• [FreeBSD-Announce] FreeBSD Quarterly Status Report - Third Quarter 2017

    From Benjamin Kaduk@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 26 01:00:00 2017
    FreeBSD Project Quarterly Status Report - 3rd Quarter 2017

    This quarter's FreeBSD developments continue to provide excitement and
    promise for further developments. I myself have a soft spot for manual
    pages, so it is especially good to see that we have gained some
    documentation for writing them (and I hope that this will translate to
    more and improved manual pages in the future!). The core@ entry is also
    of particular note, with the introduction of the FCP process and the
    recognition of the first non-committer FreeBSD Project Member (and
    more). Read on to find out more about these, as well as improved
    support for the AMD Zen family of processors (e.g., Ryzen), and a whole
    lot more!

    --Benjamin Kaduk
    __________________________________________________________________

    The deadline for submissions covering the period from October to
    December 2017 is January 14, 2017.
    __________________________________________________________________

    FreeBSD Team Reports

    * FreeBSD Release Engineering Team
    * Ports Collection
    * The FreeBSD Core Team
    * The FreeBSD Foundation

    Projects

    * FreeBSD CI

    Kernel

    * Intel 10G iflib Driver Update
    * Intel iWARP Support
    * pNFS Server Plan B

    Architectures

    * AMD Zen (family 17h) support

    Userland Programs

    * Updates to GDB

    Ports

    * FreeBSDDesktop
    * OpenJFX 8
    * Puppet

    Documentation

    * Absolute FreeBSD, 3rd Edition
    * Manual Pages

    Third-Party Projects

    * The nosh Project
    __________________________________________________________________

    FreeBSD Team Reports

    Entries from the various official and semi-official teams, as found in
    the Administration Page.

    FreeBSD Release Engineering Team

    Links
    FreeBSD 11.1-RELEASE Announcement
    URL: https://www.FreeBSD.org/releases/11.1R/announce.html
    FreeBSD 10.4-RELEASE Schedule
    URL: https://www.FreeBSD.org/releases/10.4R/schedule.html
    FreeBSD Development Snapshots
    URL: https://download.FreeBSD.org/ftp/snapshots/ISO-IMAGES/

    Contact: FreeBSD Release Engineering Team <re@FreeBSD.org>

    The FreeBSD Release Engineering Team is responsible for setting and
    publishing release schedules for official project releases of FreeBSD,
    announcing code freezes, and maintaining the respective branches, among
    other things.

    The FreeBSD Release Engineering Team continued finalizing the
    11.1-RELEASE cycle, with the final release builds starting on July 21
    and the official release announcement email sent on July 26. Thank you
    to everyone who helped test 11.1-RELEASE, ensuring its quality and
    stability. [1]

    FreeBSD 11.1-RELEASE is the second release from the stable/11 branch.

    Additionally, the FreeBSD Release Engineering Team started the
    10.4-RELEASE cycle, with the code slush starting on July 28. With the
    final release build expected to start on September 29 and the official
    announcement overlapping the end of the quarter, everything is on
    schedule as of this writing. [2]

    FreeBSD 10.4-RELEASE will be the fifth release from the stable/10
    branch, and is planned to be the final release of the 10.x series.

    This project was sponsored by The FreeBSD Foundation [1].

    This project was sponsored in part by The FreeBSD Foundation [2].
    __________________________________________________________________

    Ports Collection

    Links
    About FreeBSD Ports
    URL: https://www.FreeBSD.org/ports/
    Contributing to Ports
    URL: https://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/articles/contributing/ports-contributing.html
    FreeBSD Ports Monitoring
    URL: http://portsmon.freebsd.org/index.html
    Ports Management Team Website
    URL: https://www.freebsd.org/portmgr/index.html
    FreeBSD portmgr on Twitter (@freebsd_portmgr)
    URL: https://twitter.com/freebsd_portmgr/
    FreeBSD Ports Management Team on Facebook
    URL: https://www.facebook.com/portmgr
    FreeBSD Ports Management Team on Google+
    URL: https://plus.google.com/communities/108335846196454338383

    Contact: René Ladan <portmgr-secretary@FreeBSD.org>
    Contact: FreeBSD Ports Management Team <portmgr@FreeBSD.org>

    The Ports Collection now features over 31,600 ports. There are
    currently 2671 problem reports, of which 718 are unassigned. This
    quarter saw almost 5,900 commits from 175 committers. The number of
    open PRs grew compared to last quarter, and outpaced the number of
    changes.

