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Lots of engineering decisions get made on vibes. Popularity, anecdotes—they can lead to expedient decisions rather than rigorous ones. At Oxide, our choice to go with CockroachDB was hardly hasty! Dave Pacheco joins Bryan and Adam to talk about why we choose CRDB… and how Cockroach Lab's recent switch to a proprietary license impacts that.In addition to Bryan Cantrill and Adam Leventhal, our special guest was Dave Pacheco.Some of the topics we hit on, in the order that we hit them:TechCrunch: Cockroach Labs shakes up its licensing to force bigger companies to payKelsey's TweetOxide RFD 53: Control plane data storage requirementsOxide RFD 110: CockroachDB for the control plane databaseOxide RFD 508: Whither CockroachDBJoyent blog post on the outage due to postgres autovacuumJepsenDave's CRDB exploration repoChronyOxF: A Debugging Odyssey -- debugging an issue that manifested in CRDBThe Liberation of RethinkDBIf we got something wrong or missed something, please file a PR! Our next show will likely be on Monday at 5p Pacific Time on our Discord server; stay tuned to our Mastodon feeds for details, or subscribe to this calendar. We'd love to have you join us, as we always love to hear from new speakers!
The Oxide control plane coordinates multiple services to do complex, compound operations. Early on, we knew we wanted to provide a robust structure for these multi-part workflows. We stumbled onto Distributed Sagas and built our own implementation in Steno. Bryan and Adam are joined by several members of the Oxide team who built and use Steno to drive the complex operation of the control plane.In addition to Bryan Cantrill and Adam Leventhal, speakers included Dave Pacheco. Eliza Weisman, Andrew Stone, Greg Colombo, and James MacMahon.Some of the topics we hit on, in the order that we hit them:Distributed Sagas: A Protocol for Coordinating Microservices - Caitie McCaffreyOxide RFD 107: Workflows EngineStenochat: "the trouble with other people's workflow engines, somehow with all the yaml in the world they're never quite extensible enough"Not our first bit of background noise on OxF (trombone)SAGAS paperchat: "when i hear sagas i think "transaction semantics enforced at the application layer" and when i hear workflow i hear "a dsl that doesn't have a for loop""Automated saga testingOxide RFD 289: Steno UpgradeFeral Concurrency Control paper from Berkeley and the University of SydneyEliza's PRSteno's description of its divergence from Distributed SagasAWS "constant work" blogchat: "Now, migrate the owl."OxF on formal methodsA complex bug with sagas: "tl;dr there's TWENTY steps in 5042 that leads to an accounting bug"Oxide RFD 373: Reliable Persistent WorkflowsEliza's novella on updating an instanceIf we got something wrong or missed something, please file a PR! Our next show will likely be on Monday at 5p Pacific Time on our Discord server; stay tuned to our Mastodon feeds for details, or subscribe to this calendar. We'd love to have you join us, as we always love to hear from new speakers!
A Debugging OdysseyWe've been hosting a live show weekly on Mondays at 5p for about an hour, and recording them all; here is the recording from December 19th, 2022.In addition to Bryan Cantrill and Adam Leventhal, our special guest was Dave Pacheco.
Jay is joined by Dave Pacheco of the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance (SUWA). Dave is SUWA's Utah Grassroots Organizer, a fifth generation Utahn from Salt Lake City and a graduate of the University of Utah with a B.S. in Sociology. He's in his second stint with SUWA, having held similar positions with the organization from 1994-2004, rejoining the staff in 2014. His focus is educating and bringing together individuals and groups in support of protecting the remaining wild lands at the heart of the Colorado Plateau. In his own time, Dave prefers hiking, paddling, bike touring and quiet recreation.Support the show
We're taking a look back at 2022, the challenges we faced, the coalitions we helped build, and lands we protected. We'll also take this opportunity to thank you, our steadfast members and followers. Our thanks goes way beyond words that you can read or hear. In 2023, SUWA celebrates its 40th anniversary. As it has been since those early years in the 1980s, our members and supporters are the heart of the movement to Protect Wild Utah. And as the day-to-day work to protect wild redrock country grinds along slowly, sure progress is being made, step-by-hard-earned-step, and we're taking the opportunity to focus on that progress in this episode.Thank you to our show supporters!Wild Utah is made possible by the contributing members of SUWA. Thank you for your support!Become a SUWA member today and support the Wild Utah PodcastSubscribe to Wild Utah on your favorite podcast app!wildutah.info/Stitcherwildutah.info/Applewildutah.info/SpotifyTheme music is by Haley Noel Austin, with interlude music by Larry Pattis.Dave Pacheco is the host of Wild Utah.Post studio production and editing is by Laura Borichevsky.
