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Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2012 07:56:22 -0500 (EST)
From: Diane Bruce <db@db.net>
Reply-To: Diane Bruce <db@db.net>
To: FreeBSD-gnats-submit@freebsd.org
Cc:
Subject: dcbsdcon links dead, ezine link dead link replaced, fixed links
X-Send-Pr-Version: 3.113
X-GNATS-Notify:

>Number:         169395
>Category:       docs
>Synopsis:       dcbsdcon links dead, ezine link dead link replaced, fixed links
>Confidential:   no
>Severity:       non-critical
>Priority:       low
>Responsible:    issyl0
>State:          closed
>Quarter:        
>Keywords:       
>Date-Required:  
>Class:          doc-bug
>Submitter-Id:   current-users
>Arrival-Date:   Mon Jun 25 13:00:20 UTC 2012
>Closed-Date:    Wed Jun 27 23:04:17 UTC 2012
>Last-Modified:  Wed Jun 27 23:10:06 UTC 2012
>Originator:     Diane Bruce
>Release:        FreeBSD 8.3-PRERELEASE amd64
>Organization:
The hills are alive, with the sound of web fixes
>Environment:
System: FreeBSD night.db.net 8.3-PRERELEASE FreeBSD 8.3-PRERELEASE #7: Sat Apr 21 08:17:50 EDT 2012 root@night.db.net:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/GENERIC amd64


	
>Description:
	
>How-To-Repeat:
	
>Fix:

	


Index: head/en_US.ISO8859-1/htdocs/multimedia/multimedia-input.xml
===================================================================
--- head/en_US.ISO8859-1/htdocs/multimedia/multimedia-input.xml	(revision 39124)
+++ head/en_US.ISO8859-1/htdocs/multimedia/multimedia-input.xml	(working copy)
@@ -4335,293 +4335,6 @@
 	    <tags>dcbsdcon,dcbsdcon2009,photos</tags>
 	</item>
 
