diff --git a/en/handbook/README b/en/handbook/README
index cbb14494c2..8165e547b0 100644
--- a/en/handbook/README
+++ b/en/handbook/README
@@ -46,3 +46,31 @@ FreeBSD-doc mailing list) if they have specific questions.
% cvs add handbook.sgml
% cvs commit
+ 2. handbook.sgml was loaded into XEmacs 20.30 (straight from the ports
+ collection) and sgml-mode was turned on. My .emacs file contains the
+ following hook:
+
+ (add-hook 'sgml-mode-hook
+ (function
+ (lambda()
+ (setq sgml-omittag nil)
+ (setq sgml-indent-data t))))
+
+ This configures psgml to not omit any tags that the DTD lists as
+ omittable, and to indent data in the same way that markup is indented.
+
+ The following function was pasted into the *scratch* buffer, and then
+ "M-x eval-current-buffer" was run.
+
+ (defun sgml-indent-buffer
+ "Indents the current buffer, one line at a time"
+ (interactive "*")
+ (save-excursion
+ (goto-char (point-min))
+ (while (= (forward-line 1) 0)
+ (sgml-indent-or-tab))))
+
+ In the handbook.sgml buffer, the point was placed on the first character
+ of the first line, and "M-x sgml-indent-buffer" was run.
+
+ The changes were then committed.
diff --git a/en/handbook/handbook.sgml b/en/handbook/handbook.sgml
index 365f94187e..ec092b3d61 100644
--- a/en/handbook/handbook.sgml
+++ b/en/handbook/handbook.sgml
@@ -1,37488 +1,37488 @@
-
-
-
-FreeBSD Handbook
-
-
-
-The FreeBSD Documentation Project
-
-
-
-March 1998
-
-Welcome to FreeBSD! This handbook covers the
-installation and day to day use of FreeBSD Release
-&rel.current;. This manual is a work in progress and is the
-work of many individuals. Many sections do not yet exist
-and some of those that do exist need to be updated. If
-you are interested in helping with this project, send
-email to the &a.doc; The latest version of this
-document is always available from
-the FreeBSD World Wide Web server. It may also be downloaded in plain text, postscript or HTML from the FreeBSD FTP server or one of the numerous
-. You may also want to
-Search the Handbook.
-
-
-
-
-
-Getting Started
-
-
-
-Introduction
-
-FreeBSD is a 4.4BSD-Lite based operating system for Intel
-architecture (x86) based PCs. For an overview of FreeBSD, see
-. For a
-history of the project, read . To see a description of the
-latest release, read . If you're interested
-in contributing something to the FreeBSD project (code, equipment,
-sacks of unmarked bills), please see about .
-
-
-FreeBSD in a Nutshell
-
-FreeBSD is a state of the art operating system for
-personal computers based on the Intel CPU architecture, which
-includes the 386, 486 and Pentium processors (both SX and DX versions).
-Intel compatible CPUs from AMD and Cyrix are supported as well.
-FreeBSD provides you with many advanced features previously available
-only on much more expensive computers. These features include:
-
-
-
-
-
-Preemptive multitasking with dynamic priority
-adjustment to ensure smooth and fair sharing of the
-computer between applications and users.
-
-
-
-Multiuser access means that many people can use a
-FreeBSD system simultaneously for a variety of things. System
-peripherals such as printers and tape drives are also properly
-SHARED BETWEEN ALL users on the system.
-
-
-
-Complete TCP/IP networking including SLIP, PPP, NFS
-and NIS support. This means that your FreeBSD machine can
-inter-operate easily with other systems as well act as an enterprise
-server, providing vital functions such as NFS (remote file access) and
-e-mail services or putting your organization on the Internet
-with WWW, ftp, routing and firewall (security) services.
-
-
-
-Memory protection ensures that applications (or
-users) cannot interfere with each other. One application
-crashing will not affect others in any way.
-
-
-
-FreeBSD is a 32-bit operating system and was designed
-as such from the ground up.
-
-
-
-The industry standard X Window System (X11R6)
-provides a graphical user interface (GUI) for the cost of a
-common VGA card and monitor and comes with full sources.
-
-
-
-Binary compatibility with many programs built for SCO,
-BSDI, NetBSD, Linux and 386BSD.
-
-
-
-Hundreds of ready-to-run applications are
-available from the
-FreeBSD ports and packages
-collection. Why search the net when you can find it all
-right here?
-
-
-
-Thousands of additional and easy-to-port applications
-available on the Internet. FreeBSD is source code compatible
-with most popular commercial Unix systems and thus most
-applications require few, if any, changes to compile.
-
-
-
-Demand paged virtual memory and `merged VM/buffer cache'
-design efficiently satisfies applications with large appetites
-for memory while still maintaining interactive response to other
-users.
-
-
-
-Shared libraries (the Unix equivalent of
-MS-Windows DLLs) provide for efficient use of disk space
-and memory.
-
-
-
-A full compliment of C, C++ and
-Fortran development tools. Many additional
-languages for advanced research and development are
-also available in the ports and packages collection.
-
-
-
-Source code for the entire system means you have
-the greatest degree of control over your environment. Why be
-locked into a proprietary solution and at the mercy of your vendor
-when you can have a truly Open System?
-
-
-
-Extensive on-line documentation.
-
-
-
-And many more!
-
-
-
-
-
-FreeBSD is based on the 4.4BSD-Lite release from Computer
-Systems Research Group (CSRG) at the University of
-California at Berkeley, and carries on the distinguished
-tradition of BSD systems development. In addition to the
-fine work provided by CSRG, the FreeBSD Project has put in
-many thousands of hours in fine tuning the system for
-maximum performance and reliability in real-life load
-situations. As many of the commercial giants struggle to
-field PC operating systems with such features, performance
-and reliability, FreeBSD can offer them now!
-
-The applications to which FreeBSD can be put are truly
-limited only by your own imagination. From software
-development to factory automation, inventory control to
-azimuth correction of remote satellite antennae; if it can
-be done with a commercial UNIX product then it is more than
-likely that you can do it with FreeBSD, too! FreeBSD also
-benefits significantly from the literally thousands of high
-quality applications developed by research centers and
-universities around the world, often available at little
-to no cost. Commercial applications are also available
-and appearing in greater numbers every day.
-
-Because the source code for FreeBSD itself is generally
-available, the system can also be customized to an almost
-unheard of degree for special applications or projects, and
-in ways not generally possible with operating systems from
-most major commercial vendors. Here is just a sampling of
-some of the applications in which people are currently
-using FreeBSD:
-
-
-
-
-
-Internet Services: The robust TCP/IP networking
-built into FreeBSD makes it an ideal platform for a
-variety of Internet services such as:
-
-
-
-FTP servers
-
-
-
-World Wide Web servers
-
-
-
-Gopher servers
-
-
-
-Electronic Mail servers
-
-
-
-USENET News
-
-
-
-Bulletin Board Systems
-
-
-
-And more...
-
-
-
-
-You can easily start out small with an inexpensive 386
-class PC and upgrade as your enterprise grows.
-
-
-
-Education: Are you a student of computer science
-or a related engineering field? There is no better way
-of learning about operating systems, computer
-architecture and networking than the hands on, under the
-hood experience that FreeBSD can provide. A number of
-freely available CAD, mathematical and graphic design
-packages also make it highly useful to those whose
-primary interest in a computer is to get other
-work done!
-
-
-
-Research: With source code for the entire system
-available, FreeBSD is an excellent platform for research
-in operating systems as well as other branches of
-computer science. FreeBSD's freely available nature also
-makes it possible for remote groups to collaborate on
-ideas or shared development without having to worry about
-special licensing agreements or limitations on what
-may be discussed in open forums.
-
-
-
-Networking: Need a new router? A name server
-(DNS)? A firewall to keep people out of your internal
-network? FreeBSD can easily turn that unused 386 or 486 PC
-sitting in the corner into an advanced router with
-sophisticated packet filtering capabilities.
-
-
-
-X Window workstation: FreeBSD is a fine
-choice for an inexpensive X terminal solution, either
-using the freely available XFree86 server or one
-of the excellent commercial servers provided by X Inside.
-Unlike an X
-terminal, FreeBSD allows many applications to be run
-locally, if desired, thus relieving the burden on a
-central server. FreeBSD can even boot
-"diskless", making individual workstations even cheaper
-and easier to administer.
-
-
-
-Software Development: The basic FreeBSD system
-comes with a full compliment of development tools
-including the renowned GNU C/C++ compiler and
-debugger.
-
-
-
-
-
-FreeBSD is available in both source and binary form on CDROM and
-via anonymous ftp. See
-for more details.
-
-
-
-
-
-A Brief History of FreeBSD
-
-Contributed by &a.jkh;.
-
-The FreeBSD project had its genesis in the early part of 1993,
-partially as an outgrowth of the "Unofficial 386BSD Patchkit" by the
-patchkit's last 3 coordinators: Nate Williams, Rod Grimes and myself.
-
-Our original goal was to produce an intermediate snapshot of 386BSD in
-order to fix a number of problems with it that the patchkit mechanism
-just was not capable of solving. Some of you may remember the early
-working title for the project being "386BSD 0.5" or "386BSD Interim"
-in reference to that fact.
-
-386BSD was Bill Jolitz's operating system, which had been up to that
-point suffering rather severely from almost a year's worth of neglect.
-As the patchkit swelled ever more uncomfortably with each passing day,
-we were in unanimous agreement that something had to be done and
-decided to try and assist Bill by providing this interim "cleanup"
-snapshot. Those plans came to a rude halt when Bill Jolitz suddenly
-decided to withdraw his sanction from the project and without any
-clear indication of what would be done instead.
-
-It did not take us long to decide that the goal remained worthwhile,
-even without Bill's support, and so we adopted the name "FreeBSD",
-coined by David Greenman. Our initial objectives were set after
-consulting with the system's current users and, once it became clear
-that the project was on the road to perhaps even becoming a reality,
-I contacted Walnut Creek CDROM with an eye towards improving
-FreeBSD's distribution channels for those many unfortunates without
-easy access to the Internet. Walnut Creek CDROM not only supported
-the idea of distributing FreeBSD on CD but went so far as to provide
-the project with a machine to work on and a fast Internet connection.
-Without Walnut Creek CDROM's almost unprecedented degree of faith in
-what was, at the time, a completely unknown project, it is quite
-unlikely that FreeBSD would have gotten as far, as fast, as it
-has today.
-
-The first CDROM (and general net-wide) distribution was FreeBSD 1.0,
-released in December of 1993. This was based on the 4.3BSD-Lite
-("Net/2") tape from U.C. Berkeley, with many components also provided by
-386BSD and the Free Software Foundation. It was a fairly reasonable
-success for a first offering, and we followed it with the highly successful
-FreeBSD 1.1 release in May of 1994.
-
-Around this time, some rather unexpected storm clouds formed on the
-horizon as Novell and U.C. Berkeley settled their long-running lawsuit
-over the legal status of the Berkeley Net/2 tape. A condition of that
-settlement was U.C. Berkeley's concession that large parts of Net/2
-were "encumbered" code and the property of Novell, who had in turn acquired
-it from AT&T some time previously. What Berkeley got in return was
-Novell's "blessing" that the 4.4BSD-Lite release, when it was finally
-released, would be declared unencumbered and all existing Net/2 users
-would be strongly encouraged to switch. This included FreeBSD, and the
-project was given until the end of July 1994 to stop shipping its own
-Net/2 based product. Under the terms of that agreement, the project
-was allowed one last release before the deadline, that release being
-FreeBSD 1.1.5.1.
-
-FreeBSD then set about the arduous task of literally re-inventing itself
-from a completely new and rather incomplete set of 4.4BSD-Lite bits. The
-"Lite" releases were light in part because Berkeley's CSRG had removed
-large chunks of code required for actually constructing a bootable running
-system (due to various legal requirements) and the fact that the Intel
-port of 4.4 was highly incomplete. It took the project until December of 1994
-to make this transition, and in January of 1995 it released FreeBSD 2.0 to
-the net and on CDROM. Despite being still more than a little rough around
-the edges, the release was a significant success and was followed by the more
-robust and easier to install FreeBSD 2.0.5 release in June of 1995.
-
-We released FreeBSD 2.1.5 in August of 1996, and it appeared to be
-popular enough among the ISP and commercial communities that another
-release along the 2.1-stable branch was merited. This was FreeBSD 2.1.7.1,
-released in February 1997 and capping the end of mainstream development
-on 2.1-stable. Now in maintenance mode, only security enhancements and other
-critical bug fixes will be done on this branch (RELENG_2_1_0).
-
-FreeBSD 2.2 was branched from the development mainline ("-current") in
-November 1996 as the RELENG_2_2 branch, and the first full release
-(2.2.1) was released in April, 1997. Further releases along the 2.2 branch
-were done in the Summer and Fall of '97, the latest being 2.2.6 which
-appeared in late March of '98. The first official 3.0 release will appear
-later in 1998.
-
-Long term development projects for everything from SMP to DEC ALPHA support
-will continue to take place in the 3.0-current branch and SNAPshot releases
-of 3.0 on CDROM (and, of course, on the net).
-
-
-
-
-
-FreeBSD Project Goals
-
-Contributed by &a.jkh;.
-
-The goals of the FreeBSD Project are to provide software that may
-be used for any purpose and without strings attached. Many of us
-have a significant investment in the code (and project) and would
-certainly not mind a little financial compensation now and then,
-but we're definitely not prepared to insist on it. We believe
-that our first and foremost "mission" is to provide code to any
-and all comers, and for whatever purpose, so that the code gets
-the widest possible use and provides the widest possible benefit.
-This is, I believe, one of the most fundamental goals of Free
-Software and one that we enthusiastically support.
-
-That code in our source tree which falls under the GNU Public License
-(GPL) or GNU Library Public License (GLPL) comes with slightly more
-strings attached, though at least on the side of enforced
-access rather than the usual opposite. Due to the additional
-complexities that can evolve in the commercial use of GPL software,
-we do, however, endeavor to replace such software with submissions
-under the more relaxed BSD copyright whenever possible.
-
-
-
-
-
-The FreeBSD Development Model
-
-Contributed by &a.asami;.
-
-The development of FreeBSD is a very open and flexible process,
-FreeBSD being literally built from the contributions of hundreds of
-people around the world, as can be seen from our . We are constantly on the lookout for
-new developers and ideas, and those interested in becoming more
-closely involved with the project need simply contact us at the
-&a.hackers;. Those who prefer to work more independently are also
-accommodated, and they are free to use our FTP facilities at ftp.freebsd.org to distribute their own patches or work-in-progress
-sources. The &a.announce; is also available to those wishing
-to make other FreeBSD users aware of major areas of work.
-
-Useful things to know about the FreeBSD project and its development process,
-whether working independently or in close cooperation:
-
-
-
-The CVS repository
-
-
-
-The central source tree for FreeBSD is maintained by CVS
-(Concurrent Version System), a freely available source code control
-tool which comes bundled with FreeBSD. The primary CVS repository
-resides on a machine in Concord CA, USA from where it is replicated
-to numerous mirror machines throughout the world. The CVS tree, as well
-as the and trees which are checked out of it, can be easily
-replicated to your own machine as well. Please refer to the
-
-section for more information on doing this.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The committers list
-
-
-
-
-The are the people
-who have write access to the CVS tree, and are thus
-authorized to make modifications to the FreeBSD source (the term
-``committer'' comes from the cvs(1) ``commit''
-command, which is used to bring new changes into the CVS repository).
-The best way of making submissions for review by the committers list
-is to use the send-pr(1) command, though if something appears to be jammed
-in the system then you may also reach them by sending mail to committers@freebsd.org.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The FreeBSD core team
-
-
-
-
-The would be
-equivalent to the board of directors if the FreeBSD Project were a
-company. The primary task of the core team is to make sure the
-project, as a whole, is in good shape and is heading in the right
-directions. Inviting dedicated and responsible developers to join our
-group of committers is one of the functions of the core team, as is
-the recruitment of new core team members as others move on. Most
-current members of the core team started as committers who's addiction
-to the project got the better of them.
-
-
-
-Some core team members also have specific , meaning that they are committed to
-ensuring that some large portion of the system works as advertised.
-Note that most members of the core team are volunteers when it comes
-to FreeBSD development and do not benefit from the project
-financially, so "commitment" should also not be misconstrued as
-meaning "guaranteed support." The ``board of directors'' analogy
-above is not actually very accurate, and it may be more suitable to
-say that these are the people who gave up their lives in favor of
-FreeBSD against their better judgement! ;)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Outside contributors
-
-
-
-
-Last, but definitely not least, the largest group of developers are
-the users themselves who provide feedback and bug-fixes to us on an
-almost constant basis. The primary way of keeping in touch with FreeBSD's
-more non-centralized development is to subscribe to the &a.hackers;
-(see ) where such
-things are discussed.
-
-
-
- of those who have
-contributed something which made its way into our source tree is
-a long and growing one, so why not join it by contributing something
-back to FreeBSD today? :-)
-
-
-
-Providing code is not the only way of contributing to the project;
-for a more complete list of things that need doing, please refer to the section in this handbook.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-In summary, our development model is organized as a loose set of
-concentric circles. The centralized model is designed for the
-convenience of the users of FreeBSD, who are thereby provided
-with an easy way of tracking one central code base, not to keep
-potential contributors out! Our desire is to present a stable
-operating system with a large set of coherent that the users can easily install and
-use, and this model works very well in accomplishing that.
-
-All we ask of those who would join us as FreeBSD developers is some of
-the same dedication its current people have to its continued success!
-
-
-
-
-
-About the Current Release
-
-FreeBSD is a freely available, full source 4.4BSD-Lite
-based release for Intel i386/i486/Pentium/PentiumPro/Pentium II
-(or compatible) based PC's. It is based primarily on
-software from U.C. Berkeley's CSRG group, with some
-enhancements from NetBSD, OpenBSD, 386BSD, and the Free
-Software Foundation.
-
-Since our release of FreeBSD 2.0 in January of 95, the
-performance, feature set, and stability of FreeBSD has
-improved dramatically. The largest change is a
-revamped virtual memory system with a merged VM/file buffer
-cache that not only increases performance, but reduces
-FreeBSD's memory footprint, making a 5MB configuration
-a more acceptable minimum. Other enhancements include
-full NIS client and server support, transaction TCP
-support, dial-on-demand PPP, an improved SCSI
-subsystem, early ISDN support, support for FDDI and
-Fast Ethernet (100Mbit) adapters, improved support for
-the Adaptec 2940 (WIDE and narrow) and many hundreds of
-bug fixes.
-
-We have also taken the comments and suggestions of many
-of our users to heart and have attempted to provide
-what we hope is a more sane and easily understood
-installation process. Your feedback on this
-(constantly evolving) process is especially welcome!
-
-In addition to the base distributions, FreeBSD offers a
-new ported software collection with hundreds of commonly
-sought-after programs. At the end of March 1998 there were
-more than 1300 ports! The list of ports ranges from
-http (WWW) servers, to games, languages, editors and
-almost everything in between. The entire ports collection
-requires approximately 26MB of storage, all ports being
-expressed as ``deltas'' to their original sources. This makes
-it much easier for us to update ports, and greatly reduces
-the disk space demands made by the older 1.0 ports
-collection. To compile a port, you simply change to the
-directory of the program you wish to install, type ``make
-all'' followed by ``make install'' after successful
-compilation and let the system do the rest. The full
-original distribution for each port you build is retrieved
-dynamically off the CDROM or a local ftp site, so you need
-only enough disk space to build the ports you want.
-(Almost) every port is also provided as a pre-compiled
-"package" which can be installed with a simple command
-(pkg_add) by those who do not wish to compile their own
-ports from source.
-
-A number of additional documents which you may find
-very helpful in the process of installing and using
-FreeBSD may now also be found in the
-/usr/share/doc directory on any machine running
-FreeBSD 2.1 or later. You may view the locally installed
-manuals with any HTML capable browser using the
-following URLs:
-
-
-
-The FreeBSD handbook
-
-file:/usr/share/doc/handbook/handbook.html
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The FreeBSD FAQ
-
-
-file:/usr/share/doc/FAQ/FAQ.html
-
-
-
-
-
-
-You can also visit the master (and most frequently
-updated) copies at http://www.freebsd.org.
-
-The core of FreeBSD does not contain DES code which
-would inhibit its being exported outside the United
-States. There is an add-on package to the core
-distribution, for use only in the United States, that
-contains the programs that normally use DES. The
-auxiliary packages provided separately can be used by
-anyone. A freely (from outside the U.S.) exportable
-European distribution of DES for our non-U.S. users
-also exists and is described in the FreeBSD FAQ.
-
-If password security for FreeBSD is all you need, and
-you have no requirement for copying encrypted passwords
-from different hosts (Suns, DEC machines, etc) into
-FreeBSD password entries, then FreeBSD's MD5 based
-security may be all you require! We feel that our
-default security model is more than a match for DES,
-and without any messy export issues to deal with. If
-you are outside (or even inside) the U.S., give it a
-try!
-
-
-
-
-
-Installing FreeBSD
-
-So, you would like to try out FreeBSD on your system?
-This section is a quick-start guide for what you need to
-do. FreeBSD can be installed from a variety of media
-including CD-ROM, floppy disk, magnetic tape, an MS-DOS
-partition and, if you have a network connection, via
-anonymous ftp or NFS.
-
-Regardless of the installation media you choose, you can
-get started by creating the installation disk
-as described below. Booting your computer into the FreeBSD installer,
-even if you aren't planning on installing FreeBSD right away, will
-provide important information about compatibility between
-FreeBSD and your hardware which may, in turn, dictate which
-installation options are even possible. It can also provide
-early clues to any compatibility problems which could prevent
-FreeBSD running on your system at all. If you plan on
-installing via anonymous FTP then this installation disk
-is all you need to download (the installation will handle any
-further required downloading itself).
-
-For more information on obtaining the latest FreeBSD distributions,
-please see in the Appendix.
-
-So, to get the show on the road, follow these steps:
-
-
-
-
-
-Review the section of this installation guide to
-be sure that your hardware is supported by FreeBSD. It
-may be helpful to make a list of any special cards you
-have installed, such as SCSI controllers, Ethernet
-adapters or sound cards. This list should include
-relevant configuration parameters such as interrupts
-(IRQ) and IO port addresses.
-
-
-
-
-
-If you're installing FreeBSD from CDROM media then you have
-several different installation options:
-
-
-
-
-
-If the CD has been mastered with El Torrito boot support and
-your system supports direct booting from CDROM (and many older systems
-do not), simply insert the CD into the drive and boot
-directly from it.
-
-
-
-
-
-If you're running DOS and have the proper drivers to access
-your CD, run the install.bat script provided on the CD. This will
-attempt to boot into the FreeBSD installation straight from DOS
-(note: You must do this from actual DOS and not a Windows DOS box). If you also want to install FreeBSD from your DOS partition
-(perhaps because your CDROM drive is completely unsupported by
-FreeBSD) then run the setup program first to copy the
-appropriate files from the CD to your DOS partition, afterwards
-running install.
-
-
-
-
-
-If either of the two proceeding methods work then you can
-simply skip the rest of this section, otherwise your final option
-is to create a boot floppy from the floppies\boot.flp
-image - proceed to step 4 for instructions on how to do
-this.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-If you don't have a CDROM distribution then simply download the installation boot disk image file to your hard
-drive, being sure to tell your browser to
-save rather than display the file.
-Note: This disk image can only be used with
-1.44 megabyte 3.5 inch floppy disks.
