OpenBSD Innovations

This is a list of software and ideas developed or maintained by the OpenBSD project, sorted in order of approximate introduction. Some of them are explained in detail in our research papers.

Concepts

ipsec(4): Started by John Ioannidis, Angelos D. Keromytis, Niels Provos, and Niklas Hallqvist, imported February 20, 1997. OpenBSD was the first free operating system to provide an IPSec stack.

inet6(4): First complete integration and adoption of IPv6 led by "Itojun" (Dr. Junichiro Hagino) [WIDE/KAME], Craig Metz [NRL], and Angelos D. Keromytis starting Jan 6, 1999. Almost fully operational Jun 6, 1999 during the first OpenBSD hackathon. OpenBSD 2.7.

Privilege separation : First implemented by Niels Provos and Markus Friedl in OpenSSH in March 2002, released with OpenBSD 3.2. The concept is now used in many OpenBSD programs, for example bgpd(8), dhclient(8), dhcpd(8), dvmrpd(8), eigrpd(8), file(1), httpd(8), iked(8), ldapd(8), ldpd(8), mountd(8), npppd(8), ntpd(8), ospfd(8), ospf6d(8), pflogd(8), radiusd(8), relayd(8), ripd(8), script(1), smtpd(8), syslogd(8), tcpdump(8), tmux(1), xconsole(1), xdm(1), Xserver(1), ypldap(8), pkg_add(1), etc.

: First implemented by Niels Provos and Markus Friedl in OpenSSH in March 2002, released with OpenBSD 3.2. The concept is now used in many OpenBSD programs, for example bgpd(8), dhclient(8), dhcpd(8), dvmrpd(8), eigrpd(8), file(1), httpd(8), iked(8), ldapd(8), ldpd(8), mountd(8), npppd(8), ntpd(8), ospfd(8), ospf6d(8), pflogd(8), radiusd(8), relayd(8), ripd(8), script(1), smtpd(8), syslogd(8), tcpdump(8), tmux(1), xconsole(1), xdm(1), Xserver(1), ypldap(8), pkg_add(1), etc. Privilege revocation : Related to the work on privilege separation, some programs were refactored to drop privileges while holding onto a tricky resource such as a raw socket, reserved port, or modification-locked bpf(4) descriptor, for example ping(8), traceroute(8), etc.

: Related to the work on privilege separation, some programs were refactored to drop privileges while holding onto a tricky resource such as a raw socket, reserved port, or modification-locked bpf(4) descriptor, for example ping(8), traceroute(8), etc. Stack protector : Developed since 2001 as "propolice" by Hiroaki Etoh. Integrated, and implemented for additional hardware platforms, by Miod Vallat and Theo de Raadt. OpenBSD 3.3 was the first operating system to enable it systemwide by default.

: Developed since 2001 as "propolice" by Hiroaki Etoh. Integrated, and implemented for additional hardware platforms, by Miod Vallat and Theo de Raadt. OpenBSD 3.3 was the first operating system to enable it systemwide by default. W^X : First used for sparc, sparc64, alpha, and hppa in OpenBSD 3.3. Strictly enforced by default since OpenBSD 6.0: a program can only violate it if the executable is marked with PT_OPENBSD_WXNEEDED and it is located on a filesystem mounted with the wxallowed mount(8) option.

: First used for sparc, sparc64, alpha, and hppa in OpenBSD 3.3. Strictly enforced by default since OpenBSD 6.0: a program can only violate it if the executable is marked with and it is located on a filesystem mounted with the mount(8) option. GOT and PLT protection by ld.so: first done as part of the W^X work in OpenBSD 3.3, by Dale Rahn and Theo de Raadt. The GOT and PLT regions are read-only outside of ld.so itself. Extended to the .init/.fini sections (constructors and destructors) in OpenBSD 3.4.

by ld.so: first done as part of the W^X work in OpenBSD 3.3, by Dale Rahn and Theo de Raadt. The GOT and PLT regions are read-only outside of ld.so itself. Extended to the .init/.fini sections (constructors and destructors) in OpenBSD 3.4. ASLR : OpenBSD 3.4 was the first widely used operating system to provide it by default.

: OpenBSD 3.4 was the first widely used operating system to provide it by default. gcc-local(1) __attribute__((__bounded__)) static analysis annotation and checking mechanism: Started by Anil Madhavapeddy on June 26, 2003 and ported to GCC 4 by Nicholas Marriott. First released with OpenBSD 3.4.

malloc(3) randomization implemented by Thierry Deval. Guard pages and randomized (delayed) free added by Ted Unangst. Reimplemented by Otto Moerbeek for OpenBSD 4.4.

