OpenBSD 3.9 Released
An anonymous reader writes "OpenBSD 3.9 was released this morning and is now available for download from the OpenBSD mirror sites. Among the new features is integrated framework for monitoring hardware sensors, a BSD licensed driver for nvidia nforce ethernet, and loads of new drivers and bug fixes. Of course you can still purchase the CD-ROM set which includes support for five platforms: i386, amd64, macppc, sparc, sparc64, and also includes the complete blob free source tree and prebuilt packages for many architectures. As always your contributions help to continue the devlopment of this great opeating system."
BSD confirms it. Netcraft is dead.
It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
As always your contributions help to continue the devlopment of this great opeating system."
That sentence about should read:
As always your contributions help to continue the devlopment of all opeating systems.
Apple's security relies on openSSH, Microsoft service's for Unix are openBSD tools, there's traces of it all over linux. In short openBSD has made everyone's lives better - you should contribute to openBSD if you're a computer user of any sort!
Thanks Theo - for releasing your work under a BSD license, you've allowed us all to benefit from it.
There are shills on slashdot. Apparently, I'm one of them.
which includes support for five platforms: i386, amd64, macppc, sparc, sparc64
at least you'll be able to do something with your old mac when Apple is done switching and pulls the plug on ppc support for good...
"A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
Actually the CDs have been shipped for those that preordered, I got mine a couple fo weeks ago. The best thing, it just installs like a dream. I tried setting it up inside a VMware Workstation, took all of about 5 minutes from the CD.
I also made my first donation to OpenBSD for a long time, to keep it going, since I use OpenSSH every day, infact my job depends on it.
Installed on an AMD64X2-3800. zoom Had to compile -current for something but I'm in the minority.
Order the CDs and make a donation today, you cheap bastards!
Trolling is a art,
Before the weight of the collective slashdot effect kills the main BSD servers, check out the bit torrents that are located here: http://openbsd.somedomain.net/
-- Don't make me replace you with a small shell script.
> If the theological debates could be set aside
THEOlogical debates. in an open bsd story. hahahahaha. geddit?
oh ok. sorry.
OpenBSD has excelent Sparc support, and I for one am very happy about it, Sparcs make excelent firewalls and servers for small environments, mine currently has a quad fast ethernet card in the back thus meaning I dont need an extra hub in the server cupboard (just the four rooms it connects to) and combined with OpenBSD's excelent packet filter and rock solid security (which is even stronger on sparc since it can take advantage of quirks of the archetecture to defend against some attacks better) it makes an ideal server for me, runs nicely and doesn't even push the sparc that hard.
Joke or otherwise, Sparcs are awesome machines (for some roles), and OpenBSD is an awesome system.
Not to disagree ith you but I'm a longtime Ubuntu user (since Jan 2005) and I'd like to ask: what, among the things you've listed, couldn't have been done without Linux?
:-)
Go to the Ubuntu packages pages & search for openbsd Two pages of results! And that's barely scrathing the surface.
Furthermore, as someone else in this thread mentions, openBSD audits their code more thoroughly prior to inclusion in their system. Many packages used in Ubuntu (apache, x.org, etc etc etc) have bug fixes contributed back from the openBSD port.
You're thinking I'm saying that openBSD can do something linux can't - I'm not really, its more like openBSD is the cranky old uncle of the free-unix family, telling all the youngsters to lock their doors & not walk around at night
There are shills on slashdot. Apparently, I'm one of them.
This article, covering the release of 3.9 includes some discussion of the ways in which users of other operating systems benefit from the continued health of the OpenBSD project, including the views of one of the OpenBSD devs.
I am TheRaven on Soylent News
After two weeks of attempting to get the various crappy beta-quality drivers to work on linux, I switched to OpenBSD to find that it supported my wireless card perfectly. (I have a PPC machine, so ndiswrapper was not an option.)
Installing was also easy. If you have a little patience and are not afraid of a text-only install, starting OpenBSD was very easy.
I like this operating system. The man files are comprehensive and well written, and even a person with limited technical experience (me) was able to get everything working fairly quickly.
I could maintain a lot of stuff in 10GB, but given the sensitive nature of most OpenBSD installations (such as firewalls, etc.), GCC is not among the things I want to have around.
According to the FAQ, three file sets are required for installation:
Although that gets you a complete running system, it doesn't leave you with one that can self-host source updates. Given that I run exactly one OpenBSD machine at the office, I don't want to have a separate build server sitting around just to keep it updated. So, even though I have the hardware to support the process, and the technical skills to do so, it's still a major pain in the neck.
Oh, and to those saying I should just install snapshots, the FAQ says:
Elsewhere on the site are other discouraging words:For our major architectures, we tend to build mini releases of unknown stability and quality about every month or so. This is where we place those test releases.
Ain't no way I'm going to tell my boss that my security update process involves "mini releases of unknown stability and quality". That is why I'd like to see "baseXX-r1.tgz" at ftp.openbsd.bsd (and it's mirrors) that holds nothing but the 3 or 4 binaries I'd need to upgrade on a stock system to bring it up to date. I'm not stupid or broke - just very time-challenged. I'd be happy to pay for a subscription to such a service were one available.
Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?