More and more BSDCan videos keep showing up. (See the bottoms of individual speaker pages on the BSDCan site.) Here’s the PC-BSD summary.
- A pfSense SG-2440 review at Maximum PC.
- pfSense 2.2.3 is out.
- Puppet and OpenBSD.
- I love cross-pollination.
- There’s a new BSD user group in Vancouver, Canada. “VanBUG”.
- TrueOS/PC-BSD/FreeNAS keep showing as building from the same source tree. That makes sense.
- Ingo Schwarze’s slides (PDF) from his recent CDBUG/NYCBUG presentations. (via)
- NetBSD 7.0_RC1 is out.
- Commit jokes are the best jokes.
- FreeBSD on Azure.
- DiscoverBSD for 2015/06/22.
- BSDCan 2015 trip reports one and two.
- PC-BSD Documentation can now be Translated Using Pootle.
- out with the old, in with the less. Notable link to “Cascade of Attention-Deficit Teenagers“.
FYI, the link in Ted’s article to the cascade is broken, and so is yours.
I found you a good link here: http://www.jwz.org/doc/cadt.html
I could have sworn it worked when I clicked on it… Maybe it was a change in the location separately from that. Oh well.
http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc&m=143496487415023&w=2
With regard to the gentleman talking about puppet server. While he may have meant puppet master, which is technically the exact same ruby scripts just with different options set in the configuration file, there is also a puppet server project recently spun up by puppetlabs to replace that portion of the code, and it’s a rewrite of the rack app portion of the code into clojure. The jvm itself might run on openbsd, but you would have to do all the packaging of everything related to that project on your own. Puppetlabs officially does not support any BSD, unfortunately, although with some coercion you can make it work on most of them. I’m not in the OpenBSD mailing list though.