ONLamp.com has a new article on sending email securely. In fact, it’s UUCP over SSH, an acronym combo I didn’t think I’d ever type. I think it’s been more than a decade since I’ve even seen a UUCP address.
Registration is open now.
Tom Hummel mentioned AMD Turion 64 laptops as a possible good fit for DragonFly, given their low power and cooling needs.
I have yet to encounter anyone who has bought one of the AMD 64-bit CPUs and been unhappy with the purchase.
Todd Willey announced on the GoBSD mailing list that a new set of pkgsrc prebuilt binaries have been placed on the gobsd.com site.
Matt Dillon mentioned that he hopes to have the next major release of DragonFly out, with journaling included in some form, before Usenix ’05 in mid-April. More info on this plus a stable tag slip are in his post.
In the ongoing discussion about journaling, Dan Melomedman linked to Paul Jarc’s “/fs“.
leaf.dragonflybsd.org is apparently down or unreachable, at least from where I’m standing.
Update: Working, now – thanks, Hiten!.
shiningsilence.com was down for a good chunk of yesterday; a construction worker tripped a fuse in my house, and my UPS only kept going for so long… It’s obviously better now.
Matthew Dillon gave a further update on the journaling work, plus he noted (as many had hoped) that there would be no background fsck in DragonFly.
Zera William Holladay was looking for tips on where to find BSD-oriented material for a OS design class; several people replied with references to the “Design and Implementation…” book, other books, and general experience.
While talking about how to implement “undo” for disk journaling, Matthew Dillon also included some data on the relative effect of his journaling work on disk speed so far. (Look at the end of the post.)
Thomas Petazzoni posted a request on the kernel@ list for contributions to the Libre Software Meeting in July, in France.
Sascha Wildner saw that ‘make quickworld’ seems to be broken.
The BSDCan 2005 schedule is released. (Thanks, BSDNews.)
Sam Smith’s excellent BSD news roundup, this one for February, has appeared on the ONLamp/BSD site.
Matthew Dillon is looking for someone with lots of time and know-how who can take on the userland side of his journaling work. Just read it, and you’ll see.
Matthew Dillon posted his C program for blocking repeated ssh scanners. Garance Drosihn pointed at a similar perl script, while Scott Ullrich modified Matthew Dillon’s script to use pf.
Also, Brian Reichert posted a link to the DROP list, while George Georgalis followed with a link to bogons along with a “sloppy bash script” that blocks by country code.
Matthew Dillon has checked in a large update to msfbufs, produced by him and by Hiten Pandya.
If you’re looking for a task to fill a rainy day, Joerg Sonnenberger suggested that moving over bits of smbfs from FreeBSD 5/6 would be good.
Matthew Dillon issued this warning to folks with accounts on leaf: Due to an increase in automated ssh scans, he’s implemented a security policy that may lock you out if you goof up your login. Mail him if that does happen.
I’ve seen these same ssh scans with some frequency for at least a few months; these scans appear to be looking for poorly configured machines. Not a huge threat, but enough to warrant a closer eye.