Advertisement
Promo

Enterprise open source Toolkit

OpenBSD 3.9 adds sensor framework

Ingrid Marson ZDNet.co.uk

Published: 24 Mar 2006 09:30 GMT

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

Open BSD 3.9 will include a new sensor framework to allow system administrators to monitor the environmental conditions of servers running OpenBSD.

At present, there are a number of commercial products that allow the environmental conditions of servers to be monitored, but different brands of server require different products. For example, Dell PowerEdge servers use the Embedded Server Management tool, while Sun Fire Servers use Sun's Remote System Control. This can make server management tricky when running a heterogenous architecture.

OpenBSD 3.9, which is scheduled for release on 1 May, includes support for the sensors and the sensor management tools used on a number of architectures, Theo de Raadt, the founder and lead developer of OpenBSD, told ZDNet UK earlier this week.

"There is a significant new sensor framework [in OpenBSD 3.9], which supports voltage sensors, fan sensors, temperature sensors, and so on," said de Raadt. "Such a feature is still missing in Linux and other major operating systems."

De Raadt has already been using the sensor framework to monitor the machines running in the project's server room. "I now get a call on my cell phone whenever something is wrong in the machine room," he said.

OpenBSD 3.9 includes support for Dell's ESM and the Intelligent Platform Management Interface, a standard that defines interfaces with hardware that system administrators can use to monitor system health. It also offers support for a number of sensors, including the Asus ASB 100 temperature sensor, the TAOS TSL2560/61 light-to-digital converter and the Analog Devices ADM1030 temperature sensor.

"Thousands of small changes" across the operating system have been made in version 3.9, said De Raadt, including the introduction of fully enabled randomised memory allocation. This feature ensures that when a program runs it does not always allocate memory in the same place, and therefore offers protection against buffer-overflow attacks.

"No other major commercial operating system has this feature," claimed de Raadt. "The Linux security patch PaX has some of this stuff, but it's not part of the default kernel."

Randomised memory allocation was initially added to OpenBSD two releases ago, but is fully enabled for the first time in version 3.9, according to de Raadt.

More details on the features in OpenBSD 3.9 can be found here.

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendlyPrint with EPSON

Did you find this article useful?
71 out of 152 people found this useful


Full Talkback thread

0 comments

Company/Topic Alerts

Create a new alert from the list below:



Video icon

Video

Discussions

hkommedal hkommedal

I have this funny feeling that Goebbel...

Saturday 21 November 2009, 10:45 PM

2 comments
Simon Bisson and Mary Branscombe Simon Bisson and Mary Branscombe

indeed

Saturday 21 November 2009, 7:26 PM

9 comments
mdgreaney mdgreaney

From a resident

Saturday 21 November 2009, 7:23 PM

4 comments
Tezzer Tezzer

Small Business?

Saturday 21 November 2009, 6:38 PM

2 comments

Skip Sub Navigation Links to CNET Brand Links

Help

Become part of the ZDNet community.

Newsletters