FreeBSD 9.3 erschienen

Yamagi

Possessed With Psi Powers
Teammitglied
Heute das FreeBSD Release Engineering Team mit FreeBSD 9.3 das vierte Release des FreeBSD 9 Zweigs freigegeben. Hierbei handelt es sich hauptsächlich um ein Service Release, was sich auf Bugfixes und neue Versionen von Treibern und Programmen konzentriert. Es gibt jedoch auch einige neue Features. Wie die ungerade Versionsnummer aussagt, wird FreeBSD 9.3 zwei Jahre Security Updates erhalten. Damit wird der FreeBSD 9 Zweig nach derzeitigem Stand mindestens fünf Jahre unterstützt werden. Es gibt übrigens Pläne, beginnend mit 11.0 für Zweige eine Unterstützung von mindestens fünf Jahren zu garantieren.

Die wichtigsten Änderungen gegenüber FreeBSD 9.2 sind:
- AMD Radeon GPUs werden nun per KMS unterstützt.
- Mit Newcons ist optional ein neuer, experimenteller Konsolenrenderer verfügbar, der Unicode unterstützt und in KMS integriert.
- OpenZFS wurde auf die letzte Version aktualisiert.
- FreeBSD verweigert nun die Ausführung von Binaries für neuere Hauptversionen. Dies kann mit dem Sysctl kern.disallow_high_osrel abgeschaltet werden.
- Hardware PRNG sind in Standardeinstellung nun abgeschaltet.
- ext4 Dateisysteme können read-only eingehängt werden.
- XENHVM wird unterstützt.

Das Release steht ab sofort als ISO-Image, sowie USB- / Festplatten-Image auf den Spiegel-Servern bereit. Des Weiteren findet sich unter http://www.freebsd.org/releases/ die Release-Dokumentation.

Die offizielle Ankündigung:
Code:
  FreeBSD 9.3-RELEASE Announcement

  The FreeBSD Release Engineering Team is pleased to announce the
  availability of FreeBSD 9.3-RELEASE. This is the fourth release of the
  stable/9 branch, which improves on the stability of FreeBSD 9.2-RELEASE
  and introduces some new features.

  Some of the highlights:

  * The zfs(8) filesystem has been updated to support the bookmarks
  feature.

  * The uname(1) utility has been updated to include the -U and -K flags,
  which print the __FreeBSD_version for the running userland and kernel,
  respectively.

  * The fetch(3) library has been updated to support SNI (Server Name
  Identification), allowing to use virtual hosts on HTTPS.

  * Several updates to gcc(1) have been imported from Google.

  * The hastctl(8) utility has been updated to output the current queue
  sizes.

  * The protect(1) command has been added, which allows exempting
  processes from being killed when swap is exhausted.

  * The etcupdate(8) utility, a tool for managing updates to files in
  /etc, has been merged from head/.

  * A new shared library directory, /usr/lib/private, has been added for
  internal-use shared libraries.

  * OpenPAM has been updated to Nummularia (20130907).

  * A new flag, "onifconsole" has been added to /etc/ttys. This allows the
  system to provide a login prompt via serial console if the device is
  an active kernel console, otherwise it is equivalent to off.

  * Sendmail has been updated to version 8.14.9.

  * BIND has been updated to version 9.9.5.

  * The xz(1) utility has been updated to a post-5.0.5 snapshot.

  * OpenSSH has been updated to version 6.6p1.

  * OpenSSL has been updated to version 0.9.8za.

  For a complete list of new features and known problems, please see the
  online release notes and errata list, available at:

  * https://www.FreeBSD.org/releases/9.3R/relnotes.html

  * https://www.FreeBSD.org/releases/9.3R/errata.html

  For more information about FreeBSD release engineering activities, please
  see:

  * https://www.FreeBSD.org/releng/

Availability

  FreeBSD 9.3-RELEASE is now available for the amd64, i386, ia64, powerpc,
  powerpc64, and sparc64 architectures.

  FreeBSD 9.3-RELEASE can be installed from bootable ISO images or over the
  network. Some architectures also support installing from a USB memory
  stick. The required files can be downloaded via FTP as described in the
  section below. While some of the smaller FTP mirrors may not carry all
  architectures, they will all generally contain the more common ones such
  as amd64 and i386.

