Add some new content to the multimedia page of the website: three new

BSDCan papers.

PR:		docs/168811
Submitted by:	db
Approved by:	gabor (mentor)
This commit is contained in:
Isabell Long 2012-06-09 11:19:28 +00:00
parent 393d4476b1
commit 3711227824
Notes: svn2git 2020-12-08 03:00:23 +00:00
svn path=/head/; revision=39013

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@ -41,6 +41,67 @@
<tags>2012,bsdcan,bsdcan2012,photos,benedict reuschling</tags>
</item>
<item source="bsdcan" added="20120530">
<title>BSDCan-2012 - Michael Dexter - An applied survey of BSD multiplicity and virtualization strategies from chroot to BHyVe</title>
<desc>
Ever since the University of California, Berkeley CSRG
implemented the chroot(8) command and system call in its
BSD operating system in 1982, the community-developed
BSD Unix derivatives have set the standard for
the introduction of plurality to the conventionally-singular
Unix computing model. Today's system operators and developers
have an array of BSD-licensed multiplicity strategies at their
disposal that offer various degrees of both isolation and
virtualization when introducing plurality. This paper will
survey current and experimental BSD multiplicity strategies
including chroot, FreeBSD jail, NetBSD/Xen, Amazon EC2,
compatlinux, GXemul and SIMH, plus experimental strategies
such as FreeBSD BHyVe, compatmach, Usermode NetBSD,
Dragonfly BSD vkernel, OpenBSD sysjail and NetBSD mult.
As an applied survey, this paper will both categorize each
multiplicity strategy by the Unix environment to which
it introduces plurality and demonstrate the usage
of the utilities relating to each solution.
</desc>
<overview>http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/291en.html</overview>
<tags>2012,bsdcan,bsdcan2012,papers,michael dexter</tags>
<files>
<file>
<url>http://www.bsdcan.org/2011/schedule/events/291en.html</url>
<desc>html</desc>
<tags>html</tags>
</file>
</files>
</item>
<item source="bsdcan" added="20120530">
<title>BSDCan-2012 - Kirk McKusick - An Overview of Locking in the FreeBSD Kernel</title>
<desc>
The FreeBSD kernel uses seven different types of locks
to ensure proper access to the resources that it manages.
This talk describes the hierarchy of these locks from
the low-level and simple to the high-level and full-featured.
The functionality of each type of lock is described along
with the problem domain for which it is intended.
The talk concludes by describing the witness system
within the FreeBSD kernel that tracks the usage of all
the locks in the system and reports any possible deadlocks
that might occur because of improper acquisition ordering
of locks.
</desc>
<overview>http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/306en.html</overview>
<tags>2012,bsdcan,bsdcan2012,papers,kirk mckusick</tags>
<files>
<file>
<url>http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/attachments/195_locking.pdf</url>
<size>27 Kb</size>
<desc>Slides</desc>
<tags>pdf</tags>
</file>
</files>
</item>
<item source="bsdcan" added="20120528">
<title>BSDCan-2012 Photos - Developers summit and conference</title>
<overview>http://gallery.keltia.net/v/voyages/conferences/bsdcan-2012/devsummit/</overview>
@ -92,6 +153,30 @@
<tags>2010,bsdcan,bsdcan2010,photos,diane bruce</tags>
</item>
<item source="bsdcan" added="20100520">
<title>BSDCan-2010 - Kris Moore - The PBI format re-implemented for FreeBSD and PC-BSD</title>
<desc>
The PBI format (Push Button Installer) has been the default
package management system for PC-BSD going on 5+ years now.
However as we looked to the future it became apparent that it
was greatly needing an overhaul to both improve its
functionality, and expand its usage outside the scope of
just PC-BSD. Among the areas needing improvement were how
it dealt with identical libraries between applications,
the heavy requirements from being implemented in QT/KDE,
and lack of a digital verification mechanism.
</desc>
<overview>http://www.bsdcan.org/2011/schedule/events/215en.html</overview>
<tags>2010,bsdcan,bsdcan2010,papers,kris moore</tags>
<files>
<file>
<url>http://www.bsdcan.org/2011/schedule/events/215en.html</url>
<desc>html</desc>
<tags>html</tags>
</file>
</files>
</item>
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