Position-independent executables (PIE) : OpenBSD 5.3 was the first widely used operating system to enable it globally by default, on seven hardware platforms. Implemented in November 2008 by Kurt Miller and enabled by default by Pascal Stumpf in August 2012.

: OpenBSD 5.3 was the first widely used operating system to enable it globally by default, on seven hardware platforms. Implemented in November 2008 by Kurt Miller and enabled by default by Pascal Stumpf in August 2012. Random-data memory : the ability to specify that a variable should be initialized at load time with random byte values (placed into a new ELF .openbsd.randomdata section) was implemented in OpenBSD 5.3 by Matthew Dempsky.

: the ability to specify that a variable should be initialized at load time with random byte values (placed into a new ELF section) was implemented in OpenBSD 5.3 by Matthew Dempsky. Stack protector per shared object : using the random-data memory feature, each shared object was given its own stack protector cookie in OpenBSD 5.3 by Matthew Dempsky.

: using the random-data memory feature, each shared object was given its own stack protector cookie in OpenBSD 5.3 by Matthew Dempsky. Static-PIE : Position-independent static binaries for /bin, /sbin and ramdisks. Implemented for OpenBSD 5.7 by Kurt Miller and Mark Kettenis.

: Position-independent static binaries for /bin, /sbin and ramdisks. Implemented for OpenBSD 5.7 by Kurt Miller and Mark Kettenis. SROP (sigreturn(2) oriented programming) mitigation: attacks researched by Eric Bosman and Herbert Bos in 2014, solution implemented by Theo de Raadt in May 2016, enabled by default since OpenBSD 6.0.

(sigreturn(2) oriented programming) mitigation: attacks researched by Eric Bosman and Herbert Bos in 2014, solution implemented by Theo de Raadt in May 2016, enabled by default since OpenBSD 6.0. Library order randomization : In rc(8), re-link libc.so , libcrypto , and ld.so on startup, placing the objects in a random order. Theo de Raadt and Robert Peichaer, May 2016, enabled by default since OpenBSD 6.0 and 6.2.

: In rc(8), re-link , , and on startup, placing the objects in a random order. Theo de Raadt and Robert Peichaer, May 2016, enabled by default since OpenBSD 6.0 and 6.2. Kernel-assisted lazy-binding for W^X safety in multi-threaded programs. A new syscall kbind(2) permits lazy-binding to be W^X safe in multi-threaded programs. Implemented for OpenBSD 5.9 by Philip Guenther in July 2015.

Process layouts in memory tightened to remove execute permission from all segmented, non-instruction data and to remove write permission from data that is only modified during loading and relocation. By combining the RELRO (Read-Only after Relocation) design from the GNU project with the original ASLR work from OpenBSD 3.3 and strict lazy-binding work from OpenBSD 5.9, this is applied to not just a subset of programs and libraries but rather to all programs and libraries. Implemented for OpenBSD 6.1 by Philip Guenther in August 2016.

Use of fork+exec in privilege separated programs . The strategy is to give each process a fresh & unique address space for ASLR, stack protector -- as protection against address space discovery attacks. Implemented first by Damien Miller (sshd(8) 2004), Claudio Jeker (bgpd(8), 2015), Eric Faurot (smtpd(8), 2016), Rafael Zalamena (various, 2016), and others.

. The strategy is to give each process a fresh & unique address space for ASLR, stack protector -- as protection against address space discovery attacks. Implemented first by Damien Miller (sshd(8) 2004), Claudio Jeker (bgpd(8), 2015), Eric Faurot (smtpd(8), 2016), Rafael Zalamena (various, 2016), and others. trapsleds : Reduction of incidental NOP instructions/sequences in the instruction stream which could be useful potentially for ROP attack methods to innaccurately target gadgets. These NOP sequences are converted into trap sequences where possible. Todd Mortimer and Theo de Raadt, June 2017.

: Reduction of incidental NOP instructions/sequences in the instruction stream which could be useful potentially for ROP attack methods to innaccurately target gadgets. These NOP sequences are converted into trap sequences where possible. Todd Mortimer and Theo de Raadt, June 2017. Kernel relinking at boot : the .o files of the kernel are relinked in random order from a link-kit, before every reboot. This provides substantial interior randomization in the kernel's text and data segments for layout and relative branches/calls. Basically a unique address space for each kernel boot, similar to the userland fork+exec model described above but for the kernel. Theo de Raadt, June 2017.

