FreeBSD Statusreport Q3/2013

Yamagi

Possessed With Psi Powers
Teammitglied
Das FreeBSD-Team hat seinen Statusreport zum dritten Quartal 2013 veröffentlicht. Wie immer finden sich in ihm etliche Neuigkeiten, angefangen bei Kleinigkeiten über Projektfortschritte bis hin zu Überraschungen. Er findet sich online unter http://www.freebsd.org/news/status/report-2013-07-2013-09.html oder als Durchschrift hier:

Code:
FreeBSD Quarterly Status Report, July-September 2013

Introduction

   This report covers FreeBSD-related projects between July and September
   2013. This is the third of four reports planned for 2013.

   We have had another very active three months in the FreeBSD world,
   including two Developer Summits (BSDCam and EuroBSDcon) that will be
   covered in separate status reports. FreeBSD continues to push hard on
   security, with improvements to both the performance and reliability of
   the random number generation, and more compartmentalisation in programs
   in the base system. For developers, there is work on a new modern
   debugger. There is also a significant amount of of modernization in the
   support for Objective-C and Ada via ports, making FreeBSD a first-rate
   platform for developing in either language, in addition to the existing
   C++11 and C11 support already present in the base system. Server users
   will be pleased to see improvements in the iSCSI stack and scalability
   allowing over a million I/O operations per second on commodify
   hardware, while desktop users will see improvements in X support for
   new GPUs and for possible X replacements.

   Thanks to all the reporters for the excellent work! This report
   contains 30 entries and we hope you enjoy reading it.

   The deadline for submissions covering between October and December, 2013
   is January 14th, 2014.
     __________________________________________________________________

FreeBSD Team Reports

     * FreeBSD Core Team
     * FreeBSD Port Management Team
     * FreeBSD Postmaster Team
     * FreeBSD Release Engineering Team

Projects

     * Static Code Analysis

Kernel

     * AES-NI Improvements for GELI
     * Atomic "close-on-exec"
     * Continuation of the Newcons Project
     * GEOM Direct Dispatch and Fine-Grained CAM Locking
     * Native iSCSI Stack
     * Reworking random(4)
     * SDIO Driver
     * VirtIO Network Multiqueue
     * VMware VMXNET3 Driver

Architectures

     * FreeBSD on Cubieboard2
     * FreeBSD/EC2
     * FreeBSD/pseries
     * FreeBSD/sparc64
     * Superpages for ARMv7

Userland Programs

     * Capsicum
     * LLDB Debugger Port

Ports

     * FreeBSD Ada Ports
     * FreeBSD Python Ports
     * GNOME/FreeBSD
     * GNUstep on FreeBSD
     * X.Org on FreeBSD

Documentation

     * FreeBSD Documentation Project Primer Edit
     * The entities Documentation Branch

Google Summer of Code

     * Download Manager Service for the Ports Collection

Miscellaneous

     * The FreeBSD Foundation
     __________________________________________________________________

AES-NI Improvements for GELI

   URL: http://svnweb.freebsd.org/changeset/base/255187

   Contact: John-Mark Gurney <jmg@FreeBSD.org>

   An enhancement to the AES-NI implementation for OpenCrypto, the
   kernel's cryptography framework, has been committed that significantly
   improves AES-XTS and AES-CBC decryption performance. This gives geli(8)
   around a three times performance boost on gnop(8) using AES-XTS
   compared to the old code.

   These improvements are available to users of the OpenCrypto framework
   and crypto(4).
     __________________________________________________________________

Atomic "close-on-exec"

   URL: https://wiki.freebsd.org/AtomicCloseOnExec

   Contact: Jilles Tjoelker <jilles@FreeBSD.org>

   If threads or signal handlers call fork() and exec(), file descriptors
   may be passed undesirably to child processes, which may lead to hangs
   (if a pipe is not closed), exceeding the file descriptor limit, and
   security problems (if the child process has lower privilege). One
   solution is various new APIs that set the "close-on-exec" flag
   atomically with allocating a file descriptor. Some existing software
   will use the new features if present or will even refuse to compile
   without them.

   With mkostemp(), dup3(), and a change to modes of fopen() and
   freopen(), everything proposed in Austin Group issue #411 has now been
   implemented. For all POSIX-specified functions that allocate file
   descriptors, it is possible to request that the new descriptor be set
   close-on-exec atomically.

   Additionally, many file descriptors used internally by libc and libutil
   now have the close-on-exec bit set.
     __________________________________________________________________

Capsicum

   Contact: Pawel Jakub Dawidek <pjd@FreeBSD.org>

   Capsicum is the FreeBSD sandboxing subsystem, which presents
   programmers with a capability module allowing fine-grained delegation
   of rights to less-privileged processes. Casper is a friendly daemon
   that provides services to sandboxed processes, allowing policy-based
   access to privileged services such as DNS resolution.

   The work on Capsicum and related projects (such as Casper, libnv, etc.)
   is progressing nicely. An overhaul of the cap_rights_t was committed to
   FreeBSD head and will be included in 10.0. This allows us to have more
   capability rights on file descriptors than the previous limit of 64
   rights, which was almost reached. This change is not backward
   compatible, so it was very important to get it into 10.0.

   libnv, used for communication between Casper services and consumers,
   but which will hopefully be used more widely, is finalized and comes
   with a nice set of regression tests.

   The number of applications sandboxed using the Capsicum framework is
   increasing. We have around 10 of them already in base and more that are
   not yet committed.

   This project is being sponsored by the FreeBSD Foundation.

