Annotation of www/lyrics.html, Revision 1.214
1.214 ! bentley 1: <!doctype html>
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! 3: <meta charset=utf-8>
! 4:
1.170 tj 5: <title>OpenBSD: Release Songs</title>
1.1 deraadt 6: <meta name="description" content="the OpenBSD release song lyrics page">
1.170 tj 7: <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
1.214 ! bentley 8: <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="openbsd.css">
1.186 tb 9: <link rel="canonical" href="https://www.openbsd.org/lyrics.html">
1.1 deraadt 10:
1.214 ! bentley 11: <style>
! 12: body {
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1.171 tb 17:
1.214 ! bentley 18: <h2 id=OpenBSD>
1.169 deraadt 19: <a href="index.html">
1.214 ! bentley 20: <i>Open</i><b>BSD</b></a>
! 21: Release Songs
1.170 tj 22: </h2>
1.214 ! bentley 23:
1.169 deraadt 24: <hr>
1.214 ! bentley 25:
1.170 tj 26: <p>
1.100 deraadt 27: Every 6 months the OpenBSD project has the pleasure to release
1.197 tj 28: our software with artwork and a matching song.
1.139 deraadt 29: Theo and some other developers mutate a theme (from a classical
30: setting, a movie, or some genre) into the fishy world of Puffy, to
31: describe some advance, event or controversy the project went through
1.197 tj 32: over the previous six months. To match the art released with the
33: historical CD sets, we joined up with some musicians we know to make
34: at least one song.
1.1 deraadt 35:
1.182 deraadt 36: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="80%">
1.71 deraadt 37: <tr>
1.126 deraadt 38: <td valign="top">
1.212 deraadt 39: 6.2: <a href="#62">"A 3 line diff"</a><br>
1.199 deraadt 40: 6.1: <a href="#61">"Winter of 95"</a><br>
1.177 deraadt 41: 6.0: <a href="#60a">"Another Smash of the Stack"</a>,
42: <a href="#60b">"Black Hat"</a>,<br>
1.176 deraadt 43:
1.183 deraadt 44: <a href="#60c">"Money"</a>,
1.187 deraadt 45: <a href="#60d">"Comfortably Dumb (the misc song)"</a>,<br>
46:
1.193 deraadt 47: <a href="#60e">"Mother"</a>,
48: <a href="#60f">"Goodbye"</a>, and
49: <a href="#60g">"Wish you were Secure"</a><br>
1.175 deraadt 50: 5.9: <a href="#59a">"Doctor W^X"</a> and<br>
51:
52: <a href="#59b">"Systemagic (Anniversary Edition)"</a><br>
53: 5.8: <a href="#58a">"20 years ago today"</a>,
54: <a href="#58b">"Fanza"</a>,<br>
55:
56: <a href="#58c">"So much better"</a>, and
57: <a href="#58d">"A Year in the Life"</a><br>
58: 5.7: <a href="#57">"Source Fish"</a><br>
59: 5.6: <a href="#56">"Ride of the Valkyries"</a><br>
60: 5.5: <a href="#55">"Wrap in Time"</a><br>
61: 5.4: <a href="#54">"Our favorite hacks"</a><br>
62: 5.3: <a href="#53">"Blade Swimmer"</a><br>
63: 5.2: <a href="#52">"Aquarela do Linux"</a><br>
64: 5.1: <a href="#51">"Bug Busters!"</a>,
65: <a href="#51b">"Shut up and Hack"</a> and<br>
66:
67: <a href="#51c">"Sonate aux insomniaques"</a><br>
68: 5.0: <a href="#50">"What Me Worry?"</a><br>
69: 4.9: <a href="#49">"The Answer"</a><br>
1.126 deraadt 70: </td><td valign="top" width="1%">
71: <br>
72: </td><td valign="top">
1.212 deraadt 73: 4.8: <a href="#48">"El Puffiachi"</a><br>
1.176 deraadt 74: 4.7: <a href="#47">"I'm still here"</a><br>
75: 4.6: <a href="#46">"Planet of the Users"</a><br>
1.175 deraadt 76: 4.5: <a href="#45">"Games"</a><br>
77: 4.4: <a href="#44">"Trial of the BSD Knights"</a><br>
78: 4.3: <a href="#43">"Home to Hypocrisy"</a><br>
79: 4.2: <a href="#42">"100001 1010101"</a><br>
80: 4.1: <a href="#41">"Puffy Baba and the 40 Vendors"</a><br>
81: 4.0: <a href="#40">"Humppa Negala"</a> and
82: <a href="#40b">"OpenVOX"</a><br>
83: 3.9: <a href="#39">"Blob!"</a><br>
84: 3.8: <a href="#38">"Hackers of the Lost RAID"</a><br>
85: 3.7: <a href="#37">"The Wizard of OS"</a><br>
86: 3.6: <a href="#36">"Pond-erosa Puff (live)"</a><br>
87: 3.5: <a href="#35">"CARP License" and "Redundancy must be free"</a><br>
88: 3.4: <a href="#34">"The Legend of Puffy Hood"</a><br>
89: 3.3: <a href="#33">"Puff the Barbarian"</a><br>
90: 3.2: <a href="#32">"Goldflipper"</a><br>
91: 3.1: <a href="#31">"Systemagic"</a><br>
92: 3.0: <a href="#30">"E-Railed (OpenBSD Mix)"</a><br>
1.126 deraadt 93: </td></tr></table>
1.182 deraadt 94:
1.71 deraadt 95: <br>
1.182 deraadt 96: Three audio CDs have been made which contain approximately 5 years of songs each:
1.176 deraadt 97: <br>
1.182 deraadt 98: <table><tr><td valign=top>
1.209 deraadt 99: <a href="images/cdaudio.gif"><img height=158 width=158 src="images/cdaudio-m.gif"></a>
100: <br>
1.201 bentley 101: The Songs 3.0 - 4.0
1.182 deraadt 102: </td><td>
1.209 deraadt 103: <a href="images/cdaudio2.gif"><img height=158 width=158 src="images/cdaudio2-m.gif"></a>
104: <br>
1.201 bentley 105: The Songs 4.1 - 5.1
1.182 deraadt 106: </td><td>
1.209 deraadt 107: <a href="images/cdaudio3.gif"><img height=158 width=158 src="images/cdaudio3-m.gif"></a>
108: <br>
1.201 bentley 109: The Songs 5.2 - 6.0
1.182 deraadt 110: </td></tr></table>
1.126 deraadt 111: <br clear=all>
1.212 deraadt 112:
113: <hr>
114: <a name=62></a>
115: <h2><a href="62.html">6.2</a>: "A 3 line diff"</h2>
116: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
117: <tr>
118: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.213 deraadt 119: 1:54 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song62.mp3">(MP3 3.5MB)</a>
1.212 deraadt 120: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song62.ogg">(OGG 3.0MB)</a><br>
121: <br>
122: <em>
123: In OpenBSD developer circles few memes carry as strongly as "The 3
124: line diff". This is a humorous warning, but also a true story. More
125: than half the developers ("the new kids") don't know this story but
1.214 ! bentley 126: still repeat the meme — it has nearly become apocrypha.
1.212 deraadt 127: <p>
128: Unfortunately, in software development not all problems are as trivial
129: as we think.
130: <p>
131: The event happened at a hackathon in Portugal more than a decade ago.
132: <p>
133: In a eureka moment Art declared he had found a stunningly simple
1.214 ! bentley 134: solution for a problem long pondered, and he could fix it in 2 — no
! 135: — 3 lines. In the following weeks his change grew larger and larger,
1.212 deraadt 136: introducing (or exposing) other problems. We stood and stared. It
137: was far from a 3 line diff, and was eventually discarded.
138: <p>
139: I am not writing words of mockery here. This is a common occurance in
140: complex software development. To do great things, we must reach for
141: the sky. Sometimes we fail, and quite often it is messy.
142: <p>
143: There is of course a danger we'll believe we are invincible, and push
144: a change which is too disruptive to others. For that reason, we
145: operate as a team. We can try to avoid hubris.
146: <p>
147: Therefore to this day posing a question like "And you can fix the
148: problem in 3 lines?" is a humorous way of keeping each other honest.
149: <p>
150: </em>
151: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
152: </td><td valign=top>
153: Just sit right back and you'll hear a tale,<br>
154: A tale of a fateful diff,<br>
155: That started on a set of stairs<br>
156: Right by a pizza joint.<br>
157: <br>
158: Art was a mighty coding man,<br>
159: And he was mighty sure<br>
160: The only change that was required<br>
161: Was a three-line diff, a three-line diff.<br>
162: <br>
163: The coding started getting tough,<br>
164: The change began to swell,<br>
165: Despite the confidence of the programmers<br>
166: The system would then crash,<br>
167: the system always crashed.<br>
168: <br>
169: The simple change became complex<br>
170: Just too many things overlooked,<br>
171: With Grabowski,<br>
172: And the testers too, <br>
173: Theo watching and skeptical<br>
174: Miod Vallat,<br>
175: And Kettenis, and Dale, and...<br>
176: Hacking Grabowski's diff.<br>
177: <br>
178: So this is a tale of our programmers,<br>
179: They've been here for 20 years.<br>
180: They'll have to do the best they can,<br>
181: It's an endless task.<br>
182: <br>
183: Grabowski and the others too<br>
184: Will do their very best<br>
185: To get the changes into prod<br>
186: It is an epic slog,<br>
187: <br>
188: No QEMU, only DDB,<br>
189: Not a single luxury,<br>
190: Like Ritchie and Thompson did<br>
191: It's as primitive as can be<br>
192: <br>
193: So check a new diff every week,<br>
194: Your head is sure to hurt<br>
195: While all the puzzled programmers<br>
196: Gawk at Grabowski's diff<br>
197: <br>
198: Working on a marginal diff.<br>
199: <br>
200: </td><td valign=top align=right>
201: <img width=227 height=334 src="images/62_right.gif"><br>
202: </td></tr></table>
203: <em>
204: Lyrics by Carson Harding based upon tale from Theo de Raadt.
205: Vocals by Johnny Nordstrom, Chris Wynters, Scott Peters (of Captain Tractor).
206: Composition, arrangement, instruments, and recording by Jonathan Lewis.
207: This song was released 13 months after 6.2 due to various factors.
208: <br>
209: </em>
210: <br>
1.193 deraadt 211:
212: <hr>
1.199 deraadt 213: <a name=61></a>
1.200 tom 214: <h2><a href="61.html">6.1</a>: "Winter of 95"</h2>
1.199 deraadt 215: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
216: <tr>
217: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.203 deraadt 218: 3:30 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song61.mp3">(MP3 6.4MB)</a>
219: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song61.ogg">(OGG 4.7MB)</a><br>
1.199 deraadt 220: <br>
221: <em>
1.202 deraadt 222: OpenBSD was only a few months old when
223: we realized that read-only repository access
224: for everyone was a critical concept.
225: <p>
226: Previously, open source projects would make
227: occasional releases accompanied by tarballs of
228: final source files and Changelogs files, but would
229: not expose the step-by-step changes of the
230: development process. Unwittingly all open source
231: projects were operating with a walled garden
232: approach.
233: <p>
234: Chuck Cranor and I worked on the anoncvs feature, and
235: Bob Beck soon became involved in moving the anoncvs
236: mirror off my overloaded ISDN network to the
237: University of Alberta, thereby increasing our capacity
238: to deliver. Nowadays there are many anoncvs mirrors.
239: <p>
240: The introduction of anoncvs meant people without commit
241: access could read the commit logs, as well as each
242: committed diff. They could reason about the past as
243: they proposed new changes.
244: <p>
245: Anoncvs had an immediate impact expanding our development
246: group. We were inundated with high quality diffs. These
247: outsider developers wrote excellent changes because they had
248: sufficient context to reason upon. Those who overwhelmed us
249: with good changes became developers with commit access. We
250: were forced to hand out commit accounts like candy.
251: <p>
252: Some people said we would never last. Their cynicism
253: could almost be thanked for the increase in openness
254: we embraced, and then our openness probably led others
255: to embrace it also.
256: <p>
1.199 deraadt 257: </em>
258: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
259: </td><td valign=top>
1.202 deraadt 260: I had a Type-4 keyboard,<br>
261: Bought with my Sun workstation,<br>
262: Hacked on it 'til my fingers bled.<br>
263: Was the winter of '95.<br>
1.199 deraadt 264: <br>
1.202 deraadt 265: Me and the guys from core,<br>
266: Had a source tree with lots of history.<br>
267: Chris and Charles held a little coup,<br>
268: I should have known I'd lose my history.<br>
269: <br>
270: Oh, when I look back now,<br>
271: I can see we all have nothing<br>
272: When it all can be...
273: when it can be taken away.<br>
274: Everyone needs to know their history.<br>
275: It was the winter of '95<br>
276: <br>
277: So we carried on with a fresh source tree,<br>
278: Spent all of our hours coding,<br>
279: Making changes in our private history,<br>
280: Repeating the error of the past, yeah.<br>
281: <br>
282: The source tree just got too big,<br>
283: Too many diffs, too unreliable,<br>
284: Too few people had any access;<br>
285: Got to open it up now and forever<br>
286: Everyone needs to see the history.<br>
287: <br>
288: Sometimes when I look for something<br>
289: Reading ancient tarballs with despair<br>
290: I wonder what they were thinking.<br>
291: <br>
292: And now the times have changed<br>
293: Repos on the web, git,<br>
294: now githubs everywhere.<br>
295: not like the winter of '95<br>
296: <br>
297: Back around that Halloween,<br>
298: Microsoft said open source would never last,<br>
299: But now they use the repo tools,<br>
300: In the same open access way.<br>
301: <br>
302: Everyone needs to see the history.<br>
303: <br>
304: </td><td valign=top align=right>
305: <img width=600 height=334 src="images/61_right.jpg"><br>
1.199 deraadt 306: </td></tr></table>
307: <em>
1.202 deraadt 308: Lyrics by Carson Harding and Theo de Raadt at the Ship & Anchor.
309: Vocals by Cary Shields.
310: Composition, arrangement, instruments, vocals, and recording by Jonathan Lewis.
1.199 deraadt 311: </em>
312: <br>
313:
314: <hr>
1.176 deraadt 315: <a name=60></a>
316: <a name=60a></a>
317: <h2><a href="60.html">6.0</a>: "Another Smash of the Stack"</h2>
318: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
319: <tr>
1.182 deraadt 320: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 321: 4:23 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song60a.mp3">(MP3 8.0MB)</a>
322: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song60a.ogg">(OGG 6.5MB)</a><br>
323: <br>
1.176 deraadt 324: <a href="60.html">OpenBSD 6.0</a> CD2 track 2 is an<br>
325: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
326: <br>
1.182 deraadt 327: <em>
328: In 20 years of mitigating security issues, we've encountered plenty of
329: resistance. Some upstream projects don't seem to care that their
330: software follows unsafe practices or sacrifice security in favor of
331: obsolete methods. It takes sustained pressure to tear down the walls.
332: </em>
333: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
1.176 deraadt 334: </td><td valign=top>
335: We don't need no exploitation<br>
336: We don't need no overflows<br>
337: No ROP stack pivots spraying pointers<br>
338: Hackers, leave my stack alone!<br>
339: Hey! Hackers! leave my heap alone!<br>
340: All in all it's just raising the bar<br>
341: All in all you're just raising the bar<br>
342: <br>
343: "Wrong, Code it again!"<br>
344: <br>
345: "If you don't fix yer JIT, you can't exec the pages.<br>
346: How can you exec the pages if you don't fix your JIT?"<br>
347: <br>
348: "You! Yes, you there with the keyboard, shut up and hack!"<br>
349: <br>
350: </td><td valign=top align=right>
351: <img width=395 height=230 src="images/60a_right.jpg"><br>
352: </td></tr></table>
353: <em>
354: Lyrics by Todd Miller. Composition, arrangement, instruments, vocals,
355: and recording by Dewi Wood.
1.177 deraadt 356: </em>
357: <br>
358:
359: <hr>
360: <a name=60b></a>
361: <h2><a href="60.html">6.0</a>: "Black Hat"</h2>
362: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
363: <tr>
1.182 deraadt 364: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 365: 5:10 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song60b.mp3">(MP3 9.4MB)</a>
366: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song60b.ogg">(OGG 7.2MB)</a><br>
367: <br>
1.177 deraadt 368: <a href="60.html">OpenBSD 6.0</a> CD2 track 3 is an<br>
369: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
370: <br>
371: <img width=227 height=343 src="images/60b_left.jpg"></a><br>
372: <br>
1.182 deraadt 373: <em>
374: Our developers don't really promise an ideal world where all attackers
375: are blocked all the time. But our small group developed some
376: components that help make a difference.
377: </em>
378: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
1.177 deraadt 379: </td><td valign=top>
380: Black Hat, out there in the cold<br>
381: Hacking websites for control<br>
382: Can you crack me?<br>
383: Black Hat, working for the Chinese<br>
384: With twitchy fingers on flashing keys<br>
385: Can you spoof me?<br>
1.178 tb 386: Black Hat, don't let them put you in the light<br>
1.177 deraadt 387: Never give in: just fight!<br>
388: <br>
389: Black Hat, always trying to p0wn,<br>
390: Social engineering with a phone,<br>
391: Can you phish me?<br>
392: Black Hat, with your buffer overflows<br>
393: Waiting for someone to hit one<br>
394: Can you probe me?<br>
395: Black Hat, do you do this for pure knowledge?<br>
396: They opened the file! Too bad: they're pledged<br>
397: <br>
398: But it was all futility<br>
399: The firewall was strong<br>
400: As all can see<br>
401: No matter how he tried<br>
402: He could not break free()<br>
403: And his worm just sputtered and died<br>
404: <br>
405: Black Hat, skimming cards down at the bank<br>
406: always claiming "it was just a prank!"<br>
407: Can you scam me?<br>
408: Black Hat, out there on the net<br>
409: Throwing packets with wget<br>
410: Can you hack me?<br>
411: Black Hat, have you no hope at all?<br>
412: The firewalls were carped: they never fall<br>
413: <br>
414: </td><td valign=top align=right>
415: <img width=395 height=540 src="images/60b_right.jpg"><br>
416: </td></tr></table>
417: <em>
418: Lyrics by Philip Guenther. Composition, arrangement, instruments,
419: vocals and recording by Jonathan Lewis.
1.183 deraadt 420: </em>
421: <br>
422:
423: <hr>
424: <a name=60c></a>
425: <h2><a href="60.html">6.0</a>: "Money"</h2>
426: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
427: <tr>
428: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 429: 3:51 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song60c.mp3">(MP3 7.0MB)</a>
430: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song60c.ogg">(OGG 4.8MB)</a><br>
431: <br>
1.183 deraadt 432: <a href="60.html">OpenBSD 6.0</a> CD2 track 4 is an<br>
433: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
434: <br>
435: <em>
436: Consider donating to our development efforts via
1.208 tj 437: <a href="https://www.openbsdfoundation.org">the OpenBSD Foundation</a>.
1.183 deraadt 438: This Canadian not-for-profit funds OpenBSD's efforts which happen in
439: Canada and all over the world.
440: <p>
441: Majority of the funds covers the <a href="hackathons.html">hackathons</a>,
442: which increase collaboration between developers by getting them face to
1.184 tj 443: face regularly.
1.183 deraadt 444: <p>
445: Funding OpenBSD is funding innovation.
446: </em>
447: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
448: </td><td valign=top>
449: Money, donate your pay.<br>
450: Automate with a cron job and we'll be ok.<br>
1.191 jung 451: Money, donate your pay.<br>
1.183 deraadt 452: Thoughtful programming versus "just make it fast".<br>
453: TLB that cache with high CPU and cause a thrash.<br>
454: Single cores are out, SMP unlocking<br>
455: Will get you a faster net stream<br>
456: <br>
457: Canaries have your back.<br>
458: In the right place, hacks stop in your protected stack.<br>
459: Puffy, he's a hit.<br>
460: Theo doesn't suffer users' ill-informed bullshit.<br>
461: Fly to hackathons, sleep in dormatory beds<br>
462: Worldwide userbase, can you fund our project?<br>
463: <br>
464: Not donating, it's a crime.<br>
465: Distributed and shared fairly but can't exist on just a dime. <br>
466: OpenBSD, so they say<br>
467: Is the securest system today<br>
468: Don't make us busk until dusk 'cause we'd rather be hacking away<br>
469: <br>
470: </td><td valign=top align=right>
471: <img width=395 height=320 src="images/60c_right.jpg"><br>
472: </td></tr></table>
473: <em>
474: Lyrics by Jason B. George. Drums by Cikomo Paul. Bass and vocals by Ulrike Jung.
475: All other instruments, composition, arrangement, and recording by Joerg Jung.
476: Mastering by Lars Neugebauer of adlerhorstaudio.
1.187 deraadt 477: </em>
478: <br>
479:
480: <hr>
481: <a name=60d></a>
482: <h2><a href="60.html">6.0</a>: "Comfortably Dumb (the misc song)"</h2>
483: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
484: <tr>
485: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 486: 6:10 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song60d.mp3">(MP3 11.5MB)</a>
487: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song60d.ogg">(OGG 8.3MB)</a><br>
488: <br>
1.187 deraadt 489: <a href="60.html">OpenBSD 6.0</a> CD2 track 5 is an<br>
490: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
491: <br>
492: <em>
493: As developers, we want to see users succeed, and so it's especially
494: frustrating to see users setting themselves up to fail.
495: <p>
496: The necessity of triaging vague complaints to determine if they
497: represent true bugs or user error is a tax on all the users whose mail
498: goes unread when motivation runs out. Much like a fork bomb process,
499: these low content threads multiply and explode, threatening the
500: stability of the system itself and aggravating admins and users alike.
501: </em>
502: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
503: </td><td valign=top>
504: "Hello,<br>
505: Are there any experts out there?<br>
506: Please reply if you can help me.<br>
507: I just rm -rf'ed /home"<br>
508: <br>
509: "I don't know how<br>
510: But I need this feature now.<br>
511: My users are pained<br>
512: I need my server up again."<br>
513: <br>
514: "Relax.<br>
515: The list needs a dmesg first.<br>
516: Just the basic facts<br>
517: Stop whining between your blurts."<br>
518: <br>
519: There is no wifi, you are pleading.<br>
520: Vendor firmware not on horizon.<br>
521: Packets only coming through in waves.<br>
522: Your lips move but broken audio mutes what you're saying.<br>
523: Fork-bomb child. Crappy C coder.<br>
524: Bad PF ruleset. Machines fall down, go boom.<br>
525: Now we've got that feeling once again.<br>
526: We can't explain, you would not understand.<br>
527: This is just how you are.<br>
528: Original poster, you ... have become comfortably dumb.<br>
529: <br>
530: OK<br>
531: Just a little firewall pin prick<br>
532: There'll be lots of aaaaaaaah!<br>
533: You're p0wn3d by a script kiddie dick.<br>
534: <br>
535: Can you upgrade?<br>
536: We do believe it's working, good.<br>
537: That'll keep you going for a while.<br>
538: Our patience is at null.<br>
539: <br>
1.196 deraadt 540: There is no wifi, you are pleading.<br>
1.187 deraadt 541: Vendor firmware not on horizon.<br>
542: Packets only coming through in waves.<br>
543: Your lips move but broken audio mutes what you're saying.<br>
544: Fork-bomb child.<br>
545: I can no longer handle reading misc.<br>
546: I want to scrape out both my eyes.<br>
547: I tried to reply but your address bounced.<br>
548: I give you my middle finger now.<br>
549: My inner child is crushed.<br>
550: My dreams are gone.<br>
551: You ... have become comfortably dumb.<br>
552: <br>
553: </td><td valign=top align=right>
554: <img width=395 height=800 src="images/60d_right.jpg"><br>
555: </td></tr></table>
556: <em>
557: Lyrics by Jason George. Composition, arrangement, instruments, vocals,
558: and recording by Dewi Wood.
1.188 deraadt 559: </em>
560: <br>
561:
562: <hr>
563: <a name=60e></a>
564: <h2><a href="60.html">6.0</a>: "Mother"</h2>
565: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
566: <tr>
567: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 568: 5:30 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song60e.mp3">(MP3 10.2MB)</a>
569: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song60e.ogg">(OGG 7.8MB)</a><br>
570: <br>
1.188 deraadt 571: <a href="60.html">OpenBSD 6.0</a> CD2 track 6 is an<br>
572: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
573: <br>
574: <em>
575: As the author of a number of the OpenBSD songs, I'll admit that
576: sometimes it's a bit of a chore. Theo bugs me to help him out, often
577: with a theme, and eventually I relent and devote an evening to it.
578: <p>
579: One of the things that we're passionate about is making changes to the
580: software ecosystem that make things safer for all of us - not just
581: OpenBSD. Very often we try techniques, and adopt practices on OpenBSD
582: to make things better across the ecosystem, and hope to encourage
583: others to follow our lead.