Bears Ears National Monument has been in the news for years due to its status as a national monument being in flux– and as it finally enters its official planning process, we're looking to Indigenous leaders to tell us what co-management (and the change in agency culture it could take to make that happen successfully) really mean.A note: It's at this stage of the planning process that the Bureau of Land Management receives input from the public to prioritize issues they should focus on. The current open comment period (which ends October 31st) is your golden opportunity to help shape the future of the Bears Ears National Monument and echo sentiments put forward by the Indigenous voices leading the way. Joining us for this essential conversation about the role of Indigenous knowledge and leadership for Bears Ears National Monument and beyond is Regina Lopez-Whiteskunk, whom we're honored to have on the show. Regina is a fierce advocate for nature who has served as a member of the Ute Mountain Ute Tribal Council. She's a former co-chair of the Bears Ears Inter-tribal Coalition and helped lead the effort that resulted in the Bears Ears being designated as a national monument. She has been appointed by Department of Interior Secretary Haaland to serve as the Chair of the current Bears Ears National Monument Advisory Committee, and she also serves on SUWA's board of directors.Take action after this episode!The BLM is accepting comments until 10/31 as part of the scoping process. This is your chance to tell the BLM what issues are important for them to consider as they develop a draft management plan.Comment Today!Thank you to our show supporters!Wild Utah is made possible by the contributing members of SUWA. Thank you for your support!Become a SUWA member today and support the Wild Utah PodcastSubscribe to Wild Utah on your favorite podcast app!wildutah.info/Stitcherwildutah.info/Applewildutah.info/SpotifyTheme music is by Haley Noel Austin, with interlude music by Larry Pattis.Dave Pacheco is the host of Wild Utah.Post studio production and editing is by Laura Borichevsky.
What's “GSENM RMP”, anyway? It's shorthand for the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument Resource Management Plan. Originally proclaimed by President Clinton in 1996, the almost two million acre monument was slashed in half under former President Trump in 2017. It's been close to a year since President Biden restored the monument to its original boundaries, and it's time for his administration to re-write the Trump-era plan and re-emphasize scientific discovery and conservation as the primary purpose of the monument. That also means that it's time for you to get involved!Our guest is SUWA Wildlands Attorney Kya Marienfeld, who is heading up SUWA's official comments about Grand Stairacse-Escalante to the BLM. In non-legal terms, she explains the process for monument planning and helps us understand how to effectively engage in making the final plan a guiding document we can all be proud of. Take Action After this Episode:Have a Say in the Future of Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument!Leave your public comment to the Bureau of Land Management by 9/27.Thank you to our show supporters!Wild Utah is made possible by the contributing members of SUWA. Thank you for your support!Become a SUWA member today and support the Wild Utah PodcastSubscribe to Wild Utah on your favorite podcast app!wildutah.info/Stitcherwildutah.info/Applewildutah.info/SpotifyTheme music is by Haley Noel Austin, with interlude music by Larry Pattis.Dave Pacheco is the host of Wild Utah.Post studio production and editing is by Laura Borichevsky.
The heart behind activism can sometimes be overlooked– but it's often what grounds us in why we do this work. That couldn't be more true for the Episcopal Diocese of Utah. This spring, they passed a Resolution in support of America's Red Rock Wilderness Act (ARRWA) and Grand Staircase-Escalante and Bears Ears National Monuments. The church's support benefits future generations of Americans and show respect for Indigenous people with ties to the land, and it furthers action to combat climate change and stem the global loss of biodiversity by protecting habitat for all living beings.Joining this episode to discuss the importance of this resolution as one component of protecting all living things are three people from the Episcopal Church in Utah: the Very Reverend Tyler Doherty, the Dean & Rector at St Mark's Cathedral; Ron Barness, a longtime member of St Mark's who serves on the vestry and is chair of the Creation Care sub-committee for the Episcopal Diocese of Utah; and Forrest Cuch, a Ute tribal Elder, Senior Warden at St. Elizabeth's Episcopal Church in Whiterocks, Utah, and a member of the Creation Care sub-committee. Take Action After this Episode:Sign up to stay in the loop on redrock news and actions from SUWA!Thank you to our show supporters!Wild Utah is made possible by the contributing members of SUWA. Thank you for your support!Become a SUWA member today and support the Wild Utah PodcastSubscribe to Wild Utah on your favorite podcast app!wildutah.info/Stitcherwildutah.info/Applewildutah.info/SpotifyTheme music is by Haley Noel Austin, with interlude music by Larry Pattis.Dave Pacheco is the host of Wild Utah.Post studio production and editing is by Laura Borichevsky.
Since its inception a few years back, SUWA's Stewardship Program has aimed to foster a stewardship ethic and promote service as recreation in Utah through opportunities to work directly and actively to preserve and enhance the wilderness character of Utah's public lands. So what does all of that mean– for volunteers, and for the redrock wilderness?Tune in to find out! You'll be transported to a recent stewardship project in the Canyon Rims area (featuring voices from a couple inspiring University of Utah Alternate Break students) while hearing all about SUWA's stewardship philosophy from one incredibly dynamic duo: Stewardship Director Jeremy Lynch and Stewardship Coordinator Jack Hanley. Take Action After this Episode:Sign up to stay in the know about future Stewardship Projects this season and beyond!Check out the SUWA Stewardship Project Calendar here!Thank you to our show supporters!Wild Utah is made possible by the contributing members of SUWA. Thank you for your support!Become a SUWA member today and support the Wild Utah PodcastA special thank you for this episode also goes to the U of U Alternate Break crew who joined us for a one-day project that helped to create the in-the-field audio you hear on this episode.Subscribe to Wild Utah on your favorite podcast app!wildutah.info/Stitcherwildutah.info/Applewildutah.info/SpotifyTheme music is by Haley Noel Austin, with interlude music by Larry Pattis.Dave Pacheco is the host of Wild Utah.Post studio production and editing is by Laura Borichevsky.A transcript of this episode can be found here.
