NetBSD Version 8.0 Released With New Features

Recently, the NetBSD team announced the release of its sixteenth major release: NetBSD 8.0. Let’s take a look to see what goodness is baked inside this new release.

NetBSD is a Unix-like operating system that is highly portable. In fact, the battle cry of NetBSD is “Of course it runs NetBSD”. NetBSD supports x86, ARM, MIPS, PowerPC, I386, Sparc, and 49 other architectures. NetBSD is the third most used BSD after FreeBSD and OpenBSD.

This year, the NetBSD Project celebrates 25 years of existence. It was founded in 1993 by Chris Demetriou, Theo de Raadt, Adam Glass, and Charles Hannum. It was based on “4.3BSD via the Net/2 release and 386BSD”. Over the years, it has imported technology from “Apple’s Rhapsody and Force 10’s FTOS”.

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What is New in NetBSD 8.0?

NetBSD

The new release of NetBSD includes quite a few changes, including:

  • USB stack reworked
  • USB3 support added
  • In-kernel audio mixer
  • Reproducible builds
  • Parts of the network stack have been made MP-safe
  • Hardening of the network stack
  • Meltdown and Spectre mitigation
  • (U)EFI bootloader
  • Improvement and hardening of the memory layout
  • Memory protection enforced by default on some architectures with fine-grained memory protection
  • Lots of improvements to the framework (used to run 32bit userland binaries on 64bit machines
  • Add support for various ext4 features
  • Add support for Allwinner A31 SoC

This new release also includes the following updated third-party software:

  • GCC 5.5
  • GDB 7.12
  • GNU binutils 2.27
  • Clang/LLVM 3.8.1
  • OpenSSH 7.6
  • OpenSSL 1.0.2k
  • mdocml 1.14.1
  • acpica 20170303
  • ntp 4.2.8p11-o
  • dhcpcd 7.0.6
  • Lua 5.3.4

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Where You Can Get NetBSD

If you would like to give NetBSD a spin, you can download it from their site. Besides HTTP downloads, they also have support for BitTorrent, FTP, rsync and more. If you run into any problems, don’t forget to take a look at the documentation.

Have you ever used NetBSD? Are you planning to try out this new release of NetBSD? What is your favorite version of BSD? Please let us know in the comments below.

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