snapshots" to the 3.2 directory of the OpenBSD mirrors. It is well known as the world's most secure operating system and now sports chroot'd Apache, fewer suid binaries, cool pictures for xdm-logins, a brilliant "antispoof" packet filtering rule and as usual includes lots of small updates and fixes. The files are there. What are you waiting for?"
why els fp?
..legal official ISO images ;-)
Naah, just kidding. Everyone ought to order & buy her/his official OpenBSD CDs to support our favourite OS!
of Deeeezzzzz Nutz
BSD == Dead ??
I've always been a fan of FreeBSD. How does OpenBSD compare?
Anonymous Cowards suck.
(written by Lee Barnett and Kim Morrissey)
... as in "High"
1. GRAMS "HAIL TO THE CHIEF"
2. CLINTON : Well, boys, what's the situation with Hi-ate-ee?
3. ADVISOR 1 (WOMAN): Excuse me, Mr. President. I think that's pronounced "High-ti
4. ADVISOR 2 (WOMAN): Actually, Mr. President, I think you'll find it's pronounced "Hate-ti" as in "hate"
5. CLINTON: Gosh darn, I don't give a damn how you pronounce it, what's happening to our men?
6. ADVISOR 1: Well, it's not looking good. Two hundred of our men are being held off by sixteen hundred armed troops.
7. CLINTON: So, you think we should use nucular weapons?
8. ADVISOR 1: Excuse me, Mr. President. I think you mean "nuclear"
9. CLINTON Do I?
(Page 2)
1. ADVISOR 2: No, no, of course not.
2. ADVISOR 1: Certainly not.
3. ADVISOR 2: After all, after Somalia, Nicaragua and the Gulf, the last thing we need is to spoil our image as the world's peacemaker.
4. GRAMS "HAIL TO THE CHIEF"
ENDS
Common Criteria certification so it can be just as secure as my Windows 2000 boxen!
Zech Harvey, MCSE, MCDBA, CCNA
Cause slashdot is slower than old people fscking.
I like the security and stuff, but can I get gnome(2) for it?
1. What advantage does pf have over netfilter? Any links to performance comparisons between the two?
2. Are the fsn.hu isos kosher?
Dagnabbit, I can't get an ftp install to complete, I keep getting kicked.
Oh and....frost pist!
5:30pm, 8 pints of lager, one dodgy kebab and a chance to yet again make a piss poor attempt to chat the attractive barmaid up.
Well you did ask!
Avantslash - View Slashdot cleanly on your mobile phone.
and I think I'm going to be waiting a long time.
What are you waiting for?
Ummm... a Linux port?
Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
That BSD is dying.
Both of the guys using it are considering a switch to OS X
Does anyone read squid? And can OpenBSD really protect you if you engage in such unsafe behavior?
I HATE-ti you.
The the files are there.
I guess the Slashdot outage over the past 10 minutes or so was due to the installation of Apache mod_stutter.
Department of Physics and Atmospheric Science, Dalhousie University, Halifax, N.S., Canada, B3H 3J5
openbsd is superior
openbsd is being a pain in the
openbsd is installed
openbsd is superior by ben goren background
openbsd is freely available from our ftp sites
openbsd is all free
openbsd is also an extremely capable operating system
openbsd is not secure anymore
openbsd is for monkeys
openbsd is being a pain in the neck
openbsd is a serious project
openbsd is shipping does not support hdlc or isdnd
openbsd is indeed not "a server os" or "a hacker os"
openbsd is a really nice os
openbsd is audited for that most frequent of security problems
openbsd is the perfect tool in other situations
openbsd is even driving my hp laserjet 5l and deskjet 882c printers for my windows clients
openbsd is more secure than most versions of linux
openbsd is one os that's likely to be voted "most secure
openbsd is extremely robust and is capable of anything that commercial competitors such as checkpoint are
openbsd is now booting multiuser and generally useable on 64 bit sparc systems
openbsd is just awesome
openbsd is put together that the linux community needs to take note of
openbsd is often noted for its code auditing and integrated crypto
openbsd is for december
openbsd is stable and runs on several different types of computers
openbsd is security
openbsd is a fairly complete system of its own
openbsd is thought of by many security professionals to be the most secure unix
openbsd is the most secure server operating system now available
openbsd is preparing a libssl based on the patented rsaref code
openbsd is one
openbsd is complete packaging for the average joe shmoe user
openbsd is following netbsd's source tree > that it has all of the nbsd 1
openbsd is my operating system of choice
