2.0 -//Pentabarf//Schedule #<Conference_release::Row:0x808fe6130>//EN BSDCan2012 Schedule Release #<Conference_release::Row:0x808fe6130> BSDCan2012 Schedule PUBLISH 318@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 318 An Introduction to Verifiedexec in NetBSD English en 20120511T100000 20120511T110000 01H00M00S An Introduction to Verifiedexec in NetBSD The verifiedexec feature has been part of NetBSD for some years now. It seems that a lot of people are unaware of the feature or do not know the full capabilities of verifiedexec. This talk will introduce the feature, what it can do and also what it could be capable of with some kernel changes. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/318.en.html MRT 205 Brett Lymn PUBLISH 306@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 306 An Overview of Locking in the FreeBSD Kernel English en 20120511T100000 20120511T110000 01H00M00S An Overview of Locking in the FreeBSD Kernel The FreeBSD kernel uses seven different types of locks to ensure proper access to the resources that it manages. This talk describes the hierarchy of these locks from the low-level and simple to the high-level and full-featured. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/306.en.html MRT 250 Kirk McKusick PUBLISH 352@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 352 Automated Documentation Proofreading igor: Making Documentation Easier English en 20120511T113000 20120511T120000 00H30M00S Automated Documentation Proofreading- igor: Making Documentation Easier Automated Documentation Proofreading Making documentation easier and better by automating tests for errors in language, formatting, and usage. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/352.en.html MRT 256 Warren Block PUBLISH 317@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 317 Automated testing of libcurses in NetBSD English en 20120511T113000 20120511T123000 01H00M00S Automated testing of libcurses in NetBSD This talk will describe how the curses library was added to the standard tests performed by the Automated Test Framework in NetBSD. It will discuss how the approach used was chosen and the pitfalls encountered during the implementation. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/317.en.html MRT 250 Brett Lymn PUBLISH 291@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 291 BSD Multiplicity An applied survey of BSD multiplicity and virtualization strategies from chroot to BHyVe English en 20120511T100000 20120511T110000 01H00M00S BSD Multiplicity- An applied survey of BSD multiplicity and virtualization strategies from chroot to BHyVe Ever since the University of California, Berkeley CSRG implemented the chroot(8) command and system call in its BSD operating system in 1982, the community-developed BSD Unix derivatives have set the standard for the introduction of plurality to the conventionally-singular Unix computing model. Today's system operators and developers have an array of BSD-licensed multiplicity strategies at their disposal that offer various degrees of both isolation and virtualization when introducing plurality. This paper will survey current and experimental BSD multiplicity strategies including chroot, FreeBSD jail, NetBSD/Xen, Amazon EC2, compat_linux, GXemul and SIMH, plus experimental strategies such as FreeBSD BHyVe, compat_mach, Usermode NetBSD, Dragonfly BSD vkernel, OpenBSD sysjail and NetBSD mult. As an applied survey, this paper will both categorize each multiplicity strategy by the Unix environment to which it introduces plurality and demonstrate the usage of the utilities relating to each solution. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/291.en.html MRT 218 Michael Dexter PUBLISH 341@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 341 bsda2 BSDA BSD Certification English en 20120511T120000 20120511T133000 01H30M00S BSDA- BSD Certification Take the BSDA certification. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/341.en.html POR 106 Dru Lavigne PUBLISH 342@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 342 bsda1 BSDA BSD Certification English en 20120512T120000 20120512T133000 01H30M00S BSDA- BSD Certification Take the BSDA certification. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/342.en.html MRT 256 Dru Lavigne PUBLISH 309@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 309 Building a FreeBSD based Virtual Appliance How we built the Razorback appliance English en 20120512T100000 20120512T110000 01H00M00S Building a FreeBSD based Virtual Appliance- How we built the Razorback appliance Razorback is a framework for an intelligence driven security solution. It consists of a large number of components and dependencies that make the barrier to deployment quiet large for the uninitiated. This talk aims to shed some light on the process of creating a virtual appliance that enabled us to reduce the barrier for people that want to test the system. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/309.en.html MRT 205 Tom Judge PUBLISH 293@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 293 Building the network you need with PF, the OpenBSD packet filter English en 20120509T130000 20120509T160000 03H00M00S Building the network you need with PF, the OpenBSD packet filter This session is aimed at experienced or aspiring network administrators who want to expand their knowledge of PF, the OpenBSD packet filter, and related tools. A basic knowledge of Unix and TCP/IP network configuration is expected and required. A no nonsense session to get you started with PF or refresh your knowledge with the latest updates. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/293.en.html DMS 3105 Peter Hansteen PUBLISH 339@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 339 Bullet Cache Balancing speed and usability in a cache server English en 20120511T133000 20120511T143000 01H00M00S Bullet Cache- Balancing speed and usability in a cache server Bullet Cache is an in-memory cache server inspired by memcached, but with a twist: a powerful record tagging and bulk query facility, configurable multithreading models and a dump / cache prewarm option. This talk will have two parts: a technical description of Bullet Cache's implementation with focus on programming techniques and optimizations, and a description of usage scenarios with the focus on how it can help real-world applications (not limited to Web applications). PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/339.en.html MRT 250 Ivan Voras PUBLISH 355@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 355 CAM Target Layer English en 20120511T140000 20120511T143000 00H30M00S CAM Target Layer PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/355.en.html MRT 256 Ken Merry PUBLISH 357@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 357 Capsicum English en 20120511T153000 20120511T160000 00H30M00S Capsicum PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/357.en.html MRT 256 Robert Watson PUBLISH 345@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 345 close Closing session The wrap up English en 20120512T170000 20120512T180000 01H00M00S Closing session- The wrap up The closing PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/345.en.html MRT 218 Dan Langille PUBLISH 343@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 343 docsummit Collaborative Docsummit between BSDCan & PGCon English en 20120513T090000 20120513T170000 08H00M00S Collaborative Docsummit- between BSDCan & PGCon You do not need to be a doc committer in order to attend the Joint Documentation Summit as it is open to anyone within a BSD or the PostgreSQL community who is interested in documentation (including man pages, Guides/Handbooks, FAQs, publications, website material, press releases, and other marketing material) or translations. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/343.en.html BRS 314 Dru Lavigne PUBLISH 337@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 337 Crowdsourcing security Lessons in open code and bug bounties English en 20120511T133000 20120511T143000 01H00M00S Crowdsourcing security- Lessons in open code and bug bounties Advocates of open source software often claim that the public availability of source code gives them a security advantage: Given enough eyeballs, all bugs are shallow, according to Eric S. Raymond. While it is clear that the world has no shortage of eyeballs, it is far from clear that they are being usefully employed; and the putative security benefits of open source code evaporates if nobody takes advantage of the opportunity to read the source code with which they are provided. In this talk I will draw upon my experiences with a large open source project (FreeBSD) and running a bug bounty program at a small commercial project (Tarsnap) to offer advice on how to maximize the likelihood that security vulnerabilities are found and reported. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/337.en.html MRT 205 Colin Percival PUBLISH 330@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 330 Ethernet Switch Framework Fully utilize your WLAN router English en 20120512T133000 20120512T143000 01H00M00S Ethernet Switch Framework- Fully utilize your WLAN router Designing and developing the Ethernet Switch Framework for FreeBSD. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/330.en.html MRT 205 Stefan Bethke PUBLISH 325@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 325 Fast reboots with kload English en 20120511T150000 20120511T160000 01H00M00S Fast reboots with kload Linux has has the ability to quickly reboot a system by loading a new kernel image into memory while they system is running and then restart into the new kernel bypassing the reset bios post process. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/325.en.html MRT 250 Russell Cattelan PUBLISH 320@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 320 FreeBSD Unified Deployment and Configuration Management A practical approach to managing highly heterogeneous installations English en 20120511T163000 20120511T173000 01H00M00S FreeBSD Unified Deployment and Configuration Management- A practical approach to managing highly heterogeneous installations When we needed dozens of storage, processing and front-end machines for a prototype of a new cloud media service, we developed a cost-effective, but technically challenging hybrid strategy of purchased, rented dedicated and rented virtual servers. FreeBSD was an easy choice thanks to its performance, reliability, and unparalleled ease of management on a per–node level. However, while the number of infrastructure–level tasks kept growing and we needed to scale through beta and release stages, there was an obvious need to reduce complexity. After a year of tentative design and experimenting with partial solutions, we started implementing in November 2011, the result-in-progress being something we call unified configuration management (and deployment), bringing immediate returns on time invested. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/320.en.html MRT 218 Andrew Pantyukhin PUBLISH 299@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 299 FreeBSD on Freescale QorIQ Data Path Acceleration Architecture Devices English en 20120512T113000 20120512T123000 01H00M00S FreeBSD on Freescale QorIQ Data Path Acceleration Architecture Devices This paper describes the design and implementation of the FreeBSD operating system port for the QorIQ Data Path Acceleration Architecture, a family of communications microprocessors from Freescale. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/299.en.html MRT 205 Piotr Zięcik PUBLISH 287@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 287 FreeBSD on Microsoft Hyper-v A collaborative effort between Microsoft, NetApp, and Citrix English en 20120511T113000 20120511T123000 01H00M00S FreeBSD on Microsoft Hyper-v- A collaborative effort between Microsoft, NetApp, and Citrix Microsoft and NetApp will be presenting their initiative to bring native support for FreeBSD on the Microsoft Hyper-v hypervisor. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/287.en.html MRT 218 Jason Goldschmidt K.Y. SRINIVASAN PUBLISH 358@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 358 FusionIO and FreeBSD English en 20120511T163000 20120511T170000 00H30M00S FusionIO and FreeBSD PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/358.en.html MRT 256 Julian Elischer PUBLISH 285@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 285 Go SCTP! SCTP implemented in the language Go English en 20120512T133000 20120512T143000 01H00M00S Go SCTP!- SCTP implemented in the language Go Two technologies; both new, exciting, with lots of new features, so why not put them together and have even more fun? This talk is about my effort to combine two (relatively) new technologies; Stream Control Transmission Protocol (SCTP) and the computer language Go, by implementing the functionality of SCTP as a library in Go. SCTP is a reliable message oriented transport protocol, has resistance against flooding and masquerade attacks and includes congestion avoidance procedures. First standerdized in October 2000 by the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) in RFC 2960 and later updated by RFC 4960. Go is a concurrent, statically typed compiled and garbage collected language with a syntax broadly similar to C. The initial design of the programming language Go started as an internal Google Inc. project in 2007 and was officially announced and open sourced in 2009. FreeBSD has the reference implementation for SCTP and Go is also available on this platform, so it made sense to do the first implementation on this OS. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/285.en.html MRT 212 Olivier Van Acker PUBLISH 354@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 354 Google Code-In and FreeBSD English en 20120511T133000 20120511T140000 00H30M00S Google Code-In and FreeBSD PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/354.en.html MRT 256 Benedict Reuschling PUBLISH 361@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 361 Hacker Lounge meet, greet, hack English en 20120512T190000 20120513T000000 05H00M00S Hacker Lounge- meet, greet, hack The hacker lounge is on the ground floor of residence. Bring your laptop, enjoy. THIS IS NOT THE SAME ROOM AS in 2011. Is is to the left as you walk past the residence registration desk. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/361.en.html L152 Dan Langille PUBLISH 360@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 360 Hacker Lounge meet, greet, hack English en 20120511T190000 20120512T000000 05H00M00S Hacker Lounge- meet, greet, hack The hacker lounge is on the ground floor of residence. Bring your laptop, enjoy. THIS IS NOT THE SAME ROOM AS in 2011. Is is to the left as you walk past the residence registration desk. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/360.en.html L152 Dan Langille PUBLISH 303@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 303 High speed packet I/O: challenges and solutions. The netmap framework for fast packet I/O English en 20120512T100000 20120512T110000 01H00M00S High speed packet I/O: challenges and solutions.