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diff --git a/en/news/status/report-2001-07.xml b/en/news/status/report-2001-07.xml deleted file mode 100644 index c935c8c05b..0000000000 --- a/en/news/status/report-2001-07.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,1204 +0,0 @@ -<?xml version="1.0"?> - -<!-- $FreeBSD: www/en/news/status/report-july-2001.xml,v 1.6 2003/04/13 16:31:52 hrs Exp $ --> - -<report> - <date> - <month>July</month> - - <year>2001</year> - </date> - - <cvs:keywords xmlns:cvs="http://www.FreeBSD.org/XML/CVS" version="1.0"> - <cvs:keyword name="freebsd"> - $FreeBSD: www/en/news/status/report-july-2001.xml,v 1.6 2003/04/13 16:31:52 hrs Exp $ - </cvs:keyword> - </cvs:keywords> - - <section> - <title>Introduction</title> - - <p>Last month's status report was apparently a great success: I - received countless e-mails with comments, questions, and - suggestions. I've tried to incorporate any suggestions and address - any problems from these e-mails in this month's report, which - captures a far more extensive snapshot of FreeBSD activity in the - last month. Unlike last month's report, it does a better job of - reflecting non-development activity, such as on-going conference - planning, documentation, and so on. This is a trend I hope to see - improve in future months as well.</p> - - <p>On the topic of conferences, in the future I'd like to report - more on publication activities relating to FreeBSD, including - online journals with articles relating to FreeBSD, paper journals, - conference papers, and so on. Likewise, I would be interested in - including references to Call for Papers relating to FreeBSD. I'll - take this opportunity to plug both registration and paper - submission for BSDCon Europe in November, which has status included - in this report, and for the general BSD Conference being hosted by - USENIX in February. Your attendance and submissions make these - conferences "happen", and promote FreeBSD as a platform for new - research, feature development, and application products. Work of - extremely high calibre is performed on FreeBSD, and we need to get - the word out.</p> - </section> - - <section> - <title>Submission for Future Editions</title> - - <p>Next month, we're maintaining much the same submission - requirements: reports should be one or two paragraphs long, sent by - e-mail, and approximate the layout of the entries this month - (Project, Contact, URL, and text). I'll send out reminders again - over the week before the deadline, with more specific instructions. - An area where I'd like to explore improvement lies in the - coordination of related status reports for larger projects, such as - new architectural work or platform ports. This might even have the - effect of encouraging communication within these projects :-). I'd - like to continue to focus on pulling in a broader range of groups - and their activities, including the Security Officer, Release - Engineer, and Core Team.</p> - - <p> - <i>-- Robert Watson < - <a href="mailto:rwatson@FreeBSD.org">rwatson@FreeBSD.org</a> - - ></i> - </p> - </section> - - <project> - <title>ACPI</title> - - <contact> - <person> - <name> - <given>Mike</given> - - <common>Smith</common> - </name> - - <email>msmith@FreeBSD.org</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <p>ACPI (Advanced Configuration and Power Interface) is an - industry standard which obsoletes APM, Intel MPS, PnPBIOS, and - other Intel PC firmware interface standards. It is also used on - the IA64 platform. More information on ACPI is available at</p> - - <a href="http://developer.intel.com/technology/iapc/acpi"> - http://developer.intel.com/technology/iapc/acpi</a> - - <p>The FreeBSD ACPI subsystem project is based heavily on the - Intel ACPI Component Architecture. This status report outlines - the current state of the project; future updates will focus on - changes as they occur.</p> - - <p>The Intel ACPI interpreter is fully integrated, although bugs - are still coming out of the woodwork occasionally.</p> - - <ul> - <li>PCI bus detection and interrupt routing are functional, but - power management interaction will require work on the core PCI - subsystem.</li> - - <li>Non-PCI motherboard peripheral probing is implemented, but - believed to have problems on some systems.</li> - - <li>A power policy manager has been implemented. The initial - policy manager has two modes, "performance" and "economy".</li> - - <li>CPU speed throttling is integrated with the platform power - policy.</li> - - <li>System thermal monitoring is implemented, but fan control - is believed to have problems.</li> - - <li>Pushbutton suspend and power-off is implemented.</li> - - <li>System timekeeping using the ACPI timer is supported.</li> - - <li>Battery status monitoring is implemented.</li> - </ul> - - <p>Work is ongoing in the following areas:</p> - - <ul> - <li>System suspend and resume.</li> - - <li>Timekeeper accuracy/reliability.</li> - - <li>Power profiles.</li> - - <li>User-level management interfaces.