-
-
-
-
-
-Make the installation boot disk from the image file:
-
-
-
-
-
-If you are using MS-DOS then download
-fdimage.exe or get it from tools\fdimage.exe
-on the CDROM and then run it like so:
-
-E:\> tools\fdimage floppies\boot.flp a:
-
- The fdimage
-program will format the A: drive and then copy the
-boot.flp image onto it (assuming that you're at the top
-level of a FreeBSD distribution and the floppy images
-live in the floppies subdirectory, as is typically the case).
-
-
-
-
-
-If you are using a UNIX system to create the floppy image:
-
-% dd if=boot.flp of=disk_device
-
-
-where disk_device is the /dev
-entry for the floppy drive. On FreeBSD systems, this
-is /dev/rfd0 for the A: drive and
-/dev/rfd1 for the B: drive.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-With the installation disk in the A: drive, reboot your
-computer. You should get a boot prompt something like this:
-
->> FreeBSD BOOT ...
-Usage: [[[0:][wd](0,a)]/kernel][-abcCdhrsv]
-Use 1:sd(0,a)kernel to boot sd0 if it is BIOS drive 1
-Use ? for file list or press Enter for defaults
-Boot:
-
-
-If you do not type anything, FreeBSD will automatically boot
-with its default configuration after a delay of about
-five seconds. As FreeBSD boots, it probes your computer
-to determine what hardware is installed. The results of
-this probing is displayed on the screen.
-
-
-
-
-
-When the booting process is finished, The main FreeBSD
-installation menu will be displayed.
-
-
-
-
-
-If something goes wrong...
-
-Due to limitations of the PC architecture, it is
-impossible for probing to be 100 percent reliable. In the event
-that your hardware is incorrectly identified, or that the
-probing causes your computer to lock up, first check the
- section of this installation guide to be
-sure that your hardware is indeed supported by FreeBSD.
-
-If your hardware is supported, reset the computer and when
-the Boot: prompt comes up, type . This puts
-FreeBSD into a configuration mode where you can supply
-hints about your hardware. The FreeBSD kernel on the
-installation disk is configured assuming that most hardware
-devices are in their factory default configuration in terms
-of IRQs, IO addresses and DMA channels. If your hardware
-has been reconfigured, you will most likely need to use the
- option at boot to tell FreeBSD where things are.
-
-It is also possible that a probe for a device not present
-will cause a later probe for another device that is present
-to fail. In that case, the probes for the conflicting
-driver(s) should be disabled.
-
-In the configuration mode, you can:
-
-
-
-
-
-List the device drivers installed in the kernel.
-
-
-
-Disable device drivers for hardware not present in your
-system.
-
-
-
-Change the IRQ, DRQ, and IO port addresses used by a
-device driver.
-
-
-
-
-
-While at the config> prompt, type
-help for more information on the available
-commands. After adjusting the kernel to match how you have
-your hardware configured, type quit at the
-config> prompt to continue booting with the new
-settings.
-
-After FreeBSD has been installed, changes made in the
-configuration mode will be permanent so you do not have
-to reconfigure every time you boot. Even so, it is likely
-that you will want to build a custom kernel to optimize the
-performance of your system. See for more information on
-creating custom kernels.
-
-
-
-Supported Configurations
-
-FreeBSD currently runs on a wide variety of ISA, VLB,
-EISA and PCI bus based PC's, ranging from 386sx to
-Pentium class machines (though the 386sx is not
-recommended). Support for generic IDE or ESDI drive
-configurations, various SCSI controller, network and
-serial cards is also provided.
-
-A minimum of four megabytes of RAM is required to run FreeBSD.
-To run the X Window System, eight megabytes of RAM is the
-recommended minimum.
-
-Following is a list of all disk controllers and Ethernet
-cards currently known to work with FreeBSD. Other
-configurations may very well work, and we have simply not
-received any indication of this.
-
-
-
-Disk Controllers
-
-
-
-
-
-WD1003 (any generic MFM/RLL)
-
-
-
-WD1007 (any generic IDE/ESDI)
-
-
-
-IDE
-
-
-
-ATA
-
-
-
-
-Adaptec 1505 ISA SCSI controller
-
-
-
-Adaptec 152x series ISA SCSI controllers
-
-
-
-Adaptec 1535 ISA SCSI controllers
-
-
-
-Adaptec 154x series ISA SCSI controllers
-
-
-
-Adaptec 174x series EISA SCSI controller in
-standard and enhanced mode.
-
-
-
-Adaptec 274x/284x/2940/2940U/3940
-(Narrow/Wide/Twin)
-series EISA/VLB/PCI SCSI controllers
-
-
-
-Adaptec AIC7850 on-board SCSI controllers
-
-
-
-Adaptec
-AIC-6360 based boards,
-which includes the AHA-152x and SoundBlaster SCSI
-cards.
-
-Note: You cannot boot from the
-SoundBlaster cards as they have no on-board BIOS,
-which is necessary for mapping the boot device into
-the system BIOS I/O vectors. They are perfectly
-usable for external tapes, CDROMs, etc, however.
-The same goes for any other AIC-6x60 based card
-without a boot ROM. Some systems DO have a boot
-ROM, which is generally indicated by some sort of
-message when the system is first powered up or
-reset. Check your system/board documentation for
-more details.
-
-
-
-
-Buslogic 545S & 545c
-Note: that Buslogic was formerly known as "Bustek".
-
-
-
-Buslogic 445S/445c VLB SCSI controller
-
-
-
-Buslogic 742A/747S/747c EISA SCSI controller.
-
-
-
-Buslogic 946c PCI SCSI controller
-
-
-
-Buslogic 956c PCI SCSI controller
-
-
-
-
-NCR 53C810/53C815/53C825/53C860/53C875 PCI SCSI controller.
-
-
-
-NCR5380/NCR53400 (``ProAudio Spectrum'') SCSI controller.
-
-
-
-
-DTC 3290 EISA SCSI controller in 1542 emulation mode.
-
-
-
-
-UltraStor 14F/24F/34F SCSI controllers.
-
-
-
-
-Seagate ST01/02 SCSI controllers.
-
-
-
-
-Future Domain 8xx/950 series SCSI controllers.
-
-
-
-
-WD7000 SCSI controllers.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-With all supported SCSI controllers, full support is
-provided for SCSI-I & SCSI-II peripherals,
-including Disks, tape drives (including DAT) and CD ROM
-drives.
-
-The following CD-ROM type systems are supported at this
-time:
-
-
-
-
-
-SoundBlaster SCSI and ProAudio Spectrum SCSI (cd)
-
-
-
-Mitsumi (all models) proprietary interface (mcd)
-
-
-
-Matsushita/Panasonic (Creative)
-CR-562/CR-563 proprietary interface (matcd)
-
-
-
-Sony proprietary interface (scd)
-
-
-
-ATAPI IDE interface
-(experimental and should be considered ALPHA quality!)
-(wcd)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Ethernet cards
-
-
-
-
-
-Allied-Telesis AT1700 and RE2000 cards
-
-
-
-
-SMC Elite 16 WD8013 Ethernet interface, and
-most other WD8003E, WD8003EBT, WD8003W, WD8013W,
-WD8003S, WD8003SBT and WD8013EBT based clones. SMC
-Elite Ultra and 9432TX based cards are also supported.
-
-
-
-
-DEC EtherWORKS III NICs (DE203, DE204, and DE205)
-
-
-
-DEC EtherWORKS II NICs (DE200, DE201, DE202, and DE422)
-
-
-
-DEC DC21040/DC21041/DC21140 based NICs:
-
-
-
-ASUS PCI-L101-TB
-
-
-
-Accton ENI1203
-
-
-
-Cogent EM960PCI
-
-
-
-Compex CPXPCI/32C
-
-
-
-D-Link DE-530
-
-
-
-DEC DE435
-
-
-
-Danpex EN-9400P3
-
-
-
-JCIS Condor JC1260
-
-
-
-Kingston KNE100TX
-
-
-
-Linksys EtherPCI
-
-
-
-Mylex LNP101
-
-
-
-SMC EtherPower 10/100 (Model 9332)
-
-
-
-SMC EtherPower (Model 8432)
-
-
-
-SMC EtherPower (2)
-
-
-
-Zynx ZX314
-
-
-
-Zynx ZX342
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-DEC FDDI (DEFPA/DEFEA) NICs
-
-
-
-
-Fujitsu FMV-181 and FMV-182
-
-
-
-
-Fujitsu MB86960A/MB86965A
-
-
-
-
-Intel EtherExpress
-
-
-
-
-Intel EtherExpress Pro/100B 100Mbit.
-
-
-
-
-Isolan AT 4141-0 (16 bit)
-
-
-
-Isolink 4110 (8 bit)
-
-
-
-
-Lucent WaveLAN wireless networking interface.
-
-
-
-
-Novell NE1000, NE2000, and NE2100 ethernet interface.
-
-
-
-
-3Com 3C501 cards
-
-
-
-
-3Com 3C503 Etherlink II
-
-
-
-
-3Com 3c505 Etherlink/+
-
-
-
-
-3Com 3C507 Etherlink 16/TP
-
-
-
-
-3Com 3C509, 3C579, 3C589 (PCMCIA) Etherlink III
-
-
-
-
-3Com 3C590, 3C595 Etherlink III
-
-
-
-
-3Com 3C90x cards.
-
-
-
-
-HP PC Lan Plus (27247B and 27252A)
-
-
-
-
-Toshiba ethernet cards
-
-
-
-
-PCMCIA ethernet cards from IBM and National
-Semiconductor are also supported.
-
-
-
-
-
-Note: FreeBSD does not currently support
-PnP (plug-n-play) features present on some ethernet
-cards. If your card has PnP and is giving you problems,
-try disabling its PnP features.
-
-
-
-
-Miscellaneous devices
-
-
-
-
-
-AST 4 port serial card using shared IRQ.
-
-
-
-
-ARNET 8 port serial card using shared IRQ.
-
-
-
-
-BOCA IOAT66 6 port serial card using shared IRQ.
-
-
-
-
-BOCA 2016 16 port serial card using shared IRQ.
-
-
-
-
-Cyclades Cyclom-y Serial Board.
-
-
-
-
-STB 4 port card using shared IRQ.
-
-
-
-
-SDL Communications Riscom/8 Serial Board.
-
-
-
-
-SDL Communications RISCom/N2 and N2pci sync serial cards.
-
-
-
-
-Digiboard Sync/570i high-speed sync serial card.
+
+
+ FreeBSD Handbook
+
+
+
+ The FreeBSD Documentation Project
+
+
+
+ March 1998
+
+ Welcome to FreeBSD! This handbook covers the
+ installation and day to day use of FreeBSD Release
+ &rel.current;. This manual is a work in progress and is the
+ work of many individuals. Many sections do not yet exist
+ and some of those that do exist need to be updated. If
+ you are interested in helping with this project, send
+ email to the &a.doc; The latest version of this
+ document is always available from
+ the FreeBSD World Wide Web server. It may also be downloaded in plain text, postscript or HTML from the FreeBSD FTP server or one of the numerous
+ . You may also want to
+ Search the Handbook.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Getting Started
+
+
+
+ Introduction
+
+ FreeBSD is a 4.4BSD-Lite based operating system for Intel
+ architecture (x86) based PCs. For an overview of FreeBSD, see
+ . For a
+ history of the project, read . To see a description of the
+ latest release, read . If you're interested
+ in contributing something to the FreeBSD project (code, equipment,
+ sacks of unmarked bills), please see about .
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD in a Nutshell
+
+ FreeBSD is a state of the art operating system for
+ personal computers based on the Intel CPU architecture, which
+ includes the 386, 486 and Pentium processors (both SX and DX versions).
+ Intel compatible CPUs from AMD and Cyrix are supported as well.
+ FreeBSD provides you with many advanced features previously available
+ only on much more expensive computers. These features include:
+
+
+
+
+
+ Preemptive multitasking with dynamic priority
+ adjustment to ensure smooth and fair sharing of the
+ computer between applications and users.
+
+
+
+ Multiuser access means that many people can use a
+ FreeBSD system simultaneously for a variety of things. System
+ peripherals such as printers and tape drives are also properly
+ SHARED BETWEEN ALL users on the system.
+
+
+
+ Complete TCP/IP networking including SLIP, PPP, NFS
+ and NIS support. This means that your FreeBSD machine can
+ inter-operate easily with other systems as well act as an enterprise
+ server, providing vital functions such as NFS (remote file access) and
+ e-mail services or putting your organization on the Internet
+ with WWW, ftp, routing and firewall (security) services.
+
+
+
+ Memory protection ensures that applications (or
+ users) cannot interfere with each other. One application
+ crashing will not affect others in any way.
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD is a 32-bit operating system and was designed
+ as such from the ground up.
+
+
+
+ The industry standard X Window System (X11R6)
+ provides a graphical user interface (GUI) for the cost of a
+ common VGA card and monitor and comes with full sources.
+
+
+
+ Binary compatibility with many programs built for SCO,
+ BSDI, NetBSD, Linux and 386BSD.
+
+
+
+ Hundreds of ready-to-run applications are
+ available from the
+ FreeBSD ports and packages
+ collection. Why search the net when you can find it all
+ right here?
+
+
+
+ Thousands of additional and easy-to-port applications
+ available on the Internet. FreeBSD is source code compatible
+ with most popular commercial Unix systems and thus most
+ applications require few, if any, changes to compile.
+
+
+
+ Demand paged virtual memory and `merged VM/buffer cache'
+ design efficiently satisfies applications with large appetites
+ for memory while still maintaining interactive response to other
+ users.
+
+
+
+ Shared libraries (the Unix equivalent of
+ MS-Windows DLLs) provide for efficient use of disk space
+ and memory.
+
+
+
+ A full compliment of C, C++ and
+ Fortran development tools. Many additional
+ languages for advanced research and development are
+ also available in the ports and packages collection.
+
+
+
+ Source code for the entire system means you have
+ the greatest degree of control over your environment. Why be
+ locked into a proprietary solution and at the mercy of your vendor
+ when you can have a truly Open System?
+
+
+
+ Extensive on-line documentation.
+
+
+
+ And many more!
+
+
+
-
-
-
-Decision-Computer Intl. "Eight-Serial" 8 port serial cards
-using shared IRQ.
-
-
-
-
-Adlib, SoundBlaster, SoundBlaster Pro,
-ProAudioSpectrum, Gravis UltraSound, Gravis UltraSound MAX
-and Roland MPU-401 sound cards.
-
-
-
-
-Matrox Meteor video frame grabber.
-
-
-
-
-Creative Labs Video spigot frame grabber.
-
-
-
-
-Omnimedia Talisman frame grabber.
-
-
-
-
-Brooktree BT848 chip based frame grabbers.
-
-
-
-
-X-10 power controllers.
-
-
-
-
-PC joystick and speaker.
-
-
-
-
-
-FreeBSD does not currently support IBM's microchannel (MCA) bus.
-
-
-
-
-
-Preparing for the Installation
-
-There are a number of different methods by which FreeBSD
-can be installed. The following describes what
-preparation needs to be done for each type.
-
-
-
-Before installing from CDROM
-
-If your CDROM is of an unsupported type, then please
-skip to .
-
-There is not a lot of preparatory work that needs to be done to
-successfully install from one of Walnut Creek's FreeBSD CDROMs (other
-CDROM distributions may work as well, though we cannot say for certain
-as we have no hand or say in how they are created). You can either
-boot into the CD installation directly from DOS using Walnut Creek's
-supplied ``install.bat'' batch file or you can make a boot floppy with
-the ``makeflp.bat'' command. [NOTE: If you are running
-FreeBSD 2.1-RELEASE and have an IDE CDROM, use the
-inst_ide.bat or atapiflp.bat batch files instead].
-
-For the easiest interface of all (from DOS), type
-``view''. This will bring up a DOS menu utility that
-leads you through all the available options.
-
-If you are creating the boot floppy from a UNIX machine,
-see for examples. of how to create the boot floppy.
-
-Once you have booted from DOS or floppy, you should then
-be able to select CDROM as the media type in the Media
-menu and load the entire distribution from CDROM. No
-other types of installation media should be required.
-
-After your system is fully installed and you have rebooted
-from the hard disk, you can mount the CDROM at any time by
-typing: mount /cdrom
-
-Before removing the CD again, also note that it is necessary to first
-type: umount /cdrom. Do not just remove it from the drive!
-
-
-
-Special note: Before invoking the
-installation, be sure that the CDROM is in the drive
-so that the install probe can find it. This is also
-true if you wish the CDROM to be added to the default
-system configuration automatically during the install
-(whether or not you actually use it as the
-installation media).
-
-
-
-Finally, if you would like people to be able to FTP
-install FreeBSD directly from the CDROM in your
-machine, you will find it quite easy. After the machine
-is fully installed, you simply need to add the
-following line to the password file (using the vipw
-command):
-
-
-
-ftp:*:99:99::0:0:FTP:/cdrom:/nonexistent
-
-
-
-Anyone with network connectivity to your machine (and permission
-to log into it) can now chose a Media type of FTP and type
-in: ftp://your machine after picking ``Other''
-in the ftp sites menu.
-
-
-
-
-Before installing from Floppy
-
-If you must install from floppy disks, either due to
-unsupported hardware or simply because you enjoy doing
-things the hard way, you must first prepare some
-floppies for the install.
-
-You will need, at minimum, as many 1.44MB or 1.2MB floppies as
-it takes to hold all files in the bin (binary distribution)
-directory. If you are preparing these floppies under DOS, then
-THESE floppies *must* be formatted using the MS-DOS FORMAT
-command. If you are using Windows, use the Windows File
-Manager format command.
-
-Do not trust Factory Preformatted floppies! Format
-them again yourself, just to make sure. Many problems
-reported by our users in the past have resulted from the use
-of improperly formatted media, which is why I am taking such
-special care to mention it here!
-
-If you are creating the floppies from another FreeBSD machine,
-a format is still not a bad idea though you do not need to put
-a DOS filesystem on each floppy. You can use the `disklabel'
-and `newfs' commands to put a UFS filesystem on them instead,
-as the following sequence of commands (for a 3.5" 1.44MB floppy
-disk) illustrates:
-
-
-
- fdformat -f 1440 fd0.1440
- disklabel -w -r fd0.1440 floppy3
- newfs -t 2 -u 18 -l 1 -i 65536 /dev/rfd0
-
-(Use "fd0.1200" and "floppy5" for 5.25" 1.2MB disks).
-
-
-
-Then you can mount and write to them like any other file
-system.
-
-After you have formatted the floppies, you will need to copy
-the files onto them. The distribution files are split into
-chunks conveniently sized so that 5 of them will fit on a
-conventional 1.44MB floppy. Go through all your floppies,
-packing as many files as will fit on each one, until you have
-got all the distributions you want packed up in this fashion.
-Each distribution should go into a subdirectory on the
-floppy, e.g.: a:\bin\bin.aa,
-a:\bin\bin.ab, and so on.
-
-Once you come to the Media screen of the install,
-select ``Floppy'' and you will be prompted for the rest.
-
-
-
-
-Before installing from a MS-DOS partition
-
-To prepare for installation from an MS-DOS partition,
-copy the files from the distribution into a directory
-called C:\FREEBSD. The directory tree structure
-of the CDROM must be partially reproduced within this directory
-so we suggest using the DOS xcopy
-command. For example, to prepare for a minimal installation of
-FreeBSD:
-
-C> MD C:\FREEBSD
-C> XCOPY /S E:\BIN C:\FREEBSD\BIN\
-C> XCOPY /S E:\MANPAGES C:\FREEBSD\MANPAGES\
-
-
-assuming that C: is where you have free space
-and E: is where your CDROM is mounted.
-
-For as many `DISTS' you wish to install from MS-DOS
-(and you have free space for), install each one under
-C:\FREEBSD - the BIN dist is only the
-minimal requirement.
-
-
-
-
-Before installing from QIC/SCSI Tape
-
-Installing from tape is probably the easiest method,
-short of an on-line install using FTP or a CDROM
-install. The installation program expects the files to
-be simply tar'ed onto the tape, so after getting all of
-the files for distribution you are interested in, simply
-tar them onto the tape with a command like:
-
-cd /freebsd/distdir
-tar cvf /dev/rwt0 (or /dev/rst0) dist1 .. dist2
-
-
-
-When you go to do the installation, you should also
-make sure that you leave enough room in some temporary
-directory (which you will be allowed to choose) to
-accommodate the full contents of the tape you have
-created. Due to the non-random access nature of tapes,
-this method of installation requires quite a bit of
-temporary storage. You should expect to require as
-much temporary storage as you have stuff written on
-tape.
-
-
-
-Note: When going to do the
-installation, the tape must be in the drive
-before booting from the boot floppy. The
-installation probe may otherwise fail to find it.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Before installing over a network
-
-You can do network installations over 3 types of
-communications links:
-
-Serial port
-
-SLIP or PPP
-
-
-
-
-Parallel port
-
-
-PLIP (laplink cable)
-
-
-
-
-Ethernet
-
-
-A
-standard ethernet controller (includes some PCMCIA).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-SLIP support is rather primitive, and limited primarily
-to hard-wired links, such as a serial cable running
-between a laptop computer and another computer. The
-link should be hard-wired as the SLIP installation
-does not currently offer a dialing capability; that
-facility is provided with the PPP utility, which should
-be used in preference to SLIP whenever possible.
-
-If you are using a modem, then PPP is almost certainly
-your only choice. Make sure that you have your service
-provider's information handy as you will need to know it
-fairly soon in the installation process. You will need
-to know how to dial your ISP using the ``AT commands''
-specific to your modem, as the PPP dialer provides only a
-very simple terminal emulator. If you're using PAP or
-CHAP, you'll need to type the necessary ``set authname''
-and ``set authkey'' commands before typing ``term''.
-Refer to the user-ppp
-and FAQ entries
-for further information. If you have problems, logging can
-be directed to the screen using the command set log
-local ....
-
-If a hard-wired connection to another FreeBSD (2.0R or
-later) machine is available, you might also consider
-installing over a ``laplink'' parallel port cable. The
-data rate over the parallel port is much higher than
-what is typically possible over a serial line (up to
-50k/sec), thus resulting in a quicker installation.
-
-Finally, for the fastest possible network installation,
-an ethernet adaptor is always a good choice! FreeBSD
-supports most common PC ethernet cards, a table of
-supported cards (and their required settings) is
-provided in . If you are using one of the supported
-PCMCIA ethernet cards, also be sure that it is plugged
-in before the laptop is powered on! FreeBSD
-does not, unfortunately, currently support hot
-insertion of PCMCIA cards during installation.
-
-You will also need to know your IP address on the
-network, the netmask value for your address class,
-and the name of your machine. Your system
-administrator can tell you which values to use for your
-particular network setup. If you will be referring to
-other hosts by name rather than IP address, you will also
-need a name server and possibly the address of a
-gateway (if you are using PPP, it is your provider's IP
-address) to use in talking to it. If you do not know
-the answers to all or most of these questions, then you
-should really probably talk to your system
-administrator first before trying this type of
-installation.
-
-Once you have a network link of some sort working, the
-installation can continue over NFS or FTP.
-
-
-
-Preparing for NFS installation
-
-NFS installation is fairly straight-forward: Simply
-copy the FreeBSD distribution files you want onto a
-server somewhere and then point the NFS media
-selection at it.
-
-If this server supports only ``privileged port'' access
-(as is generally the default for Sun workstations),
-you will need to set this option in the Options menu
-before installation can proceed.
-
-If you have a poor quality ethernet card which
-suffers from very slow transfer rates, you may also
-wish to toggle the appropriate Options flag.
-
-In order for NFS installation to work, the server
-must support subdir mounts, e.g., if your FreeBSD
-&rel.current; distribution directory lives on:
-ziggy:/usr/archive/stuff/FreeBSD Then ziggy will have
-to allow the direct mounting of
-/usr/archive/stuff/FreeBSD, not just /usr or
-/usr/archive/stuff.
