diff --git a/en/commercial/consulting.sgml b/en/commercial/consulting.sgml index 939add6096..fc58f45221 100644 --- a/en/commercial/consulting.sgml +++ b/en/commercial/consulting.sgml @@ -1,236 +1,236 @@ - + %includes; %vendorincludes; ]> - + &header; &vendorintroduction;

Consulting Services

Commercial Vendors Home &footer; diff --git a/en/commercial/hardware.sgml b/en/commercial/hardware.sgml index e2b90185c3..0a9cbdb2c8 100644 --- a/en/commercial/hardware.sgml +++ b/en/commercial/hardware.sgml @@ -1,248 +1,248 @@ - + %includes; %vendorincludes; ]> - + &header; &vendorintroduction;

Hardware Services

Commercial Vendors Home &footer; diff --git a/en/commercial/misc.sgml b/en/commercial/misc.sgml index 479a6ab54b..87ca0649ac 100644 --- a/en/commercial/misc.sgml +++ b/en/commercial/misc.sgml @@ -1,55 +1,55 @@ - + %includes; %vendorincludes; ]> - + &header; &vendorintroduction;

Miscellaneous Services

  • The Bookpool offers 30% discounts on the new edition of The Design and Implementation of the 4.4BSD Operating System, a must-have for any FreeBSD bookshelf.

  • -
  • Walnut Creek CDROM +
  • Walnut Creek CDROM sells the complete FreeBSD distribution on CD-ROM, and more!

  • The FreeBSD Mall can provide everything you may want or need to enhance your FreeBSD experience. Are you new to FreeBSD? Or, perhaps you've been using it for years? We have something for you. We have the latest FreeBSD CDROMs, helpful books, colorful shirts and hats, and online copies of the FreeBSD Newsletter. Stay current with FreeBSD and put it to work for you!

  • CD HOUSE italia Group is an official distributor for Walnut Creek in Italy and sells FreeBSD CD-ROMs with other selection of titles.

  • Liebscher & Partner are now shipping the stuffed daemon.

Commercial Vendors Home &footer; diff --git a/en/commercial/software.sgml b/en/commercial/software.sgml index 33d5fdca92..ed9a1f9fe9 100644 --- a/en/commercial/software.sgml +++ b/en/commercial/software.sgml @@ -1,608 +1,608 @@ - + %includes; %vendorincludes; ]> - + &header; &vendorintroduction;

Software Services

    -
  • Aker Firewall is a +
  • Aker Firewall is a Brazilian firewall solution which runs on FreeBSD. The firewall provides a stateful filtering engine, Network Address Translation (NAT), cryptography (with manual key exchange and SKIP), automatic responses to pre-configured events and remote administration by a easy-to-use graphical interface which runs on many different platforms. For more information, please visit our web site at http://www.aker.com.br or send a + HREF="http://www.aker.com.br/">http://www.aker.com.br or send a e-mail to info@mail.aker.com.br.

  • -
  • Altera SQL Server +
  • Altera SQL Server is a multi-user, relational database with ODBC and JDBC option, demanding very few resources. The Altera client-server architecture allows numerous concurrent users. Altera SQL server supports CGI and is ideal for Web applications since it transfers MIME-typed BLOBS directly to the web browser via http protocol (acting as a web server). For more information please visit our site at - http://www.altera.gr. + http://www.altera.gr.

  • -
  • Coyote Point +
  • Coyote Point System's Equalizer is a server management appliance and load balancing system for building clustered arrays of TCP/IP servers. Equalizer acts as a gateway and kernel-mode network address translation engine which permits an arbitrary number of servers to sit behind a single IP address and TCP port. Several different load balancing policies are available and automatic server failure detection provides high-availability. Equalizer works with any server OS, and is in use in high-volume FreeBSD powered sites such as The Internet Movie Database
    + HREF="http://www.imdb.com/">The Internet Movie Database
    FreeQualizer, the freely available beta version of the Equalizer software turns a FreeBSD 2.2.6 system into a fully functional server load balancing system. FreeQualizer is limited to a single virtual cluster with two servers and does not include the graphical reporting facility and secure administration facilities included with the commercial product.

  • EasySQL is an ODBC-like database independent C/C++ library developed by Andrew Maltsev (AM'SOFT ). Full source code is available.

  • AstroArch Consulting, Inc. develops and licenses its ISP Billing and Tracking System or BATS for FreeBSD as well as thirteen other Operating Systems. For more information, check out the web pages http://www.astroarch.com/, send email to info@astroarch.com or call (512) 990-9711.

  • Ballista is a network security auditing tool for evaluation of security postures in areas where high assurance levels are critical. Ballista is primarily designed to audit the remote security aspects of networks and runs quite well under FreeBSD.

  • -
  • BRU from +
  • BRU from Enhanced Software Technologies is a very powerful and reliable tape backup system. It offers per-file compression, an improved tape format with three different kinds of verification, and many safety checks to insure data integrity. The "BSD/OS 1.1" version works well with FreeBSD.

  • -
  • CheapBytes, +
  • CheapBytes, a company that specializes in low cost technical products, now has FreeBSD 2.2.6 available on CD-ROM. This single CD-ROM includes all files necessary to install and run FreeBSD as well as XFree86 3.3.2. Included also is an EZSTART script to assist in creation of boot floppies. For further information see http://www.cheapbytes.com/ or send e-mail to: sales@cheapbytes.com.

  • Covalent Raven SSL Module presents an SSL module for the ever popular Apache Web Server. Raven is an Apache module offering the ability to add secure server functionality to your Apache using the RSA encryption algorithms available to residents of North America.
    Email: info@raven.covalent.net. Voice: 402.441.5710. FAX: 402.441.5720.

  • CSR Corp. is a Portland, OR, based consulting company with offices in Portland, OR; San Jose, CA; and Vero Beach, FL. CSR specializes in network applications for IPSs and CLECs, applying open network technologies for complete customer solutions. CSR has been in business since 1986. Telephone: (503) 224-4789.

  • Conetic Software is offering a FREE copy of C/BASE 4GL for the FreeBSD 2.0.5 operating system. C/BASE 4GL features a powerful application development tool and database engine. Featuring a easy to user visual development environment, a scripting language, and application libraries with a C language (API) interface. The best thing about C/BASE 4GL is that it is fully portable across hardware and operating system platforms. FreeBSD to DOS, DOS to SOLARIS, SOLARIS to AIX, etc.... Your free copy of C/BASE 4GL is set to run for a maximum of 2 concurrent users and 1,000 records. Please contact us at info@conetic.com if you would like a taste of even more power and programming fun.

  • -
  • Coolworld.Com, Inc. +
  • Coolworld.Com, Inc. provides a billing package for ISP's called Internet Billing. This package was designed to handle all the billing needs for Internet service providers. It runs under MS-Windows. One piece of the software is a client/server set with a daemon that runs on a UNIX server (including FreeBSD) that allows the client to do all for their user management under a windows front end.

  • Differential, Inc. announces FileDrive 1.1, a suite of secure and extensible high-performance FTP file transfer client/server software. FileDrive provides the industry's most secure file transfer solution through the use of SSL encryption, extensive access controls, comprehensive logging, and an optional security auditing system. Differential's FileDrive EX Extranet server also provides extensible FTP access to dynamically generated content and server-based data processing. FileDrive servers are easy to configure, manage and maintain through their integrated Web-based remote administration systems. FileDrive servers are available for FreeBSD 2.x, Linux 2.x, and Solaris 2.5, with IRIX and HP/UX available soon. A 15-day evaluation version of FileDrive and FileDrive EX are available at http://www.differential.com/.

  • EtherPage(R) provides a client/server based alphanumeric paging solution for unix networks and Windows NT. A command line and web interface are available. Ideally suited for system and database administration, EtherPage allows messages to be sent automatically to support personnel based on database events, etc. Other features include links to email, integration with user written scripts, multiple recipients, pagers selected by time of day/day of week, duplicate message suppression, long message splitting/truncation, job logging, C API. Virtually all paging services are supported.

  • FairCom(r) Corporation has provided quality database development tools for the professional C programmer since 1979. FairCom is best known for its extremely portable, high performance file handler, c-tree, used by thousands of programmers worldwide. FairCom provides database technology for many popular corporations in vertical markets, embedded applications, as well as in-house applications. c-tree Plus(r) is released in full source code, royalty-free and Windows 3.1, NT, and Win95 ready. The FairCom Server for FreeBSD 2.2.1 also offers advanced heterogeneous cross-platform client/server functionality with powerful features like: industrial quality transaction processing, file mirroring, automatic disaster recovery, multi-threaded design with full client side source and flexible OEM licensing available. The FairCom ODBC Driver and Java interfaces allow end-users to access c-tree Plus applications with higher level products such as Microsoft Access, Crystal Reports, and many others. The FairCom toolset is completed with r-tree(r), a powerful report generator, and d-tree(tm) a unique development toolkit, also ported to FreeBSD. For further information, please see our web site at: http://www.faircom.com.

  • -
  • Firehunter from - Hewlett-Packard. The HP +
  • Firehunter from + Hewlett-Packard. The HP Firehunter family of intelligent, out-of-the box software solutions delivers the information you need to proactively monitor and manage your Internet services, including mail, news and Web functions. Its powerful operational capabilities and service level reports are your keys to delivering consistently high levels of service quality, improving customer satisfaction, decreasing churn and expanding revenue.

  • Gaussian 94 is the latest in the Gaussian series of electronic - structure programs by + structure programs by Gaussian Inc. It is being used in chemistry and physics research in several universities, supercomputer and research centers around the world. It is designed to model a broad range of molecular systems under a variety of conditions, performing its computations starting from the basic laws of quantum mechanics. Gaussian 94 can predict energies, molecular structures, vibrational frequencies, and numerous molecular properties for systems in the gas phase and in solution, and it can model both their ground state and excited states.

  • Herrin Software Development, Inc. offers Qddb database software, Gustar site search engines, Qbib bibliography management software, and other products that run on FreeBSD and other UNIX platforms! To download these packages or to learn more, visit: http://www.hsdi.com/.

  • HighWind Software's Cyclone, Typhoon and Breeze USENET server products are available for FreeBSD 3.0 and later. HighWind products are carrier-class Internet News Servers and are in wide-spread use at almost every major ISP involved in USENET. Free trials are available at: http://www.highwind.com/.

  • -
  • HKS, Incorporated +
  • HKS, Incorporated offers CCVS for FreeBSD. CCVS allows Unix systems to act as a POS terminal. Our APIs let people build credit card processing capabilities into just about any system that runs on any Unix we support. More details are at http://www.hks.net/products.html.

  • -
  • i-Pass Alliance +
  • i-Pass Alliance is the leading provider of global Internet roaming solutions for Internet service providers. We provide a total solution that enables ISPs to join a global network and provide convenient, low-cost worldwide access to their traveling Internet subscribers. We provide the software which enables your users to dial-in through the access points of other i-Pass partners, but still get authenticated through your own authentication server. We are an independent organization handling the financial settlement between you and other Internet service providers and enabling you to bill their subscribers for this service. There is no cost to join and no cost for the i-Pass software. The i-Pass cross-authorization and settlement software is compatible with all common authentication servers and authentication protocols including FreeBSD. For more information, please visit - our web site.

  • + our web site.

    -
  • Inlab +
  • Inlab Software GmbH offers binaries of Inlab-Scheme for FreeBSD and Linux which are free for personal or educational use. Inlab-Scheme is a R4RS compliant Scheme which is capable of reading and writing TIFF and XBM-bitmaps to and from a special internal bitmap type. With built-in primitives for image processing, Inlab-Scheme can be a general tool for tasks like optical character recognition and general analysis and processing of bitmap data.

  • Infoflex, Inc. products include: 1) SQLflex, an SQL client/server clone of Informix ESQL/C and Informix Standard engine, 2) Infoflex-4GL, a 4GL language syntactically similar to Informix and database compatable, 3) Queryflex, a point and shoot report writer that enables novice users to develop their own reports. 4) AccountFlex, a full featured accounting system for Order Entry, Inventory, Job Cost, Bill of Materials, Purchasing, A/R, A/P, G/L, and Payroll. All Infoflex products are supported on UNIX, DOS, NT, and VMS. Further information on Infoflex products can be - obtained by visiting out web site at + obtained by visiting out web site at http://www.infoflex.com, or by e-mailing us at info@infoflex.com.

  • journyx WebTime is a web-based time and attendance tracking product for engineering departments and technical consultancies or contracting firms with people on the go. It was developed on FreeBSD. Since it is web-based, it allows for worldwide collection of data.

  • Lilikoi Software has released Ceilidh, a WWW BBS. Ceilidh is a CGI program, written in C, that allows Web pages to host bulletin boards that are self-maintaining and both server and browser-independent, while at the same time offering enormous flexibility.

  • MathTools, Ltd. is offering solutions for scientists and engineers. Check out our MATCOM, the Matlab to C++ Compiler and Matrix< LIB >, our C++ Matrix Class Library. Both are available for download - from our home page, + from our home page, http://www.mathtools.com for a 30 day evaluation period. To receive more information about our products, email us at info@mathtools.com or FAX us at 1-888-MATHTOOLS.

  • Mercantec, Inc. develops SoftCart(tm), a complete retail electronic commerce solution for marketing and selling goods and services on the World Wide Web. Mercantec sells its products through a worldwide network of Internet Service Providers (ISPs) and Web hosting service providers, Web consultants, software developers, integrators and OEMs. Visit us on the Web at http://www.mercantec.com, contact us through email at info@mercantec.com, or call us at (630) 305-3200.

  • NAG, Ltd. produces a Fortran 90 Compiler for most flavors of Unix (including FreeBSD), VMS, and the PC. The NAGWare f90 Compiler is a full implementation of Fortran 90 (which by definition includes Fortran 77) plus a single processor implementation of HPF. For further information, in North America, email naginfo@nag.com, and elsewhere, email infodesk@nag.co.uk. Or, see our web pages at http://www.nag.co.uk/.

  • -
  • NetCon Corporation +
  • NetCon Corporation , established in 1985 and with over 10,000 installed servers, is the leading supplier of NetWare compatible operating systems and Internet Gateways for standard UNIX platforms. NetCon offers a complete line of systems for FreeBSD, SUN Solaris, SCO UNIX/ODT and IBM AIX RS6000 serving from 5 to 1000 users. Services include; Full Internet access from NetWare/WIN95/Windows workstations over IPX/SPX, X Windows over IPX/SPX, NetWare file and print services, NetWare Client services for UNIX, High-performance, DOS/Windows Terminal Emulation.

  • -
  • Netsville, Inc. +
  • Netsville, Inc. sells an Internet merchandising system called - Hazel which allows webmasters, + Hazel which allows webmasters, web consultants, or regular shopkeeps to create a web storefront on the Internet. She will interface with web servers using SSL for security and various transaction processors for credit card authorization. The developers actually wrote Hazel using FreeBSD as their operating system. If you need a flexible shopping cart solution for the Internet, Hazel is your best bet.

  • Oracle Video Server is a software product which stores full-screen, full-motion video and CD-quality audio, and then streams it to NC, PC, and Mac clients over standard networks. Software RAID with real-time rebuild guarantees uninterrupted video stream delivery even in the event of disk or controller failure. Included with the Oracle Video Server is client software which allows display of video - in Netscape-compatible + in Netscape-compatible browsers, Java applets, Macromedia Director or Authorware, Asymetrix IconAuthor, or user-written applications. Integration with the Oracle8 database (optional) allows for a complete, enterprise-wide information management solution.  The FreeBSD (aka NCOS) version of  Oracle Video Server is completely compatible with versions for other platforms such as nCUBE, Sun, HP , DEC, SGI, IBM, SNI/Pyramid, and WinNT.

  • -
  • Perforce Software +
  • Perforce Software produces PERFORCE -- the FAST Software Configuration Management System for many UNIX platforms and NT. More capable than freeware tools, more applicable than solutions from academia, and more usable than available commercial products, PERFORCE manages software projects comprising thousands of source files shared by dozens of engineers across many heterogeneous platforms and geographically distributed locations. Documentation and fully functional versions (but limited to two client workspaces) can be downloaded from the Web pages. For non-commercial users on FreeBSD, we offer servers with unlimited client workspaces for $1. Perforce Software can be reached at info@perforce.com or 1 (510) 865-8720.

  • -
  • RealNetworks, Inc. +
  • RealNetworks, Inc. offers its RealPlayer, RealServer, and RealEncoder for FreeBSD. The free RealPlayer allows you to play live and on-demand audio over 14.4Kps and faster connections. All you have to do is click on a RealAudio link from your Web browser and audio begins playing instantly. Check out - The RealMedia Guide to access + The RealMedia Guide to access thousands of sites offering music, news, live radio stations, live events etc. The RealServer allows your web site to deliver live and on-demand audio, video, and animation over the Internet or your company network. A free version of the RealServer called the Basic Server is available.

  • - REBOL is a new network-based + REBOL is a new network-based messaging language that increases productivity, cuts application size, and reduces application time-to-market. The language is human-centric, ins tead of computer-centric, and offers a new alternative to anachronistic programming languages like Java and C++ and s cripting languages like PERL and Tcl. REBOL is compact, platform independent, and functions over a network or on a single system. It is ideally suited for webmasters, technicians, hobbyists, educators, experimenters, and any one who requires a simple, customizable, robust, easy-to-understand language. Download The Language of the Free(tm) now! http://www.rebol.com/downloads.html

  • RTD provides an ISP billing package for ISPs using FreeBSD called UTA

  • Sane Solutions, LLC offers NetTracker, one of the most powerful, yet easy to use Internet usage tracking programs on the market today. NetTracker allows marketing professionals, webmasters and ISPs to get the essential information they need to make informed decisions regarding their web sites. NetTracker answers the questions: Who is visiting your web site? Where are they coming from? When are they coming to your web site? How long are they staying on your web site? What pages are they viewing? What web browsers are they using? How are people finding your web site? What keywords are people using to find your web site in the search engines? How are the banner ads performing on your web site? And much, much more... A demonstration of NetTracker can be seen at http://www.sane.com/demo/, and a free 30 day evaluation copy can be downloaded from http://www.sane.com/eval.

  • - Serengeti Systems + Serengeti Systems provides PC to mainframe communication packages over Bisync and SDLC lines. We support FreeBSD as well as DOS/Win 3.x/Win95/Win NT/SCO/AIX/OS2. - For more information, reference + For more information, reference www.serengeti.com, e-mail us at sales@serengeti.com, or call (800) 634-3122.

  • Solid Information Technology Ltd is the maker of a unique data management product, SOLID Server. It is designed for robust operation in demanding environments. Its small size and ease-of-use makes it ideal for deployment to web sites, various embedded systems and other environments where databases need to operate unattended. Free evaluation copies maybe downloaded from http://www.solidtech.com/market/eval/index.htm.

  • -
  • +
  • Shpink Software offers the The Network Shell. The Network Shell provides for a Perl and Shell environment to allow you to perform secure automated and/or interactive remote administration of UNIX and Windows 95/NT hosts from the local host without the need to telnet, ftp, or .rhosts. You get access to remote files, processes, commands, and other data easily and securely from your local Shell and Perl environment. No more need to telnet, ftp, or use .rhosts to get access to your remote data. To download a fully functional evaluation, or to get more information, please visit our Web Site + HREF="http://www.shpink.com/">Web Site For more information send email to info@shpink.com or call us at 1 650 525-1537 (Voice), 1 888 I WANT NSH (Toll Free Voice).

  • Stalker Software, Inc. offers CommuniGate Pro, The + HREF="http://www.stalker.com/CommuniGatePro/">CommuniGate Pro, The Internet messaging server. Based on the Stalker Foundation framework, it employs the native services of all major operating systems including Windows 95/98, Windows NT, the Apple Rhapsody, Linux, Solaris, FreeBSD and others. The CommuniGate Pro server takes full advantage of modern multi-threaded and multi-processor environments, and includes anti-spam protection, administration via the Web, extensive multi-domain support, dial-up capabilities, unique IMAP multi-mailbox features and designed to provide access to hundreds of thousand accounts, and to relay mail on the most heavily loaded sites. Download the FREE Trial version from www.stalker.com or e-mail Stalker Software Sales

  • Syntunix Technologies, LLC. specializes in the development of enterprise solutions to integrate Microsoft's Windows NT with UNIX operating systems. The team is comprised of individuals with extensive knowledge of both Windows NT and UNIX committed to developing productivity tools for System Administrators and IT management in mixed OS environments.

  • Vector Systems Limited sells the MED Screen Editor for FreeBSD & HP-UX. This editor is particularly familiar to PCS Cadmus users in the German CAD industry.

  • -
  • VirtuFlex +
  • VirtuFlex Software produces a versatile tool called VirtuFlex which allows web developers to build dynamic web pages without CGI programming. It integrates databases, email, faxing, and telephony with the web. VirtuFlex is available for most Unix platforms, including FreeBSD.

  • -
  • Xi Graphics +
  • Xi Graphics offers commercial grade graphical software enhancements for FreeBSD. AcceleratedX Server completely supports over 400 different graphics adapters from over 40 vendors, including many partially supported or not included with XFree86. Download a free demonstration from ftp.xig.com. Also utilize the Common Desktop Environment (CDE) with AcceleratedX CDE, Motif v2.0 runtine + development environment with AcceleratedX Motif, and 3D graphics with AcceleratedX OpenGL. For more information email sales@xig.com or call +1.303.298.7478.

  • -
  • XVScan +
  • XVScan allows you to use your HP ScanJet scanner under FreeBSD. It is a commercial product based on John Bradley's xv.

  • Web Crossing, by Lundeen & Associates, is a conferencing server for the intranet/extranet and World Wide Web providing discussion forums and chat rooms. Web Crossing is a groupware application server, accessisble with any Web browser, via most Web servers. It makes communication more efficient and productive than newsgroups or email mailing lists. Contact L & A at sales@lundeen.com, +1 510 521 5855 (voice) or +1 510 522 6647 (fax).

  • YARD Software GmbH provides its relational ANSI-SQL database for FreeBSD systems. YARD-SQL is available on most UNIX systems and has interfaces for C, ODBC (MS Windows) and JDBC (Java). A Private Edition for private, non-commercial use can be downloaded from ftp://ftp.yard.de/pub/private/.

  • Zeus Technology Limited offer Zeus Server for FreeBSD. Zeus Server is an advanced, powerful full-featured commercial grade web server designed with exceptional performance, minimal machine resource requirements and ease of administration in mind. Free evaluation copies may be downloaded.

Commercial Vendors Home &footer; diff --git a/en/docproj/translations.sgml b/en/docproj/translations.sgml index 61aad09e78..872cd6e43a 100644 --- a/en/docproj/translations.sgml +++ b/en/docproj/translations.sgml @@ -1,78 +1,78 @@ - + %includes; ]> - + &header;

The FreeBSD Korean Documentation Project

Web: http://www.kr.freebsd.org/projects/doc-kr/
E-Mail: doc@kr.freebsd.org
Documents currently at working
Handbook

The FreeBSD Japanese Documentation Project

Web: http://www.jp.freebsd.org/doc-jp/
E-Mail: doc-jp@jp.freebsd.org
Documents available
Handbook, FAQ, Web, FreeBSD NewsLetter Issue #2
Documents currently at working
FreeBSD Tutorials

The FreeBSD German Documentation Project

Web: http://www.de.freebsd.org/de/uebersetzung.html
E-Mail: de-bsd-translators@de.freebsd.org
Documents currently at working
Handbook

The FreeBSD Spanish Documentation Project

Web: http://www.es.freebsd.org/es/
E-Mail: jesusr@es.freebsd.org
Documents available
FAQ
Documents currently at working
Handbook

The French FreeBSD Documentation Project

-Web: http://www.freebsd-fr.org
+Web: http://www.freebsd-fr.org
Mailling list available
Send a mail to majordomo@freebsd.francenet.frwith the words "subscribe freebsd-france" in the body of the message
Posting is allowed for the members at freebsd-fr@freebsd.francenet.fr
Documents available
FAQ
Documents currently at working
Handbook

FreeBSD Documentation Project Home &footer diff --git a/en/docs.sgml b/en/docs.sgml index 1027a3ce5a..39e25a1bbd 100644 --- a/en/docs.sgml +++ b/en/docs.sgml @@ -1,271 +1,271 @@ + %includes; ]> - + &header;

FreeBSD in the Press

The press about FreeBSD.

Year 2000 Compatibility

This is the FreeBSD project's current statement about its Year 2000 compatibility.

Newsletter

The FreeBSD Newsletter, published and distributed free of charge by Walnut Creek CDROM.

FreeBSD Real-Quick (TM) Newsletter (RQN)

A monthly (sometimes bi-weekly) newsletter containing recent developments in the FreeBSD arena. Subscribe to freebsd-announce to receive this newsletter via e-mail.

The FreeBSD Handbook

This is an evolving, comprehensive on-line resource for FreeBSD users. Please address comments and contributions to <freebsd-doc@FreeBSD.ORG>.

A Japanese translation of the handbook (EUC encoding) is also available.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

If you have a question, chances are that someone else has the same question. The most common of these have been compiled here in a brief question-answer format.

&i.new; We now offer a Japanese translation of the FAQ (EUC encoding).

Tutorials

Here lie assorted documents on various aspects of FreeBSD, FreeBSD software, and hardware. If you have comments or would like to contribute a document, please contact us at freebsd-doc@FreeBSD.org.

Additional Resources

www.FreeBSD.org is not the only place to get information on FreeBSD and various independent efforts have also produced a great deal of useful information on FreeBSD:

Books

Online documentation is useful, but any serious FreeBSD user should consider getting some of the books listed here. Most books that cover BSD systems apply well to FreeBSD.

Manual Pages

FreeBSD
For release: 1.0, 1.1, 1.1.5.1, 2.0, 2.0.5, 2.1.0, 2.1.5, 2.1.6.1, 2.1.7.1, 2.2.1, 2.2.2, 2.2.5, 2.2.6, 2.2.7, 2.2.8, 3.0-current, Ports.
Other Systems
Unix Seventh Edition (V7), 2.8BSD, 2.9.1BSD, 2.10BSD, 2.11BSD, 4.3BSD Reno, NET/2, 386BSD 0.1, 4.4BSD Lite2, Linux Slackware, NetBSD, OpenBSD, Plan 9, SunOS 4.x, SunOS 5.x, ULTRIX 4.2, and XFree86.

This service is provided courtesy of Wolfram Schneider. There is another script available with the manual pages for FreeBSD 2.0 and XFree86 release 3.1, courtesy of Hinrich Eilts.

4.4BSD Documents

If you like reading BSD manuals online, here is a hypertext version of the 4.4BSD documents from /usr/share/doc, where you would find the documents on a FreeBSD machine (if the doc distribution was installed).

Info Documents

If you like reading FreeBSD Info documents online, here is a hypertext version of the Info documents from /usr/share/info, where you would find the Info documents on a FreeBSD machine (if the info distribution was installed).

The Source Code

If you like digging your fingers into source code, here is a hypertext version of the FreeBSD kernel source. This is brought to you courtesy of Warren Toomey.

The FreeBSD Documentation Project

Like FreeBSD itself, this documentation is the product of a volunteer effort. The goals of the project are outlined here, as are the procedures for submitting corrections and new material.

&footer; diff --git a/en/internal/about.sgml b/en/internal/about.sgml index 456774bd52..fd09460b3d 100644 --- a/en/internal/about.sgml +++ b/en/internal/about.sgml @@ -1,93 +1,93 @@ - + %includes; ]> - + &header;

The Machine

The machine, www.freebsd.org, otherwise known as freefall.freebsd.org, is 400MHz Pentium Pro machine with a PCI motherboard, 256 megabytes of RAM and about 4 gigabytes of disk space. The search engine for the webpages and the mailing lists is hub.freebsd.org, a 400 MHz Pentium II with 256MB megabytes RAM and about 10 gigabytes disk space.

Naturally, the system runs under the FreeBSD operating system. The hardware and network connection have been generously provided by Walnut Creek CDROM.

A complete list of all host names in the FreeBSD.org domain is available at the The FreeBSD.org Network page.

The Software

These pages are served up by the versatile and efficient Apache http server. In addition, there are a few locally crafted CGI scripts. Indexing of these pages and the mailing list archive are provided by freewais-sf, a derivative of the CNIDR freewais.

The Urchin web statistics package is used to provide these statistics on web server usage.

The Pages

These Web pages have been put together by John Fieber <jfieber@freebsd.org> + href="http://www.freebsd.org/~jfieber/"><jfieber@freebsd.org> with input from the FreeBSD community and you. The Webmaster is <wosch@freebsd.org>. The FreeBSD pages are HTML 3.2 compliant and best viewed with your browser.

See also the FreeBSD Documentation Project

Page Design

Original page design by Megan McCormack

Blocked ping packets

- Our provider CRL are blocking ICMP + Our provider CRL are blocking ICMP completely at all times now. We are currently under attack and our T1 would be useless without the block.

Update of the FreeBSD Web Pages

The FreeBSD Web Pages are updated daily at 04:00 PDT (UTC -07:00).

Mirroring the FreeBSD Web Pages

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FreeBSD Internal Home &footer; diff --git a/en/news/news.sgml b/en/news/news.sgml index 4b3543db30..9b02ffb888 100644 --- a/en/news/news.sgml +++ b/en/news/news.sgml @@ -1,32 +1,32 @@ - + %includes; %newsincludes; ]> - + &header;

FreeBSD Newsflash

Whats new.

The FreeBSD Quick NewsLetter

FreeBSD Really-Quick(TM) NewsLetter. Things Happening in FreeBSD.

FreeBSD in the Press

The press about FreeBSD.

Newsletter

The FreeBSD Newsletter.

-

Daemon News

+

Daemon News

The industry leader in BSD news.

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FreeBSD is a rapidly developing operating system. Keeping up on the latest developments can be a chore! To keep on top of things, be sure and check this page periodically. Also, you may wish to subscribe to the freebsd-announce mailing list.

The FreeBSD Real-Quick (TM) Newsletter (RQN) is a monthly (sometimes bi-weekly) newsletter containing recent developments in the FreeBSD arena. Subscribe to freebsd-announce to recieve this newsletter via e-mail.

For a detailed description of past, present, and future releases, see the Release Information page.

December 1998

  • 13-Dec-98Walnut Creek CD-ROM has opened the FreeBSD Mall, a site devoted to the commercial aspects of FreeBSD, including add-ons, hardware, and commercial tech-support. To advertise or sell your products or services at the FreeBSD Mall, contact Walnut Creek CD-ROM.

November 1998

  • 30-Nov-98 FreeBSD 2.2.8 has been released. Please see the Release Information page for more details. Also be sure to check the release errata after installation for any late-breaking issues with 2.2.8 that you might need to be aware of.
  • 26-Nov-98FreeBSD Rocks is an initiative designed to provide the FreeBSD community with the latest FreeBSD news, software and resources. All areas include search facilities, making keyword searching of historical posts a breeze. The pages are updated daily and everyone is invited to sign up an post an article. If it happened today, you'll see it on FreeBSDRocks.

October 1998

September 1998

  • 15-Sep-98 September 15th is the scheduled date for entering BETA with the 3.0-current tree. As all of you already (should) know, 3.0 is scheduled for release on October 15th so this gives us a nice 30 day BETA period. During this time, I don't expect anyone to drop in significant new work or otherwise perturb the 3.0-current tree in such a way that violates the general idea of a BETA (you're supposed to test what you have, not move the goalposts every couple of days :).

  • 13-Sep-98 After more than a year of development, the Common Access Method SCSI layer for FreeBSD will be integrated into 3.0-current on Sunday, September 13th. The CAM development team is currently busy ensuring that the integration process goes as smoothly as possible, so please understand that we may be slow to respond to questions about CAM in the days.

  • 9-Sep-98 Perl5 is now imported into the 3.0-CURRENT source tree.

  • 5-Sep-98 - + The BSD CD Giveaway List. If somebody has a CD to give away (recipient pays for shipping) or to lend locally, they can put their email address on the list. Hardware and literature can also be given away. We encourage people to donate CDs to local libraries and put them on the list as well.

  • 1-Sep-98 First issue of Daemon News arrives day earlier. This electronic ezine is by BSD community for BSD community. See - http://www.daemonnews.org + http://www.daemonnews.org

August 1998

  • 31-Aug-98 FreeBSD -CURRENT branch (the future 3.0-RELEASE) has switched to ELF from a.out format. People involved did a great job: transition went smooth. Check freebsd-current@freebsd.org mail archive for more information on the transition to ELF.

  • 23-Aug-98 Suidcontrol-0.1 utility has been released. The suidcontrol is an experimental utility for managing suid/sgid policy under FreeBSD. You can get more information at http://www.watson.org/fbsd-hardening/suidcontrol.html

  • 9-Aug-98 FreeBSD Security How-To has been published. This work is currently in beta and can be found at http://www.best.com/~jkb/howto.txt

July 1998

June 1998

  • 24-Jun-98 The FreeBSD Project is sponsoring an FreeBSD Desktop Theme Contest. Participants will design their own X11 configurations, and winners will have theirs distributed with future releases of FreeBSD.

May 1998

  • 30-May-98 FreeBSD and Apache are used in this very useful article on implementing a web farm using round-robin DNS in WEBTechniques.com

  • 23-May-98 The second issue of the FreeBSD Newsletter is now available in Adobe PDF format (also by FTP). A help file is available to assist you in selecting and using a PDF viewer. Article submissions, advertisements, and letters to the editor should be sent to newsletter@freebsd.org.

  • 1-May-98 The FreeBSD Project set up Anonymous CVS for the FreeBSD CVS tree. Among other things, it allows users of FreeBSD to perform, with no special privileges, read-only CVS operations against one of the FreeBSD project's official anoncvs servers.

April 1998

  • 16-Apr-98 The new 4 CD set of FreeBSD 2.2.6 is now in stock and should start shipping to subscription and back-order customers tomorrow. More information on the CD contents are available from - http://www.cdrom.com. + http://www.cdrom.com.

  • 11-Apr-98 The new FreeBSD project FreeBSD Mozilla Group is created. The FreeBSD Mozilla Group supports and improves the free available Netscape web browser, - otherwise known as Mozilla. + otherwise known as Mozilla.

March 1998

  • 25-Mar-98 FreeBSD 2.2.6 has been released. See the Release Information page for details. Also be sure to check the release errata after installation for any late-breaking issues with 2.2.6 that you should know about.