Open tasks:

    1. Finish documentation of Casper and its services.
    2. Implement regression tests for Casper services.
    3. Finish documentation for libnv.
    4. Start making libc more sandbox-friendly, that is, modifying
       functions such as strerror(3), strsignal(3), localtime(3),
       login_get*(), getservent(3), getprotent(3), and getrpcent(3) which
       currently open files on first use, which might be too late if we
       are already in a capability-mode sandbox.
    5. Rethink the system.filesystem Casper service to allow for easy
       compartmentalization of various command-line tools that operate on
       multiple files.
     __________________________________________________________________

Continuation of the Newcons Project

   URL: http://svn.freebsd.org/base/user/ed/newcons/

   Contact: Aleksandr Rybalko <ray@FreeBSD.org>

   The Newcons project is aimed to replace the old syscons(4)-based
   virtual terminals. The main objectives are: support Unicode characters,
   and move away from the dependency on fixed VGA and VESA graphics modes
   and built-in BIOS services.

   This project was originally started by Ed Schouten, and it already
   featured the following features (among many others) in 2013:
     * Unicode fonts with Latin, Cyrillic and some more simple character
       sets.
     * Unicode output support.
     * Graphics mode support.
     * Text mode support.
     * sysmouse(4) support, without copy/paste.

   And these have been extended by the following items recently:
     * History, that is, the ability to scroll through the terminal
       history. The old, separate history buffer has been removed.
     * The history is implemented by a circular buffer which has no risk
       of overflow, and scrolling appears "unlimited".
     * VT_PROCESS mode, a way to hold the terminal and prevent terminal
       switching. For example, X.Org uses this feature to prevent the user
       from switching to a non-X terminal.
     * drm2/fb_helper, the KMS driver. This binds Newcons to framebuffers
       created the DRM-enabled video drivers in the kernel (such as
       i915kms and radeonkms).
     * Dynamic attachment of VT drivers, vt_allocate() to allow attaching
       console video drivers at a later point where framebuffer owner can
       manage the initialization. This is for KMS and devices without
       early graphics support.

   Supported startup modes for KMS:
     * Start without VT graphics drivers, then load KMS.
     * Start with VGA, then load KMS.
     * Preload KMS, then the KMS driver will be attached to the output.
     * Preload KMS, start with VGA, then KMS driver will replace the VGA
       output.

   This project is being sponsored by The FreeBSD Foundation. Many thanks
   to Ed Schouten, who started the Newcons project and did most of the
   work.

Open tasks:

    1. Implement a Generic Framebuffer interface, a simple interface to
       offer direct access to the framebuffer from the userland (via
       /dev/fb*) and automatic management of virtual terminals by Newcons.
    2. Mouse support, copy/paste using sysmouse(4).
    3. Improve locking.
    4. Bug fixes.
    5. Integrate into FreeBSD head.
    6. Integrate into FreeBSD 10.0.
    7. Implement mapping non-ASCII characters to Unicode on keyboard
       input.
    8. Adapt existing screen savers.
    9. Last but not least, testing is welcome!
     __________________________________________________________________

Download Manager Service for the Ports Collection

   URL: https://wiki.freebsd.org/SummerOfCode2013/IntellegentDownloadManager
   URL: https://wiki.freebsd.org/IdeasPage/IDMS

   Contact: Ambarisha Bhatlapenumarthi <ambarisha@freebsd.org>
   Contact: Xin Li <delphij@freebsd.org>

   This is a Google Summer of Code 2013 project that aims to replace the
   fetch(1)-based method for getting distribution files, such as source
   tarballs, for the third-party applications (ports) with an intelligent
   Download Manager Service (see links for more information).

   All the modules highlighted in the project wiki have been completed
   (see links). Specifically:
     * A service that receives and serves download requests. It samples
       download speeds from different mirrors and uses this information to
       pick the best mirror on the next request. It can migrate jobs
       between mirrors if it realizes that a complete download from a
       different mirror would be faster than proceeding with the mirror it
       is currently using.
     * A status dump feature has also been added to the client (dmget)
       which dumps the information about active downloads, speeds from
       mirrors, etc.

Open tasks:

    1. The implementation (especially job migration and dumping status)
       has not been tested thoroughly. Test the code, write more unit and
       regression tests.
     __________________________________________________________________

FreeBSD Ada Ports

   URL: http://www.dragonlace.net

   Contact: John Marino <marino@FreeBSD.org>

   A few years ago, Ada-based ports almost completely disappeared from the
   Ports Collection. This was not surprising, as FSF GNAT, the only
   open-source Ada compiler, ceased to build correctly on any BSD flavor.
   Previously-built bootstrap compilers would not run on modern FreeBSD,
   and certainly not on amd64. The first step, see the link for details,
   was to patch GCC in order to fix GNAT not only on FreeBSD, but
   DragonFly, NetBSD, and OpenBSD as well. New bootstraps for both i386
   and amd64 platforms were produced during this effort. Ada compilers on
   FreeBSD now pass 100% of the ACATS and GCC testsuites.

   With the introduction of the first new Ada compiler port, the
   GCC 4.6-based lang/gnat-aux, the GNAT Programming Studio (a
   multilanguage integrated development environment), XML/Ada, and GtkAda
   were among the first Ada ports resurrected.

   With the latest compiler, lang/gcc-aux based on GCC 4.7, a cohesive Ada
   framework was created with the new USES= framework. Currently around 20
   ports are part of this framework including Florist, ASIS, GPRbuild,
   QtAda, AdaControl, AdaBrowse, PolyOrb, and AWS (Ada Web Server).

   The GNAT AUX compiler is also still in use to serve as a basis for the
   GNATDroid ports which are FreeBSD-to-Android Ada+C cross-compilers.
   However, these will soon be integrated into the Ada Framework.

