It's hard to believe that 2014 is just around the corner! We've raised around $660,000 so far as of 7PM Colorado Time December 30. We also have $75,000 in pledges that we should be receiving soon! We only have around 24 hours left to reach our goal of raising $1,000,000. Here is my plea to ask for your help. Please consider making a donation. It is so easy to do. Just click here to make a donation online or to find out where to mail a check. If you file US taxes, most likely your donation will be tax-deductible. If you send a check, please mail it tomorrow (December 31). For the donation to count towards 2013, the envelope has to be postmarked by December 31. Writing 2013 donation on your check doesn't work for our accounting.
This year has been amazing. Because of our successful fundraising campaign last year, we were able to support the FreeBSD Project and community in so many ways. You can read my appeal here to see where we spent the money this year.
There are three areas where we've grown the most. One is our FreeBSD development work. We now have two staff members working on FreeBSD projects, a full-time employee working on FreeBSD System Administration and Release Engineering work, and we have a Project Manager who is not only overseeing all of our funded projects, but also working on project roadmaps and helping facilitating collaboration between our corporate users and FreeBSD developers. This is helping to bring in more corporate sponsors too.
We've also increased our FreeBSD advocacy by producing professional FreeBSD marketing brochures, white papers, literature, and our new FreeBSD Journal that will be debuting in a few weeks!
Lastly, we've spent over $100,000 on hardware to improve the FreeBSD infrastructure. This equipment resides in our four co-location facilities at NYI, Sentex, Yahoo!, and ISC.
Our End-of-Year newsletter highlights everything we supported this last year. Take a few minutes to read up on why we need your donations and how we spend the money.
Thank you for your support!
Deb Goodkin
Secretary/Treasurer
The FreeBSD Foundation
P.S. Making a donation is quick and easy! Click here to make a donation now.
Monday, December 30, 2013
Last Day to Make 2013 Donation to The FreeBSD Foundation
Faces of FreeBSD - Isabell Long
FACES OF FREEBSD
Isabell's Story
Thursday, December 26, 2013
FreeBSD 10.0-RC3 Now Available
The third RC build of the 10.0-RELEASE release cycle is now available on the FTP servers for the amd64, i386, ia64, powerpc, powerpc64 and sparc64 architectures.
The image checksums follow at the end of this email.
ISO images and, for architectures that support it, the memory stick images are available here.
Important note to freebsd-update(8) users: Please be sure to follow the instructions in the following FreeBSD Errata Notices before upgrading the system to 10.0-RC3:
Pre-installed virtual machine images for 10.0-RC3 are also available for amd64 and i386 architectures.
Changes between -RC2 and -RC3 include:
- Several minor bugfixes and functionality enhancements to bhyve.
- Add new sysctl, kern.supported_archs, containing the list of FreeBSD MACHINE_ARCH values whose binaries this kernel can run.
- Add a pkg(8) repository configuration file for cdrom-based package installation.
- Implement a fix to allow bsdconfig(8) to be able to install packages included on the DVD.
- Fix pkg(8) multi-repository support by properly respecting 'enabled' flag.
- Fix Xen build without INET.
- Several bugfixes to bsdinstall(8).
- Fix a ZFS-related panic triggered by an incorrect assertion.
- Fix mountroot> prompt eating most of the characters by not enabling RXRDY interrupts in the attach routine.
- Fix a regression in ng_ksocket(4).
- Apply patch from upstream Heimdal for encoding fix.
Love FreeBSD? Support this and future releases with a donation to the FreeBSD Foundation!
Monday, December 23, 2013
Faces of FreeBSD - Kevin Martin
FACES OF FREEBSD
Kevin's Story
Tuesday, December 17, 2013
FreeBSD Foundation Announces Capsicum Integration Project Completion
The FreeBSD Foundation is pleased to announce the successful completion of work on the improvement and integration of the Capsicum framework and the Casper services daemon. The Google Open Source Programs Office and the FreeBSD Foundation jointly sponsored Paweł Jakub Dawidek for this project.
Capsicum is a lightweight OS capability and sandbox framework developed at the University of Cambridge Computer Laboratory. Capsicum extends the POSIX API, providing several new OS primitives to support object-capability security on UNIX-like operating systems. Capsicum is now a standard part of FreeBSD, and ports to other operating systems are in progress.
The Casper daemon provides an easy to use programming interface for services which are otherwise difficult or impossible to access in a capability sandbox, including DNS resolution, access to the password and system groups database, entropy, and sysctl system configuration nodes.