    This quarter, we welcomed Zach Leslie (zleslie@), Luca Pizzamiglio
    (pizzamig@), Craig Leres (leres@), Adriaan de Groot (adridg@), and Dave
    Cottlehuber (dch@) as new committers. The commit bits of the following
    committers were taken in for safekeeping: alonso@ after 19 months of
    inactivity, rpaulo@ per his request, and ache@ after he passed away.
    Despite several tries and changing mentors, kami@ lacked interest in
    completing his mentorship, so his commit bit was also taken in for
    safekeeping.

    On the infrastructure side, two USES values were removed because they
    outlived their usefulness:
    * execinfo: libexecinfo is now available in the base system of all
    supported FreeBSD versions
    * twisted: there is only one Twisted port left

    The default version of GCC was bumped from 5 to 6. Firefox was updated
    to version 56.0 and Chromium to version 61.0.3163.100. The version of
    pkg itself was updated to 1.10.1.

    During this quarter, antoine@ performed 28 exp-runs to test version
    updates of major ports, improving USE_GITHUB and SHEBANG_FILES, and API
    changes to the base system. This quarter, the foundation for ports
    "flavors" was committed, though more development and testing will be
    performed in the coming quarter before it goes live.

    Open tasks:

    1. The PR load needs more attention, as the number of open PRs has
    started to increase again.
    __________________________________________________________________

    The FreeBSD Core Team

    Contact: FreeBSD Core Team <core@FreeBSD.org>

    The new "FreeBSD Community Process" was drafted during BSDCan earlier
    this year. The first such document, FCP 0, defines how the whole
    process works. After some time for discussion and revision, FCP 0 was
    voted on and accepted by core, following the procedure laid down within
    that document. Currently the use of FCPs is entirely optional; we shall
    see how the community begins to adopt their usage and evolve the
    process based on experience.

    A draft update to the Code of Conduct has been prepared by the advisory
    committee. Core is currently reviewing the text, and will soon vote on
    accepting it. Core is keen to avoid the trap of "rules lawyering". At
    the moment, the feeling is that we need to add a preamble to the CoC to
    articulate the goals of the project and to act as a general guide to
    the exercise of the code.

    This quarter has been quite a busy one concerning changes to the roster
    of committers and project members. We have elected our first new
    Project Member: John Hixson, who will be familiar from many conferences
    where he has given presentations and ably represented iXsystems. A
    second proposed Project Member was not accepted by core, but only
    because core felt that Fedor Uporov really deserved a commit bit
    instead.

    In addition to Fedor Uporov, please also welcome (in no particular
    order) Matt Joras, Marcin Wojtas, Chuck Tuffli, Ilya Bakulin and Alex
    Richardson as brand-new committers. We have also awarded Steven Hurd
    and Eugene Grosbein src commit bits to go with their existing ports
    bits. Welcome back Gordon Tetlow as a src committer, essential for his
    new role within secteam. Eric Davis and Rui Paulo have both decided to
    hang up their commit bits: we wish them well in their future
    endeavours. Finally, we must report the sad death of Andrey Chernov,
    who will be sorely missed by his colleagues and collaborators.

    Andrey's death has highlighted another question which is only going to
    become more complex over time. Keeping track of copyrights is already
    hard enough within a mature source tree with many contributors, such as
    the FreeBSD sources. Now we need to consider trying to keep track of
    the heirs and beneficiaries of contributors who have sadly passed away.
    Core will consult with the Foundation legal team to discuss possible
    approaches to alleviate this.

    There have been complaints that the workings of Core are being kept
    overly confidential, and that consequently the majority of the project
    has too little idea of what is going on. This is certainly not
    intentional by Core, and we are keen to open up Core's business to more
    general community scrutiny as far as seems reasonable.

