Joerg Sonnenberger has a whole lot of prebuilt packages for DragonFly 1.3.x available. It’s showing up on mirrors, too. Going by a rough line count, it appears to have about 60 more packages (2%) than gobsd.com/pkgsrc.
The FreeBSD logo contest has a winner – more info can be found on the FreeBSD site. I can’t stop thinking “Kirby“.
Jeremy C. Reed posted to users@ a note explaining that the BSD Certification Group has published its Usage Survey Report (k PDF).
Some interesting things in the survey results – there were over 100 respondents using DragonFly in their work area, which is much more than I expected. Some of the “smaller” BSDs linked are interesting, too, as I had never heard of things like “Frenzy“, “S-Core“, or “MOS“. Also, there are a number of good anecdotes that were written in as responses in the survey.
The BSD Certification website seems to have had a nice makeover, too.
Having trouble running Emacs? Don’t run itTry Tim Legant’s easy fix.
DragonFly’s been under heavy development for some time, with large under-the-hood changes going on. However, thing seem to be proceeding at a stable pace.
Michael Lucas’s ongoing miniseries on network statistic collecting (neater than it sounds) has another installment up at OnLAMP.com‘s Big Scary Daemons.
Seen on hubertf’s blog: the Google Summer of Code official results page. There’s a metric buttload of BSD projects in there.
gobsd.com has the source code for various major BSDs at gobsd.com/code. It’s apparent;y been there for a while, but only recently reactivated.
UnixReview.com seems to have recovered from last week’s Linuxgasm and has several good articles up: a book review of “php|architect’s Guide to PHP Security“, “Regular Expressions: Getting Started with SCons” (a make
replacement), and the Perl-oriented “Common Network Protocols“.
Adrian Nida has put together a new version of Andrew Atren’s atheros wireless driver; it’s worked for him on DragonFly 1.3.6, so far. I don’t know why this isn’t included in the DragonFly system yet.
If you’re running Preview or Development versions of DragonFly (1.3.x), David Rhodus has uploaded a new pkgsrc binary set, with over 3,200 packages built for DragonFly.
drhodus’s blog on GoBSD.com now describes a problem with the “lost+found
” directory created during a fsck
.
Peter Schuller has a nice writeup (and addendum) explaining the capabilities of pkgmanager, an new utility for handling pkgsrc installation.
OpenOffice, which has been around for 5 years now, just released version 2.0. Wow, the web site is pretty.
OnLamp.com has an interview up now of some OpenBSD developers, talking about the about-to-be-released OpenBSD version 3.8.
drhodus’s blog on GoBSD.com mentions a strange panic found on DragonFly and FreeBSD systems that has so far been unsolvable.
For those of you using PF, there’s a tutorial by Peter Hansteen (OpenBSD-centric, but still applies) that was recently updated. (thanks, BSDForums)
UnixReview.com has a review of a game for learning music, called GNU Solfege. The rest of the articles for the week are all Linuxy.
Adrian Nida’s recent installation troubles have spawned a longer thread that talks about the various issues – a good read about fdisk issues and why source isn’t included with the install CD.