"Libcapsicum and the Casper daemon make it easier for application developers to take advantage of capability sandboxing -- a critical step in allowing not just web browsers, but also security-ciritical desktop applications such as mail readers and office suites, to mitigate security vulnerabilities," said Robert N. M. Watson, the FreeBSD Foundation board member and University of Cambridge lecturer who led the Google-funded Capsicum research project.
The new libnv library developed as part of this project simplifies inter-process communication, a critical aspect of the Capsicum sandboxing model. Redesigned capability rights allow for finer-grained control of individual capabilities by eliminating the previous limit on the number of different kinds of file-descriptor operations controlled by capabilities.
Capsicum API enhancements appear in FreeBSD 10.0 along with sandboxing of a number of base-system components; Casper will be available from FreeBSD 10.1 on, and will be used by a number of base system components including tcpdump and kdump.
Monday, December 16, 2013
FreeBSD 10.0-RC2 Now Available
The second RC build of the 10.0-RELEASE release cycle is now available on the FTP servers for the amd64, i386, ia64, powerpc, powerpc64 and sparc64 architectures.
See the release announcement email for image checksums.
Pre-installed virtual machine images for 10.0-RC2 are also available for amd64 and i386 architectures.
Changes between -RC1 and -RC2 include:
- Fix a crash when attempting to use a non-disk device as an iSCSI LUN.
- Fix handling of empty iSCSI authentication groups.
- Fix a regression in bsdinstall(8) that prevented the system from decrypting GELI providers when installing ZFS on GELI.
- Several Radeon KMS bug fixes.
- Several wireless bug fixes.
- Several clang bug fixes.
The freebsd-update(8) utility supports binary upgrades of amd64 and i386 systems running earlier FreeBSD releases. Systems running earlier FreeBSD releases can upgrade as follows:
# freebsd-update upgrade -r 10.0-RC2
During this process, freebsd-update(8) may ask the user to help by merging some configuration files or by confirming that the automatically performed merging was done correctly.
# freebsd-update install
The system must be rebooted with the newly installed kernel before continuing.
# shutdown -r now
After rebooting, freebsd-update needs to be run again to install the new userland components:
# freebsd-update install
It is recommended to rebuild and install all applications if possible, especially if upgrading from an earlier FreeBSD release, for example, FreeBSD 9.x. Alternatively, the user can install misc/compat9x and other compatibility libraries, afterwards the system must be rebooted into the new userland:
# shutdown -r now
Finally, after rebooting, freebsd-update needs to be run again to remove stale files:
# freebsd-update install
Love FreeBSD? Support this and future releases with a donation to the FreeBSD Foundation!
Faces of FreeBSD - Shteryana Shopova
FACES OF FREEBSD
Shteryana's Story
Monday, December 9, 2013
FreeBSD 10.0-RC1 Now Available
The first RC build of the FreeBSD 10.0-RELEASE cycle is now available.
Please refer to the announcement email for the image checksums.
Please see the change list for an important note regarding the bsdinstall(8) ZFS on GELI option.
ISO images and, for architectures that support it, the memory stick images are available here.
If you notice problems you can report them through the normal GNATS PR system or here on the -current or -stable mailing lists.
Important note to freebsd-update(8) users: Please be sure to follow the instructions in the following FreeBSD Errata Notices before upgrading the system to 10.0-RC1:
Changes between -BETA4 and -RC1 include:
- Fix to a regression in bsdinstall(8) that prevents ZFS on GELI installation from working correctly.
- Please note: a last-minute problem was found in 10.0-RC1 testing with this installation option that is still being investigated. Please do not select the GELI encryption option from the installer. Although the installation successfully completes, the GELI passphrase will not decrypt the GELI provider.
- Build Hyper-V kernel modules by default for i386.
- Update oce(4) driver to support 40Gbps devices.
- Improve robustness of the Xen balloon driver.
- Fix accounting for hw.realmem on the i386 and amd64 platforms.
- Fix poweroff(8) on XenServer.
- Fix powerd/states on AMD cpus.
- Add support for BCM57764, BCM57767, BCM57782, BCM57786 and BCM57787.
- Fix PKG_ABI detection in bsdconfig(8) after pkg-1.2.
- Fix emulated jail_v0 byte order.
- Fix hang on reboot with active iSCSI connections.
- Fix a potential system crash if a jail(8) is created and destroyed on systems with VIMAGE.