February 1998

January 1998

  • 08-Jan-98 Improved support for Plug-n-Play cards has now been integrated into both 3.0-current and 2.2-stable branches now. This is available in source form via the CVSup utility or in binary release snapshots from current.FreeBSD.org

December 1997

  • 26-Dec-97 A convenient front-end tool for installing and configuring the CVSup utility is now available. To use it, simply login or su to root and run: pkg_add ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsupit.tgz

  • 2-Dec-97 The "FOOF" bug has now been fixed in our 3.0-current and 2.2-stable branches and can either be incorporated by using the CVSup utility, as described below for the LAND attack fix, or by applying these patches.

  • 1-Dec-97 The "LAND attack" bug in TCP/IP has now been fixed in all relevant branches and can be incorporated by using the CVSup utility to track the latest 2.2 or 3.0 sources.

  • 1-Dec-97 Team FreeBSD is a group of FreeBSD users and supporters contributing CPU idle time in an effort to crack RSA's 64-bit encryption code. For more information, visit - Team FreeBSD's WWW + Team FreeBSD's WWW site.

November 1997

  • 21-Nov-97 Pentium bug -- We are aware of the "F00F" Pentium halting bug and are working with Intel on a fix. When we have a fix ready for public consumption it will be announced here, on the mailing list announce@freebsd.org and to the Usenet newsgroup comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.announce. Your patience is appreciated.

  • 09-Nov-97 FreeBSD 2.2.5-RELEASE CDROMS are now in stock and shipping to customers worldwide. More information is available at http://www.cdrom.com/titles/os/fbsd25.htm.

October 1997

  • 22-Oct-97 FreeBSD 2.2.5 has been released. See the Release Information page for details. Also be sure to check the release errata after installation for any late-breaking issues with 2.2.5 that you should know about.

September 1997

  • 01-Sep-97 FreeBSD performed well in an Internet Week review of WWW server platforms.

August 1997

  • 11-Aug-97 Researchers in Duke University's Trapeze Project have developed a high-speed Myrinet driver for FreeBSD. More information about the driver, Trapeze Project, and its parent project, the Collaborative Cluster Computing Iniative, including the code for the Myrinet driver, are available from the CCCI's WWW page.

  • 03-Aug-97 Netscape Communications has released a beta version of Netscape Communicator v4.0 for FreeBSD. It can be obtained via FTP from ftp.netscape.com or its mirrors.

July 1997

June 1997

  • 17-Jun-97 FreeBSD 2.2.2-RELEASE CD-ROM discs are now in stock; subscription customers should receive them shortly.

May 1997

April 1997

March 1997

February 1997

  • 20-Feb-1997 FreeBSD 2.1.7-RELEASE is now available. Read the README.TXT file or the Release Notes for more information.

  • 10-Feb-1997 FreeBSD 3.0-970209-SNAP has been released. Read the README.TXT file for more information about this release.

  • 06-Feb-1997 A serious security problem affecting FreeBSD 2.1.6 and earlier systems was found. The problem has been corrected within the -stable, -current, and RELENG_2_2 source trees. As an additional precaution, FreeBSD 2.1.6 is no longer available from the FTP distribution sites. You can read more about the problem and solution from the FreeBSD-SA-97:01.setlocale security announcement.

  • 06-Feb-1997 The final pre-release version of FreeBSD 2.2-GAMMA, is now available. The README.TXT file has more information.

  • 05-Feb-1997 The administrative position of FreeBSD Project President has been eliminated with the resignation of former president Jordan K. Hubbard.

  • 02-Feb-1997 A snap-of-the-day server has been set up for the most current snapshot release of FreeBSD 2.2. Read the README.TXT file for more information.

January 1997

December 1996

  • 24-Dec-1996 FreeBSD 2.2-BETA has been released. Please see the Release Notes for more information.

  • 13-Dec-1996 FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE will not support installation on machines with less than 5MB of RAM or 1.2MB floppy drives. Please see the original announcement for more information.

November 1996

&newshome; &footer; diff --git a/en/news/press.sgml b/en/news/press.sgml index fd9423b1b9..6365ce0f92 100644 --- a/en/news/press.sgml +++ b/en/news/press.sgml @@ -1,255 +1,255 @@ - + %includes; %newsincludes; ]> - + &header; If you miss an entry please send the URL to www@FreeBSD.ORG

November 1998

October 1998

September 1998

August 1998

July 1998

June 1998

May 1998

April 1998

March 1998

February 1998

August 1997

June 1997

May 1997

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Overview

-

Following Netscape's +

Following Netscape's decision to publically release the source code for their client - product, otherwise known as Mozilla, + product, otherwise known as Mozilla, a number of free software groups have become actively involved in supporting and improving this technology for their own uses. The FreeBSD Mozilla Group seeks to provide a focus for such work in the FreeBSD world, providing centralized resources such as a CVS repository, a mailing list and other tools for collaborative development.

Resources

CVSup
CVSup provides ongoing syncronization with the central Mozilla repository, either for the CVS bits themselves (for those wishing to keep a local repository) or for a "checked out" version, suitable for directly building or editing. Fetch the CVSup binaries from ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/ and use a supfile which looks something like this:
 *default prefix=/usr/src/mozilla base=/usr/src/mozilla host=mozilla.FreeBSD.org release=cvs delete compress use-rel-suffix tag=.
 
 ## Main Source Tree
 cvs-mozilla
       
anoncvs
Anonymous CVS allows anyone to check things out of the FreeBSD Mozilla repository using the standard cvs(1) commands. Simply set your CVSROOT environment variable to point to:
       anoncvs@mozilla.freebsd.org:/mozilla
       

And you can then use cvs(1) for doing read-only operations on the Mozilla CVS repository.

freebsd-mozilla
The FreeBSD-mozilla mailing list is provided for developers and users of the FreeBSD mozilla port to discuss issues relating to building, using and managing the mozilla sources and any FreeBSD-specific changes to them. To subscribe, send mail to majordomo@freebsd.org and say subscribe freebsd-mozilla in the body of your message.

More information

-
Mozilla.ORG
+
Mozilla.ORG
The Mozilla.org project provides central control over Mozilla for all platforms, not just FreeBSD.
-
Cyclic Software
+
Cyclic Software
Cyclic Software has some good on-line tutorials on CVS
&footer; diff --git a/en/projects/newbies.sgml b/en/projects/newbies.sgml index 355b5065c1..3eadc825b2 100644 --- a/en/projects/newbies.sgml +++ b/en/projects/newbies.sgml @@ -1,254 +1,254 @@ - + %includes; ]> - + &header;

The following resources are some of those which FreeBSD newbies have found most helpful when learning to use FreeBSD. Please send corrections and additions to FreeBSD-Newbies@FreeBSD.org.

Using the FreeBSD web site

This web site is the main source of up to date information about FreeBSD. Newbies have found the following pages particularly helpful:

  • Search the Handbook and FAQ, or the whole web site, or the archives of the FreeBSD-Questions mailing list.

  • The Documentation page has links to the Handbook and FAQ, tutorials, information about contributing to the Documentation Project, documents in languages other than English, and much more.

  • Support page contains a wealth of information about FreeBSD, including mailing lists, user groups, web and FTP sites, release information, and links to some sources of UNIX information.

Learning about FreeBSD

  • If you haven't installed yet, look for the &a.latest.ann;latest mainstream release. (See the Handbook for why you should not be tempted by any of the other branches.) Before you begin, carefully read the installation instructions, as well as each one of the *.TXT files in the FTP directory or on the installation CD. They are there because they contain information that you will need. Also pick up the latest errata file from the web site, in case it has been updated.

    If you decide to download FreeBSD, check whether these illustrated and expanded download instructions for a previous version are still available before you begin. That should make the whole process a lot clearer.

  • A number of tutorials are available. The one For People New to Both FreeBSD and Unix is popular with absolute beginners. You don't have to know much about anything to enjoy this one. It is also available from the author's site and can be downloaded in postscript or RTF format for printing.

  • The first thing many people need to set up is ppp, and there is a lot of documentation to help. You might start with at least those parts of the Pedantic PPP Primer that are relevant to your needs, and explore the ppp page for links to the other valuable information and the latest updates.

  • The Complete FreeBSD by Greg Lehey, published by Walnut Creek CDROM. This book assumes minimal UNIX experience and takes the beginner step by step through each stage from installation to everything you need to know to set up and run a FreeBSD system. You also get to understand what you're doing and why.

  • The FreeBSD Handbook and Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) are the main documents for FreeBSD. Essential reading, they contain a lot of material for newbies as well as some pretty advanced stuff. Don't worry if you can't understand the advanced sections. The handbook contains the installation instructions and also provides lists of books and on line resources, and the FAQ has a troubleshooting section.

  • Join the FreeBSD-Questions mailing list to see the questions you were too afraid to ask, and their answers. Subscribe by sending mail to majordomo@freebsd.org with "subscribe freebsd-questions" on its own in the message body (the subject doesn't matter). You can look up old questions and answers via the search page.

  • The main newsgroup for FreeBSD is comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.misc. You might want to keep an eye on comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.announce as well.

  • Man pages are good for reference but not always the best introduction for a novice. The more you work with man pages the more familiar they become. Some are very good for newbies, so always check them out. The ppp man page, for example, is more like a tutorial.

Learning about UNIX

Many of the problems we have as newbies come from being unfamiliar with the UNIX commands needed to fix our FreeBSD problems. Without a UNIX background you'll be faced with two things to learn at once. Fortunately a lot of resources are available to make this easier.

  • There are many easy books, such as the "Dummies" guides, in any large book shop. If you want something really easy, take a look at what is available and pick one that seems to speak your language. Pretty soon you will want to move on to a book that gives more coverage.

  • One book mentioned frequently by newbies is UNIX for the Impatient by Paul W. Abrahams and Bruce R. Larson, published by Addison-Wesley. It is intended both as a book for learning UNIX and a reference, and includes an introduction to UNIX concepts and handy chapter on using the X Window System.

  • Another popular book is UNIX Power Tools by Jerry Peek, Tim O'Reilly and Mike Loukides, published by O'Reilly and Associates. It is organised as a series of short articles each of which solves a problem, and these articles are cross-referenced to other articles with related material. Though not specifically aimed at newbies, the design makes it ideal for a newbie with a burning question or the odd few minutes to browse. More elementary material is near the front of the book, but there are short easy articles throughout.

  • A UNIX Introductory Course from Ohio State University is available online in HTML, postscript and Acrobat PDF formats.

  • UNIXhelp for Users is another introductory guide which is available in HTML at a mirror site near you, or can be installed on your own system.

  • UNIX questions are dealt with in the newsgroup comp.unix.questions and the associated Frequently Asked Questions. You can also get a copy of the FAQ from the RMIT FTP site. Newbies are likely to be most interested in sections 1 and 2 initially.

  • Another interesting newsgroup is comp.unix.user-friendly which also has a FAQ. Although this newsgroup is for discussing user-friendliness, it can contain some good information for newbies. The FAQ is also available by FTP.

  • Many other web sites hold lists of UNIX tutorials and reference material. One of the best places to start looking is the UNIX page at Yahoo!.

Learning about the X Window System

The X Window System is used with a number of operating systems, including FreeBSD. The documentation for X can be found at The XFree86 Project, Inc., including the XFree86 FAQ. Beware, much of this documentation is reference material which is likely to be difficult for newcomers to digest.

  • For basic information about installing, configuring and using the X Window System, two of the books mentioned above have sections dealing with X at beginner level: The Complete FreeBSD and UNIX for the Impatient.

  • There is an easy and informative section on using the X Window System in the Linux Users' Guide. Interesting material will be found elsewhere in that document too, but remember that Linux does not always work exactly the same as FreeBSD.

  • Before you can get X running exactly the way you like, you will need to choose a window manager. - Visit the Window Managers for X + Visit the Window Managers for X page and follow the link to the introduction to find out about window managers, then return and read "The Basics". Then go back and compare the different types that are available. (Bonus: there's another beginners guide to UNIX there too.) Most if not all of these window managers are available to install from the FreeBSD ports collection.

Helping other people

Everyone has something to contribute to the FreeBSD community, even newbies! Some are busy working with the new advocacy group and some have become involved with the Documentation Project as reviewers. Other FreeBSD newbies might have particular skills and experiences to share, either computer related or not, or just want to meet new newbies and make them feel welcome. There's always people around who help others simply because they like to. Write to FreeBSD Newbies for more information.

Friends who run FreeBSD are a great resource. No book can replace chatting on the phone or across a pizza with someone who has the same interests, enjoys similar accomplishments, and faces the same challenges. If you don't have many friends who use FreeBSD, consider using your old FreeBSD CDs to create some more :-)

User groups are good places to meet other FreeBSD users. If there's not one nearby, maybe you could start one.

Before talking to real humans about your new skills, you might want to check the Pronunciation Guide and the Jargon File :-)

On line we have the FreeBSD-Newbies mailing list for non-technical discussions about matters of interest to newbies. Another mailing list, FreeBSD-Questions, answers our questions about using FreeBSD.

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In addition to the mainstream development path of FreeBSD, a number of developer groups are working on the cutting edge to expand FreeBSD's range of applications in new directions. Follow the links below to learn more about these exciting projects.

If you miss a project please send the URL and a short description (3-10 lines) to www@FreeBSD.ORG

Documentation

  • FreeBSD Documentation Project
  • FreeBSD Resources for Newbies
  • Retail Outlets for FreeBSD
  • FreeBSD Security How-To FreeBSD is a very secure operating system. Since source code is freely available, the OS is constantly going through the review and audit. While FreeBSD comes very secure OOB (Out-Of-Box), there are many features that can make it more secure for those of you who are "paranoid". This How-To will go over some steps which will help you increase overall security of your machine.
  • [New!] RELEASE/SNAP finder for FreeBSD FTP servers. A resource that would allow anyone to find a FTP server that contains particular releases and SNAP of FreeBSD. The database is updated daily at 3am Melbourne time (10 hours ahead of GMT).
  • [New!] The FreeBSD Diary This page is about my experiences with FreeBSD. How I installed it, where I got the idea behind it, and how hard/easy it was to install. Hopefully, you'll find it to be amusing, interesting, or at the least, pathetic. My aim is to document what I've done and at the same time allow others to follow the progress and possibly learn from my endeavours.
  • [New!] The FreeBSD User Guide This is a little document on how to start with the FreeBSD Operating System (OS), a Unix variant. It's made for people who never used a Unix OS. FreeBSD is a little hard to learn, so don't expect to be happy the first time you meet him alone. The main reason is that it's Command Line Interface (CLI), like MS-DOS.
  • A Comprehensive Guide to FreeBSD - an attempt at a more readable, "book-like" tutorial explaining the FreeBSD Operating System. Intended for people new to both FreeBSD and UNIX. Currently a work in progress.
  • FreeBSD How-To's for the Lazy and Hopeless is another somewhat more light-hearted attempt to provide more readable "how-to" style information on setting up and configuring FreeBSD.
  • The Linux+FreeBSD mini-HOWTO - this document describes how to use Linux and FreeBSD on the same system. It introduces FreeBSD and discusses how the two operating systems can cooperate, e.g. by sharing swap space.
  • Install Preview for FreeBSD 2.2.7 This is a guide illustrating the FreeBSD install program for those new to unix and/or FreeBSD.
  • [New!] FreeBSD VM System Overview The document is meant to describe the general workings of FreeBSD's VM system to interested parties.

Advocacy

  • [New!] - FreeBSD + FreeBSD Rocks is an initiative designed to provide the FreeBSD community with the latest FreeBSD news, software and resources. All areas include search facilities, making keyword searching of historical posts a breeze. The pages are updated daily and everyone is invited to sign up an post an article. If it happened today, you'll see it on FreeBSDRocks.
  • FreeBSD vs. Linux: a bunch of comparisons between FreeBSD and Linux, which is another publically-distributed free UNIX-like OS for PC's.
  • -
  • Daemon +
  • Daemon News
  • The FreeBSD Counter Page page is the start of a project which will attempt to determine the world-wide installed base of FreeBSD users. The FreeBSD development community currently has only the vaguest idea as to how large our user base is, and this makes it all the more difficult to persuade hardware and software vendors to take it seriously.
  • BSD CD Giveaway List If somebody has a CD to give away (recipient pays for shipping) or to lend locally, they can put their email address on the list. Hardware and literature can also be given away. We encourage people to donate CDs to local libraries and put them on the list as well.
  • The Free Software Bazaar is a market place designed to increase the amount of free software, to support free software developers, and to more accurately measure the demand for free software.

Applications

Networking

File system

  • Arla is a free AFS client implementation. The main goal is to make a fully functional client with all capabilities of normal AFS. Other planned and implemented things are all the normal management tools and a server. -
  • Coda is +
  • Coda is a distributed file system. Among its features are disconnected operation, good security model, server replication and persistent client side caching.
  • DEVFS
  • Mode locking
  • Make the namei interface reflexive
  • NFS client and server locking
  • NTFS Driver for FreeBSD
  • soft update code
  • TCFS is a Transparent Cryptographic File System that is a suitable solution to the problem of privacy for distributed file system. By a deeper integration between the encryption service and the file system, it results in a complete trasparency of use to the user applications. Files are stored in encrypted form and are decrypted before they are read. The encryption/decryption process takes place on the client machine and thus the encryption/decryption key never travels on the network.
  • Tertiary Disk is a storage system architecture to create large disk storage systems that avoid the disadvantages of custom built disk arrays. The name comes from twin goals: to have the cost per megabyte and capacity of tape libraries and the performance of magnetic disks. We use commodity, off the shelf components to develop a scalable, low cost, terabyte capacity disk system. Our target is to build a complete storage system with about 30-50% extra to the cost of the raw disk. Tertiary Disk uses PCs connected by a switched network to host a large number of disks. Our prototype consists of 20 200MHz PC PCs, which host 370 8GB disks. The PCs are connected through a 100Mbps Ethernet switch.
  • Vinum: a logical volume manager

Kernel, security

Device drivers

  • BSD ATM: implementation of ATM internetworking under 4.4BSD: New computer applications in areas such as multimedia, imaging, and distributed computing demand high levels of performance from computer networks. ATM-based networking solutions provide one possible alternative to meeting these performance needs. However, the complexity of ATM over traditional networks such as Ethernet has proven to be a barrier to its being used. In this paper we present the design and implementation of BSD ATM, a light-weight and efficient ATM software layer for BSD-based operating systems that requires minimal changes to the operating system. BSD ATM can be used both for IP-based networking traffic and for ``native'' ATM traffic.
  • High-precision timekeeping with FreeBSD
  • Home Automation
  • i4b: ISDN for FreeBSD
  • CAM: New SCSI layer for FreeBSD
  • The FreeBSD Token-Ring Project
  • FreeBSD USB driver development The NetBSD USB stack has been ported to FreeBSD. Together with them we have started developing the drivers for many devices using the USB bus. Have a look on the webpage if you want to join the effort or you want to have a look on the devices that are being supported.

Architecture

Misc

&footer; diff --git a/en/publish.sgml b/en/publish.sgml index 8b2e822d14..604d61c5bc 100644 --- a/en/publish.sgml +++ b/en/publish.sgml @@ -1,230 +1,230 @@ + %includes; ]> - + &header;
FreeBSD Daemon
Here you'll find the covers of many FreeBSD related publications. If you know of any additional FreeBSD publications/CDROMs let us know, at www@freebsd.org, so that they may be added to this site.

Click on any of the graphics to see a larger version.

Books

This is a recent (May 1997) publication from Tatsumi Hosokawa and others. Among computer books, it is a top-seller in Japan and exceeded the sales of Bill Gates' "The Road Ahead" when published (it was #2, this book was #1).
(Japanese FreeBSD book with 2.0.5, titled "FreeBSD: Fun and easy Installation")
(Japanese FreeBSD book with 2.0.5, titled "FreeBSD Introductory Kit")
This is Walnut Creek CDROM's "FreeBSD Complete" with installation guide, manual pages and 2 installation CDs inside.
This is Walnut Creek CDROM's "Installing & Running FreeBSD", a product which contained installation instructions and was shipped with each 2 CD set. It has since been replaced by the larger "FreeBSD Complete" book.
This book was recently published (early 1997) in Taiwan. Its title is "FreeBSD: introduction and applications" and the author is Jian-Da Li.
This is the "Getting Started with FreeBSD" from Fuki-Shuppan. Other than the standard installation guide and Japanese environment, it emphasizes system administration and low-level information (such as the boot process, etc.) FreeBSD-2.2.2R and XFree86-3.2 on CDROM. 264 pages, 3,400 yen.
The "Personal Unix Starter Kit - FreeBSD" from ASCII. Includes history of Unix, a guide to build a Japanese documentation processing system and how to create ports. 2.1.7.1R and XFree86-3.2 in CDROM. 384 pages, 3,000 yen.
BSD mit Methode, M. Schulze, B. Roehrig, M. Hoelzer und andere, C&L Computer und Literatur Verlag, 1998, 850 pages. 2 CDROMs, FreeBSD 2.2.6, NetBSD 1.2.1 and 1.3.2, OpenBSD 2.2 and 2.3. DM 98,-.

CDROMs

For more about recent releases go to FreeBSD release information page.

This is InfoMagic's BSDisc, containing FreeBSD 2.0 and NetBSD 1.0 on a single CD. This is the only example I have which had cover art.
This is the original 4.4 BSD Lite2 release from UC Berkeley, the core technology behind much of FreeBSD.
The first of Laser5's "BSD" series. Contains FreeBSD-2.0.5R, NetBSD-1.0, XFree86-3.1.1 and FreeBSD(98) kernel.
The second of Laser5's "BSD" series. From this version, the CDs come in a standard jewel box. Contains FreeBSD-2.1R, NetBSD-1.1, XFree86-3.1.2 and 3.1.2A, and FreeBSD(98) kernel (2.0.5).
This is the Laser5 Japanese edition of the FreeBSD CDROM. It is a 4 CD set.
This is the only FreeBSD CD Pacific Hitech produced before merging their product line with that of Walnut Creek CDROM. PHT now also produces the FreeBSD/J (Japanese) CD product.
This is the cover disc from the Korean magazine. Note the creative cover art! The CD contains the FreeBSD 2.2.1 release with some local additions.
This is it - the very first FreeBSD CD published! Both the FreeBSD Project and Walnut Creek CDROM were fairly young back then, and you'll probably have little difficulty in spotting the differences in production quality between then and now.
This was the second FreeBSD CD published by Walnut Creek CDROM and also the very last on the 1.x branch (ref USL/Novell lawsuit and settlement). The next release, FreeBSD 1.1.5, was only available on the net.
This unusual CD is something of a collector's item now given that almost all existing examples were systematically tracked down and destroyed. An artwork mishap has this CD dated for the wrong year, and on the spine "January" is also misspelled as "Jaunary", just to increase the embarrassment factor. Ah, the perils of turning in one's artwork just hours before leaving for a trade show.
This is the fixed-up version of the FreeBSD 2.0 CD. Note that the color scheme has even been changed in the corrected version, something unusual for a fixup and perhaps done to distance it from the earlier mistake.
The FreeBSD 2.0.5 release CD. This was the first CD to feature Tatsumi Hosokawa's daemon artwork.
The FreeBSD 2.1 release CD. This was the first CD release on the 2.1 branch (the last being 2.1.7).
The FreeBSD 2.1.5 release CD.
The FreeBSD 2.1.6 release CD.
The Japanese version of 2.1.6. This was the first and last Japanese localized version published by WC, responsibility for that product then transitioning to a team led by Tatsumi Hosokawa and sponsored by Pacific Hitech and Laser5.
The FreeBSD 2.1.7 release CD. Also the last CD released on the 2.1.x branch. Done primarily as a security fixup for 2.1.6
An early release SNAPshot of 2.2 (done before 2.2.1 was released).
The FreeBSD 2.2.1 release CD. This was the first CD on the 2.2 branch.
The FreeBSD 2.2.2 release CD.
The FreeBSD 3.0 snapshot CD.
The FreeBSD mailing list and newsgroup archives, turned into HTML and semi-indexed by thread. This product ran for 2 releases and then stopped with a thud once it became obvious that there was simply too much data to deal with on one CD. Perhaps when DVD becomes more popular...

Magazines

Cover of Korean UNIX magazine, May 1997 issue. Also included FreeBSD 2.2.1 with cover CDs.
UNIX User Magazine November 1996 issue. Also included FreeBSD 2.1.5 on cover CD.
This is the "FreeBSD Full Course" special in April 1997's Software Design (published by Gijutsu Hyoron Sha). There are 80 pages of FreeBSD articles covering everything from installation to tracking -current.
Quality Unix for FREE, by Brett Glass in Sm@rt Reseller Online September 1998

Newsletters

This is issue #1 of the FreeBSD Newsletter, published and distributed free of charge by -Walnut Creek CDROM. +Walnut Creek CDROM. You can register to receive it. Submit articles/make comments by sending email to newsletter@FreeBSD.ORG.
This is issue #2 of the FreeBSD Newsletter, published and distributed free of charge by -Walnut Creek CDROM. +Walnut Creek CDROM. You can register to receive it. Submit articles/make comments by sending email to newsletter@FreeBSD.ORG.
questions@FreeBSD.ORG
Copyright © 1995-1997 FreeBSD Inc. - All rights reserved.
$Date: 1998-11-01 12:54:03 $
+ All rights reserved.
$Date: 1998-12-13 23:19:11 $ diff --git a/en/releases/2.1.7R/announce.sgml b/en/releases/2.1.7R/announce.sgml index d37cf3a400..db0b68e509 100644 --- a/en/releases/2.1.7R/announce.sgml +++ b/en/releases/2.1.7R/announce.sgml @@ -1,52 +1,52 @@ - + %includes; ]> &header;

FreeBSD 2.1.7 is now available in:

ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/2.1.7-RELEASE

And shortly from its various mirror sites, a list of which may be obtained from: http://www.freebsd.org/handbook/mirrors.html

This is a security release to FreeBSD 2.1.6, fixing at least several security holes and addressing a number of outstanding problem reports in that release.

FreeBSD 2.1.7 will also be available on CDROM from Walnut Creek CDROM, hopefully shipping +href="http://www.cdrom.com/">Walnut Creek CDROM, hopefully shipping within the next 3-4 weeks. If you are a customer of Walnut Creek CDROM and you purchased the 2.1.6 release (either by subscription or by retail) then you are also entitled to a free upgrade. All you need to do is send mail to orders@cdrom.com or call 1-800 786-9907 / +1 510 674-0783 Intl, indicate that you would like the free 2.1.7 upgrade and provide your name and address information so that a replacement can be shipped. Walnut Creek CDROM customers will also receive a letter explaining these details.

Those puzzled by the near-simultaneous release of 2.1.7 and 2.2 should also look at http://www.freebsd.org/branch.html for the reasons behind this release schedule. CDROM subscription customers should see this page for information on Walnut Creek CDROM's plans for these releases.

If you are a commercial user of FreeBSD who would like to take advantage of recent bug fixes without making the jump to our more ambitious 2.2 release (or delay that jump until 2.2 has had more time to mature), or if you're simply looking for the lowest-impact upgrade from 2.1.5, then 2.1.7-RELEASE is for you.

Release Home &footer; diff --git a/en/releases/2.2.5R/announce.sgml b/en/releases/2.2.5R/announce.sgml index 09295e6fea..eb299ea913 100644 --- a/en/releases/2.2.5R/announce.sgml +++ b/en/releases/2.2.5R/announce.sgml @@ -1,96 +1,96 @@ - + %includes; ]> &header;

Date: 22 Oct 1997 14:09:08 -0500
From: "Jordan K. Hubbard" <jkh@time.cdrom.com>
Subject: 2.2.5 RELEASE now available from ftp.freebsd.org (and some mirrors)

It is my great pleasure, as always, to announce the release of FreeBSD 2.2.5, our next release on the 2.2-stable branch. Those folks who are still running 2.1.x and wish to upgrade to 2.2 technology are now encouraged to do so as 2.2.5 has reached an equivalent level of stability in all of our tests. A number of annoying problems with 2.2.2 have also been fixed (see the release notes for more information on this).

FreeBSD 2.2.5-RELEASE is available on ftp.freebsd.org and various FTP mirror sites throughout the world. It can also be ordered on CD from Walnut Creek CDROM, from where it will be shipping shortly as a new 4 CD set containing a lot of extra stuff of interest to programmers and general users alike.

The official FTP distribution site for FreeBSD is:

ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.org/pub/FreeBSD

Or via the WEB page at:

-

http://www.cdrom.com/pub/FreeBSD

+

http://www.cdrom.com/pub/FreeBSD

And on CD-ROM from Walnut Creek CDROM:

Walnut Creek CDROM
4041 Pike Lane, #D
Concord CA, 94520 USA
Phone: +1 510 674-0783
Fax: +1 510 674-0821
Tech Support: +1 510 603-1234
Email: info@cdrom.com
WWW: http://www.cdrom.com/

Additionally, FreeBSD is available via anonymous FTP from mirror sites in Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Ireland, Israel, Japan, Korea, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Russia, South Africa, Sweden, Taiwan, Thailand and the UK (among other countries :). Please check your regional mirrors first by going to:

ftp://ftp.<yourdomain>.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD

since ftp.freebsd.org is itself rather overloaded at the present time (Id software and Slackware Linux chose the same time to release their latest products :).

The latest versions of export-restricted code for FreeBSD (2.0C or later) (eBones and secure) are also being made available at the following locations. If you are outside the U.S. or Canada, please get secure (DES) and eBones (Kerberos) from one of the following foreign distribution sites:

South Africa

ftp://ftp.internat.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
ftp://ftp2.internat.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD

Brazil

ftp://ftp.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD

Finland

ftp://nic.funet.fi/pub/unix/FreeBSD/eurocrypt

Release Home &footer; diff --git a/en/releases/2.2.5R/errata.sgml b/en/releases/2.2.5R/errata.sgml index 265a7f4104..4914f27c21 100644 --- a/en/releases/2.2.5R/errata.sgml +++ b/en/releases/2.2.5R/errata.sgml @@ -1,113 +1,113 @@ - + %includes; ]> - + &header;
 The file 
 ERRATA.TXT contains post-release ERRATA for 2.2.5 and should always
 be considered the definitive place to look first before reporting
 a problem with this release.  This file will also be periodically
 updated as new issues are reported so even if you've checked this
 file recently, check it again before filing a bug report.  Any
 changes to this file are also automatically emailed to:
 
 	freebsd-stable@freebsd.org
 
 For 2.2.5 security advisories, see:
 
 	ftp://freebsd.org/pub/CERT/
 
 For the latest information (note the URL carefully - this is NOT
 ftp.freebsd.org).
 
 ---- Security Advisories:
 
 Current active security advisories for 2.2.5:	One
 
 o FreeBSD-SA-97:05 (available from ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CERT).
 
   You may also simply remove /dev/io as a quick work-around if you're
   not running an X server or some other specialized utility which
   requires access to the I/O instructions.
  
 ---- System Update Information:
 o The appletalk stack was broken in 2.2.5.
 
 Fix:  If you plan to run appletalk, you should apply the following patch:
 
 ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/updates/2.2.5-RELEASE/atalk.diff.2.2.gz
 
 
 o The line printer spooler lpd will, when sending jobs to remote
   printers, kill the child process sending to the remote after the
   timeout specified in the `ct' capability (2 minutes by default).
 
 Fix:  Please upgrade the lpd subsystem to 2.2-stable.  As a workaround,
       increase the `ct' capability to an unreasonably large number of
       seconds (like 3600).
 
 
 o Intel "F00F bug" enables users to hang machines with Pentium processors
   if they have access to the machine and can execute programs.
 
 Fix:  Update to the 2.2-stable version of the kernel or apply the patch
       found in: 
  
       ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/updates/2.2.5-RELEASE/f00f.diff.2.2.gz
 
 
 o A bug in the ipfw code exists where using the "reset tcp" firewall command
   causes the kernel to write ethernet headers onto random kernel stack
   locations.
 
 Fix:	Update to the 2.2-stable version of the kernel or apply the
         patch found in ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/updates/2.2.5-RELEASE/ipfw.diff.gz
 
 
 o A bug in XF86Setup causes it to fail to create a symbolic link from
   /usr/X11R6/bin/X to the right X server for your hardware if a link
   does not already exist.  When you type startx the following error is
   displayed:
 
   xinit:  No such file or directory (errno 2):  no server "X" found in PATH
   
 Fix:	Execute the following commands (as root) and re-run XF86Setup.
 
 	# cd /usr/X11R6/bin
 	# ln -s XF86_VGA16 X
 	
 	If XF86Setup asks you if you want to use the existing XF86Config for
 	defaults choose no.  When it asks you if you want to create an 'X'
 	link to the server choose yes.
 
 
 o A bug in the phase diagram implementation of user-level ppp causes
   problems with some ppp implementations when shutting down the link.
   The line will go dead, but the modem will not hang up unless done
   manually using pppctl (or a switch).
 
 Fix:  A version of ppp derived from the -current sources is available from
-      http://www.FreeBSD.org/~brian
+      http://www.FreeBSD.org/~brian
 
       It should build on any version of FreeBSD from 2.0.5 onwards.
       This code is available in the -current tree, but not (yet) in the
       2.2-STABLE tree.
 
 	Further documentation can be found at these locations:
 
 	  Document references
 	  FAQ
 	  handbook
 

Release Home &footer; diff --git a/en/releases/2.2.6R/announce.sgml b/en/releases/2.2.6R/announce.sgml index de9eee040a..a2650ac669 100644 --- a/en/releases/2.2.6R/announce.sgml +++ b/en/releases/2.2.6R/announce.sgml @@ -1,88 +1,88 @@ - + %includes; ]> &header;

Date: Wed Mar 25 04:24:34 PST 1998
From: "Jordan K. Hubbard" <jkh@time.cdrom.com>
Subject: 2.2.6 RELEASE now available from ftp.freebsd.org (and some mirrors)

As always, it's my great pleasure to announce the release of FreeBSD 2.2.6, our latest release on the 2.2-stable branch and the result of over 4 months of work since 2.2.5 was released. See the release notes for a list of significant changes since the previous release.

FreeBSD 2.2.6-RELEASE is available on ftp.freebsd.org and various FTP mirror sites throughout the world. It can also be ordered on CD from Walnut Creek CDROM, from where it will be shipping shortly as a 4 CD set containing a lot of extra stuff of interest to the programmer and general user alike.