584: <p>
585: We've had a lot of great success upstreaming changes and ideas to
586: individual projects, often through the diligent work of the OpenBSD
587: ports developers. We've had less success promoting things up through
588: standards bodies and other projects. Too often the world seems caught
589: up in a seemingly suicidal "backward compatibility forever" fervor,
590: exacerbated by standards bodies populated by corporate represention
591: that does not want to make any kinds of disruptive changes that might
592: cause expense.
593: <p>
594: This time, once Theo put the bug in my ear, it didn't take me very
595: long. I pondered our recent efforts to fix random functions via
596: standards bodies, and considered the real possibility of my being
597: <a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20160304081847/https://lwn.net/Articles/563285/">
598: harmed by the failure of an embedded 32 bit linux device in 2038</a>,
599: and then this this song just wrote itself in about 10 minutes.
600: <p>
601: Enjoy
602: <p>
1.214 ! bentley 603: —Bob
1.188 deraadt 604: </em>
605: </td><td valign=top>
606: Mother, don't you want to change this code?<br>
1.189 deraadt 607: Mother, don't you think this cruft's too old?<br>
1.188 deraadt 608: Mother, do you think we're heading for a fall?<br>
609: Ooooh aah, mother, we should change these calls.<br>
610: <br>
611: Mother, should I send a patch upstream?<br>
612: Mother, do you think it'll change a thing?<br>
613: Mother, will they twist this in an unfair light?<br>
614: Ooooh aah, is it just a waste of time?<br>
615: <br>
616: Hush now, baby, baby, don't you cry<br>
617: Mama's gonna keep all of her customers true<br>
618: Mama's gonna keep legacy crap there with you<br>
619: Mama's gonna keep changes from making them sad<br>
620: She won't let you flense but she might let you add<br>
621: Mama's gonna keep baby growing much more<br>
622: <br>
623: Ooooh, babe, ooooh, babe, ooooh, babe<br>
624: Of course Mama's gonna help add some calls<br>
625: <br>
626: Mother, do you think this code is stuffed? (with shit.....)<br>
627: Mother, do you think it's dangerous? (a bit.....)<br>
628: Mother, can we tear this API apart?<br>
629: Oooh aah, mother, will you break my heart?<br>
630: <br>
631: Hush now, baby, baby, don't you cry<br>
632: Mama's gonna rig all of the standards for you<br>
633: Mama won't let anything foreign get through<br>
634: Mama's gonna wait up till you send it, dear<br>
635: Mama will subvert things not invented here <br>
636: Mamma's gonna keep baby under control<br>
637: <br>
638: Ooooh, babe, ooooh, babe, ooooh, babe<br>
639: Don't say deprecation to me.<br>
640: <br>
641: Mother, does change need to be so hard?<br>
642: <br>
643: </td><td valign=top align=right>
644: <img width=395 height=600 src="images/60e_right.jpg"><br>
645: </td></tr></table>
646: <em>
647: Lyrics by Bob Beck. Composition, arrangement, instruments, vocals,
648: and recording by Jonathan Lewis.
1.190 deraadt 649: </em>
650: <br>
651:
652: <hr>
653: <a name=60f></a>
654: <h2><a href="60.html">6.0</a>: "Goodbye"</h2>
655: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
656: <tr>
657: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 658: 1:07 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song60f.mp3">(MP3 2.0MB)</a>
659: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song60f.ogg">(OGG 1.3MB)</a><br>
660: <br>
1.190 deraadt 661: <a href="60.html">OpenBSD 6.0</a> CD2 track 7 is an<br>
662: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
663: <br>
664: <em>
665: Theo's debut. It ain't easy being<br>
666: green. Going back to the keyboard<br>
667: now...
668: </em>
669: </td><td valign=top>
670: Goodbye CDs <br>
671: I'm done with you today<br>
672: Goodbye<br>
673: Goodbye<br>
674: Goodbye<br>
675: No more pre-production<br>
676: And no more long delays<br>
677: So I have peace<br>
678: Of mind<br>
679: Goodbye.<br>
680: <br>
681: </td><td valign=top align=right>
682: <img width=395 height=170 src="images/60f_right.jpg"><br>
683: </td></tr></table>
684: <em>
685: Lyrics by Bob Beck. Composition, arrangement, instruments and
686: recording by Jonathan Lewis. Vocals by Theo de Raadt.
1.194 deraadt 687: </em>
688: <br>
689:
690: <hr>
691: <a name=60g></a>
692: <h2><a href="60.html">6.0</a>: "Wish you were Secure"</h2>
693: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
694: <tr>
695: <td valign="top" width="30%">
696: 4:54 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song60g.mp3">(MP3 9.0MB)</a>
697: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song60g.ogg">(OGG 6.2MB)</a><br>
698: <br>
1.199 deraadt 699: This track missed the 6.0 CD release, therefore it is only available here.<br>
700: <br>
1.194 deraadt 701: <em>
1.195 tj 702: In Open Source philosophy, distinctions between progress or
1.194 deraadt 703: backwards-compatibility, along with other dichotomous API judgments,
704: are vendor choice, not user; so, the duality of profit and control is
705: an indivisible whole. In the ethics of OpenBSD on the other hand, most
706: notably in the philosophy of Theo de Raadt (c. 21st century AD), a
707: moral dimension is attached to the idea of stagnation and advancement.
708: </em>
709: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
710: </td><td valign=top>
711: So,<br>
712: So you think you can sell<br>
713: Our Heaven to Hell?<br>
714: ABIs cast in stone?<br>
715: Would you sell the green fields<br>
716: to buy your own cage?<br>
717: Be stable for a wage?<br>
718: So you think you can sell<br>
719: <br>
720: Did you decide to trade<br>
721: Your leaders for stock?<br>
722: Complex code in the tree<br>
723: For simple code that was free?<br>
724: Cold cash for your clout?<br>
725: Did you walk out<br>
726: On a lead role in the war<br>
727: For a part as a boy scout?<br>
728: <br>
729: How I wish, how I wish you were secure<br>
730: We're just two old fish swimming in a toilet bowl,<br>
731: it's all so impure<br>
732: Fighting over the same APIs<br>
733: What do you prize?<br>
734: That same old lure<br>
735: Wish you were secure<br>
736: <br>
737: </td><td valign=top align=right>
738: <img width=395 height=400 src="images/60g_right.jpg"><br>
739: </td></tr></table>
740: <em>
741: Lyrics by Philip Guenther. Vocals by Tierra Watts. Programming,
742: electric bass, electric guitar, and electric violin by Jonathan Lewis.
1.176 deraadt 743: </em>
744: <br>
745:
746: <hr>
1.165 deraadt 747: <a name=59></a>
748: <a name=59a></a>
1.175 deraadt 749: <h2><a href="59.html">5.9</a>: "Doctor W^X"</h2>
1.165 deraadt 750: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
751: <tr>
1.182 deraadt 752: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 753: 4:06 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song59a.mp3">(MP3 7.5MB)</a>
754: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song59a.ogg">(OGG 5.5MB)</a><br>
755: <br>
1.165 deraadt 756: <a href="59.html">OpenBSD 5.9</a> CD2 track 2 is an<br>
757: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
758: <br>
1.182 deraadt 759: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
1.165 deraadt 760: </td><td valign=top>
761: No lyrics.<br>
762: </td><td valign=top align=right>
763: <img width=395 height=110 src="images/doctorwxorx_right.jpg"><br>
764: </td></tr></table>
765: <em>
766: Composition, arrangement, recording by Jonathan Lewis.
767: Instruments by Jonathan Lewis.
768: </em>
769: <br>
770:
771: <hr>
772: <a name=59b></a>
1.175 deraadt 773: <h2><a href="59.html">5.9</a>: "Systemagic (Anniversary Edition)"</h2>
1.165 deraadt 774: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
775: <tr>
1.182 deraadt 776: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 777: 3:46 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song59b.mp3">(MP3 6.9MB)</a>
778: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song59b.ogg">(OGG 5.1MB)</a><br>
779: <br>
1.165 deraadt 780: <a href="59.html">OpenBSD 5.9</a> CD2 track 3 is an<br>
781: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
782: <br>
783: <a href="images/systemmagic.jpg">
784: <img width=227 height=343 src="images/systemmagic.jpg"></a>
1.182 deraadt 785: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
1.165 deraadt 786: </td><td valign=top>
787: BSD fight buffer reign<br>
788: Flowing blood in circuit vein<br>
789: Quagmire, Hellfire, RAMhead Count<br>
790: Puffy rip attacker out<br>
791: <p>
792: Crackin' ze bathroom, Crackin' ze vault<br>
793: Tale of the script, HEY! Secure by default<br>
794: <p>
795: Can't fight the Systemagic<br>
796: Über tragic<br>
797: Can't fight the Systemagic<br>
798: <p>
799: Sexty second, black cat struck<br>
800: Breeding worm of crypto-suck<br>
801: Hot rod box unt hunting wake<br>
802: Vampire omellete, kitten cake<br>
803: <p>
804: Crackin' ze boardroom, Crackin' ze vault<br>
805: Rippin' ze bat, HEY! Secure by default<br>
806: <p>
807: Chorus
808: <p>
809: Cybersluts vit undead guts<br>
810: Transyl-viral coffin muck<br>
811: Penguin lurking under bed<br>
812: Puffy hoompa on your head<br>
813: <p>
814: Crackin' ze bedroom, Crackin' ze vault<br>
815: Crackin' ze whip, HEY! Secure by default<br>
816: Crackin' ze bedroom, Crackin' ze vault<br>
817: Crackin' ze whip, HEY! Secure by default<br>
818: <p>
819: Chorus<br>
820: </td><td valign=top align=right>
821: <img width=395 height=600 src="images/systemmagic_right.jpg"><br>
822: </td></tr></table>
823: <p>
824: <em>
825: Lyrics based on the <a href="#31">3.1 song "Systemagic"</a> by Ty Semaka.
826: Music rearranged by Timm Markgraf.
827: Performed by Timm Markgraf (vocals, guitar, banjo), Malte Schalk (bass),
828: and Moritz Brümmer (cello).
829: Recorded at Esdenera in Hannover, Germany.
830: Mastered by Arno Jordan at Castle Röhrsdorf near Dresden.
831: </em>
832: <br>
1.158 deraadt 833:
834: <hr>
1.160 deraadt 835: <a name=58></a>
1.161 deraadt 836: <a name=58a></a>
1.175 deraadt 837: <h2><a href="58.html">5.8</a>: "20 years ago today"</h2>
1.161 deraadt 838: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
839: <tr>
1.182 deraadt 840: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 841: 2:19 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song58a.mp3">(MP3 4.2MB)</a>
842: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song58a.ogg">(OGG 3.1MB)</a><br>
843: <br>
1.161 deraadt 844: <a href="58.html">OpenBSD 5.8</a> CD2 track 2 is an<br>
845: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
846: <br>
847: <a href="images/fishhearts.jpg">
848: <img width=227 height=343 src="images/fishhearts.jpg"></a>
849: <p>
850: <em>
1.182 deraadt 851: The CVS import of the OpenBSD src tree was done at
1.211 bentley 852: <a href="https://cvsweb.openbsd.org/src/Makefile?rev=1.1&content-type=text/x-cvsweb-markup">
1.164 tj 853: 08:37:01, Oct 18, 1995 GMT</a>.<br>
1.161 deraadt 854: <br>
855: Subsequent 20 years:<br>
856: ~322,000 commits<br>
857: ~44 commits/day average<br>
858: ~355 hackers through the years<br>
859: </em>
1.182 deraadt 860: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
1.161 deraadt 861: </td><td valign=top>
862: It was twenty years ago you see<br>
863: Theo opened a cvs tree<br>
864: Made commits to many a file<br>
865: Joined by others in a very short while<br>
866: <br>
867: Take a moment to view<br>
868: The source of all this code<br>
869: The openbsd cvs repo...<br>
870: <br>
871: We're the openssh repository<br>
872: We hope you will enjoy the code<br>
873: The openntpd repository<br>
874: But that's not all that's here oh no...<br>
875: The mandoc 'pository, smtpd 'tory<br>
876: The libressl repo too<br>
877: <br>
878: It's wonderful to see the code<br>
879: Re-used far and wide<br>
880: The license is so liberal<br>
881: We'd love for you to code with us<br>
882: We'd love for you to code...<br>
883: <br>
884: I don't really want to have to go<br>
885: But it's hackathon time and so<br>
886: The coder will commit the code<br>
887: That he wants all of you to load<br>
888: <br>
889: So let me introduce to you the one and only Puffy Fish<br>
890: And the openbsd cvs repo...<br>
891: <br>
892: B... S... D...<br>
893: </td><td valign=top align=right>
894: <img width=395 height=560 src="images/20yearsago_right.jpg"><br>
895: </td></tr></table>
896: <p>
897: <em>
898: Lyrics by Todd C. Miller. Composition, arrangement, recording by
899: Jonathan Lewis. Vocals and instruments by Jonathan Lewis.
900: </em>
901: <br>
902:
903: <hr>
1.158 deraadt 904: <a name=58b></a>
1.175 deraadt 905: <h2><a href="58.html">5.8</a>: "Fanza"</h2>
1.158 deraadt 906: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
907: <tr>
1.182 deraadt 908: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 909: 3:45 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song58b.mp3">(MP3 6.7MB)</a>
910: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song58b.ogg">(OGG 4.2MB)</a><br>
911: <br>
1.158 deraadt 912: <a href="58.html">OpenBSD 5.8</a> CD2 track 3 is an<br>
913: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
914: <br>
1.182 deraadt 915: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
1.158 deraadt 916: </td><td valign=top>
917: No lyrics.<br>
918: </td><td valign=top align=right>
919: <img width=395 height=110 src="images/fanza_right.jpg"><br>
920: </td></tr></table>
921: <em>
922: Arrangement, recording and synthesizer design by
923: Alexandre Ratchov, on OpenBSD.
924: </em>
925: <br>
1.152 deraadt 926:
927: <hr>
1.157 deraadt 928: <a name=58c></a>
1.175 deraadt 929: <h2><a href="58.html">5.8</a>: "So much better"</h2>
1.157 deraadt 930: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
931: <tr>
1.182 deraadt 932: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 933: 3:06 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song58c.mp3">(MP3 5.7MB)</a>
934: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song58c.ogg">(OGG 3.4MB)</a><br>
935: <br>
1.157 deraadt 936: <a href="58.html">OpenBSD 5.8</a> CD2 track 4 is an<br>
937: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
938: <br>
939: <a href="images/somuchbetter_left.jpg">
940: <img width=227 height=343 src="images/somuchbetter_left.jpg"></a>
1.182 deraadt 941: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
1.157 deraadt 942: </td><td valign=top>
943: After 20 years, one has to admit:<br>
944: <br>
945: With every release,<br>
946: Puffy becomes better,<br>
947: a little better all the time.<br>
948: <br>
949: With every release,<br>
950: Puffy becomes better,<br>
951: so much better all the time.<br>
952: <br>
953: Let's count in sys:<br>
954: 2064534 lines of C code<br>
955: 51526 lines of Assembly code<br>
956: <br>
957: With every release,<br>
958: Puffy becomes better,<br>
959: really better all the time.<br>
960: <br>
961: Let's count in log:<br>
962: 314544 commits from developers<br>
963: 43.67 commits per day on average<br>
964: 351 hackers and slackers through the years<br>
965: <br>
966: Proactive security and sane defaults<br>
967: Puffy becomes better than ever before<br>
968: Free, functional, and secure by default<br>
969: <br>
970: With every release,<br>
971: Puffy becomes better,<br>
972: so much better all the time.<br>
973: <br>
974: With every release,<br>
975: Puffy becomes better,<br>
976: so much better all the time.<br>
977: <br>
978: With every release,<br>
979: Puffy becomes better.<br>
980: <br>
981: With every release,<br>
982: Puffy becomes better,<br>
983: so much better all the time.<br>
984: </td><td valign=top align=right>
985: <img width=395 height=817 src="images/somuchbetter_right.jpg"><br>
986: </td></tr></table>
987: <p>
988: <em>
989: Lyrics, composition, arrangement, and recording by Joerg Jung.
990: Female vocals by Ulrike Jung.
991: Edited, composed, and arranged on OpenBSD using Audacity, CMU Flite, and Schism Tracker.
992: Mastering by Lars Neugebauer of adlerhorstaudio and Joerg Jung.
1.159 deraadt 993: </em>
994: <br>
995:
996: <hr>
997: <a name=58d></a>
1.175 deraadt 998: <h2><a href="58.html">5.8</a>: "A Year in the Life"</h2>
1.159 deraadt 999: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
1000: <tr>
1.182 deraadt 1001: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 1002: 4:52 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song58d.mp3">(MP3 8.9MB)</a>
1003: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song58d.ogg">(OGG 6.7MB)</a><br>
1004: <br>
1.159 deraadt 1005: <a href="58.html">OpenBSD 5.8</a> CD2 track 5 is an<br>
1006: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
1007: <br>
1008: <a href="images/yearinthelife_left.jpg">
1009: <img width=227 height=343 src="images/yearinthelife_left.jpg"></a>
1010: <br>
1.182 deraadt 1011: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
1.159 deraadt 1012: </td><td valign=top>
1013: I read the news today oh boy<br>
1014: About a silly man who made a change<br>
1015: And though the hole was rather bad<br>
1016: Well I just had to laugh<br>
1017: I saw the code he wrote.<br>
1018: <br>
1019: BIO_snprintf with a cast..<br>
1020: He didn't know the POSIX API had changed<br>
1021: A crowd on slashdot stood and stared.<br>
1022: They'd seen such code before<br>
1023: Everyone was really sure<br>
1024: It was from 1984..<br>
1025: <br>
1026: I saw a tweet today oh boy.<br>
1027: The OpenBSD devs had just forked the code.<br>
1028: And though the code was rather gross<br>
1029: They held their nose and dove.<br>
1030: Having read the code..<br>
1031: I'd love to Ceeeeee Veeeeee Eeeeeee.<br>
1032: <br>
1033: Built up.. a sense of dread..<br>
1034: IMPLEMENT_ASN1 macros in my head.<br>
1035: Found a way down through 10 levels of hell<br>
1036: And looking there, I noticed more to fix.<br>
1037: #unifdef, and rewrite that<br>
1038: cut this out, and hear it splat.<br>
1039: Found my way upstairs and read hackernews<br>
1040: whining about comic sans and CVS.<br>
1041: <br>
1042: Whiiiiiiinne whine whine....<br>
1043: Whiiiine whinee.... Whine Whineee....<br>
1044: whine.. They... Use Cee.. Vee Esss...<br>
1045: <br>
1046: I read the news today oh boy<br>
1047: Four thousand holes in OpenSSL<br>
1048: And though the holes were rather small<br>
1049: They embargoed them all<br>
1.173 tj 1050: The privileged get to patch them<br>
1.159 deraadt 1051: while the rest get no info, at all...<br>
1052: I'd love to Ceeeeee Veeeeee Eeeeeee.<br>
1053: </td><td valign=top align=right>
1054: <img width=395 height=760 src="images/yearinthelife_right.jpg"><br>
1055: </td></tr></table>
1056: <p>
1057: <em>
1058: We've done stuff about LibreSSL before, but this particular song just
1059: fit with the release theme. While the lyrics can speak for themselves,
1060: "A Year In The Life" is representative of more than just LibreSSL. The
1061: pattern of LibreSSL development is a pattern that has repeated itself
1.214 ! bentley 1062: many times in OpenBSD — a decision is made by a few people to do
1.159 deraadt 1063: something, followed by action, and letting the world share it if they
1064: like it (such as with OpenSSH). To the developers actually doing the
1065: work, reactions to such efforts can often seem surreal, or
1066: irrelevant. The juxtaposition of working on the very real with the
1067: surreal going on around you can often make working on such projects
1068: feel like you're in a bit of an altered reality.. Sort of like the
1069: song. A number of us have had many years like this in the last 20.
1070: <br>
1071: <br>
1072: Lyrics by Bob Beck. Composition, arrangement, recording by
1073: Jonathan Lewis. Vocals and instruments by Jonathan Lewis.
1.157 deraadt 1074: </em>
1075: <br>
1076:
1077: <hr>
1.152 deraadt 1078: <a name=57></a>
1.175 deraadt 1079: <h2><a href="57.html">5.7</a>: "Source Fish"</h2>
1.152 deraadt 1080: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
1081: <tr>
1.182 deraadt 1082: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 1083: 3:00 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song57.mp3">(MP3 5.9MB)</a>
1084: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song57.ogg">(OGG 3.9MB)</a><br>
1085: <br>
1.152 deraadt 1086: <a href="57.html">OpenBSD 5.7</a> CD2 track 2 is an<br>
1087: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
1088: <br>
1089: <a href="images/bluefish.jpg">
1090: <img width=227 height=343 src="images/bluefish.jpg"></a>
1.182 deraadt 1091: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
1.152 deraadt 1092: </td><td valign=top>
1093: Comin' to ya, via CVS<br>
1094: All the code, that's safe to load<br>
1.154 deraadt 1095: Got the ProPolice, in the GCC<br>
1096: Boundry checks, and Canaries<br>
1.152 deraadt 1097: <br>
1.154 deraadt 1098: I'm a Source Fish, ha ha<br>
1099: Yeah I'm a Source Fish<br>
1.152 deraadt 1100: I'm a Source Fish<br>
1.154 deraadt 1101: Woah I'm a Source Fish<br>
1.152 deraadt 1102: <br>
1103: Code used to suck, in a Big way<br>
1.154 deraadt 1104: But it Keeps getting better, each and every day<br>
1.152 deraadt 1105: OpenSSL, wasn't done by us<br>
1.154 deraadt 1106: With Libre ha ha, there ain't no fuss<br>
1.152 deraadt 1107: <br>
1108: I'm a Source Fish<br>
1.154 deraadt 1109: Woah I'm a Source Fish<br>
1.152 deraadt 1110: I'm a Source Fish<br>
1111: I'm a Source Fish<br>
1112: <br>
1.154 deraadt 1113: With a secure shell, and a key or two<br>
1.152 deraadt 1114: You'd be amazed, at what I can do<br>
1.154 deraadt 1115: OpenSSH, relayd, PF, OpenNTPd<br>
1116: All I am, has been used for free<br>
1.152 deraadt 1117: <br>
1.154 deraadt 1118: I'm a Source Fish, that's right<br>
1.152 deraadt 1119: I'm a Source Fish<br>
1120: I'm a Source Fish<br>
1.154 deraadt 1121: Yeah I'm a Source Fish<br>
1.152 deraadt 1122: <br>
1.154 deraadt 1123: When the bullies, in that neighborhood<br>
1124: Come collecting, just remember that I'm Free, I'm Free Yeah Yeah, I'm Free Yeah Yeah<br>
1.152 deraadt 1125: <br>
1126: Instrumental<br>
1127: <br>
1.154 deraadt 1128: I'm a Source Fish, ha<br>
1129: Yes I'm a Source Fish<br>
1130: You, over there You a Source Fish, ha ha<br>
1131: Yeah, I'm a Source Fish<br>
1132: Who that over there, He's a Source Fish, You a Source Fish, ha<br>
1133: I'm a Source Fish, Yeah Yeah<br>
1134: I'm a Source Fish, Yeah Yeah<br>
1135: Source Fish<br>
1.152 deraadt 1136: </td><td valign=top align=right>
1137: <img width=395 height=656 src="images/57song.jpg"><br>
1138: </td></tr></table>
1139: <p>
1140: <em>
1141: Richie Pollack: vocals and harmonica. Jonathan Lewis: programming,
1142: bass, piano, and Hammond B3 organ. André Wickenheiser: trumpet.
1143: Lyrics by Bob Kitella. Produced and Recorded by Jonathan Lewis.
1144: </em>
1145: <br>
1.126 deraadt 1146:
1147: <hr>
1.148 deraadt 1148: <a name=56></a>
1.175 deraadt 1149: <h2><a href="56.html">5.6</a>: "Ride of the Valkyries"</h2>
1.148 deraadt 1150: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
1151: <tr>
1.182 deraadt 1152: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 1153: 3:54 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song56.mp3">(MP3 7.3MB)</a>
1154: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song56.ogg">(OGG 5.3MB)</a><br>
1155: <br>
1.148 deraadt 1156: <a href="56.html">OpenBSD 5.6</a> CD2 track 2 is an<br>
1157: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
1158: <br>
1159: <a href="images/CaptainTedu.jpg">
1160: <img width=227 height=343 src="images/CaptainTedu.jpg"></a>
1.182 deraadt 1161: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
1.148 deraadt 1162: </td><td valign=top>
1163: No lyrics.<br>
1164: </td><td valign=top align=right>
1165: <img width=395 height=656 src="images/56song.jpg"><br>
1166: </td></tr></table>
1167: <p>
1168: <em>
1169: No one <b>wants</b> to fork an open source project: it's a huge
1170: amount of work and isn't efficient in community time, but when you
1171: wake up one day and find that a hole in the SSL library you're using
1172: made world-wide news, and that the library's bad code style is
1173: hiding exploit mitigation countermeasures, then suddenly forking
1174: seems critically important. Two months of intense development later,
1175: LibreSSL was released.