   At this point, it looks like FreeBSD (shared with DragonFly via DPorts)
   has taken the crown from Debian as the recognized best Ada development
   platform. The FreeBSD versions of the software are more recent and the
   Ports Collection has ports not available on Debian, such as
   LibSparkCrypto, the Matreshka library, and the Ahven unit tester.

   Future work potentially includes converting GCC AUX to GCC 4.8 to
   acquire better Ada 2012 support, importing Spark 2014 into ports when
   it arrives and to continue to add new Ada ports to the framework.
     __________________________________________________________________

FreeBSD Core Team

   Contact: FreeBSD Core Team <core@FreeBSD.org>

   In the third quarter of 2013, the Core Team focused on officially
   launching pkg.freebsd.org, the Project's official pkg(8) repository, in
   cooperation with the Port Management Team, the Security Team, and the
   Cluster Administration Team. At the same time, there are plans to
   gradually deprecate the use of the old pkg_add(1), allowing pkg(8) to
   be the default binary package management solution for FreeBSD, arriving
   with 10.0-RELEASE. Thomas Abthorpe has been appointed to the role of
   liaison between the Core Team and the Ports Management Team, in order
   to make the collaboration more effective.

   David Chisnall has joined the group that publishes the Quarterly Status
   reports and compiled a special status report on the results of the
   BSDCan 2013 Developer Summit. David also took the lead role on the
   organization of an off-season developer summit in Cambridge, UK, which
   was finally held at the end of August. For the items discussed in
   Cambridge, preparation of a detailed report is still in progress.

   There were src commit bits issued for 5 new developers and most of the
   src commits being idle more than 12 months have been taken into
   safekeeping as result of a major cleanup to the repository access file
   in July, performed by Gavin Atkinson.
     __________________________________________________________________

FreeBSD Documentation Project Primer Edit

   URL: http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en/books/fdp-primer/book.html

   Contact: Warren Block <wblock@FreeBSD.org>

   The FreeBSD Documentation Project Primer had not changed at the same
   rate as the documents themselves. Some sections were outdated and
   others were verbose and confusing, while information on new changes to
   the documentation were not described at all. In July, Warren gave the
   entire FDP Primer a fairly intense edit for simplicity and clarity.
   Chapters and sections were moved into a more logical order, and
   information was updated to be a better guide to the current state.
   Markup examples were added and revised. Style guidelines were also
   extended and updated. The Primer is now far more consistent and usable.
   As always, there is still room for improvement, and additions or
   corrections are encouraged.

Open tasks:

    1. An introductory chapter on writing manual pages with mdoc(7) would
       be an excellent addition.
     __________________________________________________________________

FreeBSD on Cubieboard2

   URL: http://svnweb.freebsd.org/changeset/base/254056

   Contact: Ganbold Tsagaankhuu <ganbold@FreeBSD.org>

   Initial support of Allwinner A20 SoC is committed to head. The A20 SoC
   on Cubieboard2 is pin-to-pin compatible with the A10 in Cubieboard1 and
   FreeBSD supports the following peripherals:
     * USB EHCI
     * GPIO

Open tasks:

    1. Get the EMAC Ethernet driver working. Need more help from network
       driver experts.
    2. Add more drivers.
     __________________________________________________________________

FreeBSD Port Management Team

   URL: http://www.FreeBSD.org/ports/
   URL: http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en/articles/contributing-ports/
   URL: http://portsmon.freebsd.org/index.html
   URL: http://www.freebsd.org/portmgr/index.html
   URL: http://blogs.freebsdish.org/portmgr/
   URL: http://www.twitter.com/freebsd_portmgr/
   URL: http://www.facebook.com/portmgr
   URL: http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-pkg-fallout

   Contact: FreeBSD Port Management Team <portmgr@FreeBSD.org>

   The ports tree contains approximately 24,400 ports, while the PR count
   exceeds 1,900. In the third quarter, we added four new committers and
   took in six commit bits for safekeeping.

   A significant amount of effort has gone into tweaking and manipulating
   the infrastructure to modernize and update it, in preperation for
   pkg(8) replacing the old pkg_add(1) infrastructure, as well as
   preparing for FreeBSD 10.0 with Clang as default compiler, libc++ as
   the default C++ standard library, and iconv(1) integrated into libc.

   Automated procedures for quality assurance have been implemented,
   notably pkg-fallout. All porters are encouraged to subscribe to the
   associated mailing list (see links), and do their part to fix ports for
   pkg(8) and Clang readiness.

   Many iterations of tests were run to ensure that as many packages as
   possible would be available for the 9.2 release.

Open tasks:

    1. Most ports PRs are assigned, we now need to focus on testing,
       committing, and closing.
     __________________________________________________________________

FreeBSD Postmaster Team

   URL: http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-fortran
   URL: http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-pkg-fallout
   URL: http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-users-jp

   Contact: FreeBSD Postmaster Team <postmaster@FreeBSD.org>

   In the third quarter of 2013, the FreeBSD Postmaster Team has
   implemented the following items that may be interest of the general
   public:
     * Created the freebsd-fortran list, requested by Anton Shterenlikht.
     * Created the freebsd-pkg-fallout list, requested by Baptiste
       Daroussin.
     * Created the freebsd-users-jp list, requested by Hiroki Sato
     * Retired the freebsd-mozilla list, requested by Florian Smeets.
     * Worked with the FreeBSD Cluster Administrators to enable TLS
       support on incoming and outgoing mail servers.
     * Started discussions and exploration of current and possible future
       mail and spam filtering.
     * Started the process for retiring the aic7xxx mailing list.
       Completion of this is scheduled for 12 October 2013.
     __________________________________________________________________

FreeBSD Python Ports

   URL: https://wiki.FreeBSD.org/Python
   URL: irc://freebsd-python@irc.freenode.net

   Contact: FreeBSD Python Team <python@FreeBSD.org>

   We are currently working on cleaning up the lang/python* ports to
   improve their compatibility with the original upstream build behaviour
   and to reduce the need for FreeBSD-specific build patches. A first step
   was made in September by reducing the flags injected into the different
   Python interpreter versions.