    Core dealt with a number of licensing questions:
    * When upstreaming patches and other original works to VirtualBox or
    other Oracle properties, pragmatically it works best to provide
    them under the terms of the MIT license (one of two opensource
    licenses accepted by Oracle). Of course, this only applies to work
    upstreamed by or with the permission of the original author.
    * The Viking software license is sufficiently BSD-like that magic
    constants from their drivers can be used in FreeBSD code.
    * There is no separate register of deviations from the allowed
    BSD-like licenses in the source tree: any code in the tree under
    other than BSD-like license terms can be assumed to have been
    approved by core.
    * At the moment the FreeBSD copyright requirement to include the
    copyright notice in redistributions in binary form is satisfied by
    making the FreeBSD sources, with all of the detailed copyright
    information included in the different source code files, available
    alongside pre-compiled system images. However, this does not
    necessarily meet the needs of downstream projects based on FreeBSD,
    and given the new "packaged base", adding per-package licensing
    metadata in a way similar to how the Ports Collection works is
    under consideration as an alternative mechanism.

    Concerns were raised regarding the pending HardenedBSD entry in the
    previous quarterly report prior to publication. The FreeBSD project
    welcomes reports from separate (but derived) projects in quarterly
    reports and has included similar reports in the past from other
    projects (such as TrueOS and pfSense). The HardenedBSD report was
    edited for length and to concentrate on activities during the quarter
    in question.

    Amazon is proposing to set up mirrors of the freebsd-update and pkg
    servers within AWS in order to provide faster access for EC2 users.
    These mirrors will be publicly accessible, but the expectation is that
    use will primarily be from within EC2. FreeBSD AMIs will have a preset
    configuration that references the Amazon servers.

    The old, long-deprecated, and insecure "r-commands" (rsh, rlogin, rcp)
    are being removed from the base system for 12.0-RELEASE. Notice of this
    was added to the man pages and release notes in time for 11.1-RELEASE
    and 10.4-RELEASE. Anyone requiring these commands for backwards
    compatibility can use the new net/bsdrcmds port.

    Work to replace Heimdal Kerberos in base with the more widely
    compatible MIT Kerberos has begun in a new projects/krb5 branch. This
    should not fall afoul of any US cryptography export regulations: the
    project is required to notify the US government that cryptographic
    software can be downloaded from FreeBSD servers, and this already
    covers MIT Kerberos, already available within ports.

    A number of Bay Area FreeBSD User Group-related domain names are being
    given up by their original owner. The current BAFUG organisers have
    been made aware.

    Core has voted on a change to the Doceng voting rules to provide for a
    "did not vote" status during doceng voting similar to how portmgr and
    core voting operates. The current requirement for all five members of
    doceng to register a vote on issues was proving to be a significant
    bottleneck.
    __________________________________________________________________

    The FreeBSD Foundation

    Links
    FreeBSD Foundation Website
    URL: https://www.FreeBSDFoundation.org/
    FreeBSD Foundation Quarterly Newsletter
    URL: https://www.FreeBSDfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/FreeBSD-Foundation-July-August-2017-Update.pdf

    Contact: Deb Goodkin <deb@FreeBSDFoundation.org>

    The FreeBSD Foundation is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization dedicated
    to supporting and promoting the FreeBSD Project and community
    worldwide. Funding comes from individual and corporate donations and is
    used to fund and manage software development projects, conferences and
    developer summits, and provide travel grants to FreeBSD contributors.
    The Foundation purchases and supports hardware to improve and maintain
    FreeBSD infrastructure and provides full-time Release Engineering
    support; publishes marketing material to promote, educate, and advocate
    for the FreeBSD Project; facilitates collaboration between commercial
    vendors and FreeBSD developers; and finally, represents the FreeBSD
    Project in executing contracts, license agreements, and other legal
    arrangements that require a recognized legal entity.

    Here are some highlights of what we did to help FreeBSD last quarter:

    Fundraising Efforts

    Our work is 100% funded by your donations. This year we have raised
    over $860,000 from over 500 donors. Our 2017 fundraising goal is
    $1,250,00 and we are continuing to work hard to meet and exceed this
    goal! Please consider making a donation to help us continue and
    increase our support for FreeBSD:
    https://www.FreeBSDfoundation.org/donate/.