: the .o files of the kernel are relinked in random order from a link-kit, before every reboot. This provides substantial interior randomization in the kernel's text and data segments for layout and relative branches/calls. Basically a unique address space for each kernel boot, similar to the userland fork+exec model described above but for the kernel. Theo de Raadt, June 2017. Rearranged i386/amd64 register allocator order in clang(1) to reduce polymorphic RET instructions: Todd Mortimer, November 20, 2017.

Reencoding of i386/amd64 instruction sequences to avoid embedded polymorphic RET instructions. Enhancements to clang(1) Todd Mortimer, April 28, 2018 and onwards.

MAP_STACK addition to mmap(2) allows opportunistic verification that the stack-register points at stack memory, therefore catching pivots to non-stack memory (sometimes used in ROP attacks). Theo de Raadt, April 12, 2018.

addition to mmap(2) allows opportunistic verification that the stack-register points at stack memory, therefore catching pivots to non-stack memory (sometimes used in ROP attacks). Theo de Raadt, April 12, 2018. RETGUARD is a replacement for the stack-protector which uses a per-function random cookie (located in the read-only ELF .openbsd.randomdata section) to consistency-check the return address on the stack. Implemented for AMD64 and ARM64 by Todd Mortimer in OpenBSD 6.4, and for Octeon in OpenBSD 6.7.

is a replacement for the which uses a per-function random cookie (located in the read-only ELF section) to consistency-check the return address on the stack. Implemented for AMD64 and ARM64 by Todd Mortimer in OpenBSD 6.4, and for Octeon in OpenBSD 6.7. MAP_CONCEAL addition to mmap(2) disallows memory pages to be written to core dumps, preventing accidental exposure of private information. Theo de Raadt, Mark Kettenis and Scott Soule Cheloha, February 2, 2019.

addition to mmap(2) disallows memory pages to be written to core dumps, preventing accidental exposure of private information. Theo de Raadt, Mark Kettenis and Scott Soule Cheloha, February 2, 2019. Similar to the opportunistic verification in MAP_STACK , system-calls can no longer be performed from PROT_WRITE memory. Theo de Raadt, June 2, 2019.

, system-calls can no longer be performed from PROT_WRITE memory. Theo de Raadt, June 2, 2019. System calls may only be performed from selected code regions (main program, ld.so, libc.so, and sigtramp). Theo de Raadt, November 28, 2019.

Functions

issetugid(2): Theo de Raadt, August 25, 1996, OpenBSD 2.0

arc4random(3): David Mazieres, December 28, 1996, OpenBSD 2.1

bcrypt(3): Implemented by Niels Provos and David Mazieres Imported February 13, 1997 and first released with OpenBSD 2.1.

strlcpy(3), strlcat(3): Todd Miller and Theo de Raadt, July 1, 1998, OpenBSD 2.4

strtonum(3): Ted Unangst, Todd Miller, and Theo de Raadt, May 3, 2004, OpenBSD 3.6

imsg: Message passing API, written by Henning Brauer. In libutil since May 26, 2010, OpenBSD 4.8; used by various daemons before that.

timingsafe_bcmp(3): Damien Miller, July 13, 2010, OpenBSD 4.9

explicit_bzero(3): Ted Unangst and Matthew Dempsky, January 22, 2014, OpenBSD 5.5

ohash: Written and maintained by Marc Espie. In libutil since May 12, 2014, OpenBSD 5.6; used by make(1) and m4(1) before that.

asr: Replacement resolver written and maintained by Eric Faurot. Imported April 14, 2012; activated on March 26, 2014, OpenBSD 5.6.

reallocarray(3): Theo de Raadt and Ted Unangst, April 22, 2014, OpenBSD 5.6

getentropy(2): Matthew Dempsky and Theo de Raadt, June 13, 2014, OpenBSD 5.6

sendsyslog(2): Theo de Raadt, July 10, 2014, OpenBSD 5.6

timingsafe_memcmp(3): Matthew Dempsky, July 13, 2014, OpenBSD 5.6

pledge(2): Theo de Raadt, July 19, 2015, OpenBSD 5.9

getpwnam_shadow(3), getpwuid_shadow(3): Ted Unangst and Theo de Raadt, November 18, 2015, OpenBSD 5.9

recallocarray(3): Otto Moerbeek, Joel Sing and Theo de Raadt, March 6, 2017, OpenBSD 6.1

freezero(3): Otto Moerbeek, April 10, 2017, OpenBSD 6.2

unveil(2): Theo de Raadt and Bob Beck, July 13, 2018, OpenBSD 6.4

malloc_conceal(3) and calloc_conceal(3): Otto Moerbeek, May 10, 2019, OpenBSD 6.5

ober: ASN.1 basic encoding rules API, written by Claudio Jeker and Reyk Flöter, maintained by Rob Pierce and Martijn van Duren; started in 2006/07, moved to libutil on May 11, 2019, OpenBSD 6.6