openbsd is pretty much straight forward
openbsd is also available separately
openbsd is used for dns
openbsd is one of the few systems that ships with perl preinstalled
openbsd is hailed by security buffs as uncrackable; it's been over three years
openbsd is the first unix
openbsd is free
openbsd is an open
openbsd is great
openbsd is the secure os specialist
openbsd is the closest thing to a set
openbsd is unsupported under virtual pc
openbsd is freely available from
openbsd is widely hailed as being the most secure os available
openbsd is a group that has done it right
openbsd is released on a sixth month development cycle
openbsd is still relatively new
openbsd is our favourite operating system
openbsd is a free
openbsd is used to provide various network services in the department of genome sciences
openbsd is much better then linux
openbsd is highly regarded as a great firewall
openbsd is one of the industry's most secure operating systems
openbsd is nothing for pure office work
openbsd is regarded as one of the most secure operating systems on the market today
openbsd is an open source multi
openbsd is developed and released from canada and due to canadian law it is legal to export crypto to the world
openbsd is only able to boot from hfs
openbsd is supposed to be indestructable
openbsd is to give the boot loader
openbsd is a free version of unix that runs on intel/cyrix/amd pentium
openbsd is unfriendly
openbsd is now available from openbsd
openbsd is a free unix
openbsd is very difficult
openbsd is the operating system for your site
openbsd is a robust and competent open source operating system project besides freebsd
openbsd is not covered by this faq
openbsd is my
openbsd is based on netbsd so it inherits most of it's advantages
openbsd is een open source operating system en gebaseerd op de bsd kernel
openbsd is comparatively minimalist
openbsd is indeed very minimalistic but it is a bit on the slow side for a couple reasons
openbsd is one choise but their linux version didn't work on my laptop
openbsd is a vulnerable operating system because it runs on a computer which can be physically accessed by an intruder
kthx
Its the 1st of november now, you can stop posting stories about dead operating systems and their ghosts! Wait until next year
I thought the most secure OS was Windows 95. With NIC support like that nobody should be able to connect to your computer. On a more serious note, is OpenBSD recommended as an internet server over all of the other distros?
Is it infested with decimal?
Do anyone who will see this run a freenet node?
If so, please visit SSK@tyG6z6Evys7R9i1LKfA4IgppVx0PAgM/WTS/3//
I even have an feedback form there that you could use to let me know that it works.
thanks
Someone to provide a direct link to the xdm backgrounds so I can use them on my Linux systems.
Actually, I didn't wait and started trawling through their FTP archive looking for them before deciding that was a) selfish and b) stupid. At least I had enough sense not to download XFree hoping they were in there and not in a separate artwork package...
What I'm listening to now on Pandora...
Does anyone know if they have the threading issues resolved with the kernel scheduler yet?
Tha last time I worked on any BSD code they were still having some low level race conditions occuring where the kernel scheduler would actually hit two proccesses at the same time which made it look like the program had some mutex corruption when it was actually a problem with the kernel and the semaphores they use to map memory for threads.
Granted if you're only using it as a workstation you'll never see it happen as it only happened under load but I found my clients were forced to move to a commercial Unix (I still recommend Sun) as they were the only products on the market able to handle enterprise type server loads with non-trivial applications. (okay, wer're talking n-tier Olog(n) cluster nodes which is very demanding but still...)
Warmest regards,
--Jack
Wagner LLC Consulting Co. - Getting it right the first time
The funeral.
Ch-ch-ch-changes!
I just read the sad news on the netcraft website, reviled adulterer and gansta rapper Stephan "M.C." Hawking was found dead in the arms of Stephen King at King's Maine estate early this morning. You may not have gotten "A Brief History of Rhyme" or "The Stand", but no one can deny their impact on modern Western culture. Truly white male establishment icons, they will be missed.
No sight of the BSD troll yet?