</li> - - <li>PCI power management.</li> - - <li>Bug-hunting.</li> - </ul> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>ARM Port</title> - - <contact> - <person> - <name> - <given>Stephane</given> - - <common>Potvin</common> - </name> - - <email>septovin@videotron.ca</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <p>The ARM port is currently going pretty well. The kernel is - compiling and is able to boot to the point where it panics trying - to initialize the network subsystem. The current reference - platform is the Netwinder but this may change as many people - expressed interest in a more broadly available platform. Things - that need to be done before it can get further includes adding - footbridge, timer and interrupt supports. The pmap module is not - completed yet either.</p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>BIND 9</title> - - <contact> - <person> - <name>Doug Barton</name> - - <email>dougb@FreeBSD.org</email> - </person> - - <person> - <name>Jeroen Ruigrok</name> - - <email>asmodai@FreeBSD.org</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <p>Now that BIND 8.2.4 is finally imported the time has come to - look at getting BIND 9 imported into CURRENT. The current idea is - to have it imported alongside BIND 8 so that people can play with - either one until all import problems have been taken care of and - people have tested it a bit.</p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>binup</title> - - <contact> - <person> - <name>Eric Melville</name> - - <email>eric@FreeBSD.org</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <p>Although gaining a new name, the project has been at a - standstill due to both resource availability during the move - between BSDi and Wind River, and other commitments of the - developers. The project should obtain an official mailing list, - as well as return to an active state after the dust settles.</p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>BSDCon Europe</title> - - <links> - <url href="http://www.bsdconeurope.org" /> - </links> - - <contact> - <person> - <name>Paul Richards</name> - - <email>paul@freebsd-services.co.uk</email> - </person> - - <person> - <name>Josef Karthauser</name> - - <email>joe@tao.org.uk</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <p>The conference will take place at the Thistle Hotel, Brighton, - UK from 9-11 November 2001.</p> - - <p>The aim of the conference is to provide a focal point for - European users and developers of all the BSD derived operating - systems. The format will be similar to other conferences, with 2 - days of technical sessions over the Saturday and Sunday.</p> - - <p>We'll be finalizing the schedule towards the end of the month - and anybody who is interested in doing a talk should contact us - ASAP. There are no restrictions on the use of talks; if it's been - done before we may still be interested in having it presented to - an European audience, and we make no claims to the talks so - speakers are free to present the talks again at other - conferences.</p> - - <p>We're also still looking for sponsors.</p> - - <p>We had 80 pre-registrations in the first week so we're - expecting a good turnout.</p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>CAM</title> - - <contact> - <person> - <name>Matthew Jacob</name> - - <email>mjacob@FreeBSD.org</email> - </person> - - <person> - <name>Justin Gibbs</name> - - <email>gibbs@FreeBSD.org</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <p>The new CAM transport code is starting to get supported in - more HBAs and to get refined so that it does the intended - per-protocol support. No progress on doing any SMPng work for CAM - has been made yet. This is a fairly high priority.</p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>Problem Reports</title> - - <links> - <url href="http://phk.freebsd.dk/Gnats/" /> - </links> - - <contact> - <person> - <name> - <given>Poul-Henning</given> - - <common>Kamp</common> - </name> - - <email>phk@FreeBSD.org</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <p>Thanks to various outstanding individual efforts, we are now - down to just below 2300 open bug-reports. This means that we have - fought our way back to the level we had around march 2000.</p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>Documentation Project</title> - - <links> - <url href="http://www.FreeBSD.org/docs.html" /> - - <url href="http://www.FreeBSD.org/docproj/index.html" /> - </links> - - <contact> - <person> - <name>Documentation Project</name> - - <email>doc@FreeBSD.org</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <p>Work continues (in large part sponsored by WRS) on updating - the Handbook ready for the second print edition. There has been a - flurry of activity in this area recently, and the ToDo list can - be seen at</p> - - <p> - <a href="http://www.FreeBSD.org/docproj/handbook.html"> - http://www.FreeBSD.org/docproj/handbook.html</a> - </p> - - <p>Dima and others are doing a stellar job of keeping up with the - steady flow of incoming PRs relating to the documentation - project.