  SHA256 and MD5 hashes for the release ISO and memory stick images are
  included at the bottom of this message.

  A PGP-signed version of this announcement is available at:

  * https://www.FreeBSD.org/releases/9.3R/announce.asc

  The purpose of the images provided as part of the release are as follows:

  dvd1

  This contains everything necessary to install the base FreeBSD
  operating system, the documentation, and a small set of pre-built
  packages aimed at getting a graphical workstation up and running.
  It also supports booting into a "livefs" based rescue mode. This
  should be all you need if you can burn and use DVD-sized media.

  disc1

  This contains the base FreeBSD operating system. It also supports
  booting into a "livefs" based rescue mode. There are no pre-built
  packages.

  bootonly

  This supports booting a machine using the CDROM drive but does not
  contain the installation distribution sets for installing FreeBSD
  from the CD itself. You would need to perform a network based
  install (e.g. from an FTP server) after booting from the CD.

  memstick

  This can be written to an USB memory stick (flash drive) and used
  to do an install on machines capable of booting off USB drives. It
  also supports booting into a "livefs" based rescue mode. There are
  no pre-built packages.

  As one example of how to use the memstick image, assuming the USB
  drive appears as /dev/da0 on your machine something like this
  should work:

  # dd if=FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-amd64-memstick.img of=/dev/da0 bs=10240 conv=sync
   

  Be careful to make sure you get the target (of=) correct.

  mini-memstick

  This can be written to an USB memory stick (flash drive) and used
  to boot a machine, but does not contain the installation
  distribution sets on the medium itself, similar to the bootonly
  image. It also supports booting into a "livefs" based rescue mode.
  There are no pre-built packages.

  As one example of how to use the mini-memstick image, assuming the
  USB drive appears as /dev/da0 on your machine something like this
  should work:

  # dd if=FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-amd64-mini-memstick.img of=/dev/da0 bs=10240 conv=sync
   

  Be careful to make sure you get the target (of=) correct.

  FreeBSD 9.3-RELEASE can also be purchased on CD-ROM or DVD from several
  vendors. One of the vendors that will be offering FreeBSD 9.3-based
  products is:

  * FreeBSD Mall, Inc.https://www.freebsdmall.com

FTP

  FreeBSD 9.3-RELEASE may be downloaded via ftp from the following site:

  * ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/releases/ISO-IMAGES/9.3/

  However before trying this site, please check your regional mirror(s)
  first by going to:

  * ftp://ftp.<your_country_code>.FreeBSD.org/pub/FreeBSD

  Any additional mirror sites will be labeled ftp2, ftp3 and so on.

  More information about FreeBSD mirror sites can be found at:

  * https://www.FreeBSD.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/mirrors-ftp.html

  For instructions on installing FreeBSD or updating an existing machine to
  9.3-RELEASE please see:

  * https://www.FreeBSD.org/releases/9.3R/installation.html

Support

  FreeBSD 9.3-RELEASE will be supported until January 1, 2017. The
  End-of-Life dates can be found at:

  * https://www.FreeBSD.org/security/

Other Projects Based on FreeBSD

  There are many "third party" Projects based on FreeBSD. The Projects range
  from re-packaging FreeBSD into a more "novice friendly" distribution to
  making FreeBSD available on Amazon's EC2 infrastructure. For more
  information about these Third Party Projects see:

  * https://wiki.FreeBSD.org/3rdPartyProjects

Acknowledgments

  Many companies donated equipment, network access, or man-hours to support
  the release engineering activities for FreeBSD 9.3 including The
  FreeBSD Foundation, Yahoo!, NetApp, Internet Systems Consortium, ByteMark
  Hosting, Sentex Communications, New York Internet, Juniper Networks, NLNet
  Labs, iXsystems, and Yandex.