   The first tasks have been completed to support the installation of
   packages for different Python ports. A new metaport structure has
   replaced the original Python port behaviour, and will be enhanced over
   the next months to enable improved installation support of packages for
   different Python versions at the same time.

   The Python ports framework was enhanced with automated packaging list
   creation and replacement macros, which improve the compatibility with
   multiple Python versions and reduce the packaging list sizes.

   PyPy was heavily enhanced over the last couple of months. Major updates
   to the port solved integration issues and a new pypy-devel port for
   snapshots and previews was added. Since the PyPy 3 release, there is a
   new pypy3-devel port available to provide not only compatibility for
   Python 2.x specific scripts, but also for those using the 3.x language
   specification.

   IronPython found its way into the FreeBSD ports tree, providing an
   implementation of the Python language based on .NET and Mono.

Open tasks:

    1. Develop a high-level and lightweight Python Ports Policy.
    2. Chase the unification of Distribute (devel/py-distribute) and
       Setuptools (devel/py-setuptools*).
    3. Add support for granular dependencies (for example >=1.0 or < 2.0).
    4. Look at what adding pip (Python Package Index) support looks like.
    5. More tasks can be found on the Team's wiki page (see links).
     __________________________________________________________________

FreeBSD Release Engineering Team

   URL: http://www.FreeBSD.org/releases/9.2R/schedule.html
   URL: http://www.FreeBSD.org/releases/10.0R/schedule.html
   URL: http://ftp.FreeBSD.org/pub/FreeBSD/snapshots/VM-IMAGES/
   URL: http://ftp.FreeBSD.org/pub/FreeBSD/snapshots/ISO-IMAGES/

   Contact: FreeBSD Release Engineering Team <re@FreeBSD.org>

   The FreeBSD Release Engineering Team has completed the 9.2-RELEASE
   process. The release cycle changed with a last-minute addition of
   9.2-RC4. The 9.2-RELEASE was announced September 30, four weeks behind
   the original schedule.

   The FreeBSD 10.0-RELEASE cycle has started, and testing is strongly
   encouraged. For testing purposes, both installation images and virtual
   machine images exist on the FreeBSD Project FTP servers.

Open tasks:

    1. Test 10.0-CURRENT and report problems.
     __________________________________________________________________

FreeBSD/EC2

   URL: http://www.daemonology.net/freebsd-on-ec2/
   URL: https://aws.amazon.com/marketplace/pp/B00AA25MLK/

   Contact: Colin Percival <cperciva@freebsd.org>

   FreeBSD images are available for use in EC2 for 8.3-RELEASE,
   8.4-RELEASE, 9.0-RELEASE, 9.1-RELEASE, and 9.2-RELEASE. In 9.2-RELEASE,
   FreeBSD runs in EC2 using an unpatched source tree, but it needs the
   XENHVM kernel configuration.

   Starting from FreeBSD 10.0-ALPHA3, the GENERIC kernel configuration now
   contains all the XENHVM bits needed to allow FreeBSD to run in EC2
   natively. Consequently, FreeBSD 10.0 will be the first release for
   which FreeBSD/EC2 is purely "bits off the ISO". This also means that
   starting with 10.0 it will be possible to use freebsd-update(8) for all
   base system updates -- in earlier releases it was necessary to
   recompile the XENHVM kernel manually.

   Due to FreeBSD's use of HVM virtualization, running on "old" EC2
   instance types (m1, m2, c1, t1) requires that FreeBSD pretends to be
   Windows, which unfortunately results in paying the higher "windows" EC2
   instance prices. On "new" EC2 instances (cc1, cc2, cg1, cr1, hi1, hs1,
   and m3) FreeBSD can run as a "unix" image at the lower rate.

Open tasks:

    1. Test FreeBSD 10.0-ALPHAs/BETAs/RCs as they become available. Plenty
       of new Xen code has been committed recently and there are probably
       bugs to find before the release.
    2. Keep nagging Amazon to provide more instance types which FreeBSD
       can run on without paying a "Windows tax".
    3. Provide some mechanism for instance configuration via EC2
       user-data. This might involve using cloud-init, or it might be a
       new system.
     __________________________________________________________________

FreeBSD/pseries

   URL: http://svnweb.freebsd.org/changeset/base/255643

   Contact: Andreas Tobler <andreast@freebsd.org>
   Contact: Nathan Whitehorn <nwhitehorn@freebsd.org>

   Starting with FreeBSD 10.0-ALPHA4, the projects/pseries branch has been
   merged into FreeBSD head. This allows FreeBSD/powerpc64 to run in an
   IBM POWER logical partition and on certain classes of older IBM-type
   PowerPC hardware.

Open tasks:

    1. Test, possibly on real hardware. Most testing and development was
       conducted with the emulated LPAR target in QEMU. Please send any
       testing reports to the freebsd-ppc mailing list.
     __________________________________________________________________

FreeBSD/sparc64

   Contact: Marius Strobl <marius@FreeBSD.org>

   There are several things going on with the FreeBSD/sparc64 port.

   After having fixed all remaining problems and starting with
   9.2-RELEASE, releases for this architecture are cross-built on the
   FreeBSD Project cluster. As one might already have noticed, this means
   that from now on, sparc64 install sets and images including those for
   ALPHA, BETA, and RC builds, are available alongside those for the other
   platforms supported by FreeBSD. Since August 2013, automatically
   cross-built monthly FreeBSD/sparc64 snapshots are distributed via the
   official project mirrors. Hopefully, this can soon be extended further
   with freebsd-update(8) support for sparc64.