-
-In FreeBSD's /etc/exports file, this is controlled by
-the ``'' option. Other NFS servers may have
-different conventions. If you are getting
-`Permission Denied' messages from the server then
-it is likely that you do not have this enabled
-properly.
-
-
-
-
-Preparing for FTP Installation
-
-FTP installation may be done from any mirror site
-containing a reasonably up-to-date version of FreeBSD
-&rel.current;. A full menu of reasonable choices from almost
-anywhere in the world is provided by the FTP site
-menu.
-
-If you are installing from some other FTP site not
-listed in this menu, or you are having troubles
-getting your name server configured properly, you can
-also specify your own URL by selecting the ``Other''
-choice in that menu. A URL can also be a direct IP
-address, so the following would work in the absence
-of a name server:
-
-
-
-ftp://165.113.121.81/pub/FreeBSD/&rel.current;-RELEASE
-
-
-
-There are two FTP installation modes you can use:
-
-
-
-FTP Active
-
-For all FTP transfers, use ``Active'' mode. This
-will not work through firewalls, but will often
-work with older ftp servers that do not support
-passive mode. If your connection hangs with
-passive mode (the default), try active!
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FTP Passive
-
-
-For all FTP transfers, use ``Passive'' mode. This
-allows the user to pass through firewalls that do
-not allow incoming connections on random port
-addresses.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Note: Active and passive modes are
-not the same as a `proxy' connection, where a proxy
-FTP server is listening and forwarding FTP requests!
-
-
-
-For a proxy FTP server, you should usually give name of
-the server you really want as a part of the username,
-after an @-sign. The proxy server then 'fakes' the real
-server. An example: Say you want to install from
-ftp.freebsd.org, using the proxy FTP server foo.bar.com,
-listening on port 1234.
-
-In this case, you go to the options menu, set the FTP
-username to ftp@ftp.freebsd.org, and the password to your
-e-mail address. As your installation media, you specify
-FTP (or passive FTP, if the proxy support it), and the URL
-
-ftp://foo.bar.com:1234/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-/pub/FreeBSD from ftp.freebsd.org is proxied under
-foo.bar.com, allowing you to install from _that_ machine
-(which fetch the files from ftp.freebsd.org as your
-installation requests them).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Installing FreeBSD
-
-Once you have taken note of the appropriate
-preinstallation steps, you should be able to install
-FreeBSD without any further trouble.
-
-Should this not be true, then you may wish to go back and
-re-read the relevant preparation section above
-for the installation media type you are trying to use,
-perhaps there is a helpful hint there that you missed the
-first time? If you are having hardware trouble, or
-FreeBSD refuses to boot at all, read the Hardware Guide
-provided on the boot floppy for a list of possible
-solutions.
-
-The FreeBSD boot floppy contains all the on-line
-documentation you should need to be able to navigate
-through an installation and if it does not then we would
-like to know what you found most confusing. Send your
-comments to the &a.doc;.
-It is the objective of the
-FreeBSD installation program (sysinstall) to be
-self-documenting enough that painful ``step-by-step''
-guides are no longer necessary. It may take us a little
-while to reach that objective, but that is the objective!
-
-Meanwhile, you may also find the following ``typical
-installation sequence'' to be helpful:
-
-
-
-
-
-Boot the boot floppy. After a boot sequence
-which can take anywhere from 30 seconds to 3
-minutes, depending on your hardware, you should be
-presented with a menu of initial choices. If the
-floppy does not boot at all, or the boot hangs at some
-stage, go read the Q&A section of the Hardware Guide
-for possible causes.
-
-
-
-
-Press F1. You should see some basic usage
-instructions on the menu system and general
-navigation. If you have not used this menu system
-before then PLEASE read this thoroughly!
-
-
-
-
-Select the Options item and set any special
-preferences you may have.
-
-
-
-
-Select a Novice, Custom or Express install, depending on
-whether or not you would like the installation to help
-you through a typical installation, give you a high degree of
-control over each step of the installation or simply whizz
-through it (using reasonable defaults when possible) as fast
-as possible. If you have never used FreeBSD before then the
-Novice installation method is most recommended.
-
-
-
-
-The final configuration menu choice allows you to
-further configure your FreeBSD installation by giving you
-menu-driven access to various system defaults. Some
-items, like networking, may be especially important
-if you did a CDROM/Tape/Floppy installation and have
-not yet configured your network interfaces (assuming
-you have any). Properly configuring such interfaces
-here will allow FreeBSD to come up on the network
-when you first reboot from the hard disk.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-MS-DOS User's Questions and Answers
-
-Many FreeBSD users wish to install FreeBSD on PCs inhabited
-by MS-DOS. Here are some commonly asked questions about
-installing FreeBSD on such systems.
-
-Help! I have no space! Do I need to delete
-everything first?
-
-If your machine is already running MS-DOS and has little
-or no free space available for FreeBSD's installation,
-all is not lost! You may find the FIPS utility, provided
-in the tools directory on the FreeBSD CDROM or
-on the various FreeBSD ftp sites, to be quite useful.
-
-FIPS allows you to split an existing MS-DOS partition
-into two pieces, preserving the original partition and
-allowing you to install onto the second free piece. You
-first defragment your MS-DOS partition, using the DOS
-6.xx DEFRAG utility or the Norton Disk tools, then run
-FIPS. It will prompt you for the rest of the information
-it needs. Afterwards, you can reboot and install FreeBSD
-on the new free slice. See the Distributions
-menu for an estimation of how much free space you will need
-for the kind of installation you want.
-
-Can I use compressed MS-DOS filesystems from
-FreeBSD?
-
-No. If you are using a utility such as Stacker(tm) or
-DoubleSpace(tm), FreeBSD will only be able to use
-whatever portion of the filesystem you leave
-uncompressed. The rest of the filesystem will show up as
-one large file (the stacked/dblspaced file!). Do not
-remove that file! You will probably regret it
-greatly!
-
-It is probably better to create another uncompressed
-MS-DOS primary partition and use this for communications
-between MS-DOS and FreeBSD.
-
-Can I mount my MS-DOS extended partitions?
-
-Yes. DOS extended partitions are mapped in at the end of the other
-``slices'' in FreeBSD, e.g. your D: drive might be /dev/sd0s5,
-your E: drive /dev/sd0s6, and so on. This example assumes, of
-course, that your extended partition is on SCSI drive 0. For IDE drives,
-substitute ``wd'' for ``sd'' appropriately. You otherwise mount extended
-partitions exactly like you would mount any other DOS drive, e.g.:
-
-
-
-mount -t msdos /dev/sd0s5 /dos_d
-
-
-
-Can I run MS-DOS binaries under FreeBSD?
-
-BSDI has donated their DOS emulator to the BSD world and
-this has been ported to FreeBSD.
-
-There is also a (technically) nice application available in the
- called pcemu
-which allows you to run many basic MS-DOS text-mode binaries
-by entirely emulating an 8088 CPU.
-
-
-
-
-
-Unix Basics
-
-
-
-The Online Manual
-
-The most comprehensive documentation on FreeBSD is in
-the form of man pages. Nearly every program
-on the system comes with a short reference manual
-explaining the basic operation and various arguments.
-These manuals can be view with the
-man command. Use of the
-man command is simple:
-
-mancommand
-
-
-where command is the name of the command
-you wish to learn about. For example, to learn more about
-ls command type:
-
-% man ls
-
-
-
-The online manual is divided up into numbered
-sections:
-
-
-
-User commands
-
-
-
-System calls and error numbers
-
-
-
-Functions in the C libraries
-
-
-
-Device drivers
-
-
-
-File formats
-
-
-
-Games and other diversions
-
-
-
-Miscellaneous information
-
-
-
-System maintenance and operation commands
-
-
-
-
-in some cases, the same topic may appear in more than
-one section of the on-line manual. For example, there
-is a chmod user command and a
-chmod() system call. In this case,
-you can tell the man command which
-one you want by specifying the section:
-
-% man 1 chmod
-
-
-which will display the manual page for the user command
-chmod. References to a particular
-section of the on-line manual are traditionally placed
-in parenthesis in written documentation, so
-chmod(1) refers to the chmod user command and chmod(2)
-refers to the system call.
-
-This is fine if you know the name of the command and
-simply wish to know how to use it, but what if you cannot recall the
-command name? You can use man to
-search for keywords in the command descriptions by
-using the switch:
-
-% man -k mail
-
-
-With this command you will be presented with a list of
-commands that have the keyword `mail' in their
-descriptions. This is actually functionally equivalent to
-using the apropos command.
-
-So, you are looking at all those fancy commands in /usr/bin but do not even have the faintest idea
-what most of them actually do? Simply do a
-
-% cd /usr/bin; man -f *
-
-
-or
-
-% cd /usr/bin; whatis *
-
-
-which does the same thing.
-
-
-
-
-GNU Info Files
-
-FreeBSD includes many applications and utilities
-produced by the Free Software Foundation (FSF). In
-addition to man pages, these programs come with more
-extensive hypertext documents called info
-files which can be viewed with the info
-command or, if you installed emacs, the info
-mode of emacs.
-
-To use the info(1) command, simply type:
-
-% info
-
- For a brief
-introduction, type h. For a quick
-command reference, type ?.
-
-
-
-
-
-Installing Applications: The Ports collection
-
-Contributed by &a.jraynard;.
-
-The FreeBSD Ports collection allows you to compile and install a very
-wide range of applications with a minimum of effort.
-
- For all the hype about open standards, getting a program to work
-on different versions of Unix in the real world can be a tedious and
-tricky business, as anyone who has tried it will know. You may be lucky
-enough to find that the program you want will compile cleanly on your
-system, install itself in all the right places and run flawlessly
-``out of the box'', but this is unfortunately rather rare. With most
-programs, you will find yourself doing a fair bit of head-scratching,
-and there are quite a few programs that will result in premature
-greying, or even chronic alopecia...
-
- Some software distributions have attacked this problem by
-providing configuration scripts. Some of these are very clever, but
-they have an unfortunate tendency to triumphantly announce that your
-system is something you have never heard of and then ask you lots of
-questions that sound like a final exam in system-level Unix
-programming (``Does your system's gethitlist function return a const
-pointer to a fromboz or a pointer to a const fromboz? Do you have
-Foonix style unacceptable exception handling? And if not, why not?'').
-
- Fortunately, with the Ports collection, all the hard work involved
-has already been done, and you can just type 'make install' and get a
-working program.
-
-
-
-Why Have a Ports Collection?
-
-The base FreeBSD system comes with a very wide range of tools and
-system utilities, but a lot of popular programs are not in the base
-system, for good reasons:-
-
-
-
-
-
-Programs that some people cannot live without and other people
-cannot stand, such as a certain Lisp-based editor.
-
-
-
-
-Programs which are too specialised to put in the base system
-(CAD, databases).
-
-
-
-
-Programs which fall into the ``I must have a look at
-that when I get a spare minute'' category, rather than system-critical
-ones (some languages, perhaps).
-
-
-
-
-Programs that are far too much fun to be supplied with a serious
-operating system like FreeBSD ;-)
-
-
-
-
-However many programs you put in the base system, people will
-always want more, and a line has to be drawn somewhere (otherwise
-FreeBSD distributions would become absolutely enormous).
-
-
-
-
-
- Obviously it would be unreasonable to expect everyone to port their
-favourite programs by hand (not to mention a tremendous amount of
-duplicated work), so the FreeBSD Project came up with an ingenious
-way of using standard tools that would automate the process.
-
- Incidentally, this is an excellent illustration of how ``the Unix way''
-works in practice by combining a set of simple but very flexible tools
-into something very powerful.
-
-
-
-
-How Does the Ports Collection Work?
-
-Programs are typically distributed on the Internet as a
- consisting of
-a Makefile and the source code for the program and usually
-some instructions (which are unfortunately not always as instructive
-as they could be), with perhaps a configuration script.
-
-The standard scenario is that you FTP down the tarball, extract it
-somewhere, glance through the instructions, make any changes that seem
-necessary, run the configure script to set things up and use the standard
-`make' program to compile and install the program from the source.
-
-FreeBSD ports still use the tarball mechanism, but use a
- to hold the "knowledge"
-of how to get the program working on FreeBSD, rather than expecting the
-user to be able to work it out. They also supply their own customised
-, so that almost every port
-can be built in the same way.
-
-If you look at a port skeleton (either on your FreeBSD system or the FTP site) and expect to find all sorts of pointy-headed rocket
-science lurking there, you may be disappointed by the one or two
-rather unexciting-looking files and directories you find there.
-(We will discuss in a minute how to go about ).
-
-``How on earth can this do anything?'' I hear you cry. ``There
-is no source code there!''
-
- Fear not, gentle reader, all will become clear (hopefully). Let's
-see what happens if we try and install a port. I have chosen `ElectricFence',
-a useful tool for developers, as the skeleton is more straightforward than
-most.
-
-Note if you are trying this at home, you will need to be root.
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports/devel/ElectricFence
-# make install
->> Checksum OK for ElectricFence-2.0.5.tar.gz.
-===> Extracting for ElectricFence-2.0.5
-===> Patching for ElectricFence-2.0.5
-===> Applying FreeBSD patches for ElectricFence-2.0.5
-===> Configuring for ElectricFence-2.0.5
-===> Building for ElectricFence-2.0.5
-[lots of compiler output...]
-===> Installing for ElectricFence-2.0.5
-===> Warning: your umask is "0002".
- If this is not desired, set it to an appropriate value
- and install this port again by ``make reinstall''.
-install -c -o bin -g bin -m 444 /usr/ports/devel/ElectricFence/work/ElectricFence-2.0.5/libefence.a /usr/local/lib
-install -c -o bin -g bin -m 444 /usr/ports/devel/ElectricFence/work/ElectricFence-2.0.5/libefence.3 /usr/local/man/man3
-===> Compressing manual pages for ElectricFence-2.0.5
-===> Registering installation for ElectricFence-2.0.5
-
-
- To avoid confusing the issue, I have completely removed the build output.
-
-If you tried this yourself, you may well have got something like this at
-the start:-
-
-
-# make install
->> ElectricFence-2.0.5.tar.gz doesn't seem to exist on this system.
->> Attempting to fetch from ftp://ftp.doc.ic.ac.uk/Mirrors/sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/devel/lang/c/.
-
-
- The `make' program has noticed that you did not have a local copy
-of the source code and tried to FTP it down so it could get the job
-done. I already had the
-source handy in my example, so it did not need to fetch it.
-
- Let's go through this and see what the `make' program was doing.
-
-
-
-
-
- Locate the source code If it is not available locally, try to grab it from an
-FTP site.
-
-
-
-
- Run a test on the
-tarball to make sure it has not been tampered with, accidentally
-truncated, downloaded in ASCII mode, struck by neutrinos while in transit, etc.
-
-
-
-
- Extract the tarball into a temporary work directory.
-
-
-
-
- Apply any needed to get
-the source to compile and run under FreeBSD.
-
-
-
-
- Run any configuration script required by the build process and
-correctly answer any questions it asks.
-
-
-
-
- (Finally!) Compile the code.
-
-
-
-
- Install the program executable and other supporting files, man
-pages, etc. under the /usr/local hierarchy, where they will not get mixed
-up with system programs. This also makes sure that all the ports you
-install will go in the same place, instead of being flung all over
-your system.
-
-
-
-
- Register the installation in a database. This means
-that, if you do not like the program, you can cleanly all traces of it from your system.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Scroll up to the make output and see if you can match these steps to it.
-And if you were not impressed before, you should be by now!
-
-
-
-
-Getting a FreeBSD Port
-
-There are two ways of getting hold of the FreeBSD port for a
-program. One requires a , the other involves using an
-
-
-
-Compiling ports from CDROM
-
-If you answered yes to the question ``Do you want to link the ports
-collection to your CDROM'' during the FreeBSD installation, the initial
-setting up will already have been done for you.
-
-If not, make sure the FreeBSD CDROM is in the drive and mounted on,
-say, /cdrom. Then do
-
-
- # mkdir /usr/ports
- # cd /usr/ports
- # ln -s /cdrom/ports/distfiles distfiles
-
-
-to enable the ports make mechanism to find the tarballs (it expects to
-find them in /usr/ports/distfiles, which is why we sym-linked the
-CDROM's tarball directory to that directory).
-
-Now, suppose you want to install the gnats program from the databases
-directory. Here is how to do it:-
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports
- # mkdir databases
- # cp -R /cdrom/ports/databases/gnats databases
- # cd databases/gnats
- # make install
-
-
-Or if you are a serious database user and you want to compare all the
-ones available in the Ports collection, do
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports
- # cp -R /cdrom/ports/databases .
- # cd databases
- # make install
-
-
-(yes, that really is a dot on its own after the cp command and not a
-mistake. It is Unix-ese for ``the current directory'')
-
-and the ports make mechanism will automatically compile and install
-all the ports in the databases directory for you!
-
-If you do not like this method, here is a completely different way of
-doing it:-
-
-Create a "link tree" to it using the lndir(1) command that
-comes with the XFree86 distribution. Find a location with
-some free space, create a directory there and then cd to it. Then
-invoke the lndir(1) command with the full pathname of the ``ports''
-directory on the CDROM as the first argument and . (the current directory)
-as the second. This might be, for example, something like:
- lndir /cdrom/ports .
-
-
-Then you can build ports directly off the CDROM by building them in the
-link tree you have created.
-
-Note that there are some ports for which we cannot provide the original
-source in the CDROM due to licensing limitations. In that case,
-you will need to look at the section on
-
-
-
-
-Compiling ports from the Internet
-
-If you do not have a CDROM, or you want to make sure you get the very
-latest version of the port you want, you will need to download the
- for the port. Now this
-might sound like rather a fiddly job
-full of pitfalls, but it is actually very easy.
-
-The key to it is that the FreeBSD FTP server can create on-the-fly
- for you. Here is how it works,
-with the gnats program in the databases directory as an example (the
-bits in square brackets are comments. Do not type them in if you are
-trying this yourself!):-
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports
- # mkdir databases
- # cd databases
- # ftp ftp.freebsd.org
- [log in as `ftp' and give your email address when asked for a
- password. Remember to use binary (also known as image) mode!]
- > cd /pub/FreeBSD/ports/databases
- > get gnats.tar [tars up the gnats skeleton for us]
- > quit
- # tar xf gnats.tar [extract the gnats skeleton]
- # cd gnats
- # make install [build and install gnats]
-
-
-What happened here? We connected to the FTP server in the usual way
-and went to its databases sub-directory. When we gave it the command
-`get gnats.tar', the FTP server up the gnats directory for us.
-
-We then extracted the gnats skeleton and went into the gnats directory
-to build the port. As we explained , the make process noticed we did not have a copy of the
-source locally, so it fetched one before extracting, patching and
-building it.
-
-Let's try something more ambitious now. Instead of getting a single
-port skeleton, let's get a whole sub-directory, for example all the
-database skeletons in the ports collection. It looks almost the same:-
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports
- # ftp ftp.freebsd.org
- [log in as `ftp' and give your email address when asked for a
- password. Remember to use binary (also known as image) mode!]
- > cd /pub/FreeBSD/ports
- > get databases.tar [tars up the databases directory for us]
- > quit
- # tar xf databases.tar [extract all the database skeletons]
- # cd databases
- # make install [build and install all the database ports]
-
-
-With half a dozen straightforward commands, we have now got a set of
-database programs on our FreeBSD machine! All we did that was
-different from getting a single port skeleton and building it was that
-we got a whole directory at once, and compiled everything in it at
-once. Pretty impressive, no?
-
-If you expect to be installing many ports, it is
-probably worth downloading all the ports directories.
-
-
-
-
-
-Skeletons
-
-A team of compulsive hackers who have forgotten to eat in a frantic
-attempt to make a deadline? Something unpleasant lurking in the FreeBSD
-attic? No, a skeleton here is a minimal framework that supplies everything
-needed to make the ports magic work.
-
-
-
-Makefile
-
-The most important component of a skeleton is the Makefile. This contains
-various statements that specify how the port should be compiled and
-installed. Here is the Makefile for ElectricFence:-
-
-
-# New ports collection makefile for: Electric Fence
-# Version required: 2.0.5
-# Date created: 13 November 1997
-# Whom: jraynard
-#
-# $Id: handbook.sgml,v 1.1 1998-04-01 18:25:32 nik Exp $
-#
-
-DISTNAME= ElectricFence-2.0.5
-CATEGORIES= devel
-MASTER_SITES= ${MASTER_SITE_SUNSITE}
-MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR= devel/lang/c
-
-MAINTAINER= jraynard@freebsd.org
-
-MAN3= libefence.3
-
-do-install:
- ${INSTALL_DATA} ${WRKSRC}/libefence.a ${PREFIX}/lib
- ${INSTALL_MAN} ${WRKSRC}/libefence.3 ${PREFIX}/man/man3
-
-.include <bsd.port.mk>
-
-
-The lines beginning with a "#" sign are comments for the benefit
-of human readers (as in most Unix script files).
-
-`DISTNAME" specifies the name of the , but without the extension.
-
-`CATEGORIES" states what kind of program this is. In this case, a
-utility for developers.
-
-`MASTER_SITES" is the URL(s) of the master FTP site, which is
-used to retrieve the if it is not
-available on the local system. This is a site which is regarded as
-reputable, and is normally the one from which the program is officially
-distributed (in so far as any software is "officially" distributed
-on the Internet).
-
-`MAINTAINER" is the email address of the person who is
-responsible for updating the skeleton if, for example a new version
-of the program comes out.
-
-Skipping over the next few lines for a minute, the line
- .include <bsd.port.mk>
-
-says that the other statements and commands
-needed for this port are in a standard file called
-`bsd.port.mk". As these are the same for all ports, there is
-no point in duplicating them all over the place, so they are kept in a
-single standard file.
-
-This is probably not the place to go into a detailed examination of
-how Makefiles work; suffice it to say that the line starting with ``MAN3''
-ensures that the ElectricFence man page is compressed after installation,
-to help conserve your precious disk space. The original port did not
-provide an ``install'' target, so the three lines from ``do-install''
-ensure that the files produced by this port are placed in the correct
-destination.
-
-
-
-
-The files directory
-
-The file containing the for
-the port is called "md5", after the MD5 algorithm
-used for ports checksums. It lives in a directory with the slightly
-confusing name of "files".
-
-This directory can also contain other miscellaneous files that are required
-by the port and do not belong anywhere else.
-
-
-
-
-The patches directory
-
-This directory contains the needed
-to make everything work properly under FreeBSD.
-
-
-
-
-The pkg directory
-
-This program contains three quite useful files:-
-
-
-
-
-
-COMMENT - a one-line description of the program.
-
-
-
-
-DESCR - a more detailed description.
-
-
-
-
-PLIST - a list of all the files that will be created when the program is installed.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-What to do when a port does not work.
-
-Oh. You can do one of four (4) things :
-
-
-
-
-
- Fix it yourself. Technical details on how ports work can be found in
-
-
-
-
- Gripe. This is done by e-mail *ONLY*! Send such e-mail to the &a.ports;
-and please include the name/version of the port, where you got both the port
-source & distfile(s) from, and what the text of the error was.
-
-
-
-
- Forget it. This is the easiest for most - very few of the programs in
-ports can be classified as `essential'!
-
-
-
-
- Grab the pre-compiled package from a ftp server. The ``master'' package
-collection is on FreeBSD's FTP server in the packages directory, though check your local mirror first, please!
-
-These are more likely to work (on the whole) than trying to compile from
-source and a lot faster besides! Use the pkg_add(1)
-program to install a package file on your system.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-I Want to Make a Port!
-
-Great! Please see the
-for detailed instructions on how to do this.
-
-
-
-
-Some Questions and Answers
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I thought this was going to be a discussion about modems??!