Programs and subsystems

ypbind(8), ypset(8), ypcat(1), ypmatch(1), ypwhich(1), and libc support: Started by Theo de Raadt. Imported April 26, 1993 and first released with NetBSD 0.9.

ypserv(8): Started by Mats O. Jansson in 1994. Imported October 23, 1995 and first released with OpenBSD 2.0.

mopd(8): Started by Mats O. Jansson in 1993. Imported September 21, 1996 and first released with OpenBSD 2.0.

AnonCVS: Designed and implemented by Chuck Cranor and Theo de Raadt in 1995 (paper, slides)

aucat(1): Started by Kenneth Stailey. Imported January 2, 1997 and first released with OpenBSD 2.1. Now maintained by Alexandre Ratchov.

OpenSSH including ssh(1), scp(1), sftp(1), ssh-add(1), ssh-agent(1), ssh-keygen(1), sshd(8), sftp-server(8): Started by Aaron Campbell, Bob Beck, Dug Song, Markus Friedl, Niels Provos, and Theo de Raadt as a fork of SSH 1.2.12 by Tatu Ylonen. Imported September 26, 1999 and first released with OpenBSD 2.6. Now maintained by Markus Friedl, Damien Miller, Darren Tucker, and Theo de Raadt.

mg(1): Started by Dave Conroy in November 1986. Imported February 25, 2000 and first released with OpenBSD 2.7. Now maintained by Mark Lumsden.

m4(1): Originally implemented by Ozan Yigit and Richard A. O'Keefe for 4.3BSD-Reno. Considerably extended and maintained by Marc Espie since 1999.

pf(4), pfctl(8), pflogd(8), authpf(8), ftp-proxy(8): Started by Daniel Hartmeier as a replacement for the non-free ipf by Darren Reed. Imported June 24, 2001 and first released with OpenBSD 3.0. Now maintained by Henning Brauer.

systrace(4), systrace(1): Started by Niels Provos. Imported June 4, 2002 and first released with OpenBSD 3.2. Deleted after OpenBSD 5.9 because pledge(2) is even better.

spamd(8): Written by Bob Beck. Imported December 21, 2002 and first released with OpenBSD 3.3.

dc(1): Written and maintained by Otto Moerbeek. Imported September 19, 2003 and first released with OpenBSD 3.5.

bc(1): Written and maintained by Otto Moerbeek. Imported September 25, 2003 and first released with OpenBSD 3.5.

sensorsd(8): Started by Henning Brauer. Imported September 24, 2003 and first released with OpenBSD 3.5. Reworked by Constantine A. Murenin.

pkg_add(1): Written and maintained by Marc Espie. Imported October 16, 2003 and first released with OpenBSD 3.5.

carp(4): Written by Mickey Shalayeff, Markus Friedl, Marco Pfatschbacher, and Ryan McBride. Imported October 17, 2003 and first released with OpenBSD 3.5.

OpenBGPD including bgpd(8) and bgpctl(8): Written and maintained by Henning Brauer and Claudio Jeker, and also maintained by Peter Hessler. Imported December 17, 2003 and first released with OpenBSD 3.5.

dhclient(8): Started by Ted Lemon and Elliot Poger in 1996. Imported January 18, 2004 and first released with OpenBSD 3.5. Reworked by Henning Brauer. Now maintained by Kenneth Westerback.

dhcpd(8): Started by Ted Lemon in 1995. Imported April 13, 2004 and first released with OpenBSD 3.6. Reworked by Henning Brauer. Now maintained by Kenneth Westerback.

hotplugd(8): Started by Alexander Yurchenko. Imported May 30, 2004 and first released with OpenBSD 3.6.

