TrustedBSD News About TrustedBSD The TrustedBSD project provides a set of trusted operating system extensions to the FreeBSD operating system, targeting the Common Criteria for Information Technology Security Evaluation (CC). This project is still under development, and much of the code is destined to make its way back into the base FreeBSD operating system. This Web site will provide access to ...
PAO: FreeBSD Mobile Computing Package PC Card (PCMCIA), APM, etc.... (English page) (Japanese page) Last Update: $Date: 2002/03/10 08:21:36 $ FreeBSD-mobile Mailing List (English) freebsd-mobile@FreeBSD.ORG and BSD-nomads Mailing List (Japanese) bsd-nomads@clave.gr.jp . Final information The PAO project was completed. 3.5.1-RELEASE version is the last release by PAO project. The major ...
FreeBSD Java Project News Announcements Software Getting Java for FreeBSD Release Information JDK 1.1.x JDK 1.2.x JDK 1.3.x Available Ports... How can I help I found a bug! ! Documentation For Newbies Tutorials FAQ Performance Comparison Creating Ports... Java Resources Links FreeBSD Vendor Development Tools APIs Tutorials Documentation Resources... Servlets Search for: This is the offical port ...
Back to my home page dummynet 1. Description dummynet is a flexible tool originally designed for testing networking protocols, and since then (mis)used for bandwidth management. It simulates/enforces queue and bandwidth limitations, delays, packet losses, and multipath effects. It also implements a variant of Weighted Fair Queueing called WF2Q+. It can be used on user's workstations, or on ...
info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/ip_dummynet
people.freebsd.org/~fsmp/SMP/SMP.html
FreeBSD Hardening Project Announcements TrustedBSD Project Announced On April 9, 2000, the TrustedBSD Project was announced, which replaces the FreeBSD hardening project, bringing in the POSIX.1e DAC, privilege and MAC improvements. As such, the FreeBSD Hardening Project is now defunct, please update your links. POSIX.1e implementation underway! March 3, 1999 An implementation of POSIX.1e for ...
www.watson.org/fbsd-hardening
FreeBSD Development Projects In addition to the mainstream development path of FreeBSD, a number of developer groups are working on the cutting edge to expand FreeBSD's range of applications in new directions. Follow the links below to learn more about these exciting projects. If you miss a project please send the URL and a short description (3-10 lines) to www@FreeBSD.ORG In addition, some of ...
people.freebsd.org/~fsmp/HomeAuto/HomeAuto.html
The Rio project is investigating how to implement and use reliable memory. Reliable memory enables dramatic improvements in reliability and performance. Major results to date include: The Rio File Cache: We make ordinary main memory safe for persistent storage by enabling memory to survive operating system crashes. Rio survives crashes by protecting memory using virtual memory protection and ...
FreeBSD SysVR4 Emulation Mark Newton, newton@atdot.dotat.org Contents News Description To-Do Mini-FAQ Installation Download Description This page describes an SysVR4 emulator for FreeBSD. It is currently capable of running (or walking, in some cases) a wide-ish variety of SysV executabls taken from Solaris/x86 2.5.1 and 2.6 systems. I have reason to believe that it will also run SCO UnixWare and ...
people.freebsd.org/~newton/freebsd-svr4
POSIX.1e Implementation for FreeBSD POSIX.1e defines a set of security extensions to the POSIX.1 specification, including Capabilities, file system ACLs, Information Labels, Mandatory Access Control, and Auditing. Implementation of these extensions for FreeBSD 4.0 is underway, and as it becomes available, this web site is the place to look. POSIX.1e More information can be found by visiting ...
www.watson.org/fbsd-hardening/posix1e
FreeBSD/ARM - 4.4 BSD for the Acorn RISC Platforms Due to my recent international move and various other circumstances, the release of FreeBSD/ARM has had to be indefinately posponed. It is still being worked on, but I have no time to devote to it currently, and don't even have a machine to work on yet! Please keep an eye on these pages - I'll post more here when I have something slightly less ...
people.freebsd.org/~gpalmer/archbsd.html