The official FTP distribution site for FreeBSD is:

ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.org/pub/FreeBSD

Or via the WEB page at:

-

http://www.cdrom.com/pub/FreeBSD

+

http://www.cdrom.com/pub/FreeBSD

And on CD-ROM from Walnut Creek CDROM:

Walnut Creek CDROM
4041 Pike Lane, #F
Concord CA, 94520 USA
Phone: +1 925 674-0783
Fax: +1 925 674-0821
Tech Support: +1 925 603-1234
Email: info@cdrom.com
WWW: http://www.cdrom.com/

Additionally, FreeBSD is available via anonymous FTP from mirror sites in Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Ireland, Israel, Japan, Korea, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Russia, South Africa, Sweden, Taiwan, Thailand and the UK (among other countries :). Please check your regional mirrors first by going to:

ftp://ftp.<yourdomain>.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD

The latest versions of export-restricted code for FreeBSD (2.0C or later) (eBones and secure) are also being made available at the following locations. If you are outside the U.S. or Canada, please get secure (DES) and eBones (Kerberos) from one of the following foreign distribution sites:

South Africa

ftp://ftp.internat.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
ftp://ftp2.internat.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD

Brazil

ftp://ftp.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD

Finland

ftp://nic.funet.fi/pub/unix/FreeBSD/eurocrypt

Release Home &footer; diff --git a/en/releases/2.2.7R/announce.sgml b/en/releases/2.2.7R/announce.sgml index faa567a7ba..63b1082a5d 100644 --- a/en/releases/2.2.7R/announce.sgml +++ b/en/releases/2.2.7R/announce.sgml @@ -1,117 +1,117 @@ - + %includes; ]> &header;

Date: Wed, 22 Jul 1998 08:36:25 -0700
From: "Jordan K. Hubbard" <jkh@time.cdrom.com>
Subject:FreeBSD 2.2.7 is now released!

It is my usual pleasure to announce the release of FreeBSD 2.2.7, our latest release along the 2.2-stable branch. Those folks who are still running 2.1.x and wish to upgrade to 2.2 technology are encouraged to do so as 2.2.7 has reached a more than equivalent level of stability in all of our tests. A number of problems with 2.2.6 have also been fixed (see the release notes for more information).

FreeBSD 2.2.7-RELEASE is available on ftp.freebsd.org and various FTP mirror sites throughout the world. It can also be ordered on CD from Walnut Creek CDROM, from where it will be shipping shortly as a 4 CD set containing a lot of extra stuff of interest to programmers and general users alike.

IMPORTANT NOTE: All of the profits from the sales of this CD set go to support the FreeBSD Project!

Like many businesses in the field of high-tech, Walnut Creek CDROM has realized that in order to make any product for an emerging market grow, you have to make a significant investment in such growth, even if it means abandoning short-term profits. Walnut Creek CDROM is the only CDROM vendor who currently does anything like this and it's certainly my hope that you will help support the project by buying (or getting someone else to buy :) one of their CDs. Thanks!

The official FTP distribution site for FreeBSD is:

ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.org/pub/FreeBSD

Or via the WEB page at:

-

http://www.cdrom.com/pub/FreeBSD

+

http://www.cdrom.com/pub/FreeBSD

And on CD-ROM from Walnut Creek CDROM:

Walnut Creek CDROM
4041 Pike Lane, #F
Concord CA, 94520 USA
Phone: +1 925 674-0783
Fax: +1 925 674-0821
Tech Support: +1 925 603-1234
Email: info@cdrom.com
WWW: http://www.cdrom.com/

-

If you are in Japan, please refer to +

If you are in Japan, please refer to Pacific HiTech for information on ordering a localized (or the english) version of the 2.2.7 product. Pacific HiTech is now an affiliate of Walnut Creek CDROM for Japanese sales of FreeBSD.

Additionally, FreeBSD is available via anonymous FTP from mirror sites in the following countries: Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Bulgaria, Canada, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Israel, Japan, Korea, Latvia, Malaysia, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Russia, Slovenia, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Taiwan, Thailand, the Ukraine and the United Kingdom (and quite possibly several others which I've never even heard of :).

Before trying the central FTP site, please check your regional mirror(s) first by going to:

ftp://ftp.<yourdomain>.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD

Any additional mirror sites will be labeled ftp2, ftp3 and so on.

The latest versions of export-restricted code for FreeBSD (2.0C or later) (eBones and secure) are also being made available at the following locations. If you are outside the U.S. or Canada, please get secure (DES) and eBones (Kerberos) from one of the following foreign distribution sites:

South Africa

ftp://ftp.internat.F reeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
ftp://ftp2.internat.FreeBS D.ORG/pub/FreeBSD

Brazil

ftp://ftp.br.FreeBSD.ORG/p ub/FreeBSD

Finland

ftp://nic.funet.f i/pub/unix/FreeBSD/eurocrypt

Release Home &footer; diff --git a/en/releases/2.2.8R/announce.sgml b/en/releases/2.2.8R/announce.sgml index 2d582dad20..27ae1cd177 100644 --- a/en/releases/2.2.8R/announce.sgml +++ b/en/releases/2.2.8R/announce.sgml @@ -1,109 +1,109 @@ - + %includes; ]> &header;

Date: Sun, 29 Nov 1998 20:00:25 -0700
From: "Jordan K. Hubbard" <jkh@time.cdrom.com>
Subject:FreeBSD 2.2.8 is now released!

It is, as always, my great pleasure to announce the release of FreeBSD 2.2.8, our latest and final release along the 2.2-stable branch. Those folks who are still running 2.1.x and wish to upgrade to 2.2 technology are definitely encouraged to do so now as the 2.2-stable branch has gone into maintainence mode. A number of problems with 2.2.7 have been fixed and the release notes should be consulted for more information.

FreeBSD 2.2.8-RELEASE is available on ftp.freebsd.org and various FTP mirror sites throughout the world. It can also be ordered on CD from Walnut Creek CDROM, from where it will be shipping shortly as a 4 CD set containing a lot of extra stuff of interest to programmers and general users alike.

IMPORTANT NOTE: All of the profits from the sales of this CD set go to support the FreeBSD Project!

The official FTP distribution site for FreeBSD is:

ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.org/pub/FreeBSD

Or via the WEB page at:

http://www.cdrom.com/pub/FreeBSD

And on CD-ROM from Walnut Creek CDROM:

Walnut Creek CDROM
4041 Pike Lane, #F
Concord CA, 94520 USA
Phone: +1 925 674-0783
Fax: +1 925 674-0821
Tech Support: +1 925 603-1234
Email: info@cdrom.com
WWW: http://www.cdrom.com/

-

If you are in Japan, please refer to +

If you are in Japan, please refer to Pacific HiTech for information on ordering a localized (or the english) version of the 2.2.8 product. Pacific HiTech is now an affiliate of Walnut Creek CDROM for Japanese sales of FreeBSD.

Additionally, FreeBSD is available via anonymous FTP from mirror sites in the following countries: Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Bulgaria, Canada, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Israel, Japan, Korea, Latvia, Malaysia, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Russia, Slovenia, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Taiwan, Thailand, the Ukraine and the United Kingdom (and quite possibly several others which I've never even heard of :).

Before trying the central FTP site, please check your regional mirror(s) first by going to:

ftp://ftp.<yourdomain>.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD

Any additional mirror sites will be labeled ftp2, ftp3 and so on.

The latest versions of export-restricted code for FreeBSD (2.0C or later) (eBones and secure) are also being made available at the following locations. If you are outside the U.S. or Canada, please get secure (DES) and eBones (Kerberos) from one of the following foreign distribution sites:

South Africa

ftp://ftp.internat.F reeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
ftp://ftp2.internat.FreeBS D.ORG/pub/FreeBSD

Brazil

ftp://ftp.br.FreeBSD.ORG/p ub/FreeBSD

Finland

ftp://nic.funet.f i/pub/unix/FreeBSD/eurocrypt

Release Home &footer; diff --git a/en/releases/2.2R/announce.sgml b/en/releases/2.2R/announce.sgml index b28b1ad686..035cc5c1e6 100644 --- a/en/releases/2.2R/announce.sgml +++ b/en/releases/2.2R/announce.sgml @@ -1,29 +1,29 @@ - + %includes; ]> &header;

It is our great pleasure to announce the release of FreeBSD 2.2, the long-awaited first release of our 2.2 branch technology following lengthy ALPHA, BETA and GAMMA testing cycles.

FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE is now available on ftp.freebsd.org and various FTP mirror sites throughout the world. It can also be ordered on CD from -Walnut Creek CDROM, from +Walnut Creek CDROM, from where it will be shipping shortly.

FreeBSD 2.2 represents a rather large leap in functionality from the 2.1.x releases, everyone being is strongly encouraged to read the release notes for a list of new features.

Release Home &footer; diff --git a/en/releases/3.0R/announce.sgml b/en/releases/3.0R/announce.sgml index 9846f42c10..d8bb68e60b 100644 --- a/en/releases/3.0R/announce.sgml +++ b/en/releases/3.0R/announce.sgml @@ -1,119 +1,119 @@ - + %includes; ]> &header;

Date: Fri, 16 Oct 1998 13:19:03 -0700
From: "Jordan K. Hubbard" <jkh@time.cdrom.com>
Subject:FreeBSD 3.0 is now released!

After what can only be described as a heroic effort by the FreeBSD Project volunteers, the long-awaited release of FreeBSD 3.0 is now out!

This release is primarily aimed at developers and early-adopters, though many ISPs have reported good results when using it in production (not that we recommend this to any but the most highly skilled). See the release notes for more information.

FreeBSD 3.0-RELEASE is available on ftp.freebsd.org and various FTP mirror sites throughout the world. It can also be ordered on CD from Walnut Creek CDROM, from where it will be shipping shortly as a 4 CD set containing a lot of extra stuff of interest to programmers and general users alike.

IMPORTANT NOTE: All of the profits from the sales of this CD set go to support the FreeBSD Project!

Like many businesses in the field of high-tech, Walnut Creek CDROM has realized that in order to make any product for an emerging market grow, you have to make a significant investment in such growth, even if it means abandoning short-term profits. Walnut Creek CDROM is the only CDROM vendor who currently does anything like this and it's certainly my hope that you will help support the project by buying (or getting someone else to buy :) one of their CDs. Thanks!

The official FTP distribution site for FreeBSD is:

ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.org/pub/FreeBSD

Or via the WEB page at:

http://www.cdrom.com/pub/FreeBSD

And on CD-ROM from Walnut Creek CDROM:

Walnut Creek CDROM
4041 Pike Lane, #F
Concord CA, 94520 USA
Phone: +1 925 674-0783
Fax: +1 925 674-0821
Tech Support: +1 925 603-1234
Email: info@cdrom.com
WWW: http://www.cdrom.com/

-

If you are in Japan, please refer to +

If you are in Japan, please refer to Pacific HiTech for information on ordering a localized (or the english) version of the 3.0 product when it becomes available. Pacific HiTech is now an affiliate of Walnut Creek CDROM for Japanese sales of FreeBSD.

Additionally, FreeBSD is available via anonymous FTP from mirror sites in the following countries: Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Bulgaria, Canada, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Israel, Japan, Korea, Latvia, Malaysia, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Russia, Slovenia, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Taiwan, Thailand, the Ukraine and the United Kingdom (and quite possibly several others which I've never even heard of :).

Before trying the central FTP site, please check your regional mirror(s) first by going to:

ftp://ftp.<yourdomain>.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD

Any additional mirror sites will be labeled ftp2, ftp3 and so on.

The latest versions of export-restricted code for FreeBSD (2.0C or later) (eBones and secure) are also being made available at the following locations. If you are outside the U.S. or Canada, please get secure (DES) and eBones (Kerberos) from one of the following foreign distribution sites:

South Africa

ftp://ftp.internat.F reeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
ftp://ftp2.internat.FreeBS D.ORG/pub/FreeBSD

Brazil

ftp://ftp.br.FreeBSD.ORG/p ub/FreeBSD

Finland

ftp://nic.funet.f i/pub/unix/FreeBSD/eurocrypt

Release Home &footer; diff --git a/en/security/advisories.xml b/en/security/advisories.xml index df440e93b9..1837921131 100644 --- a/en/security/advisories.xml +++ b/en/security/advisories.xml @@ -1,214 +1,214 @@ - + %includes; ]> - + &header;

This guide attempts to document some of the tips and tricks used by many FreeBSD security experts for securing systems and writing secure code. It is designed to help you learn about the various ways of protecting a FreeBSD system against outside attacks and how to recover from such attacks if and when they should happen. It also lists the various ways in which the systems programmer can become more security conscious so he will less likely introduce security holes in the first place.

We welcome your comments on the contents and correctness of this page. Please send email to the FreeBSD Security Officers if you have changes you'd like to see here.

The FreeBSD security officer

FreeBSD takes security seriously, a dedicated team of security officers providing a focal point for security related communications. A security officers' main task is to send out advisories when there are known security holes and otherwise keep abreast of security issues. The security officers -also communicate with the various CERT +also communicate with the various CERT and FIRST teams around the world, sharing information about vulnerabilities in FreeBSD or utilities commonly used by FreeBSD, and keeping up to date on security issues in the world at large. The security officers are also active members of those organizations.

When you need to contact the security officers about a sensitive matter, please use their PGP key to encrypt your message before sending it.

FreeBSD security advisories:

The FreeBSD security officers provide security advisories for the following releases of FreeBSD:

  • the most recent official release of FreeBSD,
  • FreeBSD-current,
  • FreeBSD-stable, when at least 2 releases are based on it.
  • the previous FreeBSD-stable when a "new stable" does not yet have 2 releases based on it.
At this time, security advisories are available for:
  • FreeBSD 2.2.6
  • FreeBSD-current
  • FreeBSD-stable

Older releases will not be actively maintained and users are strongly encouraged to upgrade to one of the supported releases.

An advisory will be sent out when a security hole exists that is either being actively abused (as indicated to us via reports from end users or CERT like organizations), or when the security hole is public knowledge (e.g. because a report has been posted to a public mailing list).

Like all development efforts, security fixes are first brought into the FreeBSD-current branch. After a couple of days and some testing, the fix is retrofitted into the supported FreeBSD-stable branch(es) and an advisory then sent out.

Advisories are sent to the following FreeBSD mailing lists:

  • FreeBSD-security-notifications@freebsd.org
  • FreeBSD-security@freebsd.org
  • FreeBSD-announce@freebsd.org

Advisories are always signed using the FreeBSD security officer PGP key and are archived, along with their associated patches, at our FTP CERT repository. At the time of this writing, the following advisories are currently available:

FreeBSD security related information

If you want to stay up to date on FreeBSD security, you can subscribe yorself to one of the following mailing lists:

 freebsd-security		General security related discussion
 freebsd-security-notifications	Security notifications (moderated mailing list)
 
Send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.ORG with
      subscribe <listname>  [<optional address>]
 
in the body of the message in order to subscribe yourself.

What to do when you detect a security compromise:

  • Determine the level of security breach:
    What privilege did the attack get? That of another user or more (up to root privileges)?
  • Determine those parts of the system which are not in their original state anymore:
    What software has been tampered with? You may decide to re-install the operating system from a safe medium, or you might have MD5 checksums of the original software with which you can check your system. The tripwire package also keeps MD5 checksums, though be aware that tripwire might be tampered with as well and be sure and use a known-good copy.
  • Find out how the breakin was done:
    Via a well-known security bug? A misconfiguration? If it's a new bug, you should warn the FreeBSD Security Officer.
  • Fix the hole(s):
    Install new software that fixes the problems. If you aren't able to get a fix quickly, you should temporarily disable remote access to your system until you have done so.

Other questions you may ask yourself are:

  • Who do I warn? You can contact the security officer, or even the local authorities. The choice is up to you.
  • Do I want to trace the person responsible? By not fixing the hole right away, you have a chance to catch the cracker. Then again, you have the chance the cracker wipes your disk. The choice is up to you.

How to secure a FreeBSD system

There are several steps involved in securing a FreeBSD system, or in fact, any UNIX system:

Security Do's and Don'ts for Programmers

Other useful security information:

  • The COAST archive Contains a huge collection of security related material.
  • The COAST Security hotlist This page is THE place to start looking for security related material. It contains hundreds of useful security pointers. Everything you always wanted to know about security...and more...
  • -
  • The various CERTs (e.g. www.cert.org and - www.auscert.org.au)
  • +
  • The various CERTs (e.g. www.cert.org and + www.auscert.org.au)
  • -
  • SecurityPortal.com +
  • SecurityPortal.com is intended to be the comprehensive Web site for Internet Security. It is dedicated to providing corporate security professionals with the information and resources needed to protect their networks. We summarize breaking security news and provide a jumping off point for Security Alerts, Products, Tools, Tips & Tricks and other Resources.
  • Mailing lists: Bugtraq, BOS, etc.
&footer diff --git a/en/security/security.sgml b/en/security/security.sgml index 2616f0c3c3..8b3a1bd32e 100644 --- a/en/security/security.sgml +++ b/en/security/security.sgml @@ -1,214 +1,214 @@ - + %includes; ]> - + &header;

This guide attempts to document some of the tips and tricks used by many FreeBSD security experts for securing systems and writing secure code. It is designed to help you learn about the various ways of protecting a FreeBSD system against outside attacks and how to recover from such attacks if and when they should happen. It also lists the various ways in which the systems programmer can become more security conscious so he will less likely introduce security holes in the first place.

We welcome your comments on the contents and correctness of this page. Please send email to the FreeBSD Security Officers if you have changes you'd like to see here.

The FreeBSD security officer

FreeBSD takes security seriously, a dedicated team of security officers providing a focal point for security related communications. A security officers' main task is to send out advisories when there are known security holes and otherwise keep abreast of security issues. The security officers -also communicate with the various CERT +also communicate with the various CERT and FIRST teams around the world, sharing information about vulnerabilities in FreeBSD or utilities commonly used by FreeBSD, and keeping up to date on security issues in the world at large. The security officers are also active members of those organizations.

When you need to contact the security officers about a sensitive matter, please use their PGP key to encrypt your message before sending it.

FreeBSD security advisories:

The FreeBSD security officers provide security advisories for the following releases of FreeBSD:

  • the most recent official release of FreeBSD,
  • FreeBSD-current,
  • FreeBSD-stable, when at least 2 releases are based on it.
  • the previous FreeBSD-stable when a "new stable" does not yet have 2 releases based on it.
At this time, security advisories are available for:
  • FreeBSD 2.2.6
  • FreeBSD-current
  • FreeBSD-stable

Older releases will not be actively maintained and users are strongly encouraged to upgrade to one of the supported releases.

An advisory will be sent out when a security hole exists that is either being actively abused (as indicated to us via reports from end users or CERT like organizations), or when the security hole is public knowledge (e.g. because a report has been posted to a public mailing list).

Like all development efforts, security fixes are first brought into the FreeBSD-current branch. After a couple of days and some testing, the fix is retrofitted into the supported FreeBSD-stable branch(es) and an advisory then sent out.

Advisories are sent to the following FreeBSD mailing lists:

  • FreeBSD-security-notifications@freebsd.org
  • FreeBSD-security@freebsd.org
  • FreeBSD-announce@freebsd.org

Advisories are always signed using the FreeBSD security officer PGP key and are archived, along with their associated patches, at our FTP CERT repository. At the time of this writing, the following advisories are currently available:

FreeBSD security related information

If you want to stay up to date on FreeBSD security, you can subscribe yorself to one of the following mailing lists:

 freebsd-security		General security related discussion
 freebsd-security-notifications	Security notifications (moderated mailing list)
 
Send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.ORG with
      subscribe <listname>  [<optional address>]
 
in the body of the message in order to subscribe yourself.

What to do when you detect a security compromise:

  • Determine the level of security breach:
    What privilege did the attack get? That of another user or more (up to root privileges)?
  • Determine those parts of the system which are not in their original state anymore:
    What software has been tampered with? You may decide to re-install the operating system from a safe medium, or you might have MD5 checksums of the original software with which you can check your system. The tripwire package also keeps MD5 checksums, though be aware that tripwire might be tampered with as well and be sure and use a known-good copy.
  • Find out how the breakin was done:
    Via a well-known security bug? A misconfiguration? If it's a new bug, you should warn the FreeBSD Security Officer.
  • Fix the hole(s):
    Install new software that fixes the problems. If you aren't able to get a fix quickly, you should temporarily disable remote access to your system until you have done so.

Other questions you may ask yourself are:

  • Who do I warn? You can contact the security officer, or even the local authorities. The choice is up to you.
  • Do I want to trace the person responsible? By not fixing the hole right away, you have a chance to catch the cracker. Then again, you have the chance the cracker wipes your disk. The choice is up to you.

How to secure a FreeBSD system

There are several steps involved in securing a FreeBSD system, or in fact, any UNIX system:

Security Do's and Don'ts for Programmers

Other useful security information:

  • The COAST archive Contains a huge collection of security related material.
  • The COAST Security hotlist This page is THE place to start looking for security related material. It contains hundreds of useful security pointers. Everything you always wanted to know about security...and more...
  • -
  • The various CERTs (e.g. www.cert.org and - www.auscert.org.au)
  • +
  • The various CERTs (e.g. www.cert.org and + www.auscert.org.au)
  • -
  • SecurityPortal.com +
  • SecurityPortal.com is intended to be the comprehensive Web site for Internet Security. It is dedicated to providing corporate security professionals with the information and resources needed to protect their networks. We summarize breaking security news and provide a jumping off point for Security Alerts, Products, Tools, Tips & Tricks and other Resources.
  • Mailing lists: Bugtraq, BOS, etc.
&footer diff --git a/en/support.sgml b/en/support.sgml index e73078d605..955da8d34c 100644 --- a/en/support.sgml +++ b/en/support.sgml @@ -1,438 +1,438 @@ + %includes; ]> - + &header;

Mailing lists

Mailing lists are the primary support channel for FreeBSD users, with numerous mailing lists covering different topic areas. When in doubt about what list to post a question to, post to freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG. You can search the mailing list - archives at www.freebsd.org.

+ archives at www.freebsd.org.

Several non-English mailing lists are also available:

If you create other freebsd mailing lists, let us know about them.

Newsgroups

There are a few FreeBSD specific newsgroups, along with numerous other newsgroups on topics of interest to FreeBSD users, though the mailing lists remain the most reliable way to get in touch with the FreeBSD developers. For miscellaneous FreeBSD discussion, see comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.misc. For important announcements, see comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.announce.

The BSD Usenet News Searcher have archives of all BSD-related Usenet newsgroups from June 1992 onwards.

WEB Resources

GNATS Problem Report Database

Current FreeBSD problem reports are tracked using the GNATS database.

Problem reports may also be submitted to the development team using the send-pr(1) command on a FreeBSD system or by sending an email message to freebsd-bugs@FreeBSD.ORG. Please note that send-pr is preferred since messages sent to the mailing list are not tracked as official problem reports!

CVS Repository

CVS (the Concurrent Version System) is the tool we use for keeping our sources under control. Every change (with accompanying log message explaining its purpose) from FreeBSD 2.0 to the present is stored here, and can be easily viewed from here (click on the link). To obtain a complete copy of the FreeBSD CVS repository or any of the development branches inside it, you may choose any one of following options:

  • cvsup if you're looking for on-demand, low overhead access using a custom utility (written in Modula-3 no less).
  • anoncvs if you're looking for on-demand access that has higher overhead than cvsup (in terms of wall time and bytes xferred) but is easier to use for checking out small pieces of the tree and requires nothing more than the cvs tools already bundled with FreeBSD.
  • CTM if you're looking for very low overhead, batch-mode access (basically, patches through email) access.
  • The web interface if you're looking to simply browse the repository in search of a specific change or file revision.
  • Finally, if you've got bandwidth to burn or you prefer / are forced to use FTP, you can simply mirror the CVS repository from ftp.freebsd.org.

Mirrors of the CVS Repository cgi script are available in Germany and Japan.

User Groups

FreeBSD's widespread popularity has spawned a number of user groups around the world. If you know of a FreeBSD user group not listed here, let us know about it.

  • FreeBSD-SF (San Francisco FreeBSD User Group) meets semi-monthly at Silicon Reef. Those interested in attending should visit the web site or send mail to the mailing list

  • The Danish *BSD user group, BSD/DK, is being created. Send mail subscription request to bsd-dk-request@hotel.prosa.dk. No initial meeting planned yet.

  • BSDHH (BSD User Group Hamburg) meets on the first Wednesday of the month at 7.00pm in the Chinese restaurant Lotosbluete, Loewenstrasse 22 in Hamburg-Eppendorf/Germany. Most members are FreeBSD users, although users of all BSD flavors are welcome. Interested people should send mail to bsdhh@bsdhh.org.

  • -
  • The FreeBSD UKUG +
  • The FreeBSD UKUG (FreeBSD UK User's Group) exists for the benefit of FreeBSD users in the United Kingdom. Please follow the link for details.

  • -
  • The Brainstorm +
  • The Brainstorm users group meets in Wuerzburg, Germany and welcomes all users of Unix, with some emphasis on helping new users of FreeBSD. They meet every Monday at 8.00pm in the "Cafe Klug", Muenzstrasse, Wuerzburg. Mail bs@rak.franken.de for more information or follow the Brainstorm link.

  • FUUNM (Free Unix Users of New Mexico) meets on the 2nd Saturday of the month from 4:30-6:00pm at the Farris Engineering Center, room 141, University of new Mexico. This is not specifically a FreeBSD user group, but if you are in the area, your presence is welcome. The group operates a mailing list (fuunm@astro.phys.unm.edu). Contact Alan Lundin for more information.

  • FreeBSD-Milwaukee Wisconsin meets occasionally and has a mailing list: freebsd-mke-l@ns.sol.net. send mail to freebsd-mke-l-request@ns.sol.net to subscribe.

  • RUUG (Reno Unix Users Group) meets monthly in Reno Nevada and discusses the use of FreeBSD and Linux. Contact Eric Blood or Todd Crenshaw for more information.

  • Washington DC (DC Metropolitan Area) FreeBSD User Group is now forming. Please contact Richard Cramer, Sytex Access Ltd. at 703-425-2515, or preferred, email at rcramer@sytex.net to be put on a member distribution list. Initial meeting to be held in May.

  • Yavapai Free Unix Users Group is now forming for *BSD/Linux, etc., users in Northern Arizona. Please contact Russell Carter ( rcarter@consys.com) for details.

  • BSD.fr is a group for people who talk french and we are doing a mailing list by Cc (we dont have majordomo). Please contact Malartre malartre@aei.ca for more information.

  • HUMBUG (Home Unix Machine - Brisbane User Group) Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. Mailing lists are handled by majordomo@humbug.org.au - announce, general and chat.. More information at the web page. Meetings are held fortnightly at the University of Queensland. Contact president@humbug.org.au for further information.

  • -
  • KULUA (Kansas Unix & Linux Users +
  • KULUA (Kansas Unix & Linux Users Association) is a Free Unix user group based in Lawrence, Kansas, but with users throughout eastern Kansas and western Missouri. We have about 120 members and meet biweekly. Visit the web site or email kulua@kulua.org for more information.

  • -
  • TFUG: Tucson Free Unix Group, +
  • TFUG: Tucson Free Unix Group, Arizona.

  • The Israeli BSD Users Group is an effort to promote the use of *BSD throught the country, and to act as a center of information for all BSD users. It is run by us, currently FreeBSD users. However, All *BSD Variants users are welcome aboard. We have a mailing list, hosted at bsd-il@osem.co.il. To subscribe, simply send mail to majordomo@osem.co.il, with the line "subscribe bsd-il" as the message body.

  • The Yahoo Club group is a foundation for a Los Angeles based BSD user group.

FreeBSD Development Projects

In addition to the mainstream development path of FreeBSD, a number of developer groups are working on the cutting edge to expand FreeBSD's range of applications in new directions.

FreeBSD Security Guide

Security resources available to FreeBSD users: PGP Key for Security Officers, advisories, patches and mailing lists.

Commercial Consulting Services

Whether you are just starting out with FreeBSD, or need to complete a large project, a consultant or two might be your answer.

General UNIX Information

The X Window System

  • The XFree86 Project provides users of a variety of Intel based Unix systems, including FreeBSD, with an excellent X Window system.
  • The WINE project is working to provide the ability to run MS-Windows software on Intel based Unix systems such as FreeBSD, NetBSD and Linux. More information is available from the WINE FAQ.

Hardware

Related Operating System Projects

  • NetBSD is another free 4.4BSD-Lite based operating system which runs on several different architectures.
  • OpenBSD is another 4.4BSD derivative.
  • Linux is another free Unix-like system.
  • Lites is a 4.4 BSD Lite based server and emulation library that provides free unix functionality to a Mach based system.
  • The GNU HURD project is another effort to develop a free Unix-like operating system.
&footer; diff --git a/en/usergroups.sgml b/en/usergroups.sgml index 479488e28f..fdcc46ec63 100644 --- a/en/usergroups.sgml +++ b/en/usergroups.sgml @@ -1,438 +1,438 @@ + %includes; ]> - + &header;

Mailing lists

Mailing lists are the primary support channel for FreeBSD users, with numerous mailing lists covering different topic areas. When in doubt about what list to post a question to, post to freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG. You can search the mailing list - archives at www.freebsd.org.

+ archives at www.freebsd.org.

Several non-English mailing lists are also available:

If you create other freebsd mailing lists, let us know about them.

Newsgroups

There are a few FreeBSD specific newsgroups, along with numerous other newsgroups on topics of interest to FreeBSD users, though the mailing lists remain the most reliable way to get in touch with the FreeBSD developers. For miscellaneous FreeBSD discussion, see comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.misc. For important announcements, see comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.announce.

The BSD Usenet News Searcher have archives of all BSD-related Usenet newsgroups from June 1992 onwards.

WEB Resources

GNATS Problem Report Database

Current FreeBSD problem reports are tracked using the GNATS database.

Problem reports may also be submitted to the development team using the send-pr(1) command on a FreeBSD system or by sending an email message to freebsd-bugs@FreeBSD.ORG. Please note that send-pr is preferred since messages sent to the mailing list are not tracked as official problem reports!

CVS Repository

CVS (the Concurrent Version System) is the tool we use for keeping our sources under control. Every change (with accompanying log message explaining its purpose) from FreeBSD 2.0 to the present is stored here, and can be easily viewed from here (click on the link). To obtain a complete copy of the FreeBSD CVS repository or any of the development branches inside it, you may choose any one of following options:

  • cvsup if you're looking for on-demand, low overhead access using a custom utility (written in Modula-3 no less).
  • anoncvs if you're looking for on-demand access that has higher overhead than cvsup (in terms of wall time and bytes xferred) but is easier to use for checking out small pieces of the tree and requires nothing more than the cvs tools already bundled with FreeBSD.
  • CTM if you're looking for very low overhead, batch-mode access (basically, patches through email) access.
  • The web interface if you're looking to simply browse the repository in search of a specific change or file revision.
  • Finally, if you've got bandwidth to burn or you prefer / are forced to use FTP, you can simply mirror the CVS repository from ftp.freebsd.org.

Mirrors of the CVS Repository cgi script are available in Germany and Japan.

User Groups

FreeBSD's widespread popularity has spawned a number of user groups around the world. If you know of a FreeBSD user group not listed here, let us know about it.

  • FreeBSD-SF (San Francisco FreeBSD User Group) meets semi-monthly at Silicon Reef. Those interested in attending should visit the web site or send mail to the mailing list

  • The Danish *BSD user group, BSD/DK, is being created. Send mail subscription request to bsd-dk-request@hotel.prosa.dk. No initial meeting planned yet.

  • BSDHH (BSD User Group Hamburg) meets on the first Wednesday of the month at 7.00pm in the Chinese restaurant Lotosbluete, Loewenstrasse 22 in Hamburg-Eppendorf/Germany. Most members are FreeBSD users, although users of all BSD flavors are welcome. Interested people should send mail to bsdhh@bsdhh.org.

  • -
  • The FreeBSD UKUG +
  • The FreeBSD UKUG (FreeBSD UK User's Group) exists for the benefit of FreeBSD users in the United Kingdom. Please follow the link for details.

  • -
  • The Brainstorm +
  • The Brainstorm users group meets in Wuerzburg, Germany and welcomes all users of Unix, with some emphasis on helping new users of FreeBSD. They meet every Monday at 8.00pm in the "Cafe Klug", Muenzstrasse, Wuerzburg. Mail bs@rak.franken.de for more information or follow the Brainstorm link.

  • FUUNM (Free Unix Users of New Mexico) meets on the 2nd Saturday of the month from 4:30-6:00pm at the Farris Engineering Center, room 141, University of new Mexico. This is not specifically a FreeBSD user group, but if you are in the area, your presence is welcome. The group operates a mailing list (fuunm@astro.phys.unm.edu). Contact Alan Lundin for more information.

  • FreeBSD-Milwaukee Wisconsin meets occasionally and has a mailing list: freebsd-mke-l@ns.sol.net. send mail to freebsd-mke-l-request@ns.sol.net to subscribe.

  • RUUG (Reno Unix Users Group) meets monthly in Reno Nevada and discusses the use of FreeBSD and Linux. Contact Eric Blood or Todd Crenshaw for more information.

  • Washington DC (DC Metropolitan Area) FreeBSD User Group is now forming. Please contact Richard Cramer, Sytex Access Ltd. at 703-425-2515, or preferred, email at rcramer@sytex.net to be put on a member distribution list. Initial meeting to be held in May.

  • Yavapai Free Unix Users Group is now forming for *BSD/Linux, etc., users in Northern Arizona. Please contact Russell Carter ( rcarter@consys.com) for details.

  • BSD.fr is a group for people who talk french and we are doing a mailing list by Cc (we dont have majordomo). Please contact Malartre malartre@aei.ca for more information.

  • HUMBUG (Home Unix Machine - Brisbane User Group) Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. Mailing lists are handled by majordomo@humbug.org.au - announce, general and chat.. More information at the web page. Meetings are held fortnightly at the University of Queensland. Contact president@humbug.org.au for further information.

  • -
  • KULUA (Kansas Unix & Linux Users +
  • KULUA (Kansas Unix & Linux Users Association) is a Free Unix user group based in Lawrence, Kansas, but with users throughout eastern Kansas and western Missouri. We have about 120 members and meet biweekly. Visit the web site or email kulua@kulua.org for more information.

  • -
  • TFUG: Tucson Free Unix Group, +
  • TFUG: Tucson Free Unix Group, Arizona.

  • The Israeli BSD Users Group is an effort to promote the use of *BSD throught the country, and to act as a center of information for all BSD users. It is run by us, currently FreeBSD users. However, All *BSD Variants users are welcome aboard. We have a mailing list, hosted at bsd-il@osem.co.il. To subscribe, simply send mail to majordomo@osem.co.il, with the line "subscribe bsd-il" as the message body.