-	<item source="dcbsdcon" added="20090524">
-	    <title>Chris Buechler - Network perimeter redundancy with pfsense</title>
-	    <desc>
-		This session will first provide an introduction and
-		overview of pfSense and its common uses. It will
-		then go on to cover means of providing redundancy
-		for the critical portions of your network perimeter
-		using pfSense, including redundancy for your Internet
-		connections, firewalls and DNS. Live configuration
-		examples will be shown for as many of these topics
-		as the session's length permits. This session will
-		cover pfSense 1.2.1, but will also offer an overview
-		of some of the enhanced capabilities in this area
-		that pfSense 2.0 will provide in the future.
-	    </desc>
-	    <overview>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/buechler.html</overview>
-	    <tags>dcbsdcon,dcbsdcon2009,slides,pfsense,chris buechler</tags>
-	    <files>
-		<file>
-		    <url>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/slides/buechler_dcbsdcon2009.pdf</url>
-		    <desc>PDF</desc>
-		    <size>6.2 Kb</size>
-		    <length>30 pages</length>
-		    <tags>pdf</tags>
-		</file>
-	    </files>
-	</item>
-
-	<item source="dcbsdcon" added="20090524">
-	    <title>Richard Bejtlich - Network security monitoring using FreeBSD</title>
-	    <desc>
-		I've been using FreeBSD as my preferred platform
-		for Network Security Monitoring (NSM) since 2000.
-		In this presentation I'll discuss my latest thinking
-		on using FreeBSD to identify normal, suspicious,
-		and malicious traffic in enterprise networks. FreeBSD
-		is a powerful platform for network traffic inspection
-		and log analysis, and I'll share a few ways I use
-		it in production environments.
-	    </desc>
-	    <overview>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/bejtlich.html</overview>
-	    <tags>dcbsdcon,dcbsdcon2009,slides,freebsd,network security,monitoring,richard bejtlich</tags>
-	    <files>
-		<file>
-		    <url>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/slides/bejtlich_dcbsdcon2009.pdf</url>
-		    <desc>PDF</desc>
-		    <size>972 Kb</size>
-		    <length>23 pages</length>
-		    <tags>pdf</tags>
-		</file>
-	    </files>
-	</item>
-
-	<item source="dcbsdcon" added="20090524">
-	    <title>Henning Brauer - Faster packets: Performance tuning in the OpenBSD network stack and PF</title>
-	    <desc>
-		n/a
-	    </desc>
-	    <overview>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/brauer.html</overview>
-	    <tags>dcbsdcon,dcbsdcon2009,slides,openbsd,performance,henning brauer</tags>
-	    <files>
-		<file>
-		    <url>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/slides/brauer_dcbsdcon2009.pdf</url>
-		    <desc>PDF</desc>
-		    <size>27 Mb</size>
-		    <length>69 pages</length>
-		    <tags>pdf</tags>
-		</file>
-	    </files>
-	</item>
-
-	<item source="dcbsdcon" added="20090524">
-	    <title>Kristaps Dzonsons - Process isolation for NetBSD and OpenBSD</title>
-	    <desc>
-		In NetBSD and OpenBSD, user-land process and
-		process-context isolation is limited to credential
-		cross-checks, file-system chroot and explicit
-		systrace/kauth applications. I'll demonstrate a
-		working mechanism of isolated process trees in
-		branched OpenBSD-4.4 and NetBSD-5.0-beta kernels
-		where an isolated process is started by a system
-		call similar to fork; following that, the child
-		process and its descendants execute in a context
-		isolated from the caller. This system is the continued
-		work of "mult" -- first prototyped in a branched
-		NetBSD-3.1 kernel and isolating all system resources
-		-- pared down to a lightweight, auditable patch of
-		process-only separation for both OpenBSD and NetBSD.
-		I specifically address solutions to performance
-		issues and mechanism design with an eye toward more
-		resources being isolated in the future.
-	    </desc>
-	    <overview>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/dzonsons.html</overview>
-	    <tags>dcbsdcon,dcbsdcon2009,slides,openbsd,netbsd,process isolation,kristaps dzonsons</tags>
-	    <files>
-		<file>
-		    <url>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/slides/dzonsons_dcbsdcon2009.pdf</url>
-		    <desc>PDF</desc>
-		    <size>687 Kb</size>
-		    <length>27 pages</length>
-		    <tags>pdf</tags>
-		</file>
-	    </files>
-	</item>
-
-	<item source="dcbsdcon" added="20090524">
-	    <title>Robert Luciani - M:N threading in DragonflyBSD</title>
-	    <desc>
-		Ineffective concurrency mechanisms in an operating
-		system can lead to low performance in both single
-		and multiprocessor environments. Practical setbacks
-		involved with attempting overly invasive kernel
-		changes have made it difficult in the past to
-		implement new and innovative concurrency systems.
-		This paper describes the rationale behind interfaces
-		in the DragonFly BSD operating system intended to
-		provide high performance and scalability on
-		multiprocessor architectures. Using a lock-free
-		processor centric approach, DragonFly BSD has
-		developed a unique thread system with the potential
-		for excellent scalability.
-	    </desc>
-	    <overview>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/luciani.html</overview>
-	    <tags>dcbsdcon,dcbsdcon2009,slides,dragonflybsd,concurrency,robert luciani</tags>
-	    <files>
-		<file>
-		    <url>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/slides/luciani_dcbsdcon2009.pdf</url>
-		    <desc>PDF</desc>
-		    <size>1.5 Mb</size>
-		    <length>23 pages</length>
-		    <tags>pdf</tags>
-		</file>
-	    </files>
-	</item>
-
-	<item source="dcbsdcon" added="20090524">
-	    <title>Ken Caruso - Using BSD in Shmoocon labs</title>
-	    <desc>
-		n/a
-	    </desc>
-	    <overview>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/caruso.html</overview>
-	    <tags>dcbsdcon,dcbsdcon2009,slides,freebsd,scmoocon,ken caruso</tags>
-	    <files>
-		<file>
-		    <url>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/slides/caruso_dcbsdcon2009.pdf</url>
-		    <desc>PDF</desc>
-		    <size>447 Kb</size>
-		    <length>13 pages</length>
-		    <tags>pdf</tags>
-		</file>
-	    </files>
-	</item>
-
-	<item source="dcbsdcon" added="20090524">
-	    <title>Brooks Davis - Isolating cluster jobs for performance and predictability</title>
-	    <desc>
-		At The Aerospace Corporation, we run a large FreeBSD
-		based computing cluster to support engineering
-		applications. These applications come in all shapes,
-		sizes, and qualities of implementation. To support
-		them and our diverse userbase we have been searching
-		for ways to isolate jobs from one another in ways
-		that are more effective than Unix time sharing and
-		more fine grained than allocating whole nodes to
-		jobs. In this paper we discuss the problem space
-		and our efforts so far. These efforts include
-		implementation of partial file systems vitalization
-		and CPU isolation using CPU sets.
-	    </desc>
-	    <overview>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/davis.html</overview>
-	    <tags>dcbsdcon,dcbsdcon2009,slides,freebsd,clusters,brooks davis</tags>
-	    <files>
-		<file>
-		    <url>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/slides/davis_dcbsdcon2009.pdf</url>
-		    <desc>PDF</desc>
-		    <size>952 Kb</size>
-		    <length>24 pages</length>
-		    <tags>pdf</tags>
-		</file>
-	    </files>
-	</item>
-
-	<item source="dcbsdcon" added="20090524">
-	    <title>Marco Peereboom - Epitome</title>
-	    <desc><![CDATA[
-		<p>
-		Tired of tape and their weaknesses? So am I!
-		</p><p>
-		Epitome is the next generation backup mechanism.
-		It is based on the idea of providing instant available
-		backup data while removing duplicate files & blocks
-		from backups (yes really!). It is a disk based WORM
-		backup system.
-		</p><p>
-		This talk will go into the Epitome protocol and its
-		application. The code is generic enough that it can
-		address all 3 major (buzzword compliant) technologies
-		known as: CAS, DEDUP & SIS.
-		</p>
-	    ]]></desc>
-	    <overview>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/peereboom.html</overview>
-	    <tags>dcbsdcon,dcbsdcon2009,slides,epitome,backup,marco peereboom</tags>
-	    <files>
-		<file>
-		    <url>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/slides/peereboom_dcbsdcon2009.pdf</url>
-		    <desc>PDF</desc>
-		    <size>197 Kb</size>
-		    <length>34 pages</length>
-		    <tags>pdf</tags>
-		</file>
-	    </files>
-	</item>
-
-	<item source="dcbsdcon" added="20090524">
-	    <title>Kurt Miller - Implementing PIE on OpenBSD</title>
-	    <desc>
-		In this session, Kurt will discuss OpenBSD's PIE
-		implementation, its impact on existing security
-		mechanisms such as W^X on i386, and the various
-		enhancements needed to the runtime linker, kernel
-		and other system libs.
-	    </desc>
-	    <overview>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/miller.html</overview>
-	    <tags>dcbsdcon,dcbsdcon2009,slides,openbsd,pie,kurt miller</tags>
-	    <files>
-		<file>
-		    <url>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/slides/miller_dcbsdcon2009.pdf</url>
-		    <desc>PDF</desc>
-		    <size>4.1 Mb</size>
-		    <length>24 pages</length>
-		    <tags>pdf</tags>
-		</file>
-	    </files>
-	</item>
-
-	<item source="dcbsdcon" added="20090524">
-	    <title>Ted Unangst - OpenBSD vs SMP, threading, and concurrency</title>
-	    <desc>
-		I will discuss the current status of kernel SMP
-		support, the rthreads thread library, and relevant
-		future developments. Over the years, we have
-		accumulated several concurrency primitives in the
-		kernel, causing some confusion amongst developers,
-		so I will lay out the origin and correct usage for
-		each. The talk is primarily targeted at the budding
-		OpenBSD kernel developer, but I will also describe
-		the end-user effects of each topic.
-	    </desc>
-	    <overview>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/unangst.html</overview>
-	    <tags>dcbsdcon,dcbsdcon2009,slides,openbsd,smp,threading,concurrency,ted unangst</tags>
-	    <files>
-		<file>
-		    <url>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/slides/unangst_dcbsdcon2009.pdf</url>
-		    <desc>PDF</desc>
-		    <size>675 Kb</size>
-		    <length>32 pages</length>
-		    <tags>pdf</tags>
-		</file>
-	    </files>
-	</item>
-
-	<item source="dcbsdcon" added="20090524">
-	    <title>George Neville-Neil - Performance analysis with (hwpmc)</title>
-	    <desc>
-		FreeBSD has included support for Hardware Performance
-		Monitoring Counters (hwpmc) for several years now.
-		The hwpmc system provides access to counters that
-		are present in all modern Intel and AMD CPUs, as
-		well as other chipsets, and which give the programmer
-		the ability to understand the low level performance
-		issues that may effect their code. This talk will
-		cover the motivation behind and basic usage of
-		HWPMC.
-	    </desc>
-	    <overview>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/neville-neil.html</overview>
-	    <tags>dcbsdcon,dcbsdcon2009,slides,freebsd,hwpmc,george neville-neil</tags>
-	    <files>
-		<file>
-		    <url>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/slides/neville-neil_dcbsdcon2009.pdf</url>
-		    <desc>PDF</desc>
-		    <size>469 Kb</size>
-		    <length>71 pages</length>
-		    <tags>pdf</tags>
-		</file>
-	    </files>
-	</item>
-
 	<!-- EuroBSDCon
 	-->
 	<item source="eurobsdcon" added="20081022">
@@ -6883,21 +6596,29 @@
 	    </files>
 	</item>
 