</p> - - <p>The Developers' Handbook,</p> - - <p> - <a - href="http://www.FreeBSD.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/developers-handbook/index.html"> - http://www.FreeBSD.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/developers-handbook/index.html</a> - </p> - - <p>is a year old; it contains a wealth of useful content for - developers developing on, or for, FreeBSD. As ever, more - contributions are always required, not only for the developers' - handbook, but for all of the FreeBSD documentation set.</p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>Fibre Channel Support</title> - - <contact> - <person> - <name>Matthew Jacob</name> - - <email>mjacob@feral.com</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <p>The basic design hasn't changed and this project mainly is in - the phase of continued hardening and test case development. The - next major feature will be to fully integrate into the new CAM - TRAN code and to fully support on the fly device addition and - removal. The only HBA supported is QLogic at this time. Future - support for the QLogic line is planned to have 2300 (2Gb) and IP - support before October.</p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>Hardware Watchpoints in the Kernel Debugger</title> - - <contact> - <person> - <name>Brian Dean</name> - - <email>bsd@FreeBSD.org</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <p>Hardware watchpoints are now available for kernel debugging on - the IA32 (i386) architecture. One can now set hardware - watchpoints using the new ddb command 'hwatch', which is - analogous to the existing 'watch' command. Alternatively, if - greater flexibility is required, direct access to the debug - registers is available using the ddb 'set' command which allows - complete control over the processor hardware debug facilities. - Hardware watchpoints are very useful in tracking down those - elusive memory overwrite bugs in the kernel. Hardware watchpoints - can even be used to set a code breakpoint in ROM, which is - commonly found in embedded systems.</p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>ifconfig support for IEEE 802.11 wireless devices</title> - - <contact> - <person> - <name>Brooks Davis</name> - - <email>brooks@FreeBSD.org</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <p>Support for configuring IEEE 802.11 wireless devices via - ifconfig has been committed to -current and -stable. It contains - most of the functionality needed to configure an wireless device. - Some missing features are being worked on including integrated - support for DHCP so a single entry in /etc/rc.conf can be used to - fully configure a wireless device on a DHCP lan and setting the - CTS/RTS threshold. Currently the an(4) and wi(4) drivers are - supported in -current and -stable with the awi(4) device - supported in -current. Further work is needed to support - Frequency Hopping devices such as ray(4).</p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>jailNG</title> - - <contact> - <person> - <name>Robert Watson</name> - - <email>rwatson@FreeBSD.org</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <p>jailNG is a from-scratch rewrite of the popular jail(8) - service, focusing on improved management functions, as well as - more fine-grained configurability. An initial prototype has been - written, based on explicitly named and configured jails, and work - is proceeding on userland integration. Currently, it's not clear - if the timeline for this will be 5.0-RELEASE, or 5.1-RELEASE.</p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>FreeBSD Java Project</title> - - <links> - <url href="http://www.FreeBSD.org/java/" /> - </links> - - <contact> - <person> - <name>Greg Lewis</name> - - <email>glewis@eyesbeyond.com</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <p>The main development in the FreeBSD Java Project over the last - month was the release of an initial "Developers Only" patchset - for the JDK 1.3.1. Since that release progress had been made - towards a much more usable alpha quality patchset which is - likely to be turned into a port, as per the current JDK 1.2.2 - patchset. This new patchset will feature a number of bugfixes, - which essentially get the JDK to a working state for early - adopters, and an initial implementation of "native threads" based - on FreeBSD's userland pthreads. Unfortunately this implementation - isn't fully functional, but is included in the hope of - getting more eyeballs on the code (particularly experienced - pthread programmers). We'd also like to welcome Fuyuhiko - Maruyama-san as a new committer, the usual punishment for too - many good patches.