  • The Yahoo Club group is a foundation for a Los Angeles based BSD user group.

FreeBSD Development Projects

In addition to the mainstream development path of FreeBSD, a number of developer groups are working on the cutting edge to expand FreeBSD's range of applications in new directions.

FreeBSD Security Guide

Security resources available to FreeBSD users: PGP Key for Security Officers, advisories, patches and mailing lists.

Commercial Consulting Services

Whether you are just starting out with FreeBSD, or need to complete a large project, a consultant or two might be your answer.

General UNIX Information

The X Window System

  • The XFree86 Project provides users of a variety of Intel based Unix systems, including FreeBSD, with an excellent X Window system.
  • The WINE project is working to provide the ability to run MS-Windows software on Intel based Unix systems such as FreeBSD, NetBSD and Linux. More information is available from the WINE FAQ.

Hardware

Related Operating System Projects

  • NetBSD is another free 4.4BSD-Lite based operating system which runs on several different architectures.
  • OpenBSD is another 4.4BSD derivative.
  • Linux is another free Unix-like system.
  • Lites is a 4.4 BSD Lite based server and emulation library that provides free unix functionality to a Mach based system.
  • The GNU HURD project is another effort to develop a free Unix-like operating system.
&footer; diff --git a/ja/docproj/translations.sgml b/ja/docproj/translations.sgml index 4ddd216b4b..10dd8ed151 100644 --- a/ja/docproj/translations.sgml +++ b/ja/docproj/translations.sgml @@ -1,79 +1,79 @@ - + %includes; ]> - + &header;

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E-Mail: doc@kr.freebsd.org
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Web: http://www.jp.freebsd.org/doc-jp/
E-Mail: doc-jp@jp.freebsd.org
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Web: http://www.de.freebsd.org/de/uebersetzung.html
E-Mail: de-bsd-translators@de.freebsd.org
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E-Mail: jesusr@es.freebsd.org
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Walnut Creek CDROM ¤Ë¤è¤Ã¤ÆÌµÎÁ¤Ç½ÐÈÇ, ÇÛÉÛ¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤ë FreeBSD Newsletter ¤Ç¤¹.

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²áµî, ¸½ºß, ¤½¤·¤ÆÌ¤Íè¤Î¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤Î¾ÜºÙ¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤Ï, ¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¾ðÊó ¤Î¥Ú¡¼¥¸¤ò¤´Í÷²¼¤µ¤¤.

1998 10·î

  • 98/10/15 FreeBSD 3.0 ¤¬¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤µ¤ì¤Þ¤·¤¿. ¾ÜºÙ¤Ï ¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¾ðÊó¤Î¥Ú¡¼¥¸¤ò ¤´Í÷²¼¤µ¤¤. ¥¤¥ó¥¹¥È¡¼¥ë¸å¤Ë release errata ¤ò¥Á¥§¥Ã¥¯¤·¤Æ, 3.0 ¤Î¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¸å¤Ëȯ³Ð¤·¤¿ÃΤäƤª¤¯¤Ù¤­ÌäÂêÅÀ¤¬¤Ê¤¤¤«³Î¤«¤á¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤.

1998 9·î

  • 98/09/15 9 ·î 15 Æü¤Ï 3.0-current ¤Î¥Ä¥ê¡¼¤¬¥Ù¡¼¥¿ÈÇ¤ËÆþ¤ëÆü¤Ç¤¹. ¤ß¤Ê¤µ¤ó´û¤Ë¤´Â¸¤¸ (...¤Ç¤¹¤è¤Í?) ¤Î¤È¤ª¤ê, 3.0 ¤Ï 10 ·î 15 Æü¤Ë¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤µ¤ì¤ëͽÄê¤Ç¤¹¤«¤é, ¥Ù¡¼¥¿ÈÇ¤Ë¤Ï 30 Æü¤Îͱͽ¤¬¤¢¤ë¤³¤È¤Ë¤Ê¤ê¤Þ¤¹. ¤³¤Î´ü´ÖÃæ, ¥Ù¡¼¥¿ÈǤΰìÈÌŪ³µÇ° (¼ê¸µ¤Ë¤¢¤ë¤â¤Î¤ò¥Æ¥¹¥È¤¹¤ë¤¿¤á¤Ç, Æó»°Æü¤´¤È¤Ë¥´¡¼¥ë¥Ý¥¹¥È¤Î°ÌÃÖ¤òÊѤ¨¤ë¤¿¤á¤Î¤â¤Î¤Ç¤Ï¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤»¤ó :) ¤ò¤Õ¤ß¤Ë¤¸¤ë¤è¤¦¤Ê¤ä¤êÊý¤Ç 3.0-current ¤Î¥Ä¥ê¡¼¤Ë¿·¤·¤¤µ¡Ç½¤ò²Ã¤¨¤¿¤ê¤«¤­²ó¤·¤¿¤ê¤¹¤ë¿Í¤¬ ¤¤¤Ê¤¤¤³¤È¤ò¿®¤¸¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹.

  • 98/09/13 ³«È¯¤ò°ìǯ°Ê¾å³¤±¤¿¤¢¤È, FreeBSD ÍѤΠCommon Access Method SCSI ¥ì¥¤¥ä¤¬ 9 ·î 13 Æü¤ÎÆüÍËÆü¤Ë 3.0-current ¤Î¥Ä¥ê¡¼¤ËÅý¹ç¤µ¤ì¤Þ¤·¤¿. ¸½ºß CAM ³«È¯¥Á¡¼¥à¤ÏÅý¹çºî¶È¤¬²Äǽ¤Ê¸Â¤ê¥¹¥à¡¼¥º¤Ë¿Ê¤à¤è¤¦¤ËÅØÎϤ·¤Æ¤¤¤ëºÇÃæ¤Ç¤¹¤Î¤Ç, ¤³¤Î´ü´ÖÃæ¤Ï CAM ¤ËÂФ¹¤ë¼ÁÌ䤨¤ÎÈ¿±þ¤¬ÃÙ¤¯¤Ê¤Ã¤Æ¤·¤Þ¤¦¤«¤â¤·¤ì¤Þ¤»¤ó. ¤´Î»¾µ²¼¤µ¤¤.

  • 98/09/09 Perl5 ¤¬ 3.0-CURRENT ¤Î¥½¡¼¥¹¥Ä¥ê¡¼¤ËÆþ¤ê¤Þ¤·¤¿.

  • 98/09/05 - + BSD CD ¤ª¤¿¤á¤·¥ê¥¹¥È. (Í¢Á÷ÎÁ¤Ï¼õ¼è¿Íʧ¤¤¤Ç) ¤À¤ì¤«¤Ë¤¢¤²¤Æ¤â¤¤¤¤, ¤¢¤ë¤¤¤Ï¶á¤¯¤Î¿Í¤ËÂߤ·¤Æ¤â¤¤¤¤ CD ¤ò¤ª»ý¤Á¤ÎÊý¤Ï, ¤³¤Î¥ê¥¹¥È¤Ë e-mail ¥¢¥É¥ì¥¹¤òºÜ¤»¤ë¤³¤È¤¬¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹. ¥Ï¡¼¥É¥¦¥§¥¢¤ä½ñÀÒ¤â¼õ¤±ÉÕ¤±¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. Ãϰè¤Î¿Þ½ñ´Û¤Ë CD ¤ò´óÉÕ¤¹¤ëÊý¤â±þ±ç¤ÎÂоݤˤʤäƤ¤¤ë¤Î¤Ç, ¤½¤¦¤¤¤¦Êý¤â¥ê¥¹¥È¤ËºÜ¤ì¤Þ¤¹¤è.

  • 98/09/01 Daemon News ¤ÎÂè°ì¹æ¤¬°ìÆüÁ°¤ËÆÏ¤­¤Þ¤·¤¿. ¤³¤ì¤Ï BSD ¥³¥ß¥å¥Ë¥Æ¥£¤Ë¤è¤ë, BSD ¥³¥ß¥å¥Ë¥Æ¥£¤Î¤¿¤á¤ÎÅŻҥޥ¬¥¸¥ó¤Ç¤¹. - http://www.daemonnews.org + http://www.daemonnews.org ¤ò¤´Í÷²¼¤µ¤¤.

1998 8·î

  • 98/08/31 FreeBSD -CURRENT ¥Ö¥é¥ó¥Á (¾­Íè¤Î 3.0-RELEASE) ¤Ï, a.out ·Á¼°¤«¤é ELF ·Á¼°¤Ë°Ü¹Ô¤·¤Þ¤·¤¿. ´Ø·¸¼Ô¤Î¿Âç¤Ê¿ÔÎϤΤª¤«¤²¤Ç°Ü¹Ô¤Ï¥¹¥à¡¼¥º¤Ë¿Ê¤ß¤Þ¤·¤¿. ELF ¤Ø¤Î°Ü¹Ô¤Ë´Ø¤¹¤ë¾Ü¤·¤¤¾ðÊó¤¬Íߤ·¤¤Êý¤Ï, freebsd-current@freebsd.org ¤Î¥á¡¼¥ë¥¢¡¼¥«¥¤¥Ö¤ò¥Á¥§¥Ã¥¯¤·¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤.

  • 98/08/23 Suidcontrol-0.1 ¤¬¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤µ¤ì¤Þ¤·¤¿. Suidcontrol ¤Ï, FreeBSD ²¼¤Ç suid/sgid ¤Î¥Ý¥ê¥·¡¼¤ò´ÉÍý¤¹¤ë¤¿¤á¤Î¼Â¸³Åª¤Ê¥æ¡¼¥Æ¥£¥ê¥Æ¥£¤Ç¤¹. ¾Ü¤·¤¤¾ðÊó¤Ï http://www.watson.org/fbsd-hardening/suidcontrol.html ¤«¤éÆÀ¤ë¤³¤È¤¬¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹.

  • 98/08/09 FreeBSD Security How-To ¤¬¸ø³«¤µ¤ì¤Þ¤·¤¿. ¸½ºß¤Ï¤Þ¤À¥Ù¡¼¥¿ÈǤÇ, http://www.best.com/~jkb/howto.txt ¤«¤é¼ê¤Ë¤¤¤ì¤ë¤³¤È¤¬¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹.

1998 7·î

1998 6·î

  • 98/06/24 FreeBSD Project ¤Ï, FreeBSD ¥Ç¥¹¥¯¥È¥Ã¥× ¥Æ¡¼¥Þ ¥³¥ó¥Æ¥¹¥È¤ò¸å±ç¤·¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. ²æ¤È»×¤ï¤ó¿Í¤Ï, ¼«Ê¬¤Ê¤ê¤Î X11 ¤ÎÀßÄê¤ò¥Ç¥¶¥¤¥ó¤·¤Æ¤ß¤Þ¤·¤ç¤¦. ¾¡¼Ô¤ÎºîÉʤϾ­Íè¤Î FreeBSD ¤Î¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤È¶¦¤ËÇÛÉÛ¤µ¤ì¤Þ¤¹.

1998 5·î

  • 98/05/30 WEBTechniques.com ¤Î, ¥é¥¦¥ó¥É¥í¥Ó¥ó DNS ¤ò»È¤Ã¤¿ Web ¥Õ¥¡¡¼¥à¤Î¼ÂÁõ¤Ë´Ø¤¹¤ë Èó¾ï¤ËÍ­±×¤Êµ­»ö¤ÎÃæ¤Ç, FreeBSD ¤È Apache ¤¬»È¤ï¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹.

  • 98/05/23 FreeBSD Newsletter ¤ÎÂè 2 ¹æ¤ò, Adobe PDF ·Á¼°¤Ç¼ê¤Ë¤¤¤ì¤ë¤³¤È¤¬¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹ ( FTP ¤â¤´ÍøÍѲ¼¤µ¤¤). PDF¥Ó¥å¡¼¥¢¤òÁªÂò, »ÈÍѤ¹¤ë¤È¤­¤Î½õ¤±¤È¤Ê¤ë ¥Ø¥ë¥×¥Õ¥¡¥¤¥ë¤¬¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹. µ­»ö¤Ë´Ø¤¹¤ë¤´°Õ¸«, ¹­¹ð, ÊÔ½¸¼Ô¤Ø¤Î¤ª¼ê»æ¤Ï newsletter@freebsd.org ¤Þ¤Ç¤É¤¦¤¾.

  • 98/05/01 FreeBSD ¥×¥í¥¸¥§¥¯¥È¤Ï FreeBSD CVS tree ÍѤΠAnonymous CVS ¤ò¥»¥Ã¥È¥¢¥Ã¥×¤·¤Þ¤·¤¿. Ãæ¤Ç¤â, FreeBSD ¤Î¥æ¡¼¥¶¤Ï, ²¿¤é¤«¤ÎÆÃ¸¢¤ò¼èÆÀ¤·¤Ê¤¯¤Æ¤â, FreeBSD ¥×¥í¥¸¥§¥¯¥È¤Î¥ª¥Õ¥£¥·¥ã¥ë anoncvs ¥µ¡¼¥Ð¤ËÂФ·¤Æ, ÆÉ¤ß¹þ¤ßÀìÍѤΠCVS Áàºî¤ò¹Ô¤¦¤³¤È¤¬¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹.

1998 4·î

  • 98/04/16 FreeBSD 2.2.6 ¤Î¿·¤·¤¤»ÍËçÁȤΠCD ¤¬Æþ²Ù¤µ¤ì¤Þ¤·¤¿. ÌÀÆü¤«¤é¹ÖÆÉ¤¢¤ë¤¤¤Ï¥Ð¥Ã¥¯¥ª¡¼¥À¡¼¤Î¤ªµÒÍͤؤÎȯÁ÷¤¬¹Ô¤ï¤ì¤ëͽÄê¤Ç¤¹. CD ¤ÎÆâÍÆ¤Ë´Ø¤¹¤ë¾Ü¤·¤¤¾ðÊó¤¬, - http://www.cdrom.com + http://www.cdrom.com ¤«¤éÍøÍѤǤ­¤Þ¤¹.

  • 98/04/11 ¿·¤·¤¤ FreeBSD ´ØÏ¢¤Î¥×¥í¥¸¥§¥¯¥È FreeBSD Mozilla Group ¤¬ÀßΩ¤µ¤ì¤Þ¤·¤¿. FreeBSD Mozilla Group ¤Ï, - Mozilla + Mozilla ¤È¤¤¤¦Ì¾Á°¤Ç¤âÃΤé¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤ë, ¥Õ¥ê¡¼¤Î Netscape web ¥Ö¥é¥¦¥¶¤Î¥µ¥Ý¡¼¥È¤È²þÎɤò¹Ô¤¤¤Þ¤¹.

1998 3·î

  • 98/03/25 FreeBSD 2.2.6 ¤¬¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤µ¤ì¤Þ¤·¤¿. ¾ÜºÙ¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤Ï ¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¾ðÊó¤Î¥Ú¡¼¥¸¤ò¤´Í÷²¼¤µ¤¤. ¥¤¥ó¥¹¥È¡¼¥ë¸å¤Ë release errata ¤ò¥Á¥§¥Ã¥¯¤·¤Æ, 2.2.6 ¤Î¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¸å¤Ë, ÃΤäƤª¤¤¤¿Êý¤¬Îɤ¤ÌäÂ꤬ȯÀ¸¤·¤Æ¤¤¤Ê¤¤¤«¤É¤¦¤«³Îǧ¤·¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤.

1998 2·î

1998 1·î

  • 98/01/08 Plug-n-Play ¥«¡¼¥É¤ËÂФ¹¤ë¤è¤êÎɤ¤¥µ¥Ý¡¼¥È¥³¡¼¥É¤¬ 3.0-current ¤È 2.2-stable ¥Ö¥é¥ó¥Á¤ÎξÊý¤ËÅý¹ç¤µ¤ì¤Þ¤·¤¿. ¥½¡¼¥¹¤Ï CVSup ¥æ¡¼¥Æ¥£¥ê¥Æ¥£¤òÄ̤¸¤Æ, ¥Ð¥¤¥Ê¥ê¤Ï current.FreeBSD.org ¤«¤é¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤Î snapshot ¤Î·Á¤Ç¼ê¤ËÆþ¤ê¤Þ¤¹.

1997 12·î

  • 97/12/26 CVSup ¥æ¡¼¥Æ¥£¥ê¥Æ¥£¤ò´Êñ¤ËÀßÄê, ¥¤¥ó¥¹¥È¡¼¥ë¤¹¤ë¤¿¤á¤Î¥Õ¥í¥ó¥È¥¨¥ó¥É¥Ä¡¼¥ë¤¬ÍøÍѤǤ­¤ë¤è¤¦¤Ë¤Ê¤ê¤Þ¤·¤¿. root ¤Ç¥í¥°¥¤¥ó¤¹¤ë¤« su ¤·¤Æ, pkg_add ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsupit.tgz ¤ò¼Â¹Ô¤¹¤ë¤À¤±¤Ç»ÈÍѤǤ­¤Þ¤¹.

  • 97/12/02 "FOOF" ¥Ð¥°¤¬ 3.0-current, 2.2-stable ¥Ö¥é¥ó¥Á¤ÎξÊý¤Ç ½¤Àµ¤µ¤ì¤Þ¤·¤¿. ²¼¤Î LAND ¥¢¥¿¥Ã¥¯¤ÈƱ¤¸¤è¤¦¤Ë CVSup ¤ò»È¤¦¤«, ¤³¤ì¤é¤Î¥Ñ¥Ã¥Á ¤òÅö¤Æ¤ì¤Ð, ¤³¤Î½¤Àµ¤òÈ¿±Ç¤¹¤ë¤³¤È¤¬¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹.

  • 97/12/01 TCP/IP ¤Î "LAND ¥¢¥¿¥Ã¥¯" ¥Ð¥°¤Ï, ´ØÏ¢¤¹¤ë¤¹¤Ù¤Æ¤Î¥Ö¥é¥ó¥Á¤Ç ½¤Àµ¤µ¤ì¤Þ¤·¤¿. ºÇ¿·¤Î 2.2 ¤Þ¤¿¤Ï 3.0 ¥½¡¼¥¹¥Ä¥ê¡¼¤ËÄɤ¤¤«¤±¤ë ¤¿¤á¤Î¥æ¡¼¥Æ¥£¥ê¥Æ¥£ CVSup ¤ò »È¤¨¤Ð, ¤³¤Î½¤Àµ¤òÈ¿±Ç¤¹¤ë¤³¤È¤¬¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹.

  • 97/12/01 Team FreeBSD ¤Ï, CPU ¤Î¥¢¥¤¥É¥ë¥¿¥¤¥à¤ò RSA ¤Î 64 bit °Å¹æ²½¥³¡¼¥É¤Î¥¯¥é¥Ã¥¯¤Î¤¿¤á¤ËÄ󶡤·¤Æ¤¯¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤ë FreeBSD ¤Î¥æ¡¼¥¶¤È¥µ¥Ý¡¼¥¿¤Î½¸¤Þ¤ê¤Ç¤¹. ¹¹¤Ê¤ë¾ðÊó¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤Ï, - Team FreeBSD ¤Î + Team FreeBSD ¤Î WWW ¥µ¥¤¥È¤ò¤´Í÷²¼¤µ¤¤.

1997 11·î

  • 97/11/21 Pentium Bug -- ²æ¡¹¤Ï Pentium ¤Î "F00F" halt bug ¤Ë ¤Ä¤¤¤ÆÇ§¼±¤·¤Æ¤ª¤ê, ÌäÂê²óÈò¤Î¤¿¤á¤Ë Intel ¤È¶¦¤Ëºî¶È¤Ë¤¢¤¿¤Ã¤Æ ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. ²óÈòºö¤¬°ìÈ̤˸ø³«¤Ç¤­¤ë¥ì¥Ù¥ë¤Ë㤷¤¿¤ª¤ê¤Ë¤Ï, ¤³¤Î Web ¥Ú¡¼¥¸¤È announce@freebsd.org ¥á¡¼¥ê¥ó¥°¥ê¥¹¥È, comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.a nnounce ¤Ë¥¢¥Ê¥¦¥ó¥¹¤ò½Ð¤¹¤Ä¤â¤ê¤Ç¤¹. ¤â¤¦¾¯¤·¤À¤±²æËý¤·¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤.

  • 97/11/09 FreeBSD 2.2.5-RELEASE ¤Î CDROM ¤¬½Ð²Ù¤µ¤ìÀ¤³¦Ãæ¤Î¹ØÆÉ¼Ô¤Ë Á÷¤é¤ì»Ï¤á¤Þ¤·¤¿. ¾Ü¤·¤¯¤Ï http://www.cdrom.com/titles/os/fbsd25.htm ¤ò ¤´Í÷¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤.

1997 10·î

  • 97/10/22 FreeBSD 2.2.5 ¤¬¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤µ¤ì¤Þ¤·¤¿. ¾Ü¤·¤¯¤Ï¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¾ðÊó¤Î ¥Ú¡¼¥¸¤ò¸«¤Æ²¼¤µ¤¤. ¥¤¥ó¥¹¥È¡¼¥ë¸å¤Ë¤Ï ERRATA.TXT (ÉÔ¶ñ¹ç¤Ê¤É¤Î¾ðÊó) ¤â¸«¤Æ, ÃΤäƤª¤¯¤Ù¤­ 2.2.5 ¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤Î¤³¤ì¤«¤é½Ð¤Æ¤¯¤ëÌäÂêÅÀ¤ò ˺¤ì¤º¤Ë¥Á¥§¥Ã¥¯¤¹¤ë¤è¤¦¤Ë¤·¤Þ¤·¤ç¤¦. ERRATA ¤ÎÆüËܸìÌõ ¤â¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹¡£

1997 9·î

  • 97/09/01 FreeBSD ¤¬, Internet Week ¤Î WWW ¥µ¡¼¥Ð¤Î¥×¥é¥Ã¥È¥Õ¥©¡¼¥à¤Ë´Ø¤¹¤ë ¥ì¥Ó¥å¡¼¤ÎÃæ¤Ç¹â¤¤É¾²Á¤ò¼õ¤±¤Þ¤·¤¿.

1997 8·î

  • 97/08/11 Duke University ¤Î Trapeze Project ¤Î¸¦µæ¼Ô¤¿¤Á¤¬, FreeBSD ÍѤι⥹¥Ô¡¼¥É¤Î Myrinet ¥É¥é¥¤¥Ð¤ò³«È¯¤·¤Þ¤·¤¿. ¥É¥é¥¤¥Ð, Trapeze Project, ¤ª¤è¤Ó¤½¤Î ¿Æ¥×¥í¥¸¥§¥¯¥È¤Ç¤¢¤ë Collaborative Cluster Computing Iniative ¤Ë´Ø¤¹¤ë¤µ¤é¤Ê¤ë¾ðÊó¤Ï, Myrinet ¥É¥é¥¤¥Ð¤Î¥½¡¼¥¹¥³¡¼¥É¤È ¤¤¤Ã¤·¤ç¤Ë, CCCI ¤Î WWW ¥Ú¡¼¥¸¤«¤éÆÀ¤ë¤³¤È¤¬¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹.

  • 97/08/03 Netscape Communications ¤¬, Netscape Communicator v4.0 for FreeBSD ¤Î¥Ù¡¼¥¿ÈǤò¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤·¤Þ¤·¤¿. FTP ·Ðͳ¤Ç, ftp.netscape.com ¤ª¤è¤Ó¤½¤Î¥ß¥é¡¼¥µ¥¤¥È¤«¤é¼ê¤Ë Æþ¤ì¤ë¤³¤È¤¬¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹.

1997 7·î

1997 6·î

  • 97/06/17 FreeBSD 2.2.2-RELEASE ¤Î CD-ROM ¤òÆþ²Ù¤·¤Þ¤·¤¿. ͽÌ󹨯ɤ·¤Æ¤¤¤ë Êý¤Î¤ª¼ê¸µ¤Ë¤Ï¤Þ¤â¤Ê¤¯ÆÏ¤¯¤Ç¤·¤ç¤¦.

1997 5·î

1997 4·î

  • 97/04/28 3.0-current ¤Î¥½¡¼¥¹¥Ä¥ê¡¼¤Ë, ¥·¥ó¥á¥È¥ê¥Ã¥¯¥Þ¥ë¥Á¥×¥í¥»¥Ã¥µ (SMP) Âбþ¤Î¥«¡¼¥Í¥ë¤ò ¥Ó¥ë¥É¤¹¤ë¤¿¤á¤Î¥³¡¼¥É¤¬Æþ¤ê¤Þ¤·¤¿. ¾ÜºÙ¤Ï SMP ¤Î¥Ú¡¼¥¸¤Ø.

  • 97/04/22 ¡Öº£Æü¤Î RELENG_2.2¡×¥µ¡¼¥Ð¤¬ ftp://releng22.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD ¤Ë¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤·¤¿. README.TXT ¤Ë¤µ¤é¤Ê¤ë¾ðÊ󤬤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹.

  • 97/04/15 FreeBSD 2.2.1-RELEASE ¤Î CD ¤¬½Ð²Ù¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. http://www.cdrom.com/titles/os/fbsd22.htm¤ò¤´Í÷²¼¤µ¤¤.

1997 3·î

1997 2·î

  • 1997/02/20 FreeBSD 2.1.7-RELEASE ¤¬ÍøÍѤǤ­¤ë¤è¤¦¤Ë¤Ê¤ê¤Þ¤·¤¿. ¾Ü¤·¤¤¾ðÊó¤Ï, README.TXT ¤«, ¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¥Î¡¼¥È ¤ò¤ªÆÉ¤ß²¼¤µ¤¤.

  • 1997/02/10 FreeBSD 3.0-970209-SNAP ¤¬¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤µ¤ì¤Þ¤·¤¿. ¤³¤Î¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤Ë´Ø¤¹¤ë¾Ü¤·¤¤¾ðÊó¤Ï, README.TXT ¤ò¤´Í÷²¼¤µ¤¤.

  • 1997/02/06 FreeBSD 2.1.6 ¤ª¤è¤Ó¤½¤ì°ÊÁ°¤Î¥·¥¹¥Æ¥à¤Ë, ¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£¡¼¾å¤Î½ÅÂç¤ÊÌäÂ꤬¤¢¤ë¤³¤È¤¬Ê¬¤«¤ê¤Þ¤·¤¿. ¤³¤ÎÌäÂê¤Ï -stable, -current, RELENG_2_2 ¤Î¥½¡¼¥¹¥Ä¥ê¡¼ ¾å¤Ç¤Ï´û¤Ë½¤Àµ¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. ²Ã¤¨¤Æ·Ù²ü¤òÍפ¹¤ëÌäÂê¤Ç¤¢¤ë ¤¿¤á, FTP ¥µ¥¤¥È¤Ç¤Ï´û¤Ë FreeBSD 2.1.6 ¤ÎÇÛÉÛ¤ò¼è¤ê»ß¤á¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. ¤³¤ÎÌäÂê¤È²ò·èË¡¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤Ï, FreeBSD-SA-97:01.setlocale ¤Ë´Ø¤¹¤ë¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£¡¼¥¢¥Ê¥¦¥ó¥¹ ¤ÎÃæ¤Ç¾Ü¤·¤¯¤Î¤Ù¤é¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹.

  • 1997/02/06 FreeBSD 2.2-GAMMA ¤ÎºÇ¸å¤Î¥×¥ì¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¥Ð¡¼¥¸¥ç¥ó¤¬ÍøÍѤǤ­¤ë¤è¤¦¤Ë ¤Ê¤ê¤Þ¤·¤¿. README.TXT ¤Ë¾Ü¤·¤¤¾ðÊ󤬤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹.

  • 1997/02/05 ¤³¤ì¤Þ¤Ç President ¤Ç¤¢¤Ã¤¿ Jordan K. Hubbard ¤Î ¼­Ç¤¤È¤È¤â¤Ë, FreeBSD Project ¤Î´ÉÍýÌò¤Ç¤¢¤Ã¤¿ President ¤È¤¤¤¦Ìò¿¦¤¬ ¤Ê¤¯¤Ê¤ê¤Þ¤·¤¿.

  • 1997/02/02 FreeBSD 2.2 ¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤ÎºÇ¿·¤Î snapshot ¤òÆþ¼ê¤Ç¤­¤ë, ¡Öº£Æü¤Îsnap¡×¥µ¡¼¥Ð¤¬Î©¤Á¾å¤¬¤ê¤Þ¤·¤¿. ¾Ü¤·¤¯ÃΤꤿ¤¤Êý¤Ï, README.TXT ¤ò¤´Í÷²¼¤µ¤¤.

1997 1·î

1996 12·î

  • 1996/12/24 FreeBSD 2.2-BETA ¤¬¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤µ¤ì¤Þ¤·¤¿. ¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¥Î¡¼¥È¤Ë¾Ü¤·¤¤¾ðÊ󤬤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹.

  • 1996/12/13 FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE ¤Ï 5MB °Ê¾å¤Î RAM, ¤¢¤ë¤¤¤Ï 1.2MB °Ê¾å¤ÎÍÆÎ̤ò ÆÉ¤ß¹þ¤à¤³¤È¤Î¤Ç¤­¤ë¥Õ¥í¥Ã¥Ô¡¼¥É¥é¥¤¥Ö¤ò»ý¤¿¤Ê¤¤¥Þ¥·¥ó¤ËÂФ¹¤ë ¥¤¥ó¥¹¥È¡¼¥ë¤ò¥µ¥Ý¡¼¥È¤·¤Ê¤¤¸«¹þ¤ß¤Ç¤¹.¾Ü¤·¤¤¾ðÊó¤òÆÀ¤¿¤¤Êý¤Ï, ¥ª¥ê¥¸¥Ê¥ë¤Î ¥¢¥Ê¥¦¥ó¥¹ ¤ò¤ªÆÉ¤ß²¼¤µ¤¤.

1996 11·î

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1998 ǯ 10 ·î

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1997 ǯ 5 ·î

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  • ¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¾ðÊó: ¸½ºßºÇ¿·¤Î¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤Ï, 2.2.7-RELEASE ¤Ç¤¹. FreeBSD 2.2.8 ¤Ï, 11·î15Æü¤Ë ¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹Í½Äê¤Ç¤¹. FreeBSD 3.0 ¤Î¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹Í½Äê¤Ï, 10·î15Æü¤Ç¤¹. ¦Â¥Æ¥¹¥È ¤ò»Ï¤á¤Þ¤·¤ç¤¦.

  • ¥Ë¥å¡¼¥¹¤Ë¤Ê¤Ã¤¿ FreeBSD: http://www.zdnet.com/sr/stories/issue/0,4537,349576,00.html

  • ºÇ¶á¤Î²þÎÉÅÀ: CAM (Common Access Method) SCSI ¥ì¥¤¥ä¤¬ 3.0-Current ¤Ë¼ÂÁõ¤µ¤ì¤Þ¤· ¤¿.
    Perl5 ¤¬ 3.0-Current ¤Îɸ½à¥¢¥×¥ê¥±¡¼¥·¥ç¥ó¤Ë´Þ¤á¤é¤ì¤Þ¤·¤¿.
    2.2 ¥Ö¥é¥ó¥Á¤Ç 8G ¤ò±Û¤¨¤ë IDE ¥Ç¥£¥¹¥¯¤¬¥µ¥Ý¡¼¥È¤µ¤ì¤Þ¤·¤¿.
    3.0-Current ¤Ï ELF ¥Ð¥¤¥Ê¥ê¤Ë¤Ê¤ê¤Þ¤·¤¿. FreeBSD/alpha ¤Ï¼«ÎÏ¤ÇÆ°ºî¤¹¤ë¤è¤¦¤Ë¤Ê¤ê¤Þ¤·¤¿. kernel ¤â `make world' ¤â¤¦¤Þ¤¯Æ°¤­¤Þ¤¹!

  • FreeBSD JDK ¤Î¿·¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹: ¾ÜºÙ¤Ê¾ðÊó¤Ï¤³¤Á¤é: - http://www.freebsd.org/java + http://www.freebsd.org/java

  • ¥É¥é¥¤¥ÐÅý°ì¥¤¥ó¥¿¥Õ¥§¡¼¥¹: - http://www.sco.com/udi + http://www.sco.com/udi ftp://ftp.cup.hp.com/pub/hp_stds/udi/docs.html http://www.infoworld.com/cgi-bin/displayStory.pl?980916.ecminer.htm http://www.intel.com/pressroom/archive/releases/Cn091698.htm ftp://ftp.cup.hp.com/pub/hp_stds/udi/Postscript/rules.ps.Z

  • RealTek 8139 Ethernet ¥É¥é¥¤¥Ð: ¥Æ¥¹¥¿¡¼Êç½¸Ãæ. http://www.freebsd.org/~wpaul/RealTek/3.0 +HREF="http://www.freebsd.org/~wpaul/RealTek/3.0/">http://www.freebsd.org/~wpaul/RealTek/3.0 FreeBSD 3.0 ÍÑ¥½¡¼¥¹ http://www.freebsd.org/~wpaul/RealTek/2.2 +HREF="http://www.freebsd.org/~wpaul/RealTek/2.2/">http://www.freebsd.org/~wpaul/RealTek/2.2 FreeBSD 2.2.x ÍÑ¥½¡¼¥¹ wpaul@skynet.ctr.columbia.edu ¤Þ¤ÇÏ¢Íí¤·¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤.

  • ThunderLAN Ethernet ¥É¥é¥¤¥Ð (Compaq ¤Î¥Þ¥·¥ó¤Ç¤è¤¯»È¤ï¤ì¤Æ ¤¤¤Þ¤¹) : ¥Æ¥¹¥¿¡¼Êç½¸Ãæ. http://www.freebsd.org/~wpaul/ThunderLAN/3.0 +HREF="http://www.freebsd.org/~wpaul/ThunderLAN/3.0/">http://www.freebsd.org/~wpaul/ThunderLAN/3.0 FreeBSD 3.0 ÍÑ¥½¡¼¥¹ http://www.freebsd.org/~wpaul/ThunderLAN/2.2 +HREF="http://www.freebsd.org/~wpaul/ThunderLAN/2.2/">http://www.freebsd.org/~wpaul/ThunderLAN/2.2 FreeBSD 2.2.x ÍÑ¥½¡¼¥¹ wpaul@skynet.ctr.columbia.edu ¤Þ¤ÇÏ¢Íí¤·¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤.