  The release engineering team for 9.3-RELEASE includes:

  Glen Barber <gjb@FreeBSD.org>  Release Engineering Lead,   
  9.3-RELEASE Release Engineer   
  Konstantin Belousov <kib@FreeBSD.org>  Release Engineering   
  Joel Dahl <joel@FreeBSD.org>  Release Engineering   
  Baptiste Daroussin <bapt@FreeBSD.org>  Package Building   
  Bryan Drewery <bdrewery@FreeBSD.org>  Package Building   
  Marc Fonvieille <blackend@FreeBSD.org> Release Engineering, Documentation  
  Steven Kreuzer <skreuzer@FreeBSD.org>  Release Engineering   
  Xin Li <delphij@FreeBSD.org>  Release Engineering, Security   
  Officer   
  Josh Paetzel <jpaetzel@FreeBSD.org>  Release Engineering   
  Colin Percival <cperciva@FreeBSD.org>  Security Officer Emeritus   
  Craig Rodrigues <rodrigc@FreeBSD.org>  Release Engineering   
  Hiroki Sato <hrs@FreeBSD.org>  Release Engineering, Documentation  
  Gleb Smirnoff <glebius@FreeBSD.org>  Release Engineering   
  Ken Smith <kensmith@FreeBSD.org>  Release Engineering   
  Dag-Erling Smørgrav <des@FreeBSD.org>  Security Officer   
  Marius Strobl <marius@FreeBSD.org>  Release Engineering   
  Robert Watson <rwatson@FreeBSD.org>  Release Engineering, Security   

Trademark

  FreeBSD is a registered trademark of The FreeBSD Foundation.

ISO Image Checksums

  amd64 (x86_64):

  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-amd64-bootonly.iso) = e6962c2605c6a191a9c238545576eff3a5a2c2c96b5058c26c8c54b6cf701914
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-amd64-bootonly.iso.xz) = bcb5d5c8bbc1aa06baf769a6a57908e6cbf820a02c6f6f57a902db564bff4a1f
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-amd64-disc1.iso) = 5a3c82653d77bba7d7ded8bd7efbedc09d52cf4045d98ce52a82c9e0f8fa9b0e
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-amd64-disc1.iso.xz) = daf255ccb9694f0a82e34e71be1e6d0bbcf332bf74f1c6f92343f00dad579d99
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-amd64-dvd1.iso) = 30c0baa7d51a4b3130108c862bbc9439f60a3a6362b13183c1ae0be959ae9a95
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-amd64-dvd1.iso.xz) = 292cac57dea0ad7723798842a2ddf582661c41c428bc78a951535d69ae92aceb
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-amd64-memstick.img) = 04c2c98c9bcf188bb2df988ebc2c1c02ea7350c77e1711904fc368db62709634
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-amd64-memstick.img.xz) = 56deb31212c19c18852baee6097bebd048658d464e14a14e125840a24c939e63
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-amd64-mini-memstick.img) = d5a0379caa5ebb9f8252a44417d10d2b3ab0ce424d275d546689fcf9c4dd6dbe
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-amd64-mini-memstick.img.xz) = 0e6fe54a2fcd3173f27fafc62f0d67cff44cdf5a9f133adba7aedff804cbb087
 

  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-amd64-bootonly.iso) = b53878805ea89633aaa59351d706081f
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-amd64-bootonly.iso.xz) = f3b2bfdce28af6ce3fe2fecb0838ae86
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-amd64-disc1.iso) = 1fc7f8bace8dc861258af9042c9918d6
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-amd64-disc1.iso.xz) = 69701074a505b78c998807e0bb20dae6
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-amd64-dvd1.iso) = 14c176c236c27a0fa276ffb554768d38
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-amd64-dvd1.iso.xz) = da4f382733c63260877184ef33dbfec6
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-amd64-memstick.img) = ebcf069c96aeb59279af0c480b5717ca
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-amd64-memstick.img.xz) = d52f0909d7e4ea3c9080f7ac5358edd5
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-amd64-mini-memstick.img) = 6077f2f90b09b4926dbf0e59df6528bf
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-amd64-mini-memstick.img.xz) = 0c342b43053375a48bea2e7413a3c3e8
 

  i386 (x86):