OpenNTPD including ntpd(8) and ntpctl(8): Written and maintained by Henning Brauer. Imported May 31, 2004 and first released with OpenBSD 3.6. Portable version maintained by Brent Cook.

dpb(1): Started by Nikolay Sturm on August 10, 2004; first available for OpenBSD 3.6. Rewritten and maintained by Marc Espie since August 20, 2010.

ospfd(8), ospfctl(8): Started by Esben Norby and Claudio Jeker. Imported January 28, 2005 and first released with OpenBSD 3.7.

ifstated(8): Started by Marco Pfatschbacher and Ryan McBride. Imported January 23, 2004 and first released with OpenBSD 3.8.

bioctl(8): Started by Marco Peereboom. Imported March 29, 2005 and first released with OpenBSD 3.8.

hostapd(8): Written by Reyk Flöter. Imported May 26, 2005 and first released with OpenBSD 3.8.

watchdogd(8): Started by Marc Balmer. Imported August 8, 2005 and first released with OpenBSD 3.8.

sdiff(1): Written by Ray Lai. Imported December 27, 2005 and first released with OpenBSD 3.9.

dvmrpd(8), dvmrpctl(8): Started by Esben Norby. Imported June 1, 2006 and first released with OpenBSD 4.0.

ripd(8), ripctl(8): Started by Michele Marchetto. Imported October 18, 2006 and first released with OpenBSD 4.1.

pkg-config(1): Started by Chris Kuethe and Marc Espie. Imported November 27, 2006 and first released with OpenBSD 4.1. Now maintained by Jasper Lievisse Adriaanse.

relayd(8) with relayctl(8): Started by Pierre-Yves Ritschard and Reyk Flöter. Imported December 16, 2006 and first released with OpenBSD 4.1. Now maintained by Sebastian Benoit.



cwm(1): Started by Marius Aamodt Eriksen in 2004. Imported April 27, 2007 and first released with OpenBSD 4.2. Now maintained by Okan Demirmen. Portable version maintained by Leah Neukirchen.

ospf6d(8), ospf6ctl(8): Started by Esben Norby and Claudio Jeker. Imported October 8, 2007 and first released with OpenBSD 4.2.

libtool(1): Written by Steven Mestdagh and Marc Espie. Imported October 28, 2007 and first available for OpenBSD 4.3. Now maintained by Marc Espie, Jasper Lievisse Adriaanse, and Antoine Jacoutot.

snmpd(8): Started by Reyk Flöter. Imported December 5, 2007 and first released with OpenBSD 4.3. Now maintained by Martijn van Duren.

sysmerge(8): Written and maintained by Antoine Jacoutot, originally forked from mergemaster by Douglas Barton. Imported April 22, 2008, first released with OpenBSD 4.4.

ypldap(8): Started by Pierre-Yves Ritschard. Imported June 26, 2008 and first released with OpenBSD 4.4.

OpenSMTPD including smtpd(8), smtpctl(8), makemap(8): Started by Gilles Chehade. Imported November 1, 2008 and first released with OpenBSD 4.6. Now maintained by Gilles Chehade and Eric Faurot.

tmux, tmux(1): Started in 2007 and maintained by Nicholas Marriott. Imported June 1, 2009, first released with OpenBSD 4.6.

ldpd(8), ldpctl(8): Started by Michele Marchetto. Imported June 1, 2009 and first released with OpenBSD 4.6. Now maintained by Claudio Jeker.

mandoc including mandoc(1), man(1), apropos(1), makewhatis(8), man.cgi(8): Started by Kristaps Dzonsons in November 2008. Imported April 6, 2009, first released with OpenBSD 4.8. Now maintained by Ingo Schwarze.

ldapd(8), ldapctl(8): Written by Martin Hedenfalk. Imported May 31, 2010 and first released with OpenBSD 4.8.

OpenIKED including iked(8) and ikectl(8): Started by Reyk Flöter. Imported June 3, 2010 and first released with OpenBSD 4.8. Now maintained by Tobias Heider.

iscsid(8), iscsictl(8): Written and maintained by Claudio Jeker. Imported September 24, 2010 and first released with OpenBSD 4.9.

rc.d(8), rc.subr(8): Written and maintained by Robert Nagy and Antoine Jacoutot. Imported October 26, 2010 and first released with OpenBSD 4.9.

tftpd(8): Written and maintained by David Gwynne. Imported March 2, 2012 and first released with OpenBSD 5.2.

npppd(8), npppctl(8): Started by Internet Initiative Japan Inc. Imported January 11, 2010, first released with OpenBSD 5.3. Maintained by YASUOKA Masahiko.