  • ¾¦ÍÑ FreeBSD À½ÉÊ: Emerging Technologies, Inc. FreeBSD ÍÑ T1/E1 Ʊ´ü¥«¡¼¥É(ISA,PCI) - http://www.etinc.com + http://www.etinc.com ÂÓ°è¥Þ¥Í¡¼¥¸¥ã http://www.etinc.com/bwmgr.htm
    Acadix Software Systems: APE ¤Ï¸À¸ì, üËö¤Ë°Í¸¤·¤Ê¤¤ Unix ÍÑÅý¹ç³«È¯´Ä¶­¤Ç¤¹. ¥×¥í¥°¥é¥à ¤Îʸ¤Îµ¡Ç½¤Ë¤è¤Ã¤Æ¿§Ê¬¤±¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹. http://www.execpc.com/~acadix

  • BSD ¥ª¥ó¥é¥¤¥ó¥Þ¥¬¥¸¥ó: Daemon News! BSD ¥ª¥ó¥é¥¤¥ó¥Þ¥¬¥¸¥ó¤â˺¤ì¤º¤Ë¥Á¥§¥Ã¥¯¤·¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤. FreeBSD ¥³¥ß¥å ¥Ë¥Æ¥£¤«¤é¤â¤¿¤¯¤µ¤ó´ó¹Æ¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. Åê¹Æ¤Î¡ºÀÚ¤ÏËè·î 15 Æü¤Ç, Íâ·î¤Î 1 Æü¤Ëȯ¹Ô¤µ¤ì¤Þ¤¹. ´ó¹Æ¼ÔÊç½¸Ãæ. http://www.daemonnews.org/

  • °úÍÑ: ½Æ¤ò¼«Ê¬¤Î­¤Ë¸þ¤±¤Æ°ú¶â¤ò°ú¤¤¤¿¤È¤­, ÃÆ¤òÁÀ¤Ã¤¿¤È¤³¤í¤Ë³Î¼Â¤ËÆÏ¤±¤ë ¤Î¤Ï UNIX ¤Î»Å»ö¤Ç¤¹(¼«Ê¬¤Î¤¢¤ó¤è¤Ç¤¹¤±¤É). (Terry)

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¤Ï¤¸¤á¤Ë

-

Netscape ¤¬, - Mozilla ¤È¤¤¤¦Ì¾Á°¤ÇÃΤé¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤ë +

Netscape ¤¬, + Mozilla ¤È¤¤¤¦Ì¾Á°¤ÇÃΤé¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤ë ¼«¼Ò¤Î¥¯¥é¥¤¥¢¥ó¥ÈÀ½ÉʤΥ½¡¼¥¹¥³¡¼¥É¤ò¸ø³«¤¹¤ë¤È·è¤á¤¿¤³¤È¤ò¼õ¤±¤Æ, ¥Õ¥ê¡¼¥½¥Õ¥È¥¦¥§¥¢¤ò³«È¯¤·¤Æ¤¤¤ë¿ô¿¤¯¤ÎÃÄÂΤ¬, ¼«Ê¬¤¿¤Á¤Ç»È¤¦¤¿¤á¤Ë¤½¤Îµ»½Ñ¤ò¥µ¥Ý¡¼¥È¤·¤¿¤ê²þÎɤ¹¤ë¤³¤È¤Ë Ì´Ãæ¤Ë¤Ê¤Ã¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. FreeBSD Mozilla Group ¤Ï FreeBSD ¤ÎÀ¤³¦¤Ç¤½¤Î¤è¤¦¤Ê»Å»ö¤ò¤¹¤ë¿Í¤¿¤Á¤Î³èư¤ÎÃæ¿´¤ä CVS ¥ì¥Ý¥¸¥È¥ê¤Î¤è¤¦¤Ê»ñ¸»¤ÎÃù¢½ê, ¥á¡¼¥ê¥ó¥°¥ê¥¹¥È, ¶¦Æ±³«È¯¤Î¤¿¤á¤Î¤¤¤í¤¤¤í¤Ê¥Ä¡¼¥ë¤Ê¤É¤òÄ󶡤·¤è¤¦¤È¤·¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹.

»²¹Í»ñÎÁ

CVSup
CVSup ¤ò»È¤¨¤Ð, CVS ¥Ó¥Ã¥È¼«¿È¤ò¹¹¿·¤·¤¿¤ê (¥í¡¼¥«¥ë¤Ê¥ì¥Ý¥¸¥È¥ê¤òÊݼ餷¤¿¤¤¿Í¤Î¤¿¤á¤Ë), ¥Ð¥¤¥Ê¥ê¤òºî¤Ã¤¿¤ê¥½¡¼¥¹¤òÊÔ½¸¤¹¤ë¤¿¤á¤Î "¥Á¥§¥Ã¥¯¥¢¥¦¥È" ¥Ð¡¼¥¸¥ç¥ó¤òÆÀ¤¿¤ê¤¹¤ë¤¿¤á¤Ë, Ãæ±û¤Ë¤¢¤ë Mozilla ¤Î¥ì¥Ý¥¸¥È¥ê¤È¤ÎƱ´ü¤ò·Ñ³Ū¤Ë¤È¤ë¤³¤È¤¬¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹. CVSup ¤Î¥Ð¥¤¥Ê¥ê¤Ï ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/ ¤«¤é»ý¤Ã¤Æ¤­¤Æ²¼¤µ¤¤. ¤Þ¤¿ supfile ¤Ï°Ê²¼¤Î¤è¤¦¤Ê¤â¤Î¤ò»È¤Ã¤Æ²¼¤µ¤¤:
 *default prefix=/usr/src/mozilla base=/usr/src/mozilla host=mozilla.FreeBSD.org release=cvs delete compress use-rel-suffix tag=.
 
 ## Main Source Tree
 cvs-mozilla
       
anoncvs
ƿ̾ CVS ¤ò»È¤¦¤³¤È¤Ë¤è¤Ã¤ÆÃ¯¤Ç¤âɸ½à¤Î cvs(1) ¥³¥Þ¥ó¥É¤Ç FreeBSD ¤Î Mozilla ¥ì¥Ý¥¸¥È¥ê¤òÆÀ¤ë¤³¤È¤¬¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹. ´Ä¶­ÊÑ¿ô CVSROOT ¤ÎÃͤò¼¡¤Î¤â¤Î¤Ë¤·¤Æ²¼¤µ¤¤:
       anoncvs@mozilla.freebsd.org:/mozilla
       

¤³¤¦¤¹¤ë¤È Mozilla CVS ¥ì¥Ý¥¸¥È¥ê¾å¤ÇÆÉ¤ß¼è¤êÀìÍÑ¤Ç cvs(1) ¤ò»È¤¦¤³¤È¤¬¤Ç¤­¤ë¤è¤¦¤Ë¤Ê¤ê¤Þ¤¹.

freebsd-mozilla
FreeBSD-mozilla ¥á¡¼¥ê¥ó¥°¥ê¥¹¥È¤Ï, FreeBSD ¤Ë°Ü¿¢¤µ¤ì¤¿ mozilla ¤Î³«È¯¼Ô¤ä¥æ¡¼¥¶¤¬, mozilla ¤Î¥½¡¼¥¹¤Î¹½ÃÛ¤ä»ÈÍÑ, ´ÉÍý¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤ÎµÄÏÀ¤ò¤·¤¿¤ê, ¤½¤ì¤é¤ËÂФ¹¤ë FreeBSD ¤ËÆÃ²½¤·¤¿Êѹ¹¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤ÎÏäò¤¹¤ë¤¿¤á¤ËÄ󶡤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. ¤³¤Î¥á¡¼¥ê¥ó¥°¥ê¥¹¥È¤Ë»²²Ã¤¹¤ë¤Ë¤Ï majordomo@freebsd.org °¸¤Ë subscribe freebsd-mozilla ¤È¤¤¤¦ËÜʸ¤ò½ñ¤¤¤¿¥á¡¼¥ë¤òÁ÷¤Ã¤Æ²¼¤µ¤¤.

Äɵ­

-
Mozilla.ORG
+
Mozilla.ORG
Mozilla.org ¥×¥í¥¸¥§¥¯¥È¤Ï FreeBSD ¤À¤±¤Ç¤Ê¤¯¤¹¤Ù¤Æ¤Î¥×¥é¥Ã¥È¥Õ¥©¡¼¥à¤ËÂФ¹¤ë Mozilla ¤Î´ÉÍý¤ò½¸ÃæÅª¤Ë¹Ô¤Ê¤Ã¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹.
-
Cyclic Software
+
Cyclic Software
Cyclic Software ¤Ë¤Ï CVS ¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤Î Í¥¤ì¤¿¥ª¥ó¥é¥¤¥ó¥Á¥å¡¼¥È¥ê¥¢¥ë¤¬ÍѰդµ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹.
&footer; diff --git a/ja/projects/newbies.sgml b/ja/projects/newbies.sgml index fffb726306..341fd0daa0 100644 --- a/ja/projects/newbies.sgml +++ b/ja/projects/newbies.sgml @@ -1,302 +1,302 @@ - + %includes; ]> - + &header;

½é¤á¤Æ FreeBSD ¤Ë¿¨¤ì¤ë¿Í¤¬ FreeBSD ¤Î»È¤¤Êý¤ò³Ð¤¨¤ë¤È¤­¤Ë ¤â¤Ã¤È¤âÌò¤ËΩ¤Ä¾ðÊ󤬤¤¤¯¤Ä¤«°Ê²¼¤Ë¤Þ¤È¤á¤Æ¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹. ¾ðÊó¤ÎÄûÀµ¤äÄɲäˤĤ¤¤Æ¤Ï FreeBSD-Newbies@FreeBSD.org ¤ØÁ÷¤Ã¤Æ²¼¤µ¤¤.

FreeBSD ¤Î web ¥µ¥¤¥È¤òÍøÍѤ¹¤ë

¤³¤Î web ¥µ¥¤¥È¤Ï FreeBSD ¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤ÎºÇ¿·¾ðÊó¤Î¸»¤Ç¤¹. ½é¿´¼Ô¤Ë¤ÏÆÃ¤Ë°Ê²¼¤Î¥Ú¡¼¥¸¤¬ÌòΩ¤Ä¤Ç¤·¤ç¤¦:

  • ¥Ï¥ó¥É¥Ö¥Ã¥¯¤ä FAQ, web ¥µ¥¤¥È¾å¤Î¤¹¤Ù¤Æ¤ÎÆâÍÆ, FreeBSD-Questions ¥á¡¼¥ê¥ó¥°¥ê¥¹¥È¤Ëή¤ì¤¿¥á¡¼¥ë¤ËÂФ¹¤ë ¸¡º÷.

  • ¥É¥­¥å¥á¥ó¥È¤Î¥Ú¡¼¥¸¤Ë¤Ï, ¥Ï¥ó¥É¥Ö¥Ã¥¯¤ä FAQ, ¥Á¥å¡¼¥È¥ê¥¢¥ë, ¥É¥­¥å¥á¥ó¥Æ¡¼¥·¥ç¥ó¥×¥í¥¸¥§¥¯¥È¤Ø¤Î¹×¸¥¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤Î¾ðÊó, ±Ñ¸ì°Ê³°¤Ç½ñ¤«¤ì¤¿Ê¸½ñ, ¤½¤Î¾¤¿¤¯¤µ¤ó¤Î¥ê¥ó¥¯¤¬¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹.

  • ¥µ¥Ý¡¼¥È¥Ú¡¼¥¸¤Ë¤Ï, ¥á¡¼¥ê¥ó¥°¥ê¥¹¥È¤ä¥æ¡¼¥¶¥°¥ë¡¼¥×, web ¥µ¥¤¥È, FTP ¥µ¥¤¥È, ¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¾ðÊó, UNIX ¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤Î¾ðÊó¤Ø¤Î¤¤¤¯¤Ä¤«¤Î¥ê¥ó¥¯¤ò ´Þ¤à FreeBSD ¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤ÎË­É٤ʾðÊ󤬤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹.

FreeBSD ¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ³Ø¤Ö

  • ¤Þ¤À FreeBSD ¤ò¥¤¥ó¥¹¥È¡¼¥ë¤·¤Æ¤¤¤Ê¤¤¿Í¤Ï &a.latest.ann;ºÇ¿·¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤ò¸«¤Æ²¼¤µ¤¤. (¤Ê¤¼Â¾¤Î¥Ö¥é¥ó¥Á¤ËͶÏǤµ¤ì¤Æ¤Ï¤¤¤±¤Ê¤¤¤Î¤« ¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤Ï¥Ï¥ó¥É¥Ö¥Ã¥¯¤òÆÉ¤ó¤Ç²¼¤µ¤¤.) ¥¤¥ó¥¹¥È¡¼¥ë¤ò»Ï¤á¤ëÁ°¤Ë FreeBSD ¤Î¥¤¥ó¥¹¥È¡¼¥ë ¤òÃí°Õ¿¼¤¯ÆÉ¤ó¤Ç²¼¤µ¤¤. ƱÍͤË, FTP ¥Ç¥£¥ì¥¯¥È¥ê¤ä ¥¤¥ó¥¹¥È¡¼¥ë CD ¤ÎÃæ¤Î *.TXT ¥Õ¥¡¥¤¥ë¤ò¤Ò¤È¤Ä¤º¤ÄÃúÇ«¤Ë ÆÉ¤ó¤Ç²¼¤µ¤¤. ¤½¤ì¤é¤Î¥Õ¥¡¥¤¥ë¤Ï, ɬÍפʻöÊÁ¤¬½ñ¤«¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤ë¤«¤é¤³¤½, ¤½¤³¤Ë¸ºß¤·¤Æ¤¤¤ë¤Î¤Ç¤¹. ¤Þ¤¿, errata ¥Õ¥¡¥¤¥ë¤¬¹¹¿·¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤ë¤È¤­¤Ë¤Ï web ¥µ¥¤¥È¤«¤é¤½¤Î¥Õ¥¡¥¤¥ë¤ò »ý¤Ã¤Æ¤­¤ÆÆÉ¤ó¤Ç²¼¤µ¤¤.

    FreeBSD ¤ò¥À¥¦¥ó¥í¡¼¥É¤¹¤ë¤È·è¤á¤¿¤Ê¤é, °ÊÁ°¤Î¥Ð¡¼¥¸¥ç¥ó¤ËÂФ¹¤ë, ¿Þ²òÉÕ¤­¤Ç³ÈÄ¥¤µ¤ì¤¿ ¥À¥¦¥ó¥í¡¼¥É¤Î ÀâÌÀ¤¬¤Þ¤ÀÍøÍѤǤ­¤ë¤«¤É¤¦¤«, ¥À¥¦¥ó¥í¡¼¥É¤ò»Ï¤á¤ëÁ°¤Ë ³Îǧ¤·¤Æ²¼¤µ¤¤. ¤³¤Î¥Õ¥¡¥¤¥ë¤Ë¤è¤Ã¤Æ, ¤¹¤Ù¤Æ¤ÎÁàºî¤¬¤È¤Æ¤â¤ï¤«¤ê¤ä¤¹¤¯¤Ê¤ë¤Ç¤·¤ç¤¦.

  • ¿ô¿¤¯¤Î¥Á¥å¡¼¥È¥ê¥¢¥ë¤¬ÍøÍѤǤ­¤Þ¤¹. ¤½¤ÎÃæ¤Î FreeBSD ¤È Unix ξÊý¤Î½é¿´¼Ô¤Ø ¤Ï´°Á´¤Ê½é¿´¼Ô¤Ë¿Íµ¤¤¬¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹. ξÊý¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤¢¤Þ¤êÃΤé¤Ê¤¯¤Æ¤â¤³¤Îʸ½ñ¤ò³Ú¤·¤ó¤ÇÆÉ¤à¤³¤È¤¬¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹. ¤Þ¤¿¤³¤Îʸ½ñ¤Ï Ãø¼Ô¤Î¥µ¥¤¥È ¤Ç¤â¸«¤ë¤³¤È¤¬¤Ç¤­, °õºþ¤¹¤ë¤¿¤á¤Ë¤Ï ¥Ý¥¹¥È¥¹¥¯¥ê¥×¥È ¤Þ¤¿¤Ï RTF ·Á¼° ¤Ç¥À¥¦¥ó¥í¡¼¥É¤¹¤ë¤³¤È¤â²Äǽ¤Ç¤¹.

  • ¿¤¯¤Î¿Í¤¬ºÇ½é¤ËÀßÄꤷ¤¿¤¤¤È»×¤¦¤Î¤Ï ppp ¤Ç¤¢¤ê, ¤½¤ì¤Ë¤Ï ¤¿¤¯¤µ¤ó¤ÎÌò¤ËΩ¤Äʸ½ñ¤¬Â¸ºß¤·¤Þ¤¹. ¤Þ¤ººÇ½é¤Ë ÃΤ俤«¤Ö¤ê PPP ÆþÌç ¤ÎÃæ¤Î, ¼«Ê¬¤ÎÍ×˾¤ËÂФ·¤ÆÅ¬ÀÚ¤ÊÉôʬ¤«¤éÆÉ¤ß»Ï¤á, ¤½¤Î¾¤ÎÌò¤ËΩ¤Ä¾ðÊó¤äºÇ¿·¤Î¾ðÊó¤Ø¤Î¥ê¥ó¥¯¤òõ¤·¤Ë ppp ¥Ú¡¼¥¸ ¤Ø¹Ô¤¯¤Î¤¬¤è¤¤¤Ç¤·¤ç¤¦.

  • Greg Lehey ¤Ë¤è¤ë The Complete FreeBSD ¤¬ Walnut Creek CDROM ¤«¤é½ÐÈǤµ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. ¤³¤ÎËܤϺǾ®¸Â¤Î UNIX ¤Ë´Ø¤¹¤ë·Ð¸³¤òÁ°Äó¤È¤·¤Æ, FreeBSD ¤Î¥¤¥ó¥¹¥È¡¼¥ë¤«¤éÀßÄê, ±¿ÍѤ¹¤ë¤¿¤á¤Ë½é¿´¼Ô¤¬ÃΤꤿ¤¤¤È»×¤¦¤¹¤Ù¤Æ¤Î¤³¤È¤¬¤é¤Þ¤Ç¤Î ³ÆÃʳ¬¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ, °ìÃʤº¤ÄÀâÌÀ¤·¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. ¤³¤ÎËܤòÆÉ¤á¤Ð, ¤Ê¤Ë¤ò¹Ô¤Ê¤¦¤Î¤«, ¤Ê¤¼¤½¤ì¤ò¹Ô¤Ê¤¦¤Î¤«¤È¤¤¤¦¤³¤È¤â Íý²ò¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹.

  • FreeBSD ¥Ï¥ó¥É¥Ö¥Ã¥¯ ¤È ¤è¤¯¤¢¤ë¼ÁÌä¤ÈÅú¤¨ (FAQ) ¤Ï FreeBSD ¤Ë´Ø¤¹¤ëÃæ¿´Åª¤Êʸ½ñ¤Ç¤¹. ½é¿´¼Ô¤Î¤¿¤á¤Î¤¿¤¯¤µ¤ó¤ÎÏÃÂê¤Ë²Ã¤¨¤Æ, ¾¯¤·¤À¤±¿Ê¤ó¤ÀÆâÍÆ¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤â½ñ¤«¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤ë¤Î¤Ç, ¤È¤Æ¤â°Ù¤Ë¤Ê¤ê¤Þ¤¹. ¿Ê¤ó¤ÀÆâÍÆ¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤ÏÍý²ò¤Ç¤­¤Ê¤¯¤Æ¤â¿´ÇۤϤ¤¤ê¤Þ¤»¤ó. ¥Ï¥ó¥É¥Ö¥Ã¥¯¤Ë¤Ï¥¤¥ó¥¹¥È¡¼¥ë¤Ë´Ø¤¹¤ëÀâÌÀ¤ä, Ëܤȥª¥ó¥é¥¤¥ó»ñÎÁ¤Î¥ê¥¹¥È¤¬ºÜ¤Ã¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. ¤Þ¤¿, FAQ ¤Ë¤Ï¥È¥é¥Ö¥ë²ò·è¤Î¤¿¤á¤Î¹à¤¬¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹.

  • ¶²¤¯¤Æ¤È¤Æ¤âʹ¤¯¤³¤È¤¬¤Ç¤­¤Ê¤¤¤è¤¦¤Ê¼ÁÌä¤ä, ¤½¤ì¤ËÂФ¹¤ëÅú¤¨¤òÆÀ¤ë¤¿¤á¤Ë FreeBSD-Questions ¥á¡¼¥ê¥ó¥°¥ê¥¹¥È¤Ë²ÃÆþ¤·¤Æ²¼¤µ¤¤. majordomo@freebsd.org °¸¤Ë "subscribe freebsd-questions" ¤È¤À¤±ËÜʸ¤Ë½ñ¤¤¤¿¥á¡¼¥ë¤ò Á÷¤Ã¤Æ²¼¤µ¤¤ (¥µ¥Ö¥¸¥§¥¯¥È¤Ï¤Ê¤ó¤Ç¤â¹½¤¤¤Þ¤»¤ó). ¸¡º÷ ¥Ú¡¼¥¸¤Ç²áµî¤Î¼ÁÌä¤äÅú¤¨¤òõ¤¹¤³¤È¤¬¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹.

  • FreeBSD ¤Ë´Ø¤¹¤ë¼ç¤Ê¥Ë¥å¡¼¥¹¥°¥ë¡¼¥×¤Ï comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.misc ¤Ç¤¹. ¤Þ¤¿, comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.announce ¤Ë¤âÌܤòÄ̤·¤Æ¤ª¤¤¤¿Êý¤¬¤è¤¤¤«¤â¤·¤ì¤Þ¤»¤ó.

  • ¥ª¥ó¥é¥¤¥ó¥Þ¥Ë¥å¥¢¥ë ¤Ï, ¤è¤¤»²¹Í½ñ¤Ç¤¹¤¬, ɬ¤º¤·¤â½é¿´¼Ô¤Ë¤È¤Ã¤ÆºÇŬ¤ÊÀâÌÀ¤Ç¤¢¤ë¤È¤Ï¸Â¤ê¤Þ¤»¤ó. ¥Þ¥Ë¥å¥¢¥ë¤Ï, Ä´¤Ù¤ì¤ÐÄ´¤Ù¤ë¤Û¤ÉÌò¤ËΩ¤Ä¤â¤Î¤Ë¤Ê¤ê¤Þ¤¹. ¥Þ¥Ë¥å¥¢¥ë¤ÎÃæ¤Î¤¤¤¯¤Ä¤«¤Ï½é¿´¼Ô¤Ë¤È¤Æ¤â°Ù¤Ë¤Ê¤ë¤â¤Î¤Ê¤Î¤Ç, ¤¤¤Ä¤Ç¤âÄ´¤Ù¤ë¤è¤¦¤Ë¤·¤Æ²¼¤µ¤¤. Î㤨¤Ð, ppp ¤Î¥Þ¥Ë¥å¥¢¥ë¤Ï¥Á¥å¡¼¥È¥ê¥¢¥ë¤Ë¤â¤Ê¤êÆÀ¤ë¤â¤Î¤Ç¤¹.

UNIX ¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ³Ø¤Ö

½é¿´¼Ô¤¬Êú¤¨¤Æ¤¤¤ëÌäÂê¤Î¿¤¯¤Ï, FreeBSD ¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤ÎÌäÂê¤ò²ò·è¤¹¤ë¤¿¤á¤ËɬÍ×¤Ê UNIX ¥³¥Þ¥ó¥É¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤è¤¯Íý²ò¤·¤Æ¤¤¤Ê¤¤¤È¤¤¤¦¤³¤È¤¬¸¶°ø¤Ë¤Ê¤Ã¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. UNIX ¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤ÆÍý²ò¤·¤Æ¤¤¤Ê¤¤¤È, Æó¤Ä¤Î¤³¤È¤ò°ìÅ٤˳ؤФʤ±¤ì¤Ð¤Ê¤é¤Ê¤¯¤Ê¤ê¤Þ¤¹. ¤·¤«¤·¹¥±¿¤Ê¤³¤È¤Ë, ¤³¤ì¤òÍÆ°×¤Ë¤·¤Æ¤¯¤ì¤ë¤¿¤¯¤µ¤ó¤Î»ñÎÁ¤¬¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹.

  • Â礭¤Ê½ñŹ¤Ë¹Ô¤±¤Ð, "Dummies" ¥¬¥¤¥É¤Î¤è¤¦¤Ê°×¤·¤¤Ëܤ¬¤¿¤¯¤µ¤ó¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹. ËÜÅö¤Ë°×¤·¤¤Ëܤ¬Íߤ·¤±¤ì¤Ð, ¤É¤ó¤ÊËܤ¬Æþ¼ê²Äǽ¤«¤òÄ´¤Ù¤Æ, ¼«Ê¬¤ËÍý²ò¤Ç¤­¤ë¸ÀÍդǽñ¤¤¤Æ¤¢¤ë¤â¤Î¤òÁª¤Ö¤È¤è¤¤¤Ç¤·¤ç¤¦. ¤¹¤°¤Ë¤â¤Ã¤È¹­¤¤ÈϰϤˤĤ¤¤Æ½ñ¤¤¤Æ¤¢¤ëËÜ¤ØÆÉ¤ß¿Ê¤ß¤¿¤¯¤Ê¤ë¤«¤â¤·¤ì¤Þ¤»¤ó¤¬.

  • ½é¿´¼Ô¤¬¤·¤Ð¤·¤Ð̾Á°¤òµó¤²¤ëËܤΰì¤Ä¤Ë, Addison-Wesley ¤«¤é½ÐÈǤµ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤ë, Paul W. Abrahams ¤È Bruce R. Larson ¤Ë¤è¤ë UNIX for the Impatient ¤È¤¤¤¦¤â¤Î¤¬¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹. ¤³¤ÎËÜ¤Ï UNIX ¤Î³Ø½¬½ñ, »²¹Í½ñ¤Ç¤¢¤ê, UNIX ¤Î³µÇ°¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤ÎÀâÌÀ¤â¤¢¤ê, ¤µ¤é¤Ë X Window System ¤ò»È¤¦¤Î¤ËÊØÍø¤Ê¾Ï¤â´Þ¤Þ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹.

  • ¤â¤¦¤Ò¤È¤Äͭ̾¤Ê¤Î¤Ï Jerry Peek, Tim O'Reilly ¤È Mike Loukides ¤Ë¤è¤ë UNIX Power Tools ¤È¤¤¤¦ËܤÇ, ¤³¤ì¤Ï O'Reilly and Associates ¤«¤é½ÐÈǤµ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. ¤³¤ÎËܤϤҤȤĤÎÌäÂê¤ò²ò·è¤¹¤ëû¤¤ÀâÌÀ¤ò½¸¤á¤¿¤â¤Î¤Ç, ³Æ¡¹¤ÎÀâÌÀ¤Ï¤½¤ì¤Ë´ØÏ¢¤¹¤ë»öÊÁ¤Ë¤è¤Ã¤ÆÁê¸ß»²¾È¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. ¤³¤ì¤ÏÆÃ¤Ë½é¿´¼Ô¤Î¤¿¤á¤Ë½ñ¤«¤ì¤¿¤â¤Î¤Ç¤Ï¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤»¤ó¤¬, ½ÅÂç¤Ê¼ÁÌä¤òÊú¤¨¤Æ¤¤¤¿¤ê, ËܤòÆÉ¤ó¤Ç¤¤¤ë²Ë¤Î¤Ê¤¤½é¿´¼Ô¤Ë¤È¤Ã¤ÆÍýÁÛŪ¤Ê¹½À®¤Ë¤Ê¤Ã¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. ¤³¤ÎËܤϤâ¤Ã¤È¤â´ðÁÃŪ¤Ê»öÊÁ¤«¤é½ç¤Ëʤó¤Ç¤¤¤Þ¤¹¤¬, Á´ÂΤòÄ̤·¤ÆÃ»¤¯¤Æ´Êñ¤ÊÀâÌÀ¤Ð¤«¤ê¤Ç¹½À®¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹.

  • ¥ª¥Ï¥¤¥ª½£Î©Âç³Ø¤Î UNIX Introductory Course ¤Ï HTML ¤ä postscript ¤Þ¤¿¤Ï Acrobat PDF ·Á¼°¤Ç¥ª¥ó¥é¥¤¥ó¤Ç¸«¤ë¤³¤È¤¬¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹.

  • UNIX help for Users ¤Ï HTML ·Á¼°¤ÎÆþÌç½ñ¤Î¤Ò¤È¤Ä¤Ç, ¶áÎ٤Υߥ顼¥µ¥¤¥È¤«¤é¼ê¤ËÆþ¤ì¤¿¤ê, ¼«Ê¬¤Î¥·¥¹¥Æ¥à¤Ë¥¤¥ó¥¹¥È¡¼¥ë¤·¤¿¤ê¤¹¤ë¤³¤È¤¬¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹.

  • UNIX ¤Ë´Ø¤¹¤ë¼ÁÌä¤Ï¥Ë¥å¡¼¥¹¥°¥ë¡¼¥× comp.unix.questions ¤ä, ¤½¤ì¤È´ØÏ¢¤·¤¿ Frequently Asked Questions ¤ÇµÄÏÀ¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. ¤Þ¤¿, FAQ ¤Î¥³¥Ô¡¼¤ò RMIT ¤Î FTP ¥µ¥¤¥È¤«¤éÆþ¼ê¤¹¤ë¤³¤È¤â²Äǽ¤Ç¤¹. ½é¿´¼Ô¤Ï¤Ï¤¸¤á¤ËÂè1¾Ï¤ÈÂè2¾Ï¤Ë¤â¤Ã¤È¤â¶½Ì£¤ò»ý¤Ä¤Ç¤·¤ç¤¦.

  • ¤â¤¦¤Ò¤È¤Ä¤Î¶½Ì£¿¼¤¤¥Ë¥å¡¼¥¹¥°¥ë¡¼¥×¤Ï comp.unix.user-friendly ¤Ç, ¤³¤ì¤Ë¤â FAQ ¤¬¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹. ¤³¤Î¥Ë¥å¡¼¥¹¥°¥ë¡¼¥×¤Ï¥æ¡¼¥¶¿ÆÏÂÀ­¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤ÆµÄÏÀ¤¹¤ë¤¿¤á¤Î¤â¤Î¤Ç¤¹¤¬, ½é¿´¼Ô¤Ë¤È¤Ã¤ÆÌò¤ËΩ¤Ä¾ðÊó¤¬Åê¹Æ¤µ¤ì¤ë¤³¤È¤¬¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹. ¤³¤Î FAQ ¤Ï FTP ¤Ç¤âÆþ¼ê²Äǽ¤Ç¤¹.

  • ¾¤Ë¤â¤¿¤¯¤µ¤ó¤Î web ¥µ¥¤¥È¤Ë UNIX ¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤Î¥Á¥å¡¼¥È¥ê¥¢¥ë¤ä»²¹Í¤Ë¤Ç¤­¤ëʸ½ñ¤¬¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹. ¤½¤ì¤é¤ò¸«¤Æ²ó¤ë¤Î¤ËºÇŬ¤Ê½ÐȯÅÀ¤Î¤Ò¤È¤Ä¤Ï Yahoo! ¤Î UNIX ¥Ú¡¼¥¸¤Ç¤¹.

X Window System ¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ³Ø¤Ö

X Window System ¤Ï FreeBSD ¤ò´Þ¤à¿¤¯¤Î OS ¾å¤Ç»È¤ï¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. X ¤Ë´Ø¤¹¤ëʸ½ñ¤Ï The XFree86 Project, Inc. ¤Ë¤¢¤ê, ¤³¤ì¤Ë¤Ï XFree86 FAQ ¤¬´Þ¤Þ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. ¤·¤«¤·, ¤³¤Îʸ½ñ¤ÎÂçÉôʬ¤Ï»²¾È¤Î¤¿¤á¤Î¤â¤Î¤Ç¤¢¤ê, ½é¿´¼Ô¤¬Íý²ò¤¹¤ë¤Ë¤Ï¾¯¤·Æñ¤·¤¤¤È¤¤¤¦¤³¤È¤Ëµ¤¤òÉÕ¤±¤Æ²¼¤µ¤¤.

  • X Window System ¤Î¥¤¥ó¥¹¥È¡¼¥ë¤äÀßÄê, ±¿ÍѤˤĤ¤¤Æ¤Î´ðËÜŪ¤Ê¾ðÊó¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤Ï, °Ê²¼¤Î 2 ºý¤ÎËܤÎÃæ¤Ë½é¿´¼Ô¥ì¥Ù¥ë¤Îµ­½Ò¤¬¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹: The Complete FreeBSD ¤È UNIX for the Impatient.

  • Linux Users' Guide ¤ÎÃæ¤Ë¤Ï using the X Window System ¤È¤¤¤¦, Ê¿°×¤ÇÍ­±×¤Ê¾Ï¤¬¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹. ¤³¤Îʸ½ñ¤ÎÃæ¤Ë¤Ï¤¤¤¿¤ë¤È¤³¤í¤Ë¶½Ì£¿¼¤¤ÀâÌÀ¤¬¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹¤¬, Linux ¤Ï¤¤¤Ä¤â FreeBSD ¤ÈÀµ³Î¤ËƱÅù¤Êưºî¤ò¤¹¤ë¤È¤Ï¸Â¤é¤Ê¤¤¤È¤¤¤¦¤³¤È¤ò ˺¤ì¤Ê¤¤¤Ç²¼¤µ¤¤.

  • X ¤ò¹¥¤­¤Ê¤è¤¦¤Ëưºî¤µ¤»¤ë¤³¤È¤¬²Äǽ¤Ë¤Ê¤ëÁ°¤Ë, ¥¦¥£¥ó¥É¥¦¥Þ¥Í¡¼¥¸¥ã¤òÁª¤ÖɬÍפ¬¤¢¤ë¤Ç¤·¤ç¤¦. - Window Managers for X + Window Managers for X ¤Ø¹Ô¤Ã¤Æ¤¤¤í¤¤¤í¤Ê¥¦¥£¥ó¥É¥¦¥Þ¥Í¡¼¥¸¥ã¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤Î¾Ò²ð¤Î¥ê¥ó¥¯¤ò é¤Ã¤Æ¤ß¤Æ¤«¤é¤½¤Î¥Ú¡¼¥¸¤ËÌá¤Ã¤Æ "The Basics" ¤òÆÉ¤ó¤Ç²¼¤µ¤¤. ¤½¤Î¸å¤Þ¤¿¤½¤Î¥Ú¡¼¥¸¤ËÌá¤ê, °Û¤Ê¤ë¥¿¥¤¥×¤Î¤â¤Î¤òÈæ¤Ù¤Æ¤ß¤Æ²¼¤µ¤¤. (¤ª¤Þ¤±: ¤³¤Î¥Ú¡¼¥¸¤Ë¤Ï UNIX ¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤ÎÆþÌç½ñ¤â¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹.) Á´¤Æ¤Ç¤Ï¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤»¤ó¤¬ÂçÉôʬ¤Î¥¦¥£¥ó¥É¥¦¥Þ¥Í¡¼¥¸¥ã¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤Ï, FreeBSD ¤Î ports ¥³¥ì¥¯¥·¥ç¥ó¤«¤é¥¤¥ó¥¹¥È¡¼¥ë¤¹¤ë¤³¤È¤¬¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹.

