The Foundation recently sponsored Michael Dexter to attend MeetBSD, which was held in California in November. Michael provides the following trip report:
This year's MeetBSD California marked a departure from its UnConference roots in favor of a showcase of exciting new developments in the
community. Western Digital kindly hosted the event which made for a
pleasant, professional atmosphere and attendees traveled from as far as
Japan and Eastern Europe to attend.
Of the many talks, the Sony
confirmation that is a long-time BSD user was simply historic and just
may be the result of years of encouragement by AsiaBSDCon attendees.
It's not every day that you confirm the existence of millions of more
BSD users! Yes, "BSD" users at the request of the Sony legal department.
On the same theme, "600M+ Unsuspecting FreeBSD Users" by Rick Reed of
WhatsApp also shed light on the heavy lifting companies are doing with
FreeBSD and finally, Scott Long and Brendan Gregg of Netflix reminded us
how they are pushing 1/3rd of US Internet traffic each evening. Brendan
spoke about performance analysis strategies at both MeetBSD and the
Developer Summit that followed and I dare say is downright giddy about
the performance analysis options available on FreeBSD. In his second
talk he incorporated audience feedback on the spot and I for one am
delighted to see Sun Microsystems refugees like Brendan come to the BSD
community as they each bring a wealth of experience.
Kirk
McKusick's “A Narrative History of BSD” was a delight as always and
reminded us that there is absolutely nothing like BSD: professional and
open source from the start with a mission to bring sanity to government
computing. That mission sounds more like a contemporary meme than 1970's
and '80's funded government initiative! Kirk told us about Bill Joy's
prolific coding and how they navigated the pressure to incorporate the
BB&N network stack into BSD. Kirk also told us the story of how a
delay in grant funding accidentally got him into a lifetime of fast file
system development and how we almost had 48-bit IP addressing. Hearing
both Kirk and Brendan Gregg talk about the frivolity of most benchmarks
decades apart was eye opening!
Finally, David Maxwell's "Pipecut"
talk was a mind-blowing introduction to a pet project of his that
promises to change how we all use the Unix command line. Most of these
talks are online and can be found via meetbsd.com/agenda/.
As
with any BSD event, the hallway track was worth the price of admission
and I had the pleasure of meeting bhyve and FreeNAS developers that I
had only met online. Adrian Chadd tinkered with a Surface Pro system and
eventually got the keyboard working late one night and naturally had
the only working WiFi in the hotel lobby. Glen Barber and I continued
our "the good, the bad and the ugly" talk about distribution mirror
layouts based on his work as FreeBSD release engineer and my work
supporting various OSs on bhyve. Devin Teske provided scripting advice
as always and I cornered people about topics ranging from the status of
virtual networking and a ZFS panic.
Every BSD event has its own
character and MeetBSD is no different. The fact that it takes place in
Silicon Vally allows it to have a great mix of speakers and attendees
who might not make it to international events. Thank you iXsystems for
putting on yet another great MeetBSD!
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