- The netmap framework for fast packet I/O Dealing with millions of packets per second, as it can happen on 10 Gbit interfaces, puts under stress both hardware and software. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/303.en.html MRT 212 Luigi Rizzo PUBLISH 321@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 321 IPv6 Faster, Further, FreeBSD English en 20120511T133000 20120511T143000 01H00M00S IPv6- Faster, Further, FreeBSD This talk will present an update on the ongoing IPv6 work in FreeBSD. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/321.en.html MRT 218 Bjoern A. Zeeb PUBLISH 307@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 307 IPv6 Tutorial How to get rid of legacy English en 20120509T090000 20120509T120000 03H00M00S IPv6 Tutorial- How to get rid of legacy With the IPv4 depletion closer and closer, there is a rising need to be able to work with IPv6 in our everyday life. This tutorial aims at putting the audience with their hands on the new protocol, creating a test network and managing applications running on top of it. The tutorial is divided in small theory sessions, and a series of hands-on sessions right after them, where lessons learned will be applied in a real life environment. We all know that IPv4 is running out faster than we could ever predict, and everybody should start getting acquainted with IPv6, a protocol - or better a suite of protocols - that has been available and usable for more than ten years but never got the right level of audience. Being ahead of the majority of the people will give those who were smart enough a lead over those that underestimated the 'threat'. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/307.en.html DMS 1150 Massimiliano Stucchi Philip Paeps PUBLISH 340@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 340 IPv6 Tutorial (afternoon) How to get rid of legacy English en 20120509T130000 20120509T160000 03H00M00S IPv6 Tutorial (afternoon)- How to get rid of legacy With the IPv4 depletion closer and closer, there is a rising need to be able to work with IPv6 in our everyday life. This tutorial aims at putting the audience with their hands on the new protocol, creating a test network and managing applications running on top of it. The tutorial is divided in small theory sessions, and a series of hands-on sessions right after them, where lessons learned will be applied in a real life environment. We all know that IPv4 is running out faster than we could ever predict, and everybody should start getting acquainted with IPv6, a protocol - or better a suite of protocols - that has been available and usable for more than ten years but never got the right level of audience. Being ahead of the majority of the people will give those who were smart enough a lead over those that underestimated the 'threat'. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/340.en.html DMS 1150 Massimiliano Stucchi PUBLISH 310@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 310 Intro to DNSSEC English en 20120511T150000 20120511T160000 01H00M00S Intro to DNSSEC This presentation will introduce the DNS Security Extensions which extend standard DNS to add resource records and algorithms to provide source authentication. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/310.en.html MRT 218 Jeremy C. Reed PUBLISH 284@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 284 Introduction to OpenVPN Practical use of OpenVPN to secure remote networks. English en 20120510T090000 20120510T120000 03H00M00S Introduction to OpenVPN- Practical use of OpenVPN to secure remote networks. The tutorial will cover the basic installation and configuration for OpenVPN. We will touch on bridged VPNs, and demonstrate routed VPNs with hands-on activity. Attendees will build a VPN with multiple clients and expand on that through the day by connecting VPNs to other networks and passing traffic across multiple legs and VPNs. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/284.en.html MRT 251 Eric F Crist Thomas Johnson PUBLISH 353@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 353 Kernel Debugging Tricks English en 20120511T120000 20120511T123000 00H30M00S Kernel Debugging Tricks PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/353.en.html MRT 256 Bjoern A. Zeeb PUBLISH 300@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 300 Maintaining your own PBI package repository PBI Repository English en 20120509T090000 20120509T120000 03H00M00S Maintaining your own PBI package repository- PBI Repository This tutorial would cover all the major aspects of using the new PBI build and distribution system. We will take a look at how to create and maintain a repository of software for either public or private use. In addition we will dig deeper into how to run a build system, building PBIs from FreeBSD ports, either manually or in a fully-automated manner. Advanced topics such as custom build options, installation scripts and more will also be presented. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/300.en.html DMS 3105 Kris Moore PUBLISH 324@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 324 NetBSD/mips English en 20120511T163000 20120511T173000 01H00M00S NetBSD/mips Since NetBSD 5 was released, the support for MIPS on NetBSD has been completely revamped. It is now one of the more advanced ports of NetBSD. This talk is an overview on what has changed and what the current state of MIPS support and a brief look forward to what else is coming. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/324.en.html MRT 205 Matt Thomas PUBLISH 319@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 319 OpenBSD network stack evolution cksums and a new queueing subsystem English en 20120512T113000 20120512T123000 01H00M00S OpenBSD network stack evolution- cksums and a new queueing subsystem Dealing with the IP checksum and the protocol checksums (foremost TCP and UDP) in the network stack is surprisingly complex. Having stumbled over an unexpected performance penalty from the IP checksum, I always had this area on my mental todo - and when we stumbled over a really nasty piece of code in pf dealing with these checksums, I re-evaluated and changed the IP checksumming in our stack, for performance and to make better use of checksum offloading to network cards. Changing the protocol checksums in the same way is harder and in the works. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/319.en.html MRT 212 Henning Brauer PUBLISH 348@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 348 opening Opening session Welcome to BSDCan 2011 English en 20120511T093000 20120511T100000 00H30M00S Opening session- Welcome to BSDCan 2011 Traditional greetings PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/348.en.html MRT 218 Dan Langille PUBLISH 316@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 316 Optimizing ZFS for Block Storage English en 20120512T100000 20120512T110000 01H00M00S Optimizing ZFS for Block Storage The ZFS file system has been heavily tuned for workloads where file rewrite activity is minimal or is aligned and sized to match ZFS's native record size. Exporting ZFS storage to block consumers, however, presents a situation where every write is rewriting an existing block, and unaligned writes incur a performance killing synchronous read. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/316.en.html MRT 218 Justin T. Gibbs Will Andrews PUBLISH 334@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 334 Overview of Amazon Web Services English en 20120512T113000 20120512T123000 01H00M00S Overview of Amazon Web Services Amazon Web Services provides a highly reliable and scalable cloud computing infrastructure for deploying web-scale solutions, with minimal support and administration costs, and more flexibility than the traditional data center. In the recent months, AWS have launched a lot of new services and features that makes it an ideal platform for Open Source Solutions. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/334.en.html MRT 218 Randi Harper PUBLISH 351@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 351 Ports Testing Project English en 20120511T103000 20120511T110000 00H30M00S Ports Testing Project PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/351.en.html MRT 256 Steve Wills PUBLISH 350@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 350 Progress in FreeBSD Ports English en 20120511T100000 20120511T103000 00H30M00S Progress in FreeBSD Ports PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/350.en.html MRT 256 Mark Linimon PUBLISH 332@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 332 Recent Advances in IPv6 Security English en 20120512T150000 20120512T160000 01H00M00S Recent Advances in IPv6 Security During the last few years, the UK CPNI (Centre for the Protection of National Infrastructure) carried out the first comprehensive security assessment of the Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6) and related technologies (such as transition/co-existence mechanisms). The result of the aforementioned project is a series of documents that provide advice both to programmers implementing the IPv6 protocol suite and to network engineers and security administrators deploying or operating the protocols. Part of the results of the aforementioned project have been recently published, leading to a number of improvements in many IPv6 implementations. Fernando Gont will discuss the results of the aforementioned project, introducing the attendees to the “state of the art” in IPv6 security, and providing advice on how to deploy the IPv6 protocols securely. Gont will also discusss recent advances in IPv6 security areas such as Denial of Service attacks, firewall circumvention, and Network Reconnaissance, and will describe other IPv6 security areas in which further work is needed. Additionally, he will demonstrate the use of some attack/assessment tools that implement new network reconnaissance techniques or that exploit a number of vulnerabilities found in popular IPv6 implementations. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/332.en.html MRT 205 Fernando Gont PUBLISH 344@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 344 register Registration - pub Pick up your registration pack, have a beer! English en 20120510T150000 20120510T210000 06H00M00S Registration - pub- Pick up your registration pack, have a beer! Registration pick up PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/344.en.html Royal Oak Pub Dan Langille Dru Lavigne PUBLISH 283@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 283 SSH Keys, Tunnels, VPN, and Automation English en 20120510T130000 20120510T160000 03H00M00S SSH- Keys, Tunnels, VPN, and Automation Use of OpenSSH and PuTTY clients with the OpenSSH server for authentication, tunnels, VPNs, and automation. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/283.en.html MRT 251 Michael W. Lucas PUBLISH 286@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 286 Solaris Boot Environments for FreeBSD reboot into different kernels and worlds English en 20120512T150000 20120512T160000 01H00M00S Solaris Boot Environments for FreeBSD- reboot into different kernels and worlds Solaris boot environments are a painless way for sysadmins to revert changes and upgrades. Solaris boot environments are a painless way for developers to test multiple kernels and worlds. FreeBSD does not offer this functionality natively. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/286.en.html MRT 218 Nikolai Lifanov PUBLISH 356@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 356 State of 802.11 in FreeBSD English en 20120511T150000 20120511T153000 00H30M00S State of 802.11 in FreeBSD PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/356.en.html MRT 256 Adrian Chadd PUBLISH 347@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 347 tourist Tourist stuff Spend some time exploring English en 20120513T090000 20120513T150000 06H00M00S Tourist stuff- Spend some time exploring Explore Ottawa PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/347.en.html Out and About Dan Langille PUBLISH 289@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 289 Virtually-Networked FreeBSD Jails English en 20120511T163000 20120511T173000 01H00M00S Virtually-Networked FreeBSD Jails FreeBSD includes a powerful OS-based virtualization stack known as jails. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/289.en.html MRT 250 Shawn Webb PUBLISH 359@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 359 Work on callout(9) English en 20120511T170000 20120511T173000 00H30M00S Work on callout(9) PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/359.en.html MRT 256 Davide Italiano PUBLISH 346@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 346 wipo Works in Progress Sessions Short stories from projects around the world English en 20120512T160000 20120512T170000 01H00M00S Works in Progress Sessions- Short stories from projects around the world For the sixtth year running, BSDCan will have a WIP (Works In Progress) session, with presentations on diverse topics. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/346.en.html MRT 218 Dan Langille PUBLISH 335@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 335 auditdistd - Secure and reliable distribution of audit trail files English en 20120511T113000 20120511T123000 01H00M00S auditdistd - Secure and reliable distribution of audit trail files Security Event Audit is a facility to provide fine-grained, configurable logging of security-relevant events. Audit events are stored in trail files that can be used for postmortem analysis in case of system compromise. Once the system is compromised, an attacker has access to audit trail files and can modify or delete them. The auditdistd daemon's role is to distribute audit trail files to a remote system in a secure and reliable way. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/335.en.html MRT 205 Pawel Jakub Dawidek PUBLISH 302@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 302 pfSense 2.1: IPv6 and more English en 20120511T150000 20120511T160000 01H00M00S pfSense 2.1: IPv6 and more pfSense is a BSD licensed customized distribution of FreeBSD tailored for use as a firewall and router. In addition to being a powerful, flexible firewalling and routing platform, it includes a long list of related features and a package system allowing further expandability without adding bloat and potential security vulnerabilities to the base distribution. This session is being presented by the founders of the pfSense project, Chris Buechler and Scott Ullrich. PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/302.en.html MRT 205 Chris Buechler Scott Ullrich PUBLISH 292@BSDCan2012@pentabarf.org 292 pkgng Modernising FreeBSD package management English en 20120512T133000 20120512T143000 01H00M00S pkgng- Modernising FreeBSD package management pkgng is a new package manager for FreeBSD, it aims at bringing modern package management features for FreeBSD PUBLIC CONFIRMED Lecture http://www.bsdcan.org/2012/schedule/events/292.en.html MRT 218 Baptiste Daroussin