-
-
-A. Ah. You must be thinking of the serial ports on the back of your
-computer. We are using `port' here to mean the result of `porting' a
-program from one version of Unix to another. (It is an unfortunate bad
-habit of computer people to use the same word to refer to several
-completely different things).
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I thought you were supposed to use packages to install extra
-programs?
-
-
-A. Yes, that is usually the quickest and easiest way of doing it.
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. So why bother with ports then?
-
-
-A. Several reasons:-
-
-
-
-
-
- The licensing conditions on some software distributions
-require that they be distributed as source code, not binaries.
-
-
-
-
- Some people do not trust binary distributions. At least with
-source code you can (in theory) read through it and look for potential
-problems yourself.
-
-
-
-
- If you have some local patches, you will need the source to add
-them yourself.
-
-
-
-
- You might have opinions on how a program should be compiled
-that differ from the person who did the package - some people have
-strong views on what optimisation setting should be used, whether to
-build debug versions and then strip them or not, etc. etc.
-
-
-
-
- Some people like having code around, so they can read it if
-they get bored, hack around with it, borrow from it (licence terms
-permitting, of course!) and so on.
-
-
-
-
- If you ain't got the source, it ain't software! ;-)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. What is a patch?
-
-
-A. A patch is a small (usually) file that specifies how to go from one
-version of a file to another. It contains text that says, in effect,
-things like ``delete line 23'', ``add these two lines after line 468''
-or ``change line 197 to this''. Also known as a `diff', since it is
-generated by a program of that name.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. What is all this about tarballs?
-
-
-A. It is a file ending in .tar or .tar.gz (with variations like .tar.Z, or
-even .tgz if you are trying to squeeze the names into a DOS filesystem).
-
-Basically, it is a directory tree that has been archived into a single
-file (.tar) and optionally compressed (.gz). This technique was originally
-used for Tape ARchives (hence the name `tar'), but it is a
-widely used way of distributing program source code around the
-Internet.
-
-You can see what files are in them, or even extract them yourself, by
-using the standard Unix tar program, which comes with the base FreeBSD
-system, like this:-
-
-
- tar tvzf foobar.tar.gz # View contents of foobar.tar.gz
- tar xzvf foobar.tar.gz # Extract contents into the current directory
- tar tvf foobar.tar # View contents of foobar.tar
- tar xvf foobar.tar # Extract contents into the current directory
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. And a checksum?
-
-
-A. It is a number generated by adding up all the data in the file you
-want to check. If any of the characters change, the checksum will no
-longer be equal to the total, so a simple comparison will allow you to
-spot the difference. (In practice, it is done in a more complicated way
-to spot problems like position-swapping, which will not show up with a
-simplistic addition).
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I did what you said for and it worked great until I tried to install the kermit
-port:-
-
- # make install
- >> cku190.tar.gz doesn't seem to exist on this system.
- >> Attempting to fetch from ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/archives/.
-
-
-Why can it not be found? Have I got a dud CDROM?
-
-
-A. The licensing terms for kermit do not allow us to put the tarball
-for it on the CDROM, so you will have to fetch it by hand - sorry!
-The reason why you got all those error messages was because you
-were not connected to the Internet at the time. Once you have downloaded
-it from any of the sites above, you can re-start the process (try and
-choose the nearest site to you, though, to save your time and the
-Internet's bandwidth).
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I did that, but when I tried to put it into /usr/ports/distfiles I
-got some error about not having permission.
-
-
-A. The ports mechanism looks for the tarball in /usr/ports/distfiles,
-but you will not be able to copy anything there because it is sym-linked
-to the CDROM, which is read-only. You can tell it to look somewhere
-else by doing
-
-
- DISTDIR=/where/you/put/it make install
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. Does the ports scheme only work if you have everything in
-/usr/ports? My system administrator says I must put everything under
-/u/people/guests/wurzburger, but it does not seem to work.
-
-
-A. You can use the PORTSDIR and PREFIX variables to tell the ports
-mechanism to use different directories. For instance,
-
-
- make PORTSDIR=/u/people/guests/wurzburger/ports install
-
-
-will compile the port in /u/people/guests/wurzburger/ports and install
-everything under /usr/local.
-
-
-
- make PREFIX=/u/people/guests/wurzburger/local install
-
-
-will compile it in /usr/ports and install it in
-/u/people/guests/wurzburger/local.
-
-And of course
-
-
- make PORTSDIR=.../ports PREFIX=.../local install
-
-
-will combine the two (it is too long to fit on the page if I write it
-in full, but I am sure you get the idea).
-
-If you do not fancy typing all that in every time you install a port
-(and to be honest, who would?), it is a good idea to put these variables
-into your environment.
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I do not have a FreeBSD CDROM, but I would like to have all the tarballs
-handy on my system so I do not have to wait for a download every time I
-install a port. Is there an easy way to get them all at once?
-
-
-A. To get every single tarball for the ports collection, do
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports
- # make fetch
-
-
-For all the tarballs for a single ports directory, do
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports/directory
- # make fetch
-
-
-and for just one port - well, I think you have guessed already.
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I know it is probably faster to fetch the tarballs from one of the
-FreeBSD mirror sites close by. Is there any way to tell the port to
-fetch them from servers other than ones listed in the MASTER_SITES?
-
-
-A. Yes. If you know, for example, ftp.FreeBSD.ORG is much closer than
-sites listed in MASTER_SITES, do as following example.
- # cd /usr/ports/directory
- # make MASTER_SITE_OVERRIDE=ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/distfiles/ fetch
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I want to know what files make is going to need before it tries to
-pull them down.
-
-
-A. 'make fetch-list' will display a list of the files needed for a port.
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. Is there any way to stop the port from compiling? I want to do some
-hacking on the source before I install it, but it is a bit tiresome having
-to watch it and hit control-C every time.
-
-
-A. Doing 'make extract' will stop it after it has fetched and
-extracted the source code.
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I am trying to make my own port and I want to be able to stop it
-compiling until I have had a chance to see if my patches worked properly.
-Is there something like 'make extract', but for patches?
-
-
-A. Yep, 'make patch' is what you want. You will probably find the
-PATCH_DEBUG option useful as well. And by the way, thank you for
-your efforts!
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I have heard that some compiler options can cause bugs. Is this true?
-How can I make sure that I compile ports with the right settings?
-
-
-A. Yes, with version 2.6.3 of gcc (the version shipped with FreeBSD
-2.1.0 and 2.1.5), the -O2 option could result in buggy code unless you
-used the -fno-strength-reduce option as well. (Most of the ports don't
-use -O2). You should be able to specify the compiler options
-used by something like
-
-
- make CFLAGS='-O2 -fno-strength-reduce' install
-
-
-or by editing /etc/make.conf, but unfortunately not all ports respect
-this. The surest way is to do 'make configure', then go into the
-source directory and inspect the Makefiles by hand, but this can get
-tedious if the source has lots of sub-directories, each with their own
-Makefiles.
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. There are so many ports it is hard to find the one I want. Is there a
-list anywhere of what ports are available?
-
-
-A. Look in the INDEX file in /usr/ports.
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I went to install the 'foo' port but the system suddenly stopped
-compiling it and starting compiling the 'bar' port. What's going on?
-
-
-A. The 'foo' port needs something that is supplied with 'bar' - for
-instance, if 'foo' uses graphics, 'bar' might have a library with
-useful graphics processing routines. Or 'bar' might be a tool that is
-needed to compile the 'foo' port.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I installed the grizzle program from the ports and frankly it is a
-complete waste of disk space. I want to delete it but I do not know
-where it put all the files. Any clues?
-
-
-A. No problem, just do
-
-
- pkg_delete grizzle-6.5
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. Hang on a minute, you have to know the version number to use that
-command. You do not seriously expect me to remember that, do you??
-
-
-A. Not at all, you can find it out by doing
-
-
- pkg_info -a | grep grizzle
-
-
-And it will tell you:-
-
-
- Information for grizzle-6.5:
- grizzle-6.5 - the combined piano tutorial, LOGO interpreter and shoot 'em up arcade game.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. Talking of disk space, the ports directory seems to be taking up
-an awful lot of room. Is it safe to go in there and delete things?
-
-
-A. Yes, if you have installed the program and are fairly certain you
-will not need the source again, there is no point in keeping it hanging
-around. The best way to do this is
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports
- # make clean
-
-
-which will go through all the ports subdirectories and delete
-everything except the skeletons for each port.
-
-
-
-Q. I tried that and it still left all those tarballs or whatever you
-called them in the distfiles directory. Can I delete those as well?
-
-
-A. Yes, if you are sure you have finished with them, those can go as
-well.
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I like having lots and lots of programs to play with. Is there any
-way of installing all the ports in one go?
-
-
-A. Just do
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports
- # make install
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. OK, I tried that, but I thought it would take a very long time so I
-went to bed and left it to get on with it. When I looked at the
-computer this morning, it had only done three and a half ports. Did
-something go wrong?
-
-
-A. No, the problem is that some of the ports need to ask you questions
-that we cannot answer for you (eg ``Do you want to print on A4 or US
-letter sized paper?'') and they need to have someone on hand to answer
-them.
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I really do not want to spend all day staring at the monitor. Any
-better ideas?
-
-
-A. OK, do this before you go to bed/work/the local park:-
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports
- # make -DBATCH install
-
-
-This will install every port that does not require user
-input. Then, when you come back, do
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports
- # make -DIS_INTERACTIVE install
-
-
-to finish the job.
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. At work, we are using frobble, which is in your ports collection,
-but we have altered it quite a bit to get it to do what we need. Is
-there any way of making our own packages, so we can distribute it more
-easily around our sites?
-
-
-A. No problem, assuming you know how to make patches for your changes:-
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports/somewhere/frobble
- # make extract
- # cd work/frobble-2.8
- [Apply your patches]
- # cd ../..
- # make package
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. This ports stuff is really clever. I am desperate to find out how
-you did it. What is the secret?
-
-
-A. Nothing secret about it at all, just look at the bsd.ports.mk and
-bsd.ports.subdir.mk files in your makefiles directory.
-(Note: readers with an aversion to intricate shell-scripts are advised
-not to follow this link...)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-System Administration
-
-
-
-Configuring the FreeBSD Kernel
-
-Contributed by &a.jehamby;.6 October 1995.
-
-This large section of the handbook discusses the basics of
-building your own custom kernel for FreeBSD. This section
-is appropriate for both novice system administrators and
-those with advanced Unix experience.
-
-
-
-Why Build a Custom Kernel?
-
-Building a custom kernel is one of the most important
-rites of passage every Unix system administrator must
-endure. This process, while time-consuming, will provide
-many benefits to your FreeBSD system. Unlike the GENERIC
-kernel, which must support every possible SCSI and
-network card, along with tons of other rarely used
-hardware support, a custom kernel only contains support
-for your PC's hardware. This has a number of
-benefits:
-
-
-
-
-
-It will take less time to boot because it does not
-have to spend time probing for hardware which you
-do not have.
-
-
-
-
-A custom kernel often uses less memory, which is
-important because the kernel is the one process which
-must always be present in memory, and so all of that
-unused code ties up pages of RAM that your programs
-would otherwise be able to use. Therefore, on a
-system with limited RAM, building a custom kernel is
-of critical importance.
-
-
-
-
-Finally, there are several kernel options which
-you can tune to fit your needs, and device driver
-support for things like sound cards which you can
-include in your kernel but are not present
-in the GENERIC kernel.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Building and Installing a Custom Kernel
-
-First, let us take a quick tour of the kernel build
-directory. All directories mentioned will be relative to
-the main /usr/src/sys directory, which is also
-accessible through /sys. There are a number of
-subdirectories here representing different parts of the
-kernel, but the most important, for our purposes, are
-i386/conf, where you will edit your custom
-kernel configuration, and compile, which is the
-staging area where your kernel will be built. Notice the
-logical organization of the directory tree, with each
-supported device, filesystem, and option in its own
-subdirectory. Also, anything inside the i386
-directory deals with PC hardware only, while everything
-outside the i386 directory is common to all
-platforms which FreeBSD could potentially be ported to.
-
-
-
-Note: If there is not a
-/usr/src/sys directory on your system, then the
-kernel source has not been been installed. Follow the
-instructions for installing packages to add this package
-to your system.
-
-
-
-Next, move to the i386/conf directory and copy
-the GENERIC configuration file to the name you want to
-give your kernel. For example:
-
-# cd /usr/src/sys/i386/conf
-# cp GENERIC MYKERNEL
-
-
-Traditionally, this name is in all capital letters and,
-if you are maintaining multiple FreeBSD machines with
-different hardware, it is a good idea to name it after
-your machine's hostname. We will call it MYKERNEL for
-the purpose of this example.
-
-
-
-Note: You must execute these and all of the
-following commands under the root account or you will get
-``permission denied'' errors.
-
-
-
-Now, edit MYKERNEL with your favorite text editor. If
-you are just starting out, the only editor available will
-probably be vi, which is too complex to explain
-here, but is covered well in many books in the . Feel free to change the
-comment lines at the top to reflect your configuration or the
-changes you have made to differentiate it from GENERIC.
-
-If you have build a kernel under SunOS or some other BSD
-operating system, much of this file will be very familiar
-to you. If you are coming from some other operating
-system such as DOS, on the other hand, the GENERIC
-configuration file might seem overwhelming to you, so
-follow the descriptions in the
-section slowly and carefully.
-
-
-
-Note: If you are trying to upgrade your kernel from an
-older version of FreeBSD, you will probably have to get a new
-version of config(8) from the same place you got the new
-kernel sources. It is located in /usr/src/usr.sbin, so
-you will need to download those sources as well. Re-build and install
-it before running the next commands.
-
-
-
-When you are finished, type the following to compile and
-install your kernel:
-
-# /usr/sbin/config MYKERNEL
-# cd ../../compile/MYKERNEL
-# make depend
-# make
-# make install
-
-
-The new kernel will be copied to the root directory as
-/kernel and the old kernel will be moved to
-/kernel.old. Now, shutdown the system and
-reboot to use your kernel. In case something goes wrong,
-there are some instructions at the end of this
-document. Be sure to read the section which explains how
-to recover in case your new kernel .
-
-
-
-Note: If you have added any new devices (such
-as sound cards) you may have to add some to your
-/dev directory before you can use them.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The Configuration File
-
-The general format of a configuration file is quite simple.
-Each line contains a keyword and one or more arguments. For
-simplicity, most lines only contain one argument. Anything
-following a # is considered a comment and ignored.
-The following sections describe each keyword, generally in the
-order they are listed in GENERIC, although some related
-keywords have been grouped together in a single section (such
-as Networking) even though they are actually scattered
-throughout the GENERIC file.
-An exhaustive list of options and more detailed explanations
-of the device lines is present in the LINT configuration file,
-located in the same directory as GENERIC. If you are in doubt
-as to the purpose or necessity of a line, check first in LINT.
-
-The kernel is currently being moved to a better organization
-of the option handling. Traditionally, each option in the
-config file was simply converted into a switch
-for the CFLAGS line of the kernel Makefile. Naturally,
-this caused a creeping optionism, with nobody really knowing
-which option has been referenced in what files.
-
-In the new scheme, every #ifdef that is intended to
-be dependent upon an option gets this option out of an
-opt_foo.h declaration file created in the
-compile directory by config. The list of valid options
-for config lives in two files: options that do not
-depend on the architecture are listed in
-/sys/conf/options, architecture-dependent ones
-in /sys/arch/conf/options.arch,
-with arch being for example i386.
-
-
-
-Mandatory Keywords
-
-These keywords are required in every kernel you build.
-
-
-
-machine ``i386''
-
-
-
-The first keyword is machine, which,
-since FreeBSD only runs on Intel 386 and compatible
-chips, is i386.
-
-
-
-Note: that any keyword which
-contains numbers used as text must be enclosed in
-quotation marks, otherwise config gets
-confused and thinks you mean the actual number
-386.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cpu ``cpu_type''
-
-
-
-
-The next keyword is cpu, which includes
-support for each CPU supported by FreeBSD. The
-possible values of cpu_type
-include:
-
-
-
-I386_CPU
-
-
-
-I486_CPU
-
-
-
-I586_CPU
-
-
-
-I686_CPU
-
-
-
-
-and multiple instances of the cpu line may
-be present with different values of
-cpu_type as are present in the
-GENERIC kernel. For a custom kernel, it is best to
-specify only the cpu you have. If, for example,
-you have an Intel Pentium, use I586_CPU
-for cpu_type.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-ident machine_name
-
-
-
-
-Next, we have ident, which is the
-identification of the kernel. You should change
-this from GENERIC to whatever you named your
-kernel, in this example, MYKERNEL. The value you
-put in ident will print when you boot up
-the kernel, so it is useful to give a kernel a
-different name if you want to keep it separate from
-your usual kernel (if you want to build an
-experimental kernel, for example). Note that, as
-with machine and cpu, enclose
-your kernel's name in quotation marks if it
-contains any numbers.
-
-Since this name is passed to the C compiler as a
- switch, do not use names like DEBUG, or something that could be confused
-with another machine or CPU name, like vax.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-maxusers number
-
-
-
-
-This file sets the size of a number of important
-system tables. This number is supposed to be
-roughly equal to the number of simultaneous users
-you expect to have on your machine. However, under
-normal circumstances, you will want to set
-maxusers to at least four, especially if
-you are using the X Window System or compiling software. The
-reason is that the most important table set by
-maxusers is the maximum number of
-processes, which is set to 20 + 16 *
-maxusers, so if you set maxusers
-to one, then you can only have 36 simultaneous
-processes, including the 18 or so that the system
-starts up at boot time, and the 15 or so you will
-probably create when you start the X Window System. Even a
-simple task like reading a man page will
-start up nine processes to filter, decompress, and
-view it. Setting maxusers to 4 will allow
-you to have up to 84 simultaneous processes, which
-should be enough for anyone. If, however, you see
-the dreaded ``proc table full'' error when trying
-to start another program, or are running a server
-with a large number of simultaneous users (like
-Walnut Creek CDROM's FTP site), you can always
-increase this number and rebuild.
-
-
-
-Note:maxuser does
-not limit the number of users which can
-log into your machine. It simply sets various
-table sizes to reasonable values considering the
-maximum number of users you will likely have on
-your system and how many processes each of them
-will be running. One keyword which
-does limit the number of simultaneous
-remote logins is .
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-config kernel_name root on root_device
-
-
-
-
-This line specifies the location and name of the
-kernel. Traditionally the kernel is called
-vmunix but in FreeBSD, it is aptly named
-kernel. You should always use
-kernel for kernel_name because
-changing it will render numerous system utilities
-inoperative. The second part of the line specifies
-the disk and partition where the root filesystem
-and kernel can be found. Typically this will be
-wd0 for systems with non-SCSI drives, or
-sd0 for systems with SCSI drives.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-General Options
-
-These lines provide kernel support for various
-filesystems and other options.
-
-
-
-options MATH_EMULATE
-
-
-
-This line allows the kernel to simulate a math
-co-processor if your computer does not have one (386
-or 486SX). If you have a Pentium, a 486DX, or a
-386 or 486SX with a separate 387 or 487 chip, you
-can comment this line out.
-
-
-
-Note: The normal math co-processor
-emulation routines that come with FreeBSD are
-not very accurate. If you do not have a
-math co-processor, and you need the best accuracy,
-I recommend that you change this option to
-GPL_MATH_EMULATE to use the superior GNU
-math support, which is not included by default
-for licensing reasons.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options ``COMPAT_43''
-
-
-
-
-Compatibility with 4.3BSD. Leave this in; some
-programs will act strangely if you comment this
-out.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options BOUNCE_BUFFERS
-
-
-
-
-ISA devices and EISA devices operating in an ISA
-compatibility mode can only perform DMA (Direct
-Memory Access) to memory below 16 megabytes. This
-option enables such devices to work in systems with
-more than 16 megabytes of memory.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options UCONSOLE
-
-
-
-
-Allow users to grab the console, useful for X
-Windows. For example, you can create a console
-xterm by typing xterm -C, which will
-display any `write', `talk', and other messages you
-receive, as well as any console messages sent by the
-kernel.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options SYSVSHM
-
-
-
-
-This option
-provides for System V shared memory. The most
-common use of this is the XSHM extension in X
-Windows, which many graphics-intensive programs
-(such as the movie player XAnim, and Linux DOOM)
-will automatically take advantage of for extra
-speed. If you use the X Window System, you will definitely
-want to include this.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options SYSVSEM
-
-
-
-
-Support for System V
-semaphores. Less commonly used but only adds a few
-hundred bytes to the kernel.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options SYSVMSG
-
-
-
-
-Support for System V
-messages. Again, only adds a few hundred bytes to
-the kernel.
-
-
-
-Note: The ipcs(1) command will
-tell will list any processes using each of
-these System V facilities.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Filesystem Options
-
-These options add support for various filesystems.
-You must include at least one of these to support the
-device you boot from; typically this will be
-FFS if you boot from a hard drive, or
-NFS if you are booting a diskless workstation
-from Ethernet. You can include other commonly-used
-filesystems in the kernel, but feel free to comment out
-support for filesystems you use less often (perhaps the
-MS-DOS filesystem?), since they will be dynamically
-loaded from the Loadable Kernel Module directory
-/lkm the first time you mount a partition of
-that type.
-
-
-
-options FFS
-
-
-
-The basic hard drive
-filesystem; leave it in if you boot from the hard
-disk.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options NFS
-
-
-
-
-Network Filesystem. Unless
-you plan to mount partitions from a Unix file
-server over Ethernet, you can comment this out.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options MSDOSFS
-
-
-
-
-MS-DOS Filesystem. Unless
-you plan to mount a DOS formatted hard drive
-partition at boot time, you can safely comment this
-out. It will be automatically loaded the first
-time you mount a DOS partition, as described above.
-Also, the excellent mtools software (in
-the ports collection) allows you to access DOS
-floppies without having to mount and unmount them
-(and does not require MSDOSFS at all).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options ``CD9660''
-
-
-
-
-ISO 9660 filesystem for
-CD-ROMs. Comment it out if you do not have a
-CD-ROM drive or only mount data CD's occasionally
-(since it will be dynamically loaded the first time
-you mount a data CD). Audio CD's do not need this
-filesystem.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options PROCFS
-
-
-
-
-Process filesystem. This
-is a pretend filesystem mounted on /proc which
-allows programs like ps(1) to give you
-more information on what processes are running.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options MFS
-
-
-
-
-Memory-mapped file system.
-This is basically a RAM disk for fast storage of
-temporary files, useful if you have a lot of swap
-space that you want to take advantage of. A
-perfect place to mount an MFS partition is on the
-/tmp directory, since many programs store
-temporary data here. To mount an MFS RAM disk on
-/tmp, add the following line to
-/etc/fstab and then reboot or type
-mount /tmp:
-
-/dev/wd1s2b /tmp mfs rw 0 0
-
-
-
-
-
-Note: Replace the /dev/wd1s2b
-with the name of your swap partition, which will
-be listed in your /etc/fstab as follows:
-
-/dev/wd1s2b none swap sw 0 0
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Note: Also, the MFS filesystem
-can not be dynamically loaded, so you
-must compile it into your kernel if you
-want to experiment with it.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options "EXT2FS"
-
-
-
-
-Linux's native file system.
-With ext2fs support you are able to read and write to Linux
-partitions. This is useful if you dual-boot FreeBSD and Linux
-and want to share data between the two systems.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options QUOTA
-
-
-
-
-Enable disk quotas. If you
-have a public access system, and do not want users
-to be able to overflow the /home
-partition, you can establish disk quotas for each
-user. Refer to the
-
-section for more information.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Basic Controllers and Devices
-
-These sections describe the basic disk, tape, and
-CD-ROM controllers supported by FreeBSD. There are
-separate sections for controllers and cards.