    We also have a new Partnership Program, to provide more benefits for
    our larger commercial donors. Find out more information at
    https://www.FreeBSDfoundation.org/FreeBSD-foundation-partnership-program/
    and share with your companies!

    OS Improvements

    The Foundation improves the FreeBSD operating system by employing our
    technical staff to maintain and improve critical kernel subsystems, add
    features and functionality, and fix problems. This also includes
    funding separate project grants like the arm64 port, blacklistd access
    control daemon, and the integration of VIMAGE support, to make sure
    that FreeBSD remains a viable solution for research, education,
    computing, products and more.

    We kicked off or continued the following projects last quarter:
    * OpenZFS RAID-Z Expansion project
    * Broadcom Wi-Fi infrastructural improvements (bhnd(4) driver)
    * Headless mode out-of-the-box for the Beaglebone Black
    * Extending bhyve/ARMv7 features
    * Porting bhyve/ARM to an ARMv8 platform

    Having software developers on staff has allowed us to jump in and work
    directly on projects to improve FreeBSD like:
    * ZFS improvements
    * New Intel server support
    * kqueue(2) updates
    * 64-bit inode support
    * Stack guard
    * Kernel Undefined Behavior Sanitizer
    * Toolchain projects
    * i915 driver investigation
    * NVDIMM support in acpiconf(8)
    * Continuous integration dashboard (web page and physical hardware)
    * FAT filesystem support in makefs(8)

    Staff and board members continued hosting bi-weekly conference calls to
    facilitate efforts for individuals to collaborate on different
    technologies.

    Release Engineering

    The Foundation provides a full-time staff member to lead the release
    engineering efforts. This has provided timely and reliable releases
    over the last few years.

    Last quarter, our full-time staff member worked with the FreeBSD
    Release Engineering and Security Teams to finalize 11.1-RELEASE. He
    also supported the 10.4 release effort, and has continued producing
    10-STABLE, 11-STABLE, and 12-CURRENT development snapshot builds
    throughout the quarter. At the vBSDCon Developer Summit, he gave a
    presentation on the state of the release engineering team.

    You can find out more about the support we provided to the Release
    Engineering Team by reading their status update in this report.

    Supporting FreeBSD Infrastructure

    The Foundation provides hardware and support to improve the FreeBSD
    infrastructure. Last quarter, we continued supporting FreeBSD hardware
    located around the world.

    FreeBSD Advocacy and Education

    A large part of our efforts are dedicated to advocating for the
    Project. This includes promoting work being done by others with
    FreeBSD; producing advocacy literature to teach people about FreeBSD
    and help make the path to starting using FreeBSD or contributing to the
    Project easier; and attending and getting other FreeBSD contributors to
    volunteer to run FreeBSD events, staff FreeBSD tables, and give FreeBSD
    presentations.

    The FreeBSD Foundation sponsors many conferences, events, and summits
    around the globe. These events can be BSD-related, open source, or
    technology events geared towards underrepresented groups. We support
    the FreeBSD-focused events to help provide a venue for sharing
    knowledge, to work together on projects, and to facilitate
    collaboration between developers and commercial users. This all helps
    provide a healthy ecosystem. We support the non-FreeBSD events to
    promote and raise awareness of FreeBSD, to increase the use of FreeBSD
    in different applications, and to recruit more contributors to the
    Project.

    Here is a list highlighting some of the advocacy and education work we
    did last quarter:
    * Organized and ran the Essen FreeBSD Hackathon in Essen Germany
    * Sponsored and participated in the FreeBSD Developer Summit BSDCam,
    in Cambridge, England
    * Represented FreeBSD at the ARM Partner Meeting
    * Presented and taught about FreeBSD at SdNOG 4 in Khartoum, Sudan
    * Sponsored and gave presentations and tutorials at EuroBSDCon in
    Paris, France
    * Organized and ran the Paris FreeBSD Developer Summit
    * Organized and ran the FreeBSD Developer Summit at vBSDCon
    * Sponsored and attended vBSDCon
    * Proved travel grants to FreeBSD contributors to attend the above
    events.
    * Sponsored the 2017 USENIX Security Symposium in Vancouver BC as an
    Industry Partner
    * Provided FreeBSD advocacy material
    * Sponsored the 2017 USENIX Annual Technical Conference in Santa
    Clara, CA as an Industry Partner

    We continued producing FreeBSD advocacy material to help people promote
    FreeBSD around the world.