-	<!-- Source: daemonnews
-	-->
+	<item source="bsdcan" added="20060524">
+	    <title>BSDCan-2006 Photos - Friday</title>
+	    <overview>http://www.db.net/gallery/BSDCan/BSDCan_2006_Friday/</overview>
+	    <desc>
+		Photos taken during the Conference on Friday at BSDCan 2006 in Ottawa
+		by Diane Bruce.
+	    </desc>
 
-	<item source="daemonnews" added="20060524">
-	    <title>BSDCan 2006 Photos</title>
-	    <desc>BSDCan 2006 Photos by Diane Bruce</desc>
-	    <tags>daily deamon news,photos,bsdcan,bsdcan2006,diane bruce</tags>
-	    <files>
-		<file>
-		    <url>http://ezine.daemonnews.org/200605/bsdcan_photos.html</url>
-		    <tags>jpg</tags>
-		</file>
-	    </files>
+	    <tags>2006,bsdcan,bsdcan2006,photos,diane bruce</tags>
 	</item>
 
+	<item source="bsdcan" added="20060524">
+	    <title>BSDCan-2006 Photos - Saturday</title>
+	    <overview>http://www.db.net/gallery/BSDCan/BSDCan_2006_Saturday/</overview>
+	    <desc>
+		Photos taken during the Conference on Saturday at BSDCan 2006 in Ottawa
+		by Diane Bruce.
+	    </desc>
+
+	    <tags>2006,bsdcan,bsdcan2006,photos,diane bruce</tags>
+	</item>
+
+
 	<!-- Source: New York City *BSD User Group
 	-->
 
@@ -8193,24 +7914,6 @@
 	<!-- Source: FreeBSD for All
 	-->
 
-	<item source="f4all" added="20061127">
-	    <title>Episode 08 of "FreeBSD for all" uploaded</title>
-	    <desc>
-		 This week we talk about some tips, latest news, Press Coverage and yes, some jazz.
-	    </desc>
-	    <overview>http://freebsdforall.blogspot.com/2006/11/episode-08.html</overview>
-	    <tags>freebsd for all,talk</tags>
-	    <files>
-		<prefix>http://dl01.blastpodcast.com/freebsdforall/</prefix>
-		<file>
-		    <url>15403_1164691046.mp3</url>
-		    <size>18 Mb</size>
-		    <desc>128 kbps MP3 version</desc>
-		    <tags>mp3</tags>
-		</file>
-	    </files>
-	</item>
-
 	<item source="f4all" added="20060727">
 	    <title>Episode 07 of "FreeBSD for all" uploaded</title>
 	    <desc>
@@ -8503,66 +8206,6 @@
 	<!-- Source: Google Tech Talk
 	-->
 
-	<item source="googletechtalks" added="20070704">
-	    <title>Google Tech Talks June 20, 2007: How the FreeBSD Project Works</title>
-	    <desc><![CDATA[
-		 <p>
-		 The FreeBSD Project is one of the oldest and most
-		 successful open source operating system ... all
-		 projects, seeing wide deployment across the IT
-		 industry. From the root name servers, to top tier
-		 ISPs, to core router operating systems, to firewalls,
-		 to embedded appliances, you can't use a networked
-		 computer for ten minutes without using FreeBSD
-		 dozens of times. Part of FreeBSD's reputation for
-		 quality and reliability comes from the nature of
-		 its development organization--driven by a hundreds
-		 of highly skilled volunteers, from high school
-		 students to university professors. And unlike most
-		 open source projects, the FreeBSD Project has
-		 developers who have been working on the same source
-		 base for over twenty years. But how does this
-		 organization work? Who pays the bandwidth bills,
-		 runs the web servers, writes the documentation,
-		 writes the code, and calls the shots? And how can
-		 developers in a dozen time zones reach agreement
-		 on the time of day, let alone a kernel architecture?
-		 This presentation will attempt to provide, in 45
-		 minutes, a brief if entertaining snapshot into
-		 what makes FreeBSD run.
-		 </p><p>
-		 Speaker: Robert Watson Robert Watson is a researcher
-		 at the University of Cambridge Computer Laboratory
-		 investinging operating system and network security.
-		 Prior to joining the Computer Laboratory to work
-		 on a PhD, he was a Senior Principal Scientist at
-		 McAfee Research, now SPARTA ISSO, a leading security
-		 research and development organization, where he
-		 directed government and commercial research contracts
-		 for customers that include DARPA, the US Navy, and
-		 Apple Computer. His research interests include
-		 operating system security, network stack structure
-		 and performance, and windowing system structure.
-		 He is also a member of the FreeBSD Core Team and
-		 president of the FreeBSD Foundation.
-		 </p>
-	    ]]></desc>
-	    <overview><![CDATA[
-		http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-4400856579609253323&amp;total=1&amp;start=0&amp;num=10&amp;so=1&amp;type=search&amp;plindex=0
-		]]></overview>
-	    <tags>google,presentation,freebsd,freebsd project,robert watson</tags>
-	    <files>
-		<file>
-		    <url><![CDATA[
-			http://vp.video.google.com/videodownload?version=0&amp;secureurl=uAAAAMnsi51RXPgEl7zGKAWEdrKWWWjUJ5q602Nvd2V5YwaDTyCIRM5k8Rq4nUZipL4tHODLiuiSxq34qoHi8TiEyXrdjKI8_WN0fXSKQYyrrlrWKMWd5Vw7AuXiu_B0uHEadc-fR6np2MP0ItJbT-Zx-J0-GCx0Mya2fQLoLG2pb55veUzTepcJz2RsKjNaGM-XUHpxqTZoIh0rggQIkNp-vZzghRb_8JQanc00ChX2CYB3LogDCHj1hpnFFmFd-2sEEg&amp;sigh=ZrfuqGS7FqWRpFYVklZH1V4LRj4&amp;begin=0&amp;len=3053322&amp;docid=-4400856579609253323
-		    ]]></url>
-		    <size>321 Mb</size>
-		    <length>51 minutes</length>
-		    <desc>AVI</desc>
-		    <tags>avi</tags>
-		</file>
-	    </files>
-	</item>
 	