</p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>jpman project</title> - - <links> - <url href="http://www.jp.FreeBSD.org/man-jp/" /> - </links> - - <contact> - <person> - <name>Japanese Man Page Project</name> - - <email>man-jp@jp.FreeBSD.org</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <p>We have been working to provide Japanese version of FreeBSD - online manuals, since 1996. Currently, RELENG_4 manuals are - based. Translated versions are placed on doc/ja_JP.eucJP/man and - provided to users using ports/japanese/man-doc. Also, we discuss - about related commands (e.g. ports/japanese/man and - ports/japanese/groff).</p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>Kernel Summit - Usenix 2001</title> - - <links> - <url href="http://www.FreeBSD.org/~jhb/summit/usenix01/" /> - </links> - - <contact> - <person> - <name>John Baldwin</name> - - <email>jhb@FreeBSD.org</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <p>The first FreeBSD kernel summit meeting was held June 29-30, - 2001 in Boston, MA at the Usenix 2001 Annual Technical - Conference. Links to a variety of files are posted on the web - site.</p> - - <p>Note: I (jhb) am still working on writing up a general summary - of the meeting. When that is completed it will be posted here and - mailed to the -hackers mailing list.</p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>KSE threading the kernel</title> - - <links> - <url href="http://people.FreeBSD.org/~jasone/kse/" /> - </links> - - <contact> - <person> - <name>Julian Elischer</name> - - <email>julian@elischer.org</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <p>I'm working on multithreading the kernel. So far I have over - 400KB of diffs relative to todays -current (I'm keeping my tree - updated with changes as they occur rather than get hit with a big - update at the end).</p> - - <p>I have split the proc structure and am changing most of the - kernel to pass around a thread identifier instead of a proc - structure.</p> - - <p>The following interfaces have been changed so far:</p> - - <ul> - <li>device devsw entries</li> - - <li>vfs calls</li> - - <li>mutexes</li> - - <li>events</li> - - <li>system calls</li> - - <li>scheduler</li> - - <li>+ a lot of code in between.</li> - </ul> - - <p>I have still a lot of work to go with a lot of "dumb editing" - (s/struct proc \*p/struct thread \*td/) usually I change a few - items and then fix everything that breaks when I try compile it. - I'd like to check it in on a branch so others can help the - editing but haven't worked out the best way to do it yet.</p> - - <p>I have implemented changes to the scheduler so that KSE's are - scheduled instead of processes, and threads sleep, letting the - KSE pick up a new thread. but it's not anywhere ready yet (heck - it doesn't compile yet :-)</p> - - <p>Note that I have not yet updated the document listed above.. - everywhere it mentions "ksec" or "KSE-context", the code uses the - word "thread". I will update it soon as Jason has sent me the - source.</p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>FreeBSD Monthly Development Status Reports</title> - - <links> - <url href="http://www.FreeBSD.org/news/status/" /> - </links> - - <contact> - <person> - <name>Robert Watson</name> - - <email>rwatson@FreeBSD.org></email> - </person> - - <person> - <name>Chris Costello</name> - - <email>chris@FreeBSD.org</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <p>The FreeBSD Monthly Development Status Report aims to keep - users and developers up-to-date on the latest goings-on in the - FreeBSD project by providing summaries of each project and its - status. At the time of this writing, the July 2001 status report - is being prepared and is very near release. The FreeBSD Web site - now has a Status Reports section, which, when the July 2001 - report is released, will be updated to include a link to an - HTML-ified version.</p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>NetBSD rc.d port</title> - - <links> - <url href="http://groups.yahoo.com/group/FreeBSD-rc" /> - </links> - - <contact> - <person> - <name>Doug Barton</name> - - <email>dougb@FreeBSD.org</email> - </person> - - <person> - <name>Sheldon Hearn</name> - - <email>sheldonh@FreeBSD.org</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <p>The NetBSD rc.d port aims to improve the FreeBSD startup - process by porting Luke Mewburn's rc.d work from NetBSD to - FreeBSD. This will score FreeBSD startup and shutdown - dependencies without losing the traditional and much loved - monolithic configuration filesystem.</p> - - <p>Luke Mewburn's USENIX paper and slides on the system as - implemented in NetBSD are available here:</p> - - <p> - <a href="http://groups.yahoo.com/group/FreeBSD-rc/message/3"> - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/FreeBSD-rc/message/3</a> - </p> - - <p>Interested parties are urged to study this material before - joining the discussion list.</p> - - <p>The intention at this stage is to decide on an approach that - will ensure that the differences between the NetBSD rc.d system - and the system as ported to FreeBSD will be kept to a minimum. - This will probably involve discussions with Luke around those - areas of the system that are identified as areas for potential - improvement.