by Cao | May 16, 2019 | bhyve, runhyve
Runhyve is an Open Source virtual machine manager for Bhyve, the Open Source hypervisor originally written for FreeBSD. Runhyve is currently still in the early stages of development, but you can track their progress on their Git sites and watch the demo on the...
by Cao | May 16, 2019 | bsdnow.tv, Video
In this BSD Now episode, hosts Allan Jude and Benedict Reuschling discuss a UFS bug being fixed after 36 years, BSD on the road, OpenBSD automatic upgrades, ex2fs and DTrace support for FreeBSD, dedicated SSH tunnel, OpenBSD 6.5 VMM VMs, and some others. Hit play...
by Cao | May 16, 2019 | bhyve
Michael Yuji recently discovered a way to passthrough a GPU card to FreeBSD on the bhyve virtualization platform. The guest needs to be a *nix system to work however. See the article below on what the user did, as well as the implications for the FreeBSD and bhyve...
by Cao | May 16, 2019 | Tutorial, Web
This tutorial by user Amos Mibey will show you how to set up Apache with SSL certificate on your FreeBSD operating system. Apache is an Open Source HTTP Server, serving about a third of all active websites across the world wide web. For the full set of instructions,...
by Cao | May 16, 2019 | Security, Software
VULS is an Open Source vulnerability scanner that uses information from NVD and OVAL and is agent-less. It currently supports FreeBSD versions 10 and 11 among various Linux distros. Notable features are the VulsRepo (its OSS web UI), Terminal Based Viewer, and...