1 Release notes for FreeBSD 15.0.
3 This file describes new user-visible features, changes and updates relevant to
4 users of binary FreeBSD releases. Each entry should describe the change in no
5 more than several sentences and should reference manual pages where an
6 interested user can find more information. Entries should wrap after 80
7 columns. Each entry should begin with one or more commit IDs on one line,
8 specified as a comma separated list and/or range, followed by a colon and a
9 newline. Entries should be separated by a newline.
11 Changes to this file should not be MFCed.
14 newsyslog(8) now supports specifying a global compression method directly
15 at the beginning of the newsyslog.conf file, which will make newsyslog(8)
16 to behave like the corresponding option was passed to the newly added
17 '-c' option. For example:
22 newsyslog(8) now accepts a new option, '-c' which overrides all historical
23 compression flags by treating their meaning as "treat the file as compressible"
24 rather than "compress the file with that specific method."
26 The following choices are available:
27 * none: Do not compress, regardless of flag.
28 * legacy: Historical behavior (J=bzip2, X=xz, Y=zstd, Z=gzip).
29 * bzip2, xz, zstd, gzip: apply the specified compression method.
31 We plan to change the default to 'none' in FreeBSD 15.0.
34 This commit added some statistics collection to the NFS-over-TLS
35 code in the NFS server so that sysadmins can moditor usage.
36 The statistics are available via the kern.rpc.tls.* sysctls.
39 Mountd has been modified to use strunvis(3) to decode directory
40 names in exports(5) file(s). This allows special characters,
41 such as blanks, to be embedded in the directory name(s).
42 "vis -M" may be used to encode such directory name(s).
45 bhyve(8) has a new network backend, "slirp", which makes use of the
46 libslirp package to provide a userspace network stack. This backend
47 makes it possible to access the guest network from the host without
48 requiring any extra network configuration on the host.
51 Set the IUTF8 flag by default in tty(4).
53 128f63cedc14 and 9e589b093857 added proper UTF-8 backspacing handling
54 in the tty(4) driver, which is enabled by setting the new IUTF8 flag
55 through stty(1). Since the default locale is UTF-8, enable IUTF8 by
59 dialog(1) has been replaced by bsddialog(1)
62 FreeBSD 15.0 will not include support for 32-bit platforms.
63 However, 64-bit systems will still be able to run older 32-bit
66 Support for executing 32-bit binaries on 64-bit platforms via
67 COMPAT_FREEBSD32 will remain supported for at least the
68 stable/15 and stable/16 branches.
70 Support for compiling individual 32-bit applications via
71 `cc -m32` will also be supported for at least the stable/15
72 branch which includes suitable headers in /usr/include and
73 libraries in /usr/lib32.
75 Support for 32-bit platforms in ports for 15.0 and later
76 releases is also deprecated, and these future releases may not
77 include binary packages for 32-bit platforms or support for
78 building 32-bit applications from ports.
80 stable/14 and earlier branches will retain existing 32-bit
81 kernel and world support. Ports will retain existing support
82 for building ports and packages for 32-bit systems on stable/14
83 and earlier branches as long as those branches are supported
84 by the ports system. However, all 32-bit platforms are Tier-2
85 or Tier-3 and support for individual ports should be expected
86 to degrade as upstreams deprecate 32-bit platforms.
88 With the current support schedule, stable/14 will be EOLed 5
89 years after the release of 14.0. The EOL of stable/14 would
90 mark the end of support for 32-bit platforms including source
91 releases, pre-built packages, and support for building
92 applications from ports. Given an estimated release date of
93 October 2023 for 14.0, support for 32-bit platforms would end
96 The project may choose to alter this approach when 15.0 is
97 released by extending some level of 32-bit support for one or
98 more platforms in 15.0 or later. Users should use the
99 stable/14 branch to migrate off of 32-bit platforms.