1176: <p>
1177: The bigger questions remain for the open source development community
1178: to answer: why did this occur? Why is the OpenSSL code base so hard
1179: to understand? Complexity is the enemy of security, so for something
1180: whose raison d'être is security, why are secondary goals allowed
1181: to endanger the absolute #1 goal? Or has OpenSSL become a brand which
1182: allows companies to — on the cheap — meet security
1183: "requirements" like FIPS instead of actually being secure?
1184: <p>
1.149 deraadt 1185: How important is it for developers and customers to have software
1.148 deraadt 1186: where security is the goal? How much are they willing to push back
1187: on the OS developers and others to achieve that? Can we set a new,
1188: higher bar for best practices that will drive everyone to do more
1189: than just posture?
1190: </em>
1.182 deraadt 1191: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
1.148 deraadt 1192: <p>
1193: <em>
1194: Composed by Richard Wagner in July of 1851. Arranged and performed
1195: by Jonathan Lewis.
1196: </em>
1197: <br>
1198:
1199: <hr>
1.144 deraadt 1200: <a name=55></a>
1.175 deraadt 1201: <h2><a href="55.html">5.5</a>: "Wrap in Time"</h2>
1.144 deraadt 1202: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
1203: <tr>
1.182 deraadt 1204: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 1205: 4:18 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song55.mp3">(MP3 7.9MB)</a>
1206: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song55.ogg">(OGG 5.9MB)</a><br>
1207: <br>
1.144 deraadt 1208: <a href="55.html">OpenBSD 5.5</a> CD2 track 2 is an<br>
1209: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
1210: <br>
1211: <a href="images/McFishy.jpg">
1212: <img width=227 height=343 src="images/McFishy.jpg"></a>
1.182 deraadt 1213: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
1.144 deraadt 1214: </td><td valign=top>
1215: Tell me doctor, what will be the date,<br>
1216: Is it 1901, or 2038.<br>
1217: All I wanna do is make my keyboard sing<br>
1218: <br>
1219: <br>
1.145 deraadt 1220: From today I'll be fine<br>
1.144 deraadt 1221: But you better promise me I won't wrap back in time.<br>
1222: Don't wanna wrap back in time.<br>
1223: <br>
1224: <br>
1225: Don't bet your future on compat's bad advice<br>
1226: Better remember, bugs always strike twice.<br>
1227: Please don't use time32_t, not just a word again<br>
1228: <br>
1229: <br>
1.145 deraadt 1230: So talk to me, I'll be fine<br>
1.144 deraadt 1231: But you better promise me I won't wrap back in time.<br>
1232: Don't wanna wrap back in time<br>
1233: Don't wanna wrap back in time<br>
1234: No bad hacks in time.<br>
1235: <br>
1236: <br>
1237: Don't wanna wrap back in time<br>
1238: Don't wanna wrap back in time<br>
1239: don't wrap! don't wrap!<br>
1.148 deraadt 1240: </td><td valign=top align=right>
1.144 deraadt 1241: <img width=395 height=671 src="images/55song.jpg"><br>
1242: </td></tr></table>
1243: <em>
1244: In January of 2038, 32-bit Unix time will overflow and wrap
1245: back to 1901. This is known as the
1246: <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Year_2038_problem">Year 2038 problem</a>.
1247: POSIX operating systems have made strong inroads into embedded
1248: roles, so this is anticipated to be substantially worse than the Y2K transition.
1249: <p>
1.146 guenther 1250: In August of 2012, Philip Guenther started the OpenBSD work to
1.157 deraadt 1251: solve this.
1.146 guenther 1252: After a year of work it was ready enough for merging, and in August 2013
1253: the <b>time_t</b> type was changed to int64_t on all
1254: platforms and the kernel and userland were adapted to the new
1255: situation. The initial work was committed right after OpenBSD 5.4,
1256: then polished in tree over the next 6 months.
1.144 deraadt 1257: <p>
1258: The next part of the process was to drag the "ports" software
1.146 guenther 1259: ecosystem along because no one else had paved the way for 32-bit
1.144 deraadt 1260: machines to run with 64-bit <b>time_t</b>. This required a fair
1261: bit of upstream involvement. Thousands of fixes were required to
1262: make both 32-bit and 64-bit time work transparently. There will
1263: be more fixing in the future, but the concept is proven.
1264: <p>
1265: In the past OpenBSD pushed risky theoretical ideas into mainstream
1266: software practice by proving the ecosystem was ready to change.
1267: No OS wants to make a ABI jump until the case for change is proven.
1268: Stack protection, ASLR, and W^X principles are now in common use
1269: by mainline operating systems... because things like Firefox
1270: and Postgresql don't break anymore. OpenBSD built that route.
1271: <p>
1272: In the same way, the road is paved for the 64-bit <b>time_t</b>
1273: transition. Other operating systems can now make this jump.
1.148 deraadt 1274: </em>
1.182 deraadt 1275: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
1.144 deraadt 1276: <p>
1277: <em>
1278: Lyrics by Bob Beck and Philip Guenther. Vocals by Steve Pineo.
1279: Composition, arrangement, recording, and mastering by Jonathan Lewis.
1280: </em>
1281: <br>
1282:
1283: <hr>
1.137 deraadt 1284: <a name=54></a>
1.175 deraadt 1285: <h2><a href="54.html">5.4</a>: "Our favorite hacks"</h2>
1.137 deraadt 1286: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
1287: <tr>
1.182 deraadt 1288: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 1289: 2:27 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song54.mp3">(MP3 4.5MB)</a>
1290: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song54.ogg">(OGG 3.0MB)</a><br>
1291: <br>
1.137 deraadt 1292: <a href="54.html">OpenBSD 5.4</a> CD2 track 2 is an<br>
1293: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
1294: <br>
1295: <a href="images/Puffia.jpg">
1.144 deraadt 1296: <img width=227 height=343 src="images/Puffia.jpg"></a>
1.137 deraadt 1297: <br>
1298: <br>
1299: <em>
1300: do { to loop<br>
1301: at least one time<br>
1302: <br>
1303: regexp,<br>
1304: to match a chunk of text<br>
1305: <br>
1306: main, the name,<br>
1307: by which I'm called<br>
1308: <br>
1309: for,<br>
1310: another kind of loop<br>
1311: <br>
1312: sem,<br>
1313: a way to block a thread<br>
1314: <br>
1315: log<br>
1316: a func to follow sem<br>
1317: <br>
1318: t,<br>
1.138 guenther 1319: a place to store the time<br>
1.137 deraadt 1320: <br>
1321: } while (we close the block of do)<br>
1322: <br>
1323: </em>
1.182 deraadt 1324: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
1.144 deraadt 1325: </td><td valign=top>
1.137 deraadt 1326: <br>
1327: <br>
1328: PF divert-to and async resolver<br>
1329: Function call tracing to show how you got there<br>
1330: BGE changes to speed up the stack<br>
1331: These are a few of our favorite hacks<br>
1332: <br>
1333: <br>
1334: Closing the kernel thread races that hang you<br>
1335: Updating ports from the versions that pain you<br>
1336: Kernel mode setting and elf comes to vax<br>
1337: These are a few of our favorite hacks<br>
1338: <br>
1339: <br>
1340: Buffer queue limits and locale additions<br>
1341: Man-page updates to relate the traditions<br>
1342: Make DHCPD better with acks<br>
1343: These are a few of our favorite hacks<br>
1344: <br>
1345: <br>
1346: (chorus)<br>
1347: <br>
1348: <br>
1349: When my programs crash, when the kernel hangs<br>
1350: When I'm feeling mad<br>
1351: I update to get more of our favorite hacks<br>
1352: And then I don't feel so bad<br>
1353: <br>
1354: <br>
1355: (repeat)<br>
1356: <br>
1357: <br>
1358: (chorus)<br>
1359: <br>
1360: <br>
1361: When the build stops, when the panic hits,<br>
1362: When I'm feeling mad<br>
1363: I update to get more of our favorite hacks<br>
1364: And then I don't feel so bad<br>
1365: <br>
1366: <br>
1.148 deraadt 1367: </td><td valign=top align=right>
1.137 deraadt 1368: <img width=395 height=851 src="images/54song.jpg"><br>
1369: </td></tr></table>
1370: <p>
1371: <em>
1372: Lyrics by Philip Guenther. Vocals by Allison Lynch. Composition,
1373: arrangement, recording, and mastering by Jonathan Lewis.
1374: <br>
1375: <br>
1376: </em>
1377:
1378: <hr>
1.134 deraadt 1379: <a name=53></a>
1.175 deraadt 1380: <h2><a href="53.html">5.3</a>: "Blade Swimmer"</h2>
1.134 deraadt 1381: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
1382: <tr>
1.182 deraadt 1383: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 1384: 3:07 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song53.mp3">(MP3 5.7MB)</a>
1385: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song53.ogg">(OGG 4.4MB)</a><br>
1386: <br>
1.134 deraadt 1387: <a href="53.html">OpenBSD 5.3</a> CD2 track 2 is an<br>
1388: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
1389: <br>
1390: <a href="images/RoyPuffy.jpg">
1391: <img width=227 height=343 alt="Roy Puffy" src="images/RoyPuffy.jpg"></a>
1392: <br>
1393: <br>
1394: <em>
1.214 ! bentley 1395: Starting with this release, we introduce a new artist — Katherine Piro.
1.134 deraadt 1396: <br>
1397: </em>
1.182 deraadt 1398: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
1.144 deraadt 1399: </td><td valign=top>
1.134 deraadt 1400: <br>
1401: I've seen things your programs wouldn't believe.<br>
1402: <br>
1403: [laughs]<br>
1404: <br>
1405: Stack frames unwinding with Turing complete behaviour.<br>
1406: <br>
1407: I watched threads racing trampoline bindings in ld.so.<br>
1408: <br>
1409: All those overwrites will be lost in memory<br>
1410: like [coughs] accesses to NULL.<br>
1411: <br>
1412: Time to dump core.<br>
1413: <br>
1.148 deraadt 1414: </td><td valign=top align=right>
1.134 deraadt 1415: <img width=395 height=600 src="images/53song.jpg"><br>
1416: </td></tr></table>
1417: <p>
1418: <em>
1419: Lyrics by Theo de Raadt. Composition, arrangement, vocals,
1420: recording, and mastering by Bob Kitella.
1421: <br>
1422: <br>
1423: </em>
1424:
1425: <hr>
1.131 deraadt 1426: <a name=52></a>
1.175 deraadt 1427: <h2><a href="52.html">5.2</a>: "Aquarela do Linux!"</h2>
1.131 deraadt 1428: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
1429: <tr>
1430: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 1431: 3:01 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song52.mp3">(MP3 5.6MB)</a>
1432: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song52.ogg">(OGG 4.1MB)</a><br>
1433: <br>
1.131 deraadt 1434: <a href="52.html">OpenBSD 5.2</a> CD2 track 2 is an<br>
1435: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
1436: <br>
1437: <a href="images/Brazil.jpg">
1.135 rapha 1438: <img width=227 height=300 alt="Brazil" src="images/Brazil.jpg"></a>
1.131 deraadt 1439: <br>
1440: <br>
1441: <em>
1.132 beck 1442: Just as the original song professed its love for Brazil, "World,
1443: you'll love my Linux" is the passionate call of an idealistic dreamer
1444: who can't bear the thought of software that will only run under
1445: Windows, and yet loves the situation with software that will only run
1446: under particular Linux distributions.
1447: <p>
1448: This problem has proliferated itself into the standards bodies, with
1449: Posix adopting Linuxisms ahead of any other variant of Unix.
1450: <p>
1451: Posix and Unix have made it where you can write reasonably portable
1452: software and have it compile and run across a multitude of platforms.
1.157 deraadt 1453: Now this seems to be changing as the love for Linux drives the
1454: standards bodies into accepting everything Linux, good and bad.
1.132 beck 1455: <p>
1456: We also are faced with groups writing software that only works
1457: with particular distributions of Linux. From this we get software that
1458: not only isn't very portable, but often not particularly stable. Our
1459: idealistic dreamer in the song loves running one, or more than one distribution
1460: of Linux for a particular purpose. Unfortunately, the rest of us are left
1461: with the unattractive choice of doing the same, or relying on
1462: herculean efforts to port software that is being actively developed in a
1.157 deraadt 1463: way to discourage porting it to other platforms.
1.131 deraadt 1464: <br>
1465: </em>
1.182 deraadt 1466: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
1467: </td><td valign=top>
1.131 deraadt 1468: <br>
1.132 beck 1469: Linux, the one and only true Unix<br>
1470: We are in every way Posix<br>
1471: We voice our yearning "Someday soon"<br>
1472: We won't need any other.<br>
1473: <br>
1474: Then, tomorrow brings a new distro<br>
1475: It's better than the last you know<br>
1476: Another million bits that changed<br>
1477: All the hacks and tweaks we conjure up<br>
1.133 mpf 1478: They just get pushed into Posix<br>
1479: There's one thing that I know<br>
1.132 beck 1480: The world will love it, all Linux<br>
1481: <br>
1482: Then, there's other stuff we push as well<br>
1483: Others can work around this hell<br>
1484: With just a million lines of Shell<br>
1485: Now, as standards ape the one Linux<br>
1486: Everyone else just gets stuffed<br>
1487: There's one thing that I'm certain of<br>
1488: The world will love it, all Linux<br>
1489: We are Posix<br>
1490: World, you'll love my Linux<br>
1491: Linux, Linux<br>
1.131 deraadt 1492: <br>
1.148 deraadt 1493: </td><td valign=top align=right>
1.131 deraadt 1494: <img width=395 height=996 src="images/52song.jpg"><br>
1495: </td></tr></table>
1496: <p>
1497: <em>
1498: Lyrics by Bob Beck. Music composed and arranged by Jonathan Lewis. Vocals
1499: by Doug McKeag. Guitar by Victor Farrell. All other instruments,
1500: Jonathan Lewis. Recorded, mixed, and mastered Jonathan Lewis of Moxam
1501: Studios.
1502: <br>
1503: <br>
1504: </em>
1505:
1506: <hr>
1.126 deraadt 1507: <a name=51></a>
1.175 deraadt 1508: <h2><a href="51.html">5.1</a>: "Bug Busters!"</h2>
1.126 deraadt 1509: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
1510: <tr>
1511: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 1512: 2:47 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song51.mp3">(MP3 5.1MB)</a>
1513: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song51.ogg">(OGG 4.0MB)</a><br>
1514: <br>
1.126 deraadt 1515: <a href="51.html">OpenBSD 5.1</a> CD2 track 2 is an<br>
1516: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
1517: <br>
1518: <a href="images/Bugbusters.jpg">
1519: <img width=227 height=343 alt="Bugbusters" src="images/Bugbusters.jpg"></a>
1520: <br>
1521: </em>
1.182 deraadt 1522: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
1523: </td><td valign=top>
1.126 deraadt 1524: <br>
1525: If you've got a bug<br>
1526: That you just can't shove<br>
1527: Who ya gonna install?<br>
1528: Bugbusters!<br>
1529: <br>
1530: Buffer overflow?<br>
1531: Don't know where to go<br>
1532: Who ya gonna install?<br>
1533: Bugbusters!<br>
1534: <br>
1535: I ain't afraid of no holes<br>
1536: I ain't afraid of no holes<br>
1537: <br>
1538: And you're off by one<br>
1539: And it ain't no fun<br>
1540: Who ya gonna install?<br>
1541: Bugbusters!<br>
1.71 deraadt 1542: <br>
1.126 deraadt 1543: If your system's down<br>
1544: And it makes you frown<br>
1545: Who ya gonna install?<br>
1546: Bugbusters!<br>
1547: <br>
1548: I ain't afraid of no holes<br>
1549: I ain't afraid of no holes<br>
1550: <br>
1551: If you need a trace<br>
1552: Gonna win that race<br>
1553: Who ya gonna install?<br>
1554: Bugbusters!<br>
1555: <br>
1556: If you got a crash<br>
1557: And you got no cash<br>
1558: Who ya gonna install?<br>
1559: Bugbusters!<br>
1560: <br>
1561: OpenBSD makes me feel good!<br>
1562: <br>
1563: <br>
1.148 deraadt 1564: </td><td valign=top align=right>
1.126 deraadt 1565: <img width=395 height=1210 src="images/51song.jpg"><br>
1566: </td></tr></table>
1567: <p>
1568: <em>
1569: Written and Arranged by Ty Semaka and Jonathan Lewis. Lyrics and Vocals
1570: by Ty Semaka (www.tysemaka.com). All instruments programmed by
1571: Jonathan Lewis. Recorded, mixed, and mastered by Jonathan Lewis of
1572: Moxam Studios (moxam@hotmail.com).
1573: <br>
1574: <br>
1575: </em>
1576:
1577: <hr>
1.175 deraadt 1578: <a name=51b></a>
1579: <h2>"Shut up and Hack"</h2>
1.126 deraadt 1580: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
1581: <tr>
1582: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 1583: 3:11 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/songsh.mp3">(MP3 5.8MB)</a>
1584: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/songsh.ogg">(OGG 4.7MB)</a><br>
1585: <br>
1.210 tj 1586: This is an extra on "The Songs 4.1 - 5.1" Audio CD.
1.126 deraadt 1587: <br>
1588: <br>
1589: <img height=158 width=158 hspace="5" src="images/cdaudio2-m.gif">
1590: <br>
1591: <br>
1592: <em>
1.175 deraadt 1593: This is an extra track by Ty Semaka and Jonathan Lewis.
1.126 deraadt 1594: <p>
1595: On a regular basis, the OpenBSD developers hold events called
1596: <a href="hackathons.html">hackathons</a>. We've held many many
1597: of them, all over the world. Sub-groups of developers sit
1598: in one room and work fulltime for around a week.
1599: <p>
1600: One phrase in particular that has come up amongst developers,
1601: to cut extra chit-chat to a minimum, is Shut up and Hack.
1602: We've placed this phrase
1.186 tb 1603: on <a href="images/hackathons/c2k2.gif">
1.126 deraadt 1604: hackathon tshirts</a> too; they were very popular with the guys.
1605: <p>
1.210 tj 1606: <!--
1.150 deraadt 1607: <a href="https://openbsdstore.com">
1608: Order this CDROM from the OpenBSD Store.</a>
1.126 deraadt 1609: <p>
1.210 tj 1610: -->
1.126 deraadt 1611: The 2nd OpenBSD Audio CD "The Songs 4.1 - 5.1" celebrates the
1612: artwork and songs that have been released with each OpenBSD release.
1613: All the songs from the 4.1 to 5.1 releases are included (plus
1614: two bonus tracks).
1615: <p>
1616: The audio CD package contains some stickers (which ones may vary).
1617: </em>
1.182 deraadt 1618: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
1619: </td><td valign=top>
1.126 deraadt 1620: Shut up and hack!<br>
1621: In the hack room<br>
1622: In the back room<br>
1623: Wires everywhere<br>
1624: <br>
1625: At the tables<br>
1626: Fingers able<br>
1627: Take another dare!<br>
1628: <br>
1629: Close up your holes<br>
1630: Pick up the slack!<br>
1631: Get your head down!<br>
1632: Shut up and hack!<br>
1633: Close up your holes<br>
1634: Pick up the slack!<br>
1635: Get your head down!<br>
1636: Shut up and hack!<br>
1637: <br>
1638: Coding faster<br>
1639: You're the master<br>
1640: of security<br>
1641: <br>
1642: In your t-shirts<br>
1643: Hack till it hurts<br>
1644: This is how to be free<br>
1645: <br>
1646: CHORUS<br>
1647: <br>
1648: Hit the pub now<br>
1649: We're a club now<br>
1650: Trading genius for free<br>
1651: <br>
1652: Have a laugh and<br>
1653: Be a rock band<br>
1654: This is how it should be!<br>
1655: <br>
1656: CHORUS<br>
1657: <br>
1.182 deraadt 1658: </td><td>
1.71 deraadt 1659: <br>
1660: </td></tr></table>
1.20 deraadt 1661: <p>
1.104 deraadt 1662:
1663: <hr>
1.175 deraadt 1664: <a name=51c></a>
1665: <h2>"Sonate aux insomniaques"</h2>
1.199 deraadt 1666: 4:03 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/songsi.mp3">(MP3 5.9MB)</a>
1667: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/songsi.ogg">(OGG 5.7MB)</a><br>
1668: <br>
1.210 tj 1669: This is an extra on "The Songs 4.1 - 5.1" Audio CD.
1.128 deraadt 1670: <br>
1671: <em>
1672: <p>
1673: This is an extra track by audio-subsystem developer Alexandre
1674: Ratchov. It has no lyrics. The music is inspired by a poem with the
1675: same title and was entirely recorded and mixed using OpenBSD.
1676:
1.214 ! bentley 1677: <!—
1.128 deraadt 1678: <p>
1.150 deraadt 1679: <a href="https://openbsdstore.com">
1680: Order this CDROM from the OpenBSD Store.</a>
1.214 ! bentley 1681: —>
1.128 deraadt 1682: </em>
1683: <br>
1684: <p>
1685:
1686: <hr>
1.124 deraadt 1687: <a name=50></a>
1.175 deraadt 1688: <h2><a href="50.html">5.0</a>: "What Me Worry?"</h2>
1.124 deraadt 1689: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
1690: <tr>
1691: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 1692: 3:03 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song50.mp3">(MP3 5.6MB)</a>
1693: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song50.ogg">(OGG 4.0MB)</a><br>
1694: <br>
1.126 deraadt 1695: <a href="50.html">OpenBSD 5.0</a> CD2 track 2 is an<br>
1.124 deraadt 1696: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
1697: <br>
1698: <a href="images/MAD.jpg">
1699: <img width=227 height=343 alt="MAD" src="images/MAD.jpg"></a>
1700: <br>
1701: <br>
1702: <em>
1703: Ty Semaka has been drawing<br>
1704: Puffy-inspired parody artwork<br>
1705: for us for many releases.<br>
1706: This time I asked him to do some<br>
1707: art that is a meta-parody:<br>
1708: <br>
1709: A Puffy-inspired parody of<br>
1710: a parody magazine!<br>
1711: <br>
1712: </em>
1.182 deraadt 1713: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
1714: </td><td valign=top>
1.124 deraadt 1715: <br>
1716: What? Me Worry?<br>
1717: Not with this stuff<br>
1718: Nobody gettin' in<br>
1719: Nobody get tough<br>
1720: <br>
1721: I'm a comic book kid<br>
1722: Having fun in the woods<br>
1723: Carving out toys<br>
1724: and makin' em good<br>
1725: <br>
1726: Ya it's spy versus spy<br>
1727: I got so many tricks<br>
1728: I got undercover agents<br>
1729: Even out in the sticks<br>
1730: <br>
1731: Threw a brick through your window<br>
1732: Ya it's teenage fun<br>
1733: Then I blew up a bridge<br>
1734: And blocked out the sun<br>
1.125 sthen 1735: <br>
1.124 deraadt 1736: Little black flies<br>
1737: on a pile of GNU<br>
1738: With a Dairy Queen tip<br>
1739: And Imma comin' for you<br>
1740: <br>
1.125 sthen 1741: Make fun of everybody<br>
1.124 deraadt 1742: That's my thang<br>
1743: Ya It's a geeks wet dream<br>
1744: I give a poit! blit! spang!<br>
1745: <br>
1746: It's a mad mad world<br>
1747: and number 5 is alive<br>
1748: I gotta black submarine<br>
1749: and I'm built to survive<br>
1750: <br>
1751: Threw a brick through your window<br>
1752: Ya it's teenage fun<br>
1753: Then I blew up a bridge<br>
1754: And blocked out the sun<br>
1755: <br>
1756: Keep the source open<br>
1757: Gonna get my kicks<br>
1.125 sthen 1758: I'm 16 now<br>
1.124 deraadt 1759: Ya I don't need mix<br>
1760: <br>
1761: Got a stack o magazines<br>
1762: In my treehouse club<br>
1763: Nobody gettin' up here<br>
1764: Its secure ya bub<br>
1765: <br>
1766: Got a dime store bazooka<br>
1767: And a bubble gum tank<br>
1768: Got pots and pans for cookin' up<br>
1769: some Open source stank<br>
1770: <br>
1771: Threw a brick through your window<br>
1772: Ya it's teenage fun<br>
1773: Then I blew up a bridge<br>
1774: And blocked out the sun<br>
1775: <br>
1776: <br>
1.148 deraadt 1777: </td><td valign=top align=right>
1.124 deraadt 1778: <img width=395 height=1210 src="images/50song.jpg"><br>
1779: </td></tr></table>
1780: <p>
1781: <em>
1782: Written and Arranged by Ty Semaka and Jonathan Lewis. Lyrics and Vocals by
1783: Ty Semaka (www.tysemaka.com). Percussion and fuzzy bass guitar by Jonathan
1784: Lewis. Electric guitars by Tim Williams (www.cayusemusic.com). Recorded,
1785: mixed, and mastered by Jonathan Lewis of Moxam Studios (moxam@hotmail.com).