  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-i386-bootonly.iso) = 84a26479e690caaa428b361f2f96c0723a5f1b09a342bd58e5eee345fc5f7406
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-i386-bootonly.iso.xz) = 66bad7f519bb6f504932c3ba701c4d83709699a785258aba6b3ee11c651d868a
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-i386-disc1.iso) = cab6aad9c3d5ea6a3fb4059f808225c67f1edaea730c555a86a9707ac41ba75d
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-i386-disc1.iso.xz) = f248e0c16a2a03a5c8a39ee41b99e0ff656f75035ccf5e720c83587d9733ca39
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-i386-dvd1.iso) = 6c47c17ec1e0e0ccca2c24bec0f880334d5a52847bdc092a3ff4cdd7be7a85f3
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-i386-dvd1.iso.xz) = 76830e50357aec289daeb9eb01416dcb42414bf57126b4875e7352e976a7451b
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-i386-memstick.img) = 3465923d625d07ef40448e2c03bfe5c61bf89ac56cbe34fb358500860e9524aa
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-i386-memstick.img.xz) = 30480eb3ed73e2c8d45ff7928e5edcb7f69704f0c459bbaf943907ec69adcc10
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-i386-mini-memstick.img) = 17c6a518b000bb9ba81229658a71a7d47f71a4e46a3846e82887d43b1d73bf81
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-i386-mini-memstick.img.xz) = 44b4d7d1cf1c6c59d440df84731efb110dd062c2226a25adef168bc24d55dcbe
 

  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-i386-bootonly.iso) = c9abbb89fa43eed6efefb2b7926d7fa7
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-i386-bootonly.iso.xz) = 9a797ff03c3eade54654120fdbc23ccb
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-i386-disc1.iso) = 752fa8cd15f0f1e240042c342a161eb4
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-i386-disc1.iso.xz) = f4ace2617eea05e2898d8d0b70249bf4
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-i386-dvd1.iso) = fb598013bf363c44e248054106c33829
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-i386-dvd1.iso.xz) = 2024f7f2aaa73353e225ef7a1ec5aeea
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-i386-memstick.img) = c8a833fffc40a8eee2bb6a9a36595ac4
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-i386-memstick.img.xz) = 4189b56c90e7a40e1bb69ff6f26f37e2
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-i386-mini-memstick.img) = a2b0c1085db9424ea25b594e32230a3a
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-i386-mini-memstick.img.xz) = a95d50f326868c739f06aa1a3a76d636
 

  ia64:

  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-ia64-bootonly.iso) = 8d9236f55b1467f4e882a751d5e040ea6538da88f4d319746679874a8dc9caba
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-ia64-bootonly.iso.xz) = eceb7125b8a8711969d7c3997044f9043ec938fc3518dd8a197fd94f4d7076c6
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-ia64-disc1.iso) = 953b7c847f21e6316c22c0741a5de76865b521b594b593d67fe60bf5e348452d
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-ia64-disc1.iso.xz) = 3fef900ad1ef288202701e04ce3c9ef1ab6c870e5e7ec97b9ab6a6a5e5dccf59
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-ia64-memstick.img) = c4d5d921443c993e294fe9e9ca9ae60409c5c663ad895f6e582ba955c9155e86
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-ia64-memstick.img.xz) = ccd354b7571ebd5c3763158b49b1aa51c2bed63d0ce36eb49a6cf1e227bc133e
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-ia64-mini-memstick.img) = 7475bfafd661600de2516d9ce0ed6c5621699d3ebda59f672d1e7cfc8efeb504
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-ia64-mini-memstick.img.xz) = 1ed6d2ea23e320b6708958989aaf90788cd56371a4c25e9145911dc4f890dbfa
 

  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-ia64-bootonly.iso) = 6d2210defeb17219a600d02917fa3f79
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-ia64-bootonly.iso.xz) = f17b43d7fbec6dab1d05bb0d2f0bfb15
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-ia64-disc1.iso) = 1bdf7afa83a7494e9569888cb162752c
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-ia64-disc1.iso.xz) = 81c6d02da1645bda86a2c1fec716e622
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-ia64-memstick.img) = b5003d7260190a5123ae478a1980b526
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-ia64-memstick.img.xz) = d53ba4fc4748ca0953067f3c4c31b4f0
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-ia64-mini-memstick.img) = 1946ba71adecc220d66f70d0aee6606e
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-ia64-mini-memstick.img.xz) = d891966f184e6264203bf964404a4530
 

  powerpc:

  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-powerpc-bootonly.iso) = 6a2d0ac953ead098e7dbee736e4e19b28b8d914baa5947083d494c150d257381
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-powerpc-bootonly.iso.xz) = a68b22d933ef03894da5eee16c8f1fd8bdc05003d2ee40f34f0e0f165eb97715
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-powerpc-disc1.iso) = dd30aa9491b14410dd520f2cb8c231be701debbc36c5b023a427e3e28bcba3c4
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-powerpc-disc1.iso.xz) = a609d8d641d7839707d8caf9796434deee0e3f4218c79d7cadaa7787d3975c33
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-powerpc-memstick.img) = 0e0c449026084f8431bc7852dcdaeaa3101301c2c73151204e9ce4d4ccdbfb38
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-powerpc-memstick.img.xz) = f5d3b880fa1d737b708e96584c52804c33af9e7de4c7e2ee744584c08c8d8b84
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-powerpc-mini-memstick.img) = c8fb345384558215eb7d5126684c827e73104eabe36309a3de275c7ea9512822
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-powerpc-mini-memstick.img.xz) = 931706a17b708c1db6337cf0fbf8bad877a8dfce64c2e5079fe890e5e85339e3
 

  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-powerpc-bootonly.iso) = e80fd4c1278db39e3f8740612dff0da9
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-powerpc-bootonly.iso.xz) = 7690229bf847dbf377a5086652dfc1aa
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-powerpc-disc1.iso) = a308f49d59c6553cfcb625ec3c2a278d
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-powerpc-disc1.iso.xz) = 8d5783474fdf5463ab5aa06d7d09509e
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-powerpc-memstick.img) = ec112f1085ab363b27931c25c451fb2c
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-powerpc-memstick.img.xz) = 1c9d741dd889b1461812fce34fb48e93
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-powerpc-mini-memstick.img) = 0b3c655654d8def1eeb96b478a0572f0
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-powerpc-mini-memstick.img.xz) = f7913ffa1eebb43e875ba81c5bd8e992
 

  powerpc64:

  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-powerpc-powerpc64-bootonly.iso) = c8bb1f3105f2a2d9dd4a76536d8d44d8ae0aa7742230d549ea280f04e41f81b2
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-powerpc-powerpc64-bootonly.iso.xz) = f5327d0c665cf7f286e3daca382e04abb0aee9d125cc70a41a2d96ad13ffe531
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-powerpc-powerpc64-disc1.iso) = f89d13f3c292381549b8c9b70e81cd152491f34e0e889d78e439d63884a346c6
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-powerpc-powerpc64-disc1.iso.xz) = 5047b76a8c4299d3f2a56271a9798a7088717356792c91bea96ca61f871f087a
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-powerpc-powerpc64-memstick.img) = b94b05b0999aae0d197ad45b19d4d2b2678d322109da43bd10b2556b441b207c
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-powerpc-powerpc64-memstick.img.xz) = 9da446da2dfb73f24195b70c873317c4dd7578dc339dd051e082e2351b3bcac3
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-powerpc-powerpc64-mini-memstick.img) = 21874e49e3c7685c098c90100717f28975db2dbc9043e810fef554f08a6bc940
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-powerpc-powerpc64-mini-memstick.img.xz) = a6cc4f340802bd936acb4b7920aa4fced54a2e265b60ffecf0b7b1c2f71fa644
 

  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-powerpc-powerpc64-bootonly.iso) = 674ed0a922e0f662c2f8118d8424473f
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-powerpc-powerpc64-bootonly.iso.xz) = 5836f439da4dc8372da0e20d1a78ec97
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-powerpc-powerpc64-disc1.iso) = 0c5cf50f3bbf1263708ca3f9da0465bb
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-powerpc-powerpc64-disc1.iso.xz) = d2788b12c02134da11ba72238081e4cc
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-powerpc-powerpc64-memstick.img) = 5e5123677e21a53b463a3cceb2ad324d
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-powerpc-powerpc64-memstick.img.xz) = d6fd35a61aed2d529432e9c9df425be5
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-powerpc-powerpc64-mini-memstick.img) = a850121bc10455c3b835fd161237e8b2
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-powerpc-powerpc64-mini-memstick.img.xz) = 3bcf3571a3815ea78fbed61094745437
 

  sparc64:

  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-sparc64-bootonly.iso) = d9f9089c7f992744bb9675206042224bdabcfd924e72d322195acb207fe96294
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-sparc64-bootonly.iso.xz) = 67830e9f64ee617acf2fff79770ea47aa3e98c7e2901068b413d41d2282d4372
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-sparc64-disc1.iso) = 989a2d8181b889ec0c1ee08e3afabfdcaf23c75b4157c9463c9ab7496e82a949
  SHA256 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-sparc64-disc1.iso.xz) = 2f2b94f379ae3df05762e2618e573b19ae83756dfde11d6628236c3c6a0052bc
 

  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-sparc64-bootonly.iso) = 8b97d45e204dcfa8515f227189a35b1c
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-sparc64-bootonly.iso.xz) = fae6c32e0f9dd2f909b729ba6f4bfeb6
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-sparc64-disc1.iso) = 838b0211322dd19f1285b9b94e6ac17e
  MD5 (FreeBSD-9.3-RELEASE-sparc64-disc1.iso.xz) = c8a8ab9f3b6eddca77623e5bc3f6718b
 

  Love FreeBSD? Support this and future releases with a donation to The
  FreeBSD Foundation! https://www.FreeBSDFoundation.org/donate/
 
Eine Bitte an Autoren bei Onlinemagazinen und ähnlichem: Ich habe absolut nichts dagegen, dass meine Ankündigung woanders wiedergegeben werden. Allerdings hätte ich gern, dass im Sinne der BSD-Lizenz zumindest ein kleiner Hinweis wie zum Beispiel "von Yamagi auf BSDForen.de geschrieben" gegeben wird. Das ich bei den letzten Ankündigungen meinen Text unter fremden Namen wiederfinden durfte, fand ich nicht besonders glücklich.
 
Danke Yamagi für die ausführlichen Informationen.:) Das es zukünftig Langzeitunterstüzung geben wird, finde ich unheimlich gut. Das ist der richtige Weg, denn das gibt auch eine gewisse Planungssicherheit.
 
@ralli: Stimme zu. Langzeitsupport ist toll.

Ich werde wahrscheinlich trotzdem gleich die restlichen Systeme auf 10.0 upgraden. Wir haben nämlich in der Firma derzeit ein paar 9.x und ein paar 10.0-Server und eigentlich wäre es mal an der Zeit da einheitlich mit proudriere zu arbeiten.
 
Ich habe heute mein System von 9.2 auf 9.3-RELEASE (64-bit) mittles 'freebsd-update upgrade -r 9.3-RELEASE' auf 9.3 gebracht. Dann wollte ich nach dem erfolgreichen Experiment aufgrund deiner / eurer Hilfe wie hier beschrieben (http://bsdforen.de/threads/funktion...ten-bei-release-canditates.31154/#post-263865) den ATI-Treiber in der Version 7.2 bauen, doch bekomme nun diese Fehlermeldung:

Code:
===>  Building for xf86-video-ati-7.2.0_3
/usr/bin/make  all-recursive
Making all in src
CCLD   ati_drv.la
/usr/bin/ld: /usr/lib/libc.a(malloc.o): relocation R_X86_64_32S against `a local symbol' can not be used when making a shared object; recompile with -fPIC
/usr/lib/libc.a: could not read symbols: Bad value
*** [ati_drv.la] Error code 1
1 error
*** [all-recursive] Error code 1
1 error
*** [all] Error code 2
1 error
===> Compilation failed unexpectedly.
Try to set MAKE_JOBS_UNSAFE=yes and rebuild before reporting the failure to
the maintainer.
*** [do-build] Error code 1

Stop in /usr/ports/x11-drivers/xf86-video-ati.

Wieso hatte es auf einer 32-Bit Installation des 9.3-RC2 auf einem USB-Stick geklappt und jetzt auf meiner 64-Bit Version auf meinem Hauptrechner nicht mehr?
 
Also vt(4) - besser bekannt als newcons - gefällt mal auf Anhieb! Bei 200x56 Zeichen lässt sich Dank tmux auch auf der Konsole vernünftig arbyten. Endlich passen zwei man pages nebeneinander! \o/
 
Sofern Intel und co. ihre Hardware-PRNG manipuliert haben um der NSA zu helfen, hättest du bei Verwendung von ihnen ein Problem.
 