   The X.Org ports have been fixed to work on sparc64 when built with the
   WITH_NEW_XORG knob. However, it still needs to be evaluated whether the
   recently committed update to Mesa 9.1.6 has introduced any breakage.
     __________________________________________________________________

GEOM Direct Dispatch and Fine-Grained CAM Locking

   URL: http://svnweb.freebsd.org/base/projects/camlock/
   URL: http://people.freebsd.org/~mav/camlock_patches/

   Contact: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>

   Last year's high-performance storage vendor summit reported a
   performance bottleneck in the FreeBSD block storage subsystem, limiting
   peak performance to around 300-500K IOPS. While that is still more than
   enough for average systems, detailed investigation has shown a number
   of places that require radical improvement. The unmapped I/O support
   implemented early this year has already improved I/O performance by
   about 30% and moved more focus toward GEOM and CAM subsystems
   scalability. Fixing these issues was the goal of this project.

   The existing GEOM design assumed most I/O handling was to be done by
   only two kernel threads (g_up() and g_down()). That simplified locking
   in some cases, but limited potential SMP scalability and created
   additional scheduler overhead. This project introduces the concept of
   direct I/O dispatch into GEOM for cases where it is known to be safe
   and efficient. That implies marking some GEOM consumers and providers
   with one or two new flags, declaring situations when a direct function
   call can be used instead of normal request queuing. That permits
   avoiding any context switches inside GEOM for the most widely used
   topologies, simultaneously processing multiple I/Os from multiple
   calling threads.

   Having GEOM pass through multiple concurrent calls down to the
   underlying layers exposed major lock congestion in CAM. In the existing
   CAM design, all devices connected to the same ATA/SCSI controller share
   a single lock, which can be quite busy due to multiple controller
   hardware accesses and/or code logic. Experiments have shown that
   applying only the above GEOM direct dispatch changes burns up to 60% of
   system CPU time or even more in attempts to obtain these locks by
   multiple callers, killing any benefits of GEOM direct dispatch.

   To overcome this scaling limitation, a new fine-grained CAM locking
   design was implemented. It implies splitting the big per-SIM locks into
   several smaller ones: per-LUN locks, per-bus locks, queue locks, etc.
   After these changes, the remaining per-SIM lock protects only the
   controller driver internals, reducing lock congestion down to an
   acceptable level and keeping compatibility with existing drivers.

   Together, the GEOM and CAM changes double the peak I/O rate, reaching
   up to 1,000,000 IOPS on contemporary hardware.

   The changes were tested by a number of people and will be committed
   into FreeBSD head and merged to stable/10 after the end of the FreeBSD
   10.0 release cycle.

   The project is sponsored by iXsystems, Inc.

Open tasks:

    1. More reviews, more stability and performance tests.
     __________________________________________________________________

GNOME/FreeBSD

   URL: http://www.FreeBSD.org/gnome/

   Contact: FreeBSD GNOME Team <gnome@FreeBSD.org>

   Glib 2.36 and Gtk 3.8 were imported into the ports tree. The GNOME Team
   is currently working on improving the quality of GNOME 3.6. The version
   of multimedia/cheese shipped with GNOME 3 is now able to use devd(8) to
   find the camera through multimedia/webcamd. Several build improvements
   have been made to the www/webkit-gtk3 port, however it still is rather
   fragile.

   MATE, a desktop environment forked from the now-unmaintained codebase
   of GNOME 2, is about ready to go in.

   GNOME 2 will be removed at some point in the near future. How or when
   this will happen is not yet clear.

Open tasks:

    1. Test the update. Contact the maintainers if it is suspected that a
       port does not work with the newer version of devel/glib20.
    2. Update the FreeBSD GNOME website with recent changes in the ports
       tree, add new items in preparation for GNOME 3 and Mate, etc.
    3. Continue working on GNOME 3.6, stability and missing features.
    4. Import MATE into the ports tree.
     __________________________________________________________________

GNUstep on FreeBSD

   Contact: David Chisnall <theraven@FreeBSD.org>

   GNUstep is the open source implementation of the Objective-C APIs based
   on the OpenStep specification that Apple brands as Cocoa. The
   similarities between the FreeBSD and OS X libc make FreeBSD an
   attractive target platform for porting OS X applications, with the
   addition of GNUstep.

   The GNUstep ports in FreeBSD have now been updated to the latest
   releases and now build with the GNUstep Objective-C runtime and Clang
   3.3, with the non-fragile ABI by default. This means that all of the
   modern features of Objective-C are supported, including Automatic
   Reference Counting (ARC) and recent syntax improvements.

   The devel/gnustep meta-port will install all of the core GNUstep
   libraries, ready for development. The x11/gnustep-app meta-port will
   install all of the GNUstep-based applications and libraries currently
   in the ports tree. Many of these are old and not well-tested with later
   GNUstep release, so consider them experimental at present. We are
   currently working on updating them, including moving from some
   abandoned upstream locations to the GNUstep Applications Project (GAP),
   which has taken over maintenance of a number of older GNUstep programs.
     __________________________________________________________________

LLDB Debugger Port

   URL: https://wiki.freebsd.org/lldb

   Contact: Ed Maste <emaste@freebsd.org>

   LLDB is the debugger project in the LLVM family. It supports the Mac OS
   X, Linux, and FreeBSD platforms.

   A number of improvements have been made to the port since the previous
   status update. Unit test failures have been triaged and have defects
   entered in LLDB's bug tracker. In combination with the lldb buildbot
   this allows for the quick identification of new failures introduced by
   other ongoing development. Core file support has also been added.