 
 	<!-- Source: nuug
@@ -9138,7 +8781,7 @@
 	<item source="openfest" added="20080327">
 	    <title>Discussion - What's cooking for FreeBSD 7.0?</title>
 	    <desc>Discussion - What's cooking for FreeBSD 7.0? (Bulgarian)</desc>
-	    <overview>http://openfest.org/openfest-2007/</overview>
+	    <overview>http://openfest.org/archive/openfest-2007/</overview>
 	    <tags>openfest,openfest2007,discussion,freebsd,freebsd7</tags>
 	    <files>
 		<file>
@@ -9152,7 +8795,7 @@
 	<item source="openfest" added="20080327">
 	    <title>Dimitri Vasileva - Visualizing Security Threats with Social Networking Software</title>
 	    <desc>Dimitri Vasileva - Visualizing Security Threats with Social Networking Software (Bulgarian)</desc>
-	    <overview>http://openfest.org/program2007/</overview>
+	    <overview>http://openfest.org/archive/openfest-2007/</overview>
 	    <tags>openfest,openfest2007,presentation,freebsd,security,social networking,dimitri vasileva</tags>
 	    <files>
 		<file>
@@ -9166,7 +8809,7 @@
 	<item source="openfest" added="20080327">
 	    <title>Shcheryana Shopova - SNMP monitoring</title>
 	    <desc>Shcheryana Shopova - SNMP monitoring (Bulgarian)</desc>
-	    <overview>http://openfest.org/program2007/</overview>
+	    <overview>http://openfest.org/archive/openfest-2007/</overview>
 	    <tags>openfest,openfest2007,presentation,freebsd,snmp,monitoring,shcheryana shopova</tags>
 	    <files>
 		<file>
@@ -9180,7 +8823,7 @@
 	<item source="openfest" added="20080327">
 	    <title>Willow Vachkov - FreeBSD and the new network and transport protocols (IPv6 and SCTP)</title>
 	    <desc>Willow Vachkov - FreeBSD and the new network and transport protocols (IPv6 and SCTP) (Bulgarian)</desc>
-	    <overview>http://openfest.org/openfest-2007/</overview>
+	    <overview>http://openfest.org/archive/openfest-2007/</overview>
 	    <tags>openfest,openfest2007,presentation,freebsd,ipv6,sctp,willow vanchkov</tags>
 	    <files>
 		<file>
@@ -9194,7 +8837,7 @@
 	<item source="openfest" added="20080327">
 	    <title>Atanas Bchvarov - Packet Filtering in FreeBSD</title>
 	    <desc>Atanas Bchvarov - Packet Filtering in FreeBSD (Bulgarian)</desc>
-	    <overview>http://openfest.org/program2007/</overview>
+	    <overview>http://openfest.org/archive/openfest-2007/</overview>
 	    <tags>openfest,openfest2007,presentation,freebsd,atanas bchvarov</tags>
 	    <files>
 		<file>
@@ -9208,7 +8851,7 @@
 	<item source="openfest" added="20080327">
 	    <title>Nikolai Denev - FreeBSD goes Zettabyte</title>
 	    <desc>Nikolai Denev - FreeBSD goes Zettabyte (Bulgarian)</desc>
-	    <overview>http://openfest.org/openfest-2007/</overview>
+	    <overview>http://openfest.org/archive/openfest-2007/</overview>
 	    <tags>openfest,openfest2007,presentation,freebsd,zettabyte,nikolai denev</tags>
 	    <files>
 		<file>
@@ -9222,7 +8865,7 @@
 	<item source="openfest" added="20080327">
 	    <title>Vasil Dimov - The FreeBSD ports collection - tips and tricks</title>
 	    <desc>Vasil Dimov - The FreeBSD ports collection - tips and tricks (Bulgarian)</desc>
-	    <overview>http://openfest.org/openfest-2007/</overview>
+	    <overview>http://openfest.org/archive/openfest-2007/</overview>
 	    <tags>openfest,openfest2007,presentation,freebsd,ports collection,vasil dimov</tags>
 	    <files>
 		<file>
>Release-Note:
>Audit-Trail:
Responsible-Changed-From-To: freebsd-doc->issyl0 
Responsible-Changed-By: issyl0 
Responsible-Changed-When: Mon Jun 25 13:21:55 UTC 2012 
Responsible-Changed-Why:  
I'll take it. 

http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/query-pr.cgi?pr=169395 
State-Changed-From-To: open->closed 
State-Changed-By: issyl0 
State-Changed-When: Wed Jun 27 23:03:44 UTC 2012 
State-Changed-Why:  
Patch committed.  Thanks! 

http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/query-pr.cgi?pr=169395 

From: dfilter@FreeBSD.ORG (dfilter service)
To: bug-followup@FreeBSD.org
Cc:  
Subject: Re: docs/169395: commit references a PR
Date: Wed, 27 Jun 2012 23:00:51 +0000 (UTC)

 Author: issyl0
 Date: Wed Jun 27 23:00:35 2012
 New Revision: 39140
 URL: http://svn.freebsd.org/changeset/doc/39140
 
 Log:
   Remove, replace, and fix some broken links on the multimedia pages of
   the website.
   