    We help educate the world about FreeBSD by publishing the
    professionally produced FreeBSD Journal. Last quarter we published the
    July/August issue that you can find at
    https://www.FreeBSDfoundation.org/journal/.

    You can find out more about events we attended and upcoming events at
    https://www.FreeBSDfoundation.org/news-and-events/.

    Legal/FreeBSD IP

    The Foundation owns the FreeBSD trademarks, and it is our
    responsibility to protect them. We also provide legal support for the
    core team to investigate questions that arise.

    Go to http://www.FreeBSDfoundation.org to find out how we support
    FreeBSD and how we can help you!
    __________________________________________________________________

    Projects

    Projects that span multiple categories, from the kernel and userspace
    to the Ports Collection or external projects.

    FreeBSD CI

    Links
    freebsd-ci Repository
    URL: https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd-ci
    freebsd-testing Mailing List
    URL: https://lists.FreeBSD.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-testing
    FreeBSD Jenkins Instance
    URL: http://ci.FreeBSD.org

    Contact: Jenkins Admins <jenkins-admin@FreeBSD.org>

    The FreeBSD CI team runs various continuous integration solutions for
    FreeBSD, regularly checking that the current state of the Subversion
    repository can successfully build, and performing various tests and
    analysis upon the build results.

    We have introduced a DTrace test pipeline, with the results and
    artifacts available at:
    * https://ci.FreeBSD.org/job/FreeBSD-head-amd64-dtrace_test/
    * https://artifact.ci.FreeBSD.org/dtrace-test/

    We had team meetings at two developer summits during Q3:
    * BSDcam
    * EuroBSDCon

    Open tasks:

    1. Fix the failing test cases and builds.
    2. Create builds for additional architectures.
    3. Add more tests.
    4. The additional TODO items listed at
    https://wiki.FreeBSD.org/Jenkins/TODO .
    __________________________________________________________________

    Kernel

    Updates to kernel subsystems/features, driver support, filesystems, and
    more.

    Intel 10G iflib Driver Update

    Links
    ixgbe iflib Conversion
    URL: https://reviews.FreeBSD.org/D11727

    Contact: Chris Galazka <krzysztof.galazka@intel.com>
    Contact: Piotr Pietruszewski <piotr.pietruszewski@intel.com>

    The ix and ixv network interface drivers support a variety of Intel
    network interfaces, with line speeds at 10 Gbit/second.

    This quarter, with the help of Matt Macy and Sean Bruno (among others),
    we have submitted a review in Phabricator for the conversion of the
    ixgbe driver to use the new (and evolving) iflib framework.

    Stay tuned for the conversion of the 40G driver (ixl), as it is
    currently being ported to use iflib.

    Open tasks:

    1. Additional testing.
    __________________________________________________________________

    Intel iWARP Support

    Links
    iWARP for ixl
    URL: https://reviews.FreeBSD.org/D11378

    Contact: Bartosz Sobczak <bartosz.sobczak@intel.com>

    iWARP is a protocol suite that enables efficient movement of data
    across the network, building on Remote Direct Memory Access, Direct
    Data Placement, and Marker PDU Aligned Framing. It endeavors to avoid
    unnecessary (local) data copies and to offload work from the main CPU
    to dedicated hardware.

    An initial commit adding iWARP support for the Intel X722 family of
    network adapters is under review. This is an important step towards
    introducing full iWARP support on systems equipped with Intel C620
    Series Chipsets. Currently, with the iw_ixl driver, only the kVerbs API
    is supported.

    Open tasks:

    1. Additional testing.
    __________________________________________________________________

    pNFS Server Plan B

    Links
    Instructions for Testing
    URL: http://people.FreeBSD.org/~rmacklem/pnfs-planb-setup.txt

    Contact: Rick Macklem <rmacklem@FreeBSD.org>

    A pNFS server allows an NFS service to be spread over multiple servers,
    separating the MetaData operations from the Data operations (Read and
    Write). This project will add the ability to use FreeBSD systems to
    create a pNFS service consisting of a single MetaData Server plus a set
    of Data Servers. The Data Servers can be mirrored, so that redundant
    copies of the file data are maintained.

