From owner-freebsd-announce Fri Sep 29 14:53:53 2000 Delivered-To: freebsd-announce@freebsd.org Received: from vnode.vmunix.com (vnode.vmunix.com [209.112.4.20]) by hub.freebsd.org (Postfix) with ESMTP id ED5F937B503 for ; Fri, 29 Sep 2000 14:53:40 -0700 (PDT) Received: by vnode.vmunix.com (Postfix, from userid 1005) id 5DD24E; Fri, 29 Sep 2000 17:53:34 -0400 (EDT) Received: from localhost (localhost [127.0.0.1]) by vnode.vmunix.com (Postfix) with ESMTP id 53A9449A13 for ; Fri, 29 Sep 2000 17:53:34 -0400 (EDT) Date: Fri, 29 Sep 2000 17:53:34 -0400 (EDT) From: Chris Coleman To: announce@freebsd.org Subject: BSD Real Quick Newsletter Message-ID: MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII Sender: owner-freebsd-announce@FreeBSD.ORG Precedence: bulk X-Loop: FreeBSD.org BSD Real Quick(TM) News Letter. Things Happening in BSD. Presented by Daemon News Hi Everyone, I have been writing Real Quick newsletters for over two years now. They actually pre-date Daemon News. They started out as the FreeBSD Real Quick Newsletter and recently I have been writing four different newsletters, one for each BSD. I have decided to take a different approach to the newsletter. Its going to become more regular, unified, and more personalized. I'll try to take the best of each week and summarize it here. As always feedback is welcome. Chris Coleman Daemon News O'Reilly Networks -- Open Source Editor http://www.daemonnews.org http://www.oreillynet.com/ --- A Sexier BSD: Mac OS X(XX) September 28, 2000 In these last couple of weeks the online community has been buzzing about one thing, and it's not the Olympics. Sure, most of Australia's bandwidth is now taken up by International tourists checking their email on Sydney's Internet terminals, and the rest is taken up with the frenzied attempts of would-be-Olympic ticket holders trying to convince IBM's Olympics e-commerce site that they are more worthy of getting tickets than anyone else, but that's not all. It's bigger than the Olympics, it has more colours, more devoted fans and more people wearing shirts advertisingit. It's a new and improved UNIX BSD Distribution, and it's poised to take the world by storm. MORE: http://daily.daemonnews.org/view_story.php3?story_id=1223 --- BSD System takes on Linux September 27, 2000 The buzz in operating systems today seems to center on Linux. But there's another OS generating a lot of interest - BSD. Both Linux and BSD are growing faster as server systems on the Internet than their competitors, including Microsoft's Windows NT and Windows 2000 combined, according to Nancy Stewart, senior analyst at Survey.com, an Internet market research firm that surveys information technology executives on their purchasing plans. In addition, Linux and FreeBSD, an open-source version of the BSD OS, are expected to grow 177 percent as Web server systems by the end of 2001, Stewart says, compared with a loss of 7 percent for Windows NT/2000 and a loss of 11.2 percent for proprietary Unix, such as Hewlett-Packard's HP-UX and Sun Microsystems' Solaris. MORE: http://daily.daemonnews.org/view_story.php3?story_id=1215 --- FreeBSD 4.1.1 includes RSA September 26, 2000 Finally the announcement for FreeBSD 4.1.1 is out. Changes are the inclusion of the RSA libraries and other security things that were made possible because of RSA. MORE: http://daily.daemonnews.org/view_story.php3?story_id=1213 --- Open Packages Mailing Lists September 26, 2000 The OpenPackages.org project now has public mailing lists that people can join. Archives of the op-tech mailing list are also available on line. MORE: http://daily.daemonnews.org/view_story.php3?story_id=1210 LINK: --- Delphi poll September 25, 2000 There is a poll about to which platforms Delphi should be ported after Linux. For those not familiar with Delphi, it is a rapid application development tool (RAD). Thought by many, including myself, to be one of the best development tools around. The Linux port is expected in the coming months. MORE: http://daily.daemonnews.org/view_story.php3?story_id=1208 --- --- From the BSD Support Forum: --- --- Is there a way to increase the difficulty of TCP Sequence Prediction? September 27, 2000 I scanned a newly made OpenBSD firewall running ipf, ipnat and all current patches using nmap. The result were good except that the TCP Sequence Prediction was only at (worthy challenge) this was a big blow to me as I anticipated the OpenBSD box would be much better than a local SuSE linux server that got a better (Good Luck) rating. Myself and another sysadmin have a friendly rivalry going on with the bsd vs linux debate. This last scan did not help my cause much. Any ideas on what I could do to increase the prediction difficulty? Thanks in advance. MORE: http://daily.daemonnews.org/view_story.php3?story_id=1222 --- Plea for help September 27, 2000 Here's my problem - FreeBSD4.0 runs out of memory and crashes. Currently, I have one box with FreeBSD, P-2/450 w/256MB RAM. It crashed Monday morning and was rebooted, a couple hours later it crashed again. It's been up for 1+17:50 now according to top. Free was 135 MB, I tar -cvzf'ed the customer directories to a backup, now top is showing 23M Active, 186M Inactive, 33M Wired, 7156K Cache 17M Buf, 1324K Free. Something is drastically wrong here. The boot message says to look on the errata page for problems/fixes, but this isn't mentioned at all. Any clues/fixes as to why it doesn't free up the inactive RAM? MORE: http://daily.daemonnews.org/view_story.php3?story_id=1217 This is the moderated mailing list freebsd-announce. The list contains announcements of new FreeBSD capabilities, important events and project milestones. See also the FreeBSD Web pages at http://www.freebsd.org To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-announce" in the body of the message