You know, that looser that always posts his BSD are dying crap..
"The the files are there. What are you waiting for?" I'm waiting for Paris in the the spring.
It is well known as the world's most secure operating system
Whoa, partner. Sure OpenBSD is designed with security in mind, and as far as the BSDs go (which are generally pretty secure in their own right), it's probably the tightest. But it's quite a leap to say that OpenBSD is the most secure operating system in the entire world.
I don't know which OS would get that "award". But I'd have to believe that it'd be something obscure like a tiny, embedded, OS the NSA uses in their crypto equipment or some such.
Wow, OpenBSD 3.2. For a while there I wasn't sure they'd ever get another release out (heh, and I'm not one of those "BSD is dying!" trolls, either!). It's always been one of my favorite BSD distros, and I'd never have switched to Linux if OpenBSD had had an SB Live! driver back in the day. The name "OpenBSD" was synonymous with "rock hard security."
It was sad to see the record for "no remote holes" disappear earlier this year. Even sadder when the holes in OpenSSH and -SSL were found. It seemed like the OpenBSD developers had maybe started to get lazy, or were too busy rushing to support the latest gee-whiz hardware and flashy features to keep an eye on security. And for most unix admins out there, flashy features aren't worth much if you don't have security.
I guess it's good to see that Theo isn't giving up. But I'm wondering if this release is going to be just another stepping stone on OpenBSD's recent path to shame, or if they are turning it around in an attempt to regain the glory of, say, 2.7. What do people think, is OpenBSD rising from the ashes or gasping its last breath?
Karma: Good (despite my invention of the Karma: sig)
It is well known as the world's most secure operating system
:-)
That is true.. if you do a default installation and make absolutely no change to any of the services that come installed with it.. that's why it was secure for 4 something years.. but they didn't mention that if you had an old BIND version at the time it would still be "secure"
"The ones who dont do anything are always the ones who try to pull you down" -- Henry Rollins
>[OpenBSD is] the world's most secure operating system
Hear that sound? It's the VMS users (all 8 of them, currently, unless Fred's VAX killed his mains power again and he switched to OSX) choking on their lunches in laughter.
I've got an old laptop on which I'd like to try to install OpenBSD. I poked around the FAQ and Installation Guide, but could not find any mention of hardware requirements for running the installer (especially RAM requirements). Does anyone know or could someone provide a link? Thanks.
It is well known as the world's most secure operating system
Let's rephrase that as, "It is well known as the world's most secure UNIX operating system." Otherwise it's not true.
Higher Logics: where programming meets science.
You're still an assclown.
Ever consider taking a shit and posting the results on censorware.org?
Good to see, there are several facets of it that I absolutely love.
Now only if they could speed up the network and disk I/O to the levels of FreeBSD. Oh, and SMP would be great, too, but according to the OpenBSD developers, that's not a hot project of theirs.
So until then, I still keep a watchful eye, and a PC in the closet where it belongs with the latest version installed as a toy to play around with.
> What are you waiting for?
SMP Support.
The 3.2 song is available via ftp from:
ftp://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/
ftp://ftp.usa.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/
(other mirrors have not caught up yet)
The lyrics are available from:
http://www.openbsd.org/lyrics.html#32
I wouldn't want to be the one to have to clean that mirror...
According to this article the most secure OS were SCO Unix, Mac OS and Tru 64.
UPS Sucks
Some new kind of super-secure compression?
ftp://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song32.ogg (please use a mirror)
This time it's a Bond-movie theme, which matches the new logo.
-jfedor
The biggest trojan horse I've ever seen.
Support the OpenBSD developers by getting a
3.2 CD $40 or for Europe EUR 45
The new new 3.2 poster is very nice too, get it for
$10 US or EUR 14 in Europe The European size is 70x100 cm
Part of the difference with OpenBSD is that it runs on way more platforms than FreeBSD does. It's not as many as NetBSD (its parent) but it's a lot closer to NetBSD than FreeBSD.
my old sig used to be funny, but then slashcode ate it and now it's not funny anymore
I've been wanting to install OpenBSD on my laptop but it seems like its the only OS that can't have its boot loader above 8Gig on the HD. This is a major shortcoming as far as I am concerned.
