2010.04_BSD.pdf

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Dear Readers!
Happy Easter !
I hope you had great time during this
holidays!
Editor in Chief:
Olga Kartseva
Contributing:
Jan Stedehouder, Rob Somerville, Marko Milenovic, Petr
Topiarz, Paul McMath, Eric Vintimilla, Matthias Pfeifer, Theodore
Tereshchenko, Mikel King, Machtelt Garrels, Jesse Smith
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BSD 3/2010
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Contents
get started
tools and packages for your network to be able to access the
Internet. It has also the services to filter the traffic requests to
the web and block sites which are not appropriate according
to your corporate IT rules. In short, all you need is a Firewall
plus services that will make your network secure and easy to
manage in terms of network configurations.
Modern FreeBSD Install
Slawomir Wojtczak (vermaden)
All these years sysinstall(8) was helping us to install FreeBSD
with most needed options. Today it is not anymore up to the
task with new filesystems and technologies like gjournal(8) and
more important ZFS, swap and full disk encryption with geli(8)
or RAID1/RAID0 redundancy/speed increase with gmirror(8)
and gstripe(8). Currently sysinstall(8) only supports installation
on UFS filesystem with optional SoftUpdates. This article will
show You how to create more modern FreeBSD installation
without using sysinstall(8)
The Squid and the Blowish
Daniele Mazzocchio
We have grown so much accustomed to Internet access on
our work computers, that we can hardly imagine what people
ever did all day long on their workplace before! By providing
access to a virtually endless amount of information, the Internet
has quickly turned into an essential working tool. So essential
that most companies can’t do without it anymore. But besides
providing a huge amount of information, the Internet has
also turned into the main virus vehicle (togetherwith e-mail)
and doesn’t exclusively provide content in line with corporate
policies. That’s why a proxy server is often as necessary as the
Internet connection itself.
X11 without dbus/hald and with three kings
Slawomir Wojtczak (vermaden)
FreeBSD Handbook suggests (check section 5.4.2 Configuring
X11), that running sysutils/hal (hald) and devel/dbus daemons
is mandatory to have working x11/xorg ...
nothing further from the truth.
how-to’s
let’s talk
Converting a FreeBSD Port Using PBI Builder
Dru Lavigne
This is an excerpt from the “Becoming a Developer” chapter
of the recently released book, The Definitive Guide to PC-BSD.
The Definitive Guide is meant to be so, taking the reader from
complete PC-BSD novice to advanced, PC-BSD power user. This
means that some of the concepts used in later chapters are
covered in detail in earlier chapters. The book is available with a
companion DVD of PC-BSD 8.0 from the FreeBSD Mall
Hosting Environment Network and Firewall
Redundancy with the BSDs
Chris Buechler
With many large websites and hosting providers relying on BSD
operating systems to power their businesses, it only makes sense
that many smaller providers take the same path.
Comparison of FreeBSD And OpenBSD: Not
One Cake But The Two Ones
Jurai Sipos
The purpose of this article is to highlight some differences between
the two BSD operating systems – FreeBSD and OpenBSD. It is
because there is a significant lack of such information, as BSD
systems somewhat keep hidden in seclusion. To help readers
understand what the term BSD means, some terminological and
historical aspects are presented too.
BSD File Sharing – Part 2. SAMBA
Topiaz Petr
Last time I wrote about NFS on different BSD’s. This time I
am going to dedicate this article of the series to SAMBA Why
SAMBA? Well, while samba is far from being a reliable well
secured tool for sharing, it definitely is very usable in terms of
sharing files with various versions of MS Windows.
interview
22
Running VirtualBox OSE with VNC under
FreeBSD 8.0
Rob Somerville
VirtualBox is a type 2 hypervisor that sits directly on top of the
host-server OS and is suitable for server, desktop and embedded
applications. It will run most OS’s as guest with few exceptions, and
like Vmware * there are many pre-built VM’s available.
Introducing Beastie to Strangers
Jesse Smith
When PC-BSD 8 first came out back in February, I installed the
operating system on two of my machines and was very impressed
with the new release. It was fast, powerful, flexible and worked well
with my hardware. Not only was I thrilled with the latest release
from the PC-BSD team, but I wanted to share my experience with
others. I had visions of an army of Beasties peacefully invading
homes, public access terminals, schools and businesses. And
while I felt this BSD product had earned a place on my desktop
machine, I was curious to see how other people would react to it
– not just people in the IT field or people who were already open
source enthusiasts, but everyday Joe and Jane Users.
FreeBSD Firewall with Transparent Proxy
Server, DHCP Server and Name Server
Joshua Ebarvia
If you need Internet-sharing to be available to share allow
your network to access the web using only one public IP
Address, you need to setup a gateway. FreeBSD has all the
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