How do we balance off-road vehicle use with the critical need to protect southern Utah's redrock wilderness?Anyone who visits southern Utah will inevitably hear the whine of off-road vehicles (ORVs) and see how their use has scarred the landscape. In southern Utah especially, the recent exponential growth of ORV recreation has led to stream erosion and water pollution, dust and soil erosion, destruction of wildlife habitat, damage to archaeological sites and cultural resources, and increased conflicts between public land users.Travel management is one tool that can help us to take part in the creation of thoughtful, balanced plans that provide access– not excess– when it comes to off-road vehicle use and mitigate impacts to wilderness. Tune in to hear all about it (including how you can take action right now!) from SUWA's ORV Policy Fellow, Kelsey Cruickshank. Take Action After this Episode:Comment now on the scoping plans for Paunsaugunt (Kanab, UT) travel management area!Sign up to receive action alerts from SUWA so you can participate in upcoming comment periods for ORV use on Utah's public lands!Thank you to our show supporters!Wild Utah is made possible by the contributing members of SUWA. Thank you for your support!Become a SUWA member today and support the Wild Utah PodcastSubscribe to Wild Utah on your favorite podcast app!wildutah.info/Stitcherwildutah.info/Applewildutah.info/SpotifyTheme music is by Haley Noel Austin, with interlude music by Larry Pattis.Dave Pacheco is the host of Wild Utah.Post studio production and editing is by Laura Borichevsky.A transcript of this episode can be found here.
The oil & gas leasing, drilling and cleanup program in the United States is a mess– needing serious reform, time and money to fix. During the 2020 presidential election, Joe Biden made some encouraging statements and promises to address the climate crisis. in particular, Mr. Biden promised to wind down oil & gas leasing and drilling on public lands in the U.S. So where do things stand one year later, especially in Utah? To answer that question and explore the administration's ongoing efforts to reform this broken program, we are joined by SUWA Staff Attorney Landon Newell.Take Action After this Episode:Sign up to receive alerts from SUWA so you can participate in petitions, keep up to date on oil & gas leasing news, and take other actions to support oil & gas reform!Resources:Story Map: The Pause on New Oil & Gas Leasing in Utah: One Year LaterThank you to our show supporters!Wild Utah is made possible by the contributing members of SUWA. Thank you for your support!Become a SUWA member today and support the Wild Utah PodcastSubscribe to Wild Utah on your favorite podcast app!wildutah.info/Stitcherwildutah.info/Applewildutah.info/SpotifyTheme music is by Haley Noel Austin, with interlude music by Larry Pattis.Dave Pacheco is the host of Wild Utah.Post studio production and editing is by Laura Borichevsky.A transcript of this episode can be found here when this link becomes active.
What happens when new land protections and wilderness are designated? While every land management journey is different, one thing's for sure: the devil's in the details.The latest episode of Wild Utah looks at this process through 663,000 acres of land recently designated as wilderness through the 2019 John D. Dingell Jr. Conservation, Management, and Recreation Act, Congress passed the Emery County Public Land Management Act. Among other things, this act created 17 new wilderness areas, the San Rafael Swell Recreation Area, and three Wild and Scenic segments on the Green River. As a result of these new designations, there are a lot of details to consider. And because the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) must update its management plan for each of the affected areas-- which includes input from the public-- it's a process that will take well over a year to complete. So, what's the importance of this process? What do we want to see happen in following through with these new wilderness protections? And when and how do we contact the BLM about all of this to make our voices heard? SUWA Wildlands Attorney Judi Brawer joins us in this highly informative episode that we can all look to as a guide.Take Action After this Episode:Sign up to receive action alerts from SUWA so you can participate in the next phase of the commenting process!Thank you to our show supporters!Wild Utah is made possible by the contributing members of SUWA. Thank you for your support!Become a SUWA member today and support the Wild Utah PodcastSubscribe to Wild Utah on your favorite podcast app!wildutah.info/Stitcherwildutah.info/Applewildutah.info/SpotifyTheme music is by Haley Noel Austin, with interlude music by Larry Pattis.Dave Pacheco is the host of Wild Utah.Post studio production and editing is by Laura Borichevsky.A transcript of this episode can be found here.
On December 4th, the state of Utah issued a multi-million dollar contract bid, furthering their plans to file a lawsuit challenging the restoration of Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante national monuments, possibly all the way to the Supreme Court. The state was clearly not listening to the people.Two days prior, on December 2nd, Tribal and Indigenous community leaders, in addition to people from across Utah, protested at the state Capitol to discourage the irresponsible misuse of state tax dollars. Tune into the latest episode of the Wild Utah podcast to hear each of the speakers from that night, recorded live at the Capitol:• Malcom Lehi, Councilman of the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe and Co-Chair of the Bears Ears Inter-Tribal Coalition• Timothy Nuvangyaoma, Chairman of the Hopi Tribe• David Filfred, Co-Chair of Utah Diné Bikéyah• Olivia Juarez, Latinx Community Organizer for SUWA• Brooke Larsen, Utah community activist, organizer, & writerTake Action After this Episode:Send a message to Utah Governor Cox and Attorney General Reyes to let them know that pursuing this lawsuit would be another monumental mistake!Resources:Bears Ears Inter-Tribal Coalition Statement on Bears Ears National Monument restoration Utah Diné Bikéyah SUWA Statement on Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument restorationsLearn more about SUWA's stance on Bears Ears hereLearn more about SUWA's stance on Grand Staircase-Escalante hereHighlights In the News: KSL: ‘Stop the attacks': Tribal leaders, activists plead for end to ‘political football' over Utah monumentsSalt Lake Tribune: Utahns gather at State Capitol to protest Attorney General's lawsuit against Bears Ears National Monument restorationSalt Lake Tribune: Utah Attorney General's office selects law firm in legal challenge over Bears Ears and Grand Staircase monumentsKSL: Utah AG's Office picks national law firm to assist in potential monuments lawsuitThank you to our show supporters!Wild Utah is made possible by the contributing members of SUWA. Thank you for your support!Become a SUWA member today and support the Wild Utah PodcastSubscribe to Wild Utah on your favorite podcast app!wildutah.info/Stitcherwildutah.info/Applewildutah.info/SpotifyTheme music is by Haley Noel Austin, with interlude music by Larry Pattis.Dave Pacheco is the host of Wild Utah.Post studio production and editing is by Laura Borichevsky.A transcript of this episode can be found here.