I'm just glad I was able to pull a copy off the usa mirror before the announcement made it to slashdot. :o}
-Mark
What I am waiting for? Just 3 things:
1) SMP support
2) SMP support
3) SMP support
Util that is in, its viurtually usless for me.
Does anybody have a link to the description and uses of the improvements made to pf?
The complete 3.2 errata has numerous mentions of improvements, including antispoof and better handling of inappropriate/nonsensical statements. A more thorough explanation is what I'm hoping to find.
Thanks!
sedawkgrep
Is that a salami in my pants or am I just happy to be me?
6 Months,
.1 to the release number.
Every 6 months there is an OpenBSD release.
Every time they add
It is a simple as that.
I have never tried openbsd, but would like to give it a shot before purchasing it.
are there any guides for absolute newbies on how to download and create an iso? I already have a working linux platform to do this from, if that helps.
Not really. I just posted this because when there's
a BSD article there's a BSD is dying post so I put this
here so there will be one. Think of it as scratching
your fingernails on the chalkboard because its worse
waiting for the screech instead of the actual screetching.
BSD is great, but it's just not going to make inroads into the server market without SMP. It's fine for us amateurs with racks at home and 384k upload at best, but for business that really need to crank it up, OpenBSD falls short.
What's great about Open over Free (and most Linux distros) is simply that one can go from zero to installed, up and running in no time flat. The need to secure the OS is minimal (though as another said, why portmap and why inetd?), which also greatly reduces time to production. And no worries about all of those "extra" packages that one doesn't want installed that get installed whether you like it or not, and then having to find a way to yank them out.
That said, yes, I pre-ordered my CDs.
Jud.
Did anyone else read this:
and think: Ah well, I must be reading too much AtAT.Anyone know if one exists? Please send URL!
... couldn't make it through the 'Lameness filter'.
Please go to http://deadly.org where they did make it through.
Todd Fries
Warning: OpenBSD camp follower talking!
/etc/nat.conf file! Time for a round of upgrades.
It has been over two years (since 2.7, actually) since OpenBSD sucked me in with its simplicity, security and *good* documentation.
In that time I have never started Xwindows on an OpenBSD machine. There is no need.
OpenBSD has been a solid firewall, router, bridge, MX, DNS server, NIS, NFS, Web, SSH/SCP/SFTP machine with nary a GUI to be seen.
With 3.2 they have finally done superb work with locking down services. This is even extended to services that are not on by default, such as apache. They have also gotten right of that annoying
[ed. note: in the following text, former FreeBSD developer Mike Smith gives his reasons for abandoning FreeBSD]
When I stood for election to the FreeBSD core team nearly two years ago, many of you will recall that it was after a long series of debates during which I maintained that too much organisation, too many rules and too much formality would be a bad thing for the project.
Today, as I read the latest discussions on the future of the FreeBSD project, I see the same problem; a few new faces and many of the old going over the same tired arguments and suggesting variations on the same worthless schemes. Frankly I'm sick of it.
FreeBSD used to be fun. It used to be about doing things the right way. It used to be something that you could sink your teeth into when the mundane chores of programming for a living got you down. It was something cool and exciting; a way to spend your spare time on an endeavour you loved that was at the same time wholesome and worthwhile.
It's not anymore. It's about bylaws and committees and reports and milestones, telling others what to do and doing what you're told. It's about who can rant the longest or shout the loudest or mislead the most people into a bloc in order to legitimise doing what they think is best. Individuals notwithstanding, the project as a whole has lost track of where it's going, and has instead become obsessed with process and mechanics.
So I'm leaving core. I don't want to feel like I should be "doing something" about a project that has lost interest in having something done for it. I don't have the energy to fight what has clearly become a losing battle; I have a life to live and a job to keep, and I won't achieve any of the goals I personally consider worthwhile if I remain obligated to care for the project.
Discussion
I'm sure that I've offended some people already; I'm sure that by the time I'm done here, I'll have offended more. If you feel a need to play to the crowd in your replies rather than make a sincere effort to address the problems I'm discussing here, please do us the courtesy of playing your politics openly.