1786: <br>
1787: <br>
1788: </em>
1789:
1790: <hr>
1.123 deraadt 1791: <a name=49></a>
1.175 deraadt 1792: <h2><a href="49.html">4.9</a>: "The Answer"</h2>
1.123 deraadt 1793: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
1794: <tr>
1795: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 1796: 3:43 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song49.mp3">(MP3 6.8MB)</a>
1797: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song49.ogg">(OGG 5.7MB)</a><br>
1798: <br>
1.126 deraadt 1799: <a href="49.html">OpenBSD 4.9</a> CD2 track 2 is an<br>
1.123 deraadt 1800: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
1801: <br>
1802: <a href="images/Hitchhiker.jpg">
1803: <img width=227 height=343 alt="Hitchhiker" src="images/Hitchhiker.jpg"></a>
1804: <br>
1805: <br>
1806: <em>
1807: This release is OpenBSD 4.9. Then why is
1808: the song about 4.2? Huh?<br>
1809: <br>
1810: The <a href="#44">OpenBSD 4.4 release artwork</a> honoured
1811: the (Berkeley) CSRG guys for their efforts with the BSD 4.4
1.214 ! bentley 1812: release — they fought and managed to free the code.<br>
1.123 deraadt 1813: <br>
1814: This release the artwork is based on the stories of Douglas Adams,
1.214 ! bentley 1815: including his favorite number — 42. Therefore we can remember
! 1816: the previous major achievement of CSRG — BSD 4.2.<br>
1.123 deraadt 1817: <br>
1818: BSD 4.2 was
1819: not free, but it created and integrated so many new
1820: technologies that we all depend on today. Take a moment
1821: to consider how many things first available in BSD 4.2 you are using
1.214 ! bentley 1822: at this moment, to read this page — sockets, AF_INET,
1.123 deraadt 1823: virtual memory, etc.<br>
1824: <br>
1825: Today, new releases of operating systems from well-known vendors
1826: contain less new features than BSD 4.2 did.<br>
1827: <br>
1828: If only we could stop slacking and make a release like that!
1829: <br>
1830: </em>
1.182 deraadt 1831: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
1832: </td><td valign=top>
1.123 deraadt 1833: <br>
1834: How many streams must a fish swim down<br>
1835: before you can call him a man?<br>
1836: And how many codes must a vendor lock down<br>
1837: before silicon turns to sand?<br>
1838: Yes and how many times must the lawyers fly<br>
1839: before they are forever banned?<br>
1840: <br>
1841: The answer my friend<br>
1842: BSD 4.2<br>
1843: The answer<br>
1844: BSD 4.2<br>
1845: <br>
1846: How many years can a planet exist<br>
1847: before it is paved by the V?<br>
1848: How many years can some source code exist<br>
1849: before it's allowed to be free?<br>
1850: Yes and how many times can a fish turn his head<br>
1851: and pretend that he just doesn't see?<br>
1852: <br>
1853: The answer my friend<br>
1854: BSD 4.2<br>
1855: The answer<br>
1856: BSD 4.2<br>
1857: <br>
1858: How many times must we fight for the right<br>
1859: to share what is already ours?<br>
1860: Yes and how many times must we hitch while we hike<br>
1861: To end up not getting far?<br>
1862: And how many fish must we shove in our ear<br>
1863: before we can hear every star?<br>
1864: <br>
1865: The answer my friend<br>
1866: BSD 4.2<br>
1867: The answer<br>
1868: BSD 4.2<br>
1869: <br>
1870: And now we can travel the galaxy<br>
1871: with ships that are silicon made<br>
1872: And now with a towel and a laptop in hand<br>
1873: our future is made in the shade<br>
1874: And what did we use to build on and on<br>
1875: Inside everything that we use?<br>
1876: <br>
1877: The answer my friend<br>
1878: BSD 4.2<br>
1879: The answer<br>
1880: BSD 4.2<br>
1881: <br>
1882: <br>
1.148 deraadt 1883: </td><td valign=top align=right>
1.123 deraadt 1884: <img width=395 height=1210 src="images/49song.jpg"><br>
1885: </td></tr></table>
1886: <p>
1887: <em>
1888: Written and Arranged by Jonathan Lewis. Lyrics and Vocals by Ty Semaka
1889: (www.tysemaka.com). Guitar and harmonica by Leslie Alexander
1890: (www.lesliealexander.com). Recorded, mixed, and mastered by Jonathan
1891: Lewis of Moxam Studios (moxam@hotmail.com).
1892: <br>
1893: <br>
1894: </em>
1895:
1896: <hr>
1.120 deraadt 1897: <a name=48></a>
1.175 deraadt 1898: <h2><a href="48.html">4.8</a>: "El Puffiachi"</h2>
1.120 deraadt 1899: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
1900: <tr>
1.123 deraadt 1901: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 1902: 2:39 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song48.mp3">(MP3 4.4MB)</a>
1903: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song48.ogg">(OGG 3.0MB)</a><br>
1904: <br>
1.126 deraadt 1905: <a href="48.html">OpenBSD 4.8</a> CD2 track 2 is<br>
1.120 deraadt 1906: an uncompressed copy of<br>
1907: this song.<br>
1908: <br>
1909: [Instrumental]<br>
1910: <br>
1911: <a href="images/ElPuffiachi.jpg">
1.136 sthen 1912: <img width=227 height=318 alt="ElPuffiachi" src="images/ElPuffiachi.jpg"></a>
1.120 deraadt 1913: <br>
1914: <br>
1915: <em>
1916: [Sorry, no commentary]
1917: <br>
1918: </em>
1.182 deraadt 1919: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
1920: </td><td valign=top>
1.120 deraadt 1921: <br>
1922: <br>
1.148 deraadt 1923: </td><td valign=top align=right>
1.120 deraadt 1924: <img width=936 height=720 src="images/48song.jpg"><br>
1925: </td></tr></table>
1926: <p>
1927: <em>
1928: Written and performed by Manuel Jara and Mauricio Moreno of 'Los Morenos'.
1929: <br>
1930: <br>
1931: </em>
1932:
1933: <hr>
1.119 deraadt 1934: <a name=47></a>
1.175 deraadt 1935: <h2><a href="47.html">4.7</a>: "I'm still here"</h2>
1.119 deraadt 1936: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
1937: <tr>
1.123 deraadt 1938: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 1939: 4:39 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song47.mp3">(MP3 8.5MB)</a>
1940: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song47.ogg">(OGG 6.3MB)</a><br>
1941: <br>
1.126 deraadt 1942: <a href="47.html">OpenBSD 4.7</a> CD2 track 2 is an<br>
1.119 deraadt 1943: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
1944: <br>
1945: <a href="images/Superfish.jpg">
1.136 sthen 1946: <img width=227 height=318 alt="Superfish" src="images/Superfish.jpg"></a>
1.119 deraadt 1947: <br>
1948: <br>
1949: <em>
1950: [Sorry, no commentary]
1951: <br>
1952: </em>
1.182 deraadt 1953: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
1954: </td><td valign=top>
1.119 deraadt 1955: <br>
1956: Back when I was twenty<br>
1957: They said I wouldn't last<br>
1958: All that I believed in<br>
1959: Were the teachings of the past<br>
1960: <br>
1961: All I ever wanted<br>
1962: Was to keep the world secure<br>
1963: And all the criticizing<br>
1964: Was something I'd endure<br>
1965: <br>
1966: The changes that I've been through<br>
1967: And the trials along the way<br>
1968: The battle isn't over<br>
1969: And I'm living day by day<br>
1970: <br>
1971: But I'm still here<br>
1972: <br>
1973: Some say that I'm a hero<br>
1974: But I'm just being me<br>
1975: With my filter I can hide<br>
1976: My true identity<br>
1977: <br>
1978: One day when I was flying<br>
1979: Across the open skies<br>
1980: I saw the bridge to freedom<br>
1981: Had been weakened over time<br>
1982: <br>
1983: The server room was burning up<br>
1984: And melting the array<br>
1985: A little breath of cold air<br>
1986: Was enough to save the day<br>
1987: <br>
1988: CHORUS:<br>
1989: But I'm still here<br>
1990: Better than I've ever been before<br>
1991: I'm still free<br>
1992: Close a window, open up a door<br>
1993: I'm still me<br>
1994: <br>
1995: INSTRUMENTAL<br>
1996: <br>
1997: Now that I am older<br>
1998: And I've been around so long<br>
1999: The world is ever changing<br>
2000: I'm still righting all the wrong<br>
2001: <br>
2002: CHORUS:<br>
2003: <br>
2004: <br>
1.148 deraadt 2005: </td><td valign=top align=right>
1.119 deraadt 2006: <img width=395 height=1500 src="images/47song.jpg"><br>
2007: </td></tr></table>
2008: <p>
2009: <em>
2010: Written, arranged, and sung by Bob Kitella. Guitar by Tim Campbell.
1.172 benno 2011: Keyboard by Bob Kitella and Jonathan Lewis. Bass, additional programming,
2012: mixing, and mastering by Jonathan Lewis.
1.119 deraadt 2013: <br>
2014: <br>
2015: </em>
2016:
2017: <hr>
1.116 deraadt 2018: <a name=46></a>
1.175 deraadt 2019: <h2><a href="46.html">4.6</a>: "Planet of the Users"</h2>
1.116 deraadt 2020: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
2021: <tr>
1.123 deraadt 2022: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 2023: 2:38 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song46.mp3">(MP3 4.8MB)</a>
2024: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song46.ogg">(OGG 3.6MB)</a><br>
2025: <br>
1.126 deraadt 2026: <a href="46.html">OpenBSD 4.6</a> CD2 track 2 is an<br>
1.116 deraadt 2027: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
2028: <br>
2029: <a href="images/PlanetUsers.jpg">
1.123 deraadt 2030: <img width=227 height=343 alt="PlanetUsers" src="images/PlanetUsers.jpg"></a>
1.116 deraadt 2031: <br>
2032: <br>
2033: <em>
1.119 deraadt 2034: [Sorry, no commentary]
1.116 deraadt 2035: <br>
2036: </em>
1.182 deraadt 2037: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
2038: </td><td valign=top>
1.116 deraadt 2039: <br>
2040: Welcome to the future<br>
2041: One very rich man<br>
2042: runs the Earth with<br>
2043: one multinational<br>
2044: owns your stuff<br>
2045: and owns your birth<br>
2046: <br>
2047: Everyone is armless<br>
2048: Personal robots<br>
2049: Do it all for you<br>
2050: Sitting on your slug head<br>
2051: One channel TV<br>
2052: never gonna bore you<br>
2053: <br>
2054: CHORUS<br>
2055: Does it sound like a paradise<br>
2056: or a way to die<br>
2057: while alive and a loser<br>
2058: I'm a man from the open past<br>
1.117 damien 2059: And I'll never last<br>
1.116 deraadt 2060: on the Planet of the Users<br>
2061: <br>
2062: Everyone is happy<br>
2063: No more government<br>
2064: No more media<br>
2065: Only the Company<br>
2066: Entertains you<br>
2067: while it feeds you<br>
2068: <br>
2069: Soylent Green pap<br>
2070: Eating your friends while<br>
2071: shopping, buying<br>
2072: Stupid applications<br>
2073: Obsolete before you try them<br>
2074: <br>
2075: CHORUS<br>
2076: <br>
2077: Take me back<br>
2078: Take me back<br>
2079: Please<br>
2080: Take me back<br>
2081: <br>
2082: Way back in my time<br>
2083: Open source kept<br>
2084: everyone choosing<br>
2085: People knew the insides<br>
2086: Of devices they were using<br>
2087: <br>
2088: Hackers had a doorway<br>
2089: Now it's locked and<br>
2090: dumbed down so much<br>
2091: One button coma<br>
2092: Stop the future truly outta touch<br>
2093: <br>
2094: CHORUS<br>
2095: <br>
2096: <br>
1.148 deraadt 2097: </td><td valign=top align=right>
1.116 deraadt 2098: <img width=395 height=1778 src="images/46song.jpg"><br>
2099: </td></tr></table>
2100: <p>
2101: <em>
2102: Written and arranged by Ty Semaka and Jonathan Lewis. Lyrics by Ty Semaka.
2103: Vocals by Duncan McDonald, bass guitar by Jonathan Lewis, guitars by
2104: Russ Broom, drums by John McNeil.
1.157 deraadt 2105: Recorded, mixed, and mastered by Jonathan Lewis of
1.116 deraadt 2106: Moxam Studios (<a mailto:moxamstudios@hotmail.com>moxamstudios@hotmail.com</a>).
2107: <br>
2108: <br>
2109: </em>
2110:
2111: <hr>
1.108 deraadt 2112: <a name=45></a>
1.175 deraadt 2113: <h2><a href="45.html">4.5</a>: "Games"</h2>
1.108 deraadt 2114: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
2115: <tr>
1.123 deraadt 2116: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 2117: 3:29 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song45.mp3">(MP3 6.4MB)</a>
2118: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song45.ogg">(OGG 4.5MB)</a><br>
2119: <br>
1.126 deraadt 2120: <a href="45.html">OpenBSD 4.5</a> CD2 track 2 is an<br>
1.108 deraadt 2121: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
2122: <br>
2123: <a href="images/Pufftron.jpg">
1.123 deraadt 2124: <img width=227 height=343 alt="Pufftron" src="images/Pufftron.jpg"></a>
1.108 deraadt 2125: <br>
2126: <br>
2127: <em>
1.119 deraadt 2128: [Sorry, no commentary]
1.108 deraadt 2129: <br>
2130: </em>
1.182 deraadt 2131: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
2132: </td><td valign=top>
1.108 deraadt 2133: <br>
2134: I love to hate my PC<br>
2135: But now it's not so easy<br>
2136: Just wanna get this job done<br>
2137: But these A.M.L. games are dumb<br>
2138: <br>
2139: You wanna know the truth?<br>
2140: Intel's controlling you<br>
2141: And Microsoft is too<br>
2142: But this is nothing new<br>
2143: <br>
2144: With A.C.P.I.<br>
2145: This endless mess so corporate<br>
2146: Tangles and angles<br>
2147: In what could be straight forward<br>
2148: <br>
2149: Lost connections<br>
2150: Lost my mind<br>
2151: It's such a waste of time<br>
2152: <br>
2153: CHORUS<br>
2154: <br>
2155: Now on the motherboard<br>
2156: Where all my life is stored<br>
2157: Playing with garbage there<br>
2158: With rules so unfair<br>
2159: <br>
2160: Ruled by A.C.P.I.<br>
1.109 deraadt 2161: Whose heart is so corrupted<br>
1.108 deraadt 2162: Forcing us all to play<br>
2163: Our progress interrupted<br>
2164: <br>
2165: Lost connections<br>
2166: Lost my mind<br>
2167: It's such a waste of time<br>
2168: <br>
2169: CHORUS<br>
2170: <br>
2171: Yes I'm a user<br>
2172: And I'm not the only one<br>
2173: I'm not a loser<br>
2174: With help from Puffy Tron<br>
2175: <br>
2176: And we will find it<br>
2177: The pin in all this heartache<br>
2178: Map our devices<br>
2179: And we know what it'll take<br>
2180: <br>
2181: Lost connections<br>
2182: Lost my mind<br>
2183: Oh Ooh Woah end of line<br>
2184: <br>
2185: (bridge)<br>
2186: On and on<br>
2187: Can we all be wrong?<br>
2188: All and all<br>
2189: We are one<br>
2190: Clean the dream<br>
2191: Gone wrong<br>
2192: We are Tron<br>
2193: On and on and on<br>
2194: <br>
2195: Instrumental CHORUS (guitar solo)<br>
2196: <br>
2197: Instrumental pre-chorus<br>
2198: <br>
2199: CHORUS<br>
2200: dumb dumb dumb<br>
2201: <br>
1.148 deraadt 2202: </td><td valign=top align=right>
1.108 deraadt 2203: <img width=395 height=1778 src="images/45song.jpg"><br>
2204: </td></tr></table>
2205: <p>
2206: <em>
2207: Music written and arranged by Jonathan Lewis. Lyrics by Ty Semaka and
2208: Theo de Raadt. Synth, drum and bass programming by Jonathan Lewis,
2209: guitar by Russ Broom, vocals by Jonny Sinclair.
1.157 deraadt 2210: Recorded, mixed, and mastered by Jonathan Lewis of
1.112 deraadt 2211: Moxam Studios (<a mailto:moxamstudios@hotmail.com>moxamstudios@hotmail.com</a>).
1.108 deraadt 2212: <br>
2213: <br>
2214: </em>
2215:
2216: <hr>
1.104 deraadt 2217: <a name=44></a>
1.175 deraadt 2218: <h2><a href="44.html">4.4</a>: "Trial of the BSD Knights"</h2>
1.104 deraadt 2219: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
2220: <tr>
1.123 deraadt 2221: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 2222: 3:05 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song44.mp3">(MP3 5.6MB)</a>
2223: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song44.ogg">(OGG 4.4MB)</a><br>
2224: <br>
1.126 deraadt 2225: <a href="44.html">OpenBSD 4.4</a> CD2 track 2 is an<br>
1.104 deraadt 2226: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
2227: <br>
2228: <a href="images/SourceWars.jpg">
1.123 deraadt 2229: <img width=227 height=343 alt="SourceWars" src="images/SourceWars.jpg"></a>
1.104 deraadt 2230: <br>
2231: <br>
2232: <em>
2233: Nearly 10 years ago Kirk McKusick wrote a history of
2234: the Berkeley Unix distributions for the
1.121 deraadt 2235: O'Reilly book "Open Sources: Voices from the Open Source Revolution".
1.104 deraadt 2236: We recommend you read his story, entitled
2237: <a href="http://oreilly.com/catalog/opensources/book/kirkmck.html">
2238: "Twenty Years of Berkeley Unix
2239: From AT&T-Owned to Freely Redistributable"</a>
2240: first, to see how Kirk remembers how we got here.
2241: Sadly, since it showed up in book form originally, this text has
2242: probably not been read by enough people.
2243: <br>
2244: <br>
2245: The USL(AT&T) vs BSDI/UCB court case settlement documents were
2246: not public until recently; their disclosure has made the facts more clear.
2247: But the story of how three people decided to free the BSD codebase
1.214 ! bentley 2248: of corporate pollution — and release it freely — is more interesting
1.104 deraadt 2249: than the lawsuit which followed. Sure, a stupid lawsuit happened which
2250: hindered the acceptance of the BSD code during a critical period.
2251: But how did a bunch of guys go through the effort of replacing so
2252: much AT&T code in the first place? After all, companies had
1.214 ! bentley 2253: lots of really evil lawyers back then too — were they not afraid?
1.104 deraadt 2254: <br>
2255: <br>
2256: After a decade of development, most of the AT&T code had
2257: already been replaced by university researchers and their associates.
2258: So Keith Bostic, Mike Karels and Kirk McKusick (the main UCB CSRG group)
2259: started going through the 4.3BSD codebase to cleanse the rest.
2260: Keith, in particular, built a ragtag team (in those days, USENIX
2261: conferences were a gold mine for such team building) and led these
2262: rebels to rewrite and replace all the Imperial AT&T code, piece by
2263: piece, starting with the libraries and userland programs.
1.214 ! bentley 2264: Anyone who helped only got credit as a Contributor — people like
1.104 deraadt 2265: Chris Torek and a cast of .. hundreds more.
2266: <br>
2267: <br>
1.105 deraadt 2268: Then Mike and Kirk purified the kernel. After a bit more careful
1.104 deraadt 2269: checking, this led to the release of a clean tree called Net/2 which
1.214 ! bentley 2270: was given to the world in June 1991 — the largest dump of free source
! 2271: code the world had ever received (for those days — not modern monsters like OpenOffice).
1.104 deraadt 2272: <br>
2273: <br>
2274: Some of these ragtags formed a company (BSDi) to sell a production system
2275: based on this free code base, and a year later Unix System Laboratories
2276: (basically AT&T) sued BSDi and UCB.
2277: Eventually AT&T lost and after a few trifling fixes (described in the
2278: lawsuit documents) the codebase was free. A few newer developments
2279: (and more free code) were added, and released in June 1994 as 4.4BSD-Lite.
2280: Just over 14 years later OpenBSD is releasing its own 4.4 release (and for
1.207 deraadt 2281: a lot less than $1000 per copy).
1.104 deraadt 2282: <br>
2283: <br>
2284: The OpenBSD 4.4 release is dedicated to Keith Bostic, Mike Karels, Kirk McKusick,
2285: and all of those who contributed to making Net/2 and 4.4BSD-Lite free.
2286: <br>
2287: </em>
1.182 deraadt 2288: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
2289: </td><td valign=top>
1.104 deraadt 2290: <br>
2291: <center>
2292: <br>
2293: Source Wars<br>
2294: Episode IV<br>
2295: Trial of the BSD Knights<br>
2296: </center>
2297: <br>
2298: Not so very long ago<br>
2299: and not so far away<br>
2300: AT&T made system code<br>
2301: and gave some bits away<br>
2302: <br>
2303: Some Berkeley geeks rebuilt it<br>
2304: better, faster, more diverse<br>
2305: This open thing was wonderful<br>
2306: for everyone on Earth<br>
2307: <br>
2308: And then the roaring 90's came<br>
2309: The Empire changed its mind<br>
2310: And good old greed was back again<br>
2311: The geeks were in a legal bind<br>
2312: <br>
2313: The Empire's Unix Lab<br>
2314: sued BSDi from above<br>
2315: The code is free but<br>
2316: only we can sell it bub!<br>
2317: <br>
2318: The University came calling<br>
2319: in full protective mode<br>
1.106 deraadt 2320: and proved the source in Net/2<br>
1.104 deraadt 2321: didn't use the Empire's code<br>
2322: <br>
2323: Then Bostic brought the Empire's books<br>
2324: n' slammed them dandys down<br>
2325: And showed the giant chunks<br>
2326: of BSD code all around<br>
2327: <br>
2328: They didn't even give an ounce<br>
2329: of credit front to back<br>
2330: This broke the license USL<br>
2331: was using to attack<br>
2332: <br>
2333: The case was thrown out by the judge<br>
2334: and "settled" out of court<br>
2335: And UCB was big enough<br>
2336: to take it like a sport<br>
2337: <br>
2338: And to this day the geekfolk say<br>
2339: Now did we win or lose?<br>
2340: They shoulda made 'em reprint<br>
2341: every book with proper dues<br>
2342: <br>
2343: And take out ads in major rags<br>
2344: apologetically<br>
2345: And maybe now it wouldn't be<br>
2346: the same monopoly<br>
2347: <br>
2348: The Empire might have tumbled<br>
2349: down if everybody saw<br>
2350: How greed became so big<br>
2351: they couldn't see that glaring flaw<br>
2352: <br>
2353: But only one community<br>
2354: the one that makes it tick<br>
2355: Is there to fight for everyone<br>
2356: exposing hypocrites<br>
2357: <br>
2358: And OpenBSD is here<br>
2359: to tell the story right<br>
2360: Once again the fight is fought<br>
2361: and kept in shining light<br>
2362: <br>
2363: And may the source be with you<br>
2364: May the Empire fall apart<br>
2365: Ya like that's gonna happen!<br>
2366: But we gotta keep heart!<br>
2367: <br>
1.148 deraadt 2368: </td><td valign=top align=right>
1.104 deraadt 2369: <img width=395 height=1800 src="images/44song.jpg"><br>
2370: </td></tr></table>
2371: <p>
2372: <em>
2373: Music written and arranged by Jonathan Lewis. Lyrics and vocals by Ty Semaka.
2374: Clarinet by Cedric Blary. Alto Sax 1 & 2, Tenor Sax by Lincoln Frey.
2375: Drum, Bass, and Steel Drum programming by Jonathan Lewis.
1.157 deraadt 2376: Recorded, mixed, and mastered by Jonathan Lewis of
1.112 deraadt 2377: Moxam Studios (<a mailto:moxamstudios@hotmail.com>moxamstudios@hotmail.com</a>).
1.104 deraadt 2378: <br>
2379: <br>
2380: </em>
1.20 deraadt 2381:
2382: <hr>
1.95 deraadt 2383: <a name=43></a>
1.175 deraadt 2384: <h2><a href="43.html">4.3</a>: "Home to Hypocrisy"</h2>
1.95 deraadt 2385: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
2386: <tr>
1.123 deraadt 2387: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 2388: 4:48 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song43.mp3">(MP3 8.2MB)</a>
2389: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song43.ogg">(OGG 6.5MB)</a><br>
2390: <br>
1.126 deraadt 2391: <a href="43.html">OpenBSD 4.3</a> CD2 track 2 is an<br>
1.95 deraadt 2392: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
2393: <br>
2394: <a href="images/Cryptonaut.jpg">
2395: <img width=227 height=343 alt="Cryptonaut" src="images/Cryptonaut.jpg"></a>
2396: <br>
2397: <br>
2398: <em>
2399: We are just plain tired of being lectured to by a man
2400: who is a lot like
2401: <a href="http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/04/08/campbell_grounded/">Naomi Campbell</a>.