    The support for non-mirrored Data Servers is now believed to be
    complete. Support for mirrored Data Servers using the Flexible File
    Layout, which will soon be published as an RFC, is implemented.
    However, there is still significant work to be done, since the current
    implementation of mirrored Data Servers does not handle failed Data
    Servers or their resilvering/recovery. It is hoped that support for
    failure/recovery of Data Servers will be implemented in the next six
    months.

    The patched FreeBSD sources may now be accessed for testing via either
    Subversion or downloading a gzipped tarball. They consist of a patched
    kernel and nfsd and can be used on any FreeBSD 11 or later system. The
    installation procedure is covered in the linked document.

    Open tasks:

    1. Testing by others will be needed, now that the implementation is
    available.
    2. Implementation and testing of mirror failure/recovery.
    __________________________________________________________________

    Architectures

    Updating platform-specific features and bringing in support for new
    hardware platforms.

    AMD Zen (family 17h) support

    Contact: Conrad Meyer cem@FreeBSD.org <>

    This quarter, a bit of work was done to enhance platform support for
    AMD Zen (Ryzen, Threadripper, Epyc) processors:
    * The CPU topology detection code was enhanced to properly detect Zen
    dies and CPU Complexes. This gives the scheduler more locality
    information to use when making scheduling decisions.
    * The x86 topology analysis was enhanced to report dies and CPU
    Complexes, in addition to the existing reporting on packages,
    cores, and threads. An example of the new output is FreeBSD/SMP: 1
    package(s) x 2 groups x 2 cache groups x 4 core(s) x 2 hardware
    threads.
    * The amdsmn(4) driver for accessing SMN (System Management Network)
    registers was added.
    * CPU temperature monitoring support for Zen was added to amdtemp(4).
    * In cpufreq(4):
    + Added support for decoding Zen P-state information from
    Machine State Registers (which is usually not necessary, since
    it is largely redundant with ACPI P-state information, but is
    potentially useful)
    + Work around the apparent Ryzen inability to achieve the P1
    state by not busying cores waiting to transition to it
    * The intpm(4) smbus driver was fixed to attach to the AMD FCH
    (Fusion Controller Hub).
    * All MCA banks are now enabled and monitored on Zen CPUs.
    * Feature-bit decoding was added for: CLZERO, SVM features, and RAS
    capabilities.
    * SHA intrinsic support was added to the aesni(4) driver. Ryzen is
    currently the only desktop processor to feature these intrinsics.
    Support for these intrinsics is also present in Intel's Goldmont
    line of low-end SoCs.

    Overall, Zen is now a very usable platform for x86 workstations and
    servers.

    This project was sponsored by Dell EMC Isilon.

    Open tasks:

    1. Add HWPMC support for the new performance counters avilable on the
    Zen architecture.
    2. Add support for the CCP (Crypto Co-Processor).
    __________________________________________________________________

    Userland Programs

    Changes affecting the base system and programs in it.

    Updates to GDB

    Contact: John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
    Contact: Luca Pizzamiglio <pizzamig@FreeBSD.org>

    The devel/gdb port has been updated to GDB 8.0.1.

    Support for FreeBSD/aarch64 userland binaries has been committed
    upstream. These patches, along with support for debugging
    FreeBSD/aarch64 kernels, have been committed to the port.

    Upstream patches adding improved support for FreeBSD/arm userland
    binaries are currently in review. FreeBSD 12 has recently grown support
    for debugging VFP registers via ptrace() and core dumps as part of this
    work. Support for FreeBSD/arm kernels will be added to the port after
    the upstream patches are added to the port.

    Support for $_siginfo has been committed upstream. This uses the
    recently added NT_LWPINFO note to extract signal information from
    process cores.

    Hangs that occured when GDB's kill command was used were fixed in
    FreeBSD in r313992.