   PR:		docs/169395
   Submitted by:	db
   Approved by:	gabor (mentor)
 
 Modified:
   head/en_US.ISO8859-1/htdocs/multimedia/multimedia-input.xml
 
 Modified: head/en_US.ISO8859-1/htdocs/multimedia/multimedia-input.xml
 ==============================================================================
 --- head/en_US.ISO8859-1/htdocs/multimedia/multimedia-input.xml	Wed Jun 27 22:33:22 2012	(r39139)
 +++ head/en_US.ISO8859-1/htdocs/multimedia/multimedia-input.xml	Wed Jun 27 23:00:35 2012	(r39140)
 @@ -4335,293 +4335,6 @@
  	    <tags>dcbsdcon,dcbsdcon2009,photos</tags>
  	</item>
  
 -	<item source="dcbsdcon" added="20090524">
 -	    <title>Chris Buechler - Network perimeter redundancy with pfsense</title>
 -	    <desc>
 -		This session will first provide an introduction and
 -		overview of pfSense and its common uses. It will
 -		then go on to cover means of providing redundancy
 -		for the critical portions of your network perimeter
 -		using pfSense, including redundancy for your Internet
 -		connections, firewalls and DNS. Live configuration
 -		examples will be shown for as many of these topics
 -		as the session's length permits. This session will
 -		cover pfSense 1.2.1, but will also offer an overview
 -		of some of the enhanced capabilities in this area
 -		that pfSense 2.0 will provide in the future.
 -	    </desc>
 -	    <overview>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/buechler.html</overview>
 -	    <tags>dcbsdcon,dcbsdcon2009,slides,pfsense,chris buechler</tags>
 -	    <files>
 -		<file>
 -		    <url>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/slides/buechler_dcbsdcon2009.pdf</url>
 -		    <desc>PDF</desc>
 -		    <size>6.2 Kb</size>
 -		    <length>30 pages</length>
 -		    <tags>pdf</tags>
 -		</file>
 -	    </files>
 -	</item>
 -
 -	<item source="dcbsdcon" added="20090524">
 -	    <title>Richard Bejtlich - Network security monitoring using FreeBSD</title>
 -	    <desc>
 -		I've been using FreeBSD as my preferred platform
 -		for Network Security Monitoring (NSM) since 2000.
 -		In this presentation I'll discuss my latest thinking
 -		on using FreeBSD to identify normal, suspicious,
 -		and malicious traffic in enterprise networks. FreeBSD
 -		is a powerful platform for network traffic inspection
 -		and log analysis, and I'll share a few ways I use
 -		it in production environments.
 -	    </desc>
 -	    <overview>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/bejtlich.html</overview>
 -	    <tags>dcbsdcon,dcbsdcon2009,slides,freebsd,network security,monitoring,richard bejtlich</tags>
 -	    <files>
 -		<file>
 -		    <url>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/slides/bejtlich_dcbsdcon2009.pdf</url>
 -		    <desc>PDF</desc>
 -		    <size>972 Kb</size>
 -		    <length>23 pages</length>
 -		    <tags>pdf</tags>
 -		</file>
 -	    </files>
 -	</item>
 -
 -	<item source="dcbsdcon" added="20090524">
 -	    <title>Henning Brauer - Faster packets: Performance tuning in the OpenBSD network stack and PF</title>
 -	    <desc>
 -		n/a
 -	    </desc>
 -	    <overview>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/brauer.html</overview>
 -	    <tags>dcbsdcon,dcbsdcon2009,slides,openbsd,performance,henning brauer</tags>
 -	    <files>
 -		<file>
 -		    <url>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/slides/brauer_dcbsdcon2009.pdf</url>
 -		    <desc>PDF</desc>
 -		    <size>27 Mb</size>
 -		    <length>69 pages</length>
 -		    <tags>pdf</tags>
 -		</file>
 -	    </files>
 -	</item>
 -
 -	<item source="dcbsdcon" added="20090524">
 -	    <title>Kristaps Dzonsons - Process isolation for NetBSD and OpenBSD</title>
 -	    <desc>
 -		In NetBSD and OpenBSD, user-land process and
 -		process-context isolation is limited to credential
 -		cross-checks, file-system chroot and explicit
 -		systrace/kauth applications. I'll demonstrate a
 -		working mechanism of isolated process trees in
 -		branched OpenBSD-4.4 and NetBSD-5.0-beta kernels
 -		where an isolated process is started by a system
 -		call similar to fork; following that, the child
 -		process and its descendants execute in a context
 -		isolated from the caller. This system is the continued
 -		work of "mult" -- first prototyped in a branched
 -		NetBSD-3.1 kernel and isolating all system resources
 -		-- pared down to a lightweight, auditable patch of
 -		process-only separation for both OpenBSD and NetBSD.
 -		I specifically address solutions to performance
 -		issues and mechanism design with an eye toward more
 -		resources being isolated in the future.
 -	    </desc>
 -	    <overview>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/dzonsons.html</overview>
 -	    <tags>dcbsdcon,dcbsdcon2009,slides,openbsd,netbsd,process isolation,kristaps dzonsons</tags>
 -	    <files>
 -		<file>
 -		    <url>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/slides/dzonsons_dcbsdcon2009.pdf</url>
 -		    <desc>PDF</desc>
 -		    <size>687 Kb</size>
 -		    <length>27 pages</length>
 -		    <tags>pdf</tags>
 -		</file>
 -	    </files>
 -	</item>
 -
 -	<item source="dcbsdcon" added="20090524">
 -	    <title>Robert Luciani - M:N threading in DragonflyBSD</title>
 -	    <desc>
 -		Ineffective concurrency mechanisms in an operating
 -		system can lead to low performance in both single
 -		and multiprocessor environments. Practical setbacks
 -		involved with attempting overly invasive kernel
 -		changes have made it difficult in the past to
 -		implement new and innovative concurrency systems.
 -		This paper describes the rationale behind interfaces
 -		in the DragonFly BSD operating system intended to
 -		provide high performance and scalability on
 -		multiprocessor architectures. Using a lock-free
 -		processor centric approach, DragonFly BSD has
 -		developed a unique thread system with the potential
 -		for excellent scalability.
 -	    </desc>
 -	    <overview>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/luciani.html</overview>
 -	    <tags>dcbsdcon,dcbsdcon2009,slides,dragonflybsd,concurrency,robert luciani</tags>
 -	    <files>
 -		<file>
 -		    <url>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/slides/luciani_dcbsdcon2009.pdf</url>
 -		    <desc>PDF</desc>