-
-
-
-controller isa0
-
-
-
-All PC's supported by
-FreeBSD have one of these. If you have an IBM PS/2
-(Micro Channel Architecture), then you cannot run
-FreeBSD at this time.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller pci0
-
-
-
-
-Include this if you have a
-PCI motherboard. This enables auto-detection of
-PCI cards and gatewaying from the PCI to the ISA
-bus.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller fdc0
-
-
-
-
-Floppy drive controller:
-fd0 is the ``A:'' floppy drive, and
-fd1 is the ``B:'' drive. ft0 is
-a QIC-80 tape drive attached to the floppy
-controller. Comment out any lines corresponding to
-devices you do not have.
-
-
-
-Note: QIC-80 tape support requires a
-separate filter program called ft(8), see
-the manual page for details.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller wdc0
-
-
-
-
-This is the primary IDE
-controller. wd0 and wd1 are the
-master and slave hard drive, respectively.
-wdc1 is a secondary IDE controller where
-you might have a third or fourth hard drive, or an
-IDE CD-ROM. Comment out the lines which do not
-apply (if you have a SCSI hard drive, you will
-probably want to comment out all six lines, for
-example).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device wcd0
-
-
-
-
-This device
-provides IDE CD-ROM support. Be sure to leave
-wdc0 uncommented, and wdc1 if you have
-more than one IDE controller and your CD-ROM is on
-the second one card. To use this, you must
-also include the line options ATAPI.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device npx0 at isa? port ``IO_NPX'' irq 13 vector npxintr
-
-
-
-
-npx0 is the interface to the floating point math
-unit in FreeBSD, either the hardware co-processor or the
-software math emulator. It is NOT optional.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device wt0 at isa? port 0x300 bio irq 5 drq 1 vector wtintr
-
-
-
-
-Wangtek and Archive
-QIC-02/QIC-36 tape drive support
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Proprietary CD-ROM support
-
-
-
-
-The following
-drivers are for the so-called proprietary
-CD-ROM drives. These drives have their own
-controller card or might plug into a sound card
-such as the SoundBlaster 16. They are not
-IDE or SCSI. Most older single-speed and
-double-speed CD-ROMs use these interfaces, while
-newer quad-speeds are likely to be or .
-
-
-
-device mcd0 at isa? port 0x300 bio irq 10 vector mcdintr
-
-
-
-Mitsumi CD-ROM (LU002,
-LU005, FX001D).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device scd0 at isa? port 0x230 bio
-
-
-
-
-Sony CD-ROM (CDU31, CDU33A).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller matcd0 at isa? port ? bio
-
-
-
-
-Matsushita/Panasonic CD-ROM (sold by Creative
-Labs for SoundBlaster).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-SCSI Device Support
-
-This section describes the various SCSI controllers
-and devices supported by FreeBSD.
-
-
-
-SCSI Controllers
-
-
-
-The next ten or so lines include support for
-different kinds of SCSI controllers. Comment out
-all except for the one(s) you have:
-
-
-
-controller bt0 at isa? port ``IO_BT0'' bio irq ? vector btintr
-
-
-
-Most Buslogic controllers
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller uha0 at isa? port ``IO_UHA0'' bio irq ? drq 5 vector uhaintr
-
-
-
-
-UltraStor 14F and 34F
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller ahc0
-
-
-
-
-Adaptec 274x/284x/294x
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller ahb0 at isa? bio irq ? vector ahbintr
-
-
-
-
-Adaptec 174x
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller aha0 at isa? port ``IO_AHA0'' bio irq ? drq 5 vector ahaintr
-
-
-
-
-Adaptec 154x
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller aic0 at isa? port 0x340 bio irq 11 vector aicintr
-
-
-
-
-Adaptec 152x and sound cards using Adaptec AIC-6360 (slow!)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller nca0 at isa? port 0x1f88 bio irq 10 vector ncaintr
-
-
-
-
-ProAudioSpectrum cards using NCR 5380 or Trantor T130
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller sea0 at isa? bio irq 5 iomem 0xc8000 iosiz 0x2000 vector seaintr
-
-
-
-
-Seagate ST01/02 8 bit controller (slow!)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller wds0 at isa? port 0x350 bio irq 15 drq 6 vector wdsintr
-
-
-
-
-Western Digital WD7000 controller
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller ncr0
-
-
-
-
-NCR 53C810, 53C815, 53C825, 53C860, 53C875 PCI SCSI controller
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options ``SCSI_DELAY=15''
-
-
-
-
-This causes the
-kernel to pause 15 seconds before probing each SCSI
-device in your system. If you only have IDE hard
-drives, you can ignore this, otherwise you will
-probably want to lower this number, perhaps to 5
-seconds, to speed up booting. Of course if you do
-this, and FreeBSD has trouble recognizing your SCSI
-devices, you will have to raise it back up.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller scbus0
-
-
-
-
-If you have any SCSI
-controllers, this line provides generic SCSI
-support. If you do not have SCSI, you can comment
-this, and the following three lines, out.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device sd0
-
-
-
-
-Support for SCSI hard
-drives.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device st0
-
-
-
-
-Support for SCSI tape
-drives.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device cd0
-
-
-
-
-Support for SCSI CD-ROM
-drives.
-
-
-
-Note that the number 0 in the above entries
-is slightly misleading: all these devices are
-automatically configured as they are found, regardless
-of how many of them are hooked up to the SCSI bus(es),
-and which target IDs they have.
-
-If you want to ``wire down'' specific target IDs to
-particular devices, refer to the appropriate section
-of the LINT kernel config file.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Console, Bus Mouse, and X Server Support
-
-You must choose one of these two console types, and, if you plan
-to use the X Window System with the vt220 console, enable the
-XSERVER option and optionally, a bus mouse or PS/2 mouse device.
-
-
-
-device sc0 at isa? port ``IO_KBD' tty irq 1 vector scintr
-
-
-
-sc0 is the default
-console driver, which resembles an SCO console.
-Since most full-screen programs access the console
-through a terminal database library like
-termcap, it should not matter much whether
-you use this or vt0, the VT220 compatible
-console driver. When you log in, set your TERM
-variable to ``scoansi'' if full-screen programs
-have trouble running under this console.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device vt0 at isa? port ``IO_KBD'' tty irq 1 vector pcrint
-
-
-
-
-This is a VT220-compatible
-console driver, backwards compatible to VT100/102.
-It works well on some laptops which have hardware
-incompatibilities with sc0. Also, set
-your TERM variable to ``vt100'' or ``vt220'' when
-you log in. This driver might also prove useful
-when connecting to a large number of different
-machines over the network, where the termcap
-or terminfo entries for the sc0
-device are often not available -- ``vt100'' should be
-available on virtually any platform.
-
-
-
-options ``PCVT_FREEBSD=210''
-
-
-
-Required
-with the vt0 console driver.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options XSERVER
-
-
-
-
-Only applicable with the vt0 console driver.
-This includes code
-required to run the XFree86 X Window
-Server under the vt0 console driver.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device mse0 at isa? port 0x23c tty irq 5 vector ms
-
-
-
-
-Use this device if you have a Logitech or
-ATI InPort bus mouse card.
-
-
-
-Note: If you have a serial mouse,
-ignore these two lines, and instead, make sure
-the appropriate port is enabled (probably
-COM1).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device psm0 at isa? port ``IO_KBD'' conflicts tty irq 12 vector psmintr
-
-
-
-
-Use this device if your
-mouse plugs into the PS/2 mouse port.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Serial and Parallel Ports
-
-Nearly all systems have these. If you are attaching a
-printer to one of these ports, the section of the handbook is very
-useful. If you are using modem, provides extensive detail on
-serial port configuration for use with such devices.
-
-
-
-device sio0 at isa? port ``IO_COM1'' tty irq 4 vector siointr
-
-
-
-sio0
-through sio3 are the four serial ports
-referred to as COM1 through COM4 in the MS-DOS
-world. Note that if you have an internal modem on
-COM4 and a serial port at COM2 you will have to
-change the IRQ of the modem to 2 (for obscure
-technical reasons IRQ 2 = IRQ 9) in order to access
-it from FreeBSD. If you have a multiport serial
-card, check the manual page for sio(4) for
-more information on the proper values for these
-lines. Some video cards (notably
-those based on S3 chips) use IO addresses of the
-form 0x*2e8, and since many cheap serial
-cards do not fully decode the 16-bit IO address
-space, they clash with these cards, making the
-COM4 port practically unavailable.
-
-Each serial port is required to have a unique
-IRQ (unless you are using one of the multiport cards
-where shared interrupts are supported), so the default
-IRQs for COM3 and COM4 cannot be used.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device lpt0 at isa? port? tty irq 7 vector lptintr
-
-
-
-
-lpt0 through lpt2
-are the three printer ports you could conceivably
-have. Most people just have one, though, so feel
-free to comment out the other two lines if you do
-not have them.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Networking
-
-FreeBSD, as with Unix in general, places a
-big emphasis on networking. Therefore, even
-if you do not have an Ethernet card, pay attention to
-the mandatory options and the dial-up networking
-support.
-
-
-
-options INET
-
-Networking support. Leave it in even if you do not plan
-to be connected to a network. Most programs require at least
-loopback networking (i.e. making network connections within your
-PC) so this is essentially mandatory.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Ethernet cards
-
-
-
-
-The next lines enable support for various Ethernet
-cards. If you do not have a network card, you can
-comment out all of these lines. Otherwise, you will
-want to leave in support for your particular
-Ethernet card(s):
-
-
-
-device de0
-
-
-
-Ethernet adapters based on Digital Equipment DC21040,
-DC21041 or DC21140 chips
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device fxp0
-
-
-
-
-Intel EtherExpress Pro/100B
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device vx0
-
-
-
-
-3Com 3C590 and 3C595 (buggy)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device cx0 at isa? port 0x240 net irq 15 drq 7 vector cxintr
-
-
-
-
-Cronyx/Sigma multiport
-sync/async (with Cisco or PPP framing)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device ed0 at isa? port 0x280 net irq 5 iomem 0xd8000 vector edintr
-
-
-
-
-Western Digital and SMC 80xx and 8216; Novell NE1000
-and NE2000; 3Com 3C503; HP PC Lan Plus (HP27247B and HP27252A)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device el0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 9 vector elintr
-
-
-
-
-3Com 3C501 (slow!)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device eg0 at isa? port 0x310 net irq 5 vector egintr
-
-
-
-
-3Com 3C505
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device ep0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 10 vector epintr
-
-
-
-
-3Com 3C509 (buggy)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device fe0 at isa? port 0x240 net irq ? vector feintr
-
-
-
-
-Fujitsu MB86960A/MB86965A Ethernet
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device fea0 at isa? net irq ? vector feaintr
-
-
-
-
-DEC DEFEA EISA FDDI adapter
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device ie0 at isa? port 0x360 net irq 7 iomem 0xd0000 vector ieintr
-
-
-
-
-AT&T StarLAN 10 and EN100; 3Com 3C507;
-unknown NI5210
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device ix0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 10 iomem 0xd0000 iosiz 32768 vector ixintr
-
-
-
-
-Intel EtherExpress 16
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device le0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 5 iomem 0xd0000 vector le_intr
-
-
-
-
-Digital Equipment EtherWorks 2 and EtherWorks
-3 (DEPCA, DE100, DE101, DE200, DE201, DE202,
-DE203, DE204, DE205, DE422)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device lnc0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 10 drq 0 vector lncintr
-
-
-
-
-Lance/PCnet cards (Isolan, Novell NE2100,
-NE32-VL)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device ze0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 5 iomem 0xd8000 vector zeintr
-
-
-
-
-IBM/National Semiconductor PCMCIA ethernet
-controller.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device zp0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 10 iomem 0xd8000 vector zpintr
-
-
-
-
-3Com PCMCIA Etherlink III
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Note: With certain cards (notably the
-NE2000) you will have to change the port and/or IRQ
-since there is no ``standard'' location for these
-cards.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device loop
-
-
-
-
-loop is the
-generic loopback device for TCP/IP. If you telnet
-or FTP to localhost
-(a.k.a. 127.0.0.1) it will come back at
-you through this pseudo-device. Mandatory.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device ether
-
-
-
-
-ether is only
-needed if you have an Ethernet card and includes
-generic Ethernet protocol code.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device sl number
-
-
-
-
-sl is for SLIP (Serial Line Internet
-Protocol) support. This has been almost entirely
-supplanted by PPP, which is easier to set up,
-better suited for modem-to-modem connections, as
-well as more powerful. The number after
-sl specifies how many simultaneous SLIP
-sessions to support. This handbook has more
-information on setting up a SLIP or .
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device ppp number
-
-
-
-
-ppp is for kernel-mode PPP (Point-to-Point
-Protocol) support for dial-up Internet connections.
-There is also version of PPP implemented as a user
-application that uses the tun and offers
-more flexibility and features such as demand
-dialing. If you still want to use this PPP driver,
-read the
-section of the handbook. As with the sl
-device, number specifies how many
-simultaneous PPP connections to support.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device tun number
-
-
-
-
-tun is used by the user-mode PPP software.
-This program is easy to set up and very fast. It
-also has special features such as automatic
-dial-on-demand. The number after tun
-specifies the number of simultaneous PPP sessions
-to support. See the section of the handbook for
-more information.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device bpfilter number
-
-
-
-
-Berkeley packet filter. This pseudo-device allows
-network interfaces to be placed in promiscuous
-mode, capturing every packet on a broadcast network
-(e.g. an ethernet). These packets can be captured
-to disk and/or examined with the
-tcpdump(1) program. Note that
-implementation of this capability can seriously
-compromise your overall network security.
-The number after bpfilter is the number of
-interfaces that can be examined
-simultaneously. Optional, not recommended except
-for those who are fully aware of the potential
-pitfalls. Not all network cards support this
-capability.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Sound cards
-
-This is the first section containing lines that are
-not in the GENERIC kernel. To include sound card
-support, you will have to copy the appropriate lines from
-the LINT kernel (which contains support for
-every device) as follows:
-
-
-
-controller snd0
-
-
-
-Generic sound driver code.
-Required for all of the following sound cards
-except pca.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device pas0 at isa? port 0x388 irq 10 drq 6 vector pasintr
-
-
-
-
-ProAudioSpectrum digital audio and MIDI.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device sb0 at isa? port 0x220 irq 7 conflicts drq 1 vector sbintr
-
-
-
-
-SoundBlaster digital audio.
-
-
-
-Note: If your SoundBlaster is on a
-different IRQ (such as 5), change irq 7
-to, for example, irq 5 and remove the
-conflicts keyword. Also, you must add
-the line: options ``SBC_IRQ=5''
-
-Note: If your SB16 is on a different
-16-bit DMA channel (such as 6 or 7), change the
-drq 5 keyword appropriately, and then
-add the line: options
-"SB16_DMA=6"
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device sbmidi0 at isa? port 0x330
-
-
-
-
-SoundBlaster 16 MIDI interface. If you have a
-SoundBlaster 16, you must include this line, or the
-kernel will not compile.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device gus0 at isa? port 0x220 irq 10 drq 1 vector gusintr
-
-
-
-
-Gravis Ultrasound.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device mss0 at isa? port 0x530 irq 10 drq 1 vector adintr
-
-
-
-
-Microsoft Sound System.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device opl0 at isa? port 0x388 conflicts
-
-
-
-
-AdLib FM-synthesis audio. Include this line for
-AdLib, SoundBlaster, and ProAudioSpectrum users, if
-you want to play MIDI songs with a program such as
-playmidi (in the ports collection).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device mpu0 at isa? port 0x330 irq 6 drq 0
-
-
-
-
-Roland MPU-401 stand-alone card.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device uart0 at isa? port 0x330 irq 5 vector ``m6850intr''
-
-
-
-
-Stand-alone 6850 UART for MIDI.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device pca0 at isa? port ``IO_TIMER1'' tty
-
-
-
-
-Digital audio through PC speaker. This is going to
-be very poor sound quality and quite CPU-intensive,
-so you have been warned (but it does not require a
-sound card).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Note: There is some additional
-documentation in
-/usr/src/sys/i386/isa/sound/sound.doc.
-Also, if you add any of these devices, be sure to
-create the sound .
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Pseudo-devices
-
-Pseudo-device drivers are parts of the kernel that act
-like device drivers but do not correspond to any actual
-hardware in the machine. The
-pseudo-devices are in that section, while the remainder
-are here.
-
-
-
-pseudo-device gzip
-
-
-
-gzip allows you to run FreeBSD programs
-that have been compressed with gzip. The
-programs in /stand are compressed so it
-is a good idea to have this option in your kernel.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device log
-
-
-
-
-log is used for logging of kernel error
-messages. Mandatory.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device pty number
-
-
-
-
-pty is a ``pseudo-terminal'' or simulated
-login port. It is used by incoming telnet
-and rlogin sessions, xterm, and some other
-applications such as emacs. The number
-indicates the number of ptys to create.
-If you need more than GENERIC default of 16
-simultaneous xterm windows and/or remote logins, be
-sure to increase this number accordingly, up to a
-maximum of 64.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device snp number
-
-
-
-
-Snoop device. This pseudo-device allows one
-terminal session to watch another using the
-watch(8) command. Note that
-implementation of this capability has important
-security and privacy implications. The
-number after snp is the total number of
-simultaneous snoop sessions. Optional.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device vn
-
-
-
-
-Vnode driver. Allows a file to be treated as a
-device after being set up with the
-vnconfig(8) command. This driver can be
-useful for manipulating floppy disk images and
-using a file as a swap device (e.g. an MS Windows
-swap file). Optional.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device ccd number
-
-
-
-
-Concatenated disks. This pseudo-device allows you to
-concatenate multiple disk partitions into one large
-``meta''-disk. The number after ccd is the
-total number of concatenated disks (not total number of
-disks that can be concatenated) that can be created.
-(See ccd(4) and ccdconfig(8) man pages
-for more details.) Optional.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Joystick, PC Speaker, Miscellaneous
-
-This section describes some miscellaneous hardware
-devices supported by FreeBSD. Note that none of these
-lines are included in the GENERIC kernel, you will have
-to copy them from this handbook or the LINT kernel
-(which contains support for every device):
-
-
-
-device joy0 at isa? port ``IO_GAME''
-
-
-
-PC joystick device.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device speaker
-
-
-
-
-Supports IBM BASIC-style noises through the PC
-speaker. Some fun programs which use this are
-/usr/sbin/spkrtest, which is a shell
-script that plays some simple songs, and
-/usr/games/piano which lets you play songs
-using the keyboard as a simple piano (this file
-only exists if you have installed the games
-package). Also, the excellent text role-playing
-game NetHack (in the ports collection) can be
-configured to use this device to play songs when
-you play musical instruments in the game.
-
-
-
-See also the device.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Making Device Nodes
-
-Almost every device in the kernel has a corresponding
-``node'' entry in the /dev directory. These
-nodes look like regular files, but are actually special
-entries into the kernel which programs use to access the
-device. The shell script /dev/MAKEDEV, which is
-executed when you first install the operating system,
-creates nearly all of the device nodes supported.
-However, it does not create all of them, so when
-you add support for a new device, it pays to make sure
-that the appropriate entries are in this directory, and
-if not, add them. Here is a simple example:
-
-Suppose you add the IDE CD-ROM support to the kernel.
-The line to add is:
-
-controller wcd0
-
-
-This means that you should look for some entries that
-start with wcd0 in the /dev directory,
-possibly followed by a letter, such as `c', or preceded
-by the letter 'r', which means a `raw' device. It turns
-out that those files are not there, so I must change to
-the /dev directory and type:
-
-# sh MAKEDEV wcd0
-
-
-When this script finishes, you will find that there are
-now wcd0c and rwcd0c entries in
-/dev so you know that it executed correctly.
-
-For sound cards, the command:
-
-# sh MAKEDEV snd0
-
-
-creates the appropriate entries. Note: when creating device
-nodes for devices such as sound cards, if other people have
-access to your machine, it may be desirable to
-protect the devices from outside access by adding them to the
-/etc/fbtab file. See man fbtab for
-more information.
-
-Follow this simple procedure for any other non-GENERIC
-devices which do not have entries.
-
-
-
-Note: All SCSI controllers use the same set
-of /dev entries, so you do not need to create
-these. Also, network cards and SLIP/PPP pseudo-devices
-do not have entries in /dev at all, so you do
-not have to worry about these either.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-If Something Goes Wrong
-
-There are four categories of trouble that can occur when
-building a custom kernel. They are:
-
-
-
-Config command fails
-
-
-
-If the config
-command fails when you give it your kernel
-description, you have probably made a simple error
-somewhere. Fortunately, config will print
-the line number that it had trouble with, so you can
-quickly skip to it with vi. For example, if
-you see:
-
-config: line 17: syntax error
-
-
-you can skip to the problem in vi by typing
-``17G'' in command mode. Make sure the keyword is
-typed correctly, by comparing it to the GENERIC
-kernel or another reference.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Make command fails
-
-
-
-
-If the make
-command fails, it usually signals an error in your
-kernel description, but not severe enough for
-config to catch it. Again, look over your
-configuration, and if you still cannot resolve the
-problem, send mail to the &a.questions; with your kernel
-configuration, and it should be diagnosed very
-quickly.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Kernel will not boot
-
-
-
-
-If your new kernel
-does not boot, or fails to recognize your devices,
-do not panic! Fortunately, BSD has an excellent
-mechanism for recovering from incompatible kernels.
-Simply type the name of the kernel you want to boot
-from (i.e. ``kernel.old'') at the FreeBSD boot
-prompt instead of pressing return. When
-reconfiguring a kernel, it is always a good idea to
-keep a kernel that is known to work on hand.
-
-After booting with a good kernel you can check over
-your configuration file and try to build it again.
-One helpful resource is the
-/var/log/messages file which records, among
-other things, all of the kernel messages from every
-successful boot. Also, the dmesg(8) command
-will print the kernel messages from the current boot.
-
-
-
-Note: If you are having trouble building
-a kernel, make sure to keep a GENERIC, or some
-other kernel that is known to work on hand as a
-different name that will not get erased on the next
-build. You cannot rely on kernel.old
-because when installing a new kernel,
-kernel.old is overwritten with the last
-installed kernel which may be non-functional.
-Also, as soon as possible, move the working kernel
-to the proper ``kernel'' location or commands such
-as ps(1) will not work properly. The
-proper command to ``unlock'' the kernel file that
-make installs (in order to move another
-kernel back permanently) is:
-
-# chflags noschg /kernel
-
-
-And, if you want to ``lock'' your new kernel into place, or any file
-for that matter, so that it cannot be moved or tampered with:
-
-# chflags schg /kernel
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Kernel works, but ps does not work any more!
-
-
-
-
-If you have installed a different version
-of the kernel from the one that the system utilities
-have been built with, for example, an experimental
-``2.2.0'' kernel on a 2.1.0-RELEASE system, many
-system-status commands like ps(1) and
-vmstat(8) will not work any more. You must
-recompile the libkvm library as well as
-these utilities. This is one reason it is not
-normally a good idea to use a different version of
-the kernel from the rest of the operating system.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Security
-
-
-
-DES, MD5, and Crypt
-
-Contributed by &a.wollman;24 September 1995.
-
-In order to protect the security of passwords on UN*X systems from
-being easily exposed, passwords have traditionally been scrambled in
-some way. Starting with Bell Labs' Seventh Edition Unix, passwords
-were encrypted using what the security people call a ``one-way hash
-function''. That is to say, the password is transformed in such a way
-that the original password cannot be regained except by brute-force
-searching the space of possible passwords. Unfortunately, the only
-secure method that was available to the AT&T researchers at the
-time was based on DES, the Data Encryption Standard. This causes only
-minimal difficulty for commercial vendors, but is a serious problem
-for an operating system like FreeBSD where all the source code is
-freely available, because national governments in many places like to
-place restrictions on cross-border transport of DES and other
-encryption software.