Now that we've collectively taken a month or so to deeply breathe in full restoration of Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante national monuments to their original boundaries: what comes next? We've invited SUWA's Legal Director, Steve Bloch to explain the current state of things. Steve has guided SUWA's work through legal and administrative challenges on both monuments over the years, and he's here to bring us up to date on the process, answer your questions, and explain what you can do to reinforce protections for these outstanding places.Take Action After this Episode:Sign a thank you card to President Biden and Interior Secretary Haaland for restoring Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monuments!Attend an upcoming webcast with Oregonians of Wild Utah, Washington Friends of Wild Utah, and Jacqueline Keeler to further unpack the future of Bears Ears.Resources:Bears Ears Inter-Tribal Coalition Statement on Bears Ears National Monument restoration SUWA Statement on Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument restorationsLearn more about SUWA's stance on Bears Ears hereLearn more about SUWA's stance on Grand Staircase-Escalante hereHighlights In the News: KSLTV: Tribes, advocates praise Bears Ears restorationHigh Country News: Bears Ears is back-- but don't celebrate just yetWashington Post Opinion: Bears Ears is protected again. But for how long?Deseret Opinion: It's time to deflate the Bears Ears political footballHuffington Post: Utah Republicans Shamelessly Invoke Tribes to Condemn Bidens Monument RestorationsABC 7 Denver: Native stewards of Bears Ears hope for more Indigenous voices to be included in federal land managementKUTV2: Utah AG challenging orders over Bears Ears, Grand Staircase National MonumentsOutside Magazine Op-Ed: There's more work to do at Bears EarsThank you to our show supporters!Wild Utah is made possible by the contributing members of SUWA. Thank you for your support!Become a SUWA member today and support the Wild Utah PodcastSubscribe to Wild Utah on your favorite podcast app!wildutah.info/Stitcherwildutah.info/Applewildutah.info/SpotifyTheme music is by Haley Noel Austin, with interlude music by Larry Pattis.Dave Pacheco is the host of Wild Utah.Post studio production and editing is by Laura Borichevsky.A transcript of this episode can be found here.
We recorded with Ron Millar of the Center for Freethought Equality as Democratic presidential candidates got serious about dropping out of the race. We still have to make decisions about a lot of more local races, though. Listen as Ron discusses experience, policy, and more with David Norton and Dave Pacheco. Links: Center for Freethought Equality
SUWA Wildlands Attorney Kya Marienfeld speaks with Dave Pacheco about about the Trump administration's new master management plans for what remains of Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, as well as the nearly one million acres that President Trump excised from the 23 year-old monument. These plans authorize rampant chaining of pinyon and juniper forests and unbridled energy development, and set the stage for a free-for-all of off-road vehicle abuse. Wild Utah is produced by Jerry Schmidt and is made possible by the contributing members of SUWA. Our theme music, “What’s Worth?” was written and performed in Moab by Haley Noel Austin.
Matt and Dave, SUWA’s Utah organizer, chat about the organization’s efforts to protect Utah’s redrock wilderness, especially Bears Ears. He discussed the group’s collaboration with local Native groups, particularly the Bears Ears Inter-Tribal Coalition. Dave also described the key role that SUWA’s grassroots supporter play in their legal battles. For more information, visit SUWA’s website and find them on Facebook and Twitter.
Matt and Dave, SUWA’s Utah organizer, chat about the organization’s efforts to protect Utah’s redrock wilderness, especially Bears Ears. He discussed the group’s collaboration with local Native groups, particularly the Bears Ears Inter-Tribal Coalition. Dave also described the key role that SUWA’s grassroots supporter play in their legal battles. For more information, visit SUWA’s website and find them on Facebook and Twitter.
Dave Pacheco discusses the environmental consequences of oil and gas leasing on public lands with SUWA Staff Attorney Landon Newell. Millions of acres of public lands in Utah are still natural or in a wild condition. It’s these places, proposed for wilderness designation in America’s Redrock Wilderness Act, that SUWA works to defend. So, what happens when the BLM proposes drilling in those wild places?
Dave Pacheco speaks with SUWA's Kya Marienfeld and Wild Utah Project's Allison Jones about the Utah BLM's ecologically destructive practice of "chaining" -- or, in the BLM's vernacular, "vegetation treatment." This practice of mechanically removing trees, shrubs and virtually all vegetation from otherwise healthy pinion-juniper forests -- often to benefit domestic livestock -- is being challenged by conservationists as an extreme overreaction to a non-existent problem.
In this episode, Dave Pacheco speaks with SUWA Board Member Darrell Knuffke about the origins and early days of SUWA. In doing some research for our show, we found Darrell’s name listed as a Board Member in SUWA’s newsletter as early as 1986, just three years after our organization’s founding. He has some fascinating insights to share with us about SUWA’s origins and the early days of the Utah wilderness movement.
