290: Timestamped Notes

BSD Now - Podcast autorstwa JT Pennington - Czwartki

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FreeBSD on Cavium ThunderX, looking at NetBSD as an OpenBSD user, taking time-stamped notes in vim, OpenBSD 6.5 has been tagged, FreeBSD and NetBSD in GSoC 2019, SecBSD: an UNIX-like OS for Hackers, and more. ##Headlines ###ARM’d and dangerous: FreeBSD on Cavium ThunderX (aarch64) While I don’t remember for how many years I’ve had an interest in CPU architectures that could be an alternative to AMD64, I know pretty well when I started proposing to test 64-bit ARM at work. It was shortly after the disaster named Spectre / Meltdown that I first dug out server-class ARM hardware and asked whether we should get one such server and run some tests with it. While the answer wasn’t a clear “no” it also wasn’t exactly “yes”. I tried again a few times over the course of 2018 and each time I presented some more points why I thought it might be a good thing to test this. But still I wasn’t able to get a positive answer. Finally in January 2019 year I got a definitive answer – and it was “yes, go ahead”! The fact that Amazon had just presented their Graviton ARM Processor may have helped the decision. ###Looking at NetBSD from an OpenBSD user perspective I use to use NetBSD quite a lot. From 2.0 to 6.99. But for some reasons, I stopped using it about 2012, in favor of OpenBSD. Reading on the new 8 release, I wanted to see if all the things I didn’t like on NetBSD were gone. Here is a personal Pros / Cons list. No Troll, hopefully. Just trying to be objective. What I liked (pros) Things I didn’t like (cons) Conclusion So that was it. I didn’t spend more than 30 minutes of it. But I didn’t want to spend more time on it. I did stop using NetBSD because of the need to compile each and every packages ; it was in the early days of pkgin. I also didn’t like the way system maintenance was to be done. OpenBSD’s 6-months release seemed far more easy to manage. I still think NetBSD is a great OS. But I believe you have to spent more time on it than you would have to do with OpenBSD. That said, I’ll keep using my Puffy OS. ##News Roundup ###Using Vim to take time-stamped notes I frequently find myself needing to take time-stamped notes. Specifically, I’ll be in a call, meeting, or interview and need to take notes that show how long it’s been since the meeting started. My first thought was that there’s be a plugin to add time stamps, but a quick search didn’t turn anything up. However, I little digging did turn up the fact that vim has the built-in ability to tell time. This means that writing a bit of vimscript to insert a time stamp is pretty easy. After a bit of fiddling, I came up with something that serves my needs, and I decided it might be useful enough to others to be worth sharing. John Baldwin’s notes on bhyve meetings ###OpenBSD 6.5-beta has been tagged It’s that time of year again; Theo (deraadt@) has just tagged 6.5-beta. A good reminder for us all run an extra test install and see if your favorite port still works as you expect. CVSROOT: /cvs Module name: src Changes by: [email protected] 2019/02/26 15:24:41 Modified files: etc/root : root.mail share/mk : sys.mk sys/conf : newvers.sh sys/sys : ktrace.h param.h usr.bin/signify: signify.1 sys/arch/macppc/stand/tbxidata: bsd.tbxi Log message: crank to 6.5-beta ###The NetBSD Foundation participating in Google Summer of Code 2019 For the 4th year in a row and for the 13th time The NetBSD Foundation will participate in Google Summer of Code 2019! If you are a student and would like to learn more about Google Summer of Code please go to the Google Summer of Code homepage. You can find a list of projects in Google Summer of Code project proposals in the wiki. Do not hesitate to get in touch with us via #netbsd-code IRC channel on Freenode and via NetBSD mailing lists! ###SecBSD: an UNIX-like OS for Hackers SecBSD is an UNIX-like operating system focused on computer security based on OpenBSD. Designed for security testing, hacking and vulnerability assessment, it uses full disk encryption and ProtonVPN + OpenVPN by default. A security BSD enviroment for security researchers, penetration testers, bug hunters and cybersecurity experts. Developed by Dark Intelligence Team for private use and will be public release coming soon. ##Beastie Bits Why OpenBSD Rocks Rich’s sh (POSIX shell) tricks Drinking coffee with AWK Civilisational HTTP Error Codes MidnightBSD Roadmap NetBSD on Nintendo64 From Vimperator to Tridactyl ##Feedback/Questions Russell - BSD Now Question :: ZFS & FreeNAS Alan - Tutorial, install ARM *BSD with no other BSD box pls Johnny - New section to add to the show Send questions, comments, show ideas/topics, or stories you want mentioned on the show to [email protected] Your browser does not support the HTML5 video tag.

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