 -		    <size>1.5 Mb</size>
 -		    <length>23 pages</length>
 -		    <tags>pdf</tags>
 -		</file>
 -	    </files>
 -	</item>
 -
 -	<item source="dcbsdcon" added="20090524">
 -	    <title>Ken Caruso - Using BSD in Shmoocon labs</title>
 -	    <desc>
 -		n/a
 -	    </desc>
 -	    <overview>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/caruso.html</overview>
 -	    <tags>dcbsdcon,dcbsdcon2009,slides,freebsd,scmoocon,ken caruso</tags>
 -	    <files>
 -		<file>
 -		    <url>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/slides/caruso_dcbsdcon2009.pdf</url>
 -		    <desc>PDF</desc>
 -		    <size>447 Kb</size>
 -		    <length>13 pages</length>
 -		    <tags>pdf</tags>
 -		</file>
 -	    </files>
 -	</item>
 -
 -	<item source="dcbsdcon" added="20090524">
 -	    <title>Brooks Davis - Isolating cluster jobs for performance and predictability</title>
 -	    <desc>
 -		At The Aerospace Corporation, we run a large FreeBSD
 -		based computing cluster to support engineering
 -		applications. These applications come in all shapes,
 -		sizes, and qualities of implementation. To support
 -		them and our diverse userbase we have been searching
 -		for ways to isolate jobs from one another in ways
 -		that are more effective than Unix time sharing and
 -		more fine grained than allocating whole nodes to
 -		jobs. In this paper we discuss the problem space
 -		and our efforts so far. These efforts include
 -		implementation of partial file systems vitalization
 -		and CPU isolation using CPU sets.
 -	    </desc>
 -	    <overview>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/davis.html</overview>
 -	    <tags>dcbsdcon,dcbsdcon2009,slides,freebsd,clusters,brooks davis</tags>
 -	    <files>
 -		<file>
 -		    <url>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/slides/davis_dcbsdcon2009.pdf</url>
 -		    <desc>PDF</desc>
 -		    <size>952 Kb</size>
 -		    <length>24 pages</length>
 -		    <tags>pdf</tags>
 -		</file>
 -	    </files>
 -	</item>
 -
 -	<item source="dcbsdcon" added="20090524">
 -	    <title>Marco Peereboom - Epitome</title>
 -	    <desc><![CDATA[
 -		<p>
 -		Tired of tape and their weaknesses? So am I!
 -		</p><p>
 -		Epitome is the next generation backup mechanism.
 -		It is based on the idea of providing instant available
 -		backup data while removing duplicate files & blocks
 -		from backups (yes really!). It is a disk based WORM
 -		backup system.
 -		</p><p>
 -		This talk will go into the Epitome protocol and its
 -		application. The code is generic enough that it can
 -		address all 3 major (buzzword compliant) technologies
 -		known as: CAS, DEDUP & SIS.
 -		</p>
 -	    ]]></desc>
 -	    <overview>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/peereboom.html</overview>
 -	    <tags>dcbsdcon,dcbsdcon2009,slides,epitome,backup,marco peereboom</tags>
 -	    <files>
 -		<file>
 -		    <url>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/slides/peereboom_dcbsdcon2009.pdf</url>
 -		    <desc>PDF</desc>
 -		    <size>197 Kb</size>
 -		    <length>34 pages</length>
 -		    <tags>pdf</tags>
 -		</file>
 -	    </files>
 -	</item>
 -
 -	<item source="dcbsdcon" added="20090524">
 -	    <title>Kurt Miller - Implementing PIE on OpenBSD</title>
 -	    <desc>
 -		In this session, Kurt will discuss OpenBSD's PIE
 -		implementation, its impact on existing security
 -		mechanisms such as W^X on i386, and the various
 -		enhancements needed to the runtime linker, kernel
 -		and other system libs.
 -	    </desc>
 -	    <overview>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/miller.html</overview>
 -	    <tags>dcbsdcon,dcbsdcon2009,slides,openbsd,pie,kurt miller</tags>
 -	    <files>
 -		<file>
 -		    <url>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/slides/miller_dcbsdcon2009.pdf</url>
 -		    <desc>PDF</desc>
 -		    <size>4.1 Mb</size>
 -		    <length>24 pages</length>
 -		    <tags>pdf</tags>
 -		</file>
 -	    </files>
 -	</item>
 -
 -	<item source="dcbsdcon" added="20090524">
 -	    <title>Ted Unangst - OpenBSD vs SMP, threading, and concurrency</title>
 -	    <desc>
 -		I will discuss the current status of kernel SMP
 -		support, the rthreads thread library, and relevant
 -		future developments. Over the years, we have
 -		accumulated several concurrency primitives in the
 -		kernel, causing some confusion amongst developers,
 -		so I will lay out the origin and correct usage for
 -		each. The talk is primarily targeted at the budding
 -		OpenBSD kernel developer, but I will also describe
 -		the end-user effects of each topic.
 -	    </desc>
 -	    <overview>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/unangst.html</overview>
 -	    <tags>dcbsdcon,dcbsdcon2009,slides,openbsd,smp,threading,concurrency,ted unangst</tags>
 -	    <files>
 -		<file>
 -		    <url>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/slides/unangst_dcbsdcon2009.pdf</url>
 -		    <desc>PDF</desc>
 -		    <size>675 Kb</size>
 -		    <length>32 pages</length>
 -		    <tags>pdf</tags>
 -		</file>
 -	    </files>
 -	</item>
 -
 -	<item source="dcbsdcon" added="20090524">
 -	    <title>George Neville-Neil - Performance analysis with (hwpmc)</title>
 -	    <desc>
 -		FreeBSD has included support for Hardware Performance
 -		Monitoring Counters (hwpmc) for several years now.
 -		The hwpmc system provides access to counters that
 -		are present in all modern Intel and AMD CPUs, as
 -		well as other chipsets, and which give the programmer
 -		the ability to understand the low level performance
 -		issues that may effect their code. This talk will
 -		cover the motivation behind and basic usage of
 -		HWPMC.
 -	    </desc>
 -	    <overview>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/neville-neil.html</overview>
 -	    <tags>dcbsdcon,dcbsdcon2009,slides,freebsd,hwpmc,george neville-neil</tags>
 -	    <files>
 -		<file>
 -		    <url>http://www.dcbsdcon.org/speakers/slides/neville-neil_dcbsdcon2009.pdf</url>
 -		    <desc>PDF</desc>
 -		    <size>469 Kb</size>
 -		    <length>71 pages</length>
 -		    <tags>pdf</tags>
 -		</file>
 -	    </files>
 -	</item>
 -
  	<!-- EuroBSDCon
  	-->
  	<item source="eurobsdcon" added="20081022">
 @@ -6883,21 +6596,29 @@
  	    </files>
  	</item>
  
