Portmgr is happy to announce that two new members will join the team.
KDE 4.2.4 Released
An anonymous reader writes “KDE 4.2.4 has been released. See the release announcement for details.” Barring a “security issue or another grave bug,” this is the end of the KDE 4.2 line, which means for distros based on long-term support, it might be the thing to get used to for a while.
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When VMware Performance Fails, Try BSD Jails
Siker writes in to tell us about the experience of email transfer service YippieMove, which ditched VMware and switched to FreeBSD jails. “We doubled the amount of memory per server, we quadrupled SQLite’s internal buffers, we turned off SQLite auto-vacuuming, we turned off synchronization, we added more database indexes. We were confused. Certainly we had expected a performance difference between running our software in a VM compared to running on the metal, but that it could be as much as 10X was a wake-up call.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
When VMWare Performance Fails, Try BSD Jails
Siker writes in to tell abou the experience of email transfer service YippieMove, which ditched VMware and switched to FreeBSD jails. “We doubled the amount of memory per server, we quadrupled SQLite’s internal buffers, we turned off SQLite auto-vacuuming, we turned off synchronization, we added more database indexes. We were confused. Certainly we had expected a performance difference between running our software in a VM compared to running on the metal, but that it could be as much as 10X was a wake-up call.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Hardware-Accelerated Graphics On SGI O2 Under NetBSD
Zadok_Allan writes “It’s a bit late, but since many readers will remember the SGI O2 fondly, this might interest a few. The gist of the story is this: NetBSD now supports hardware accelerated graphics on the O2 both in X and in the kernel. We didn’t get any help from SGI, and the documentation available doesn’t go beyond a general description and a little theory of operation, which is why it took so long to figure it out. The X driver still has a few rough edges (all the acceleration frameworks pretty much expect a mappable linear framebuffer, if you don’t have one — like on most SGI hardware — you’ll have to jump through a lot of hoops and make sure there’s no falling back to cfb and friends) but it supports XRENDER well enough to run KDE 3.5. Yes, it’s usable on a 200MHz R5k O2. Not quite as snappy as any modern hardware but nowhere near as sluggish as you’d expect, and since Xsgi doesn’t support any kind of XRENDER support, let alone hardware acceleration, pretty much anything using anti-aliased fonts gets a huge performance boost out of this compared to IRIX.”
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FreeBSD 7.2 Released
An anonymous reader writes “The FreeBSD Release Engineering Team is pleased to announce the availability of FreeBSD 7.2-RELEASE. This is the third release from the 7-STABLE branch which improves on the functionality of FreeBSD 7.1 and introduces some new features. Some of the highlights: Support for fully transparent use of superpages for application memory; Support for multiple IPv4 and IPv6 addresses for jails; csup(1) now supports CVSMode to fetch a complete CVS repository; Gnome updated to 2.26, KDE updated to 4.2.2; Sparc64 now supports UltraSparc-III processors. For a complete list of new features and known problems, please see the online release notes and errata list.” Adds another anonymous reader, “You can grab the latest version from FreeBSD from the mirrors or via BitTorrent. There is also a quick review of the new features and upgrade instructions.”
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OpenBSD 4.5 Released
portscan writes “OpenBSD 4.5 has been released. New and extended platforms include sparc64, and added device drivers. OpenSSH 5.2 is included, plus a number of tweaks, bugfixes, and enhancements. See the announcement page for a full list. OpenBSD is a security-oriented UNIX/BSD operating system.” As per OpenBSD tradition, of course there’s a song.
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NetBSD 5.0 Released
kl76 writes “The NetBSD Project have announced the release of NetBSD 5.0 after two years of development. Highlights of the seven million new lines of code in 5.0 include a new threads implementation, kernel preemption, a new scheduler, POSIX real-time scheduling, message queues and asynchronous I/O, WAPBL metadata journaling for FFS filesystems, improved ACPI support, UDF write support, X.Org instead of XFree86 (on some platforms — at last!) and lots of driver updates. Binary distributions for 53 different platforms are provided.”
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PC-BSD 7.1 Released With Integrated Software Manager
Death Metal writes “PC-BSD 7.1 is built upon the FreeBSD 7.1-STABLE operating system. FreeBSD is a UNIX-based operating system that provides a high level of security and stability. The Galileo Edition of PC-BSD includes updated versions of KDE (4.2.2) and Xorg (7.4). The latest version of KDE includes new window effects, screen savers, and better 3D Acceleration. PC-BSD exclusively features the Push Button Installer, a software installation wizard with a wide range of applications. The latest version improves PBI self-containment to increase reliability. The Add / Remove Programs tool and the Update Manager have been consolidated into ‘Software & Updates.'”
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Debian Gets FreeBSD Kernel Support
mu22le writes “Today Debian gets one step closer to really becoming ‘the universal operating system’ by adding two architectures based on the FreeBSD kernel to the unstable archive. This does not mean that the Debian project is ditching the Linux kernel; Debian users will be able to choose which kernel they want to install (at least on on the i386 and amd64 architectures) and get more or less the same Debian operating system they are used to. This makes Debian the first distribution, and probably the first large OS, to support two completely different kernels at the same time.”
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