-
-So, the FreeBSD team was faced with a dilemma: how could we provide
-compatibility with all those UNIX systems out there while still not
-running afoul of the law? We decided to take a dual-track approach:
-we would make distributions which contained only a non-regulated
-password scrambler, and then provide as a separate add-on library the
-DES-based password hash. The password-scrambling function was moved
-out of the C library to a separate library, called `libcrypt'
-because the name of the C function to implement it is
-`crypt'. In FreeBSD 1.x and some pre-release 2.0 snapshots,
-the non-regulated scrambler uses an insecure function written by Nate
-Williams; in subsequent releases this was replaced by a mechanism
-using the RSA Data Security, Inc., MD5 one-way hash function. Because
-neither of these functions involve encryption, they are believed to be
-exportable from the US and importable into many other countries.
-
-Meanwhile, work was also underway on the DES-based password hash
-function. First, a version of the `crypt' function which was
-written outside the US was imported, thus synchronizing the US and
-non-US code. Then, the library was modified and split into two; the
-DES `libcrypt' contains only the code involved in performing
-the one-way password hash, and a separate `libcipher' was
-created with the entry points to actually perform encryption. The
-code was partitioned in this way to make it easier to get an export
-license for the compiled library.
-
-
-
-Recognizing your `crypt' mechanism
-
-It is fairly easy to recognize whether a particular password
-string was created using the DES- or MD5-based hash function.
-MD5 password strings always begin with the characters
-`$1$'. DES password strings do not have
-any particular identifying characteristics, but they are shorter
-than MD5 passwords, and are coded in a 64-character alphabet
-which does not include the `$' character, so a
-relatively short string which doesn't begin with a dollar sign is
-very likely a DES password.
-
-Determining which library is being used on your system is fairly
-easy for most programs, except for those like `init' which
-are statically linked. (For those programs, the only way is to try
-them on a known password and see if it works.) Programs which use
-`crypt' are linked against `libcrypt', which for
-each type of library is a symbolic link to the appropriate
-implementation. For example, on a system using the DES versions:
-
-
-
-$ cd /usr/lib
-$ ls -l /usr/lib/libcrypt*
-lrwxr-xr-x 1 bin bin 13 Sep 5 12:50 libcrypt.a -> libdescrypt.a
-lrwxr-xr-x 1 bin bin 18 Sep 5 12:50 libcrypt.so.2.0 -> libdescrypt.so.2.0
-lrwxr-xr-x 1 bin bin 15 Sep 5 12:50 libcrypt_p.a -> libdescrypt_p.a
-
-
-
-On a system using the MD5-based libraries, the same links will be
-present, but the target will be `libscrypt' rather than
-`libdescrypt'.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-S/Key
-
-Contributed by &a.wollman;25 September 1995.
-
-S/Key is a one-time password scheme based on a one-way hash function
-(in our version, this is MD4 for compatibility; other versions have
-used MD5 and DES-MAC). S/Key has been a standard part of all FreeBSD
-distributions since version 1.1.5, and is also implemented on a large
-and growing number of other systems. S/Key is a registered trademark
-of Bell Communications Research, Inc.
-
-There are three different sorts of passwords which we will talk about
-in the discussion below. The first is your usual UNIX-style or Kerberos
-password; we will call this a ``UNIX password''. The second sort is the
-one-time password which is generated by the S/Key `key' program and
-accepted by the `keyinit' program and the login prompt; we will call
-this a ``one-time password''. The final sort of password is the
-secret password which you give to the `key' program (and sometimes the
-`keyinit' program) which it uses to generate one-time passwords; we will
-call it a ``secret password'' or just unqualified ``password''.
-
-The secret password does not necessarily have anything to do with your
-UNIX password (while they can be the same, this is not recommended).
-While UNIX passwords are limited to eight characters in length, your
-S/Key secret password can be as long as you like; I use seven-word
-phrases. In general, the S/Key system operates completely
-independently of the UNIX password system.
-
-There are in addition two other sorts of data involved in the S/Key
-system; one is called the ``seed'' or (confusingly) ``key'', and
-consists of two letters and five digits, and the other is the
-``iteration count'' and is a number between 100 and 1. S/Key
-constructs a one-time password from these components by concatenating
-the seed and the secret password, then applying a one-way hash (the
-RSA Data Security, Inc., MD4 secure hash function) iteration-count
-times, and turning the result into six short English words. The
-`login' and `su' programs keep track of the last one-time
-password used, and the user is authenticated if the hash of the
-user-provided password is equal to the previous password. Because a
-one-way hash function is used, it is not possible to generate future
-one-time passwords having overheard one which was successfully used;
-the iteration count is decremented after each successful login to keep
-the user and login program in sync. (When you get the iteration count
-down to 1, it is time to reinitialize S/Key.)
-
-There are four programs involved in the S/Key system which we will
-discuss below. The `key' program accepts an iteration count, a
-seed, and a secret password, and generates a one-time password. The
-`keyinit' program is used to initialized S/Key, and to change
-passwords, iteration counts, or seeds; it takes either a secret
-password, or an iteration count, seed, and one-time password. The
-`keyinfo' program examines the /etc/skeykeys file and
-prints out the invoking user's current iteration count and seed.
-Finally, the `login' and `su' programs contain the necessary
-logic to accept S/Key one-time passwords for authentication. The
-`login' program is also capable of disallowing the use of UNIX
-passwords on connections coming from specified addresses.
-
-There are four different sorts of operations we will cover. The first
-is using the `keyinit' program over a secure connection to set up
-S/Key for the first time, or to change your password or seed. The
-second operation is using the `keyinit' program over an insecure
-connection, in conjunction with the `key' program over a secure
-connection, to do the same. The third is using the `key' program to
-log in over an insecure connection. The fourth is using the `key'
-program to generate a number of keys which can be written down or
-printed out to carry with you when going to some location without
-secure connections to anywhere (like at a conference).
-
-
-
-Secure connection initialization
-
-To initialize S/Key, change your password, or change your seed while
-logged in over a secure connection (e.g., on the console of a machine),
-use the `keyinit' command without any parameters while logged in as
-yourself:
-
-
-
-$ keyinit
-Updating wollman: ) these will not appear if you
-Old key: ha73895 ) have not used S/Key before
-Reminder - Only use this method if you are directly connected.
-If you are using telnet or rlogin exit with no password and use keyinit -s.
-Enter secret password: ) I typed my pass phrase here
-Again secret password: ) I typed it again
-
-ID wollman s/key is 99 ha73896 ) discussed below
-SAG HAS FONT GOUT FATE BOOM )
-
-
-
-There is a lot of information here. At the `Enter secret password:'
-prompt, you should enter some password or phrase (I use phrases of
-minimum seven words) which will be needed to generate login keys. The
-line starting `ID' gives the parameters of your particular S/Key
-instance: your login name, the iteration count, and seed. When
-logging in with S/Key, the system will remember these parameters and
-present them back to you so you do not have to remember them. The last
-line gives the particular one-time password which corresponds to those
-parameters and your secret password; if you were to re-login
-immediately, this one-time password is the one you would use.
-
-
-
-
-Insecure connection initialization
-
-To initialize S/Key or change your password or seed over an insecure
-connection, you will need to already have a secure connection to some
-place where you can run the `key' program; this might be in the form
-of a desk accessory on a Macintosh, or a shell prompt on a machine you
-trust (we will show the latter). You will also need to make up an
-iteration count (100 is probably a good value), and you may make up
-your own seed or use a randomly-generated one. Over on the insecure
-connection (to the machine you are initializing), use the `keyinit -s'
-command:
-
-
-
-$ keyinit -s
-Updating wollman:
-Old key: kh94741
-Reminder you need the 6 English words from the skey command.
-Enter sequence count from 1 to 9999: 100 ) I typed this
-Enter new key [default kh94742]:
-s/key 100 kh94742
-
-
-
-To accept the default seed (which the `keyinit' program confusingly
-calls a `key'), press return. Then move over to your secure
-connection or S/Key desk accessory, and give it the same parameters:
-
-
-
-$ key 100 kh94742
-Reminder - Do not use this program while logged in via telnet or rlogin.
-Enter secret password: ) I typed my secret password
-HULL NAY YANG TREE TOUT VETO
-
-
-
-Now switch back over to the insecure connection, and copy the one-time
-password generated by `key' over to the `keyinit' program:
-
-
-
-s/key access password: HULL NAY YANG TREE TOUT VETO
-
-ID wollman s/key is 100 kh94742
-HULL NAY YANG TREE TOUT VETO
-
-
-
-The rest of the description from the previous section applies here as
-well.
-
-
-
-
-Diversion: a login prompt
-
-Before explaining how to generate one-time passwords, we should go
-over an S/Key login prompt:
-
-
-
-$ telnet himalia
-Trying 18.26.0.186...
-Connected to himalia.lcs.mit.edu.
-Escape character is '^]'.
-s/key 92 hi52030
-Password:
-
-
-
-Note that, before prompting for a password, the login program
-prints out the iteration number and seed which you will need in order
-to generate the appropriate key. You will also find a useful feature
-(not shown here): if you press return at the password prompt, the
-login program will turn echo on, so you can see what you are typing.
-This can be extremely useful if you are attempting to type in an S/Key
-by hand, such as from a printout.
-
-If this machine were configured to disallow UNIX passwords over a
-connection from my machine, the prompt would have also included the
-annotation `(s/key required)', indicating that only S/Key one-time
-passwords will be accepted.
-
-
-
-
-Generating a single one-time password
-
-Now, to generate the one-time password needed to answer this login
-prompt, we use a trusted machine and the `key' program. (There are
-versions of the `key' program from DOS and Windows machines, and there
-is an S/Key desk accessory for Macintosh computers as well.) The
-command-line `key' program takes as its parameters the iteration count
-and seed; you can cut-and-paste right from the login prompt starting
-at ``key'' to the end of the line. Thus:
-
-
-
-$ key 92 hi52030 ) pasted from previous section
-Reminder - Do not use this program while logged in via telnet or rlogin.
-Enter secret password: ) I typed my secret password
-ADEN BED WOLF HAW HOT STUN
-
-
-
-And in the other window:
-
-
-
-s/key 92 hi52030 ) from previous section
-Password:
- (turning echo on)
-Password:ADEN BED WOLF HAW HOT STUN
-Last login: Wed Jun 28 15:31:00 from halloran-eldar.l
-[etc.]
-
-
-
-This is the easiest mechanism if you have a trusted machine.
-There is a Java S/Key key applet,
-The Java OTP Calculator,
-that you can download and run locally on any Java supporting brower.
-
-
-
-
-Generating multiple one-time passwords
-
-Sometimes we have to go places where no trusted machines or
-connections are available. In this case, it is possible to use the
-`key' command to generate a number of one-time passwords in the same
-command; these can then be printed out. For example:
-
-
-
-$ key -n 25 57 zz99999
-Reminder - Do not use this program while logged in via telnet or rlogin.
-Enter secret password:
-33: WALT THY MALI DARN NIT HEAD
-34: ASK RICE BEAU GINA DOUR STAG
-[...]
-56: AMOS BOWL LUG FAT CAIN INCH
-57: GROW HAYS TUN DISH CAR BALM
-
-
-
-The `' requests twenty-five keys in sequence; the `57' indicates
-the ending iteration number; and the rest is as before. Note that
-these are printed out in reverse order of eventual use. If you are
-really paranoid, you might want to write the results down by hand;
-otherwise you can cut-and-paste into `lpr'. Note that each line shows
-both the iteration count and the one-time password; you may still find
-it handy to scratch off passwords as you use them.
-
-
-
-
-Restricting use of UNIX passwords
-
-The configuration file /etc/skey.access can be used to
-configure restrictions on the use of UNIX passwords based on the host
-name, user name, terminal port, or IP address of a login session. The
-complete format of the file is documented in the skey.access(5)
-manual page; there are also some security cautions there which should
-be read before depending on this file for security.
-
-If there is no /etc/skey.access file (which is the default
-state as FreeBSD is shipped), then all users will be allowed to use
-UNIX passwords. If the file exists, however, then all users will be
-required to use S/Key unless explicitly permitted to do otherwise by
-configuration statements in the skey.access file. In all cases,
-UNIX passwords are permitted on the console.
-
-Here is a sample configuration file which illustrates the three most
-common sorts of configuration statements:
-
-
-
-permit internet 18.26.0.0 255.255.0.0
-permit user jrl
-permit port ttyd0
-
-
-
-The first line (`permit internet') allows users whose IP source
-address (which is vulnerable to spoofing) matches the specified value
-and mask, to use UNIX passwords. This should not be considered a
-security mechanism, but rather, a means to remind authorized users
-that they are using an insecure network and need to use S/Key for
-authentication.
-
-The second line (`permit user') allows the specified user to
-use UNIX passwords at any time. Generally speaking, this should only
-be used for people who are either unable to use the `key'
-program, like those with dumb terminals, or those who are uneducable.
-
-The third line (`permit port') allows all users logging in on
-the specified terminal line to use UNIX passwords; this would be used
-for dial-ups.
-
-
-
-
-
-Kerberos
-
-Contributed by &a.markm; (based on contribution by &a.md;).
-
-Kerberos is a network add-on system/protocol that allows users to
-authenticate themselves through the services of a secure server.
-Services such as remote login, remote copy, secure inter-system
-file copying and other high-risk tasks are made considerably safer
-and more controllable.
-
-The following instructions can be used as a guide on how to
-set up Kerberos as distributed for FreeBSD. However, you should refer
-to the relevant manual pages for a complete description.
-
-In FreeBSD, the Kerberos is not that from the original 4.4BSD-Lite,
-distribution, but eBones, which had been previously ported to
-FreeBSD 1.1.5.1, and was sourced from outside the USA/Canada,
-and is thus available to system owners outside those countries.
-
-For those needing to get a legal foreign distribution of this
-software, please DO NOT get it from a USA or Canada site.
-You will get that site in big trouble! A legal copy of this is
-available from skeleton.mikom.csir.co.za, which is in South
-Africa.
-
-
-
-Creating the initial database
-
-This is done on the Kerberos server only. First make sure that you
-do not have any old Kerberos databases around. You should change to the
-directory /etc/kerberosIV and check that only the following
-files are present:
-
-
-
-grunt# cd /etc/kerberosIV
-grunt# ls
-README krb.conf krb.realms
-
-
-
-If any additional files (such as principal.* or
-master_key) exist, then use the kdb_destroy
-command to destroy the old Kerberos database, of if Kerberos
-is not running, simply delete the extra files with rm.
-
-You should now edit the krb.conf and krb.realms
-files to define your Kerberos realm. In this case the realm will
-be GRONDAR.ZA and the server is grunt.grondar.za.
-We edit or create the krb.conf file:
-
-
-
-grunt# cat krb.conf
-GRONDAR.ZA
-GRONDAR.ZA grunt.grondar.za admin server
-CS.BERKELEY.EDU okeeffe.berkeley.edu
-ATHENA.MIT.EDU kerberos.mit.edu
-ATHENA.MIT.EDU kerberos-1.mit.edu
-ATHENA.MIT.EDU kerberos-2.mit.edu
-ATHENA.MIT.EDU kerberos-3.mit.edu
-LCS.MIT.EDU kerberos.lcs.mit.edu
-TELECOM.MIT.EDU bitsy.mit.edu
-ARC.NASA.GOV trident.arc.nasa.gov
-
-
-
-In this case, the other realms do not need to be there.
-They are here as an example of how a machine may be made aware
-of multiple realms. You may wish to not include them for simplicity.
-
-The first line names the realm in which this system works. The other
-lines contain realm/host entries. The first item on a line is a realm,
-and the second is a host in that realm that is acting as a ``key
-distribution centre''. The words ``admin server'' following a hosts
-name means that host also provides an administrative database server.
-For further explanation of these terms, please consult the Kerberos
-man pages.
-
-Now we have to add grunt.grondar.za to the GRONDAR.ZA
-realm and also add an entry to put all hosts in the .grondar.za
-domain in the GRONDAR.ZA realm. The krb.realms file
-would be updated as follows:
-
-
-
- grunt# cat krb.realms
- grunt.grondar.za GRONDAR.ZA
- .grondar.za GRONDAR.ZA
- .berkeley.edu CS.BERKELEY.EDU
- .MIT.EDU ATHENA.MIT.EDU
- .mit.edu ATHENA.MIT.EDU
-
-
-
-Again, the other realms do not need to be there.
-They are here as an example of how a machine may be made aware
-of multiple realms. You may wish to remove them to simplify things.
-
-The first line puts the specific system into the named
-realm. The rest of the lines show how to default systems of a
-particular subdomain to a named realm.
-
-Now we are ready to create the database. This only needs to run on
-the Kerberos server (or Key Distribution Centre). Issue the
-kdb_init command to do this:
-
-
-
-grunt# kdb_init
-Realm name [default ATHENA.MIT.EDU ]: GRONDAR.ZA
-You will be prompted for the database Master Password.
-It is important that you NOT FORGET this password.
-
-Enter Kerberos master key:
-
-
-
-Now we have to save the key so that servers on the local
-machine can pick it up. Use the kstash command to
-do this.
-
-
-
-grunt# kstash
-
-Enter Kerberos master key:
-
-Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
-
-Master key entered. BEWARE!
-
-
-
-This saves the encrypted master password in
-/etc/kerberosIV/master_key.
-
-
-
-
-Making it all run
-
-Two principals need to be added to the database for each
-system that will be secured with Kerberos. Their names are
-kpasswd and rcmd These two principals are
-made for each system, with the instance being the name of the
-individual system.
-
-These daemons, kpasswd and rcmd allow other systems
-to change Kerberos passwords and run commands like rcp,
-rlogin and rsh.
-
-Now let's add these entries:
-
-
-
-grunt# kdb_edit
-Opening database...
-
-Enter Kerberos master key:
-
-Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
-
-Master key entered. BEWARE!
-Previous or default values are in [brackets] ,
-enter return to leave the same, or new value.
-
-Principal name: passwd
-Instance: grunt
-
-<Not found>, Create [y] ? y
-
-Principal: passwd, Instance: grunt, kdc_key_ver: 1
-New Password: <---- enter RANDOM here
-Verifying password
-
-New Password: <---- enter RANDOM here
-
-Random password [y] ? y
-
-Principal's new key version = 1
-Expiration date (enter yyyy-mm-dd) [ 2000-01-01 ] ?
-Max ticket lifetime (*5 minutes) [ 255 ] ?
-Attributes [ 0 ] ?
-Edit O.K.
-Principal name: rcmd
-Instance: grunt
-
-<Not found>, Create [y] ?
-
-Principal: rcmd, Instance: grunt, kdc_key_ver: 1
-New Password: <---- enter RANDOM here
-Verifying password
-
-New Password: <---- enter RANDOM here
-
-Random password [y] ?
-
-Principal's new key version = 1
-Expiration date (enter yyyy-mm-dd) [ 2000-01-01 ] ?
-Max ticket lifetime (*5 minutes) [ 255 ] ?
-Attributes [ 0 ] ?
-Edit O.K.
-Principal name: <---- null entry here will cause an exit
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Creating the server file
-
-We now have to extract all the instances which define the services
-on each machine. For this we use the ext_srvtab command.
-This will create a file which must be copied or moved by secure
-means to each Kerberos client's /etc/kerberosIV directory. This
-file must be present on each server and client, and is crucial to the
-operation of Kerberos.
-
-
-
-grunt# ext_srvtab grunt
-
-Enter Kerberos master key:
-
-Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
-
-Master key entered. BEWARE!
-Generating 'grunt-new-srvtab'....
-
-
-
-Now, this command only generates a temporary file
-which must be renamed to srvtab so that all the
-server can pick it up. Use the mv command to move it
-into place on the original system:
-
-
-
-grunt# mv grunt-new-srvtab srvtab
-
-
-
-If the file is for a client system, and the network is not
-deemed safe, then copy the <client>-new-srvtab to
-removable media and transport it by secure physical means. Be
-sure to rename it to srvtab in the client's
-/etc/kerberosIV directory, and make sure it is mode 600:
-
-
-
-grumble# mv grumble-new-srvtab srvtab
-grumble# chmod 600 srvtab
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Populating the database
-
-We now have to add some user entries into the database.
-First let's create an entry for the user jane. Use
-the kdb_edit command to do this:
-
-
-
-grunt# kdb_edit
-Opening database...
-
-Enter Kerberos master key:
-
-Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
-
-Master key entered. BEWARE!
-Previous or default values are in [brackets] ,
-enter return to leave the same, or new value.
-
-Principal name: jane
-Instance:
-
-<Not found>, Create [y] ? y
-
-Principal: jane, Instance: , kdc_key_ver: 1
-New Password: <---- enter a secure password here
-Verifying password
-
-New Password: <---- re-enter the password here
-
-Principal's new key version = 1
-Expiration date (enter yyyy-mm-dd) [ 2000-01-01 ] ?
-Max ticket lifetime (*5 minutes) [ 255 ] ?
-Attributes [ 0 ] ?
-Edit O.K.
-Principal name: <---- null entry here will cause an exit
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Testing it all out
-
-First we have to start the Kerberos daemons. NOTE that if you have
-correctly edited your /etc/rc.conf then this will happen
-automatically when you reboot. This is only necessary on the Kerberos
-server. Kerberos clients will automagically get what they need from
-the /etc/kerberosIV directory.
-
-
-
-grunt# kerberos &
-grunt# Kerberos server starting
- Sleep forever on error
- Log file is /var/log/kerberos.log
-Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
-
-Master key entered. BEWARE!
-
-Current Kerberos master key version is 1
-Local realm: GRONDAR.ZA
-grunt# kadmind -n &
-grunt# KADM Server KADM0.0A initializing
-Please do not use 'kill -9' to kill this job, use a
-regular kill instead
-
-Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
-
-Master key entered. BEWARE!
-
-
-
-Now we can try using the kinit command to get a ticket for
-the id jane that we created above:
-
-
-
-grunt$ kinit jane
-MIT Project Athena (grunt.grondar.za)
-Kerberos Initialization for "jane"
-Password:
-
-
-
-Try listing the tokens using klist to see if we really have them:
-
-
-
-grunt$ klist
-Ticket file: /tmp/tkt245
-Principal: jane@GRONDAR.ZA
-
- Issued Expires Principal
-Apr 30 11:23:22 Apr 30 19:23:22 krbtgt.GRONDAR.ZA@GRONDAR.ZA
-
-
-
-Now try changing the password using passwd to check if the
-kpasswd daemon can get authorization to the Kerberos database:
-
-
-
-grunt$ passwd
-realm GRONDAR.ZA
-Old password for jane:
-New Password for jane:
-Verifying password
-New Password for jane:
-Password changed.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Adding su privileges
-
-Kerberos allows us to give each user who needs root
-privileges their own separatesupassword. We
-could now add an id which is authorized to su to root.
-This is controlled by having an instance of root associated
-with a principal. Using kdb_edit we can create the entry
-jane.root in the Kerberos database:
-
-
-
-grunt# kdb_edit
-Opening database...
-
-Enter Kerberos master key:
-
-Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
-
-Master key entered. BEWARE!
-Previous or default values are in [brackets] ,
-enter return to leave the same, or new value.
-
-Principal name: jane
-Instance: root
-
-<Not found>, Create [y] ? y
-
-Principal: jane, Instance: root, kdc_key_ver: 1
-New Password: <---- enter a SECURE password here
-Verifying password
-
-New Password: <---- re-enter the password here
-
-Principal's new key version = 1
-Expiration date (enter yyyy-mm-dd) [ 2000-01-01 ] ?