2402: <br>
2403: <br>
2404: In 1998 when a United Airlines plane was waiting in the queue at
1.102 deraadt 2405: Washington Dulles International Airport for take-off to New Orleans
2406: (where a Usenix conference was taking place), one man stood up from
2407: his seat, demanded that they stop waiting in the queue and be permitted
1.95 deraadt 2408: to deplane. Even after orders from the crew and a pilot from
2409: the cockpit he refused to sit down. The plane exited the queue
1.96 deraadt 2410: and returned to the airport gangway. Security personnel ran onto
1.95 deraadt 2411: the plane and removed this man, Richard Stallman, from the plane.
2412: After Richard was removed from the plane, everyone else stayed
2413: onboard and continued their journey to New Orleans. A few
2414: OpenBSD developers were on that same plane, seated very closeby,
2415: so we have an accurate story of the events.
2416: <br>
2417: <br>
2418: This is the man who presumes that he should preach to us
2419: about morality, freedom, and what is best for us. He believes
2420: it is his God-given role to tell us what is best for us, when he
2421: has shown that he takes actions which are not best for everyone.
1.214 ! bentley 2422: He prefers actions which he thinks are best for him — and him
! 2423: alone — and then lies to the public. Richard Stallman is no Spock.
1.95 deraadt 2424: <br>
2425: <br>
2426: We release our software in ways that are maximally free. We
2427: remove all restrictions on use and distribution, but leave a
2428: requirement to be known as the authors. We follow a pattern of
2429: free source code distribution that started in the mid-1980's
2430: in Berkeley, from before Richard Stallman had any powerful
2431: influence which he could use so falsely.
2432: <br>
2433: <br>
2434: We have a development sub-tree called "ports". Our "ports" tree
2435: builds software that is 'found on the net' into packages that
2436: OpenBSD users can use more easily. A scaffold of Makefiles and
2437: scripts automatically fetch these pieces of software, apply
2438: patches as required by OpenBSD, and then build them into nice
2439: neat little tarballs. This is provided as a convenience for
1.97 okan 2440: users. The ports tree is maintained by OpenBSD entirely separately
1.95 deraadt 2441: from our main source tree. Some of the software which is fetched
2442: and compiled is not as free as we would like, but what can we do.
2443: All the other operating system projects make exactly the same
2444: decision, and provide these same conveniences to their users.
2445: <br>
2446: <br>
2447: Richard felt that this "ports tree" of ours made OpenBSD non-free.
2448: He came to our mailing lists and lectured to us specifically, yet
2449: he said nothing to the many other vendors who do the same; many of
2450: them donate to the FSF and perhaps that has something to do with it.
2451: Meanwhile, Richard has personally made sure that all the official
1.214 ! bentley 2452: GNU software — including Emacs — compiles and runs on Windows.
1.95 deraadt 2453: <br>
2454: <br>
2455: That man is a false leader. He is a hypocrite. There may be some
2456: people who listen to him. But we don't listen to people who do not
2457: follow their own stupid rules.
2458: </em>
1.182 deraadt 2459: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
2460: </td><td valign=top>
1.95 deraadt 2461: <br>
2462: Puffy and the mighty Cryptonauts<br>
2463: Trading with new lands by open C<br>
2464: Corporate monsters, many closing passages<br>
2465: Tempting harpies<br>
2466: 13 years of treachery<br>
2467: <br>
2468: <br>
2469: Journey's over, welcome home the heroes<br>
2470: Offering the bounty of their trade<br>
2471: Useful clothing spun from the golden fleece<br>
2472: For the people, free and very strongly made<br>
2473: <br>
2474: <br>
2475: But something's wrong with them<br>
2476: They will not take our free wares<br>
2477: "What's the matter good people?<br>
1.99 deraadt 2478: Why are you so scared?<br>
2479: Why?"<br>
1.95 deraadt 2480: <br>
2481: <br>
2482: Then one brave soul spoke out<br>
2483: "We're not allowed to take your gifts<br>
1.98 okan 2484: Hypocrites has spoken<br>
1.95 deraadt 2485: There are many new laws"<br>
2486: <br>
2487: <br>
1.98 okan 2488: Hypocrites appears<br>
1.95 deraadt 2489: "Puffy!<br>
2490: You must obey my new rules!"<br>
2491: <br>
2492: <br>
2493: "First rule one dictates<br>
2494: You cannot give your code away"<br>
2495: <br>
2496: <br>
2497: (In Greek) To your health, Nick, great bouzouki player and cool dude.<br>
2498: <br>
2499: <br>
2500: "And rule two dictates<br>
2501: You must give it to me<br>
2502: So I can give it away properly for free"<br>
2503: <br>
2504: <br>
2505: "The list goes on of course<br>
2506: But for traders this is all you need"<br>
2507: <br>
2508: <br>
2509: "This is madness!<br>
2510: He has lost his mind!<br>
2511: This defies the first law of free trade<br>
2512: Rule zero came before this rule one<br>
2513: Freedom means you cannot dictate to anyone"<br>
2514: <br>
2515: <br>
2516: Then Hypocrites goes mad.<br>
2517: <br>
2518: <br>
1.148 deraadt 2519: </td><td valign=top align=right>
1.95 deraadt 2520: <img width=395 height=1720 src="images/43song.gif"><br>
2521: </td></tr></table>
2522: <p>
2523: <em>
2524: Music written and arranged by Jonathan Lewis. Lyrics by Ty Semaka and
2525: Nikkos Diochnos. Vocals and bouzouki by Nikkos Diochnos. Baglama,
2526: second bouzouki, violin, bass, and drum programming by Stelios Pulos,
1.101 naddy 2527: né Jonathan Lewis. Guitar by Methodios Valtiotis, né Allen Baekeland.
2528: Percussion by Pentelis Yiannikopulos, né Ben Johnson. Recorded, mixed,
1.157 deraadt 2529: and mastered by Jonathan Lewis of
1.112 deraadt 2530: Moxam Studios (<a mailto:moxamstudios@hotmail.com>moxamstudios@hotmail.com</a>).
1.95 deraadt 2531: <br>
2532: <br>
2533: </em>
2534:
2535: <hr>
1.90 deraadt 2536: <a name=42></a>
1.175 deraadt 2537: <h2><a href="42.html">4.2</a>: "100001 1010101"</h2>
1.90 deraadt 2538: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
2539: <tr>
1.123 deraadt 2540: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 2541: 4:40 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song42.mp3">(MP3 4.0MB)</a>
2542: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song42.ogg">(OGG 6.4MB)</a><br>
2543: <br>
1.126 deraadt 2544: <a href="42.html">OpenBSD 4.2</a> CD2 track 2 is an<br>
1.90 deraadt 2545: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
2546: <br>
2547: <a href="images/Marathon.jpg">
2548: <img width=227 height=343 alt="Marathon" src="images/Marathon.jpg"></a>
2549: <br>
2550: <br>
2551: <em>
2552: Those of us who work on OpenBSD are often asked why we do what we do.
1.91 merdely 2553: This song's lyrics express the core motivations and goals which have
1.214 ! bentley 2554: remained unchanged over the years — secure, free, reliable software,
1.90 deraadt 2555: that can be shared with anyone. Many other projects purport to share
2556: these same goals, and love to wrap themselves in a banner of "Open
2557: Source" and "Free Software". Given how many projects there are one
2558: would think it might be easy to stick to those goals, but it doesn't
2559: seem to work out that way. A variety of desires drag many projects
2560: away from the ideals very quickly.
2561: <p>
1.93 jmc 2562: Much of any operating system's usability depends on device support,
1.91 merdely 2563: and there are some very tempting alternative ways to support devices
1.90 deraadt 2564: available to those who will surrender their moral code. A project
2565: could compromise by entering into NDA agreements with vendors, or
2566: including binary objects in the operating system for which no source
2567: code exists, or tying their users down with contract terms hidden
2568: inside copyright notices. All of these choices surrender some subset
2569: of the ideals, and we simply will not do this. Sure, we care about
2570: getting devices working, but not at the expense of our original goals.
2571: <p>
2572: Of course since "free to share with anyone" is part of our goals,
2573: we've been at the forefront of many licensing and NDA issues,
1.91 merdely 2574: resulting in a good number of successes. This success had led to much
1.90 deraadt 2575: recognition for the advancement of Free Software causes, but has also
2576: led to other issues.
2577: <p>
2578: We fully admit that some BSD licensed software has been taken and used
2579: by many commercial entities, but contributions come back more often
2580: than people seem to know, and when they do, they're always still
2581: properly attributed to the original authors, and given back in the
2582: same spirit that they were given in the first place.
2583: <p>
2584: That's the best we can expect from companies. After all, we make our
1.214 ! bentley 2585: stuff so free so that everyone can benefit — it remains a core goal;
1.90 deraadt 2586: we really have not strayed at all in 10 years. But we can expect more
1.214 ! bentley 2587: from projects who talk about sharing — such as the various Linux
1.90 deraadt 2588: projects.
2589: <p>
2590: Now rather than seeing us as friends who can cooperatively improve all
2591: codebases, we are seen as foes who oppose the GPL. The participants
2592: of "the race" are being manipulated by the FSF and their legal arm, the
2593: SFLC, for the FSF's aims, rather than the goal of getting good source
2594: into Linux (and all other code bases). We don't want this to come off
2595: as some conspiracy theory, but we simply urge those developers caution
1.214 ! bentley 2596: — they should ensure that the path they are being shown by those who
1.90 deraadt 2597: have positioned themselves as leaders is still true. Run for yourself,
2598: not for their agenda.
2599: <p>
2600: The Race is there to be run, for ourselves, not for others. We do
2601: what we do to run our own race, and finish it the best we can. We
2602: don't rush off at every distraction, or worry how this will affect our
2603: image. We are here to have fun doing right.
2604: <p>
2605: </em>
1.182 deraadt 2606: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
2607: </td><td valign=top>
1.90 deraadt 2608: <br>
2609: The starting line is nervous<br>
2610: we burst upon the course<br>
2611: Electric is our passion<br>
2612: An open hearted force<br>
2613: <br>
2614: The water's full of dangers<br>
2615: That interrupt the flow<br>
2616: And soon the spirit splinters<br>
1.92 deraadt 2617: as temptation takes its toll<br>
1.90 deraadt 2618: <br>
2619: *Give and get back some<br>
2620: Sharing it all<br>
2621: Path we know best<br>
2622: we're having a ball<br>
2623: Opulent mission<br>
2624: Lost in our passion<br>
2625: You can still choose<br>
2626: If you don't swim to win<br>
2627: you'll never lose*<br>
2628: <br>
2629: One Zero Zero Zero Zero One<br>
2630: <br>
2631: The window is a wall by now<br>
2632: A sieve of sickened holes<br>
2633: The water chicken stealing maps<br>
2634: Mistaking us for foes<br>
2635: <br>
2636: The sun a son of Icarus<br>
2637: Flies too close to itself<br>
2638: Forbidden fruit is blinded<br>
2639: by the toys upon the shelf<br>
2640: <br>
2641: *CHORUS*<br>
2642: <br>
2643: One Zero One Zero One Zero One<br>
2644: <br>
2645: Slow and steady wins they say<br>
2646: but this is not a race<br>
2647: It's not about who takes a prize<br>
2648: for first or second place<br>
2649: <br>
2650: Imaginary rings of brass<br>
2651: Were traded for real goals<br>
2652: The vision and the mission lost<br>
2653: For those with corporate souls<br>
2654: <br>
2655: *Give and get back some<br>
2656: Sharing it all<br>
2657: Path we know best<br>
2658: we're having a ball<br>
2659: Give and get zeros<br>
2660: Give and get ones<br>
2661: Given to you but<br>
2662: Not you to us<br>
2663: Opulent mission<br>
2664: Lost in our passion<br>
2665: You can still choose<br>
2666: If you don't swim to win<br>
2667: you'll never lose<br>
2668: You'll never lose*<br>
2669: <br>
2670: <br>
1.148 deraadt 2671: </td><td valign=top align=right>
1.90 deraadt 2672: <img width=396 height=1876 src="images/42song.gif"><br>
2673: </td></tr></table>
2674: <p>
2675: <em>
2676: Music written and arranged by Jonathan Lewis. Recorded, mixed and
1.157 deraadt 2677: mastered by Jonathan Lewis of
1.112 deraadt 2678: Moxam Studios (<a mailto:moxamstudios@hotmail.com>moxamstudios@hotmail.com</a>).
1.172 benno 2679: Vocals by Duncan McDonald (www.thegreatgavalan.com). Drums by
1.90 deraadt 2680: John McNeil. Guitar by Jeff Drummond. Bass and keyboards by
2681: Jonathan Lewis. Lyrics by Ty Semaka and Theo de Raadt.
2682: <br>
2683: <br>
2684: </em>
2685:
2686: <hr>
1.81 deraadt 2687: <a name=41></a>
1.175 deraadt 2688: <h2><a href="41.html">4.1</a>: "Puffy Baba and the 40 Vendors"</h2>
1.81 deraadt 2689: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
2690: <tr>
1.123 deraadt 2691: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 2692: 4:19 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song41.mp3">(MP3 4.1MB)</a>
2693: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song41.ogg">(OGG 8.3MB)</a><br>
2694: <br>
1.126 deraadt 2695: <a href="41.html">OpenBSD 4.1</a> CD2 track 2 is an<br>
1.81 deraadt 2696: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
2697: <br>
2698: <a href="images/PuffyBaba.jpg">
2699: <img width=227 height=343 alt="PuffyBaba" src="images/PuffyBaba.jpg"></a>
2700: <br>
2701: <br>
2702: <em>
2703: As developers of a free operating system, one of our prime responsibilities
2704: is device support. No matter how nice an operating system is, it remains
2705: useless and unusable without solid support for a wide percentage of the
2706: hardware that is available on the market. It is therefore rather unsurprising
2707: that more than half of our efforts focus on various aspects relating to
2708: device support.
2709: <p>
1.85 mbalmer 2710: Most parts of the operating system (from low kernel, through to libraries,
1.81 deraadt 2711: all the way up to X, and then even to applications) use fairly obvious
2712: interface layers, where the "communication protocols" or "argument passing"
2713: mechanisms (ie. APIs) can be understood by any developer who takes the
2714: time to read the free code. Device drivers pose an additional and significant
2715: challenge though: because many vendors refuse to document the exact behavior
2716: of their devices. The devices are black boxes. And often they are surprisingly
2717: weird, or even buggy.
2718: <p>
2719: When vendor documentation does not exist, the development process can
2720: become extremely hairy. Groups of developers have found themselves focused
2721: for months at a time, figuring out the most simple steps, simply because
2722: the hardware is a complete mystery. Access to documentation can ease
2723: these difficulties rapidly. However, getting access to the chip documentation
2724: from vendors is ... almost always a negotiation. If we had open access to
1.84 matthieu 2725: documentation, anyone would be able to see how simple all these devices
1.81 deraadt 2726: actually are, and device driver development would flourish (and not just in
2727: OpenBSD, either).
2728: <p>
2729: When we proceed into negotiations with vendors, asking for documentation,
2730: our position is often weak. One would assume that the modern market is fair,
2731: and that selling chips would be the primary focus of these vendors. But
2732: unfortunately a number of behemoth software vendors have spent the last 10 or
2733: 20 years building
1.83 wvdputte 2734: <a href="papers/brhard2007/mgp00024.html">
1.81 deraadt 2735: political hurdles against the smaller players</a>.
2736: <p>
1.82 jsg 2737: A particularly nasty player in this regard has been the Linux vendors and
1.87 tom 2738: some Linux developers, who have played along with an American corporate model
1.81 deraadt 2739: of requiring NDAs for chip documentation. This has effectively put Linux
2740: into the club with Microsoft, but has left all the other operating system
1.214 ! bentley 2741: communities — and their developers — with much less available clout for
1.81 deraadt 2742: requesting documentation. In a more fair world, the Linux vendors would
2743: work with us, and the device driver support in all free operating systems
2744: would be fantastic by now.
2745: <p>
2746: We only ask that
1.83 wvdputte 2747: <a href="papers/brhard2007/mgp00027.html">
1.81 deraadt 2748: users help</a> us in changing the political landscape.
2749: </em>
1.182 deraadt 2750: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
2751: </td><td valign=top>
1.81 deraadt 2752: <br>
2753: Here's an old story ...<br>
2754: <br>
2755: <br>
2756: Puffy Baba and the 40 Vendors<br>
2757: We all know the details<br>
2758: Magic cave, magic words, some thieves,<br>
2759: some serious loot,<br>
1.214 ! bentley 2760: and lucky — Mister — Baba<br>
1.81 deraadt 2761: Who got a bad rap if you ask me<br>
2762: The little guy who<br>
2763: did the best with what he had<br>
2764: <br>
2765: <br>
2766: Here are Mr. Baba's lessons<br>
2767: Load one ass, take a few trips and spend<br>
2768: in moderation<br>
1.214 ! bentley 2769: Three things the average man can't — get — right<br>
1.81 deraadt 2770: <br>
2771: <br>
2772: If you know your brother is a greedy bastard<br>
2773: never give him the password<br>
2774: If he goes penguin on you,<br>
1.214 ! bentley 2775: stop — being — his brother.<br>
1.81 deraadt 2776: When a cave is guarded by magic lawyers<br>
1.86 tom 2777: A sea of blood will be its doormat<br>
1.81 deraadt 2778: So do the best with what you have<br>
2779: <br>
2780: <br>
1.214 ! bentley 2781: Beyond the lessons — you must know this<br>
1.81 deraadt 2782: that the Devil is as real as your address<br>
2783: But unlike Vendors,<br>
2784: he at least keeps the door open<br>
2785: <br>
2786: <br>
2787: Vendors of water that should be free<br>
2788: Look upon their words and despair<br>
2789: Their badvertising made a thief of my brother<br>
2790: then made him better off dead<br>
2791: Now he hasn't got shit to do his best with<br>
2792: <br>
2793: <br>
2794: Gratis. Free. Libre. Cuffo.<br>
2795: The companies of thieves stole every good adjective<br>
2796: and left us with open source (sores)<br>
2797: sharing smaller and smaller bandages<br>
2798: for each consecutive cut<br>
2799: But with the salty water of labour<br>
2800: parched desert becomes pregnant black soil<br>
2801: <br>
2802: <br>
2803: It's not whether you're well off<br>
2804: it's where you dig the well<br>
2805: The best the little guy can do is what<br>
2806: the little guy does right<br>
2807: <br>
2808: <br>
1.148 deraadt 2809: </td><td valign=top align=right>
1.81 deraadt 2810: <img width=396 height=1904 src="images/41song.gif"><br>
2811: </td></tr></table>
2812: <p>
2813: <em>
1.157 deraadt 2814: Recorded, mixed and mastered by Jonathan Lewis of
1.112 deraadt 2815: Moxam Studios (<a mailto:moxamstudios@hotmail.com>moxamstudios@hotmail.com</a>).
2816: Voice by Richard Sixto. Lyrics by Ty Semaka.
1.81 deraadt 2817: <br>
2818: <br>
2819: </em>
2820:
2821: <hr>
1.175 deraadt 2822: <a name=40b></a>
2823: <h2><a href="40.html">4.0</a>: "OpenVOX"</h2>
1.76 deraadt 2824: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
2825: <tr>
1.123 deraadt 2826: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 2827: 4:00 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/songty.mp3">(MP3 3.9MB)</a>
2828: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/songty.ogg">(OGG 6.0MB)</a><br>
2829: <br>
1.210 tj 2830: This is the extra song on the "The Songs 3.0 - 4.0" Audio CD.
1.126 deraadt 2831: <br>
1.76 deraadt 2832: <br>
2833: <img height=158 width=158 hspace="5" src="images/cdaudio-m.gif">
2834: <br>
2835: <br>
2836: <em>
1.126 deraadt 2837: This is an extra track by the artist Ty Semaka
2838: (who really has "had Puffy on his mind") which we included on the "The Songs 3.0 - 4.0" audio CD.
1.76 deraadt 2839: <p>
2840: This song details the process that Ty has to go through to make the art
2841: and music for each OpenBSD release.
2842: Ty and Theo really do go to a (very specific) bar and discuss what is
2843: going on in the project, and then try to find a theme that will work...
1.111 deraadt 2844: <p>
1.210 tj 2845: <!--
1.150 deraadt 2846: <a href="https://openbsdstore.com">
2847: Order this CDROM from the OpenBSD Store.</a>
1.111 deraadt 2848: <p>
1.210 tj 2849: -->
1.126 deraadt 2850: The 1st OpenBSD Audio CD "The Songs 3.0 - 4.0" celebrates the artwork
2851: and songs that have been released with each OpenBSD release. All the
2852: songs from the 3.0 to 4.0 releases are included (plus this bonus track).
1.111 deraadt 2853: <p>
1.126 deraadt 2854: Includes an 11cm silver-on-clear die-cut wireframe Puffy sticker!
1.76 deraadt 2855: </em>
1.182 deraadt 2856: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
2857: </td><td valign=top>
1.76 deraadt 2858: Be Open<br>
2859: Be Vocal<br>
2860: Stay Open<br>
2861: Stay Vocal<br>
2862: <br>
2863: (repeat)<br>
2864: <br>
2865: OpenBSD<br>
2866: <br>
2867: Twice a year,<br>
2868: me an' Theo Theorize over beer<br>
2869: at the Ship and outhip all the misers<br>
2870: and take strips out of liars.<br>
2871: He sits me down and he tries to explain:<br>
2872: He says "The badabadabingabanger<br>
2873: button on the raidorama cuttin'<br>
1.78 deraadt 2874: on the systematicalifornication<br>
1.76 deraadt 2875: and a license application<br>
2876: is a fishybomination<br>
2877: and a random allocation<br>
2878: got a copywritten melanoma<br>
2879: sasafrazzin' wireless device".<br>
2880: OK stop.<br>
2881: I get it.<br>
2882: Some asshole lied.<br>
2883: <br>
2884: And then he says,<br>
1.78 deraadt 2885: "The crashorama villaination<br>
1.76 deraadt 2886: lawyerific pornication threatifies<br>
2887: the only honest hackerammerunderider<br>
2888: in the cyber cider documation<br>
2889: universal anagrama-attic (I'm outta here)<br>
2890: cohabitationizizingation"<br>
2891: OK stop.<br>
2892: I get it.<br>
1.166 awolk 2893: <a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20110726013945/http://devresources.linuxfoundation.org/dev/opendrivers/summit2006/james_ketrenos.pdf">
1.76 deraadt 2894: Some asshole said he was "open"<br>
2895: but he was only open for business.<br></a>
2896: I get it.<br>
2897: Where's my pencils?<br>
2898: Bring me my mic!<br>
1.144 deraadt 2899: </td><td valign=top>
1.76 deraadt 2900: Be Open<br>
2901: Be Vocal<br>
2902: Stay Open<br>
2903: Stay Vocal<br>
2904: <br>
2905: (repeat)<br>
2906: <br>
2907: Then he has another beer and<br>
2908: gets all, you know, pushy.<br>
2909: Make Puffy kill pussies?<br>
2910: And too much thinkin' and kitchen sinkin'<br>
2911: the drawings or toons I should say,<br>
2912: where a fish can talk, be an agent<br>
2913: a hit man or walk, and ride horses<br>
2914: and forces my hand to make Puffy a spy<br>
2915: or a cowboy, or WHY a little girl, in a dream<br>
2916: and fake Floyd as the theme?<br>
2917: And squeeze in five concepts<br>
2918: every time, every song!<br>
2919: And the geeks and Theo lose it<br>
2920: if I draw the device wrong!<br>
2921: "It's four little buttons not five Ty"<br>
2922: And pretty soon I'll be losing my mind<br>
2923: cause it's a f@#!kin' cartoon!<br>
2924: <br>
2925: (beat boxin')<br>
2926: <br>
2927: <br>
2928: </td></tr></table>
2929: <p>
2930: <em>
2931: <br>
2932: </em>
2933:
2934: <hr>
2935: <a name=40></a>
1.175 deraadt 2936: <h2><a href="40.html">4.0</a>: "Humppa Negala"</h2>
1.76 deraadt 2937: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
2938: <tr>
1.123 deraadt 2939: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 2940: 2:40 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song40.mp3">(MP3 2.3MB)</a>
2941: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song40.ogg">(OGG 3.6MB)</a><br>
2942: <br>
1.126 deraadt 2943: <a href="40.html">OpenBSD 4.0</a> CD2 track 2 is an<br>
1.76 deraadt 2944: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
2945: <br>
2946: <a href="images/Pufferix.jpg">
2947: <img width=227 height=343 alt="Pufferix" src="images/Pufferix.jpg"></a>
2948: <br>
2949: <br>
2950: <em>
2951: The last 10 years, every 6 month period has (without fail)
1.77 deraadt 2952: resulted in an official OpenBSD release making it to the FTP
1.76 deraadt 2953: servers. But CDs are also manufactured, which the project
1.77 deraadt 2954: sells to continue our development goals.