ldomd(8), ldomctl(8): Written and maintained by Mark Kettenis. Imported October 26, 2012 and first released with OpenBSD 5.3.

sndiod(8): Written and maintained by Alexandre Ratchov. Imported November 23, 2012 and first released with OpenBSD 5.3.

cu(1): Written and maintained by Nicholas Marriott. Imported July 10, 2012 and first released with OpenBSD 5.4.

identd(8): Written and maintained by David Gwynne. Imported March 18, 2013 and first released with OpenBSD 5.4.

slowcgi(8): Written and maintained by Florian Obser. Imported May 23, 2013 and first released with OpenBSD 5.4.

signify(1): Written and maintained by Ted Unangst. Imported December 31, 2013 and first released with OpenBSD 5.5.

htpasswd(1): Written and maintained by Florian Obser. Imported March 17, 2014 and first released with OpenBSD 5.6.

LibreSSL: Started by Ted Unangst, Bob Beck, Joel Sing, Miod Vallat, Philip Guenther, and Theo de Raadt on April 13, 2014, as a fork of OpenSSL 1.0.1g. First released with OpenBSD 5.6. Portable version maintained by Brent Cook.

httpd(8): Started by Reyk Flöter. Imported July 12, 2014 and first released with OpenBSD 5.6. Now maintained by Florian Obser.

rcctl(8): Written and maintained by Antoine Jacoutot. Imported August 19, 2014 and first released with OpenBSD 5.7.

file(1): Rewritten from scratch and maintained by Nicholas Marriott. Imported April 24, 2015 and first released with OpenBSD 5.8.

doas(1): Written and maintained by Ted Unangst. Imported July 16, 2015 and first released with OpenBSD 5.8.

radiusd(8): Written and maintained by YASUOKA Masahiko. Imported July 21, 2015 and first released with OpenBSD 5.8.

eigrpd(8), eigrpctl(8): Written and maintained by Renato Westphal. Imported October 2, 2015 and first released with OpenBSD 5.9.

vmm(4), vmd(8), vmctl(8): Written by Mike Larkin and Reyk Flöter. Imported November 13, 2015 and first released with OpenBSD 5.9.

pdisk(8): Originally written by Eryk Vershen in 1996-1998, rewritten and maintained by Kenneth Westerback since January 11, 2016 and first released with OpenBSD 5.9.

mknod(8): Original version from Version 6 AT&T UNIX (1975), last rewritten by Marc Espie on March 5, 2016 and first released with OpenBSD 6.0.

audioctl(1): Originally written by Lennart Augustsson in 1997, rewritten and maintained by Alexandre Ratchov since June 21, 2016 and first released with OpenBSD 6.0.

switchd(8), switchctl(8): Written by Reyk Flöter. Imported July 19, 2016; released with OpenBSD 6.1.

acme-client(1): Written by Kristaps Dzonsons, imported August 31, 2016; released with OpenBSD 6.1.

syspatch(8): Written and maintained by Antoine Jacoutot. Imported September 5, 2016; released with OpenBSD 6.1.

ping(8): Restructured to include IPv6 functionality and maintained by Florian Obser. The separate ping6(8) was superseded on September 17, 2016, and the new, combined version was released with OpenBSD 6.1.

xenodm(1): Cleaned-up fork of xdm(1) maintained by Matthieu Herrb. Imported October 23, 2016; released with OpenBSD 6.1.

ocspcheck(8): Written and maintained by Bob Beck. Imported January 24, 2017; released with OpenBSD 6.1.

slaacd(8): Written and maintained by Florian Obser. Imported March 18, 2017; released with OpenBSD 6.2.

rad(8): Written and maintained by Florian Obser. Imported July 10, 2018; released with OpenBSD 6.4.

unwind(8): Written and maintained by Florian Obser. Imported January 23, 2019; released with OpenBSD 6.5.

openrsync(1): Written by Kristaps Dzonsons. Imported February 10, 2019; released with OpenBSD 6.5.

sysupgrade(8): Written by Christian Weisgerber, Florian Obser, and Theo de Raadt. Imported April 25, 2019; released with OpenBSD 6.6.

snmp(1): Written and maintained by Martijn van Duren. Imported August 9, 2019; released with OpenBSD 6.6.

rpki-client(8): Written by Kristaps Dzonsons, maintained by Claudio Jeker. Imported June 17, 2019; to be released with OpenBSD 6.7.

Projects maintained by OpenBSD developers outside OpenBSD