 -	<!-- Source: daemonnews
 -	-->
 +	<item source="bsdcan" added="20060524">
 +	    <title>BSDCan-2006 Photos - Friday</title>
 +	    <overview>http://www.db.net/gallery/BSDCan/BSDCan_2006_Friday/</overview>
 +	    <desc>
 +		Photos taken during the Conference on Friday at BSDCan 2006 in Ottawa
 +		by Diane Bruce.
 +	    </desc>
  
 -	<item source="daemonnews" added="20060524">
 -	    <title>BSDCan 2006 Photos</title>
 -	    <desc>BSDCan 2006 Photos by Diane Bruce</desc>
 -	    <tags>daily deamon news,photos,bsdcan,bsdcan2006,diane bruce</tags>
 -	    <files>
 -		<file>
 -		    <url>http://ezine.daemonnews.org/200605/bsdcan_photos.html</url>
 -		    <tags>jpg</tags>
 -		</file>
 -	    </files>
 +	    <tags>2006,bsdcan,bsdcan2006,photos,diane bruce</tags>
  	</item>
  
 +	<item source="bsdcan" added="20060524">
 +	    <title>BSDCan-2006 Photos - Saturday</title>
 +	    <overview>http://www.db.net/gallery/BSDCan/BSDCan_2006_Saturday/</overview>
 +	    <desc>
 +		Photos taken during the Conference on Saturday at BSDCan 2006 in Ottawa
 +		by Diane Bruce.
 +	    </desc>
 +
 +	    <tags>2006,bsdcan,bsdcan2006,photos,diane bruce</tags>
 +	</item>
 +
 +
  	<!-- Source: New York City *BSD User Group
  	-->
  
 @@ -8193,24 +7914,6 @@
  	<!-- Source: FreeBSD for All
  	-->
  
 -	<item source="f4all" added="20061127">
 -	    <title>Episode 08 of "FreeBSD for all" uploaded</title>
 -	    <desc>
 -		 This week we talk about some tips, latest news, Press Coverage and yes, some jazz.
 -	    </desc>
 -	    <overview>http://freebsdforall.blogspot.com/2006/11/episode-08.html</overview>
 -	    <tags>freebsd for all,talk</tags>
 -	    <files>
 -		<prefix>http://dl01.blastpodcast.com/freebsdforall/</prefix>
 -		<file>
 -		    <url>15403_1164691046.mp3</url>
 -		    <size>18 Mb</size>
 -		    <desc>128 kbps MP3 version</desc>
 -		    <tags>mp3</tags>
 -		</file>
 -	    </files>
 -	</item>
 -
  	<item source="f4all" added="20060727">
  	    <title>Episode 07 of "FreeBSD for all" uploaded</title>
  	    <desc>
 @@ -8503,66 +8206,6 @@
  	<!-- Source: Google Tech Talk
  	-->
  