Ich möchte hiermit ganz artig Dankeschön sagen. Dankeschön dafür, dass es das FreeBSD Projekt gibt und die Unterstützer, die dieses großartige Projekt im Gang halten. :)
Für Weihnachten hätte ich bloß noch einen Wunsch, TRIM für SSD Unterstützung in GELI. Es gab da mal einen Thread im März 2013, in dem sich dann auch Pawel Jakub Dawidek zu Wort meldete und einen Ansatz skizierte: https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-fs/2013-March/016764.html
 
Wow, da ist mal eine Diskussion die mit gefährlichem Halbwissen gefüllt ist. Trim würde es nicht leichter machen die Crypto zu brechen. Die einzige Information die aus dem Crypto-Container dadurch ausbricht, wäre wie viele Daten darin liegen.

Übrigens halte ich Trim für technisch nicht notwendig. Wenn eine SSD ohne Trim langsam wird, heißt das für mich, dass die nicht genug Extra-Sektoren für das Wear-Leveling hat. Denn wann immer ein vorhandener Sektor überschrieben wird, kann die SSD ja einen anderen unterschieben und weiß der "überschriebene" ist jetzt leer.

Wenn das nicht reicht, dann sind Platten im annähernd vollen Zustand immer lahm (beim Schreiben). Außerdem erzeugt es wenig Vertrauen in Bezug auf die Lebenserwartung.
 
Nun ja, meine alte SSD mit installiertem FreeBSD hat nun 13594 Betriebstunden. Grundsätzlich ist sie schon noch schnell:
Code:
diskinfo -ctv ada0
ada0
        512             # sectorsize
        128035676160    # mediasize in bytes (119G)
        250069680       # mediasize in sectors
        0               # stripesize
        0               # stripeoffset
        248085          # Cylinders according to firmware.
        16              # Heads according to firmware.
        63              # Sectors according to firmware.
                         # Disk ident.

I/O command overhead:
        time to read 10MB block      0.050630 sec       =    0.002 msec/sector
        time to read 20480 sectors   1.056113 sec       =    0.052 msec/sector
        calculated command overhead                     =    0.049 msec/sector

Seek times:
        Full stroke:      250 iter in   0.033636 sec =    0.135 msec
        Half stroke:      250 iter in   0.034491 sec =    0.138 msec
        Quarter stroke:   500 iter in   0.067345 sec =    0.135 msec
        Short forward:    400 iter in   0.053366 sec =    0.133 msec
        Short backward:   400 iter in   0.053678 sec =    0.134 msec
        Seq outer:       2048 iter in   0.108744 sec =    0.053 msec
        Seq inner:       2048 iter in   0.110689 sec =    0.054 msec
Transfer rates:
        outside:       102400 kbytes in   0.500613 sec =   204549 kbytes/sec
        middle:        102400 kbytes in   0.515408 sec =   198678 kbytes/sec
        inside:        102400 kbytes in   0.523882 sec =   195464 kbytes/sec
Das waren auch ungefähr die Werte die sie zeigte, als sie noch neu war. Aber wenn mal sehr große Dateien geschrieben werden müssen, dann braucht sie mittlerweile zum freimachen der Blöcke wohl etwas Zeit. Dank dem:
Code:
cat /etc/rc.d/gsched

#!/bin/sh

# REQUIRE: FILESYSTEMS
# PROVIDE: geom_rr

. /etc/rc.subr

name=geom_rr

start_cmd=${name}_start
stop_cmd=:

geom_rr_start() {
        geom sched insert -a rr ada0
}

run_rc_command "$1"
ist das nicht so schlimm, aber TRIM würde dafür sorgen, dass dem Controller gemeldet würde, welche Blöcke schon mal frei zu machen wären, wenn Dateien gelöscht werden.
Quelle für das gesched:
https://forums.freebsd.org/viewtopic.php?&t=16489
 
Zu TRIM gab es letzten Monat eine weitere Diskussion. Ich glaube, es war auf freebsd-stable@ bin aber nicht ganz sicher.
 
Zurück
Oben