With the main portion of the college wrestling season already a month and a half gone, one college division's season is over. In California, they wrestle a community college system in the fall. That season wrapped up on December 12 as the Panthers from Sacramento City College won its third California Community College state championship, outdistancing Fresno City College, Cerritos and Palomar. On Episode 229 of the Short Time Wrestling Podcast, Dave Pacheco, head coach of Sac City, talks about his team's performance, why he's now won two of the last three titles in the league and what type of athletes he takes in and sends on to the four-year level. Coach Pacheco was a product of the California Community College system before moving on to Idaho State, where he as a Division I qualifier in 1978 and 1979. He's been coaching at Sac City since 1983 and has put dozens and dozens of wrestlers on college mats at the Division I, II, III and NAIA levels. With the Olympics coming up, there's also a special deal going on from Rocket Languages, one of the fastest ways to learn a foreign language. There's a 60% OFF sale starting on December 16 and it runs for just 48 hours. With the Olympics in Rio, it's a perfect time to get your Portuguese on to prepare. Or maybe you want to go the Spanish route, or the even more mysterious Russian. Check out Rocket Languages and use the PROMO CODE XMAS60 when you check out to save 60% on your first purchase. Leave a voicemail for the show by checking out our contact page. Your listener feedback could be played back and answered on an upcoming episode of Short Time. The Short Time Time Wrestling Podcast is proudly sponsored by Flipswrestling. Share your attitude and #BEHEARD at Flipswrestling.com. SUBSCRIBE TO SHORT TIME iTunes | Stitcher | Spreaker | iHeartRadio | TuneIn | SoundCloud | iOS App | Android App | RSS JOIN THE TEAM And if you're a fan of the extensive and broad-based reach of the shows on the Mat Talk Podcast Network, become a TEAM MEMBER today. There are various levels of perks for the different levels of team membership. If you like wrestling content -- scratch that -- if you LOVE great wrestling content, consider becoming a team member. You'll get some cool stuff too. 8 Habits of Highly Successful Former Wrestlers As wrestlers, we all know the value of the lessons we learn on the mat. Have you ever wondered what it is that makes certain former wrestlers go on to massive success in business and life? Jim Harshaw, host of the Wrestling with Greatness podcast, has interviewed CEO's, entrepreneurs, military leaders and others--all former wrestlers-- and has identified the eight core habits of some of the most successful people on the planet who were also wrestlers. Download his free report, "The 8 Habits of Highly Successful Former Wrestlers" and begin using the lessons you learn in wrestling to reach the top. To download your free copy today visit mattalkonline.com/habits GET DAILY WRESTLING NEWS! You like wrestling news, right? Of course you do. Did you know you can sign up for FREE to subscribe to the Mat Talk Online DAILY WRESTLING NEWS e-mail newsletter that's published EVERY morning with the previous day's top news stories from outlets all around the globe. It's free and it's a great way to start your wrestling day. Almanac Time! Get the Cadet & Junior Nationals All-American Almanac, a 219-page digital download. It's available now and if you use the promo code "JB" you'll save $5 off the cover price. It's got every All-American EVER in Fargo (and the locations that were before Fargo) and every breakdown by year and state. Oh, you know this guy who says he placed at Juniors? Fact check him or her quickly by buying one now! And if you haven't already, leave a rating and a review on iTunes. Looking to start a podcast of your own? Get a free month with Libsyn by using the promo code MTO when you sign up. You'll get the remainder of the month from when you sign up as well as the next month free. It'll be enough time to kick the tires and lights some fires.
Episode 9 of Wrestling 411 with Sacramento City College head coach Dave Pacheco. Recorded December 11, 2008 at KAUG studios in Minneapolis, Minnesota.ContributeAnd if you're a fan of the extensive and broad-based reach of the shows on the Mat Talk Podcast Network, consider becoming a contributor by going to www.patreon.com/mattalkonline. There are various levels of perks for the different levels of patronage. If you like wrestling content -- scratch that -- if you LOVE great wrestling content, consider becoming a contributor. How much you give is solely up to how much you believe it's worth to you.Looking to start a podcast of your own?Get a free month with Libsyn.com by using the promo code MTO when you sign up. You'll get the remainder of the month from when you sign up as well as the next month free. It'll be enough time to kick the tires and lights some fires.
