Created by three guys who love BSD, we cover the latest news and have an extensive series of tutorials, as well as interviews with various people from all areas of the BSD community. It also serves as a platform for support and questions. We love and advocate FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD, DragonFlyBSD and TrueOS. Our show aims to be helpful and informative for new users that want to learn about them, but still be entertaining for the people who are already pros. The show airs on Wednesdays at 2:00PM (US Eastern time) and the edited version is usually up the following day.

92: BSD After Midnight

June 03, 2015 1:07:14 48.41 MB Downloads: 0

Coming up this week, we'll be chatting with Lucas Holt, founder of MidnightBSD. It's a slightly lesser-known fork of FreeBSD, with a focus on easy desktop use. We'll find out what's different about it and why it was created. Answers to your emails and all this week's news, on BSD Now - the place to B.. SD.

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Headlines

Zocker, it's like docker on FreeBSD

  • Containment is always a hot topic, and docker has gotten a lot of hype in Linux land in the last couple years - they're working on native FreeBSD support at the moment
  • This blog post is about a docker-like script, mainly for ease-of-use, that uses only jails and ZFS in the base system
  • In total, it's 1,500 lines of shell script
  • The post goes through the process of using the tool, showing off all the subcommands and explaining the configuration
  • In contrast to something like ezjail, Zocker utilizes the jail.conf system in the 10.x branch ***

Patrol Read in OpenBSD

  • OpenBSD has recently imported some new code to support the Patrol Read function of some RAID controllers
  • In a nutshell, Patrol Read is a function that lets you check the health of your drives in the background, similar to a zpool "scrub" operation
  • The goal is to protect file integrity by detecting drive failures before they can damage your data
  • It detects bad blocks and prevents silent data corruption, while marking any bad sectors it finds ***

HAMMER 2 improvements

  • DragonFly BSD has been working on the second generation HAMMER FS
  • It now uses LZ4 compression by default, which we've been big fans of in ZFS
  • They've also switched to a faster CRC algorithm, further improving HAMMER's performance, especially when using iSCSI ***

FreeBSD foundation May update

  • The FreeBSD foundation has published another update newsletter, detailing some of the things they've been up to lately
  • In it, you'll find some development status updates: notably more ARM64 work and the addition of 64 bit Linux emulation
  • Some improvements were also made to FreeBSD's release building process for non-X86 architectures
  • There's also an AsiaBSDCon recap that covers some of the presentations and the dev events
  • They also have an accompanying blog post where Glen Barber talks about more sysadmin and clusteradm work at NYI ***

Interview - Lucas Holt - questions@midnightbsd.org / @midnightbsd

MidnightBSD


News Roundup

The launchd on train is never coming

  • Replacement of init systems has been quite controversial in the last few years
  • Fortunately, the BSDs have avoided most of that conflict thus far, but there have been a few efforts made to port launchd from OS X
  • This blog post details the author's opinion on why he thinks we're never going to have launchd in any of the BSDs
  • Email us your thoughts on the matter ***

Native SSH comes to… Windows

  • In what may be the first (and last) mention of Microsoft on BSD Now...
  • They've just recently announced that PowerShell will get native SSH support in the near future
  • It's not based on the commercial SSH either, it's the same one from OpenBSD that we already use everywhere
  • Up until now, interacting between BSD and Windows has required something like PuTTY, WinSCP, FileZilla or Cygwin - most of which are based on really outdated versions
  • The announcement also promises that they'll be working with the OpenSSH community, so we'll see how many Microsoft-submitted patches make it upstream (or how many donations they make) ***

Moving to FreeBSD

  • This blog post describes a long-time Linux user's first BSD switching experience
  • The author first talks about his Linux journey, eventually coming to love the more customization-friendly systems, but the journey ended with systemd
  • After doing a bit of research, he gave FreeBSD a try and ended up liking it - the rest of the post mostly covers why that is
  • He also plans to write about his experience with other BSDs, and is writing some tutorials too - we'll check in with him again later on ***

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