NetBSD Status Report January - March 2005
jschauma writes "The NetBSD Foundation published its first quarterly
status report in 2005, covering the months January through March of 2005.
Among many other things, this status report covers the addition of TCP/SACK
and PAM support, the opening of the Foundations Online Store, the new stable
pkgsrc branch and various port-specific items."
It wasn't adopted because PAM is a steaming pile, and the people on the NetBSD mailing lists have been arguing ceaselessly about the only benefit that PAM has over other, technologically superior schemes: support for closed-source binary authentication modules.
Part of the reason for the push for PAM adoption has been the recent commercial slant of the decisions of NetBSD core. I wouldn't call it "selling out" per se, but I would say that it is no longer just about the code.
It's unfortunate. It's reluctance to incorporate things like PAM, or use Linux-like exploding version numbering, was the primary reason I was such a pro-NetBSD supporter. Now that those attractions are gone and the NetBSD foundation seems to want to play catch-up with Linux, I might as well just go with FreeBSD, or a version of Linux.
I believe the reason for the recent commercial slant is simple: I think the commercial customers of Wasabi Systems are pushing them to build an OS which is as close to Linux as possible but is not encumbered by the GPL. The commercial advantages of that are obvious, but disheartening.
NetBSD's old niche of extreme portability and purity is now overshadowed by these commercial interests. Too bad.