1.76 deraadt 2955: <br>
2956: <br>
2957: While tests of the release binaries are done by developers
1.77 deraadt 2958: around the world, Theo and some developers from Calgary
2959: or Edmonton (such as Peter Valchev or Bob Beck) test that
1.76 deraadt 2960: the discs are full of (only) correct code. Ty Semaka works for
2961: approximately two months to design and draw artwork that will fit
2962: the designated theme, and coordinates with his music buddies to
2963: write and record a song that also matches the theme.
2964: <br>
2965: <br>
2966: Then the discs and all the artwork gets delivered to the plant,
2967: so that they can be pressed in time for an official release date.
2968: <br>
2969: <br>
2970: This release, instead of bemoaning vendors or organizations that
2971: try to make our task of writing free software more difficult, we
2972: instead celebrate the 10 years that we have been given (so far) to
2973: write free software, express our themes in art, and the 5 years
2974: that we have made music with a group of talented musicians.
1.77 deraadt 2975: <br>
2976: <br>
1.76 deraadt 2977: OpenBSD developers have been torturing each other for years now
2978: with Humppa-style music, so this release our users get a taste
1.77 deraadt 2979: of this too. Sometimes at hackathons you will hear the same
2980: songs being played on multiple laptops, out of sync. It is
2981: under such duress that much of our code gets written.
1.76 deraadt 2982: <br>
2983: <br>
2984: We feel like Pufferix and Bobilix delivering The Three Discs of
2985: Freedom to those who want them whenever the need arises, then
2986: returning to celebrate the (unlocked) source tree with all the
2987: other developers.
2988: </em>
1.182 deraadt 2989: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
2990: </td><td valign=top>
1.76 deraadt 2991: <br>
2992: <br>
2993: <br>
2994: Humppa negala<br>
2995: Humppa negala<br>
2996: Humppa negala<br>
2997: Venismechah<br>
2998: <br>
2999: Humppa negala<br>
3000: Humppa negala<br>
3001: Humppa negala<br>
3002: Venismechah<br>
3003: <br>
3004: Humppa neranenah<br>
3005: Humppa neranenah<br>
3006: Humppa neranenah<br>
3007: Venismechah<br>
3008: <br>
3009: Humppa neranenah<br>
3010: Humppa neranenah<br>
3011: Humppa neranenah<br>
3012: Venismechah<br>
3013: <br>
3014: Uru, uru achim!<br>
3015: Uru achim b'lev sameach<br>
3016: Uru achim b'lev sameach<br>
3017: Uru achim b'lev sameach<br>
3018: Uru achim b'lev sameach<br>
3019: uru achim!<br>
3020: uru achim!<br>
3021: OpenBSD!<br>
3022: <br>
3023: <br>
3024: (circus torture)<br>
3025: <br>
3026: <br>
3027: Humppa negala<br>
3028: Humppa negala<br>
3029: Humppa negala<br>
3030: Venismechah<br>
3031: <br>
3032: Humppa negala<br>
3033: Humppa negala<br>
3034: Humppa negala<br>
3035: Venismechah<br>
3036: <br>
3037: Humppa neranenah<br>
3038: Humppa neranenah<br>
3039: Humppa neranenah<br>
3040: Venismechah<br>
3041: <br>
3042: Humppa neranenah<br>
3043: Humppa neranenah<br>
3044: Humppa neranenah<br>
3045: Venismechah<br>
3046: <br>
3047: Uru, uru achim!<br>
3048: Uru achim b'lev sameach<br>
3049: Uru achim b'lev sameach<br>
3050: Uru achim b'lev sameach<br>
3051: Uru achim b'lev sameach<br>
3052: uru achim!<br>
3053: uru achim!<br>
3054: OpenBSD!<br>
3055: <br>
3056: <br>
1.148 deraadt 3057: </td><td valign=top align=right>
1.76 deraadt 3058: <img width=396 height=1862 src="images/40song.gif"><br>
3059: </td></tr></table>
3060: <p>
3061: <em>
1.90 deraadt 3062: Based on the traditional Jewish song "Hava Nagilah" composed by Anonymous.
1.163 naddy 3063: Section of "Enter The Gladiators" (circus theme) composed by Julius Fučík.
1.157 deraadt 3064: Recorded, mixed and mastered by Jonathan Lewis of
1.112 deraadt 3065: Moxam Studios (<a mailto:moxamstudios@hotmail.com>moxamstudios@hotmail.com</a>).
3066: Accordion, Tuba and drums by Jonathan Lewis. Vocals by
1.94 tobias 3067: Ty Semaka & Jonathan Lewis.
1.76 deraadt 3068: <br>
3069: <br>
3070: </em>
3071:
3072: <hr>
1.63 deraadt 3073: <a name=39></a>
1.175 deraadt 3074: <h2><a href="39.html">3.9</a>: "Blob!"</h2>
1.63 deraadt 3075: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
3076: <tr>
1.123 deraadt 3077: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 3078: 4:00 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song39.mp3">(MP3 7.6MB)</a>
3079: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song39.ogg">(OGG 6.0MB)</a><br>
3080: <br>
1.126 deraadt 3081: <a href="39.html">OpenBSD 3.9</a> CD2 track 2 is an<br>
1.63 deraadt 3082: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
3083: <br>
1.76 deraadt 3084: <a href="images/Blob.jpg">
1.123 deraadt 3085: <img width=227 height=343 alt="Blob" src="images/Blob.jpg"></a>
1.63 deraadt 3086: <br>
3087: <br>
3088: <em>
3089: OpenBSD emphasizes security. It also emphasizes openness. All the code
3090: is there for all to see. Blobs are vendor-compiled binary drivers
3091: without any source code. Hardware makers like them because they
3092: obscure the details of how to make their hardware work. They hide bugs
3093: and workarounds for bugs. Newer versions of blobs can weaken support
3094: for older hardware and motivate people to buy new hardware.<br>
3095: <br>
3096: <br>
3097: Blobs are expedient. Many other open source operating systems
3098: cheerfully incorporate them; in fact their users demand them.<br>
3099: <br>
3100: <br>
3101: But when you need to trust the system, how do you check the blob for
3102: quality? For adherence to standards? How do you know the blob contains
3103: no malicious code? No incompetent code? Inspection is impossible; you
3104: can only test the black box. And when it breaks, you have no idea why.<br>
3105: <br>
3106: <br>
3107: <ul>
3108: <li>Blobs can be 'de-supported' by vendors<br>
3109: at any time.<br>
3110: <br>
3111: <li>Blobs cannot be supported by developers.<br>
3112: <br>
3113: <li>Blobs cannot be fixed by developers.<br>
3114: <br>
3115: <li>Blobs cannot be improved.<br>
3116: <br>
3117: <li>Blobs cannot be audited.<br>
3118: <br>
3119: <li>
3120: Blobs are specific to an architecture, thus<br>
3121: less portable.<br>
3122: <br>
3123: <li>Blobs are quite often massively bloated.<br>
3124: </ul>
3125: <br>
3126: <br>
3127: This release, like every OpenBSD release, contains OpenBSD and its
3128: source code. It runs on a wide variety of hardware. It contains many
3129: new features and improvements. OpenBSD does attempt to convince
3130: vendors to release documentation, and often reverse-engineers around
3131: the need for blobs. OpenBSD remains blob-free. Anyone can look at it,
1.157 deraadt 3132: assess it, improve it. If it breaks, it can be fixed.
1.63 deraadt 3133: </em>
1.182 deraadt 3134: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
3135: </td><td valign=top>
1.63 deraadt 3136: <br><br><br>
3137: Little baby Blobby was a cute little baby<br>
3138: when we found him on the beach,<br>
3139: there was nothin' shady<br>
3140: you could bounce him on your knee<br>
3141: like a ba-ba-ball<br>
3142: and his first little word was adorable<br>
3143: <br>
3144: He said a blah blah blah blah blah<br>
3145: blah blah blah<br>
3146: Blah!<br>
3147: <br>
3148: <br>
3149: Thin edge of the wedge?<br>
1.214 ! bentley 3150: But everybody was so happy — about Blob<br>
1.63 deraadt 3151: <br>
3152: <br>
3153: Blob was popular at school he was helpful too<br>
3154: He could get your motor runnin'<br>
3155: with a drop of goo<br>
3156: He was givin' it away never charged a dime<br>
3157: But by the time he graduated<br>
3158: Blob was business slime!<br>
3159: <br>
3160: He was a blah blah blah blah blah blah<br>
3161: blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah<br>
3162: blah blah<br>
3163: <br>
3164: <br>
3165: He's givin' you the Evil Eye!<br>
3166: <br>
3167: <br>
3168: Now everybody had it<br>
3169: they was drivin' around<br>
3170: They was givin' up their freedoms<br>
3171: for convenience now<br>
3172: Blobbin' up the freeway, water black as pitch<br>
3173: And somehow little Blobby was a growin' rich!<br>
3174: <br>
3175: <br>
3176: He was a blah blah blah blah blah blah<br>
3177: blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah<br>
3178: blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah<br>
3179: blah blah<br>
3180: <br>
3181: <br>
3182: It's linkin' time!<br>
3183: <br>
3184: <br>
3185: Now it was out of control<br>
3186: n' fishy's came to depend<br>
3187: on Blobby's Blob Blah, seemed to be no end<br>
3188: Then his empire spread and to their surprise<br>
3189: Blobby been a growin' to incredible size!<br>
3190: <br>
3191: <br>
3192: He's a blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah<br>
3193: blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah<br>
3194: blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah<br>
3195: blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah<br>
3196: B-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b<br>
3197: <br>
3198: <br>
1.66 deraadt 3199: Then along came a genius Doctor Puffystein<br>
1.63 deraadt 3200: And he battled the Blob<br>
3201: who had crossed the line<br>
1.214 ! bentley 3202: He was 50 feet tall — Doctor said "No fear"<br>
1.63 deraadt 3203: I got a sample of Blob I can reverse engineer!<br>
3204: <br>
3205: <br>
3206: But it was too late!<br>
3207: Blob was takin' over the world!<br>
3208: He wants your video!<br>
3209: Ya he wants your net!<br>
3210: He wants your drive!<br>
3211: He wants it all!!<br>
3212: <br>
3213: <br>
3214: Somebody help us!<br>
3215: Noooooooo!<br>
3216: NVIDIA!<br>
3217: Intel!<br>
3218: Atheros!<br>
3219: 3-Ware!<br>
3220: VIA!<br>
3221: ATI!<br>
3222: Broadcom!<br>
3223: TI!<br>
3224: Myricom!<br>
3225: HighPoint!<br>
3226: Adaptec!<br>
3227: Mylex!<br>
3228: ICP Vortex!<br>
3229: and IBM!<br>
3230: Takin' over the world!<br>
3231: <br>
3232: <br>
1.148 deraadt 3233: </td><td valign=top align=right>
1.76 deraadt 3234: <img height=2160 width=396 src="images/39song.gif"><br>
1.63 deraadt 3235: </td></tr></table>
3236: <p>
3237: <em>
3238: Music composed by Ty Semaka and Jonathan Lewis.
1.157 deraadt 3239: Recorded, mixed and mastered by Jonathan Lewis of
1.112 deraadt 3240: Moxam Studios (<a mailto:moxamstudios@hotmail.com>moxamstudios@hotmail.com</a>).
1.63 deraadt 3241: Vocals and Lyrics by <a href="http://www.tysemaka.com">Ty Semaka</a> &
3242: Theo de Raadt.
3243: Bass guitar, organ and bubbles by Jonathan Lewis.
3244: Guitar by <a href="http://www.tom-bagley.com">Tom Bagley</a>.
3245: Drums by Jim Buick.
3246: <br>
3247: <br>
3248: </em>
3249:
3250: <hr>
1.58 deraadt 3251: <a name=38></a>
1.175 deraadt 3252: <h2><a href="38.html">3.8</a>: "Hackers of the Lost RAID"</h2>
1.58 deraadt 3253: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
3254: <tr>
1.123 deraadt 3255: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.192 tb 3256: 4:24 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song38.mp3">(MP3 8.1MB)</a>
3257: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song38.ogg">(OGG 5.6MB)</a><br>
1.76 deraadt 3258: Instrumental version
1.192 tb 3259: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song38b.mp3">(MP3 8.0MB)</a>
3260: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song38b.ogg">(OGG 5.5MB)</a><br>
1.58 deraadt 3261: <br>
1.199 deraadt 3262: <a href="38.html">OpenBSD 3.8</a> CD2 track 2 is an<br>
3263: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
3264: <br>
1.76 deraadt 3265: <a href="images/Jones.jpg">
1.123 deraadt 3266: <img width=227 height=343 alt="Jones" src="images/Jones.jpg"></a>
1.58 deraadt 3267: <br>
3268: <br>
3269: <em>
3270: For a multitude of (stupid) reasons, vendors often attempt to lock
3271: out our participation with their customers by refusing to give our
3272: programmers sufficient documentation so that we can properly support
3273: their devices.
3274: <p>
3275: Take Adaptec for instance. Before the 3.7 release we disabled support
3276: for the
1.204 tb 3277: <a href="https://man.openbsd.org/?query=aac&sektion=4">aac(4)</a>
1.58 deraadt 3278: Adaptec RAID driver because negotiations with the Adaptec had failed.
3279: They refused to give us documentation. Without documentation, support
3280: for their controller had always been poor. The driver had bugs (which
3281: affected some users more than others) which caused crashes, and of
3282: course there was no RAID management support. Apparently most of these
1.59 jolan 3283: bugs are because the Adaptec controllers have numerous buggy firmware
3284: issues which require careful workarounds; without documentation we
3285: cannot solve these issues.
1.58 deraadt 3286: <p>
3287: The driver was written by an OpenBSD developer, who cribbed parts
3288: of it from a FreeBSD driver written by an ex-Adaptec employee. But no
3289: public documentation exists, and Adaptec has dozens of cards with
3290: different firmware issues. All of this adds up to a very desperate
1.214 ! bentley 3291: development model — it becomes very hard for the principle of
1.58 deraadt 3292: "quality" to show its head.
3293: <p>
3294: RAID devices have two main qualities that people buy them for:
3295: <br>
3296: <ul>
1.60 pvalchev 3297: <li>Redundancy
1.58 deraadt 3298: <li>Repair
3299: </ul>
3300: You want a RAID unit to provide you with redundancy, so that if some drives
1.60 pvalchev 3301: fail, your data is not lost. But once a drive has failed, you require your
3302: array to (automatically, most likely) perform the operations to repair
1.58 deraadt 3303: itself, so that it is functioning perfectly again.
3304: <p>
3305: Some vendors (or like the above Adaptec case, ex-employee) have
3306: sometimes given us some documentation so that we could write drivers,
3307: so that their devices could support Redundancy. But these vendors have
3308: never given us any documentation for performing Repairs.
3309: <p>
3310: Instead these vendors have tried to pass out non-free RAID management
3311: tools. These are typically gigantic Linux binaries, or some crazy thing, that
1.67 jolan 3312: is supposed to work through a bizarre interface in the device driver, which
1.58 deraadt 3313: we are apparently supposed to write code for without any documentation.
3314: <p>
3315: And since we refuse to accept our users being forced into depending on
3316: vendor binaries, we have reverse engineered the management interface for
3317: the AMI controllers.
3318: <p>
3319: There is no great "intellectual property" in this stuff, it is all
3320: rather simple primitives. This is all that we need to implement
3321: basic RAID management:
3322: <ul>
3323: <li>SCSI transactions on the back-side busses
3324: <li>Discovering which drives are in which volumes
3325: <li>Being able to silence the buzzer
3326: <li>Marking a new drive as a Hot-Spare
3327: </ul>
3328: <p>
3329: The AMI driver needed to support these small primitive operations.
3330: And once we had that, we rely on something else which we know: Almost
3331: all the RAID controllers would need the same primitives.
3332: <p>
3333: Thus armed, we were able to write a generic framework which would later
3334: work on other vendors' RAID cards, that is, once we get documentation
3335: or do some reverse engineering for their products.
3336: <p>
1.60 pvalchev 3337: But having been ignored for so long by these vendors, it is not clear when (if
3338: ever) we will get around to writing that support for Adaptec RAID
1.58 deraadt 3339: controllers now. And Adaptec has gone and bought ICP Vortex, which
3340: may mean we can never get documentation for the
1.204 tb 3341: <a href="https://man.openbsd.org/?query=gdt&sektion=4">gdt(4)</a>
1.58 deraadt 3342: controllers.
3343: The "Open Source Friendly liar" IBM owns Mylex, and Mylex has told us we
3344: would not get documentation, either.
3345: 3Ware has lied to us and our users so many times they make politicians
3346: look saintly.
3347: <p>
3348: Until other vendors give us documentation, if you want reliable RAID
3349: in OpenBSD, please buy
3350: <a href="http://www.lsilogic.com/products/megaraid/index.html">LSI/AMI</a>
3351: RAID cards. And everything
1.206 tb 3352: <a href="https://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc&m=112630095818062&w=2">
1.58 deraadt 3353: will just work</a>.
3354: <p>
3355: And keep pestering the other vendors.
3356: <br>
3357: </em>
1.182 deraadt 3358: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
3359: </td><td valign=top>
1.58 deraadt 3360: <font color="#b00000">Narrator:</font>
3361: Welcome friends to the adventures of Puffiana Jones!<br>
3362: <br>
3363: Brought to you by the good people at OpenBSD!<br>
3364: <br>
3365: Whether braving jungles of wires, oceans of code, or hacking the most
3366: treacherous of crypts, one fish fights for justice. With bravery and
3367: morality like none other, one name rings true. Puffiana Jones, famed
3368: hackologist and adventurer!<br>
3369: <br>
3370: Tracking down valuable artifacts and returning them to the public from
3371: the steely grip of greed. Many a villain has he pummeled, many a vile
3372: vendor has he thwarted, countless thugs, lawyers and kitties abound.<br>
3373: <br>
3374: Join us now in his latest adventure. Hackers of the Lost RAID!<br>
3375: <br>
3376: <br>
3377: <font color="#b00000">Marlus:</font>
3378: Puffy, this mission will be dangerous.<br>
3379: <br>
3380: <font color="#b00000">Puffy:</font>
3381: I'm a careful guy Marlus.<br>
3382: <br>
3383: <br>
3384: <font color="#b00000">Puffy and Salmah:</font>
3385: They're hacking in the wrong place!<br>
3386: <br>
3387: <br>
3388: <font color="#b00000">Beluge:</font>
3389: You will never get the documentation Jones! Ah ha ha ha ha!<br>
3390: <br>
3391: <font color="#b00000">Puffy:</font>
3392: Now you're gettin' nasty.<br>
3393: <br>
3394: <br>
3395: <font color="#b00000">Puffy:</font>
3396: SCSI's, why'd it have to be SCSI's?<br>
3397: <br>
3398: <font color="#b00000">Salmah:</font>
3399: API's, very dangerous. You go first.<br>
3400: <br>
3401: <br>
3402: <font color="#b00000">Narrator:</font>
3403: Through thick and thin our hero persists, until finally,
3404: there before him
3405: lies the answer of the ages. How to get OpenBSD, the world's most
3406: secure operating system,
3407: to communicate with the lost RAID. But alas, he is foiled once again by
3408: the evil Neozis. Again he must chase the truth. Will our hero prevail?<br>
3409: <br>
3410: Triumphant again! Join us next time for the continuing adventures of
3411: Puffiana Jones!<br>
3412: <br>
3413: <br>
1.148 deraadt 3414: </td><td valign=top align=right>
1.76 deraadt 3415: <img height=2160 width=380 src="images/38song.gif"><br>
1.58 deraadt 3416: </td></tr></table>
3417: <p>
3418: <em>
3419: Music composed by Ty Semaka and Jonathan Lewis.
3420: The Moxam Orchestra programmed and played by Jonathan Lewis.
3421: Vocals and Lyrics by Ty Semaka. Drums by Charlie Bullough.
1.157 deraadt 3422: Recorded, mixed and mastered by Jonathan Lewis of
1.112 deraadt 3423: Moxam Studios (<a mailto:moxamstudios@hotmail.com>moxamstudios@hotmail.com</a>).
1.58 deraadt 3424: <br>
3425: <br>
3426: </em>
3427:
3428: <hr>
1.44 deraadt 3429: <a name=37></a>
1.175 deraadt 3430: <h2><a href="37.html">3.7</a>: "Wizard of OS"</h2>
1.44 deraadt 3431: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
3432: <tr>
1.123 deraadt 3433: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 3434: 10:08 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song37.mp3">(MP3 18MB)</a>
3435: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song37.ogg">(OGG 13MB)</a><br>
3436: <br>
1.126 deraadt 3437: <a href="37.html">OpenBSD 3.7</a> CD2 track 2 is an<br>
1.44 deraadt 3438: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
3439: <br>
1.76 deraadt 3440: <a href="images/Wizard.jpg">
3441: <img width=227 height=343 alt="Wizard" src="images/Wizard.jpg"></a>
1.44 deraadt 3442: <br>
3443: <br>
3444: <em>
3445: For an operating system to get anywhere in "the market" it must have
3446: good device support.<br>
3447: <br>
3448: Ethernet was our first concern. Many vendors refused to supply
3449: programmers with programming documentation for these chipsets. Donald
3450: Becker (Linux) and Bill Paul (FreeBSD) changed the rules of the game
3451: here: They wrote drivers for the chipsets that they could get
3452: documentation for, and as they succeeded in writing more and more
3453: drivers, eventually closed vendors slowly opened up until most
3454: ethernet chipset documentation was available. Today, some vendors
3455: still resist releasing ethernet chipset documentation (ie. Broadcom,
1.62 brad 3456: Intel, Marvell/SysKonnect, NVIDIA) but the driver problem is mostly
1.46 henning 3457: solved in the ethernet market.<br>
1.44 deraadt 3458: <br>
3459: Similar problems have happened in the SCSI, IDE, and RAID markets.
3460: Again, the problem was solved by writing drivers for documented
3461: devices first. If the free software user communities use those drivers
3462: preferentially, it is a market loss for the secretive vendors.
3463: Another approach that has worked is to publish email addresses and
3464: phone numbers for the marketing department managers in these
3465: companies. These email campaigns have worked almost every time.<br>
3466: <br>
3467: The new frontier: 802.11 wireless chipsets.<br>
3468: <br>
3469: Over the last six months, this came to a head in the OpenBSD project.
3470: We asked our users to help us petition numerous vendors so that we
3471: could get chipset documentation or redistributable firmware. Certainly, we did
1.52 deraadt 3472: not succeed for some vendors. But we did influence some vendors, in
1.44 deraadt 3473: particular the Taiwanese (Ralink and Realtek), who have given us
3474: everything we need. We also reverse engineered the Atheros chipsets.<br>
3475: <br>
3476:
3477: Want to help us? Avoid
1.204 tb 3478: <a href="https://man.openbsd.org/?query=ipw">Intel Centrino</a>,
1.44 deraadt 3479: Broadcom, TI, or Connexant PrismGT chipsets.
3480: Heck, avoid buying even regular
1.204 tb 3481: <a href="https://man.openbsd.org/?query=wi">old pre-G Prism products</a>,
1.44 deraadt 3482: to send a message.
1.48 deraadt 3483: If you can, buy 802.11 products using chips by
1.204 tb 3484: <a href="https://man.openbsd.org/?query=rtw">Realtek</a>,
3485: <a href="https://man.openbsd.org/?query=ral">Ralink</a>,
3486: <a href="https://man.openbsd.org/?query=atu">Atmel</a>,
3487: <a href="https://man.openbsd.org/?query=awi">ADMTek</a>,
3488: <a href="https://man.openbsd.org/?query=ath">Atheros</a>.
1.44 deraadt 3489: Our manual pages attempt to explain which vendors (ie. D-Link) box
1.52 deraadt 3490: which chipsets into which product.
1.44 deraadt 3491: <br>
3492: <br>
3493: Send a message that open support for hardware matters. A vendor in
1.56 cloder 3494: Redmond largely continues their practices because they get
1.44 deraadt 3495: the chipset documentation years before everyone else does.
3496: What really upsets us the most is that some Linux vendors are signing
3497: Non-Disclosure Agreements with vendors, or contracts that let them
3498: distribute firmwares. Meanwhile both Linux and FSF head developers
1.49 nick 3499: are not asking their communities to help us in our efforts to free
1.44 deraadt 3500: development information for all, but are even going further and
3501: telling their development communities to not work with us at
3502: pressuring vendors. It is ridiculous.
