"We are pleased to announce the official release of OpenBSD 4.3," began OpenBSD creator Theo de Raadt. "This is our 23rd release on CD-ROM (and 24th via FTP). We remain proud of OpenBSD's record of more than ten years with only two remote holes in the default install." He added, "as in our previous releases, 4.3 provides significant improvements, including new features, in nearly all areas of the system". Four platforms were listed as new or extended, including: sparc64 gained SMP support, "this should work on all supported systems, with the exception of the Sun Enterprise 10000"; hppa K-class servers are now supported; mvme88k gained SMP support on a couple of systems, and support for the 88110 processor was added. Numerous drivers were listed as new or improved, including a huge list of network drivers:
"The bge(4) driver now supports BCM5906/BCM5906M 10/100 and BCM5755 10/100/Gigabit Ethernet devices; the cas(4) driver now supports Cassini+ 10/100/Gigabit Ethernet devices; the em(4) driver now supports ICH9 10/100 and 10/100/Gigabit Ethernet devices; the gem(4) driver now supports the onboard 1000base-SX interface on the Sun Fire V880 server; the ixgb(4) driver now supports the Sun 10Gb PCI-X Ethernet devices; the msk(4) driver now supports Yukon FE+ 10/100 and Yukon Supreme 10/100/Gigabit Ethernet devices; the nfe(4) driver now supports MCP73, MCP77 and MCP79 10/100/Gigabit Ethernet devices; the ral(4) driver now supports RT2800 based wireless network devices; the cmpci(4) driver now supports CMI8768 based audio adapters; the it(4) driver now supports ITE IT8705F/8712F/8716F/8718F/8726F and SiS SiS950 ICs; new bwi(4) driver for the Broadcom AirForce IEEE 802.11b/g wireless network device; new et(4) driver for the Agere/LSI ET1310 10/100/Gigabit Ethernet device; new etphy(4) driver for the Agere/LSI ET1011 TruePHY Gigabit Ethernet PHY; new iwn(4) driver for the Intel Wireless WiFi Link 4965AGN IEEE 802.11a/b/g/Draft-N wireless network device; new upgt(4) driver for the Conexant/Intersil PrismGT SoftMAC USB IEEE 802.11b/g wireless network device."
A more complete list of changes can be found here. ONLamp also recently posted an interview titled, "Puffy and the Cryptonauts: What's New in OpenBSD 4.3". Theo noted, "profits from CD sales are the primary income source for the OpenBSD project -- in essence selling these CD-ROM units ensures that OpenBSD will continue to make another release six months from now."
SMP Benchmarks?
SMP for sparc64 sound nice. I'm interested how OpenBSD scale on Sun's T5140/T5240 (128 hardware threads per server, using 2xUltraSPARC T2+).
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:wq
OpenBSD supports the T1, not
OpenBSD supports the T1, not T2 yet.
23nd & 24rd?
Can someone please correct the "23nd" and "24rd" at least somewhere or is it really meant to read 22nd and 23rd? =)
Incremental errors
I think Theo may have just been adding 1 to the 22nd and 23rd comments in last releases email.
Fortunately it's not a remotely exploitable bug, so it keeps their security record intact.
OpenBSD is cool
I never tried OpenBSD but it seems so cool.
Strong focus on security, strong focus on openness and freedom.
Plus, it have lyrics and crappy songs and nice images of Puffy in different themes. :D
There is something appealing about OpenBSD, I gotta try it out sometime. :)
It is cool.
Just don't have any problems using it and ask someone on the mailing list for help. You will quickly learn that despite the code's openness, the BSD community is all about cliques and elitism.
mailing lists are not the first place to look for help
Documentation, Google, forums (if applicable), mailing lists for users, mailing lists for developers: use in that order for a minimum of issues in dealing with others.
It's a different culture
It's a different culture than the general Linux forums, yes; different in that you're expected to be able to learn on your own, or at least be able to work a problem as far as you're able to before asking others to spend their time helping you fix *your* problem.
misc@openbsd.org doesn't exist to wipe your ass and make you feel special.
We reap what we sow.
We reap what we sow.
We ARE the elite - you're nothing
Stop whining and face the truth: we are the guys who write the software you use!
You sound like a psychopath
You sound like a psychopath more than anything else...
Look who's talking!
You sound like an idiot more than anything else...
You obviously didn't read
You obviously didn't read the FAQ ...
# Why are the OpenBSD mail lists so "unfriendly"?
Try it
Just grab a CD-set from your nearest reseller and install. You'll get 3 CDs with binaries for multiple platforms and all the source code. Plus you'll get cool stickers and get to read about Puffy and Hypocrites ;-)
88110 ???
The Motorola 88110 has been out of production for twenty years, since Motorola switched that fab to PowerPC. Why in the world would somebody spend time adding support for it?
Some of them must still be
Some of them must still be working and in use. They don't make 'em like they used to....
Because someone enjoys doing
Because someone enjoys doing so.
Because they can....
Because they can....
Seriously, though, that was
Seriously, though, that was pretty much a hobby project / labor of love by an ex-Motorola guy. Why shouldn't his favorite OS run on it?
porting to another arch is a lot of work
Anyway, porting to another arch is a *lot* of work. If he did this alone, hats off the heads.