This time on the show, we'll be talking with Justin Cormack about NetBSD rump kernels. We'll learn how to run them on other operating systems, what's planned for the future and a lot more. As always, answers to viewer-submitted questions and all the news for the week, on BSD Now - the place to B.. SD. This episode was brought to you by Headlines EuroBSDCon 2014 talks and tutorials (http://2014.eurobsdcon.org/talks-and-schedule/) The 2014 EuroBSDCon videos have been online for over a month, but unannounced - keep in mind these links may be temporary (but we'll mention their new location in a future show and fix the show notes if that's the case) Arun Thomas, BSD ARM Kernel Internals (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Rodopi/03.Saturday/01.BSD-ARM%20Kernel%20Internals%20-%20Arun%20Thomas.mp4) Ted Unangst, Developing Software in a Hostile Environment (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Rodopi/03.Saturday/02.Developing%20Software%20in%20a%20Hostile%20Environment%20-%20Ted%20Unangst.mp4) Martin Pieuchot, Taming OpenBSD Network Stack Dragons (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Rodopi/03.Saturday/03.Taming%20OpenBSD%20Network%20Stack%20Dragons%20-%20Martin%20Pieuchot.mp4) Henning Brauer, OpenBGPD turns 10 years (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Rodopi/03.Saturday/04.OpenBGPD%20turns%2010%20years%20-%20%20Henning%20Brauer.mp4) Claudio Jeker, vscsi and iscsid iSCSI initiator the OpenBSD way (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Rodopi/03.Saturday/05.vscsi(4)%20and%20iscsid%20-%20iSCSI%20initiator%20the%20OpenBSD%20way%20-%20Claudio%20Jeker.mp4) Paul Irofti, Making OpenBSD Useful on the Octeon Network Gear (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Rodopi/03.Saturday/06.Making%20OpenBSD%20Useful%20on%20the%20Octeon%20Network%20Gear%20-%20Paul%20Irofti.mp4) Baptiste Daroussin, Cross Building the FreeBSD ports tree (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Rodopi/04.Sunday/01.Cross%20Building%20the%20FreeBSD%20ports%20tree%20-%20Baptiste%20Daroussin.mp4) Boris Astardzhiev, Smartcom's control plane software, a customized version of FreeBSD (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Rodopi/04.Sunday/02.Smartcom%e2%80%99s%20control%20plane%20software,%20a%20customized%20version%20of%20FreeBSD%20-%20Boris%20Astardzhiev.mp4) Michał Dubiel, OpenStack and OpenContrail for FreeBSD platform (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Rodopi/04.Sunday/03.OpenStack%20and%20OpenContrail%20for%20FreeBSD%20platform%20-%20Micha%c5%82%20Dubiel.mp4) Martin Husemann & Joerg Sonnenberger, Tool-chaining the Hydra, the ongoing quest for modern toolchains in NetBSD (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Rodopi/04.Sunday/04.(Tool-)chaining%20the%20Hydra%20The%20ongoing%20quest%20for%20modern%20toolchains%20in%20NetBSD%20-%20Martin%20Huseman%20&%20Joerg%20Sonnenberger.mp4) Taylor R Campbell, The entropic principle: /dev/u?random and NetBSD (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Rodopi/04.Sunday/05.The%20entropic%20principle:%20dev-u%3frandom%20and%20NetBSD%20-%20Taylor%20R%20Campbell.mp4) Dag-Erling Smørgrav, Securing sensitive & restricted data (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Rodopi/04.Sunday/06.Securing%20sensitive%20&%20restricted%20data%20-%20Dag-Erling%20Sm%c3%b8rgrav.mp4) Peter Hansteen, Building The Network You Need (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/01.Thursday/01.Building%20The%20Network%20You%20Need%20With%20PF%20-%20Peter%20Hansteen.mp4) With PF (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/01.Thursday/02.Building%20The%20Network%20You%20Need%20With%20PF%20-%20Peter%20Hansteen.mp4) Stefan Sperling, Subversion for FreeBSD developers (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/01.Thursday/03.Subversion%20for%20FreeBSD%20developers%20-%20Stefan%20Sperling.mp4) Peter Hansteen, Transition to (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/02.Friday/01.Transition%20to%20OpenBSD%205.6%20-%20Peter%20Hansteen.mp4) OpenBSD 5.6 (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/02.Friday/02.Transition%20to%20OpenBSD%205.6%20-%20Peter%20Hansteen.mp4) Ingo Schwarze, Let's make manuals (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/02.Friday/03.Let%e2%80%99s%20make%20manuals%20more%20useful%20-%20Ingo%20Schwarze.mp4) more useful (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/02.Friday/04.Let%e2%80%99s%20make%20manuals%20more%20useful%20-%20Ingo%20Schwarze.mp4) Francois Tigeot, Improving DragonFly's performance with PostgreSQL (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/03.Saturday/01.Improving%20DragonFly%e2%80%99s%20performance%20with%20PostgreSQL%20-%20Francois%20Tigeot.mp4) Justin Cormack, Running Applications on the NetBSD Rump Kernel (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/03.Saturday/02.Running%20Applications%20on%20the%20NetBSD%20Rump%20Kernel%20-%20Justin%20Cormack.mp4) Pierre Pronchery, EdgeBSD, a year later (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/03.Saturday/04.EdgeBSD,%20a%20year%20later%20-%20%20Pierre%20Pronchery.mp4) Peter Hessler, Using routing domains or tables in a production network (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/03.Saturday/05.Using%20routing%20domains%20or%20tables%20in%20a%20production%20network%20-%20%20Peter%20Hessler.mp4) Sean Bruno, QEMU user mode on FreeBSD (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/03.Saturday/06.QEMU%20user%20mode%20on%20FreeBSD%20-%20%20Sean%20Bruno.mp4) Kristaps Dzonsons, Bugs Ex Ante (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/04.Sunday/01.Bugs%20Ex%20Ante%20-%20Kristaps%20Dzonsons.mp4) Yann Sionneau, Porting NetBSD to the LatticeMico32 open source CPU (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/04.Sunday/02.Porting%20NetBSD%20to%20the%20LatticeMico32%20open%20source%20CPU%20-%20Yann%20Sionneau.mp4) Alexander Nasonov, JIT Code Generator for NetBSD (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/04.Sunday/03.JIT%20Code%20Generator%20for%20NetBSD%20-%20Alexander%20Nasonov.mp4) Masao Uebayashi, Porting Valgrind to NetBSD and OpenBSD (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/04.Sunday/04.Porting%20Valgrind%20to%20NetBSD%20and%20OpenBSD%20-%20Masao%20Uebayashi.mp4) Marc Espie, parallel make, working with legacy code (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/04.Sunday/05.parallel%20make:%20working%20with%20legacy%20code%20-%20Marc%20Espie.mp4) Francois Tigeot, Porting the drm-kms graphic drivers to DragonFly (https://va.ludost.net/files/eurobsdcon/2014/Pirin/04.Sunday/06.Porting%20the%20drm-kms%20graphic%20drivers%20to%20DragonFly%20-%20Francois%20Tigeot.mp4) The following talks (from the Vitosha track room) are all currently missing: Jordan Hubbard, FreeBSD, Looking forward to another 10 years (but we have another recording) Theo de Raadt, Randomness, how arc4random has grown since 1998 (but we have another recording) Kris Moore, Snapshots, Replication, and Boot-Environments Kirk McKusick, An Introduction to the Implementation of ZFS John-Mark Gurney, Optimizing GELI Performance Emmanuel Dreyfus, FUSE and beyond, bridging filesystems Lourival Vieira Neto, NPF scripting with Lua Andy Tanenbaum, A Reimplementation of NetBSD Based on a Microkernel Stefano Garzarella, Software segmentation offloading for FreeBSD Ted Unangst, LibreSSL Shawn Webb, Introducing ASLR In FreeBSD Ed Maste, The LLDB Debugger in FreeBSD Philip Guenther, Secure lazy binding *** OpenBSD adopts SipHash (https://www.marc.info/?l=openbsd-tech&m=141614801713457&w=2) Even more DJB crypto somehow finds its way into OpenBSD's base system This time it's SipHash (https://131002.net/siphash/), a family of pseudorandom functions that's resistant to hash bucket flooding attacks while still providing good performance After an initial import (http://cvsweb.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb/src/sys/crypto/siphash.c?rev=1.1&content-type=text/x-cvsweb-markup) and some clever early usage (https://www.marc.info/?l=openbsd-cvs&m=141604896822253&w=2), a few developers agreed that it would be better to use it in a lot more places It will now be used in the filesystem, and the plan is to utilize it to protect all kernel hash functions Some other places (http://www.bsdnow.tv/episodes/2013_12_18-cryptocrystalline) that Bernstein's work can be found in OpenBSD include the ChaCha20-Poly1305 authenticated stream cipher and Curve25519 KEX used in SSH, ChaCha20 used in the RNG, and Ed25519 keys used in signify (http://www.bsdnow.tv/episodes/2014_02_05-time_signatures) and SSH *** FreeBSD 10.1-RELEASE (https://www.freebsd.org/releases/10.1R/announce.html) FreeBSD's release engineering team (http://www.bsdnow.tv/episodes/2013-09-11_engineering_powder_kegs) likes to troll us by uploading new versions just a few hours after we finish recording an episode The first maintenance update for the 10.x branch is out, improving upon a lot of things found in 10.0-RELEASE The vt driver was merged from -CURRENT and can now be enabled with a loader.conf switch (and can even be used on a PlayStation 3) Bhyve has gotten quite a lot of fixes and improvements from its initial debut in 10.0, including boot support for ZFS Lots of new ARM hardware is supported now, including SMP support for most of them A new kernel selection menu was added to the loader, so you can switch between newer and older kernels at boot time 10.1 is the first to support UEFI booting on amd64, which also has serial console support now Lots of third party software (OpenSSH, OpenSSL, Unbound..) and drivers have gotten updates to newer versions It's a worthy update from 10.0, or a good time to try the 10.x branch if you were avoiding the first .0 release, so grab an ISO (http://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/ISO-IMAGES-amd64/10.1/) or upgrade (https://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=freebsd-update) today Check the detailed release notes (https://www.freebsd.org/releases/10.1R/relnotes.html) for more information on all the changes Also take a look at some of the known problems (https://www.freebsd.org/releases/10.1R/errata.html#open-issues) to see if (https://forums.freebsd.org/threads/segmentation-fault-while-upgrading-from-10-0-release-to-10-1-release.48977/) you'll (https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-stable/2014-October/080599.html) be (https://forums.freebsd.org/threads/10-0-10-1-diocaddrule-operation-not-supported-by-device.49016/) affected (https://www.reddit.com/r/freebsd/comments/2mmzzy/101release_restart_problems_anyone/) by any of them PC-BSD was also updated accordingly (http://wiki.pcbsd.org/index.php/What%27s_New/10.1) with some of their own unique features and changes *** arc4random - Randomization for All Occasions (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aWmLWx8ut20) Theo de Raadt gave an updated version of his EuroBSDCon presentation at Hackfest 2014 in Quebec The presentation is mainly about OpenBSD's arc4random function, and outlines the overall poor state of randomization in the 90s and how it has evolved in OpenBSD over time It begins with some interesting history on OpenBSD and how it became a security-focused OS - in 1996, their syslogd got broken into and "suddenly we became interested in security" The talk also touches on how low-level changes can shake up the software ecosystem and third party packages that everyone uses There's some funny history on the name of the function (being called arc4random despite not using RC4 anymore) and an overall status update on various platforms' usage of it Very detailed and informative presentation, and the slides can be found here (http://www.openbsd.org/papers/hackfest2014-arc4random/index.html) A great quote from the beginning: "We consider ourselves a community of (probably rather strange) people who work on software specifically for the purpose of trying to make it better. We take a 'whole-systems' approach: trying to change everything