-Max ticket lifetime (*5 minutes) [ 255 ] ? 12 <--- Keep this short!
-Attributes [ 0 ] ?
-Edit O.K.
-Principal name: <---- null entry here will cause an exit
-
-
-
-Now try getting tokens for it to make sure it works:
-
-
-
-grunt# kinit jane.root
-MIT Project Athena (grunt.grondar.za)
-Kerberos Initialization for "jane.root"
-Password:
-
-
-
-
-Now we need to add the user to root's .klogin file:
-
-
-
-grunt# cat /root/.klogin
-jane.root@GRONDAR.ZA
-
-
-
-Now try doing the su:
-
-
-
-[jane@grunt 10407] su
-Password:
-grunt#
-
-
-
-
-and take a look at what tokens we have:
-
-
-
-grunt# klist
-Ticket file: /tmp/tkt_root_245
-Principal: jane.root@GRONDAR.ZA
-
- Issued Expires Principal
-May 2 20:43:12 May 3 04:43:12 krbtgt.GRONDAR.ZA@GRONDAR.ZA
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Using other commands
-
-In an earlier example, we created a principal called jane
-with an instance root. This was based on a user with the
-same name as the principal, and this is a Kerberos default; that a
-<principal>.<instance> of the form
-<username>.root will allow that
-<username> to su to root if the necessary
-entries are in the .klogin file in root's home
-directory:
-
-
-
-grunt# cat /root/.klogin
-jane.root@GRONDAR.ZA
-
-
-
-Likewise, if a user has in their own home directory lines of the
-form:
-
-
-
-[jane@grunt 10543] cat ~/.klogin
-jane@GRONDAR.ZA
-jack@GRONDAR.ZA
-
-
-
-This allows anyone in the GRONDAR.ZA realm who has
-authenticated themselves to jane or jack (via
-kinit, see above) access to rlogin to jane's
-account or files on this system (grunt) via rlogin,
-rsh or rcp.
-
-For example, Jane now logs into another system, using Kerberos:
-
-
-
-[jane@grumble 573] kinit
-MIT Project Athena (grunt.grondar.za)
-Password:
-[jane@grumble 574] rlogin grunt
-Last login: Mon May 1 21:14:47 from grumble
-Copyright (c) 1980, 1983, 1986, 1988, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994
- The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
-
-FreeBSD BUILT-19950429 (GR386) #0: Sat Apr 29 17:50:09 SAT 1995
-
-[jane@grunt 10567]
-
-
-
-Or Jack logs into Jane's account on the same machine (Jane having set up
-the .klogin file as above, and the person in charge of Kerberos
-having set up principal jack with a null instance:
-
-
-
-[jack@grumble 573] kinit
-[jack@grumble 574] rlogin grunt -l jane
-MIT Project Athena (grunt.grondar.za)
-Password:
-Last login: Mon May 1 21:16:55 from grumble
-Copyright (c) 1980, 1983, 1986, 1988, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994
- The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
-
-FreeBSD BUILT-19950429 (GR386) #0: Sat Apr 29 17:50:09 SAT 1995
-
-[jane@grunt 10578]
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Firewalls
-
-Contributed by &a.gpalmer; and &a.alex;.
-
-Firewalls are an area of increasing interest for people who are
-connected to the Internet, and are even finding applications on
-private networks to provide enhanced security. This section will
-hopefully explain what firewalls are, how to use them, and how to use
-the facilities provided in the FreeBSD kernel to implement them.
-
-
-
-Note: People often think that having a firewall between
-your companies internal network and the ``Big Bad Internet'' will
-solve all your security problems. It may help, but a poorly setup
-firewall system is more of a security risk than not having one at all.
-A firewall can only add another layer of security to your systems, but
-they will not be able to stop a really determined hacker from
-penetrating your internal network. If you let internal security lapse
-because you believe your firewall to be impenetrable, you have just
-made the hackers job that bit easier.
-
-
-
-
-
-What is a firewall?
-
-There are currently two distinct types of firewalls in common
-use on the Internet today. The first type is more properly called
-a packet filtering router, where the kernel on a
-multi-homed machine chooses whether to forward or block packets
-based on a set of rules. The second type, known as proxy
-servers, rely on daemons to provide authentication and to
-forward packets, possibly on a multi-homed machine which has
-kernel packet forwarding disabled.
-
-Sometimes sites combine the two types of firewalls, so that only a
-certain machine (known as a bastion host) is allowed to send
-packets through a packet filtering router onto an internal
-network. Proxy services are run on the bastion host, which are
-generally more secure than normal authentication mechanisms.
-
-FreeBSD comes with a kernel packet filter (known as IPFW),
-which is what the rest of this section will concentrate on. Proxy
-servers can be built on FreeBSD from third party software, but there
-is such a variety of proxy servers available that it would be
-impossible to cover them in this document.
-
-
-
-Packet filtering routers
-
-A router is a machine which forwards packets between two or more
-networks. A packet filtering router has an extra piece of code in its
-kernel, which compares each packet to a list of rules before deciding
-if it should be forwarded or not. Most modern IP routing software has
-packet filtering code in it, which defaults to forwarding all
-packets. To enable the filters, you need to define a set of rules for
-the filtering code, so that it can decide if the packet should be
-allowed to pass or not.
-
-To decide if a packet should be passed on or not, the code looks
-through its set of rules for a rule which matches the contents of
-this packets headers. Once a match is found, the rule action is
-obeyed. The rule action could be to drop the packet, to forward the
-packet, or even to send an ICMP message back to the originator. Only
-the first match counts, as the rules are searched in order. Hence, the
-list of rules can be referred to as a ``rule chain''.
-
-The packet matching criteria varies depending on the software used,
-but typically you can specify rules which depend on the source IP
-address of the packet, the destination IP address, the source port
-number, the destination port number (for protocols which support
-ports), or even the packet type (UDP, TCP, ICMP, etc).
-
-
-
-
-Proxy servers
-
-Proxy servers are machines which have had the normal system daemons
-(telnetd, ftpd, etc) replaced with special servers. These servers are
-called proxy servers as they normally only allow onward
-connections to be made. This enables you to run (for example) a proxy
-telnet server on your firewall host, and people can telnet in to your
-firewall from the outside, go through some authentication mechanism,
-and then gain access to the internal network (alternatively, proxy
-servers can be used for signals coming from the internal network and
-heading out).
-
-Proxy servers are normally more secure than normal servers, and
-often have a wider variety of authentication mechanisms available,
-including ``one-shot'' password systems so that even if someone
-manages to discover what password you used, they will not be able to use
-it to gain access to your systems as the password instantly
-expires. As they do not actually give users access to the host machine,
-it becomes a lot more difficult for someone to install backdoors
-around your security system.
-
-Proxy servers often have ways of restricting access further, so
-that only certain hosts can gain access to the servers, and often they
-can be set up so that you can limit which users can talk to which
-destination machine. Again, what facilities are available depends
-largely on what proxy software you choose.
-
-
-
-
-
-What does IPFW allow me to do?
-
-IPFW, the software supplied with FreeBSD, is a packet
-filtering and accounting system which resides in the kernel, and has a
-user-land control utility, ipfw(8). Together, they
-allow you to define and query the rules currently used by the kernel
-in its routing decisions.
-
-There are two related parts to IPFW. The firewall section
-allows you to perform packet filtering. There is also an IP accounting
-section which allows you to track usage of your router, based on
-similar rules to the firewall section. This allows you to see (for
-example) how much traffic your router is getting from a certain
-machine, or how much WWW (World Wide Web) traffic it is forwarding.
-
-As a result of the way that IPFW is designed, you can use
-IPFW on non-router machines to perform packet filtering on
-incoming and outgoing connections. This is a special case of the more
-general use of IPFW, and the same commands and techniques
-should be used in this situation.
-
-
-
-
-Enabling IPFW on FreeBSD
-
-As the main part of the IPFW system lives in the kernel, you will
-need to add one or more options to your kernel configuration
-file, depending on what facilities you want, and recompile your kernel. See
- for more
-details on how to recompile your kernel.
-
-There are currently three kernel configuration options
-relevant to IPFW:
-
-
-
-options IPFIREWALL
-
-Compiles into the kernel the code for packet
-filtering.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options IPFIREWALL_VERBOSE
-
-
-Enables code to allow logging of
-packets through syslogd(8). Without this option, even if you
-specify that packets should be logged in the filter rules, nothing
-will happen.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options IPFIREWALL_VERBOSE_LIMIT=10
-
-
-Limits the number of
-packets logged through syslogd(8) on a per entry basis.
-You may wish to use this option in hostile environments in which
-you want to log firewall activity, but do not want to be open to
-a denial of service attack via syslog flooding.
-
-
-
-When a chain entry reaches the packet limit specified, logging
-is turned off for that particular entry. To resume logging, you
-will need to reset the associated counter using the ipfw(8)
-utility:
-
-
-
-ipfw zero 4500
-
-
-
-Where 4500 is the chain entry you wish to continue logging.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Previous versions of FreeBSD contained an IPFIREWALL_ACCT
-option. This is now obsolete as the firewall code automatically
-includes accounting facilities.
-
-
-
-
-Configuring IPFW
-
-The configuration of the IPFW software is done through the
-ipfw(8) utility. The syntax for this command looks
-quite complicated, but it is relatively simple once you understand
-its structure.
-
-There are currently four different command categories used by the
-utility: addition/deletion, listing, flushing, and clearing.
-Addition/deletion is used to build the rules that control how packets
-are accepted, rejected, and logged. Listing is used to examine the
-contents of your rule set (otherwise known as the chain) and packet
-counters (accounting). Flushing is used to remove all entries from
-the chain. Clearing is used to zero out one or more accounting
-entries.
-
-
-
-Altering the IPFW rules
-
-The syntax for this form of the command is:
-
-ipfw [-N] command [index]
-action [log] protocoladdresses
-[options]
-
-
-
-There is one valid flag when using this form of the command:
-
-
-
--N
-
-Resolve addresses and service names in output.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The command given can be shortened to the shortest unique
-form. The valid commands are:
-
-
-
-add
-
-Add an entry to the firewall/accounting rule list
-
-
-
-
-
-
-delete
-
-
-Delete an entry from the firewall/accounting rule list
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Previous versions of IPFW used separate firewall and
-accounting entries. The present version provides packet accounting
-with each firewall entry.
-
-If an index value is supplied, it used to place the entry
-at a specific point in the chain. Otherwise, the entry is placed at
-the end of the chain at an index 100 greater than the last chain
-entry (this does not include the default policy, rule 65535, deny).
-
-The log option causes matching rules to be output to the
-system console if the kernel was compiled with IPFIREWALL_VERBOSE.
-
-Valid actions are:
-
-
-
-reject
-
-Drop the packet, and send an ICMP host or port
-unreachable (as appropriate) packet to the source.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-allow
-
-
-Pass the packet on as normal. (aliases: pass and
-accept)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-deny
-
-
-Drop the packet. The source is not notified via an ICMP
-message (thus it appears that the packet never arrived at the
-destination).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-count
-
-
-Update packet counters but do not allow/deny the packet
-based on this rule. The search continues with the next chain entry.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Each action will be recognized by the shortest unambiguous
-prefix.
-
-The protocols which can be specified are:
-
-
-
-all
-
-Matches any IP packet
-
-
-
-
-
-
-icmp
-
-
-Matches ICMP packets
-
-
-
-
-
-
-tcp
-
-
-Matches TCP packets
-
-
-
-
-
-
-udp
-
-
-Matches UDP packets
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The address specification is:
-
-from <address/mask>[port] to
-<address/mask>[port] [via <interface>]
-
-
-
-You can only specify port in conjunction with
-protocols which support ports (UDP and TCP).
-
-The via is optional and may specify the IP address or
-domain name of a local IP interface, or an interface name (e.g.
-ed0) to match only packets coming through this interface.
-Interface unit numbers can be specified with an optional wildcard.
-For example, ppp* would match all kernel PPP interfaces.
-
-The syntax used to specify an <address/mask> is:
-
-<address>
-
-
-or
-
-<address>/mask-bits
-
-
-or
-
-<address>:mask-pattern
-
-
-
-A valid hostname may be specified in place of the IP
-address. mask-bits is a decimal number representing how many
-bits in the address mask should be set. e.g. specifying
-
-192.216.222.1/24
-
-
-will create a mask which will allow any address in a class C subnet
-(in this case, 192.216.222) to be matched. mask-pattern is an IP
-address which will be logically AND'ed with the address given. The
-keyword any may be used to specify ``any IP address''.
-
-The port numbers to be blocked are specified as:
-
-port[,port[,port[...]]]
-
-
-to specify either a single port or a list of ports, or
-
-port-port
-
-
-to specify a range of ports. You may also combine a single range with a
-list, but the range must always be specified first.
-
-The options available are:
-
-
-
-frag
-
-Matches if the packet is not the first fragment of the datagram.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-in
-
-
-Matches if the packet is on the way in.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-out
-
-
-Matches if the packet is on the way out.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-ipoptions spec
-
-
-Matches if the IP header contains the
-comma separated list of options specified in spec. The
-supported list of IP options are: ssrr (strict source route),
-lsrr (loose source route), rr (record packet route),
-and ts (timestamp). The absence of a particular option may
-be denoted with a leading '!'.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-established
-
-
-Matches if the packet is part of an already established
-TCP connection (i.e. it has the RST or ACK bits set). You can optimize
-the performance of the firewall by placing established rules
-early in the chain.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-setup
-
-
-Matches if the packet is an attempt to establish a TCP connection
-(the SYN bit set is set but the ACK bit is not).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-tcpflags flags
-
-
-Matches if the TCP header contains
-the comma separated list of flags. The supported flags
-are fin, syn, rst, psh, ack,
-and urg. The absence of a particular flag may be indicated
-by a leading '!'.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-icmptypes types
-
-
-Matches if the ICMP type is present in
-the list types. The list may be specified as any combination
-of ranges and/or individual types separated by commas. Commonly used
-ICMP types are: 0 echo reply (ping reply), 5
-redirect, 8 echo request (ping request), and 11
-time exceeded (used to indicate TTL expiration as with
-traceroute(8)).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Listing the IPFW rules
-
-The syntax for this form of the command is:
-
-ipfw [-atN] l
-
-
-
-There are three valid flags when using this form of the command:
-
-
-
--a
-
-While listing, show counter values. This option is the only
-way to see accounting counters.
-
-
-
-
-
-
--t
-
-
-Display the last match times for each chain entry. The time
-listing is incompatible with the input syntax used by the
-ipfw(8) utility.
-
-
-
-
-
-
--N
-
-
-Attempt to resolve given addresses and service names.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Flushing the IPFW rules
-
-The syntax for flushing the chain is:
-
-ipfw flush
-
-
-
-This causes all entries in the firewall chain to be removed except
-the fixed default policy enforced by the kernel (index 65535). Use
-caution when flushing rules, the default deny policy will leave your
-system cut off from the network until allow entries are added to the
-chain.
-
-
-
-
-Clearing the IPFW packet counters
-
-The syntax for clearing one or more packet counters is:
-
-ipfw zero [index]
-
-
-
-When used without an index argument, all packet counters
-are cleared. If an index is supplied, the clearing operation
-only affects a specific chain entry.
-
-
-
-
-
-Example commands for ipfw
-
-This command will deny all packets from the host
-evil.hacker.org to the telnet port of the host
-nice.people.org by being forwarded by the router:
-
-
-
-ipfw add deny tcp from evil.hacker.org to nice.people.org 23
-
-
-
-The next example denies and logs any TCP traffic from the entire
-hacker.org network (a class C) to the nice.people.org
-machine (any port).
-
-
-
-ipfw add deny log tcp from evil.hacker.org/24 to nice.people.org
-
-
-
-If you do not want people sending X sessions to your internal network
-(a subnet of a class C), the following command will do the necessary
-filtering:
-
-
-
-ipfw add deny tcp from any to my.org/28 6000 setup
-
-
-
-To see the accounting records:
-
-ipfw -a list
-
-
-or in the short form
-
-ipfw -a l
-
-
-You can also see the last time a chain entry was matched with
-
-ipfw -at l
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Building a packet filtering firewall
-
-
-
-Note: The following suggestions are just that:
-suggestions. The requirements of each firewall are different and I
-cannot tell you how to build a firewall to meet your particular
-requirements.
-
-
-
-When initially setting up your firewall, unless you have a test
-bench setup where you can configure your firewall host in a controlled
-environment, I strongly recommend you use the logging version of the
-commands and enable logging in the kernel. This will allow you to
-quickly identify problem areas and cure them without too much
-disruption. Even after the initial setup phase is complete, I
-recommend using the logging for of `deny' as it allows tracing of
-possible attacks and also modification of the firewall rules if your
-requirements alter.
-
-
-
-Note: If you use the logging versions of the
-accept command, it can generate large amounts
-of log data as one log line will be generated for every packet
-that passes through the firewall, so large ftp/http transfers,
-etc, will really slow the system down. It also increases the
-latencies on those packets as it requires more work to be done by
-the kernel before the packet can be passed on. syslogd with also
-start using up a lot more processor time as it logs all the extra
-data to disk, and it could quite easily fill the partition
-/var/log is located on.
-
-
-
-
-
-Synchronous Serial Transmission
-
-Synchronous serial transmission requires that the sender and
-receiver share a clock with one another, or that the sender provide
-a strobe or other timing signal so that the receiver knows when to
-"read" the next bit of the data. In most forms of serial
-Synchronous communication, if there is no data available at a given
-instant to transmit, a fill character must be sent instead so that
-data is always being transmitted. Synchronous communication is
-usually more efficient because only data bits are transmitted
-between sender and receiver, and synchronous communication can be
-more more costly if extra wiring and circuits are required to
-share a clock signal between the sender and receiver.
-
-A form of Synchronous transmission is used with printers and
-fixed disk devices in that the data is sent on one set of wires
-while a clock or strobe is sent on a different wire. Printers and
-fixed disk devices are not normally serial devices because most
-fixed disk interface standards send an entire word of data for each
-clock or strobe signal by using a separate wire for each bit of the
-word. In the PC industry, these are known as Parallel devices.
-
-The standard serial communications hardware in the PC does not
-support Synchronous operations. This mode is described here for
-comparison purposes only.
-
-
-
-
-Asynchronous Serial Transmission
-
-Asynchronous transmission allows data to be transmitted without
-the sender having to send a clock signal to the receiver. Instead,
-the sender and receiver must agree on timing parameters in advance
-and special bits are added to each word which are used to
-synchronize the sending and receiving units.
-
-When a word is given to the UART for Asynchronous transmissions,
-a bit called the "Start Bit" is added to the beginning of each word
-that is to be transmitted. The Start Bit is used to alert the
-receiver that a word of data is about to be sent, and to force the
-clock in the receiver into synchronization with the clock in the
-transmitter. These two clocks must be accurate enough to not
-have the frequency drift by more than 10% during the transmission
-of the remaining bits in the word. (This requirement was set in
-the days of mechanical teleprinters and is easily met by modern
-electronic equipment.)
-
-After the Start Bit, the individual bits of the word of data are
-sent, with the Least Significant Bit (LSB) being sent first. Each
-bit in the transmission is transmitted for exactly the same
-amount of time as all of the other bits, and the receiver "looks"
-at the wire at approximately halfway through the period assigned
-to each bit to determine if the bit is a "1" or a "0". For example,
-if it takes two seconds to send each bit, the receiver will examine
-the signal to determine if it is a "1" or a "0" after one second
-has passed, then it will wait two seconds and then examine the value
-of the next bit, and so on.
-
-The sender does not know when the receiver has "looked" at the
-value of the bit. The sender only knows when the clock says to
-begin transmitting the next bit of the word.
-
-When the entire data word has been sent, the transmitter may add
-a Parity Bit that the transmitter generates. The Parity Bit may
-be used by the receiver to perform simple error checking. Then at
-least one Stop Bit is sent by the transmitter.
-
-When the receiver has received all of the bits in the data word,
-it may check for the Parity Bits (both sender and receiver must
-agree on whether a Parity Bit is to be used), and then the receiver
-looks for a Stop Bit. If the Stop Bit does not appear when it is
-supposed to, the UART considers the entire word to be garbled and
-will report a Framing Error to the host processor when the data
-word is read. The usual cause of a Framing Error is that the sender
-and receiver clocks were not running at the same speed, or that
-the signal was interrupted.
-
-Regardless of whether the data was received correctly or not, the
-UART automatically discards the Start, Parity and Stop bits. If the
-sender and receiver are configured identically, these bits are not
-passed to the host.
-
-If another word is ready for transmission, the Start Bit for the new
-word can be sent as soon as the Stop Bit for the previous
-word has been sent.
-
-Because asynchronous data is "self synchronizing", if there is no
-data to transmit, the transmission line can be idle.
-
-
-
-
-Other UART Functions
-
-In addition to the basic job of converting data from parallel to
-serial for transmission and from serial to parallel on reception,
-a UART will usually provide additional circuits for signals that
-can be used to indicate the state of the transmission media, and
-to regulate the flow of data in the event that the remote device
-is not prepared to accept more data. For example, when the
-device connected to the UART is a modem, the modem may report the
-presence of a carrier on the phone line while the computer may be
-able to instruct the modem to reset itself or to not take calls
-by asserting or deasserting one more more of these extra signals.
-The function of each of these additional signals is defined in
-the EIA RS232-C standard.
-
-
-
-
-The RS232-C and V.24 Standards
-
-In most computer systems, the UART is connected to circuitry that
-generates signals that comply with the EIA RS232-C specification.
-There is also a CCITT standard named V.24 that mirrors the
-specifications included in RS232-C.
-
-
-
-RS232-C Bit Assignments (Marks and Spaces)
-
-In RS232-C, a value of "1" is called a "Mark" and a value of "0"
-is called a "Space". When a communication line is idle, the line
-is said to be "Marking", or transmitting continuous "1" values.
-
-The Start bit always has a value of "0" (a Space). The Stop Bit
-always has a value of "1" (a Mark). This means that there will
-always be a Mark (1) to Space (0) transition on the line at the
-start of every word, even when multiple word are
-transmitted back to back. This guarantees that sender and
-receiver can resynchronize their clocks regardless of the content
-of the data bits that are being transmitted.
-
-The idle time between Stop and Start bits does not have
-to be an exact multiple (including zero) of the bit rate of the
-communication link, but most UARTs are designed this way for
-simplicity.
-
-In RS232-C, the "Marking" signal (a "1") is represented by a voltage
-between -2 VDC and -12 VDC, and a "Spacing" signal (a "0") is
-represented by a voltage between 0 and +12 VDC. The transmitter
-is supposed to send +12 VDC or -12 VDC, and the receiver is supposed
-to allow for some voltage loss in long cables. Some transmitters
-in low power devices (like portable computers) sometimes use only
-+5 VDC and -5 VDC, but these values are still acceptable to a
-RS232-C receiver, provided that the cable lengths are short.
-
-
-
-
-RS232-C Break Signal
-
-RS232-C also specifies a signal called a "Break", which is caused
-by sending continuous Spacing values (no Start or Stop bits). When
-there is no electricity present on the data circuit, the line is
-considered to be sending "Break".
-
-The "Break" signal must be of a duration longer than the time
-it takes to send a complete byte plus Start, Stop and Parity bits.
-Most UARTs can distinguish between a Framing Error and a
-Break, but if the UART cannot do this, the Framing Error detection
-can be used to identify Breaks.
-
-In the days of teleprinters, when numerous printers around the
-country were wired in series (such as news services), any unit
-could cause a "Break" by temporarily opening the entire circuit
-so that no current flowed. This was used to allow a location with
-urgent news to interrupt some other location that was currently
-sending information.