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FreeBSD ¤ò»È¤Ã¤Æ¤¤¤ëͧ¿Í¤Ï°ÎÂç¤Ê¾ðÊ󸻤Ǥ¹. Ʊ¤¸¤³¤È¤Ë¶½Ì£¤ò»ý¤Ã¤Æ¤¤¤ë¿Í¤äÀ®¸ù¤òʬ¤«¤Á¹ç¤¨¤ë¿Í, Ʊ¤¸¤³¤È¤ËÄ©À路¤Æ¤¤¤ë¿Í¤ÈÅÅÏäÇÏäò¤·¤¿¤ê, °ì½ï¤Ë¥Ô¥¶¤ò¿©¤Ù¤Ê¤¬¤éÏ乤³¤È¤Ï, ¤É¤ó¤ÊËܤˤ⿿»÷¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤»¤ó. ¤â¤·¤Þ¤ï¤ê¤Ë FreeBSD ¤ò»È¤Ã¤Æ¤¤¤ëͧ¿Í¤¬¾¯¤Ê¤«¤Ã¤¿¤é, FreeBSD ¤Î CDROM ¤ò»È¤Ã¤Æ¤½¤¦¤¤¤¦Í§¿Í¤òÁý¤ä¤·¤Þ¤·¤ç¤¦ :-)

User groups ¤Ï¾¤Î FreeBSD ¥æ¡¼¥¶¤È½Ð²ñ¤¦¤Î¤Ë¤è¤¤¾ì½ê¤Ç¤¹. ¤â¤·¶á½ê¤Ë½»¤ó¤Ç¤¤¤ë¿Í¤¬¤½¤³¤Ë¤Ï¤¤¤Ê¤«¤Ã¤¿¤é, ¤¢¤Ê¤¿¤¬ºÇ½é¤Î°ì¿Í¤Ë¤Ê¤ë¤«¤â¤·¤ì¤Þ¤»¤ó.

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½é¿´¼Ô¤¬¶½Ì£¤ò»ý¤Ä¤è¤¦¤Ê¤³¤È¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤ÆÈóµ»½ÑŪ¤ÊµÄÏÀ¤ò¤¹¤ë FreeBSD-Newbies ¥á¡¼¥ê¥ó¥°¥ê¥¹¥È¤¬¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹. ¤Þ¤¿, FreeBSD ¤ò»È¤¦¾å¤Ç¤Î¼ÁÌä¤ËÅú¤¨¤Æ¤¯¤ì¤ë FreeBSD-Questions ¥á¡¼¥ê¥ó¥°¥ê¥¹¥È¤â¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹.

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FreeBSD ¥Ç¡¼¥â¥ó
¤³¤³¤Ç¤Ï¤¿¤¯¤µ¤ó¤Î FreeBSD ´ØÏ¢¤Î½ÐÈÇʪ¤Îɽ»æ¤ò¸«¤ë¤³¤È¤¬¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹. ¤³¤Î¾¤Ë FreeBSD ´ØÏ¢¤Î½ñÀÒ¤ä CDROM ¤ò¸æÂ¸ÃΤǤ·¤¿¤é, ¤³¤³¤ËÄɲäǤ­¤ë¤è¤¦www@freebsd.org¤Þ¤Ç ¥á¡¼¥ë¤Ë¤Æ¤ªÃΤ餻¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤.

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¤³¤ì¤¬ºÙÀî ã¸Ê»á¤é¤Ë¤è¤ëºÇ¿·¤Î (1997 ǯ 5 ·î) ½ñÀҤǤ¹. ȯÇä»þ¤Ë¤Ï¡Ö¥Ó¥ë¡¦¥²¥¤¥Ä ̤Íè¤ò¸ì¤ë¡×(¸¶Âê "The Road Ahead") ¤ò¾å²ó¤ë Çä¤ì¹Ô¤­¤òµ­Ï¿¤·, ÆüËܤΥ³¥ó¥Ô¥å¡¼¥¿´Ø·¸¤Î½ñÀҤΥ٥¹¥È¥»¥é¡¼¤È¤Ê¤ê¤Þ¤·¤¿ (Èà¤ÎËܤ¬ 2 °Ì, ¤³¤ÎËܤ¬ 1 °Ì¤Ç¤¹).
"FreeBSD ¤ªµ¤³Ú¶Ë³Ú¥¤¥ó¥¹¥È¡¼¥ë" ¤Ç¤¹. 2.0.5 ¤¬Éí°¤·¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹.
"FreeBSD ÆþÌ祭¥Ã¥È" ¤Ç¤¹. 2.0.5 ¤¬Éí°¤·¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹.
¤³¤ì¤¬ Walnut Creek CDROM ¤Î "FreeBSD Complete" ¤Ç¤¹. ¥¤¥ó¥¹¥È¡¼¥ë¥¬¥¤¥É, ¥Þ¥Ë¥å¥¢¥ë¤ª¤è¤Ó¥¤¥ó¥¹¥È¡¼¥ë CD 2 Ë礫¤é¹½À®¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹.
¤³¤ì¤¬ Walnut Creek CDROM ¤Î "Installing & Running FreeBSD" ¤Ç¤¹. ¥¤¥ó¥¹¥È¡¼¥ë¤Î¼ê½ç¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ½ñ¤«¤ì¤Æ¤ª¤ê, ÊÌ¤Ë 2 ËçÁȤΠCD ¤¬ÈÎÇ䤵¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤·¤¿. ¤½¤Î¤¿¤á, ¤è¤ê¹­¤¤ÈϰϤò¥«¥Ð¡¼¤¹¤ë "FreeBSD Complete" ¤Ë¤è¤êÃÖ¤­¤«¤¨¤é¤ì¤Þ¤·¤¿.
¤³¤ÎËܤ϶ᤴ¤í (1997 ǯ¤Ï¤¸¤á) ÂæÏѤǽÐÈǤµ¤ì¤¿¤â¤Î¤Ç¤¹. ¥¿¥¤¥È¥ë¤Ï "FreeBSD: ÆþÌç¤È±þÍÑ" ¤Ç, Ãø¼Ô¤ÏÍû ·úã»á¤Ç¤¹.
¤³¤ì¤ÏÉù½ÐÈǤΠ"¤Ï¤¸¤á¤Æ¤Î FreeBSD" ¤Ç¤¹. °ìÈÌŪ¤Ê¥¤¥ó¥¹¥È¡¼¥ë¥¬¥¤¥É¤äÆüËܸì´Ä¶­¤Î¤Û¤«, ¥·¥¹¥Æ¥à´ÉÍý¤ä (¥Ö¡¼¥È¥×¥í¥»¥¹ Åù¤Î¤è¤¦¤Ê) ²¼°Ì¥ì¥Ù¥ë¤Î¾ðÊó¤Ë½ÅÅÀ¤òÃÖ¤¤¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. FreeBSD-2.2.2R ¤È XFree86-3.2 ¤¬ CDROM ¤Ë¼ýÏ¿¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. 264 ¥Ú¡¼¥¸, 3,400 ±ß¤Ç¤¹.
ASCII ¤Î "¥Ñ¡¼¥½¥Ê¥ë Unix ¥¹¥¿¡¼¥¿¡¼¥­¥Ã¥È - FreeBSD" ¤Ç¤¹. Unix ¤ÎÎò»Ë, ÆüËܸìʸ½ñ½èÍý¥·¥¹¥Æ¥à¤Î¹½ÃÛ¥¬¥¤¥É¤ä ports ¤Îºî¤êÊý¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤â ½ñ¤«¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. 2.1.7.1R ¤È XFree86-3.2 ¤¬ CDROM ¤Ë¼ýÏ¿¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. 384 ¥Ú¡¼¥¸, 3,000 ±ß¤Ç¤¹.

CDROM

ºÇ¶á¤Î¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤Ï FreeBSD ¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¾ðÊó¤Î¥Ú¡¼¥¸ ¤ò»²¾È¤·¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤.

¤³¤ì¤Ï InfoMagic ¤Î BSDisc ¤Ç, FreeBSD 2.0 ¤È NetBSD 1.0 ¤ò 1 Ëç¤Î CD ¤Ë¼ýÏ¿¤·¤¿¤â¤Î¤Ç¤¹. »ä¤¬»ý¤Ã¤Æ¤¤¤ëÃæ¤Ç¤Ï, ɽ»æ¤Ë³¨¤¬ÉÁ¤«¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤ë¤Î¤Ï ¤³¤ì 1 Ëç¤À¤±¤Ç¤¹.
¤³¤ì¤¬¥«¥ê¥Õ¥©¥ë¥Ë¥¢Âç³Ø¥Ð¡¼¥¯¥ì¥¤¹»¤Ë¤è¤ë ¥ª¥ê¥¸¥Ê¥ë¤Î 4.4 BSD Lite2 ¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤Ç, FreeBSD ¤Î¤«¤Ê¤ê¤ÎÉôʬ¤ò»Ù¤¨¤ë Ãæ¿´µ»½Ñ¤Ç¤¹.
LASER 5 ¤Î "BSD" ¥·¥ê¡¼¥º¤ÎºÇ½é¤Î¤â¤Î¤Ç¤¹. FreeBSD-2.0.5R, NetBSD-1.0, XFree86-3.1.1 ¤ª¤è¤Ó FreeBSD(98) ¥«¡¼¥Í¥ë¤¬¼ýÏ¿¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹.
LASER 5 ¤Î "BSD" ¥·¥ê¡¼¥º¤Î 2 ËçÌܤΤâ¤Î¤Ç¤¹. ¤³¤Î¥Ð¡¼¥¸¥ç¥ó¤«¤éÄ̾ï¤Î CD ¥±¡¼¥¹¤Ë¥Ñ¥Ã¥±¡¼¥¸¥ó¥°¤µ¤ì¤ë¤è¤¦¤Ë¤Ê¤ê¤Þ¤·¤¿. FreeBSD-2.1R, NetBSD-1.1, XFree86-3.1.2 ¤È 3.1.2A ¤ª¤è¤Ó FreeBSD(98) ¥«¡¼¥Í¥ë (2.0.5) ¤¬¼ýÏ¿¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹.
LASER 5 ¤ÎÆüËܸìÈÇ FreeBSD CDROM ¤Ç¤¹. CD 4 ËçÁȤǤ¹.
¥Ñ¥·¥Õ¥£¥Ã¥¯¥Ï¥¤¥Æ¥Ã¥¯ (PHT) ¤ÎÀ½Éʥ饤¥ó¤¬ Walnut Creek CDROM ¤ËÅý¹ç¤µ¤ì¤ëÁ°¤Ë PHT ¤¬È¯¹Ô¤·¤¿Í£°ì¤Î FreeBSD ¤Î CD ¤Ç¤¹. PHT ¤Ï¸½ºß FreeBSD/J (ÆüËܸìÈÇ) CD ¤âȯ¹Ô¤·¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹.
´Ú¹ñ¤Î»¨»ï¤Î ÉÕÏ¿ CD ¤Îɽ»æ¤Ç¤¹. ÆÈÁÏŪ¤Ê³¨¤ÎÉÁ¤«¤ì¤¿É½»æ¤Ë¸æÃíÌÜ ! ¤³¤Î CD ¤Ë¤Ï FreeBSD 2.2.1 release ¤È¥í¡¼¥«¥ë¤Ê³ÈÄ¥¤¬¤¤¤¯¤Ä¤«¼ýÏ¿¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹.
¤³¤ì¤³¤½¤¬ ! ¼Â¤Ë½é¤á¤ÆÈ¯¹Ô¤µ¤ì¤¿ FreeBSD ¤Î CD ¤Ê¤Î¤Ç¤¹ ! FreeBSD ¥×¥í¥¸¥§¥¯¥È¤È Walnut Creek CDROM ξ¼Ô¤Î¼ã¤«¤ê¤·º¢¤ÎºîÉʤʤΤÇ, ¸½ºß¤ÎÀ½ÉʤȤÎÉʼÁ¤Î°ã¤¤¤ò¸«¤Ä¤±¤ë¤Î¤Ï, ¤ª¤½¤é¤¯ ¤¢¤Þ¤êÆñ¤·¤¯¤Ê¤¤¤³¤È¤Ç¤·¤ç¤¦.
¤³¤ì¤Ï Walnut Creek CDROM ¤«¤éȯ¹Ô¤µ¤ì¤¿ 2 ËçÌܤΠFreeBSD ¤Î CD ¤Ç, 1.x ¥Ö¥é¥ó¥Á¤ÎºÇ¸å¤Î CD ¤Ç¤â¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹ (USL/¥Î¥Ù¥ë ¤È¤ÎÁʾ٤Èϲò¤ò»²¾È). ¤Ä¤¤¤Ç¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤µ¤ì¤¿ FreeBSD 1.1.5 ¤Ï¥Í¥Ã¥È¥ï¡¼¥¯¾å¤Ç¤·¤«Æþ¼ê¤¹¤ë¤³¤È¤¬ ¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤»¤ó¤Ç¤·¤¿.
¤³¤ÎÄÁ¤·¤¤ CD ¤Ï, ¸½Â¸¤¹¤ë¸«ËܤΠ¤Û¤Ü¤¹¤Ù¤Æ¤¬ÁÈ¿¥Åª¤ËÄÉÀפµ¤ìÇÑ´þ¤µ¤ì¤¿¤¿¤á, ¸½ºß¤Ç¤Ï ¤Á¤ç¤Ã¤È¤·¤¿¥³¥ì¥¯¥¿¡¼¥º¥¢¥¤¥Æ¥à¤Ë¤Ê¤Ã¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. ¤³¤Î CD ¤Î¿ÞÈǤÎÉÔ¹¬¤ÊÅÀ¤Ï, ºîÀ®Ç¯¤¬´Ö°ã¤Ã¤Æ¤¤¤ë¤³¤È¤È, ¤µ¤é¤Ë ¥Ð¥Ä¤Î°­¤¤¤³¤È¤Ë, ÇØÃæ¤Î "January" ¤Þ¤Ç "Jaunary" ¤È´Ö°ã¤Ã¤Æ ¤Ä¤Å¤é¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤ë¤³¤È¤Ç¤¹. ¤¢¤¢, ¸«ËܻԤ˸þ¤±¤Æ½Ðȯ¤¹¤ë ¤Û¤ó¤Î¿ô»þ´ÖÁ°¤Ë¿ÞÈǤòÊѹ¹¤¹¤ë¤È¤¤¤¦ËÁ¸±¤ò»î¤ß¤ë¤ó¤¸¤ã¤Ê¤«¤Ã¤¿.
¤³¤ì¤¬½¤ÀµÈǤΠFreeBSD 2.0 ¤Î CD ¤Ç¤¹. ½¤ÀµÈǤǤÏ(¿¾¯É÷ÊѤï¤ê¤Ç¤Ï¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹¤¬), ¿§ºÌ¤Þ¤Ç¤â¤¬Êѹ¹¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤ë¤³¤È¤Ë ¸æÃíÌÜ. ¤ª¤½¤é¤¯ ¤³¤ÎÊѹ¹¤Ï, °ÊÁ°¤Î¼ºÇÔºî¤È¶èÊ̤¹¤ë¤¿¤á¤Ë ¤ª¤³¤Ê¤ï¤ì¤¿¤â¤Î¤Ç¤·¤ç¤¦.
FreeBSD 2.0.5 release ¤Î CD ¤Ç¤¹. ¤³¤ì¤ÏºÙÀî ã¸Ê»á¤Î¥Ç¡¼¥â¥ó·¯¤ò½é¤á¤ÆÉ½»æ¤Ë»ÈÍѤ·¤¿ CD ¤Ç¤¹.
FreeBSD 2.1 release ¤Î CD ¤Ç¤¹. ¤³¤ì¤Ï (2.1.7 ¤¬ºÇ¸å¤È¤Ê¤ë) 2.1 ¥Ö¥é¥ó¥Á¤ÎºÇ½é¤Î CD ¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤Ç¤¹.
FreeBSD 2.1.5 release ¤Î CD ¤Ç¤¹.
FreeBSD 2.1.6 release ¤Î CD ¤Ç¤¹.
WC ¤«¤éȯ¹Ô¤µ¤ì¤¿, ºÇ½é¤ÇºÇ¸å¤Î 2.1.6 ¤ÎÆüËܸì¥í¡¼¥«¥é¥¤¥ºÈǤǤ¹. º£¸å¤³¤Î¼ï¤ÎÀ½Éʤ˴ؤ·¤Æ¤Ï, ¥Ñ¥·¥Õ¥£¥Ã¥¯¥Ï¥¤¥Æ¥Ã¥¯¤ª¤è¤Ó LASER 5 ¤Î¸å±ç¤ò ¼õ¤±¤¿, ºÙÀî ã¸Ê»á¤Î¤Ò¤­¤¤¤ë¥Á¡¼¥à¤ËÀÕǤ¤¬°Üž¤µ¤ì¤Þ¤¹.
¤³¤ì¤Ï FreeBSD 2.1.7 release ¤Î CD¤Ç, 2.1.x ¥Ö¥é¥ó¥Á¤Î ºÇ¸å¤Î CD ¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤Ç¤â¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹. 2.1.6 ¤Î¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£Âкö¤ò¼ç¤ÊÌÜŪ¤È¤·¤Æ ¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤µ¤ì¤¿¤â¤Î¤Ç¤¹.
2.2 ¥¹¥Ê¥Ã¥×¥·¥ç¥Ã¥È¤ÎÁá´ü¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹ (2.2.1 ¤Î¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹°ÊÁ°¤Ë¤ª¤³¤Ê¤ï¤ì¤¿¤â¤Î) ¤Ç¤¹.
FreeBSD 2.2.1 release ¤Î CD ¤Ç¤¹. ¤³¤ì¤Ï 2.2 ¥Ö¥é¥ó¥Á¤ÎºÇ½é¤Î CD ¤Ç¤¹.
FreeBSD 2.2.2 release ¤Î CD ¤Ç¤¹.
FreeBSD 3.0 ¥¹¥Ê¥Ã¥×¥·¥ç¥Ã¥È¤Î CD ¤Ç¤¹.
FreeBSD ¥á¡¼¥ê¥ó¥°¥ê¥¹¥È¤È¥Ë¥å¡¼¥¹¤Î¥¢¡¼¥«¥¤¥Ö¤Ç¤¹. ¥¹¥ì¥Ã¥ÉËè¤Ë¾¯¤·À°Íý¤µ¤ì, HTML ¤ËÊÑ´¹¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. ¤³¤ÎÀ½ÉʤÎȯ¹Ô¤Ï 2 ²ó¤ª¤³¤Ê¤ï¤ì¤¿¤¢¤È¤ÇÊɤˤ֤ÁÅö¤Ã¤Æ¤·¤Þ¤¤¤Þ¤·¤¿. ¤È¤¤¤¦¤Î¤Ï ¥Ç¡¼¥¿¤¬Â¿¤¹¤®¤Æ 1 Ëç¤Î CD ¤Ë¤ÏÆþ¤ê¤­¤é¤Ê¤¤¤³¤È¤¬ÌÀ¤é¤«¤Ë¤Ê¤Ã¤¿¤«¤é¤Ç¤¹. ¤ª¤½¤é¤¯ DVD ¤¬¤â¤Ã¤È°ìÈÌŪ¤Ë¤Ê¤Ã¤¿»þ¤Ë¤Ï...

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´Ú¹ñ¤Î UNIX »¨»ï 1997 ǯ 5 ·î¹æ¤Îɽ»æ¤Ç¤¹. ÉÕÏ¿ CD ¤ËFreeBSD 2.2.1¤¬¼ýÏ¿¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹.
UNIX User »ï 1996 ǯ 11 ·î¹æ¤Ç¤¹. ÉÕÏ¿ CD ¤Ë FreeBSD 2.1.5 ¤¬¼ýÏ¿¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹.
Software Design »ï 1997 ǯ 4 ·î¹æ¤Î "FreeBSD ¥Õ¥ë¥³¡¼¥¹" ÆÃ½¸ (µ»½ÑɾÏÀ¼Òȯ¹Ô) ¤Ç¤¹. ¥¤¥ó¥¹¥È¡¼¥ë¤«¤é -current ¤ÎÄɤ¤¤«¤±Êý¤Þ¤Ç¤Î ¤¹¤Ù¤Æ¤ò¥«¥Ð¡¼¤·¤¿ FreeBSD ¤Îµ­»ö¤¬ 80 ¥Ú¡¼¥¸¤Ë¤ï¤¿¤Ã¤Æ·ÇºÜ¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹.
Sm@rt Reseller Online ¤Î 1998 ǯ 9 ·î¹æ¤Ë·ÇºÜ¤µ¤ì¤¿ Brett Class ¤Î Quality Unix for FREE ¤Ç¤¹.

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¤³¤ì¤Ï -Walnut Creek CDROM¤¬È¯¹Ô¤·, ̵ÎÁ¤Ç +Walnut Creek CDROM¤¬È¯¹Ô¤·, ̵ÎÁ¤Ç ÇÛÉÛ¤·¤Æ¤¤¤ë FreeBSD ¥Ë¥å¡¼¥¹¥ì¥¿¡¼¤Î Âè 1 ¹æ¤Ç¤¹. ÅÐÏ¿¤¹¤ì¤Ð ¼ê¤ËÆþ¤ì¤ë¤³¤È¤¬¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹. µ­»ö¤ÎÅê¹Æ¤ä¸æ°Õ¸«¤ÏÅŻҥ᡼¥ë¤Ç newsletter@FreeBSD.ORG¤Þ¤Ç¤ª´ê¤¤¤·¤Þ¤¹.
¤³¤ì¤Ï -Walnut Creek CDROM¤¬È¯¹Ô¤·, ̵ÎÁ¤Ç +Walnut Creek CDROM¤¬È¯¹Ô¤·, ̵ÎÁ¤Ç ÇÛÉÛ¤·¤Æ¤¤¤ë FreeBSD ¥Ë¥å¡¼¥¹¥ì¥¿¡¼¤Î Âè 2 ¹æ ¤Ç¤¹. ÅÐÏ¿¤¹¤ì¤Ð ¼ê¤ËÆþ¤ì¤ë¤³¤È¤¬¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹. µ­»ö¤ÎÅê¹Æ¤ä¸æ°Õ¸«¤ÏÅŻҥ᡼¥ë¤Ç newsletter@FreeBSD.ORG¤Þ¤Ç¤ª´ê¤¤¤·¤Þ¤¹.
questions@FreeBSD.ORG
Copyright © 1995-1997 FreeBSD Inc. - All rights reserved.
$Date: 1998-10-01 17:00:11 $
+ All rights reserved.
$Date: 1998-12-13 23:19:26 $ diff --git a/ja/releases/2.2.5R/announce.sgml b/ja/releases/2.2.5R/announce.sgml index 99ab64d223..af37177d38 100644 --- a/ja/releases/2.2.5R/announce.sgml +++ b/ja/releases/2.2.5R/announce.sgml @@ -1,105 +1,105 @@ - + %includes; ]> - + &header;

Date: 22 Oct 1997 14:09:08 -0500
From: "Jordan K. Hubbard" <jkh@time.cdrom.com>
Subject: 2.2.5 RELEASE now available from ftp.freebsd.org (and some mirrors)

2.2-stable ¥Ö¥é¥ó¥Á¤Î¼¡¤Î¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤Ç¤¢¤ë FreeBSD 2.2.5 ¤Î¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤ò ¤³¤³¤Ë¤ªÃΤ餻¤Ç¤­¤ë¤Î¤Ï, ¾ï¤Î¤´¤È¤¯, »ä¤ÎÂ礭¤Ê´î¤Ó¤Ç¤¹. ̤¤À¤Ë 2.1.x ¤òÁö¤é¤»¤Æ¤¤¤Æ, 2.2 ¤Î¥Æ¥¯¥Î¥í¥¸¤Ë¥¢¥Ã¥×¥°¥ì¡¼¥É¤·¤¿¤¤¤È´ê¤Ã¤Æ¤¤¤ë Êý¡¹¤Ë¤È¤Ã¤Æ¤Ï, º£¤³¤½¤½¤Î»þ¤Ç¤¹. 2.2.5 ¤Ï²æ¡¹¤¬¹Ô¤Ã¤¿¥Æ¥¹¥È¤ÎÁ´¤Æ¤ÎʬÌî¤Ç, 2.1.x ¥Ö¥é¥ó¥Á¤ËɤŨ¤¹¤ë°ÂÄêÀ­¤òÊÝ»ý¤·¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. 2.2.2 ¤Ë¤¢¤Ã¤¿Â¿¤¯¤Î ¤¦¤ó¤¶¤ê¤¹¤ë¤è¤¦¤ÊÌäÂê¤â²ò·è¤·¤Þ¤·¤¿ (¤³¤ì¤Ë´Ø¤¹¤ë¤µ¤é¤Ê¤ë¾ðÊó¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤Ï, ¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¥Î¡¼¥È¤ò¤´Í÷²¼¤µ¤¤).

FreeBSD 2.2.5-RELEASE ¤Ï, ftp.freebsd.org ¤ä, À¤³¦Ãæ¤Ë¤¢¤ë¤¿¤¯¤µ¤ó¤Î FTP ¥ß¥é¡¼¥µ¥¤¥È ¤«¤é¼è¤Ã¤Æ¤¯¤ë¤³¤È¤¬¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹. Walnut Creek CDROM ¤Ë CD ¤ò Ãíʸ¤¹¤ë¤³¤È¤â²Äǽ¤Ç¤¹. ¤Þ¤â¤Ê¤¯, ¥×¥í¥°¥é¥Þ¤âÉáÄ̤Υ桼¥¶¤â ¹¥´ñ¿´¤ò¤½¤½¤é¤ì¤ë¤³¤È´Ö°ã¤¤¤Ê¤·¤Î¤ª¤Þ¤±¤¬¤¤¤Ã¤Ñ¤¤Æþ¤Ã¤¿, 4 ËçÁȤΠCD ¤Î¥»¥Ã¥È¤¬Çä¤ê½Ð¤µ¤ì¤ëͽÄê¤Ç¤¹.

FreeBSD ¤Î ¸ø¼°¤ÊÇÛÉÛ FTP ¥µ¥¤¥È¤Ï,

ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.org/pub/FreeBSD

¤Ç¤¹.

¤Þ¤¿, WEB ¥Ú¡¼¥¸·Ðͳ¤Î¾ì¹ç¤Ï,

-

http://www.cdrom.com/pub/FreeBSD

+

http://www.cdrom.com/pub/FreeBSD

¤Ë¤Ê¤ê¤Þ¤¹.

Walnut Creek CDROM ¤Ë CD-ROM ¤òÃíʸ¤¹¤ë¾ì¹ç¤Ï,

Walnut Creek CDROM
4041 Pike Lane, #D
Concord CA, 94520 USA
Phone: +1 510 674-0783
Fax: +1 510 674-0821
Tech Support: +1 510 603-1234
Email: info@cdrom.com
WWW: http://www.cdrom.com/

¤Ø¤É¤¦¤¾.

¤Þ¤¿, FreeBSD ¤Ï anonymous FTP ·Ðͳ¤Ç, ¥ß¥é¡¼¥µ¥¤¥È¤«¤é¼è¤Ã¤Æ¤¯¤ë¤³¤È¤¬ ¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹. ¥ß¥é¡¼¥µ¥¤¥È¤Ï¥¢¥ë¥¼¥ó¥Á¥ó, ¥ª¡¼¥¹¥È¥é¥ê¥¢, ¥Ö¥é¥¸¥ë, ¥«¥Ê¥À, ¥Á¥§¥³¶¦Ï¹ñ, ¥Ç¥ó¥Þ¡¼¥¯, ¥¨¥¹¥È¥Ë¥¢, ¥Õ¥£¥ó¥é¥ó¥É, ¥Õ¥é¥ó¥¹, ¥É¥¤¥Ä, ¹á¹Á, ¥¢¥¤¥ë¥é¥ó¥É, ¥¤¥¹¥é¥¨¥ë, ÆüËÜ, ´Ú¹ñ, ¥ª¥é¥ó¥À, ¥Ý¡¼¥é¥ó¥É, ¥Ý¥ë¥È¥¬¥ë, ¥í¥·¥¢, Æî¥¢¥Õ¥ê¥«, ¥¹¥¦¥§¡¼¥Ç¥ó, ÂæÏÑ, ¥¿¥¤, ¤½¤·¤Æ (¾¤Î¹ñ¤Ëº®¤¸¤Ã¤Æ :)¥¤¥®¥ê¥¹¤Ë¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹. ¤Þ¤º¤Ï¤¢¤Ê¤¿¤¬½»¤ó¤Ç¤¤¤ëÃϰè¤Î

ftp://ftp.<yourdomain>.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD

¤Ø¹Ô¤Ã¤Æ¤ß¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤. º£¤Î¤È¤³¤í, ftp.freebsd.org ¤Ï¤Á¤ç¤Ã¤ÈÉé²Ù¤¬ ¹â¤¤¾õ¶·¤Ë¤Ê¤Ã¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹ (Id software ¤È Slackware Linux ¤ÎºÇ¿·À½ÉÊ¤È ¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹»þ´ü¤¬¤«¤Á¤¢¤Ã¤Æ¤·¤Þ¤Ã¤¿¤ó¤Ç¤¹ :).

FreeBSD (2.0C °Ê¹ß) ÍѤÎÍ¢½Ðµ¬À©¥³¡¼¥É (eBones ¤È secure) ¤ÎºÇ¿·ÈǤÏ, °Ê²¼¤Î¾ì½ê¤«¤é¼ê¤ËÆþ¤ì¤ë¤³¤È¤¬¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹. ¤¢¤Ê¤¿¤¬¹ç½°¹ñ¤«¥«¥Ê¥À¤Ë½»¤ó¤Ç ¤¤¤Ê¤¤¾ì¹ç, secure (DES) ¤È eBones (Kerberos) ¤Ï°Ê²¼¤Î, ³¤³°¤ÎÇÛÉÛ¥µ¥¤¥È ¤«¤é¼ê¤ËÆþ¤ì¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤.

Æî¥¢¥Õ¥ê¥«

ftp://ftp.internat.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
ftp://ftp2.internat.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD

¥Ö¥é¥¸¥ë

ftp://ftp.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD

¥Õ¥£¥ó¥é¥ó¥É

ftp://nic.funet.fi/pub/unix/FreeBSD/eurocrypt

¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¾ðÊó¤Î¥Ú¡¼¥¸ &footer; diff --git a/ja/releases/2.2.5R/errata.sgml b/ja/releases/2.2.5R/errata.sgml index b72260752c..f06bb89a9e 100644 --- a/ja/releases/2.2.5R/errata.sgml +++ b/ja/releases/2.2.5R/errata.sgml @@ -1,124 +1,124 @@ - + %includes; ]> - + &header;
 ¤³¤Î¥Õ¥¡¥¤¥ë
 
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 2.2.5 ¤ËÂФ¹¤ë, ¸½ºßÍ­¸ú¤Ê¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£¤Ë´Ø¤¹¤ë´«¹ð:   One
 
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 97:05 (ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CERT ¤«¤éÍøÍѤǤ­¤Þ¤¹).
 
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 ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/updates/2.2.5-RELEASE/atalk.diff.2.2.gz
 
 
 o ¥ê¥â¡¼¥È¥×¥ê¥ó¥¿¤Ë¥¸¥ç¥Ö¤òÁ÷¤ë¾ì¹ç, ¥é¥¤¥ó¥×¥ê¥ó¥¿¡¦¥¹¥×¡¼¥é¡¦
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 o ipfw ¤Î¥³¡¼¥É¤ÎÃæ¤Ë, "reset tcp" ¤È¤¤¤¦¥Õ¥¡¥¤¥¢¥¦¥©¡¼¥ë¤Î¥³¥Þ¥ó¥É¤ò
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 o XF86Setup ¤Ë¤Ï¥Ð¥°¤¬¤¢¤ê, ¥ê¥ó¥¯¤¬´û¤Ë¸ºß¤·¤Æ¤¤¤ë¾ì¹ç¤ò¤Î¤¾¤­,
 /usr/X11R6/bin/X ¤«¤éÀµ¤·¤¤ X ¥µ¡¼¥Ð¤Ø¥·¥ó¥Ü¥ê¥Ã¥¯¥ê¥ó¥¯¤òÄ¥¤ë¤³¤È¤¬¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤»¤ó.
 startx ¤ò¼Â¹Ô¤¹¤ë¤È, °Ê²¼¤Î¥¨¥é¡¼¤¬É½¼¨¤µ¤ì¤Þ¤¹.
 
   xinit:  No such file or directory (errno 2):  no server "X" found in PATH
 
 ½¤ÀµË¡: (root ¤Ë¤Ê¤Ã¤Æ) °Ê²¼¤Î¥³¥Þ¥ó¥É¤ò¼Â¹Ô¤·, XF86Setup ¤ò¤â¤¦°ìÅÙÁö¤é¤»¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤.
 
         # cd /usr/X11R6/bin
         # ln -s XF86_VGA16 X
 
         XF86Setup ¤¬¸½¹Ô¤Î XF86Config ¤ò¥Ç¥Õ¥©¥ë¥È¤Ç»ÈÍѤ¹¤ë¤«¤É¤¦¤«
 	¤¿¤º¤Í¤Æ¤­¤¿¤é, no ¤òÁªÂò¤·¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤.
 	'X' ¤«¤é¥µ¡¼¥Ð¤Ë¥ê¥ó¥¯¤òÄ¥¤ë¤«¤É¤¦¤«¤¿¤º¤Í¤Æ¤­¤¿¤é,
         yes ¤òÁªÂò¤·¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤.
 
 
 o ¥æ¡¼¥¶¥â¡¼¥É PPP ¤Î¥Õ¥§¡¼¥º¥À¥¤¥¢¥°¥é¥à¤Î¼ÂÁõ¤Ë¤Ï¥Ð¥°¤¬¤¢¤ê, ¤¤¤¯¤Ä¤«¤Î
   PPP ¤Î¼ÂÁõ¤È¤ÎÁȹç¤ï¤»¤Ç»ÈÍѤ¹¤ë¤È, ¥ê¥ó¥¯¤òÀÚÃǤ¹¤ë¤È¤­¤ËÌäÂ꤬ȯÀ¸¤·¤Þ¤¹.
   ²óÀþ¤ÏÀÚÃǤµ¤ì¤Þ¤¹¤¬, ¥â¥Ç¥à¤Ï¼êư¤Ç pppctl (¤«, switch) ¤ò¼Â¹Ô¤·¤Ê¤¤¸Â¤ê
   ¥Ï¥ó¥°¥¢¥Ã¥×¤·¤Þ¤»¤ó.
 
