OpenBSD
OpenBSD was created because of philosophical and developer personality differences between de Raadt and the other founders of NetBSD. Despite being the larger reason for OpenBSD's existence, security is not the only focus of the OpenBSD developers. Being a descendant of NetBSD, OpenBSD is a very portable operating system, currently running on 12 different platforms. Supported platforms are added and dropped as resources and practicality warrant.
In the current release, 3.5 (released May 2004), OpenBSD includes a fork of XFree86 4.4-RC2, due to changes in the XFree86 license. This will make OpenBSD the only open source BSD operating system to ship with its own X implementation. Other added features include further enhancements to the packet filter, and CARP, the new redundancy protocol.
Until June 2002 the OpenBSD web page featured the slogan "No remote hole in the default install, in nearly 6 years." This was changed to "Only one remote hole in the default install, in more than 8 years" after an exploit was discovered in OpenSSH. Some have criticized this statement since not much is enabled in the default install of OpenBSD, and stable releases have included software that later were found to have remote holes. Others counter that one of the OpenBSD project's fundamental innovations is the drive for systems to be "Secure by Default". It is standard, and indeed fundamental, computer security practice to enable as few services as possible on production machines. Be that as it may, OpenBSD is still a remarkably secure and stable operating system.
As part of the recent "string cleaning", countless occurrences of strcpy, strcat, sprintf, and vsprintf were replaced with bounded, safer variants like, strlcpy, strlcat, snprintf, vsnprintf, and asprintf. In addition to the ongoing source code auditing, OpenBSD contains strong cryptography. More recently, several new technologies have been integrated into the system, further increasing its security. As of version 3.3, ProPolice has been enabled by default in GCC, providing additional protection against stack smashing attacks. In OpenBSD 3.4, this protection has been enabled in the kernel as well. W^X (pronounced: "W xor X") is a fine-grained memory management scheme ensuring that memory is either writable, or executable, but never both, providing yet another layer of protection against buffer overflows. Privilege separation, privilege revocation, and randomized loading of libraries also play an ever increasing role in the security of the system.
A static bounds checker was added to the toolchain, which attempts to find common programming mistakes at compile time. Systrace can now be used to protect the system while building ports.
Because of its security benefits, OpenBSD is often used in the security industry as the underlying operating system for firewalls and intrusion detection systems. The OpenBSD packet filter, pf, is a full featured stateful firewall developed after license issues in ipf. OpenBSD was the first open source operating system to ship with a packet filter.
OpenBSD uses a password-hashing algorithm derived from Bruce Schneier's Blowfish block cipher.
OpenSSH, an open source and compatible alternative to SSH, was developed within the OpenBSD project.
Like the other free, open source BSDs, OpenBSD is distributed under the terms of the modern version of the BSD license.
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