   An LLDB snapshot has been imported into the FreeBSD base system and is
   available as of SVN revision 255722. It is not yet built by default but
   may be enabled by adding WITH_LLDB= to src.conf(5).

   This project is sponsored by DARPA/AFRL in collaboration with SRI
   International and the University of Cambridge.

Open tasks:

    1. Support live debugging of multithreaded processes.
    2. Fix amd64 watchpoints.
    3. Add support for remote debugging (gdbserver, debugserver).
    4. Add support for kernel debugging.
    5. Verify i386 and arm architectures.
    6. Implement MIPS target support.
    7. Verify cross-debugging.
    8. Investigate and fix test suite failures.
     __________________________________________________________________

Native iSCSI Stack

   URL: https://wiki.freebsd.org/Native%20iSCSI%20target

   Contact: Edward Tomasz Napierała <trasz@FreeBSD.org>

   Due to the quickly approaching time of 10.0-RELEASE, the priorities for
   the native iSCSI stack shifted somewhat, from performance optimizations
   to making sure the new stack is reliable, feature-complete, and is able
   to interoperate correctly with various implementations. Plenty of time
   was invested into testing and debugging, mostly on the initiator side,
   to make sure it works correctly with other targets, such as Solaris
   COMSTAR, and behaves properly in edge conditions like connection
   problems. Nevertheless, some fundamental optimizations, such as
   Immediate Data support, were implemented. The documentation has
   improved, and there will be a new section added to the FreeBSD Handbook
   describing the use of the new stack.

   The new stack was committed to head and will ship as part of
   10.0-RELEASE. There is ongoing work on fixing issues reported by early
   adopters.

   This project is being sponsored by The FreeBSD Foundation.

Open tasks:

    1. Fix newly reported issues.
    2. Improve performance.
     __________________________________________________________________

Reworking random(4)

   Contact: Mark Murray <markm@freebsd.org>
   Contact: Arthur Mesh <arthurmesh@gmail.com>
   Contact: Dag-Erling Smørgrav <des@freebsd.org>

   Random numbers require a lot more thought and preparation than would
   naively appear to be the case. For simulations, number sequences that
   are repeatable but sufficiently disordered are often needed to achieve
   required experimental duplication ability, and many programmers are
   familiar with these. For cryptography, it is essential that an attacker
   not be able to predict or guess the output sequence, thus giving a
   source of security-critical secret material for uses such as passwords
   or "key material".

   FreeBSD's random number generator, available as the pseudo-file
   /dev/random produces unpredictable numbers intended for cryptographic
   use, and is thus a Cryptograpically-Secured Pseudo-Random Number
   Generator, or CSPRNG. The security is given by careful design of the
   output generator (based on a block cipher) and input entropy
   accumulation queues. The latter uses hashes to accumulate stochastic
   information harvested from various places in the kernel to provide
   highly unpredictable input to the generator. The algorithm for doing
   this, Yarrow, by Schneier et al, may be found by web search.

   FreeBSD's CSPRNG also allowed for certain stochastic sources, deemed to
   be "high-quality", to directly supply the random(4) device without
   going through Yarrow. With recent revelations over possible government
   surveillance and involvement in the selection of these "high-quality"
   sources, it is felt that they can no longer be trusted, and must
   therefore also be processed though Yarrow.

   The matter was discussed at various levels of formality at the
   Cambridge Developer Summit in August, and at EuroBSDcon 2013 in
   September.

   This work is now done, and the random(4) CSPRNG is now brought to a
   more paranoid, modern standard of distrust with regard to its entropy
   sources. Infrastructure work was also done to facilitate certain
   entropy-source choices for the convenience of the system
   administrators.

   Future work is now going ahead with the implementation of the Fortuna
   algorithm by Ferguson and Schneier as an upgrade or alternative to
   Yarrow. Initially a choice will be presented, and decisions on the
   future of the CSPRNG processing algorithms in use will be made in the
   future as needs arise.

Open tasks:

    1. Implement FIPS 800-90b support.
    2. A full, in-depth review of entropy.
     __________________________________________________________________

SDIO Driver

   URL: https://wiki.freebsd.org/SDIO
   URL: https://github.com/kibab/freebsd/tree/kibab-dplug

   Contact: Ilya Bakulin <ilya@bakulin.de>

   SDIO is an interface designed as an extension of the existing SD card
   standard, to allow connecting different peripherals to the host with
   the standard SD controller. Peripherals currently sold at the general
   market include WLAN/BT modules, cameras, fingerprint readers, and
   barcode scanners. The driver is implemented as an extension to the
   existing MMC bus, adding a lot of new SDIO-specific bus methods. A
   prototype of the driver for the Marvell SDIO WLAN/BT (Avastar 88W8787)
   module is also being developed, using the existing Linux driver as the
   reference.

   SDIO card detection and initialization already work, most needed bus
   methods are implemented and tested. There is an ongoing work to design
   a good locking model for the stack. The WiFi driver is able to load
   firmware onto the card and initialize it.

Open tasks:

    1. SDIO stack: Design a locking model, define how the interrupts
       should be processed (on SDIO controller level, MMC stack level and
       by child drivers).
    2. Marvell SDIO WiFi: connect to the FreeBSD network stack, write the
       code to implement required functions (such as sending and receiving
       data, network scanning, and so on).
    3. Implement detach path. It cannot be tested on the DreamPlug used
       for development, because the DreamPlug does not have an external
       SDIO-capable slot.
     __________________________________________________________________

Static Code Analysis

   URL: http://scan.coverity.com/
   URL: http://scan.freebsd.your.org/
   URL: http://clang-analyzer.llvm.org/

   Contact: Ulrich Spoerlein <uqs@FreeBSD.org>

   With our own (old and unstable) instance of Coverity Prevent gone, we
   have now fully transitioned to the Scan project run by Coverity (see
   links), which Open Source projects can use to learn about possible
   defects in their source code.