3503: <br>
3504: </em>
1.182 deraadt 3505: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
3506: </td><td valign=top>
1.44 deraadt 3507: <br>
3508: The heroine is deaf to her device<br>
3509: her uncles on the farm,<br>
3510: send out the alarm<br>
3511: and the shit storm flies<br>
3512: E-maelstrom is lifting up the house<br>
3513: With Puffathy inside,<br>
3514: twisting up a ride<br>
3515: to the land of OS<br>
3516: Hard landing, the packets celebrate<br>
3517: The wicked lawyers dead<br>
3518: The open slippers red are<br>
3519: Hers to take<br>
3520: <br>
1.53 otto 3521: Ding dong the lawyer's dead<br>
1.44 deraadt 3522: You're off to see the Wizard kid<br>
3523: <br>
3524: The north witch instructed Puffathy<br>
3525: To get yourself back home<br>
3526: Take this yellow road and<br>
1.47 pvalchev 3527: You'll be fine<br>
1.44 deraadt 3528: Believe in the open ruby shoes<br>
3529: Now go to see the Wiz and<br>
3530: give Taiwan your biz<br>
3531: You'll never lose<br>
3532: The 3 friends she made along the way<br>
3533: Were nice but pretty lame,<br>
3534: lazy and insane<br>
3535: but they sang OK<br>
3536: <br>
1.53 otto 3537: Ding dong the lawyer's dead<br>
1.44 deraadt 3538: You're off to see the Wizard kid<br>
3539: <br>
3540: Finally we're through the trees<br>
3541: The city glows<br>
3542: It's positively green<br>
3543: Pompously the wizard booms<br>
3544: He wants the broom of triple 'w'<br>
3545: <br>
3546: Go to the west<br>
3547: You must pass the test<br>
3548: For me<br>
3549: Bring me the ride<br>
3550: of the witch I despise<br>
3551: And you'll be free<br>
3552: <br>
3553: You don't need the broom<br>
3554: You don't need the shoes<br>
3555: You don't need the wiz<br>
3556: You will never lose<br>
3557: You have all you need<br>
3558: You always had heart<br>
3559: You always had courage<br>
3560: Did somebody fart?<br>
3561: You always had brains<br>
3562: You answered each call<br>
1.57 deraadt 3563: And this may surprise you<br>
1.44 deraadt 3564: But you've got some balls<br>
3565: So double click heels<br>
3566: and work with Taiwan<br>
3567: And speak to your doggie<br>
3568: You're already gone....<br>
3569: <br>
1.148 deraadt 3570: </td><td valign=top align=right>
1.76 deraadt 3571: <img height=1079 width=380 src="images/37song.gif"><br>
1.44 deraadt 3572: </td></tr></table>
3573: <p>
3574: <em>
3575: Lyrics and vocal melody written by Ty Semaka.
3576: Main vocals by Jonathan Lewis, sung female vocals by Adele Legere,
3577: Puffathy (little girl voice) by Anita Miotti, monkeys and laughing by Ty
3578: Semaka,
3579: guitar by Reed Shimozawa, drums, bass and all other sounds programmed by
1.55 tom 3580: Jonathan Lewis. Co-Arranged by Ty Semaka & Jonathan Lewis.
1.157 deraadt 3581: Recorded, mixed and mastered by Jonathan Lewis at
1.112 deraadt 3582: Moxam Studios (<a mailto:moxamstudios@hotmail.com>moxamstudios@hotmail.com</a>).
1.44 deraadt 3583: <br>
3584: <br>
3585: </em>
3586:
3587: <hr>
1.37 deraadt 3588: <a name=36></a>
1.175 deraadt 3589: <h2><a href="36.html">3.6</a>: "Pond-erosa Puff (live)"</h2>
1.37 deraadt 3590: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
3591: <tr>
1.182 deraadt 3592: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 3593: 4:00 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song36.mp3">(MP3 7.7MB)</a>
3594: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song36.ogg">(OGG 5.2MB)</a><br>
3595: <br>
1.126 deraadt 3596: <a href="36.html">OpenBSD 3.6</a> CD2 track 2 is an<br>
1.37 deraadt 3597: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
3598: <br>
1.76 deraadt 3599: <a href="images/Ponderosa.jpg">
1.123 deraadt 3600: <img width=227 height=343 alt="Ponderosa" src="images/Ponderosa.jpg"></a>
1.37 deraadt 3601: <br>
3602: <br>
3603: <em>
3604: What is up with some free software providers?!
3605: They say "Here's something free! Oh wait, I changed my mind."
3606: <p>
3607: While not exactly bait-and-switch, this is something which
3608: has been causing the community continual grief, and therefore
3609: we decided to honour a few of the projects that have decided
1.41 deraadt 3610: to go non-free. After all.. having gone non-free, no one is
1.37 deraadt 3611: going to remember them in the end.
3612: <p>
3613: This song is dedicated to a few worthy groups who
3614: have made this Free-to-Non-Free transition with their
3615: offerings in the last few years:
3616: <ul>
3617: <li>David Dawes worked for years with a team of
3618: developers to make a free X11 distribution for us to use,
3619: called XFree86, 98% of which was based on entirely free
3620: code from MIT. Suddenly, one day, he decided that
3621: we must give him more credit (ie. advertise his name) or
3622: stop using it. Within about 4 months every project had
3623: told him to get stuffed, and the community has created a
3624: replacement effort.
1.41 deraadt 3625: Now his team cannot even keep their web pages up to date...
1.37 deraadt 3626: <p>
3627: <li>OpenBSD was the first operating system to integrate a
3628: packet filter, and it was the ipf codebase from Darren Reed
3629: that we chose. But a few years later he told us that we
3630: were not free to make changes to the code. So we deleted ipf,
3631: and our new packet filter far exceeds the capabilities of the
3632: one he wrote. And other projects are switching too...
3633: <p>
3634: <li>The Apache group started from the humble beginnings
3635: of just being 'a patchy' set of changes to a completely free
3636: web server of dubious quality. But the years have changed them,
3637: and what they supply is now quite non-free... released under
1.40 jolan 3638: a license so entangled in legalese that we have absolutely no
1.51 jcs 3639: doubt that there are encumbrances hidden within. Legal terms
1.37 deraadt 3640: protect. Who are they protecting? Not your freedom.
3641: </ul>
3642: So here's a goodbye to those three groups, and a warning to any
3643: others who will follow them:
3644: Make your stuff non-free, and something else will
3645: replace it.
3646: <br>
3647: </em>
1.182 deraadt 3648: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
1.144 deraadt 3649: </td><td valign=top>
1.37 deraadt 3650: <br>
3651: <br>
3652: Well he rode from the ocean far upstream<br>
3653: Nuthin' to his name but a code and a dream<br>
3654: Lookin' for the legendary inland sea<br>
3655: Where the water was deep n' clean n' free<br>
3656: <p>
3657: But the town he found had suffered a blow<br>
1.38 pvalchev 3658: Fish were dying, cause the water was low<br>
1.37 deraadt 3659: Fat cat fish name o' Diamond Dawes<br>
3660: Plugged the stream with copyright laws<br>
3661: <p>
3662: <br>
3663: He said my water's good n' my water's free<br>
3664: So Pond-erosa, you gonna thank me!<br>
3665: Then he bottled it up and he labeled it "Mine"<br>
3666: They opened n' poured, but they ran outta time!<br>
3667: <p>
3668: So Puff made a brand and he tanned his hide<br>
3669: Said. "this is the mark of too much pride"<br>
3670: Tied him to a horse, set the tail on fire<br>
3671: Slapped er on the ass and the water went higher!<br>
3672: <p>
3673: <br>
3674: Pond-erosa Puff<br>
3675: wouldn't take no guff<br>
1.41 deraadt 3676: Water oughta be clean and free<br>
1.37 deraadt 3677: So he fought the fight<br>
3678: and he set things right<br>
3679: With his OpenBSD<br>
3680: <p>
3681: <br>
3682: Well things were good fer a spell in town<br>
3683: But then one day, dang water turned brown<br>
3684: Comin' to the rescue, Mayor Reed<br>
3685: He said, "This here filter's all ya'll need"<br>
3686: <p>
3687: But it didn't take long 'fore the filter plugged<br>
3688: Full of mud, n' crud, n' bugs<br>
3689: Folks said "gotta be a gooder way"<br>
3690: Mayor said "Hell No! She's O.K."<br>
3691: <p>
3692: <br>
3693: "The water's fine on the Open range"<br>
3694: And he passed a law that it couldn't change.<br>
1.51 jcs 3695: "No freeze, no boil, no frolicking young"<br>
1.37 deraadt 3696: Puff took him aside, said "this is wrong"<br>
3697: <p>
3698: Then he found the Mayor was addin' the crud!<br>
3699: So he took him down in a cloud of blood<br>
3700: Said "The Mayor's learnd, he's done been mean"<br>
3701: So they did it right and the water went clean!<br>
3702: <p>
3703: <br>
3704: CHORUS<br>
3705: <p>
3706: <br>
3707: So once agin' it was right, but then<br>
3708: The lake went dry, she was gone again!<br>
3709: Fish started flippin' and floppin' about<br>
1.42 deraadt 3710: Yellin' "Mercy Puff! It's a doggone drought!"<br>
1.37 deraadt 3711: <p>
3712: So he rolled up-gulch till he hit the lake<br>
3713: Of Apache fish, they was on the take<br>
3714: They'd built a dam that was made of rules<br>
3715: Now Puff was pissed and he lost his cool!<br>
3716: <p>
3717: <br>
3718: I'm sick and tired of these goldarn words!<br>
1.39 mcbride 3719: n' laws n' bureaucratic nerds!<br>
1.37 deraadt 3720: You're full o' beans n' killin' my town<br>
3721: and if you's all don't shut er down<br>
3722: <p>
3723: I'll hang a lickin' on every one<br>
3724: of you sons o' bitchin' greedy scum!<br>
1.41 deraadt 3725: So he blew the dam, an' he let 'er haul<br>
3726: Cause water oughta be free for all!<br>
1.37 deraadt 3727: <p>
3728: <br>
3729: CHORUS<br>
3730: <br>
3731: <p>
3732: That's right!<br>
3733: I'll hang a lickin' on ya!<br>
3734: Never piss on another man's boot!<br>
3735: <br>
1.148 deraadt 3736: </td><td valign=top align=right>
1.76 deraadt 3737: <img height=1634 width=263 src="images/36song.gif"><br>
1.37 deraadt 3738: </td></tr></table>
3739: <p>
3740: <em>
1.214 ! bentley 3741: Vocals, Lyrics, Melody and Co-Arrangement by Ty Semaka — Guitar by
! 3742: Chantal Vitalis — Bass by Jonny Nordstrom — Drums by John McNiel,<br>
! 3743: Fiddle — Co-Arrangement, Recording, Mixing, Mastering by Jonathan Lewis of
1.112 deraadt 3744: Moxam Studios (<a mailto:moxamstudios@hotmail.com>moxamstudios@hotmail.com</a>).
1.37 deraadt 3745: <br>
3746: <br>
3747: </em>
3748:
3749: <hr>
1.30 deraadt 3750: <a name=35></a>
1.175 deraadt 3751: <h2><a href="35.html">3.5</a>: "CARP License" and "Redundancy must be free"</h2>
1.30 deraadt 3752: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
3753: <tr>
1.182 deraadt 3754: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 3755: 5:21 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song35.mp3">(MP3 9.7MB)</a>
3756: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song35.ogg">(OGG 6.8MB)</a><br>
3757: <br>
1.126 deraadt 3758: <a href="35.html">OpenBSD 3.5</a> CD2 track 2 is an<br>
1.55 tom 3759: uncompressed copy of this skit & song.<br>
1.30 deraadt 3760: <br>
1.76 deraadt 3761: <a href="images/Carp.gif">
3762: <img width=255 height=343 alt="CARP" src="images/Carp.gif"></a>
1.30 deraadt 3763: <br>
3764: <br>
3765: <em>
3766: A common theme used by the comedy crew Monty Python was to emphasize
3767: and exaggerate ridiculousnesses that their target had imposed upon
3768: themselves. Few things could be considered as humorous as making a
3769: redundancy protocol... redundant; e.g. being forced to replace it by
3770: Cisco lawyers and IETF policy.
3771: <p>
3772: We've been working a few years now on our packet filtering software
1.204 tb 3773: <a href="https://man.openbsd.org/?query=pf&sektion=4">pf(4)</a>
1.30 deraadt 3774: and it became time to add failover. We want to be able to set up pf
3775: firewalls side by side, and exchange the stateful information between
3776: them, so that in case of failure another could take over 'keep state'
3777: sessions. Our
1.204 tb 3778: <a href="https://man.openbsd.org/?query=pfsync&sektion=4">pfsync(4)</a>
1.30 deraadt 3779: protocol solves this problem. However, on both sides of the firewall,
3780: it is also necessary to have all the regular hosts not see a
3781: network failure. The only reliable way to do this is for both
3782: firewall machines to have and use the same IP and MAC addresses. But
3783: the only real way to do that is to use multicast protocols.
3784: <p>
3785: The IETF community proposed work in this direction in the late
3786: 90's, however in 1997 Cisco informed them that they believed some of
3787: Cisco's patents covered the proposed IETF VRRP (Virtual Router
3788: Redundancy Protocol); on
1.205 tb 3789: <a href="https://www.ietf.org/ietf/IPR/VRRP-CISCO">
1.30 deraadt 3790: March 20, 1998 they went further and specifically named their HSRP
3791: "Hot Standby Router Protocol" patent</a>. Reputedly, they were upset
3792: that IETF had not simply adopted the flawed HSRP protocol as the
3793: standard solution for this problem. Despite this legal pressure, the
3794: IETF community forged ahead and published VRRP as a standard even
3795: though there was a patent in the space. Why?
1.144 deraadt 3796: <a href="http://mirror.switch.ch/ftp/doc/ietf/vrrp/vrrp-minutes-97dec.txt">
1.30 deraadt 3797: There was much deliberation</a>
3798: at all levels of the IETF, and unfortunately for all of us the
3799: politicians within eventually decided to allow patented technology in
1.214 ! bentley 3800: standards — as long as the patented technology is licensed under RAND
1.30 deraadt 3801: (Reasonable And Non Discriminatory) terms. As free software
3802: programmers, we therefore find ourselves in the position that these
3803: RAND standards must not be implemented by us, and we must deviate from
3804: the standard. We find all this rather Unreasonable and Discriminatory
3805: and we *will* design competing protocols. Some standards organization,
3806: eh?
3807: <p>
3808: Due to some HSRP flaws fixed by VRRP and for compatibility with the
3809: (HSRP-licensed) VRRP implementations of their competitors, Cisco in
3810: recent times has largely abandoned HSRP and now relies on VRRP instead
1.214 ! bentley 3811: — a protocol designed for and by the community, but for which they
1.30 deraadt 3812: claim patent rights.
3813: <p>
3814: On August 7 2002, after many communications, Robert Barr (Cisco's
3815: lawyer) firmly informed the OpenBSD community that Cisco would defend
1.214 ! bentley 3816: its patents for VRRP implementations — meaning basically that it was
1.30 deraadt 3817: impossible for a free software group to produce a truly free
3818: implementation of the IETF standard protocol. Perhaps this is because
3819: Cisco and Alcatel are currently engaged in a pair of patent lawsuits; a
3820: small piece of which is Cisco attempting to use the HSRP patent
3821: against Alcatel for their use of VRRP. Some IETF working group
3822: members took note of our complaints,
1.122 deraadt 3823: <a href="http://web.archive.org/web/20061109082106/http://lists.microshaft.org/pipermail/dmca_discuss/2003-April/004702.html">
1.30 deraadt 3824: however an attempt in April 2003 to have the IETF abandon the use of
3825: patented technology failed to "reach consensus" in the IETF</a>.
3826: <p>
3827: A few years ago, the W3C, who designs our web protocols, tried to move
3828: to a RAND policy as well (primarily because of pressure from Microsoft
3829: and Apple), but the community outrage was so overpowering that they
3830: backed down. Some standards groups use this policy, while others
1.214 ! bentley 3831: avoid it — the one differentiation being the amount of corporate
1.55 tom 3832: participation. In the IETF, the pro-RAND agents work for AT&T,
1.30 deraadt 3833: Alcatel, IBM, Cisco, Microsoft, and other large companies. Since IETF
3834: is an open forum, they can blend in as the populace, and vote just
3835: like all others, except against the community.
3836: <p>
3837: Translation: In failing to "reach consensus", the companies who
3838: benefit from RAND won, and the community lost again.
3839: <p>
3840: Left with little choice, we proceeded to reinvent the wheel or, more
3841: correctly, abandon the wheel entirely and go for a "hovercraft". We
3842: designed CARP (Common Address Redundancy Protocol) to solve the same
3843: problem that these other protocols are designed for, but without the
3844: same technological basis as HSRP and VRRP. We read the patent
3845: document carefully and ensured that CARP was fundamentally different.
3846: We also avoided many of the flaws in HSRP and VRRP (such as an inherent
3847: lack of security). And since we are OpenBSD developers, we designed
3848: it to use cryptography.
3849: <p>
3850: The combination of
1.204 tb 3851: <a href="https://man.openbsd.org/?query=pf&sektion=4">pf(4)</a>,
3852: <a href="https://man.openbsd.org/?query=pfsync&sektion=4">pfsync(4)</a>, and
3853: <a href="https://man.openbsd.org/?query=carp&sektion=4">carp(4)</a>
1.30 deraadt 3854: has permitted us to build highly redundant firewalls. To date, we
3855: have built a few networks that include as many as 4 firewalls, all
3856: running random reboot cycles. As long as one firewall is alive in a
3857: group, traffic through them moves smoothly and correctly for all of
3858: our packet filter functionality. Cisco's low end products are unable
3859: to do this reliably, and if they have high end products which can do
3860: this, you most certainly cannot afford them.
3861: <p>
3862: As a final note of course, when we petitioned IANA, the IETF body
3863: regulating "official" internet protocol numbers, to give us numbers
3864: for CARP and pfsync our request was denied. Apparently we had failed
3865: to go through an official standards organization. Consequently we
3866: were forced to choose a protocol number which would not conflict with
3867: anything else of value, and decided to place CARP at IP protocol 112.
3868: We also placed pfsync at an open and unused number. We informed IANA of
3869: these decisions, but they declined to reply.
3870: <p>
3871: This ridiculous situation then inspired one of our developers to create
3872: this parody of the well-known Monty Python skit and song.
3873: <br>
3874: </em>
1.182 deraadt 3875: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
1.144 deraadt 3876: </td><td valign=top>
1.30 deraadt 3877: <br>
3878: <br>
3879: <font color="#b00000">Customer:</font>
3880: Hello, I would like to buy a CARP license please.
3881: <br>
3882: <font color="#b00000">Licenser:</font>
3883: A what?
3884: <br>
3885: <font color="#b00000">Customer:</font>
3886: A license for my network redundancy protocol, CARP.
3887: <br>
3888: <font color="#b00000">Licenser:</font>
3889: Well, it's free isn't it?
3890: <br>
3891: <font color="#b00000">Customer:</font>
3892: Exactly, the protocol's name is CARP. CARP the redundancy protocol.
3893: <br>
3894: <font color="#b00000">Licenser:</font>
3895: What?
3896: <br>
3897: <font color="#b00000">Customer:</font>
3898: He is an.... redundancy protocol.
3899: <br>
3900: <font color="#b00000">Licenser:</font>
3901: CARP is a free redundancy protocol!
3902: <br>
3903: <font color="#b00000">Customer:</font>
3904: Yes, I chose it out of three, I didn't like the others,
3905: they were all too... encumbered. And now I must license it!
3906: <br>
3907: <font color="#b00000">Licenser:</font>
3908: You must be a looney.
3909: <br>
3910: <font color="#b00000">Customer:</font>
3911: I am not a looney! Why should I be tied with the epithet looney merely
3912: because I wish to protect my redundancy protocol? I've heard tell
3913: that Network Associates has a pet algorithm called RSA used in IETF
3914: standards, and you wouldn't call them a looney; Geoworks has a claim
3915: on WAP, after what their lawyers do to you if you try to implement it.
3916: Cisco has two redundant patents, both encumbered, and Cadtrack has a
3917: patent on cursor movement! So, if you're calling the large American
3918: companies that fork out millions of dollars for the use of XOR a
3919: bunch of looneys, I shall have to ask you to step outside!
3920: <br>
3921: <font color="#b00000">Licenser:</font>
3922: Alright, alright, alright. A license.
3923: <br>
3924: <font color="#b00000">Customer:</font>
3925: Yes.
3926: <br>
3927: <font color="#b00000">Licenser:</font>
3928: For a free redundancy protocol?
3929: <br>
3930: <font color="#b00000">Customer:</font>
3931: Yes.
3932: <br>
3933: <font color="#b00000">Licenser:</font>
3934: You are a looney.
3935: <br>
3936: <font color="#b00000">Customer:</font>
3937: Look, it allows for bleeding redundancy doesn't it? Cisco's got a
3938: patent for the HSRP, and I've got to get a license for me router
3939: VRRP.
3940: <br>
3941: <font color="#b00000">Licenser:</font>
3942: You don't need a license for your VRRP.
3943: <br>
3944: <font color="#b00000">Customer:</font>
1.32 otto 3945: I bleeding well do and I got one. It can't be called VRRP without it.
1.30 deraadt 3946: <br>
3947: <font color="#b00000">Licenser:</font>
3948: There's no such thing as a bloody VRRP license.
3949: <br>
3950: <font color="#b00000">Customer:</font>
3951: Yes there is!
3952: <br>
3953: <font color="#b00000">Licenser:</font>
3954: Isn't!
3955: <br>
3956: <font color="#b00000">Customer:</font>
3957: Is!
3958: <br>
3959: <font color="#b00000">Licenser:</font>
3960: Isn't!
3961: <br>
3962: <font color="#b00000">Customer:</font>
3963: I bleeding got one, look! What's that then?
3964: <br>
3965: <font color="#b00000">Licenser:</font>
3966: This is a Cisco HSRP patent document with the word "Cisco" crossed
3967: out and the word "IETF" written in in crayon.
3968: <br>
3969: <font color="#b00000">Customer:</font>
3970: The man didn't have the right form.
3971: <br>
3972: <font color="#b00000">Licenser:</font>
3973: What man?
3974: <br>
3975: <font color="#b00000">Customer:</font>
3976: Robert Barr, the man from the redundancy detector van.
3977: <br>
3978: <font color="#b00000">Licenser:</font>
3979: The looney detector van, you mean.
3980: <br>
3981: <font color="#b00000">Customer:</font>
3982: Look, it's people like you what cause unrest.
3983: <br>
3984: <font color="#b00000">Licenser:</font>
3985: What redundancy detector van?
3986: <br>
3987: <font color="#b00000">Customer:</font>
3988: The redundancy detector van from the Monopoly of Cizzz-coeee.
3989: <br>
3990: <font color="#b00000">Licenser:</font>
3991: Cizzz-coeee?
3992: <br>
3993: <font color="#b00000">Customer:</font>
3994: It was spelt like that on the van. I'm very observant! I never seen
3995: so many bleeding aerials. The man said that their equipment could
3996: pinpoint a failover configuration at 400 yards! And my Cisco router,
3997: being such a flappy bat, was a piece of cake.
3998: <br>
3999: <font color="#b00000">Licenser:</font>
1.34 otto 4000: How much did you pay for that?
1.30 deraadt 4001: <br>
4002: <font color="#b00000">Customer:</font>
4003: Sixty quid, and twenty grand for the PIX.
4004: <br>
4005: <font color="#b00000">Licenser:</font>
4006: What PIX?
4007: <br>
4008: <font color="#b00000">Customer:</font>
4009: The PIX I'm replacing!
4010: <br>
4011: <font color="#b00000">Licenser:</font>
4012: So you're replacing your PIX with free software, and yet you want to
4013: license it?
4014: <br>
4015: <font color="#b00000">Customer:</font>
4016: There's nothing so odd about that. I'm sure they patented this
4017: protocol too. After all, the IETF had a hand in it!
4018: <br>
4019: <font color="#b00000">Licenser:</font>
4020: No they didn't!
4021: <br>
4022: <font color="#b00000">Customer:</font>
4023: Did!
4024: <br>
4025: <font color="#b00000">Licenser:</font>
4026: Didn't!
4027: <br>
4028: <font color="#b00000">Customer:</font>
4029: Did, did, did and did!
4030: <br>
4031: <font color="#b00000">Licenser:</font>
4032: Oh, all right.
4033: <br>
4034: <font color="#b00000">Customer:</font>
4035: Spoken like a gentleman, sir. Now, are you going to give me a CARP
4036: license?
