I own a Unicompmodel-m keyboard. The keyboard has a nice key feel but it has windows super key(s).
I don’t use super key(s), and would prefer to have a keyboard without it. But when it has super keys I’d rather have it without the windows logo on it so it was time to replace them with the tux version
But with the latest versions of FreeBSD ( not sure when it started to work, but it works on FreeBSD 14) you can run FreeBSD as a virtual machine on ARM64 with UEFI just like on x86 on GNU/Linux with KVM.
UEFI on KVM is in general provided by the open-source tianocore project.
I didn’t find much information on how to run OpenBSD with UEFI on x86 or ARM64.
So I decided to write a blog post about it, in the hope that this information might be useful to somebody else. First I tried to download the OpenBSD 7.4 ISO image and boot
it as a virtual machine on KVM (x86). But the iso image failed to boot on a virtual with UEFI enabled. It looks like the ISO image only supports a legacy BIOS.
ARM64 doesn’t support a “legacy BIOS”. The ARM64 download page for OpenBSD 7.4 doesn’t even have an ISO image, but there is an install-<version>.img
image available. So I tried to boot this image on one of my Raspberry Pi systems and this worked. I had more trouble getting NetBSD working as a virtual machine on the Raspberry Pi but this might be a topic for another blog post :-)
You’ll find my journey with my installation instructions below.
In my previous blog post, we installed GitLab-CE and did some post configuration.
In this blog post, we’ll continue to create user accounts and set up SSH to the git repository.
In the next blog posts will add code to GitLab and set up GitLab runners on different Operating systems.
When you want or need to use CI/CD you have a lot of CI/CD platforms where you can choose from. As with most “tools”, the tool is less important. What (which flow, best practices, security benchmarks, etc) and how you implement it, is what matters.
Jenkins started as Hudson at Sun Microsystem(RIP). Hudson is one of the many open-source projects that were started at Sun and killed by Oracle. Jenkins continued as the open-source fork of Hudson.
Jenkins has evolved. If you need to do more complex things you probably end up creating a lot of groovy scripts, nothing wrong with groovy. But as with a lot of discussions about programming, the ecosystem (who is using it, which libraries are available, etc) is important.
Groovy isn’t that commonly used in and known in the system administration ecosystem so this is probably something you need to learn if you’re coming for the system administrator world ( as I do, so I learnt the basics of Groovy this way ).
The other option is to implement CI/CD using the commonly used source hosting platforms; GitHub and GitLab.
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