   We also continue to run our code base through the Static Analyzer that
   is shipped with Clang/LLVM. It cannot track the state of the code over
   time, but has the benefit that everyone can use it without any special
   setup. See the home page at the links section for more information on
   the Clang Static Analyzer project in general, and head over to the
   FreeBSD Clang Static Analyzer Scan page (see links) to see those
   possible defects (no signup required).

   We are looking for a co-admin for both of these projects to increase
   the bus-factor and the chance of survival for these services. Fame and
   fortune await!

Open tasks:

    1. Maybe turn on email reports for new defects to the internal list of
       FreeBSD developers.
    2. Find co-admin.
    3. Fix the defects reported by Coverity and Clang.
     __________________________________________________________________

Superpages for ARMv7

   URL: http://static.usenix.org/events/osdi02/tech/full_papers/navarro/navarro.pdf
   URL: http://wiki.freebsd.org/ARMSuperpages
   URL: http://blogs.arm.com/software-enablement/1079-transparent-superpages-for-freebsd-on-arm
   URL: https://wiki.freebsd.org/201309DevSummit?action=AttachFile&do=view&target=semihalf-superpages_armv7.pdf
   URL: http://svnweb.freebsd.org/changeset/base/254918

   Contact: Zbigniew Bodek <zbb@semihalf.com>
   Contact: Grzegorz Bernacki <gjb@semihalf.com>
   Contact: Rafał Jaworowski <raj@semihalf.com>

   The ARM architecture is becoming more and more prevalent, with
   increasing usage beyond the mobile and embedded space. Among the more
   interesting industry trends emerging in the recent months, there has
   been the concept of "ARM server". Top-tier companies like Dell and HP
   have already started to develop such systems.

   Key to the success of FreeBSD in these new areas is dealing with the
   sophisticated features of the platform, for example adding support for
   superpages.

   The objective of this project is to enable FreeBSD/arm to utilize
   superpages, allowing efficient use of TLB translations (by enlarging
   TLB coverage), leading to improved performance in many applications and
   scalability. This is intended to work on ARMv7-based processors,
   however compatibility with ARMv6 will be preserved.

   The following steps have been made since the last status report:
     * The pmap(9) module has been adjusted to fully utilize superpages.
     * Found and fixed minor bugs in superpage management.
     * Implemented the pmap_advise() routine.
     * Performed extensive testing and benchmarking:
          + Giga Updates Per Second (GUPS) benchmark: 34% lower memory
            access latency and 34% higher updates ratio.
          + LMbench: 38% lower memory latency.
          + Self-hosted buildworld: 20% shorter, using GCC.
     * Final integration into FreeBSD head.

   This project is jointly sponsored by The FreeBSD Foundation and
   Semihalf.

Open tasks:

    1. Adjust pmap to resolve the demotion issue caused by the continuous
       active queue scanning in VM.
    2. Support for 64KB page size.
    3. Move pv_flags to page table entry descriptors.
     __________________________________________________________________

The entities Documentation Branch

   URL: http://svnweb.freebsd.org/changeset/doc/42226

   Contact: René Ladan <rene@FreeBSD.org>

   The entities project branch has been successfully merged into the main
   documentation branch per revision 42226 of the doc repository (see
   link). The purpose of this branch was to remove the duplicated
   definitions of authors in both authors.ent and developers.ent. The
   latter file has been removed after migrating its contents to the former
   file. While most changes are not visible to end users, the Committer's
   Guide was changed to accomodate for changes related to adding a new
   committer. Translators were also informed of the update. The largest
   hurdle mentioned in the last report, processing the <email> element,
   was solved with the help of Gábor Kövesdán.
     __________________________________________________________________

The FreeBSD Foundation

   URL: http://www.FreeBSDFoundation.org/

   Contact: Deb Goodkin <deb@FreeBSDFoundation.org>

   The FreeBSD Foundation is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization dedicated
   to supporting and promoting the FreeBSD Project and community
   worldwide. Most of our funding is used to support FreeBSD development
   projects, conferences and developer summits, purchase equipment to grow
   and improve the FreeBSD infrastructure, and provide legal support for
   the Project.

   We listened to our donors who asked us to have more fundraising efforts
   throughout the year. This quarter we had the second of three
   fundraising campaigns planned for 2013. We started the quarter having
   raised $365,291. By the end of the quarter, we raised $410,000 for the
   year. These early donations have made a significant impact on our
   fundraising efforts this year.

   Some of the highlights from this past quarter include:
     * Projects completed last quarter:
          + ARM Superpages
          + Documentation project infrastructure enhancements
     * Projects in progress:
          + Native iSCSI kernel stack
          + Newcons console driver
     * Projects that started last quarter:
          + Capsicum Integration
          + Network Stack Layer 2 Modernization
     * Platinum Sponsor for EuroBSDcon, had six Foundation representatives
       attend the conference and the Developer Summit, sponsored 7
       developers to attend the conference, and sponsored the Developer
       Summit.
     * Sponsored the Cambridge Developer Summit, and sponsored 2
       developers to attend this event.
     * Attended Indianapolis LinuxFest July 27, FOSSCON in Philadelphia
       August 10, Ohio LinuxFest in Columbus September 14, and LinuxCon in
       New Orleans September 16-17, to promote FreeBSD.
     * Met with the FreeBSD Core Team to discuss their goals and to
       discuss areas that we can help.
     * Met with the Documentation Team to talk about helping them update
       their website as well as what other areas we can help them with.
     * Recognized Dag-Erling Smørgrav at EuroBSDcon for his contributions
       to FreeBSD.
     * Became a sponsor of vBSDCon, a new conference in Washington, DC.
     * Hired Glen Barber as a full-time employee to do system
       administration work and to help with release engineering.
     * Hired Cinthy Tanko as a part-time administrative assistant to help
       with day-to-day Foundation activities.
     * Purchased hardware to be placed in our NYI colo to support the
       building and distribution of new style packages in advance of
       FreeBSD 10.
     * Provided teleconferencing services to the Core Team to support
       their monthly conferences.
     __________________________________________________________________

