Common request, but no. First and foremost, the accounting overhead is annoying. If I spend two days at a hackathon working on smp, do I have to charge the hotel to a different account? Can I pretend the libressl work I did for free this week is exchangeable for paid work during a hackathon? It very quickly becomes a mess.
I think you get a pretty decent return on investment even if your dollars support openbsd features you don't use. All of us working on libressl are working in it because we work on openbsd, and we work on openbsd because others have made it a viable platform for us. Basically you may not care about openbsd desktops, but I do, and I'm only working on libressl because of that. Paying me market rates for this work would get a lot less done.
Particular example: libressl exists in part because of previous work done on exploit mitigation. Without that, there'd be no libressl.
Or, to put it another way, if you were to donate to me, I'd probably turn around and forward that money to openbsd foundation anyway.
All that said, you can mention that your donation is for libressl. That doesn't guarantee anything, but I'm sure there are unofficial tallies.
I think you get a pretty decent return on investment even if your dollars support openbsd features you don't use. All of us working on libressl are working in it because we work on openbsd, and we work on openbsd because others have made it a viable platform for us. Basically you may not care about openbsd desktops, but I do, and I'm only working on libressl because of that. Paying me market rates for this work would get a lot less done.
Particular example: libressl exists in part because of previous work done on exploit mitigation. Without that, there'd be no libressl.
Or, to put it another way, if you were to donate to me, I'd probably turn around and forward that money to openbsd foundation anyway.
All that said, you can mention that your donation is for libressl. That doesn't guarantee anything, but I'm sure there are unofficial tallies.