 -	<item source="googletechtalks" added="20070704">
 -	    <title>Google Tech Talks June 20, 2007: How the FreeBSD Project Works</title>
 -	    <desc><![CDATA[
 -		 <p>
 -		 The FreeBSD Project is one of the oldest and most
 -		 successful open source operating system ... all
 -		 projects, seeing wide deployment across the IT
 -		 industry. From the root name servers, to top tier
 -		 ISPs, to core router operating systems, to firewalls,
 -		 to embedded appliances, you can't use a networked
 -		 computer for ten minutes without using FreeBSD
 -		 dozens of times. Part of FreeBSD's reputation for
 -		 quality and reliability comes from the nature of
 -		 its development organization--driven by a hundreds
 -		 of highly skilled volunteers, from high school
 -		 students to university professors. And unlike most
 -		 open source projects, the FreeBSD Project has
 -		 developers who have been working on the same source
 -		 base for over twenty years. But how does this
 -		 organization work? Who pays the bandwidth bills,
 -		 runs the web servers, writes the documentation,
 -		 writes the code, and calls the shots? And how can
 -		 developers in a dozen time zones reach agreement
 -		 on the time of day, let alone a kernel architecture?
 -		 This presentation will attempt to provide, in 45
 -		 minutes, a brief if entertaining snapshot into
 -		 what makes FreeBSD run.
 -		 </p><p>
 -		 Speaker: Robert Watson Robert Watson is a researcher
 -		 at the University of Cambridge Computer Laboratory
 -		 investinging operating system and network security.
 -		 Prior to joining the Computer Laboratory to work
 -		 on a PhD, he was a Senior Principal Scientist at
 -		 McAfee Research, now SPARTA ISSO, a leading security
 -		 research and development organization, where he
 -		 directed government and commercial research contracts
 -		 for customers that include DARPA, the US Navy, and
 -		 Apple Computer. His research interests include
 -		 operating system security, network stack structure
 -		 and performance, and windowing system structure.
 -		 He is also a member of the FreeBSD Core Team and
 -		 president of the FreeBSD Foundation.
 -		 </p>
 -	    ]]></desc>
 -	    <overview><![CDATA[
 -		http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-4400856579609253323&amp;total=1&amp;start=0&amp;num=10&amp;so=1&amp;type=search&amp;plindex=0
 -		]]></overview>
 -	    <tags>google,presentation,freebsd,freebsd project,robert watson</tags>
 -	    <files>
 -		<file>
 -		    <url><![CDATA[
 -			http://vp.video.google.com/videodownload?version=0&amp;secureurl=uAAAAMnsi51RXPgEl7zGKAWEdrKWWWjUJ5q602Nvd2V5YwaDTyCIRM5k8Rq4nUZipL4tHODLiuiSxq34qoHi8TiEyXrdjKI8_WN0fXSKQYyrrlrWKMWd5Vw7AuXiu_B0uHEadc-fR6np2MP0ItJbT-Zx-J0-GCx0Mya2fQLoLG2pb55veUzTepcJz2RsKjNaGM-XUHpxqTZoIh0rggQIkNp-vZzghRb_8JQanc00ChX2CYB3LogDCHj1hpnFFmFd-2sEEg&amp;sigh=ZrfuqGS7FqWRpFYVklZH1V4LRj4&amp;begin=0&amp;len=3053322&amp;docid=-4400856579609253323
 -		    ]]></url>
 -		    <size>321 Mb</size>
 -		    <length>51 minutes</length>
 -		    <desc>AVI</desc>
 -		    <tags>avi</tags>
 -		</file>
 -	    </files>
 -	</item>
  	
  
  	<!-- Source: nuug
 @@ -9138,7 +8781,7 @@
  	<item source="openfest" added="20080327">
  	    <title>Discussion - What's cooking for FreeBSD 7.0?</title>
  	    <desc>Discussion - What's cooking for FreeBSD 7.0? (Bulgarian)</desc>
 -	    <overview>http://openfest.org/openfest-2007/</overview>
 +	    <overview>http://openfest.org/archive/openfest-2007/</overview>
  	    <tags>openfest,openfest2007,discussion,freebsd,freebsd7</tags>
  	    <files>
  		<file>
 @@ -9152,7 +8795,7 @@
  	<item source="openfest" added="20080327">
  	    <title>Dimitri Vasileva - Visualizing Security Threats with Social Networking Software</title>
  	    <desc>Dimitri Vasileva - Visualizing Security Threats with Social Networking Software (Bulgarian)</desc>
 -	    <overview>http://openfest.org/program2007/</overview>
 +	    <overview>http://openfest.org/archive/openfest-2007/</overview>
  	    <tags>openfest,openfest2007,presentation,freebsd,security,social networking,dimitri vasileva</tags>
  	    <files>
  		<file>
 @@ -9166,7 +8809,7 @@
  	<item source="openfest" added="20080327">
  	    <title>Shcheryana Shopova - SNMP monitoring</title>
  	    <desc>Shcheryana Shopova - SNMP monitoring (Bulgarian)</desc>
 -	    <overview>http://openfest.org/program2007/</overview>
 +	    <overview>http://openfest.org/archive/openfest-2007/</overview>
  	    <tags>openfest,openfest2007,presentation,freebsd,snmp,monitoring,shcheryana shopova</tags>
  	    <files>
  		<file>
 @@ -9180,7 +8823,7 @@
  	<item source="openfest" added="20080327">
  	    <title>Willow Vachkov - FreeBSD and the new network and transport protocols (IPv6 and SCTP)</title>
  	    <desc>Willow Vachkov - FreeBSD and the new network and transport protocols (IPv6 and SCTP) (Bulgarian)</desc>
 -	    <overview>http://openfest.org/openfest-2007/</overview>
 +	    <overview>http://openfest.org/archive/openfest-2007/</overview>
  	    <tags>openfest,openfest2007,presentation,freebsd,ipv6,sctp,willow vanchkov</tags>
  	    <files>
  		<file>
 @@ -9194,7 +8837,7 @@
  	<item source="openfest" added="20080327">
  	    <title>Atanas Bchvarov - Packet Filtering in FreeBSD</title>
  	    <desc>Atanas Bchvarov - Packet Filtering in FreeBSD (Bulgarian)</desc>
 -	    <overview>http://openfest.org/program2007/</overview>
 +	    <overview>http://openfest.org/archive/openfest-2007/</overview>
  	    <tags>openfest,openfest2007,presentation,freebsd,atanas bchvarov</tags>
  	    <files>
  		<file>
 @@ -9208,7 +8851,7 @@
  	<item source="openfest" added="20080327">
  	    <title>Nikolai Denev - FreeBSD goes Zettabyte</title>
  	    <desc>Nikolai Denev - FreeBSD goes Zettabyte (Bulgarian)</desc>
 -	    <overview>http://openfest.org/openfest-2007/</overview>
 +	    <overview>http://openfest.org/archive/openfest-2007/</overview>
  	    <tags>openfest,openfest2007,presentation,freebsd,zettabyte,nikolai denev</tags>
  	    <files>
  		<file>
 @@ -9222,7 +8865,7 @@
  	<item source="openfest" added="20080327">
  	    <title>Vasil Dimov - The FreeBSD ports collection - tips and tricks</title>
  	    <desc>Vasil Dimov - The FreeBSD ports collection - tips and tricks (Bulgarian)</desc>
 -	    <overview>http://openfest.org/openfest-2007/</overview>
 +	    <overview>http://openfest.org/archive/openfest-2007/</overview>
  	    <tags>openfest,openfest2007,presentation,freebsd,ports collection,vasil dimov</tags>
  	    <files>
  		<file>
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