</p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>Netgraph ATM</title> - - <contact> - <person> - <name>Hartmut Brandt</name> - - <email>brandt@fokus.gmd.de</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <p>The goal of this project is the implementation of ATM - signalling and other ATM protocols by means of the netgraph(4) - framework. This should provide an easily extensible architecture - for using ATM on FreeBSD. Currently the full UNI4.0 stack (except - for the LIJ capability) has been implemented, including ILMI and - a first version of the ATM Forum API for UNI. An implementation - of Classical IP over ATM is also available. Drivers have been - implemented for the Fore PCA200E and Fore HE-155 cards.</p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>network device cloning</title> - - <contact> - <person> - <name>Brooks Davis</name> - - <email>brooks@FreeBSD.org</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <p>Network device cloning support has been imported from NetBSD. - This allows virtual devices to be allocated on demand rather then - being statically allocated at compile time. Our implementation - differs slightly from that of NetBSD's in that we allow both the - creation of specific devices (i.e. gif0) and arbitrary devices - instead of just allowing specific devices. Currently, the only - device in the tree which has been converted is the gif(4) device - which has been converted in both -current and -stable. Work is - ongoing to convert all other virtual network devices with work in - progress on faith, stf, and vlan interfaces. In general this - conversion is accompanied by appropriate modifications to make - these devices fully modular.</p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>Next Generation POSIX threads (NGPT)</title> - - <links> - <url - href="http://oss.software.ibm.com/developerworks/opensource/pthreads/" /> - </links> - - <contact> - <person> - <name>Arun Sharma</name> - - <email>arun@sharma.dhs.org</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <h4>Porting NGPT (next generation pthreads) to FreeBSD</h4> - - <p>NGPT is an effort led by IBM engineers to implement MxN - threads (also known as many user threads to one kernel thread - mapping) on Linux. I have ported it to FreeBSD to use - rfork(2).</p> - - <p>The port is right here:</p> - - <p> - <a href="http://www.FreeBSD.org/cgi/query-pr.cgi?pr=29239"> - http://www.FreeBSD.org/cgi/query-pr.cgi?pr=29239</a> - </p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>OLDCARD upgrade to support PCI cards</title> - - <links> - <url href="http://people.FreeBSD.org/~imp/oldcard-status.html" /> - </links> - - <contact> - <person> - <name>Warner Losh</name> - - <email>imp@village.org</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <p> - <i>Funded by: Monzoon Networking, LLC</i> - </p> - - <p>This month has been a month of conventration and - consolidation. Much of the changes from current have been - migrating into stable. I've improved power support, - suspend/resume interactions, interrupt handling, and ability to - work after windows/NEWCARD has run. Interrupt routing continues - to be a locking issue for a complete MFC. Current patches are - available at the above website. I'm racing to get this done - before 4.4 is released.</p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>Open Runtime Platform (ORP)</title> - - <links> - <url href="http://www.intel.com/research/mrl/orp/" /> - </links> - - <contact> - <person> - <name>Arun Sharma</name> - - <email>arun@sharmas.dhs.org</email> - </person> - - <person> - <name>eGroups: ORP</name> - - <email>orp@egroups.com</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <p>Information on Intel ORP - a BSD licensed Java VM is right - here:</p> - - <p> - <a href="http://www.intel.com/research/mrl/orp/"> - http://www.intel.com/research/mrl/orp/</a> - </p> - - <p>A FreeBSD patch has been tested to work with NGPT and - submitted to the ORP project. The patch is available here:</p> - - <p> - <a - href="http://www.sharma-home.net/~adsharma/projects/orp/orp-freebsd-1.0.5.patch.txt.gz"> - http://www.sharma-home.net/~adsharma/projects/orp/orp-freebsd-1.0.5.patch.txt.gz</a> - </p> - - <p>There are some issues to be ironed out to make it work with - FreeBSD's default (user level) pthread implementation.</p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>OpenPackages</title> - - <links> - <url href="http://openpackages.org/" /> - </links> - - <body> - <p>OpenPackages intends to create a software packaging system - that will allow third-party programs to be installed, without - operating system dependent changes, on as many platforms as are - feasible. OpenPackages was originally based on code from the BSD - ports systems, and has been improved and extended by developers - of many heritages.