NetBSD Project Releases NetBSD 7.0.2 (softpedia.com) 22
An anonymous reader writes:
"After spending six months in development, the NetBSD 7.0.2 release is now available for those running NetBSD 7.0 or NetBSD 7.0.1," reports Softpedia, "but also for those who are still using an older version of the BSD-based operating system and haven't managed to upgrade their systems, bringing them a collection of security patches and recent software updates." Release engineer Soren Jacobsen wrote that "It represents a selected subset of fixes deemed important for security or stability reasons. If you are running an earlier release of NetBSD, we strongly suggest updating to 7.0.2."
The security fixes eliminate a race condition in mail.local(8), and also update OpenSSL, ntp and BIND. In addition, "there are various MIPS pmap improvements, a patch for an NFS (Network File System) crash, as well as a crash that occurred when attempting to mount an FSS snapshot as read and write. NetBSD 7.0.2 also fixes an issue with the UFS1 file system when it was created outside the operating system." Download NetBSD 7.0.2 at one of these mirror sites.
The security fixes eliminate a race condition in mail.local(8), and also update OpenSSL, ntp and BIND. In addition, "there are various MIPS pmap improvements, a patch for an NFS (Network File System) crash, as well as a crash that occurred when attempting to mount an FSS snapshot as read and write. NetBSD 7.0.2 also fixes an issue with the UFS1 file system when it was created outside the operating system." Download NetBSD 7.0.2 at one of these mirror sites.
And the crowd goes wild! (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
netbsd used to be the go-to when you had weird hardware. it supported more platforms than anything. the focus was on ports and portability. but these days, Linux runs on more platforms, so it's less relevant.
I used to run it on Mac IIci with a cache card, on which it ran flawlessly... if slowly
Re:And the crowd goes wild! (Score:4, Informative)
Actually interesting things are going on in NetBSD, lua support in the kernel and the rumpkernel. Also, for 32 bit systems, I always suggest people install NetBSD, no 2038 issue. (OpenBSD also does not have the 2038 problem).
And on NetBSD, X11 is installed were it belongs, /usr/X11R7 :)
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
Blah. NetBSD (while not my favorite OS) is far more consistent across its supported platforms than Linux has ever been.
BSD is coming to ftp (Score:2)
And compiling it twice;
Slashdot and chocolate covered shrooms confirms (Score:2)
NetBSD is not dead!
Re: (Score:2)
You're complaining in the wrong area. Go submit something to the Linux subsection if you care, but I think you'll find that most people do not care about it
NetBSD is my side OS project (Score:4, Interesting)
I mostly run Gentoo, but I like the correlations it has with NetBSD so I run it as my side OS. It is very well written and high quality.
Still my favorite. (Score:2)