 ½¤ÀµË¡:	-current ¤Î¥½¡¼¥¹ÇÉÀ¸¤Î ppp ¤¬
-        http://www.FreeBSD.org/~brian ¤«¤éÍøÍѤǤ­¤Þ¤¹.
+        http://www.FreeBSD.org/~brian ¤«¤éÍøÍѤǤ­¤Þ¤¹.
 
         ¤³¤Î¥½¡¼¥¹¤Ï 2.0.5 °Ê¹ß¤Î¥Ð¡¼¥¸¥ç¥ó¤Î FreeBSD ¤Ç¥Ó¥ë¥É¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹.
         ¤³¤Î¥³¡¼¥É¤Ï -current ¤Î¥Ä¥ê¡¼¤Ë¤ÏÆþ¤Ã¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹¤¬,
         2.2-STABLE ¤Î¥Ä¥ê¡¼¤Ë¤Ï (¤Þ¤À) Æþ¤Ã¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤»¤ó.
 
         ¤µ¤é¤Ê¤ë¾ðÊó¤Ï°Ê²¼¤Î¾ì½ê¤Ç¼ê¤ËÆþ¤ê¤Þ¤¹.
 
 	  Document references
 	  FAQ
 	  handbook
 

¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¾ðÊó¤Î¥Ú¡¼¥¸ &footer; diff --git a/ja/releases/2.2.6R/announce.sgml b/ja/releases/2.2.6R/announce.sgml index 4f53ca8c26..44e962c02c 100644 --- a/ja/releases/2.2.6R/announce.sgml +++ b/ja/releases/2.2.6R/announce.sgml @@ -1,100 +1,100 @@ - + %includes; ]> - + &header;

Date: Wed Mar 25 04:24:34 PST 1998
From: "Jordan K. Hubbard" <jkh@time.cdrom.com>
Subject: 2.2.6 RELEASE now available from ftp.freebsd.org (and some mirrors)

2.2-stable ¥Ö¥é¥ó¥Á¤ÎºÇ¿·¤Î¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤Ç¤¢¤ê, ¤½¤·¤Æ 2.2.5 ¤¬¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤«¤é 4 ¥õ·î°Ê¾å¤ËÅϤëºî¶È¤Î·ë²Ì¤È¤·¤Æ¤Î FreeBSD 2.2.6 ¤Î¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤ò¤³¤³¤Ë¤ªÃΤ餻¤Ç¤­¤ë¤Î¤Ï, ¤¤¤Ä¤â¤Î¤è¤¦¤Ë ¤ï¤¿¤·¤ÎÂ礭¤Ê´î¤Ó¤Ç¤¹. ¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¥Î¡¼¥È ¤Ë¤Ï °ÊÁ°¤Î¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤«¤é¤ÎÊѹ¹ÅÀ¤Î¥ê¥¹¥È¤òºÜ¤»¤Æ¤ª¤­¤Þ¤¹.

FreeBSD 2.2.6-RELEASE ¤Ïftp.freebsd.org ¤ä À¤³¦Ãæ¤Ë¤¢¤ë¤¿¤¯¤µ¤ó¤Î FTP ¥ß¥é¡¼¥µ¥¤¥È ¤«¤é¼è¤Ã¤Æ¤¯¤ë¤³¤È¤¬¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹. Walnut Creek CDROM ¤Ë CD ¤ò Ãíʸ¤¹¤ë¤³¤È¤â²Äǽ¤Ç¤¹. ¤Þ¤â¤Ê¤¯, ¥×¥í¥°¥é¥Þ¤âÉáÄ̤Υ桼¥¶¤â ¹¥´ñ¿´¤ò¤½¤½¤é¤ì¤ë¤³¤È´Ö°ã¤¤¤Ê¤·¤Î¤ª¤Þ¤±¤¬¤¤¤Ã¤Ñ¤¤Æþ¤Ã¤¿, 4 ËçÁȤΠCD ¤Î¥»¥Ã¥È¤¬Çä¤ê½Ð¤µ¤ì¤ëͽÄê¤Ç¤¹.

FreeBSD ¤Î ¸ø¼°¤ÊÇÛÉÛ FTP ¥µ¥¤¥È¤Ï

ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.org/pub/FreeBSD

¤Ç¤¹.

¤Þ¤¿, WEB ¥Ú¡¼¥¸·Ðͳ¤Î¾ì¹ç¤Ï

-

http://www.cdrom.com/pub/FreeBSD

+

http://www.cdrom.com/pub/FreeBSD

¤Ë¤Ê¤ê¤Þ¤¹.

¤½¤·¤Æ, Walnut Creek CDROM ¤Ë CD-ROM ¤òÃíʸ¤¹¤ë¾ì¹ç¤Ï

Walnut Creek CDROM
4041 Pike Lane, #F
Concord CA, 94520 USA
Phone: +1 925 674-0783
Fax: +1 925 674-0821
Tech Support: +1 925 603-1234
Email: info@cdrom.com
WWW: http://www.cdrom.com/

¤Ø¤É¤¦¤¾.

¤Þ¤¿, FreeBSD ¤Ï anonymous FTP ·Ðͳ¤Ç, ¥ß¥é¡¼¥µ¥¤¥È¤«¤é¼è¤Ã¤Æ¤¯¤ë¤³¤È¤¬ ¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹. ¥ß¥é¡¼¥µ¥¤¥È¤Ï¥¢¥ë¥¼¥ó¥Á¥ó, ¥ª¡¼¥¹¥È¥é¥ê¥¢, ¥Ö¥é¥¸¥ë, ¥«¥Ê¥À, ¥Á¥§¥³¶¦Ï¹ñ, ¥Ç¥ó¥Þ¡¼¥¯, ¥¨¥¹¥È¥Ë¥¢, ¥Õ¥£¥ó¥é¥ó¥É, ¥Õ¥é¥ó¥¹, ¥É¥¤¥Ä, ¹á¹Á, ¥¢¥¤¥ë¥é¥ó¥É, ¥¤¥¹¥é¥¨¥ë, ÆüËÜ, ´Ú¹ñ, ¥ª¥é¥ó¥À, ¥Ý¡¼¥é¥ó¥É, ¥Ý¥ë¥È¥¬¥ë, ¥í¥·¥¢, Æî¥¢¥Õ¥ê¥«, ¥¹¥¦¥§¡¼¥Ç¥ó, ÂæÏÑ, ¥¿¥¤, ¤½¤·¤Æ (¾¤Î¹ñ¤Ëº®¤¸¤Ã¤Æ :)¥¤¥®¥ê¥¹¤Ë¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹. ¤Þ¤º¤Ï°Ê²¼¤Ë¹Ô¤Ã¤Æ¤ß¤Æ¤¢¤Ê¤¿¤¬½»¤ó¤Ç¤¤¤ëÃϰè¤Î¥ß¥é¡¼¥µ¥¤¥È¤ò ³Îǧ¤·¤Æ¤ß¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤.

ftp://ftp.<yourdomain>.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD

FreeBSD (2.0C °Ê¹ß) ÍѤÎÍ¢½Ðµ¬À©¥³¡¼¥É (eBones ¤È secure) ¤ÎºÇ¿·ÈǤÏ, °Ê²¼¤Î¾ì½ê¤«¤é¼ê¤ËÆþ¤ì¤ë¤³¤È¤¬¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹. ¤¢¤Ê¤¿¤¬¹ç½°¹ñ¤«¥«¥Ê¥À¤Ë½»¤ó¤Ç ¤¤¤Ê¤¤¾ì¹ç, secure (DES) ¤È eBones (Kerberos) ¤Ï°Ê²¼¤Î, ³¤³°¤ÎÇÛÉÛ¥µ¥¤¥È ¤«¤é¼ê¤ËÆþ¤ì¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤.

Æî¥¢¥Õ¥ê¥«

ftp://ftp.internat.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
ftp://ftp2.internat.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD

¥Ö¥é¥¸¥ë

ftp://ftp.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD

¥Õ¥£¥ó¥é¥ó¥É

ftp://nic.funet.fi/pub/unix/FreeBSD/eurocrypt

¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¾ðÊó¤Î¥Ú¡¼¥¸ &footer; diff --git a/ja/releases/2.2.7R/announce.sgml b/ja/releases/2.2.7R/announce.sgml index 010a5b3fee..aef432272d 100644 --- a/ja/releases/2.2.7R/announce.sgml +++ b/ja/releases/2.2.7R/announce.sgml @@ -1,130 +1,130 @@ - + %includes; ]> - + &header;

Date: Wed, 22 Jul 1998 08:36:25 -0700
From: "Jordan K. Hubbard" <jkh@time.cdrom.com>
Subject:FreeBSD 2.2.7 is now released!

2.2-stable ¥Ö¥é¥ó¥Á¤ÎºÇ¿·¤Î¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤Ç¤¢¤ë FreeBSD 2.2.7 ¤Î¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤ò ¤ªÃΤ餻¤Ç¤­¤ë¤Î¤Ï, ¤¤¤Ä¤â¤Î¤è¤¦¤Ë´î¤Ð¤·¤¯»×¤¤¤Þ¤¹. ¤Þ¤À 2.1.x ¤ò»È¤Ã¤Æ¤¤¤Æ 2.2 ¤Îµ»½Ñ¤Ë¹¹¿·¤·¤¿¤¤¤È»×¤Ã¤Æ¤¤¤ëÊý¡¹¤Ë¤Ï, 2.2.7 ¤Ï¤ï¤ì¤ï¤ì¤Î¤¹¤Ù¤Æ¤Ë¤ï¤¿¤ë ¥Æ¥¹¥È¤Ë¤è¤Ã¤Æ°ÂÄêÅÙ¤¬°ÊÁ°¤Î¤â¤Î¤ÈƱÅù°Ê¾å¤Î¤â¤Î¤òãÀ®¤·¤Þ¤·¤¿¤Î¤Ç, À§È󹹿·¤¹¤ë¤³¤È¤ò¤ª´«¤á¤·¤Þ¤¹. 2.2.6 ¤Ë¤ª¤±¤ë¿¤¯¤ÎÌäÂê¤â½¤Àµ¤µ¤ì¤Þ¤·¤¿. (¾Ü¤·¤¤¾ðÊó¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤Ï ¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¥Î¡¼¥È ¤ò ¸«¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤.)

FreeBSD 2.2.7-RELEASE ¤Ï ftp.freebsd.org ¤ä À¤³¦Ãæ¤Ë¤¢¤ë¤¿¤¯¤µ¤ó¤Î FTP ¥ß¥é¡¼¥µ¥¤¥È ¤«¤é¼è¤Ã¤Æ¤¯¤ë¤³¤È¤¬¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹. Walnut Creek CDROM ¤Ë CD ¤ò Ãíʸ¤¹¤ë¤³¤È¤â²Äǽ¤Ç¤¹. ¤Þ¤â¤Ê¤¯, ¥×¥í¥°¥é¥Þ¤âÉáÄ̤Υ桼¥¶¤â ¹¥´ñ¿´¤ò¤½¤½¤é¤ì¤ë¤³¤È´Ö°ã¤¤¤Ê¤·¤Î¤ª¤Þ¤±¤¬¤¤¤Ã¤Ñ¤¤Æþ¤Ã¤¿, 4 ËçÁȤΠCD ¤Î¥»¥Ã¥È¤¬Çä¤ê½Ð¤µ¤ì¤ëͽÄê¤Ç¤¹.

½ÅÍפÊÃí°Õ: ¤³¤Î CD ¥»¥Ã¥È¤ÎÇä¾å¤ÎÍø±×¤Î¤¹¤Ù¤Æ¤Ï FreeBSD ¥×¥í¥¸¥§¥¯¥È¤ò¥µ¥Ý¡¼¥È¤¹¤ë¤¿¤á¤Ë²ó¤µ¤ì¤Þ¤¹!

ºÇÀèü¤Îµ»½Ñ¤ÎʬÌî¤Ë¤ª¤±¤ë¿¤¯¤Î¾¦Çä¤Î¤è¤¦¤Ë, Welnut Creek CDROM ¤Ï ¿·¤·¤¯À®Ä¹¤·¤Æ¤¤¤ë»Ô¾ì¤Î¤¿¤á¤Î¤É¤ÎÀ½Éʤòºî¤ë¤Ë¤·¤Æ¤â, ¤¢¤Ê¤¿¤Ï¤½¤Î¤è¤¦¤ÊÀ®Ä¹»Ô¾ì¤Ë¿¤¯¤ÎÅê»ñ¤ò¤·¤Ê¤¯¤Æ¤Ï¤Ê¤é¤Ê¤¤¤Î¤Ç, ¤¿¤È¤¨Ã»´ü´Ö¤ÎÍø±×¤ò¼Î¤Æ¤Æ¤·¤Þ¤Ã¤¿¤È¤·¤Æ¤â¤«¤Þ¤ï¤Ê¤¤¤È¤¤¤¦Ç§¼±¤ò¤·¤Þ¤·¤¿. Walnut Creek CDROM ¤Ï¤³¤Î¤è¤¦¤Ê¤³¤È¤ò¤·¤Æ¤¤¤ë¸½ºßÍ£°ì¤Î¥Ù¥ó¥À¤Ç¤¹¤·, ¤¢¤Ê¤¿¤¬Èà¤é¤Î CD ¤Î°ì¤Ä¤òÇ㤦¤³¤È¤Ç (¤â¤·¤¯¤Ï¤Û¤«¤Î狼¤«¤éÇ㤦¤³¤È¤Ç :) ¥×¥í¥¸¥§¥¯¥È¤ò¥µ¥Ý¡¼¥È¤·¤Æ¤¯¤ì¤ë¤È¤¤¤¦¤³¤È¤ò´õ˾¤·¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. ¤¢¤ê¤¬¤È¤¦¤´¤¶¤¤¤Þ¤¹!

FreeBSD ¤Î¸ø¼°¤ÊÇÛÉÛ FTP ¥µ¥¤¥È¤Ï

ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.org/pub/FreeBSD

¤Ç¤¹.

¤Þ¤¿, WEB ¥Ú¡¼¥¸·Ðͳ¤Î¾ì¹ç¤Ï

-

http://www.cdrom.com/pub/FreeBSD

+

http://www.cdrom.com/pub/FreeBSD

¤Ë¤Ê¤ê¤Þ¤¹.

¤½¤·¤Æ, Walnut Creek CDROM ¤Ë CD-ROM ¤òÃíʸ¤¹¤ë¾ì¹ç¤Ï

Walnut Creek CDROM
4041 Pike Lane, #F
Concord CA, 94520 USA
Phone: +1 925 674-0783
Fax: +1 925 674-0821
Tech Support: +1 925 603-1234
Email: info@cdrom.com
WWW: http://www.cdrom.com/

¤Ø¤É¤¦¤¾.

-

¤â¤·¤¢¤Ê¤¿¤¬ÆüËܤ˽»¤ó¤Ç¤¤¤ë¤Î¤Ê¤é, +

¤â¤·¤¢¤Ê¤¿¤¬ÆüËܤ˽»¤ó¤Ç¤¤¤ë¤Î¤Ê¤é, ¥Ñ¥·¥Æ¥£¥Ã¥¯¥Ï¥¤¥Æ¥Ã¥¯ ¤Ë 2.2.7 ¤ÎÀ½ÉÊ¤ÎÆüËܸ첽¤µ¤ì¤¿ (¤â¤·¤¯¤Ï±Ñ¸ì¤Î) ¥Ð¡¼¥¸¥ç¥ó¤òÃíʸ¤¹¤ë¤¿¤á¤Î¾ðÊó¤òÌ䤤¹ç¤ï¤»¤Æ¤ß¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤. ¥Ñ¥·¥Æ¥£¥Ã¥¯¥Ï¥¤¥Æ¥Ã¥¯¤Ï¤¤¤Þ¤Ï FreeBSD ¤òÆüËܤÇÈÎÇ䤹¤ë¤¿¤á¤Ë Welnut Creek CDROM ¤ÈÄó·È¤·¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹.

¤Þ¤¿, FreeBSD ¤Ï anonymous FTP ·Ðͳ¤Ç¼¡¤Ëµó¤²¤ë¤è¤¦¤Ê¹ñ¡¹¤Î ¥ß¥é¡¼¥µ¥¤¥È ¤«¤é ¼è¤Ã¤Æ¤¯¤ë¤³¤È¤¬¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹. ¥¢¥ë¥¼¥ó¥Á¥ó, ¥ª¡¼¥¹¥È¥é¥ê¥¢, ¥Ö¥é¥¸¥ë, ¥Ö¥ë¥¬¥ê¥¢, ¥«¥Ê¥À, ¥Á¥§¥³¶¦Ï¹ñ, ¥Ç¥ó¥Þ¡¼¥¯, ¥¨¥¹¥È¥Ë¥¢, ¥Õ¥£¥ó¥é¥ó¥É, ¥Õ¥é¥ó¥¹, ¥É¥¤¥Ä, ¹á¹Á, ¥Ï¥ó¥¬¥ê¡¼, ¥¢¥¤¥¹¥é¥ó¥É, ¥¢¥¤¥ë¥é¥ó¥É, ¥¤¥¹¥é¥¨¥ë, ÆüËÜ, ´Ú¹ñ, ¥é¥È¥Ó¥¢, ¥Þ¥ì¡¼¥·¥¢, ¥ª¥é¥ó¥À, ¥Ý¡¼¥é¥ó¥É, ¥Ý¥ë¥È¥¬¥ë, ¥ë¡¼¥Þ¥Ë¥¢, ¥í¥·¥¢, ¥¹¥í¥Ù¥Ë¥¢, Æî¥¢¥Õ¥ê¥«, ¥¹¥Ú¥¤¥ó, ¥¹¥¦¥§¡¼¥Ç¥ó, ÂæÏÑ, ¥¿¥¤, ¥¦¥¯¥é¥¤¥Ê, ¤½¤·¤Æ¥¤¥®¥ê¥¹. (¤½¤·¤Æ¤ï¤¿¤·¤¬¤Þ¤Àʹ¤¤¤¿¤³¤È¤¬¤Ê¤¤Â¾¤Î¤È¤³¤í¤Ë¤â ¤¢¤ë¤«¤â¤·¤ì¤Þ¤»¤ó. :)

ÇÛÉÛ¸µ¤Î FTP ¥µ¥¤¥È¤ò¸«¤ËÍè¤ë¤Þ¤¨¤Ë, °Ê²¼¤Î¤è¤¦¤Ê¤¢¤Ê¤¿¤Î¹ñÆâ¤Î¥ß¥é¡¼¥µ¥¤¥È¤ò ¤Þ¤º¸«¤Æ²¼¤µ¤¤.

ftp://ftp.<yourdomain>.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD

¥ß¥é¡¼¥µ¥¤¥È¤ÏÄɲ䵤ì¤ë¤È ftp2, ftp3 ¤Ê¤É¤È¤¤¤¦Ì¾Á°¤¬ÉÕ¤±¤é¤ì¤Þ¤¹.

FreeBSD (2.0C °Ê¹ß) ÍѤÎÍ¢½Ðµ¬À©¥³¡¼¥É (eBones ¤È secure) ¤ÎºÇ¿·ÈǤÏ, °Ê²¼¤Î¾ì½ê¤«¤é¼ê¤ËÆþ¤ì¤ë¤³¤È¤¬¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹. ¤¢¤Ê¤¿¤¬¹ç½°¹ñ¤«¥«¥Ê¥À¤Ë½»¤ó¤Ç ¤¤¤Ê¤¤¾ì¹ç, secure (DES) ¤È eBones (Kerberos) ¤Ï°Ê²¼¤Î, ³¤³°¤ÎÇÛÉÛ¥µ¥¤¥È ¤«¤é¼ê¤ËÆþ¤ì¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤.

Æî¥¢¥Õ¥ê¥«

ftp://ftp.internat.F reeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
ftp://ftp2.internat.FreeBS D.ORG/pub/FreeBSD

¥Ö¥é¥¸¥ë

ftp://ftp.br.FreeBSD.ORG/p ub/FreeBSD

¥Õ¥£¥ó¥é¥ó¥É

ftp://nic.funet.f i/pub/unix/FreeBSD/eurocrypt

¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¾ðÊó¤Î¥Ú¡¼¥¸ &footer; diff --git a/ja/releases/2.2R/announce.sgml b/ja/releases/2.2R/announce.sgml index defbbad0de..f288a0d64f 100644 --- a/ja/releases/2.2R/announce.sgml +++ b/ja/releases/2.2R/announce.sgml @@ -1,33 +1,33 @@ - + %includes; ]> - + &header;

FreeBSD 2.2 ¤Î¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤òȯɽ¤¹¤ë¤³¤È¤Ï¡¢»ä¤¿¤Á¤ÎÂ礭¤Ê¤è¤í¤³¤Ó¤Ç¤¹. ¤³¤ì¤Ï 2.2 ¥Ö¥é¥ó¥Á ¥Æ¥¯¥Î¥í¥¸¡¼¤ÎÂÔ˾¤ÎºÇ½é¤Î¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤Ç¤¢¤ê, Ť«¤Ã¤¿ ALPHA, BETA, GAMMA ¥Æ¥¹¥È¥µ¥¤¥¯¥ë¤Ë³¤¯¤â¤Î¤Ç¤¹.

FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE ¤Ï ftp.freebsd.org ¤ä À¤³¦Ãæ¤Î¿¤¯¤Î FTP ¥ß¥é¡¼¥µ¥¤¥È ¤«¤éÆþ¼ê¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹. ¤Þ¤¿ -Walnut Creek CDROM ¤Î CD ¤È¤·¤Æ +Walnut Creek CDROM ¤Î CD ¤È¤·¤Æ Ãíʸ¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹. ¤³¤ì¤Ï¤Þ¤â¤Ê¤¯½Ð²Ù¤µ¤ì¤ëͽÄê¤Ç¤¹.

FreeBSD 2.2 ¤Ï 2.1.X ¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤ÈÈæ¤Ù¤ë¤Èµ¡Ç½Åª¤Ë¤«¤Ê¤êÂ礭¤ÊÈôÌö¤ò ¤È¤²¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. ¿·µ¡Ç½¤Î¥ê¥¹¥È¤ò ¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¥Î¡¼¥È ¤Ç ¸«¤ë¤³¤È¤ò¶¯¤¯¤ª´«¤á¤·¤Þ¤¹.

¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¾ðÊó¤Î¥Ú¡¼¥¸ &footer; diff --git a/ja/security/security.sgml b/ja/security/security.sgml index f486704b33..5c250f0a99 100644 --- a/ja/security/security.sgml +++ b/ja/security/security.sgml @@ -1,216 +1,216 @@ - + %includes; ]> - + &header;

¤³¤Î¥¬¥¤¥É¤Ï¿¤¯¤Î FreeBSD ¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£¤Îã¿Í¤¬¥·¥¹¥Æ¥à¤ò°ÂÁ´¤Ë¤·¤¿¤ê °ÂÁ´¤Ê¥³¡¼¥É¤ò½ñ¤¯¤¿¤á¤Ë»È¤Ã¤Æ¤¤¤ë Tips ¤ä Tricks ¤ò¥É¥­¥å¥á¥ó¥È²½¤·¤è¤¦¤È ¤·¤¿¤â¤Î¤Ç¤¹. ³°Éô¤Î¹¶·â¤«¤é FreeBSD ¥·¥¹¥Æ¥à¤ò¼é¤ë¤¿¤á¤Î¿ô¿¤¯¤ÎÊýË¡¤È, ¤â¤·¤½¤¦¤¤¤Ã¤¿¹¶·â¤¬¹Ô¤ï¤ì¤¿»þ¤Ë¤¤¤«¤ËÉüµì¤¹¤ì¤Ð¤¤¤¤¤Î¤«¤È¤¤¤¦¤³¤È¤ò³Ø¤Ö ¤¿¤á¤Î¼ê½õ¤±¤È¤Ê¤ë¤è¤¦¤Ë¥Ç¥¶¥¤¥ó¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. ¤Þ¤¿, ¥·¥¹¥Æ¥à¥×¥í¥°¥é¥Þ¤¬ ¤è¤ê¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£¤ò°Õ¼±¤·, ¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£¥Û¡¼¥ë¤òºî¤Ã¤Æ¤·¤Þ¤¦¤è¤¦¤Ê¤³¤È¤ò½é´ü Ãʳ¬¤ÇËɤ°¤¿¤á¤ÎÊýË¡¤âºÜ¤»¤Æ¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹.

¤³¤Î¥Ú¡¼¥¸¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤Î¥³¥á¥ó¥È¤äÄûÀµ¤Î»ØÅ¦¤Ï¤¤¤Ä¤Ç¤â´¿·Þ¤·¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. ¤â¤· ¤³¤³¤ËºÜ¤»¤¿¤¤Êѹ¹¤¬¤¢¤ë»þ¤Ï, FreeBSD ¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£Ã´Åö¼Ô ¤Þ¤Ç¥á¡¼¥ë¤òÁ÷¤Ã¤Æ²¼¤µ¤¤.

FreeBSD ¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£Ã´Åö¼Ô

FreeBSD ¤Ï¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£¤ò¿¼¹ï¤Ê¤â¤Î¤È¼õ¤±»ß¤á¤Æ¤¤¤ë¤¿¤á, ¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£¤Ë ´Ø¤¹¤ë¾ðÊó¸ò´¹¤Î¤¿¤á¤ÎÁë¸ý¤È¤Ê¤ë¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£Ã´Åö¼Ô¤òÀߤ±¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. ¤³¤Î ¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£Ã´Åö¼Ô¤Î¼ç¤ÊÌò³ä¤Ï, FreeBSD ¥æ¡¼¥¶¤Î¤«¤«¤¨¤ë¥·¥¹¥Æ¥à¤ò°ÂÁ´¤Ë ÊݤĤ¿¤á¤Ë, ´ûÃΤΥ»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£¥Û¡¼¥ë¤¬È¯¸«¤µ¤ì¤¿»þ¤Ë´«¹ð¤ò¹­Ê󤹤뤳¤È¤È ¤È¤â¤Ë, ¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£ÌäÂê¤ò°ÂÁ´¤Ê¤â¤Î¤ËÊݤĤ³¤È¤Ç¤Ç¤¹. ¤¹¤ë¤³¤È¤Ç¤¹. ¤Þ¤¿, ¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£Ã´Åö¼Ô¤ÏÀ¤³¦³Æ¹ñ¤Î CERT (ÌõÃí: ÆüËÜ¤Ç¤Ï JPCERT/CC) ¤ä FIRST ¥Á¡¼¥à¤ÈÏ¢Íí¤ò¼è¤ê¹ç¤¤, FreeBSD ¤ä FreeBSD ¤Ç¤è¤¯»È¤ï¤ì¤ë¥æ¡¼¥Æ¥£¥ê¥Æ¥£¤Î¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£¾å¤Î¼åÅÀ¤Ë´Ø¤¹¤ë¾ðÊó¸ò´¹¤ò ¹Ô¤Ê¤¤, ¹­Âç¤ÊÀ¤³¦Ãæ¤Î¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£¤Ë´Ø¤¹¤ëºÇ¿·¤Î¾ðÊó¤ÎÆþ¼ê¤ËÅØ¤á¤Þ¤¹. ¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£Ã´Åö¼Ô¤Ï, ¤³¤ì¤é¤ÎÃÄÂΤˤª¤±¤ë³èȯ¤Ê¥á¥ó¥Ð¤Ç¤â¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹.

µ¤¤¬¤«¤ê¤ÊÌäÂ꤬¤¢¤Ã¤Æ¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£Ã´Åö¼Ô¤ÈÏ¢Íí¤ò¼è¤ëɬÍפ¬¤¢¤ë¾ì¹ç¤Ï, ¤¢¤Ê¤¿¤«¤é¤Î¥á¥Ã¥»¡¼¥¸¤ò°Å¹æ²½¤¹¤ë¤¿¤á¤Ë, ¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£Ã´Åö¼Ô¤Î PGP key ¤ò»ÈÍѤ·¤Æ²¼¤µ¤¤.

FreeBSD ¤Î¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£´«¹ð:

FreeBSD ¤Ï¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£´«¹ð¤òÄ󶡤·¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. ¤³¤Î´«¹ð¤Ï, °Ê²¼¤Î¤è¤¦¤Ê ¤¤¤¯¤Ä¤«¤¢¤ë FreeBSD ¤ÎºÇ¿·¤Î¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤ò¥«¥Ð¡¼¤·¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹.

  • FreeBSD ¤ÎºÇ¿·¤Î¸ø¼°¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹
  • FreeBSD-current
  • FreeBSD-stable (ºÇ¿·¤Î¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹·ÏÅý¤¬ 2 ¤Ä°Ê¾å¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤ë¾ì¹ç)
  • °ÊÁ°¤Î¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹·ÏÅý¤Ç¤Î FreeBSD-stable (``ºÇ¿· stable''¤Î¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹ ·ÏÅý¤¬¤Þ¤À 2 ¤Ä¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Ê¤¤¾ì¹ç)
¸½»þÅÀ¤Ç¤Ï, ¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£´«¹ð¤Ï°Ê²¼¤Î¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤ò¥µ¥Ý¡¼¥È¤·¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹:
  • FreeBSD 2.2.6
  • FreeBSD-current
  • FreeBSD-stable

¤³¤ì°ÊÁ°¤Î¸Å¤¤¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤Ï, ÀѶËŪ¤Ë¥á¥ó¥Æ¥Ê¥ó¥¹¤µ¤ì¤ë¤³¤È¤Ï ¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤»¤ó¤Î¤Ç, ¥µ¥Ý¡¼¥È¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤ë¥ê¥ê¡¼¥¹¤¤¤º¤ì¤«¤Ø¤Î¥¢¥Ã¥×¥°¥ì¡¼¥É¤ò ¶¯¤¯¿ä¾©¤·¤Þ¤¹.

¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£¥Û¡¼¥ë¤¬³èȯ¤Ë°­ÍѤµ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤ë (¤È¤ÎÏ¢Íí¤¬¥¨¥ó¥É¥æ¡¼¥¶¤«¤é, ¤â¤·¤¯¤Ï CERT ¤Î¤è¤¦¤ÊÃÄÂΤ«¤é´ó¤»¤é¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤ë) ¾ì¹ç, ¤¢¤ë¤¤¤Ï¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£ ¥Û¡¼¥ë¤¬ (Î㤨¤Ð, °ìÈÌŪ¤Ê¥á¡¼¥ê¥ó¥°¥ê¥¹¥È°¸¤Æ¤ËÁ÷¤é¤ì¤ë¤Ê¤É¤ÎÍýͳ¤Ç) ¼þÃΤΤâ¤Î¤È¤Ê¤Ã¤¿¾ì¹ç¤Ë, ´«¹ð¤¬¸øÉ½¤µ¤ì¤ë¤³¤È¤È¤Ê¤ê¤Þ¤¹.

Á´¤Æ¤Î³«È¯¤ÎÅØÎÏ¤ÈÆ±ÍͤË, ¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£¥Õ¥£¥Ã¥¯¥¹¤Ï¤Þ¤º FreeBSD-current ¥Ö¥é¥ó¥Á¤Ë»ý¤Á¹þ¤Þ¤ì¤Þ¤¹. ¿ôÆü´Ö¤Î¥Æ¥¹¥È¤ò·Ð¤Æ, ²æ¡¹¤Î¥«¥Ð¡¼¤·¤Æ¤¤¤ë FreeBSD-stable ¥Ö¥é¥ó¥Á¤ËÂбþ¤¹¤ë¤è¤¦¤Ë, ½¤ÀµÆâÍÆ¤¬»ý¤Á¹þ¤Þ¤ì, ´«¹ð¤¬¸øÉ½ ¤µ¤ì¤ë¤³¤È¤Ë¤Ê¤ê¤Þ¤¹.

´«¹ð¤Ï, °Ê²¼¤Î FreeBSD ¥á¡¼¥ê¥ó¥°¥ê¥¹¥È¤òÄ̤¸¤Æ¸øÉ½¤µ¤ì¤Þ¤¹.

  • FreeBSD-security-notifications@freebsd.org
  • FreeBSD-security@freebsd.org
  • FreeBSD-announce@freebsd.org (ÌõÃí: ¤³¤ÎÆâÍÆ¤Ï announce-jp@jp.freebsd.org ¤Ë¤âÇÛÁ÷¤µ¤ì¤Þ¤¹)

´«¹ð¤Ï, ¾ï¤Ë FreeBSD ¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£Ã´Åö¼Ô¤Î PGP ¸° ¤Ç½ð̾¤µ¤ì¤¿¸å, FTP CERT ¥ê¥Ý¥¸¥È¥ê ¤Ë´ØÏ¢¥Ñ¥Ã¥Á¤È¤È¤â¤Ë¥¢¡¼¥«¥¤¥Ö¤µ¤ì¤Þ¤¹. ¤³¤ì (ÌõÃí: ¸¶Ê¸¤Î¤³¤È) ¤ò½ñ¤¤¤Æ¤¤¤ë »þÅÀ¤Ç¤Ï, °Ê²¼¤Î´«¹ð¤¬¸ø³«¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹.