</p> - - <p>The OpenPackages Project is pleased to release the Milestone 2 - codebase. This release contains a working package building system - and a single test package. OP currently is known to build on - certain instances of the following operating systems: FreeBSD, - HP/UX, IRIX, Linux (Debian, Red Hat, Suse, Mandrake, TurboLinux, - Caldera, etc.), NetBSD, OpenBSD, Solaris</p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>PAM</title> - - <contact> - <person> - <name>Mark R V Murray</name> - - <email>mark@grondar.za</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <p>(First report)</p> - - <p>Large cleanup and extension of FreeBSD PAM modules. All - modules are to be documented, consistent in style (style(9) used) - and as complete as possible WRT functionality. Mostly done.</p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>PowerPC Port</title> - - <contact> - <person> - <name>Benno Rice</name> - - <email>benno@FreeBSD.org</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <p>We now have the rudiments of device support. We have a nexus - driver for OpenFirmware machines, along with support for the - Apple UniNorth PCI/AGP host bridge. I'm currently trying to get - the USB hardware working so that I can get closer to having a - console driver independent of OpenFirmware, then I'll be trying - to get the system to get to single-user mode using NFS.</p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>PPP IPv6 Support</title> - - <contact> - <person> - <name>Brian Somers</name> - - <email>brian@freebsd-services.com</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <p>Work has begun, but nothing has yet been committed. The NCP - addresses used by ppp have been abstracted and initial support - has been added to the filter set for ipv6 addresses. NCP - negotiation hasn't yet been started.</p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>Porting ppp to hurd & linux</title> - - <contact> - <person> - <name>Brian Somers</name> - - <email>brian@Awfulhak.org</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <p>Patches have been submitted to get ppp working under HURD, and - mostly under Linux. There are GPL copyright problems that need to - be addressed.</p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>pppoed</title> - - <contact> - <person> - <name>Brian Somers</name> - - <email>brian@freebsd-services.com</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <p>Making pppoed function in a production environment. Most of - the work is complete and committed. Additional work includes - adding a -l option where ``-l label'' is shorthand for ``-e exec - ppp -direct label'' and discovering why rogue child processes are - being left around.</p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>PRFW - Hooks within the FreeBSD kernel</title> - - <contact> - <person> - <name>Evan Sarmiento</name> - - <email>ems@open-root.org</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <p>PRFW is a set of hooks which I have integrated into the - FreeBSD kernel. This allows modules to easily intercept system - calls with less overhead. It also supports per-pid restrictions, - which means, one process may not be able to use X function in Y - manner, but another process may.</p> - - <p>Progress: I was working on this in 4.3-RELEASE, but now I'm - merging it into current. I will be submitting a patch to the - mailing lists in about a week.</p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>SCSI Tape Support</title> - - <contact> - <person> - <name>Matthew Jacob</name> - - <email>mjacob@feral.com</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <p>This driver is currently not working well under -current and - is undergoing some work at this time. No major design or feature - changes are planned. There was some notion of adding TapeAlert - support, but HP supports that as a binary product via a user - library and it was felt that it'd be more politically prudent to - leave it alone.</p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>SMPng</title> - - <contact> - <person> - <name>Peter Wemm</name> - - <email>peter@FreeBSD.org</email> - </person> - - <person> - <name>John Baldwin</name> - - <email>jhb@FreeBSD.org</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <h4>Development</h4> - - <p>In the 'smpng' p4 branch there is code to make the ast() - function loop to close the race when an AST is triggered while we - are handling previously triggered AST's.</p> - - <p>In the 'jhb_preemption' p4 branch work is being done to make - the kernel fully preemptive. It is reportedly stable on UP x86, - but SMP x86 locks up, UP alpha has problems during shutdown and - can recurse indefinitely until it exhausts its stack.</p> - - <h4>Management</h4> - - <p>We are using a perforce repository for live development work, - which can track multiple separate long-lived works-in-progress - and collaborate between multiple developers at the same time on - the same change set.</p> - - <p>FreeBSD-current is being imported into p4 hourly, for easy - tracking of the moving -current tree.</p> - - <p>I haven't written up a good primer yet, but we're able to open - this up to the general developer community. NEWCARD work looks - like it will be done here too. Perforce is ideal for tracking - this sort of long-lived project without having to resort to - passing patches around.