From a technical perspective, the project faces a set of challenges that significantly outstrips our ability to deliver. Some of the resources that we need to address these challenges are tied up in the fruitless metadiscussions that have raged since we made the mistake of electing officers. Others have left in disgust, or been driven out by the culture of abuse and distraction that has grown up since then. More may well remain available to recruitment, but while the project is busy infighting our chances for successful outreach are sorely diminished.
There's no simple solution to this. For the project to move forward, one or the other of the warring philosophies must win out; either the project returns to its laid-back roots and gets on with the work, or it transforms into a super-organised engineering project and executes a brilliant plan to deliver what, ultimately, we all know we want.
Whatever path is chosen, whatever balance is struck, the choosing and the striking are the important parts. The current indecision and endless conflict are incompatible with any sort of progress.
Trying to dissect the above is far beyond the scope of any parting shot, no matter how distended. All I can really ask of you all is to let go of the minutiae for a moment and take a look at the big picture. What is the ultimate goal here? How can we get there with as little overhead as possible? How would you like to be treated by your fellow travellers?
Shouts
To the Slashdot "BSD is dying" crowd - big deal. Death is part of the cycle; take a look at your soft, pallid bodies and consider that right this very moment, parts of you are dying. See? It's not so bad.
To the bulk of the FreeBSD committerbase and the developer community at large - keep your eyes on the real goals. It's when you get distracted by the politickers that they sideline you. The tireless work that you perform keeping the system clean and building is what provides the platform for the obsessives and the prima donnas to have their moments in the sun. In the end, we need you all; in order to go forwards we must first avoid going backwards.
To the paranoid conspiracy theorists - yes, I work for Apple too. No, my resignation wasn't on Steve's direct orders, or in any way related to work I'm doing, may do, may not do, or indeed what was in the tea I had at lunchtime today. It's about real problems that the project faces, real problems that the project has brought upon itself. You can't escape them by inventing excuses about outside influence, the problem stems from within.
To the politically obsessed - give it a break, if you can. No, the project isn't a lemonade stand anymore, but it's not a world-spanning corporate juggernaut either and some of the more grandiose visions going around are in need of a solid dose of reality. Keep it simple, stupid.
To the grandstanders, the prima donnas, and anyone that thinks that they can hold the project to ransom for their own agenda - give it a break, if you can. When the current core were elected, we took a conscious stand against vigorous sanctions, and some of you have exploited that. A new core is going to have to decide whether to repeat this mistake or get tough. I hope they learn from our errors.
Future
I started work on FreeBSD because it was fun. If I'm going to continue, it has to be fun again. There are things I still feel obligated to do, and with any luck I'll find the time to meet those obligations.
However I don't feel an obligation to get involved in the political mess the project is in right now. I tried, I burnt out. I don't feel that my efforts were worthwhile. So I won't be standing for election, I won't be shouting from the sidelines, and I probably won't vote in the next round of ballots.
You could say I'm packing up my toys. I'm not going home just yet, but I'm not going to play unless you can work out how to make the project somewhere fun to be again.
= Mike
--
People always get annoyed with this, however we would like .iso's of OpenBSD. I believe the philosophy is flawed in that .iso's are not made available so people have to purchase the cd's which helpds fund the project. However this limits the distribution of OpenBSD. If anyone could download an .iso, become familiar with OpenBSD, the userbase would be larger and therefore more people would purchase the official CD's.
What do others think?
I'm waiting for a browser that installs without library fiddling, and supports the common plug-ins.
Isn't that like rp_filter on Linux?
it still suchs
I've installed OpenBSD about 10 times now, and I've always been amazed that they've kept the just terrible disk partitioning and labeling scheme for the install. Does the new release have any new features in that area? If not, please just steal some code from FreeBSD or somewhere! Then I won't have to use a calculator to do an install :) :)
Theo de Ass says he audits code. If OpenSSL isn't part of the base system (see FreeBSD) then he can't produce a useable audited system. In the tradition of the OpenBSD project suddenly hating something and re-writing it from scratch so long as it's not difficult to implement or most of the work isn't already done. And you spelled separate incorrectly. So, OpenSSL is required for SSH (largely stolen from Tatu Ylonen, he a prick, but he wrote it) and OpenSSL isn't part of the fucking base system? This is a joke. OpenBSD is crap now, and if you cant see that - are now a zealot, its official, FACT: OpenBSD zealots want to excuse Theo de Ass from any and all responsibility.