in the ecosystem that's under our control, trying to see if we can make it better. We gain a lot of strength by being able to throw backwards compatibility out the window. So that means that we're able to do research and the minute that we decide that something isn't right, we'll design an alternative for it and push it in. And if it ends up breaking everybody's machines from the previous stage to the next stage, that's fine because we'll end up in a happier place." *** Interview - Justin Cormack - justin@netbsd.org (mailto:justin@netbsd.org) / @justincormack (https://twitter.com/justincormack) NetBSD on Xen, rump kernels, various topics News Roundup The FreeBSD foundation's biggest donation (http://freebsdfoundation.blogspot.com/2014/11/freebsd-foundation-announces-generous.html) The FreeBSD foundation has a new blog post about the largest donation they've ever gotten From the CEO of WhatsApp comes a whopping one million dollars in a single donation It also has some comments from the donor about why they use BSD and why it's important to give back Be sure to donate to the foundation of whatever BSD you use when you can - every little bit helps, especially for OpenBSD (http://www.openbsd.org/donations.html), NetBSD (https://www.netbsd.org/donations/) and DragonFly (http://www.dragonflybsd.org/donations/) who don't have huge companies supporting them regularly like FreeBSD does *** OpenZFS Dev Summit 2014 videos (http://open-zfs.org/wiki/OpenZFS_Developer_Summit) Videos from the recent OpenZFS developer summit are being uploaded, with speakers from different represented platforms and companies Matt Ahrens (http://www.bsdnow.tv/episodes/2014_05_14-bsdcanned_goods), opening keynote (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XnTzbisLYzg) Raphael Carvalho, Platform Overview: ZFS on OSv (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TJLOBLSRoHE) Brian Behlendorf, Platform Overview: ZFS on Linux (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_MVOpMNV7LY) Prakash Surya, Platform Overview: illumos (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UtlGt3ag0o0) Xin Li, Platform Overview: FreeBSD (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xO0x5_3A1X4) All platforms, Group Q&A Session (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t4UlT0RmSCc) Dave Pacheco, Manta (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BEoCMpdB8WU) Saso Kiselkov, Compression (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TZF92taa_us) George Wilson (http://www.bsdnow.tv/episodes/2013_12_04-zettabytes_for_days), Performance (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=deJc0EMKrM4) Tim Feldman, Host-Aware SMR (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b1yqjV8qemU) Pavel Zakharov, Fast File Cloning (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-4c4gsLi1LI) The audio is pretty poor (https://twitter.com/OpenZFS/status/534005125853888512) on all of them unfortunately *** BSDTalk 248 (http://bsdtalk.blogspot.com/2014/11/bsdtalk248-dragonflybsd-with-matthew.html) Our friend Will Backman is still busy getting BSD interviews as well This time he sits down with Matthew Dillon, the lead developer of DragonFly BSD We've never had Dillon on the show, so you'll definitely want to give this one a listen They mainly discuss all the big changes coming in DragonFly's upcoming 4.0 release *** MeetBSD 2014 videos (https://www.meetbsd.com/) The presentations from this year's MeetBSD conference are starting to appear online as well Kirk McKusick (http://www.bsdnow.tv/episodes/2013-10-02_stacks_of_cache), A Narrative History of BSD (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DEEr6dT-4uQ) Jordan Hubbard (http://www.bsdnow.tv/episodes/2013_11_27-bridging_the_gap), FreeBSD: The Next 10 Years (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mri66Uz6-8Y) Brendan Gregg, Performance Analysis (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uvKMptfXtdo) The slides can be found here (https://www.meetbsd.com/agenda/) *** Feedback/Questions Dominik writes in (http://slexy.org/view/s20PXjp55N) Steven writes in (http://slexy.org/view/s2LwEYT3bA) Florian writes in (http://slexy.org/view/s2ubK8vQVt) Richard writes in (http://slexy.org/view/s216Eq8nFG) Kevin writes in (http://slexy.org/view/s21D2ugDUy) *** Mailing List Gold Contributing without code (https://www.marc.info/?t=141600819500004&r=1&w=2) Compression isn't a CRIME (https://lists.mindrot.org/pipermail/openssh-unix-dev/2014-November/033176.html) Securing web browsers (https://www.marc.info/?t=141616714600001&r=1&w=2) ***
Sacramento City College coach Dave Pacheco has spent almost 30 years as the head coach at the California community college. As college wrestling season looms for the 20 junior college programs in California, it's time for a refresher on one of the most unique wrestling divisions in the country.A product of the California Community College system before finishing his career at Idaho State, Pacheco has put dozens upon dozens of wrestlers into four-year programs around the country.Dave Pacheco answers these questions and more on Episode 92 of the Short Time Podcast:What are some of the benefits for the California Community College system.How's the funding work with most schools?You guys are a one-semester sport with being the only collegiate wrestling action in the months of September and October. Why do you like that format?You can now enter more than 10 wrestlers into the postseason.. Where did that concept evolve?There's some real quality coaches in the league, what's one thing people might not know about some of your fellow coaches.There have been Olympians in the CACC. Heath Sims made a Greco-Roman Olympic Team for the US, while recently Jesse Ruiz represented Mexico. What's it mean for those programs to have guys do big things.You've been a regular attendee at the NWCA Convention. What can coaches at the California level benefit from?
George Kane interviews Dave Pacheco and Jon Eisenberg of the Minnesota Chapter of Americans United.