    Open tasks:

    1. Figure out why the powerpc kgdb targets are not able to unwind the
    stack past the initial frame.
    2. Test support for sparc64 binaries and kernels.
    3. Add support for debugging powerpc vector registers.
    4. Implement info proc commands.
    5. Implement info os commands.
    __________________________________________________________________

    Ports

    Changes affecting the Ports Collection, whether sweeping changes that
    touch most of the tree, or individual ports themselves.

    FreeBSDDesktop

    Links
    FreeBSDDesktop on GitHub
    URL: https://github.com/FreeBSDDesktop/

    Contact: Johannes Dieterich <jmd@freebsd.org>
    Contact: Mark Johnston <markj@freebsd.org>
    Contact: Hans Petter Selasky <hselasky@freebsd.org>
    Contact: Matthew Macy <mmacy@nextbsd.org>

    The FreeBSDDesktop team is happy to announce the availability of
    graphics/drm-next-kmod. This port for FreeBSD-CURRENT (amd64) provides
    support for the amdgpu, i915, and radeon DRM modules using the linuxkpi
    compatibility framework. The port currently corresponds to the DRM from
    Linux 4.9 and is in an experimental state. It works reliably for many
    testers with modern GPU hardware (AMD HD7000 series/Tahiti to Polaris
    and Intel HD3000/Sandy Bridge to Skylake). Broader testing and
    reporting/fixing of bugs is appreciated.

    Open tasks:

    1. Resolve issues that cause radeonkms and amdgpu to fail with EFI
    boot (though there is a workaround available).
    2. Upgrade to Linux 4.10 and higher DRM versions.
    3. Get feedback from broader testing.
    __________________________________________________________________

    OpenJFX 8

    Links
    OpenJFX Wiki
    URL: https://wiki.openjdk.java.net/display/OpenJFX/Main
    java/openjfx8-devel
    URL: https://www.freshports.org/java/openjfx8-devel
    java/openjfx8-scenebuilder
    URL: https://www.freshports.org/java/openjfx8-scenebuilder
    AsciidocFX
    URL: https://github.com/asciidocfx/AsciidocFX

    Contact: Tobias Kortkamp <tobik@FreeBSD.org>

    OpenJFX is an open source, next generation, client application platform
    for desktop and embedded systems, based on JavaSE. This quarter, the
    OpenJFX port was reworked and has received some significant
    improvements.

    More modules are being built. With the new web module we gain support
    for applications that have their own builtin web browser such as
    AsciidocFX. The new media module allows JavaFX applications to play
    audio and video files.

    A port of the JavaFX scenebuilder, a RAD tool for building JavaFX
    scenes, was added to the ports tree.

    The OpenGL Prism backend for GPU acceleration was enabled by default.

    From a mainainer's and contributor's perspective, the port was
    simplified by moving all FreeBSD-local patches to the ports tree and
    fetching the upstream sources directly, instead of using a separate
    repository for them.

    Open tasks:

    1. Upstream some of the patches in the Ports Collection.
    __________________________________________________________________

    Puppet

    Links
    Puppetlab's FreeBSD Slack Channel
    URL: https://puppetcommunity.slack.com/messages/C6CK0UGB1/

    Contact: Puppet Team <puppet@FreeBSD.org>

    This summer has seen the creation of a puppet@ team to help maintain
    the approximately 30 Puppet-related ports in the FreeBSD Ports
    Collection. These ports were previously maintained by various
    committers, and from time to time the distributed maintainership
    introduced some delays when updating a port, due to the need to wait
    for a maintainer's approval for a related change to a different port.

    Puppet 5 is now in the ports tree (as sysutils/puppet5). The C++
    version of Facter (sysutils/facter) got a lot of attention and is now a
    drop-in replacement for the previous Ruby version
    (sysutils/rubygem-facter); it is the default facts source for the
    Puppet 5 port.

    Work continues on bringing in Puppetserver 5 to the ports tree, and on
    keeping all the ports up-to-date.

    Open tasks:

    1. The pkg package provider has some minor issues (it breaks things
    when no repos are configured, and is not working properly from the
    context of the MCollective package agent).
    2. The databases/puppetdb[345] and sysutils/puppetserver[45] ports
    rely on Clojure and Java, and download compiled jar files instead

    [continued in next message]

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