4037: <br>
4038: <font color="#b00000">Licenser:</font>
4039: I promise you that there is no such thing. You don't need one.
4040: <br>
4041: <font color="#b00000">Customer:</font>
4042: In that case, give me a Firewall License.
4043: <br>
4044: <font color="#b00000">Licenser:</font>
4045: A license?
4046: <br>
4047: <font color="#b00000">Customer:</font>
4048: Yes.
4049: <br>
4050: <font color="#b00000">Licenser:</font>
4051: For your firewall?
4052: <br>
4053: <font color="#b00000">Customer:</font>
4054: No.
4055: <br>
4056: <font color="#b00000">Licenser:</font>
4057: No?
4058: <br>
4059: <font color="#b00000">Customer:</font>
4060: No, half my firewall. It had an accident.
4061: <br>
4062: <font color="#b00000">Licenser:</font>
4063: You're off your chump.
4064: <br>
4065: <font color="#b00000">Customer:</font>
4066: Look, if you intend by that utilization of an obscure colloquialism
1.43 deraadt 4067: to imply that my sanity is not entirely up to scratch, or indeed to deny the
1.30 deraadt 4068: semi-existence of my little half firewall, I shall have to ask you to
4069: listen to this! Take it away CARP the orchestra leader!
4070: <br>
4071: <br>
4072: A zero... one.. A one zero one one<br>
4073: <br>
4074: VRRP, philosophically,<br>
4075: must ipso facto standard be<br>
4076: But standard it<br>
4077: needs to be free<br>
1.174 guenther 4078: vis-à-vis<br>
1.30 deraadt 4079: the IETF<br>
4080: you see?<br>
4081: <br>
4082: But can VRRP<br>
4083: be said to be<br>
4084: or not to be<br>
4085: a standard, see,<br>
4086: when VRRP can not be free,<br>
4087: due to some Cisco patentry..<br>
4088: <br>
4089: Singing...<br>
4090: <br>
4091: La Dee Dee, 1, 2, 3.<br>
4092: VRRP ain't free.<br>
4093: O P E N B S D<br>
4094: CARP is free<br>
4095: <br>
4096: Is this wretched Cisco-eze<br>
4097: let through IETF to mean<br>
4098: my firewall must pay legal fees?<br>
4099: No! CARP and PF are Free!<br>
4100: <br>
4101: Fiddle dee dum,<br>
4102: Fiddle dee dee,<br>
4103: CARP and PF are free.<br>
4104: <br>
4105: 1 1 2,<br>
4106: Tee Hee Hee,<br>
4107: CARP and PF are free.<br>
4108: <br>
4109: My firewall just keeps running, see,<br>
4110: bisected accidentally,<br>
4111: one summer afternoon by me.<br>
4112: Redundancy's good when free.<br>
4113: <br>
4114: Redundancy must be free.<br>
4115: Redundancy must be free.<br>
4116: <br>
4117: The End<br>
4118: <br>
4119: Under the Geddy Lee?<br>
4120: <br>
4121: No, Redundancy must be free!<br>
4122: <br>
4123: Geddy must be free.<br>
4124: <br>
4125: <br>
1.148 deraadt 4126: </td><td valign=top align=right>
1.76 deraadt 4127: <img height=1800 width=360 src="images/35song.gif"><br>
1.30 deraadt 4128: </td></tr></table>
4129: <p>
4130: <em>
4131: <font color="#00b000">"CARP License"</font> sketch:<br>
4132: Tony Binns as the Customer, Peter Rumpel as the Licenser.
1.34 otto 4133: <font color="#00b000">"Redundancy must be free"</font> song:<br>
1.30 deraadt 4134: Lead vocal by Peter Rumpel, backing vocals by Jonathan Lewis and Ty Semaka.
1.37 deraadt 4135: Piano by Janet Lewis, acoustic guitars by Chantal Vitalis.<br>
1.30 deraadt 4136: Bass and Geddy Lee questioning by Jonathan Lewis.
4137: Lyrics by Bob Beck.<br>
4138: <br>
4139: <br>
4140: </em>
4141:
4142: <hr>
1.20 deraadt 4143: <a name=34></a>
1.175 deraadt 4144: <h2><a href="34.html">3.4</a>: "The Legend of Puffy Hood"</h2>
1.20 deraadt 4145: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
4146: <tr>
1.182 deraadt 4147: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 4148: 3:30 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song34.mp3">(MP3 7.0MB)</a>
4149: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song34.ogg">(OGG 5.1MB)</a><br>
4150: <br>
1.126 deraadt 4151: <a href="34.html">OpenBSD 3.4</a> CD2 track 2 is an<br>
1.20 deraadt 4152: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
4153: <br>
1.76 deraadt 4154: <a href="images/Hood.gif">
4155: <img height=343 width=255 alt="Puffy Hood" src="images/Hood.gif"></a>
1.20 deraadt 4156: <br>
4157: <br>
4158: <em>
4159: Join Puffy Hood and his Funny Fish as they take on
1.26 deraadt 4160: the Sheriff (an unelected leader) and other evil
1.20 deraadt 4161: forces of the draconian government!
4162: <p>
4163: <br>
4164: As we did for the 3.3 release, we have once again tried
4165: making release artwork and music which are allegorical
4166: of recent happenings.
4167: <p>
4168: Two years ago we became involved with the University
4169: of Pennsylvania and DARPA, who were funding us to do
4170: security research and development .. on things that
4171: we were already intending to do. We provided ideas,
4172: wrote papers, and deployed cutting-edge technology;
4173: DARPA provided finances and reaped a share of the
4174: credit, and the University of Pennsylvania acted as
4175: a middle-man. We accepted funding based on the
4176: promise that our freedom to operate as we wished
4177: was unaffected. To us, freedom is more important
1.214 ! bentley 4178: than funding — heck, we were dealing with the evil
1.20 deraadt 4179: forces of government, and needed to be careful.
4180: <p>
4181: A few months prior to this release, DARPA suddenly
4182: and without warning decided to withdraw that funding;
4183: they also aggressively backed out of contractual
1.185 tj 4184: obligations. Many articles in the press followed regarding
1.67 jolan 4185: this sudden maneuver. Apparently this hoopla happened
1.20 deraadt 4186: because an OpenBSD-related article in the Canadian
1.55 tom 4187: newspaper The Globe & Mail had quoted Theo de Raadt
1.20 deraadt 4188: making anti-war statements regarding Iraq and the
4189: theft of oil.
4190: <p>
4191: The only answer given (to major media reporters) by a
4192: DARPA spokesperson (Jan Walker) was this:
4193: <p>
4194: "As a result of the DARPA review of the
4195: project, and due to world events and the evolving
4196: threat posed by increasingly capable nation-states,
4197: the Government on April 21 advised the University
4198: to suspend work on the "security fest" portion of
4199: the project."
4200: <p>
4201: That almost toes the line of calling us terrorists!
4202: We had lost financial support, but the release of the
4203: statement above suddenly made us very happy to be free
4204: of any perceived obligation to such crazy people.
4205: <p>
4206: Since the termination came near natural contract
4207: termination (about 4 months remained), less damage
4208: than expected was sustained by the project. Sponsors
4209: stepped forward and helped us make up the missing funds
4210: we needed to run our "Hackathon", and the event
1.61 grunk 4211: proceeded as planned. We even had T-shirts made with
1.20 deraadt 4212: "Workstations of Mass Development" artwork for those
4213: developers who attended (sorry, they are not for sale).
4214: <p>
4215: We could not make stories like this up. So instead,
4216: we are making up an allegory about it, using the tale
4217: of Robin Hood.
4218: </em>
1.182 deraadt 4219: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
1.144 deraadt 4220: </td><td valign=top>
1.20 deraadt 4221: <br>
4222: Sir Puffy of Ramsay was a wandrin'<br>
4223: Through forests of seaweed all alone<br>
4224: He had found the crusades<br>
4225: were an endless charade<br>
4226: So for now he called Nothing Hack home<br>
4227: <br>
4228: <br>
4229: One day he met Little Bob of Beckley<br>
4230: Beat him fair on a log-in by staff<br>
4231: Clever chums they did find<br>
4232: other fish of their kind<br>
4233: Thwarting evil with humppa and math<br>
4234: <br>
4235: <br>
4236: Now trouble was a brewin' when the Good King was away<br>
4237: The Sheriff came a callin' for the poor to pay<br>
4238: With CD's and their freedom<br>
4239: for to share online<br>
4240: And burning down the village cause he was a slime<br>
4241: <br>
4242: <br>
4243: So Puffy and his buddies took the booty from the rich<br>
4244: and turned it into a system to protect poor fish<br>
4245: Sent out by Hook or a Wim<br>
4246: to the teaming schools<br>
4247: Town cryers were on fire cause the crypto ruled!<br>
4248: <br>
4249: <br>
4250: <em>Chorus:</em><br>
4251: They called it "BSD"!<br>
4252: And "Open" because it's always free<br>
4253: So raise up your glass and<br>
4254: three cheers to the Funny<br>
4255: Fish for never running<br>
4256: and making something good!<br>
4257: And here's to Puffy Hood!<br>
4258: <br>
4259: <br>
4260: Aaaw! Word to the sea y'all<br>
4261: The Hood's a bad ball<br>
4262: Ya underneath he's a heathen and a traitor<br>
4263: He can take from you all and say "later!"<br>
4264: Think he's a hero?<br>
4265: Naw he ain't lovin' ya<br>
1.24 deraadt 4266: He gettin' richer than Bill Gates and Dubya<br>
1.20 deraadt 4267: Read the Wanted poster<br>
4268: of Sheriff Plac-o-derm fool<br>
4269: We gettin' back the booty<br>
4270: or we take away your worms too<br>
4271: <br>
4272: <br>
4273: Yo! Word to the classes<br>
4274: Put on your glasses<br>
4275: I guess the Sheriff is King till this passes<br>
4276: Times are a changin' and movin' so fast<br>
1.157 deraadt 4277: He says "Give me your freedom,<br>
1.20 deraadt 4278: I'll grasp it and pass it to brass<br>
4279: who can hash it for weapons of massive distraction.<br>
4280: And hand me the bastards that brashly amassed from the cash<br>
4281: happy faction of oily and gassy co-action".<br>
4282: No! Don't hand em dick, grab a stick, keep attacking for freedom<br>
4283: and hack till the King cometh back and leave em'<br>
4284: <br>
4285: <br>
4286: Then trouble was a rollin' with an army on the run<br>
1.25 deraadt 4287: The Sheriff came a callin' for the spikey one<br>
1.20 deraadt 4288: And took back all the booty<br>
4289: Puff intended for the poor<br>
4290: The Arch-a-thon went on despite the mighty roar<br>
4291: <br>
4292: <br>
4293: Puff snuck into the castle, and found the treasure hill<br>
4294: And also found Maid Marlin held against her will<br>
4295: He loaded all the loot<br>
1.157 deraadt 4296: to give it back and big surprise<br>
1.20 deraadt 4297: He took the maiden too, 'cause she was easy on the eyes<br>
4298: <br>
4299: <br>
4300: <em>Chorus:</em><br>
4301: They called it "BSD"!<br>
4302: And "Open" because it's always free<br>
4303: So raise up your glass and<br>
4304: three cheers to the Funny<br>
4305: Fish for never running<br>
4306: and making something good!<br>
4307: And here's to Puffy Hood!<br>
4308: <br>
4309:
4310: <br>
4311: <br>
1.148 deraadt 4312: </td><td valign=top align=right>
1.76 deraadt 4313: <img height=1440 width=263 src="images/34song.gif"><br>
1.20 deraadt 4314: </td></tr></table>
4315: <p>
4316: <em>
4317: Music, Co-arrangement, Recording, Mixing, Drum Programming,
4318: Bass, Organ, and Violin by Jonathan Lewis.
4319: Co-Arrangement, Lyrics, and Main Vocals by Ty Semaka.
4320: Back-vocals by Bob Beck, Calvin Beck, Theo de Raadt, Alan Kolodziejzyk,
1.55 tom 4321: Jonathan Lewis & Peter Valchev.
1.20 deraadt 4322: <br>
4323: Rap #1 by Richard Sixto.
4324: Guitar by Chantal Vitalis.
4325: <br>
4326: </em>
4327:
1.23 jose 4328: <br>
4329: <hr>
1.11 deraadt 4330: <a name=33></a>
1.175 deraadt 4331: <h2><a href="33.html">3.3</a>: "Puff the Barbarian"</h2>
1.11 deraadt 4332: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
4333: <tr>
1.123 deraadt 4334: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 4335: 4:00 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song33.mp3">(MP3 7.5MB)</a>
4336: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song33.ogg">(OGG 3.3MB)</a><br>
4337: <br>
1.126 deraadt 4338: <a href="33.html">OpenBSD 3.3</a> CD2 track 2 is an<br>
1.11 deraadt 4339: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
4340: <br>
1.76 deraadt 4341: <a href="images/Barbarian.gif">
4342: <img height=343 width=255 alt="Puff the Barbarian" src="images/Barbarian.gif"></a>
1.12 deraadt 4343: <br>
4344: <br>
1.14 deraadt 4345: <em>
1.69 deraadt 4346: Like other Barbarians before him, Puff has had to
4347: face some pretty crazy challenges.
1.12 deraadt 4348: <br>
1.69 deraadt 4349: This song is an allegory of the recent difficulties
4350: we went through dealing with Sun, who refused our
4351: request for documentation about their UltraSPARC
4352: III processors. We want documentation, because
4353: these are the fastest processors with a per-page
4354: eXecute bit in the MMU, needed to fully support
4355: our new W^X security feature. In the meantime,
4356: the AMD Hammer has come onto the scene, and
4357: this processor supports an eXecute bit in 64-bit
1.36 deraadt 4358: mode.<br>
4359: <br>
4360: And it is going to be faster...<br>
1.12 deraadt 4361: </em>
1.182 deraadt 4362: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
1.144 deraadt 4363: </td><td valign=top>
1.11 deraadt 4364: Deep through the mists of time<br>
4365: Gaze to the crystal ball<br>
4366: Back to the age of darkness<br>
4367: Black was the protocol<br>
4368: <p>
4369: A King ruled the web with fear<br>
4370: Spilling the blood of men<br>
4371: Then from the ocean came<br>
4372: Puff the Barbarian<br>
1.17 deraadt 4373: <br>
4374: <br>
1.11 deraadt 4375: Born in a tiny bowl Puff was a pet<br>
4376: Sold into slav-er-y by the man<br>
4377: Eating the weeds till he was strong enough<br>
4378: Breaking his bonds like nobody can<br>
4379: <p>
4380: Down the sewer pipes of Hell<br>
4381: A thousand kitties then did bleed<br>
4382: Constraints were slain as well<br>
4383: Hacked his way out to the C<br>
4384: <p>
4385: And there he found<br>
4386: His destiny<br>
4387: Hammer of the Ocean God<br>
4388: "Xor taking care of me"<br>
4389: <p>
4390: Then in a dream Xor requested he<br>
4391: "Go to the Sun King, get what I yearn<br>
4392: Kernighan saw it, prophet of the C<br>
1.214 ! bentley 4393: Knowledge — so they may never return"<br>
1.11 deraadt 4394: <p>
4395: At the tower Puff appealed<br>
4396: For the wisdom of the One<br>
4397: Denied, his mind did reel<br>
4398: Puff was getting tired of Sun<br>
4399: <p>
4400: Broke down the guard<br>
4401: Cause math is hard<br>
1.18 deraadt 4402: Saw McNealy on his throne<br>
1.11 deraadt 4403: All alone and only bones<br>
4404: <p>
4405: Come the Sun King blade ablur<br>
4406: Hammer down eclipse the Sun<br>
4407: And Puff, the land secured<br>
4408: The new King Barbarian!<br>
1.148 deraadt 4409: </td><td valign=top align=right>
1.76 deraadt 4410: <img height=640 width=260 src="images/33song.gif"><br>
1.11 deraadt 4411: </td></tr></table>
4412: <p>
4413: <em>
4414: Written and arranged by Ty Semaka.
4415: Co-arranged, recorded, mixed & mastered by Jonathan Lewis.
4416: Vocals by DeVille, guitar by Sean Desmond, bass by Ian Knox,
4417: drums by John McNiel, violin by Jonathan Lewis.
4418: </em>
4419:
4420: <br>
4421: <hr>
1.9 millert 4422: <a name=32></a>
1.175 deraadt 4423: <h2><a href="32.html">3.2</a>: "Goldflipper"</h2>
1.11 deraadt 4424: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
4425: <tr>
1.123 deraadt 4426: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 4427: 3:00 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song32.mp3">(MP3 2.5MB)</a>
4428: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song32.ogg">(OGG 2.3MB)</a><br>
4429: <br>
1.126 deraadt 4430: <a href="32.html">OpenBSD 3.2</a> CD2 track 2 is an<br>
1.11 deraadt 4431: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
4432: <br>
1.76 deraadt 4433: <a href="images/MrPond.gif">
4434: <img height=313 width=255 alt="Mr Pond" src="images/MrPond.gif"></a>
1.182 deraadt 4435: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
1.144 deraadt 4436: </td><td valign=top>
1.9 millert 4437: Goldflipper<br>
4438: With golden skin<br>
4439: and flippers as sharp as a knife<br>
4440: He's the machine<br>
4441: Designed to dismember your life<br>
4442: <p>
4443: And the fish<br>
4444: Protecting us all from the cat<br>
4445: And the cat<br>
4446: Infecting the wo-orld for a laugh<br>
4447: <p>
4448: Cyborg on a mission<br>
4449: To do some Puff fishin'<br>
4450: The doctor wants fugu tonight!<br>
4451: <p>
4452: (short instrumental intro)
1.1 deraadt 4453: <p>
1.9 millert 4454: You'll need some machismo to<br>
4455: catch the spikey one<br>
4456: He's got guts and gizmos to<br>
4457: make the system run<br>
1.1 deraadt 4458: <p>
1.9 millert 4459: But Flip's here for fun<br>
4460: and without a gun<br>
4461: He'll dice you with his Golden fin<br>
1.1 deraadt 4462: <p>
1.9 millert 4463: She's all over Puff cause he's<br>
4464: such a sexy catch<br>
4465: Is she spying on him or<br>
4466: just a seafood match?<br>
1.1 deraadt 4467: <p>
1.9 millert 4468: Oh double seven<br>
4469: Send me to Heaven<br>
4470: Cause for Mr. Po-o-o-ond<br>
1.1 deraadt 4471: <p>
1.9 millert 4472: The women are fond<br>
4473: She knows what to do<br>
4474: She'll turn Gold to goo<br>
1.1 deraadt 4475: <p>
1.9 millert 4476: Goldflipper is gone<br>
4477: Gold flipper's goooooooooooooone<br>
1.182 deraadt 4478: </td><td>
1.11 deraadt 4479: <br>
4480: </td></tr></table>
1.1 deraadt 4481: <p>
4482: <em>
1.9 millert 4483: Lyrics by Ty Semaka. Arranged by Ty Semaka & Jonathan Lewis.
4484: Base & drum programming, recording, mixing & mastering by
4485: Jonathan Lewis. Vocals by Onalea Gilbertson. Sax by Dan Meichel.
4486: Trumpet & Trombone by Craig Soby.
1.1 deraadt 4487: </em>
4488:
4489: <br>
4490: <hr>
1.3 ian 4491: <a name=31></a>
1.175 deraadt 4492: <h2><a href="31.html">3.1</a>: "Systemagic"</h2>
1.11 deraadt 4493: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
4494: <tr>
1.123 deraadt 4495: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 4496: 3:00 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song31.mp3">(MP3 2.9MB)</a>
4497: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song31.ogg">(OGG 2.3MB)</a><br>
4498: <br>
1.126 deraadt 4499: <a href="31.html">OpenBSD 3.1</a> CD2 track 2 is an<br>
1.11 deraadt 4500: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
4501: <br>
1.76 deraadt 4502: <a href="images/Systemagic.jpg">
4503: <img width=255 height=323 alt="Systemagic" src="images/Systemagic.jpg"></a>
1.182 deraadt 4504: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
1.144 deraadt 4505: </td><td valign=top>
1.1 deraadt 4506: BSD fight buffer reign<br>
4507: Flowing blood in circuit vein<br>
4508: Quagmire, Hellfire, RAMhead Count<br>
4509: Puffy rip attacker out<br>
4510: <p>
4511: Crackin' ze bathroom, Crackin' ze vault<br>
4512: Tale of the script, HEY! Secure by default<br>
4513: <p>
4514: Can't fight the Systemagic<br>
4515: Über tragic<br>
4516: Can't fight the Systemagic<br>
4517: <p>
4518: Sexty second, black cat struck<br>
4519: Breeding worm of crypto-suck<br>
4520: Hot rod box unt hunting wake<br>
4521: Vampire omellete, kitten cake<br>
4522: <p>
4523: Crackin' ze boardroom, Crackin' ze vault<br>
4524: Rippin' ze bat, HEY! Secure by default<br>
4525: <p>
4526: Chorus
4527: <p>
4528: Cybersluts vit undead guts<br>
4529: Transyl-viral coffin muck<br>
4530: Penguin lurking under bed<br>
4531: Puffy hoompa on your head<br>
4532: <p>
4533: Crackin' ze bedroom, Crackin' ze vault<br>
4534: Crackin' ze whip, HEY! Secure by default<br>
4535: Crackin' ze bedroom, Crackin' ze vault<br>
4536: Crackin' ze whip, HEY! Secure by default<br>
4537: <p>
4538: Chorus<br>
1.11 deraadt 4539: </td></tr></table>
1.1 deraadt 4540: <p>
4541: <em>
1.3 ian 4542: Produced & Directed by Ty Semaka and Ian Knox.
1.1 deraadt 4543: Written, Arranged and Performed by Ty Semaka (vocals, lyrics), Ian Knox (bass,
4544: drum programming), and Sean Desmond (guitar).
1.3 ian 4545: Recorded & Mixed at Ruffmix Audio Productions (Calgary) by Kelly Mihalicz.
1.1 deraadt 4546: Mastered by Jonathan Lewis.
4547: </em>
4548:
1.8 millert 4549: <br>
4550: <hr>
1.9 millert 4551: <a name=30></a>
1.175 deraadt 4552: <h2><a href="30.html">3.0</a>: "E-Railed (OpenBSD Mix)"</h2>
1.11 deraadt 4553: <p>
1.182 deraadt 4554: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="100%">
1.11 deraadt 4555: <tr>
1.123 deraadt 4556: <td valign="top" width="30%">
1.199 deraadt 4557: 3:00 <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song30.mp3">(MP3 2.9MB)</a>
4558: <a href="https://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/songs/song30.ogg">(OGG 2.3MB)</a><br>
4559: <br>
1.126 deraadt 4560: <a href="30.html">OpenBSD 3.0</a> CD2 track 2 is an<br>
1.11 deraadt 4561: uncompressed copy of this song.<br>
4562: <br>
1.76 deraadt 4563: <a href="images/Rock.jpg">
4564: <img width=255 height=323 alt="Rock" src="images/Rock.jpg"></a>
1.182 deraadt 4565: </td><td valign="top" width="1%"><br>
1.144 deraadt 4566: </td><td valign=top>
1.76 deraadt 4567: <br>
4568: <br>
1.9 millert 4569: Don't tell anyone I'm free<br>
4570: Don't tell anyone I'm free<br>
1.8 millert 4571: <p>
1.9 millert 4572: During these hostile and trying times and what-not<br>
4573: OpenBSD may be your family's only line of defense<br>
1.8 millert 4574: <p>
1.9 millert 4575: I'm secure by default<br>
1.8 millert 4576: <p>
1.27 deraadt 4577: They that can give up liberty to obtain a little temporary safety<br>
1.9 millert 4578: deserve neither liberty nor safety<br>
1.8 millert 4579: <p>
1.9 millert 4580: RELEASE TIME!!!!<br>
1.8 millert 4581: <p>
1.16 deraadt 4582: Stay off, stay off, stay off...<br>
1.9 millert 4583: I'm secure by default<br>
4584: stay off, stay off, stay off<br>
1.8 millert 4585: <br>
1.144 deraadt 4586: </td><td valign=top>
1.8 millert 4587: <br>
1.11 deraadt 4588: </td></tr></table>
4589: <p>
1.8 millert 4590: <em>
1.9 millert 4591: By The Plaid Tongued Devils. Produced & Arranged by Ty Semaka & Wynn Gogol.
4592: Written & Performed by Gordon Chipp Robb (bass line),
1.35 nick 4593: John McNiel (drums), Ty Semaka (vocals & lyrics), and Wynn Gogol (programming).
1.9 millert 4594: Recorded, Mixed & Mastered by Wynn Gogol of Workshop Recording Studios (Victoria BC).
4595: Check out <a href="http://www.thedevils.com">http://www.thedevils.com</a>
1.8 millert 4596: </em>
1.79 deraadt 4597:
1.1 deraadt 4598: </body>
4599: </html>