OpenSSH hole. I'll tell you why this happened. Some fool thinks its impossible to write secure code and instead of trying to write secure code he gets obsessed with chrooting and priv-sep-ing everything. In doing so, they ignored obvious errors. Notice that the priv-sepped version didn't have the "hole." I think this was Theo de Ass secretly punishing those who didn't listen to him about priv-sep. Priv-sep and chrooting is mental masturbation most of the time, bad programmed with little or no real liability for that their product does. A classic sign of poor open source programming.
OpenBSD hardware support is inferior and hardware drivers are hacked and primitive, often taken from other project (see: FreeBSD). I would imagine the amount of time spent by the OpenBSD project pirating innovation from Net and FreeBSD outweighs the total time they do something original. Also, its single CPU and it has no RX polling. Sorry, not a useful networking OS, not secure by default. And barring security, have you ever loaded that thing up? It falls apart like a Zeppelin on fire. If, in your own Chingrish words a la AYBABTU, "Security is still the critical issues," then they need to better audit OpenSSL so it doesn't offer root holes to other people. Human being are generally assholic, Theo is an Ass, in fact aptly named, The de Ass
Open BSD runs on crap hardware inferiorly. Microsoft could easily teach the OpenBSD developers a thing or two, and they royally suck. OpenBSD risks nothing, pushes any and all important thing into ports which is inferior to FreeBSD's ports, and washes their hands of responsibility. Microsoft provides, networking, iis, sql, exchange, directory services. Not that they are "secure" in any way or useable - but here is a whack with the cluebat - they support it, they also support multiple cpu, and they also support more hardware then OpenBSD could ever hope. Theo doesn't fool anyone intelligent by sitting in the corner saying secure by default, (disclaimer - the default OS doesn't so anything useful.)
3.0. SSH - better used anywhere but OpenBSD. pf. Rewritten by stealing ideas and code. SMP - too difficult for amateurs to implement. Hardware Support. OpenBSD users are losers so they cant afford real hardware.
OpenBSD I a classic case study on an academic piece of shit written outside of the framework of a company whose charter it is to make something useful enough to make money off of it. I don't see OpenBSD getting security contracts either.
Everyone falls asleep when a kiddy starts touting OpenBSD. Now I'm going to work, you go get back to Quake on your Winderz box.
Look. OpenBSD is a SERVER operating system. 99.99999% of the people using OpenBSD use OpenBSD as a SERVER and yet we still get idiots whining about completely useless crap like this monk3yboyCRAP. Clever?? I don't think so.
I'm thinking of installing this as a server / firewall / IPMasq router. Anyone know where I can get a "HOWTO" or something similar like the IPMasq howto for Linux?
1.44 floppy net-based installs, which is what i usually use and i've been using openbsd since 2.5
just because there are no "Official" iso's does not mean that they are not available from "Unofficial" sources just look around but you really should support hte project if you can
(the t-shirts/posters/stickers are all cool and the later can only be found w/ the official cdrom distribution)
my personal server (which is used primarily for NAT and personal ftp) has been running OpenBSD for years and it's certainly hte most elegant and simply designed UNIX based system that I've ever used and is far more intuitive and secure than Linux (which i have also dealt with since '95 and presently have a debian desktop machine running under my desk so no flames please) by default.. anyway my $.02
here is a link to the floppy internet based install instructions: http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq4.html#Media
I hate it when I get all testy. I get modded down.
-- clvrmnky
Just sign up for the openbsd-misc mailing list and fire away! The friendly folks there are all conversant with Linux terminology, so just ask for IPMasq and they'll know what you're talking about. HTML email is preferred, so it looks better in the archives, and if you can do a diagram in flash you'll get bonus points.
Who runs a dodgy OpenBSD ISO server?
Well, it would be great if the OS wasn't doomed to die a horrible death, alone, one the side of some backwoods road in Montana..