</p> - - <p>KSE work is now being checked into a kse p4 branch - thanks - Julian!</p> - - <p>KSE work is focusing on getting the main API changes into the - base tree well before 5.0.</p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>SMPng mbuf allocator</title> - - <links> - <url href="http://people.FreeBSD.org/~bmilekic/code/mb_slab/" /> - </links> - - <contact> - <person> - <name>Bosko Milekic</name> - - <email>bmilekic@FreeBSD.org</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <p>mb_alloc is a specialized allocator for mbufs and mbuf - clusters. It offers various important advantages over the old - mbuf allocator, particularly for MP machines. Additionally, it - is designed with the possibility of important future - enhancements in mind.</p> - - <p>The mb_alloc code has been committed to -CURRENT a month ago - and appears to be holding up well. Prior to committing it, - preliminary performance measurements were done merely to ensure - that it is not significantly worse than the old allocator, even - with Giant still in place. Results were promising - <a - href="http://people.FreeBSD.org/~bmilekic/code/mb_alloc/results.html"> - [http://people.FreeBSD.org/~bmilekic/code/mb_alloc/results.html]</a> - - - also see jlemon's results (link at the bottom of accompanying - text). Since the commit, Matt Jacob has provided useful feedback - and bugfixes. Work is now being done to re-enable mbtypes - statistics and make appropriate changes to netstat(1) and - systat(1).</p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>sparc64 port</title> - - <contact> - <person> - <name>Jake Burkholder</name> - - <email>jake@FreeBSD.org</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <p>The sparc64 port has been committed to the FreeBSD repository. - As such further development will occur in cvs, rather than as a - separately maintained patch set. Significant progress has been - made since the last status report, including; support for kernel - debugging with ddb, much more complete pmap support, support for - context switching and process creation, and filling out of - important machine dependent data structures. Thomas Moestl has - shown a strong interest in working on the port and is in the - process of implementing support for saving and restoring a - process's floating point context. I look forward to working with - him and any other developers that happen to fall out of the wood - works.</p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>FreeBSD/sparc64 kernel loader</title> - - <contact> - <person> - <name>Robert Drehmel</name> - - <email>robert@ferrari.de</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <p>The sparc64 loader is functional enough to boot an ELF binary - from an UFS filesystem using the existent openfirmware library, - which has been revised to work flawlessly on 32-bit and 64-bit - architectures. Support for netbooting and modules will be - implemented next, followed by a better openfirmware mapping - strategy.</p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>SYN cache implementation for FreeBSD</title> - - <contact> - <person> - <name>Jonathan Lemon</name> - - <email>jlemon@FreeBSD.org</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <p>This project brings a SYN cache implementation to FreeBSD, in - order to make it more robust to DoS attacks. A SYN cookie - approach was considered, but ultimately rejected because it does - not conform to the TCP protocol. The SYN cache will work with - T/TCP, IPV6 and IPSEC, and the size of each cache element is - currently is less than 1/5th the size of a normal TCP control - block.</p> - </body> - </project> - - <project> - <title>TrustedBSD Project</title> - - <links> - <url href="http://www.TrustedBSD.org/" /> - </links> - - <contact> - <person> - <name>Robert Watson</name> - - <email>rwatson@FreeBSD.org</email> - </person> - </contact> - - <body> - <p>It's been a busy month, with a number of relevant news items. - Not least important is that NAI Labs was awarded a $1.2M contract - from the US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) to - work on a variety of components relevant to the TrustedBSD - Project, including support for pluggable security models, and - supporting features such as improving the extended attributes - implementation, simple crypto support for swap and filesystems, - documentation, and much more.</p> - - <p>On the features side, progress continues on Mandatory Access - Control, object labeling, and improving the consistency of kernel - access control mechanisms--in particular, with regard to - inter-process authorization and credential management. Work has - begun on porting LOMAC, NAI Labs' Low-Watermark Mandatory Access - Control scheme, from Linux to FreeBSD, and it has been - re-licensed under a BSD license. We hope to have an initial port - complete in time for 5.0-RELEASE later this year.</p> - </body> - </project> -</report> - |