VirtIO Network Multiqueue

   URL: http://svnweb.freebsd.org/changeset/base/255112

   Contact: Bryan Venteicher <bryanv@freebsd.org>

   The VirtIO network driver, vtnet(4), is used by FreeBSD systems running
   on hypervisors including bhyve(4) and Linux's KVM. It recently gained
   support for multiple queues, along with a significant cleanup and
   support for a few additional features.
     __________________________________________________________________

VMware VMXNET3 Driver

   URL: http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-current/2013-August/043494.html
   URL: http://svnweb.freebsd.org/base/head/sys/dev/vmware/vmxnet3/

   Contact: Bryan Venteicher <bryanv@freebsd.org>

   A port of the OpenBSD vmx(4) ethernet driver for VMware virtual
   machines has been committed. The driver can be used in place of the
   VMware Tools vmxnet3 driver, which currently does not support
   10.0-RELEASE (or anything past 9.0-RELEASE).

Open tasks:

    1. Performance improvements, multiqueue support.
    2. Merge to stable/9.
     __________________________________________________________________

X.Org on FreeBSD

   URL: https://wiki.freebsd.org/Graphics
   URL: https://wiki.freebsd.org/Xorg
   URL: http://trillian.chruetertee.ch/ports/browser/trunk
   URL: https://wiki.freebsd.org/AMD_GPU
   URL: https://github.com/dumbbell/freebsd/tree/kms-drm-update-38

   Contact: FreeBSDX11 Team <x11@FreeBSD.org>

   Mesa 9.1 (libGL and dri) was updated in ports. This includes
   experimental ports for libEGL and libgles2: they are dependencies of
   the experimental ports for Wayland and Weston.

   The radeonkms driver was committed to FreeBSD head in the end of August
   and will be part of 10.0-RELEASE. It received several fixes since the
   initial commit and now seems quite stable. However, one missing major
   feature is support for suspend/resume: the GPU almost always locks up
   during resume on the test computer.

   Thanks to the update of Mesa and the update of
   x11-drivers/xf86-video-ati to 7.2.0 in the ports tree, every pieces are
   in place to allow users to use recent AMD video cards (up to HD7000,
   maybe some HD8000).

   The driver will now only receive bug fixes and focus will move on the
   update of the DRM generic code and the i915 driver.

   The generic DRM code, shared by the i915kms and radeonkms video drivers
   is quite old now. Work has started to update and sync it with that of
   Linux 3.8. This code is available on GitHub.

   The expected benefits are:
     * Fixes in the framebuffer code, which would help the future
       deployment of Newcons.
     * Preliminary support for minor devices (that is, control versus
       render nodes).
     * Support for setmaster and dropmaster, which allows to run multiple
       X sessions.

   François Tigeot from DragonFly is also working on updates to their DRM
   code, and the X11 team is planning to share the effort.

   An experimental devd(8) backend was added to the
   x11-servers/xorg-server port. This allows X.Org to use devd(8) to
   detect and configure input devices (for example, keyboards and mices)
   dynamically.

   Our current wiki articles are used to describe projects and report
   status. However, they lack some consistency and links between them. We
   started to think about reorganizing them to:
     * Improve the coordination between the ports and the kernel efforts.
     * Make the information more accessible.

   Nothing is visible yet on the wiki.

Open tasks:

    1. Keep tracking Mesa 9.2 or later and xorg-server 1.14. Both are
       currently blocked, but it is good to keep track of what upstream is
       doing.
    2. Test and report successes and failures for AMD GPUs.
    3. Wayland builds now. Work is being done on Weston to see if there
       are any run-time issues. Weston is the reference compositor for
       Wayland.
    4. Improve the devd(8) backend for x11-servers/xorg-server, so the HAL
       option can be removed completely.
     __________________________________________________________________
 
FreeBSD 10 dürfte ein schönes Stück Software werden :)

- Native iSCSI Stack
- VirtIO Network Multiqueue
- VMware VMXNET3 Driver
- GNOME 3 is now able to use devd
- MATE, a desktop environment forked from the now-unmaintained codebase of GNOME 2, is about ready to go in.
- An experimental devd(8) backend was added to the x11-servers/xorg-server port.
 
Und:
- pkg.freebsd.org wird nun erstmals als FreeBSD 10.0 Feature erwähnt
- Newcons scheint für 10.0 noch nicht abgeschrieben zu sein, aber ich halte es für unwahrscheinlich
 
Interessante Neuerung ist auch das versucht wird drm2 in Sync mit Linux zu halten und erstmal auf den Stand vom kernel 3.8 zu heben.
Selbst wenn es newscons schafft, denke ich kann das nur optional kommen. Sonst wuerde 10.0 Release 40 Beta-Versionen benoetigen, um fertig zu werden. Das werden die wohl nicht machen.
 
Vernünftige Unicode Unterstützung auf der Shell, darauf warte ich schon lange.
Bisher ist es bei allen BSDs mit Schmerzen verbunden und ein Flickenteppich sondergleichen.
 
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