FreeBSD ¤Î¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£¤Ë´Ø¤¹¤ë¾ðÊó

FreeBSD ¤Î¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤ÆºÇ¿·¤Î¾ðÊó¤Ë¿¨¤ì³¤±¤¿¤¤¤Î¤Ç¤¢¤ì¤Ð, °Ê²¼¤Î ¥á¡¼¥ê¥ó¥°¥ê¥¹¥È¤Ë»²²Ã¤¹¤ë¤³¤È¤¬¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹.

 freebsd-security		¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£°ìÈ̤˴ؤ¹¤ëµÄÏÀ
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    ¤É¤Î¥½¥Õ¥È¥¦¥§¥¢¤¬ÉÔÀµ¤Ë²þÊѤµ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤ë¤Î¤Ç¤·¤ç¤¦¤«? °Â¿´¤Ç¤­¤ë¥á¥Ç¥£¥¢¤«¤é OS ¤òºÆ¥¤¥ó¥¹¥È¡¼¥ë¤¹¤ë, ¤¢¤ë¤¤¤Ï¥ª¥ê¥¸¥Ê¥ë¥½¥Õ¥È¥¦¥§¥¢¤Î MD5 Ãͤò¥Á¥§¥Ã¥¯ ¤·¤Æ, ¥·¥¹¥Æ¥à¤ò¥Á¥§¥Ã¥¯¤¹¤ë¤³¤È¤â¤Ç¤­¤ë¤Ç¤·¤ç¤¦. tripwire ¥Ñ¥Ã¥±¡¼¥¸¤Ï (ÌõÃí: ¥·¥¹¥Æ¥à¤Î½ÅÍפʥե¡¥¤¥ë¤Î) MD5 ÃͤòÊݸ¤¹¤ë¤³¤È¤â¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹, ¤â¤Ã¤È¤â ¤½¤Î tripwire ¤¬²þÊѤµ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤ë¾ì¹ç¤â¤è¤¯¹Ô¤Ê¤ï¤ì¤ë¤È¤¤¤¦¤³¤È¤Ëµ¤¤Å¤­, ³Î¼Â¤Ë ÌäÂ꤬¤Ê¤¤¤È¤Ï¤Ã¤­¤ê¤·¤Æ¤¤¤ë¥³¥Ô¡¼¤ò»ÈÍѤ¹¤ë¤è¤¦¤Ë¤·¤Æ²¼¤µ¤¤.
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    ¤è¤¯ÃΤé¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤ë¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£¾å¤ÎÌäÂê¤Ë¤è¤ë¤â¤Î¤Ê¤Î¤Ç¤·¤ç¤¦¤«? ¸í¤Ã¤¿ ÀßÄê¤Ë¤è¤ë¤â¤Î¤Ê¤Î¤Ç¤·¤ç¤¦¤«? ¿·¤·¤¤¥Ð¥°¤Ç¤¢¤ì¤Ð, FreeBSD ¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£ ôÅö¼Ô¤ËÏ¢Íí¤·¤Æ²¼¤µ¤¤.
  • ¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£¥Û¡¼¥ë¤Î½¤Àµ:
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  • ï¤Ë·Ù¹ð¤·¤è¤¦¤«? ¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£Ã´Åö¼Ô¤ËÏ¢Íí¤¹¤ë¤³¤È¤¬¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹, ¤¢¤ë¤¤¤Ï ¤è¤ê¥í¡¼¥«¥ë¥°¥ë¡¼¥×Æâ¤Î¸¢°Ò¼Ô¤ËÁêÃ̤¹¤ë¤³¤È¤â¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹. ¤½¤ÎÁªÂò¤Ï, ¤¢¤Ê¤¿ ¼¡Âè¤Ç¤¹.
  • ÌäÂê¤Î¸¶°ø¤È¤Ê¤Ã¤Æ¤¤¤ë¿Í¤òÄÉÀפ·¤¿¤¤¤À¤í¤¦¤«? ÌäÂ꤬¤¹¤°½¤Àµ¤µ¤ì¤Ê¤¤ ¤¦¤Á¤Ï, ¤½¤Î¥¯¥é¥Ã¥«¡¼¤òÊá¤Þ¤¨¤ëµ¡²ñ¤¬¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹. ¤½¤ì¤«¤é, ¤½¤Î¥¯¥é¥Ã¥«¡¼¤ò ¥Ï¡¼¥É¥Ç¥£¥¹¥¯¤«¤éÄɤ¤½Ð¤¹µ¡²ñ¤â¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹. ¤½¤ÎÁªÂò¤Ï, ¤¢¤Ê¤¿¼¡Âè¤Ç¤¹.

FreeBSD ¥·¥¹¥Æ¥à¤ò°ÂÁ´¤ËÊݤÄÊýË¡

FreeBSD ¥·¥¹¥Æ¥à, ¤½¤ì¤«¤é¼ÂºÝ¤Î¤È¤³¤í¼ï¡¹ UNIX ¥·¥¹¥Æ¥à¤ò°ÂÁ´¤Ê¤â¤Î¤È ¤¹¤ë¼ê½ç¤¬¤¤¤¯¤Ä¤«¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹.

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¥á¡¼¥ê¥ó¥°¥ê¥¹¥È ¤Ï FreeBSD ¤Î¥æ¡¼¥¶¤Ë¤È¤Ã¤Æ¼çÍפʥµ¥Ý¡¼¥È¼êÃʤǤ¢¤ê, °Û¤Ê¤ëÏÃÂêÈϰϤò¥« ¥Ð¡¼¤¹¤ë¿¤¯¤Î¥á¡¼¥ê¥ó¥°¥ê¥¹¥È¤¬¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹. ¤É¤Î¥ê¥¹¥È¤ËÅê¹Æ¤¹¤Ù¤­¤«¤ï¤« ¤é¤Ê¤¤»þ¤Ï freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG ¤Ë (ÌõÃí: ±Ñ¸ì¤Ç) Åê¹Æ¤·¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤. ¥á¡¼¥ê¥ó¥°¥ê¥¹¥È¤Î¥¢¡¼¥«¥¤¥Ö¤ò - www.freebsd.org ¤Ë¤Æ + www.freebsd.org ¤Ë¤Æ ¸¡º÷ ¤¹¤ë¤³¤È¤â ¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹.

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¤³¤ì°Ê³°¤Ë FreeBSD ¤Î¥á¡¼¥ê¥ó¥°¥ê¥¹¥È¤òºî¤Ã¤¿»þ¤Ï, ²æ¡¹¤ËÃΤ餻¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤.

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FreeBSD ÀìÍѤΠ¥Ë¥å¡¼¥¹¥°¥ë¡¼¥×¤Ï¾¯¤·¤·¤«¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤»¤ó¤¬, ¾¤Ë FreeBSD ¤Î¥æ¡¼¥¶¤¬¶½Ì£¤ò»ý¤ÄÏÃÂê¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤Î¿ô¿¤¯¤Î¥Ë¥å¡¼¥¹¥°¥ë¡¼¥×¤¬¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹. ¤±¤ì¤É¤â, ¥á¡¼¥ê¥ó¥°¥ê¥¹¥È¤¬ FreeBSD ¤Î³«È¯¼Ô¤ËÀÜ¿¨¤¹¤ëºÇ¤â¿®Íê¤Ç¤­ ¤ëÊýË¡¤Ç¤¢¤ë¤³¤È¤Ë¤ÏÊѤï¤ê¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤»¤ó. FreeBSD ¤Ë´Ø¤¹¤ëÍÍ¡¹¤ÊµÄÏÀ¤Ï comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.misc ¤ò¸«¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤. ½ÅÍפʥ¢¥Ê¥¦¥ó¥¹¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤Ï comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.announce ¤ò¸«¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤.

The BSD Usenet News Searcher ¤Ï 1992 ǯ 6 ·î°Ê¹ß¤Î¤¹¤Ù¤Æ¤Î BSD ´ØÏ¢¤Î Usenet ¥Ë¥å¡¼¥¹¥°¥ë¡¼¥×¤ò¥¢¡¼¥«¥¤¥Ö¤·¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹.

WEB ¥ê¥½¡¼¥¹

GNATS ¾ã³²Êó¹ð (Problem Report) ¥Ç¡¼¥¿¥Ù¡¼¥¹

ºÇ¿·¤Î FreeBSD ¤Î¾ã³²Êó¹ð¤Ï GNATS ¥Ç¡¼¥¿¥Ù¡¼¥¹¤ò ÍѤ¤¤ÆÄÉÀפµ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹.

¾ã³²Êó¹ð¤Ï FreeBSD ¥·¥¹¥Æ¥à¤Î send-pr(1) ¥³¥Þ¥ó¥É¤ä freebsd-bugs@FreeBSD.ORG ¤Ë¥á¡¼¥ë¤òÁ÷¤ë¤³¤È¤Ç ³«È¯¥Á¡¼¥à¤ËÄó½Ð¤¹¤ë¤³¤È¤â¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹. ¥á¡¼¥ê¥ó¥°¥ê¥¹¥È¤Ï¸ø¼°¤Ê¾ã³²Êó¹ð¤È¤·¤Æ¤ÏÄÉÀפµ¤ì¤Æ ¤¤¤Ê¤¤ ¤Î¤Ç, send-pr ¤¬¿ä¾©¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤ë¤³¤È¤ËÃí°Õ¤·¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤!

CVS ¥ê¥Ý¥¸¥È¥ê

CVS (the Concurrent Version System) ¤ò²æ¡¹¤Ï¥½¡¼¥¹¤ò¥³¥ó¥È¥í¡¼¥ë¤¹¤ë ¥Ä¡¼¥ë¤È¤·¤Æ»È¤Ã¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. FreeBSD 2.0 ¤«¤é¸½ºß¤Þ¤Ç¤ÎÁ´¤Æ¤ÎÊѹ¹ (¤½¤ÎÌÜŪ¤òÀâÌÀ¤¹¤ë¥í¥°¥á¥Ã¥»¡¼¥¸¤È¶¦¤Ë) CVS ¥ê¥Ý¥¸¥È¥ê¤ËÆþ¤Ã¤Æ ¤ª¤ê, ¤³¤³¤«¤é´Êñ¤Ë¸«¤ë¤³¤È¤¬¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹ (¥ê¥ó¥¯¤ò¥¯¥ê¥Ã¥¯¤·¤Æ¤¯¤À ¤µ¤¤). FreeBSD ¤Î CVS ¥ê¥Ý¥¸¥È¥ê¤Î´°Á´¤Ê¥³¥Ô¡¼¤ä¤½¤ÎÃæ¤Ë´Þ¤Þ¤ì¤ë Ǥ°Õ¤Î³«È¯¥Ö¥é¥ó¥Á¤òÆþ¼ê¤¹¤ë¤Ë¤Ï, °Ê²¼¤Î¤è¤¦¤ÊÊýË¡¤¬¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹.

  • cvsup ¥ª¥ó¥Ç¥Þ¥ó¥É¤Ç¥¢¥¯¥»¥¹¤¹¤ë¥ª¡¼¥Ð¡¼¥Ø¥Ã¥É¤ÎÄ㤤ÊýË¡¤Ç¤¹. ÀìÍѥ桼¥Æ¥£¥ê¥Æ¥£ (Modula-3 ¤Ç½ñ¤¤¤Æ¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹) ¤ò»ÈÍѤ·¤Þ¤¹.
  • anoncvs ¥ª¥ó¥Ç¥Þ¥ó¥É¤Ç¥¢¥¯¥»¥¹¤¹¤ëÊýË¡¤Ç¤¹. cvsup ¤è¤ê¤Ï (»þ´Ö¤ÈžÁ÷¤µ¤ì¤ë ¥Ð¥¤¥ÈÎ̤ÎÅÀ¤«¤é¤ß¤Æ) ¥ª¡¼¥Ð¡¼¥Ø¥Ã¥É¤¬¹â¤¤¤Ç¤¹¤¬, ¥½¡¼¥¹¥Ä¥ê¡¼¤Î ¤´¤¯°ìÉô¤ò check out ¤¹¤ë¤Î¤Ë»È¤¦Ê¬¤Ë¤Ï¤è¤ê´Êñ¤Ç¤¹¤·, FreeBSD ¤Ë´û¤Ë¥Ð¥ó¥É¥ë¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤ë cvs ¤Î¥Ä¡¼¥ë°Ê³°¤ÏɬÍפȤ·¤Þ¤»¤ó.
  • CTM ¥ª¡¼¥Ð¡¼¥Ø¥Ã¥É¤¬Èó¾ï¤Ë Ä㤤, ¥Ð¥Ã¥Á¥â¡¼¥É¤Ç¥¢¥¯¥»¥¹¤¹¤ëÊýË¡¤Ç¤¹. ´ðËÜŪ¤Ë¥Ñ¥Ã¥Á¤¬¥á¡¼¥ë ¤ÇÆÏ¤±¤é¤ì¤Þ¤¹.
  • ºÇ¸å¤Ë, ½¼Ê¬¤Ê¥Í¥Ã¥È¥ï¡¼¥¯ÂӰ褬¤¢¤ë¾ì¹ç¤ä FTP ¤ò»È¤ï¤Ê¤±¤ì¤Ð ¤Ê¤é¤Ê¤¤¾ì¹ç¤Ï, ftp.freebsd.org ¤«¤é CVS ¥ê¥Ý¥¸¥È¥ê¤ò¥ß¥é¡¼¤·¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤.

CVS ¥ê¥Ý¥¸¥È¥ê CGI ¥¹¥¯¥ê¥×¥È¤Î¥ß¥é¡¼¤Ï ¥É¥¤¥Ä ¤È ÆüËÜ ¤Ë¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹.

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FreeBSD ¤Ï¿Íµ¤¤òÂ礭¤¯¹­¤²¤Æ¤¤¤Æ, À¤³¦Ãæ¤Ë¿¤¯¤Î¥æ¡¼¥¶¥°¥ë¡¼¥× ¤¬¤Ç¤­¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. ¤â¤·¤³¤Î¥ê¥¹¥È¤Ë¤Ê¤¤ FreeBSD ¤Î¥æ¡¼¥¶¥°¥ë¡¼¥× ¤òÃΤäƤ¤¤¿¤é ²æ¡¹¤ËÃΤ餻¤Æ ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤.

  • FreeBSD-SF (San Francisco FreeBSD User Group) ¤Ï·î 2 ²ó Silicon Reef ¤ÇÎã²ñ¤ò ³«¤¤¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. ¶½Ì£¤Î¤¢¤ëÊý¤Ï WEB ¥µ¥¤¥È¤ò¸«¤ë¤« Interested ¥á¡¼¥ê¥ó¥°¥ê¥¹¥È ¤Ë¥á¡¼¥ë¤·¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤.

  • ¥Ç¥ó¥Þ¡¼¥¯¤Î *BSD ¥æ¡¼¥¶¥°¥ë¡¼¥×¤Î BSD/DK ¤¬·ëÀ® ¤µ¤ì¤Þ¤·¤¿. ¥á¡¼¥ë¹ØÆÉ¤Î´õ˾¤Ï bsd-dk-request@hotel.prosa.dk ¤Þ¤Ç. ºÇ½é¤ÎÎã²ñ¤ÎͽÄê ¤Ï¤Þ¤À·è¤Þ¤Ã¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤»¤ó.

  • BSDHH (BSD users group Hamburg) ¤ÏËè·îÂè 1 ¿åÍËÆü¤Î¸á¸å 7 »þ¤«¤é ¥É¥¤¥Ä¤Î Hamburg-Eppendorf ¤Î Loewenstrasse 22 ÈÖÃϤˤ¢¤ë Ãæ²Ú¥ì¥¹¥È¥é¥ó Lotosbluete ¤ÇÎã²ñ¤ò³«¤¤¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. ¤Û¤È¤ó¤É¤Î¥á¥ó¥Ð¡¼¤Ï FreeBSD ¥æ¡¼¥¶¤Ç¤¹¤¬, BSD É÷¤ÎÁ´¤Æ¤Î ¥·¥¹¥Æ¥à¤Î¥æ¡¼¥¶¤Î»²²Ã¤ò´¿·Þ¤·¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. ¶½Ì£¤Î¤¢¤ëÊý¤Ï bsdhh@bsdhh.org ¤Ë ¥á¡¼¥ë¤·¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤.

  • -
  • The FreeBSD UKUG +
  • The FreeBSD UKUG (FreeBSD UK User's Group) ¤Ï¥¤¥®¥ê¥¹¹ñÆâ¤Î FreeBSD ¥æ¡¼¥¶¤Î¤¿¤á¤Ë ³èư¤·¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. ¾Ü¤·¤¯¤Ï¥ê¥ó¥¯¤ò¤¿¤É¤Ã¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤.

  • ¥É¥¤¥Ä¤Î Wuerzburg ¤Î The Brainstorm + "http://www.wuerzburg.de/brainstorm/">Brainstorm ¥æ¡¼¥¶¥°¥ë¡¼¥×¤ÏÁ´¤Æ¤Î UNIX ¥æ¡¼¥¶¤Î»²²Ã¤ò´¿·Þ¤·¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. FreeBSD ¤Î¿·µ¬¥æ¡¼¥¶¤Ø¤Î ¼ê½õ¤±¤Ë¤¢¤ëÄøÅٽŤ­¤ò¤ª¤¤¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. Ëè½µ·îÍËÆü¤Î¸á¸å 8 »þ¤«¤é Wuerzburg ¤Î Muenzstrasse ¤Ë¤¢¤ë "Cafe Klug" ¤ÇÎã²ñ¤ò³«¤¤¤Æ¤¤ ¤Þ¤¹. ¾ÜºÙ¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤Ï bs@rak.franken.de ¤Ë¥á¡¼¥ë¤¹¤ë¤« Brainstorm ¤Î¥ê¥ó¥¯¤ò¤¿¤À¤Ã¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤.

  • FUUNM (Free Unix Users of New Mexico) ¤ÏËè·îÂè 2 ÅÚÍËÆü ¤Î ¸á¸å 4:30 ¤«¤é 6:00 ¤Þ¤Ç¥Ë¥å¡¼¥á¥­¥·¥³Âç³Ø Farris ¥¨¥ó¥¸¥Ë¥¢¥ê¥ó¥°¥»¥ó¥¿¡¼¤Î 141 ¹æ¼¼¤ÇÎã²ñ¤ò³«¤¤¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. FreeBSD ÀìÌç¤Î¥æ¡¼¥¶¥°¥ë¡¼¥×¤Ç¤Ï¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤»¤ó¤¬, ¤³¤ÎÃϰè¤Ë ¤¤¤ëÊý¤Î»²²Ã¤ò´¿·Þ¤·¤Þ¤¹. ¥°¥ë¡¼¥×¤Ï¥á¡¼¥ê¥ó¥°¥ê¥¹¥È (fuunm@astro.phys.unm.edu) ¤ò±¿±Ä¤·¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. ¾ÜºÙ¤Ï Alan Lundin ¤Þ¤Ç.

  • ¥¦¥£¥¹¥³¥ó¥·¥ó½£¤ÎFreeBSD-Milwaukee ¤Ï»þ¡¹²ñ¹ç¤ò³«¤¤¤Æ¤¤¤Æ¥á¡¼¥ê¥ó¥°¥ê¥¹¥È freebsd-mke-l@ns.sol.net ¤ò±¿±Ä¤·¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. »²²Ã¤¹¤ë¤Ë¤Ï freebsd-mke-l-request@ns.sol.net ¤Ë¥á¡¼¥ë¤·¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤.

  • RUUG (Reno Unix Users Group) ¤ÏËè·î Nevada ½£ Reno ¤Ç Îã²ñ¤ò³«¤¤¤Æ¤¤¤Æ FreeBSD ¤È Linux ¤Î»ÈÍѤˤĤ¤¤ÆµÄÏÀ¤·¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. ¾Ü¤·¤¯¤Ï Eric Blood ¤« Todd Crenshaw ¤Þ¤Ç.

  • Washington DC (DC Metropolitan Area) FreeBSD User Group ¤¬ ¸½ºß·ëÀ®¤µ¤ì¤Ä¤Ä¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹. ¥á¥ó¥Ð¡¼¥ê¥¹¥È¤Ë²Ã¤ï¤ë¤Ë¤Ï Sytex Access Ltd. ¤Î Richard Cramer ¤Ë¥³¥ó¥¿¥¯¥È¤·¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤. 703-425-2515 ¤«, ¤â¤·¤è¤±¤ì¤Ð rcramer@sytex.net ¤Ë¥á¡¼¥ë¤·¤Æ ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤. ºÇ½é¤Î²ñ¹ç¤Ï 5 ·î¤Ë³«¤«¤ì¤ëͽÄê¤Ç¤¹.

  • Yavapai Free Unix Users Group ¤ÏËÌ¥¢¥ê¥¾¥Ê¤Î *BSD/Linux ¤Ê¤É¤Î ¥æ¡¼¥¶¤Î¤¿¤á¤Ë·ëÀ®¤µ¤ì¤Ä¤Ä¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹. ¾Ü¤·¤¯¤Ï Russell Carter ( rcarter@consys.com) ¤Þ¤Ç.

  • BSD.fr ¤Ï¥Õ¥é¥ó¥¹¸ì¤òÏ乿͡¹¤Î¥°¥ë¡¼¥×¤Ç Cc ¤ò»È¤Ã¤Æ¥á¡¼¥ê¥ó¥°¥ê¥¹¥È¤ò ±¿ÍѤ·¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹ (majordomo ¤Ï»È¤Ã¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤»¤ó). ¾Ü¤·¤¯¤Ï Malartre malartre@aei.ca ¤Þ¤Ç.

  • HUMBUG (Home Unix Machine - Brisbane User Group) Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. ¥á¡¼¥ê¥ó¥°¥ê¥¹¥È¤ò majordomo@humbug.org.au ¤Ç±¿ÍѤ·¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. ¥¢¥Ê¥¦¥ó¥¹, °ìÈÌ, ¥Á¥ã¥Ã¥È ¤Ê¤É¤¬¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹. ¾Ü¤·¤¯¤Ï Web ¥Ú¡¼¥¸¤Ë¤Æ. ¥ß¡¼¥Æ¥£¥ó¥°¤ò Queensland Âç³Ø¤Ç¹Ô¤Ê¤Ã¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. ¾Ü¤·¤¯¤Ï president@humbug.org.au ¤Þ¤Ç.

  • -
  • KULUA (Kansas Unix & Linux Users +
  • KULUA (Kansas Unix & Linux Users Association) ¤Ï¥«¥ó¥¶¥¹½£ Lawrence ¤Î¥Õ¥ê¡¼ UNIX ¤Î¥æ¡¼¥¶¡¼¥°¥ë¡¼¥× ¤Ç¤¹¤¬, ¥«¥ó¥¶¥¹½£ÅìÉô¤«¤é¥ß¥º¡¼¥ê½£À¾Éô¤Î¥æ¡¼¥¶¡¼¤Ç¹½À®¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. Ìó 120 ̾¤Î²ñ°÷¤¬¤¤¤Æ³Ö½µ¤Ç²ñ¹ç¤ò³«¤¤¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. ¾ÜºÙ¤Ï Web ¥µ¥¤¥È¤«, ¤Þ¤¿¤Ï kulua@kulua.org ¤Þ¤Ç.

  • -
  • TFUG: ¥¢¥ê¥¾¥Ê½£¤Î +
  • TFUG: ¥¢¥ê¥¾¥Ê½£¤Î Tucson Free Unix Group ¤Ç¤¹.

FreeBSD ³«È¯¥×¥í¥¸¥§¥¯¥È

FreeBSD ¤Î³«È¯¤Îή¤ì¤Î¼çή¤È¤Ê¤ë¤â¤Î¤Ë²Ã¤¨¤Æ, ¿ô¿¤¯¤Î³«È¯¥°¥ë¡¼¥×¤¬ FreeBSD ¥¢¥×¥ê¥±¡¼¥·¥ç¥ó¤ÎÈϰϤò¿·¤·¤¤Ê¬Ìî¤Ø¤È³ÈÂ礹¤Ù¤¯, ºÇÀèüµ»½Ñ¤Ë¼è¤êÁȤó¤Ç¤¤¤Þ¤¹.

FreeBSD ¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£¥¬¥¤¥É

FreeBSD ¥æ¡¼¥¶¤Ø°Ê²¼¤Î¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£´Ø·¸¤Î¥ê¥½¡¼¥¹¤¬Ä󶡤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹: ¥»¥­¥å¥ê¥Æ¥£¥ª¥Õ¥£¥µ¡¼¤Î PGP Key, ´«¹ð (advisories), ¥Ñ¥Ã¥Á, ¥á¡¼¥ê¥ó¥°¥ê¥¹¥È.

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FreeBSD ¤ò»Ï¤á¤¿¤Ð¤«¤ê¤ÎÊý¤Ç¤â, µðÂç¤Ê¥×¥í¥¸¥§¥¯¥È¤ò´°·ë¤·¤Ê¤±¤ì¤Ð ¤Ê¤é¤Ê¤¤¾ì¹ç¤Ç¤â, ¥³¥ó¥µ¥ë¥¿¥ó¥È¤¬Ìò¤Ë¤¿¤Ä¤Ç¤·¤ç¤¦.

°ìÈÌŪ¤Ê UNIX ¾ðÊó

The X Window System

  • XFree86 ¥×¥í¥¸¥§¥¯¥È ¤Ï FreeBSD ¤ò´Þ¤àÍÍ¡¹¤Ê Intel ¥Ù¡¼¥¹¤Î UNIX ¥·¥¹¥Æ¥à¤Î¥æ¡¼¥¶¤ËÍ¥¤ì¤¿ X Window System ¤òÄ󶡤·¤Æ ¤¤¤Þ¤¹.
  • WINE ¥×¥í¥¸¥§¥¯¥È¤Ï FreeBSD, NetBSD, Linux ¤Î¤è¤¦¤Ê Intel ¥Ù¡¼¥¹¤Î UNIX ¥·¥¹¥Æ¥à¤Ç MS-Windows ¥½¥Õ¥È¥¦¥§¥¢¤ò ¼Â¹Ô¤¹¤ëµ¡Ç½¤òÄ󶡤¹¤ë¤¿¤á¤Ëºî¶È¤·¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹. ¾ÜºÙ¤Ê¾ðÊó¤Ï WINE FAQ ¤ÇÆþ¼ê¤Ç¤­¤Þ¤¹.

¥Ï¡¼¥É¥¦¥§¥¢

  • The comp.answers pc-hardware-faq ¤Ï ¼«Ê¬¤Ç¥Þ¥·¥ó¤òÁȤßΩ¤Æ¤ë¿Í¤Î¤¿¤á¤ÎÂî±Û¤·¤¿¥ê¥Õ¥¡¥ì¥ó¥¹¤Ç¤¹.
  • FreeBSD ¤Î¥Ù¡¼¥¹ distribution ¤Ç¤Ï¤Þ¤ÀÄ󶡤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Ê¤¤, PCCARD (PCMCIA ¤È¤â¸Æ¤Ð¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹) ¤Î¥µ¥Ý¡¼¥È¤òõ¤·¤Æ¤¤¤ë ¥é¥Ã¥×¥È¥Ã¥×¥æ¡¼¥¶¤Ï, ºÇ¿·¤Î¤¹¤Ð¤é¤·¤¤¼Â¸³Åª¤Ê¥é¥Ã¥×¥È¥Ã¥× ¥µ¥Ý¡¼¥È¤Î¤¿¤á¤Î - PAO distribution + PAO distribution ¥Ú¡¼¥¸¤ò¸«¤Æ¤ß¤ë¤Ù¤­¤Ç¤·¤ç¤¦. -
  • Intel Secrets -- What +
  • Intel Secrets -- What Intel Doesn't Want You To Know (Intel ¤ÎÈëÌ© -- Intel ¤¬¤¢¤Ê¤¿¤ËÃΤäÆÍߤ·¤¯¤Ê¤¤¤³¤È) - Intel ¤Î¥Á¥Ã¥×¤Ë´Ø¤¹¤ë ¿¤¯¤Î¾ðÊó.
  • Aad Offerman's Chip List - PC ¥¯¥í¡¼¥ó¤Ç»È¤ï¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤ë¥Á¥Ã¥×¤Ë ¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤Î¥ê¥Õ¥¡¥ì¥ó¥¹»ñÎÁ.
  • -
  • ASUS ¤Ï FreeBSD ¤¬ +
  • ASUS ¤Ï FreeBSD ¤¬ ¤¦¤Þ¤¯Æ°ºî¤¹¤ë¥Þ¥¶¡¼¥Ü¡¼¥É¤òÀ½Â¤¤·¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹.
  • FreeBSD ¥Ï¡¼¥É¥¦¥§¥¢¥¬¥¤¥É ¤Ï FreeBSD ¤¬¤¦¤Þ¤¯Æ°ºî¤¹¤ë¤ÈÃΤé¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤ë¥Ï¡¼¥É¥¦¥§¥¢¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ, ¤¤¤¯¤Ä¤«¤Î¶ñÂÎŪ¤Ê¿äÁ¦¤ò¤·¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹.

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  • NetBSD ¤Ï¥Õ¥ê¡¼¤Î 4.4BSD-Lite ¥Ù¡¼¥¹¤Î¥ª¥Ú¥ì¡¼¥Æ¥£¥ó¥° ¥·¥¹¥Æ¥à¤Ç, ¤¤¤¯¤Ä¤«¤Î°Û¤Ê¤ë¥¢¡¼¥­¥Æ¥¯¥Á¥ã¤Î¥Þ¥·¥ó¤Çưºî ¤·¤Þ¤¹.
  • OpenBSD ¤Ï 4.4BSD ¤«¤éÇÉÀ¸¤·¤¿¥ª¥Ú¥ì¡¼¥Æ¥£¥ó¥°¥·¥¹¥Æ¥à¤Ç¤¹.
  • Linux ¤Ï ¥Õ¥ê¡¼¤Î UNIX-like ¥·¥¹¥Æ¥à¤Ç¤¹.
  • Lites ¤Ï Mach ¥Ù¡¼¥¹¤Î¥·¥¹¥Æ¥à¤Ë ¥Õ¥ê¡¼ UNIX ¤Îµ¡Ç½¤òÄ󶡤¹¤ë 4.4 BSD Lite ¥Ù¡¼¥¹¤Î¥µ¡¼¥Ð¡¼¤È¥¨¥ß¥å¥ì¡¼¥·¥ç¥ó¥é¥¤¥Ö¥é¥ê ¤Ç¤¹.
  • GNU HURD ¥×¥í¥¸¥§¥¯¥È¤Ï¥Õ¥ê¡¼¤Î UNIX-like ¥ª¥Ú¥ì¡¼¥Æ¥£¥ó¥°¥·¥¹¥Æ¥à¤ò³«È¯¤·¤è¤¦¤È¤¹¤ë ¼è¤êÁȤߤǤ¹.
&footer; diff --git a/share/sgml/advisories.xml b/share/sgml/advisories.xml index df440e93b9..1837921131 100644 --- a/share/sgml/advisories.xml +++ b/share/sgml/advisories.xml @@ -1,214 +1,214 @@ - + %includes; ]> - + &header;

This guide attempts to document some of the tips and tricks used by many FreeBSD security experts for securing systems and writing secure code. It is designed to help you learn about the various ways of protecting a FreeBSD system against outside attacks and how to recover from such attacks if and when they should happen. It also lists the various ways in which the systems programmer can become more security conscious so he will less likely introduce security holes in the first place.

We welcome your comments on the contents and correctness of this page. Please send email to the FreeBSD Security Officers if you have changes you'd like to see here.

The FreeBSD security officer

FreeBSD takes security seriously, a dedicated team of security officers providing a focal point for security related communications. A security officers' main task is to send out advisories when there are known security holes and otherwise keep abreast of security issues. The security officers -also communicate with the various CERT +also communicate with the various CERT and FIRST teams around the world, sharing information about vulnerabilities in FreeBSD or utilities commonly used by FreeBSD, and keeping up to date on security issues in the world at large. The security officers are also active members of those organizations.

When you need to contact the security officers about a sensitive matter, please use their PGP key to encrypt your message before sending it.

FreeBSD security advisories:

The FreeBSD security officers provide security advisories for the following releases of FreeBSD:

  • the most recent official release of FreeBSD,
  • FreeBSD-current,
  • FreeBSD-stable, when at least 2 releases are based on it.
  • the previous FreeBSD-stable when a "new stable" does not yet have 2 releases based on it.
At this time, security advisories are available for:
  • FreeBSD 2.2.6
  • FreeBSD-current
  • FreeBSD-stable

Older releases will not be actively maintained and users are strongly encouraged to upgrade to one of the supported releases.

An advisory will be sent out when a security hole exists that is either being actively abused (as indicated to us via reports from end users or CERT like organizations), or when the security hole is public knowledge (e.g. because a report has been posted to a public mailing list).

Like all development efforts, security fixes are first brought into the FreeBSD-current branch. After a couple of days and some testing, the fix is retrofitted into the supported FreeBSD-stable branch(es) and an advisory then sent out.

Advisories are sent to the following FreeBSD mailing lists:

  • FreeBSD-security-notifications@freebsd.org
  • FreeBSD-security@freebsd.org
  • FreeBSD-announce@freebsd.org

Advisories are always signed using the FreeBSD security officer PGP key and are archived, along with their associated patches, at our FTP CERT repository. At the time of this writing, the following advisories are currently available:

FreeBSD security related information

If you want to stay up to date on FreeBSD security, you can subscribe yorself to one of the following mailing lists:

 freebsd-security		General security related discussion
 freebsd-security-notifications	Security notifications (moderated mailing list)
 
Send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.ORG with
      subscribe <listname>  [<optional address>]
 
in the body of the message in order to subscribe yourself.

What to do when you detect a security compromise:

  • Determine the level of security breach:
    What privilege did the attack get? That of another user or more (up to root privileges)?
  • Determine those parts of the system which are not in their original state anymore:
    What software has been tampered with? You may decide to re-install the operating system from a safe medium, or you might have MD5 checksums of the original software with which you can check your system. The tripwire package also keeps MD5 checksums, though be aware that tripwire might be tampered with as well and be sure and use a known-good copy.
  • Find out how the breakin was done:
    Via a well-known security bug? A misconfiguration? If it's a new bug, you should warn the FreeBSD Security Officer.
  • Fix the hole(s):
    Install new software that fixes the problems. If you aren't able to get a fix quickly, you should temporarily disable remote access to your system until you have done so.

Other questions you may ask yourself are:

  • Who do I warn? You can contact the security officer, or even the local authorities. The choice is up to you.
  • Do I want to trace the person responsible? By not fixing the hole right away, you have a chance to catch the cracker. Then again, you have the chance the cracker wipes your disk. The choice is up to you.

How to secure a FreeBSD system

There are several steps involved in securing a FreeBSD system, or in fact, any UNIX system:

Security Do's and Don'ts for Programmers

Other useful security information:

  • The COAST archive Contains a huge collection of security related material.
  • The COAST Security hotlist This page is THE place to start looking for security related material. It contains hundreds of useful security pointers. Everything you always wanted to know about security...and more...
  • -
  • The various CERTs (e.g. www.cert.org and - www.auscert.org.au)
  • +
  • The various CERTs (e.g. www.cert.org and + www.auscert.org.au)
  • -
  • SecurityPortal.com +
  • SecurityPortal.com is intended to be the comprehensive Web site for Internet Security. It is dedicated to providing corporate security professionals with the information and resources needed to protect their networks. We summarize breaking security news and provide a jumping off point for Security Alerts, Products, Tools, Tips & Tricks and other Resources.
  • Mailing lists: Bugtraq, BOS, etc.
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