God rest OpenBSD's soul.
cool pictures for xdm-logins
I'm afraid all the "BSD is dying" posts are true. If that's one of the offerings worth mentioning, I think I'll stick with Linux or FreeBSD for my Unix fix.
A quote from the OpenBSD website:
"One remote hole in the default install, in nearly 6 years!"
Does anyone here actually use the OS in it's default state? My home server runs MySQL, Apache, NFS, SAMBA, and a few other services.. What good would the default install be to someone like me?
I can see how this would be attractive to people who are new to Unix and don't know how to set up a machine, but then again the installer will keep newbies from using it.
NICE USE OF CAPS, FAG.
And these caps serve as a testament to your fucking idiotic penchant for stating the obvious. Asshole.
Fag.
He means you don't use it to do tons of things on one server.
Usually because you can't run it on large hardware (lack of SMP support).
Oh, you CAN, of course, it's a solid bsd... but you smack into scaling problems on any kind of volume.
As a firewall and a router, it is NOT as functional as Linux, and there are things it simply will not do that linux will.
I received my CDs today in the mail. I haven't removed the shrink-wrap yet but I bet it's going to be good again.
Congratulations OpenBSD team.
without OpenSSL, doesnt it?
You stupid fuck.
Why dont they just go and rewrite OpenSSL so they could audit that- oh, wait, rewriting OpenSSL would probably be difficult like implementing SMP. Theo and the Rat Pack cant fucking do anything comlicated.
Nice use of anonymous coward fucknut.
If it was so obvious I guess the parent poster was just too fucking stupid to understand it the first time.
Well, keep laughing... Ever heard of chroot, privlidge seperation, and systrace?
OpenBSD is what you make of it... If you set everything SUID it's certainly not going to be very secure, but you can secure an OpenBSD system extremely well if you want to do so.
Stick that in your VMS pipe and smoke it!
Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
OpenBSD is a SERVER operating system. 99.99999% of the people using OpenBSD use OpenBSD as a SERVER
Rubbish.
The OpenBSD ports tree, while not as brimming with goodies as FreeBSDs, has loads of software for use on the desktop.
My desktop *NIX boxes at home and work are both OpenBSD with lots of decent software installed via ports. I hardly think that developers would bother making a port of only
Trolling is a art,
maybe it was sarcasm, you dumb cunt.
and Theo and the Fuuck Paack dont audit shit.
I NEVER SEE THEM SUBMIT ANY DIFFS ANYWHERE SO THIS AUDIT THING IS A FARCE.
oh, yeah,
FUCK YOU
That said, how can I trust that my copy of the "world's most secure operating system" hasn't been tampered with? OpenBSD does not sign their files with PGP, GnuPG, or OpenSSL (yes, the latter has been suggested on lists). OpenSSH does. Why can't OpenBSD?
The ports tree, the kernel source, and the rest of the base source (ports.tar.gz, srcsys.tar.gz, and src.tar.gz) don't even have published MD5 hashes (but the archetecture-specific binaries do). The source matters, because (aside from using potentially unstable snapshots binaries) you need the source to apply security patches as security issues are discovered.
For an OS with such a focus on cryptography "because we can", I don't see it being used where it counts. (I've written to the misc list, and only received one response. I've filed a bug report and have received none.)
Given the great amount of people who seem too like the features and function of OpenBSD but are miffed by the 'rude' responses by the OpenBSD crowd in general and the OpenBSD dev team in specific I've decided to start a new *BSD code branch "NiceBSD".
The project goals for NiceBSD is skip all the coding and writing stuff and concentrate on being nice and polite to the users.
All code and documentation will be ripped from OpenBSD and updated every week.
Users asking question that can be answered by reading FAQs or man pages will get the correct quote in a nice and polite way.
Users asking questions not covered by FAQs and man pages will be informed that we don't have a clue, in a nice and polite manner.
Users asking for new features will informed that we will consider it for the next release.
I haven't decided upon which cute mascot to use for NiceBSD but I think that a Donkey or a Jackass would be perfect.
Executive Pope (small) Kallisti Engineering
Their product is excellent.
Does anyone know if these now will run on OpenBSD?
I've used OpenBSD 3.1, and they certainly wouldn't run there.