-
-In modern systems there are two types of Break signals. If the
-Break is longer than 1.6 seconds, it is considered a "Modem Break",
-and some modems can be programmed to terminate the conversation and
-go on-hook or enter the modems' command mode when the modem detects
-this signal. If the Break is smaller than 1.6 seconds, it signifies
-a Data Break and it is up to the remote computer to respond to
-this signal. Sometimes this form of Break is used as an Attention
-or Interrupt signal and sometimes is accepted as a substitute for
-the ASCII CONTROL-C character.
-
-Marks and Spaces are also equivalent to "Holes" and "No Holes"
-in paper tape systems.
-
-Note that Breaks cannot be generated from paper tape or from any
-other byte value, since bytes are always sent with Start and Stop
-bit. The UART is usually capable of generating the continuous
-Spacing signal in response to a special command from the host
-processor.
-
-
-
-
-RS232-C DTE and DCE Devices
-
-The RS232-C specification defines two types of equipment: the Data
-Terminal Equipment (DTE) and the Data Carrier Equipment (DCE).
-Usually, the DTE device is the terminal (or computer), and the DCE
-is a modem. Across the phone line at the other end of a
-conversation, the receiving modem is also a DCE device and the
-computer that is connected to that modem is a DTE device. The DCE
-device receives signals on the pins that the DTE device transmits on,
-and vice versa.
-
-When two devices that are both DTE or both DCE must be connected
-together without a modem or a similar media translater between them,
-a NULL modem must be used. The NULL modem electrically re-arranges
-the cabling so that the transmitter output is connected to the
-receiver input on the other device, and vice versa. Similar
-translations are performed on all of the control signals so that
-each device will see what it thinks are DCE (or DTE) signals from
-the other device.
-
-The number of signals generated by the DTE and DCE devices are
-not symmetrical. The DTE device generates fewer signals for
-the DCE device than the DTE device receives from the DCE.
-
-
-
-
-RS232-C Pin Assignments
-
-The EIA RS232-C specification (and the ITU equivalent, V.24) calls
-for a twenty-five pin connector (usually a DB25) and defines the
-purpose of most of the pins in that connector.
-
-In the IBM Personal Computer and similar systems, a subset of
-RS232-C signals are provided via nine pin connectors (DB9).
-The signals that are not included on the PC connector deal mainly
-with synchronous operation, and this transmission mode is not
-supported by the UART that IBM selected for use in the IBM PC.
-
-Depending on the computer manufacturer, a DB25, a DB9, or
-both types of connector may be used for RS232-C communications.
-(The IBM PC also uses a DB25 connector for the parallel printer
-interface which causes some confusion.)
-
-Below is a table of the RS232-C signal assignments in the DB25
-and DB9 connectors.
-
-
-DB25 DB9 EIA CCITT Common Signal Description
-RS232-C IBM PC Circuit Circuit Name Source
-Pin Pin Symbol Symbol
-
-1 - AA 101 PG/FG --- Frame/Protective Ground
-2 3 BA 103 TD DTE Transmit Data
-3 2 BB 104 RD DCE Receive Data
-4 7 CA 105 RTS DTE Request to Send
-5 8 CB 106 CTS DCE Clear to Send
-6 6 CC 107 DSR DCE Data Set Ready
-7 5 AV 102 SG/GND --- Signal Ground
-8 1 CF 109 DCD/CD DCE Data Carrier Detect
-9 - - - - - Reserved for Test
-10 - - - - - Reserved for Test
-11 - - - - - Unassigned
-12 - CI 122 SRLSD DCE Sec. Recv. Line Signal Detector
-13 - SCB 121 SCTS DCE Secondary Clear To Send
-14 - SBA 118 STD DTE Secondary Transmit Data
-15 - DB 114 TSET DCE Trans. Sig. Element Timing
-16 - SBB 119 SRD DCE Secondary Received Data
-17 - DD 115 RSET DCE Receiver Signal Element Timing
-18 - - 141 LOOP DTE Local Loopback
-19 - SCA 120 SRS DTE Secondary Request to Send
-20 4 CD 108.2 DTR DTE Data Terminal Ready
-21 - - - RDL DTE Remote Digital Loopback
-22 9 CE 125 RI DCE Ring Indicator
-23 - CH 111 DSRS DTE Data Signal Rate Selector
-24 - DA 113 TSET DTE Trans. Sig. Element Timing
-25 - - 142 - DCE Test Mode
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Bits, Baud and Symbols
-
-Baud is a measurement of transmission speed in asynchronous
-communication. Because of advances in modem communication
-technology, this term is frequently misused when describing
-the data rates in newer devices.
-
-Traditionally, a Baud Rate represents the number of bits that are
-actually being sent over the media, not the amount of data
-that is actually moved from one DTE device to the other. The
-Baud count includes the overhead bits Start, Stop and Parity
-that are generated by the sending UART and removed by the
-receiving UART. This means that seven-bit words of data
-actually take 10 bits to be completely transmitted.
-Therefore, a modem capable of moving 300 bits per second from one
-place to another can normally only move 30 7-bit words if
-Parity is used and one Start and Stop bit are present.
-
-If 8-bit data words are used and Parity bits are also used, the
-data rate falls to 27.27 words per second, because it now
-takes 11 bits to send the eight-bit words, and the modem still
-only sends 300 bits per second.
-
-The formula for converting bytes per second into a baud rate
-and vice versa was simple until error-correcting modems
-came along. These modems receive the serial stream of bits
-from the UART in the host computer (even when internal modems
-are used the data is still frequently serialized) and converts
-the bits back into bytes. These bytes are then combined into
-packets and sent over the phone line using a Synchronous
-transmission method. This means that the Stop, Start, and Parity
-bits added by the UART in the DTE (the computer) were removed by
-the modem before transmission by the sending modem. When these
-bytes are received by the remote modem, the remote modem adds
-Start, Stop and Parity bits to the words, converts them to a
-serial format and then sends them to the receiving UART in the remote
-computer, who then strips the Start, Stop and Parity bits.
-
-The reason all these extra conversions are done is so that the
-two modems can perform error correction, which means that the
-receiving modem is able to ask the sending modem to resend a
-block of data that was not received with the correct checksum.
-This checking is handled by the modems, and the DTE devices are
-usually unaware that the process is occurring.
-
-By striping the Start, Stop and Parity bits, the additional bits of
-data that the two modems must share between themselves to perform
-error-correction are mostly concealed from the effective
-transmission rate seen by the sending and receiving DTE equipment.
-For example, if a modem sends ten 7-bit words to another modem
-without including the Start, Stop and Parity bits, the sending
-modem will be able to add 30 bits of its own information that
-the receiving modem can use to do error-correction without
-impacting the transmission speed of the real data.
-
-The use of the term Baud is further confused by modems that perform
-compression. A single 8-bit word passed over the telephone
-line might represent a dozen words that were transmitted to
-the sending modem. The receiving modem will expand the data back
-to its original content and pass that data to the receiving DTE.
-
-Modern modems also include buffers that allow the rate that
-bits move across the phone line (DCE to DCE) to be a different speed
-than the speed that the bits move between the DTE and DCE on both
-ends of the conversation. Normally the speed between the DTE and
-DCE is higher than the DCE to DCE speed because of the use of
-compression by the modems.
-
-Because the number of bits needed to describe a byte varied
-during the trip between the two machines plus the differing
-bits-per-seconds speeds that are used present on the DTE-DCE and
-DCE-DCE links, the usage of the term Baud to describe the
-overall communication speed causes problems and can misrepresent
-the true transmission speed. So Bits Per Second (bps) is the correct
-term to use to describe the transmission rate seen at the
-DCE to DCE interface and Baud or Bits Per Second are acceptable
-terms to use when a connection is made between two systems with a
-wired connection, or if a modem is in use that is not performing
-error-correction or compression.
-
-Modern high speed modems (2400, 9600, 14,400, and 19,200bps) in
-reality still operate at or below 2400 baud, or more accurately,
-2400 Symbols per second. High speed modem are able to encode more
-bits of data into each Symbol using a technique called Constellation
-Stuffing, which is why the effective bits per second rate of the
-modem is higher, but the modem continues to operate within the
-limited audio bandwidth that the telephone system provides.
-Modems operating at 28,800 and higher speeds have variable Symbol
-rates, but the technique is the same.
-
-
-
-
-The IBM Personal Computer UART
-
-Starting with the original IBM Personal Computer, IBM selected
-the National Semiconductor INS8250 UART for use in the IBM PC
-Parallel/Serial Adapter. Subsequent generations of compatible
-computers from IBM and other vendors continued to use the INS8250
-or improved versions of the National Semiconductor UART family.
-
-
-
-National Semiconductor UART Family Tree
-
-There have been several versions and subsequent generations of
-the INS8250 UART. Each major version is described below.
-
-
- INS8250 -> INS8250B
- \
- \
- \-> INS8250A -> INS82C50A
- \
- \
- \-> NS16450 -> NS16C450
- \
- \
- \-> NS16550 -> NS16550A -> PC16550D
-
-
-
-
-INS8250
-
-This part was used in the original IBM PC and
-IBM PC/XT. The original name for this part was the INS8250 ACE
-(Asynchronous Communications Element) and it is made from NMOS
-technology.
-
-The 8250 uses eight I/O ports and has a one-byte send and
-a one-byte receive buffer. This original UART has several
-race conditions and other flaws. The original IBM BIOS
-includes code to work around these flaws, but this made
-the BIOS dependent on the flaws being present, so subsequent
-parts like the 8250A, 16450 or 16550 could not be used in
-the original IBM PC or IBM PC/XT.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-INS8250-B
-
-
-This is the slower speed of the INS8250 made
-from NMOS technology. It contains the same problems as the original
-INS8250.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-INS8250A
-
-
-An improved version of the INS8250 using XMOS
-technology with various functional flaws corrected. The INS8250A
-was used initially in PC clone computers by vendors who used
-"clean" BIOS designs. Because of the corrections in the chip, this
-part could not be used with a BIOS compatible with the INS8250
-or INS8250B.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-INS82C50A
-
-
-This is a CMOS version (low power consumption)
-of the INS8250A and has similar functional characteristics.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-NS16450
-
-
-Same as NS8250A with improvements so it can be
-used with faster CPU bus designs. IBM used this part in the IBM AT
-and updated the IBM BIOS to no longer rely on the bugs in the
-INS8250.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-NS16C450
-
-
-This is a CMOS version (low power consumption)
-of the NS16450.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-NS16550
-
-
-Same as NS16450 with a 16-byte send and receive
-buffer but the buffer design was flawed and could not be reliably
-be used.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-NS16550A
-
-
-Same as NS16550 with the buffer flaws corrected.
-The 16550A and its successors have become the most popular UART
-design in the PC industry, mainly due it its ability to reliably
-handle higher data rates on operating systems with sluggish interrupt
-response times.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-NS16C552
-
-
-This component consists of two NS16C550A CMOS
-UARTs in a single package.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-PC16550D
-
-
-Same as NS16550A with subtle flaws corrected. This
-is revision D of the 16550 family and is the latest design available
-from National Semiconductor.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The NS16550AF and the PC16550D are the same thing
-
-National reorganized their part numbering system a few years ago,
-and the NS16550AFN no longer exists by that name. (If you
-have a NS16550AFN, look at the date code on the part, which is a
-four digit number that usually starts with a nine. The first two
-digits of the number are the year, and the last two digits are the
-week in that year when the part was packaged. If you have a
-NS16550AFN, it is probably a few years old.)
-
-The new numbers are like PC16550DV, with minor differences in the
-suffix letters depending on the package material and its shape.
-(A description of the numbering system can be found below.)
-
-It is important to understand that in some stores, you may pay
-$15(US) for a NS16550AFN made in 1990 and in the next bin are the
-new PC16550DN parts with minor fixes that National has made since the
-AFN part was in production, the PC16550DN was probably made in the
-past six months and it costs half (as low as $5(US) in volume) as
-much as the NS16550AFN because they are readily available.
-
-As the supply of NS16550AFN chips continues to shrink, the price will
-probably continue to increase until more people discover and accept
-that the PC16550DN really has the same function as the old part
-number.
-
-
-
-
-National Semiconductor Part Numbering System
-
-The older NSnnnnnrqp part numbers are now of the
-format PCnnnnnrgp.
-
-The "r" is the revision field. The current revision of
-the 16550 from National Semiconductor is "D".
-
-The "p" is the package-type field. The types are:
- "F" QFP (quad flat pack) L lead type
- "N" DIP (dual inline package) through hole straight lead type
- "V" LPCC (lead plastic chip carrier) J lead type
-
-
-The "g" is the product grade field. If an "I" precedes
-the package-type letter, it indicates an "industrial" grade part,
-which has higher specs than a standard part but not as high as
-Military Specification (Milspec) component. This is an optional field.
-
-So what we used to call a NS16550AFN (DIP Package) is now called a
-PC16550DN or PC16550DIN.
-
-
-
-
-
-Other Vendors and Similar UARTs
-
-Over the years, the 8250, 8250A, 16450 and 16550 have been licensed
-or copied by other chip vendors. In the case of the 8250, 8250A
-and 16450, the exact circuit (the "megacell") was licensed to many
-vendors, including Western Digital and Intel. Other vendors
-reverse-engineered the part or produced emulations that had similar
-behavior.
-
-In internal modems, the modem designer will frequently emulate the
-8250A/16450 with the modem microprocessor, and the emulated UART will
-frequently have a hidden buffer consisting of several hundred bytes.
-Because of the size of the buffer, these emulations can be as
-reliable as a 16550A in their ability to handle high speed data.
-However, most operating systems will still report that
-the UART is only a 8250A or 16450, and may not make effective use
-of the extra buffering present in the emulated UART unless special
-drivers are used.
-
-Some modem makers are driven by market forces to abandon a design
-that has hundreds of bytes of buffer and instead use a 16550A UART
-so that the product will compare favorably in market comparisons
-even though the effective performance may be lowered by this action.
-
-A common misconception is that all parts with "16550A" written on
-them are identical in performance. There are differences, and in
-some cases, outright flaws in most of these 16550A clones.
-
-When the NS16550 was developed, the National Semiconductor obtained
-several patents on the design and they also limited licensing, making
-it harder for other vendors to provide a chip with similar features.
-Because of the patents, reverse-engineered designs and emulations
-had to avoid infringing the claims covered by the patents.
-Subsequently, these copies almost never perform exactly the same as
-the NS16550A or PC16550D, which are the parts most computer and
-modem makers want to buy but are sometimes unwilling to pay the
-price required to get the genuine part.
-
-Some of the differences in the clone 16550A parts are unimportant,
-while others can prevent the device from being used at all with a
-given operating system or driver. These differences may show up
-when using other drivers, or when particular combinations of events
-occur that were not well tested or considered in the Windows driver.
-This is because most modem vendors and 16550-clone makers use the
-Microsoft drivers from Windows for Workgroups 3.11 and the Microsoft
-MSD utility as the primary tests for compatibility with the
-NS16550A. This over-simplistic criteria means that if a different
-operating system is used, problems could appear due to subtle
-differences between the clones and genuine components.
-
-National Semiconductor has made available a program named COMTEST
-that performs compatibility tests independent of any OS drivers.
-It should be remembered that the purpose of this type of program is
-to demonstrate the flaws in the products of the competition, so the
-program will report major as well as extremely subtle differences in
-behavior in the part being tested.
-
-In a series of tests performed by the author of this document in
-1994, components made by National Semiconductor, TI, StarTech, and
-CMD as well as megacells and emulations embedded in internal modems
-were tested with COMTEST. A difference count for some of these
-components is listed below. Because these tests were performed in
-1994, they may not reflect the current performance of the given
-product from a vendor.
-
-It should be noted that COMTEST normally aborts when an excessive
-number or certain types of problems have been detected. As part of
-this testing, COMTEST was modified so that it would not abort no
-matter how many differences were encountered.
-
-
-Vendor Part number Errors aka "differences" reported
-National (PC16550DV) 0 *
-
-National (NS16550AFN) 0
-
-National (NS16C552V) 0 *
-
-TI (TL16550AFN) 3
-
-CMD (16C550PE) 19
-
-StarTech (ST16C550J) 23
-
-Rockwell reference modem
- with internal 16550 or an
- emulation (RC144DPi/C3000-25) 117
-
-Sierra modem with an internal
- 16550 (SC11951/SC11351) 91
-
-
-It is important to understand that a simple count of differences
-from COMTEST does not reveal a lot about what differences are
-important and which are not. For example, about half of the
-differences reported in the two modems listed above that have
-internal UARTs were caused by the clone UARTs not supporting
-five- and six-bit character modes. The real 16550, 16450, and
-8250 UARTs all support these modes and COMTEST checks the
-functionality of these modes so over fifty differences are
-reported. However, almost no modern modem supports five- or
-six-bit characters, particularly those with error-correction
-and compression capabilities. This means that the differences
-related to five- and six-bit character modes can be discounted.
-
-Many of the differences COMTEST reports have to do with timing. In
-many of the clone designs, when the host reads from one port, the
-status bits in some other port may not update in the same amount
-of time (some faster, some slower) as a real NS16550AFN
-and COMTEST looks for these differences. This means that the number
-of differences can be misleading in that one device may only have
-one or two differences but they are extremely serious, and some
-other device that updates the status registers faster or slower
-than the reference part (that would probably never affect the
-operation of a properly written driver) could have dozens of
-differences reported.
-
-* To date, the author of this document has not found any non-National
-parts that report zero differences using the COMTEST program. It
-should also be noted that National has had five versions of the
-16550 over the years and the newest parts behave a bit differently
-than the classic NS16550AFN that is considered the benchmark for
-functionality. COMTEST appears to turn a blind eye to the
-differences within the National product line and reports no errors
-on the National parts (except for the original 16550) even when
-there are official erratas that describe bugs in the A, B and C
-revisions of the parts, so this bias in COMTEST must be taken into
-account.
-
-COMTEST can be used as a screening tool to alert the administrator
-to the presence of potentially incompatible components
-that might cause problems or have to be handled as a special case.
-
-If you run COMTEST on a 16550 that is in a modem or a modem is
-attached to the serial port, you need to first issue a ATE0&W
-command to the modem so that the modem will not echo any of the test
-characters. If you forget to do this, COMTEST will report at least
-this one difference:
-
-This is a user process PPP software package. Normally, PPP is
-implemented as a part of the kernel (e.g. as managed by pppd) and
-it is thus somewhat hard to debug and/or modify its behavior. However,
-in this implementation PPP is done as a user process with the help of
-the tunnel device driver (tun).
-
-
-
-In essence, this means that rather than running a PPP daemon, the ppp
-program can be run as and when desired. No PPP interface needs to be
-compiled into the kernel, as the program can use the generic tunnel
-device to get data into and out of the kernel.
-
-From here on out, user ppp will be referred to simply as ppp unless a
-distinction needs to be made between it and any other PPP client/server
-software such as pppd. Unless otherwise stated, all commands in this
-section should be executed as root.
-
-
-
-Before you start
-
-This document assumes you are in roughly this position:
-
-You have an account with an Internet Service Provider (ISP) which lets you
-use PPP. Further, you have a modem (or other device) connected and
-configured correctly which allows you to connect to your ISP.
-
-You are going to need the following information to hand:
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Your ISPs phone number(s).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Your login name and password. This can be either a regular
-unix style login/password pair, or a PPP PAP or CHAP
-login/password pair.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The IP address of your ISP's gateway. The gateway is the
-machine to which you will connect and will
-be set up as your default route. If your ISP hasn't
-given you this number, don't worry. We can make one up and
-your ISP's PPP server will tell us when we connect.
-
-This number is known from now on as HISADDR.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Your ISP's netmask setting. Again, if your ISP hasn't given
-you this information, you can safely use a netmask of
-255.255.255.0.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The IP addresses of one or more nameservers. Normally, you
-will be given two IP numbers. You MUST have this
-information unless you run your own nameserver.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-If your ISP allocates you a static IP address and hostname
-then you will need this information too. If not, you will need
-to know from what range of IP addresses your allocated IP address
-will belong. If you haven't been given this range, don't worry.
-You can configure PPP to accept any IP number (as explained later).
-
-
-
-
-
-If you do not have any of the required information, contact your ISP
-and make sure they provide it to you.
-
-
-
-
-Building a ppp ready kernel
-
-As the description states, ``ppp'' uses the kernel ``tun'' device.
-It is necessary to make sure that your kernel has support for this
-device compiled in.
-
-To check this, go to your kernel compile directory (/sys/i386/conf
-or /sys/pc98/conf) and examine your kernel configuration file.
-It needs to have the line
-
-
-
- pseudo-device tun 1
-
-
-
-in it somewhere. The stock GENERIC kernel has this as standard, so
-if you have not installed a custom kernel or you do not have a /sys
-directory, you do not have to change anything.
-
-If your kernel configuration file does not have this line in it, or
-you need to configure more than one tun device (for example, if
-you are setting up a server and could have 16 dialup ppp connections
-at any one time then you will need to use ``16'' instead of ``1''),
-then you should add the line, re-compile, re-install and boot the new
-kernel. Please refer to the
-
-section for more information on kernel configuration.
-
-You can check how many tunnel devices your current kernel has by
-typing the following:
-
-
-
- # ifconfig -a
- tun0: flags=8051<UP,POINTOPOINT,RUNNING,MULTICAST> mtu 1500
- inet 200.10.100.1 --> 203.10.100.24 netmask 0xffffffff
- tun1: flags=8050<POINTOPOINT,RUNNING,MULTICAST> mtu 576
- tun2: flags=8051<UP,POINTOPOINT,RUNNING,MULTICAST> mtu 1500
- inet 203.10.100.1 --> 203.10.100.20 netmask 0xffffffff
- tun3: flags=8050<POINTOPOINT,RUNNING,MULTICAST> mtu 1500
-
-
-
-which in this case shows four tunnel devices, two of which are
-currently configured and being used.
-
-If you have a kernel without the tun device, and you can not
-rebuild it for some reason, all is not lost. You should be
-able to dynamically load the code. Refer to the appropriate
-modload(8) and lkm(4) pages for further details.
-
-You may also wish to take this opportunity to configure a firewall.
-Details can be found in the
-section.
-
-
-
-
-Check the tun device
-
-Most users will only require one ``tun'' device (tun0). If you have
-used more (i.e., a number other than `1' in the pseudo-device line
-in the kernel configuration file) then alter all references to ``tun0''
-below to reflect whichever device number you are using.
-
-The easiest way to make sure that the tun0 device is configured correctly
-is to re-make it. To do this, execute the following commands:
-
-
-
- # cd /dev
- # ./MAKEDEV tun0
-
-
-
-If you require 16 tunnel devices in your kernel, you will need to
-create more than just tun0:
-
-
-
- # cd /dev
- # ./MAKEDEV tun15
-
-
-
-Also, to confirm that the kernel is configured correctly,
-the following command should give the indicated output:
-
-
-
- $ ifconfig tun0
- tun0: flags=8050<POINTOPOINT,RUNNING,MULTICAST> mtu 1500
- $
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Name Resolution Configuration
-
-The resolver is the part of the system that turns IP addresses
-into hostnames and vice versa. It can be configured to look for
-maps that describe IP to hostname mappings in one of two places.
-The first is a file called /etc/hosts (man 5 hosts).
-The second is the Internet Domain Name Service (DNS), a distributed
-data base, the discussion of which is beyond the scope of this document.
-
-This section describes briefly how to configure your resolver.
-
-The resolver is a set of system calls that do the name mappings, but
-you have to tell them where to find their information. You do
-this by first editing the file /etc/host.conf. Do
-not call this file /etc/hosts.conf (note the extra
-``s'') as the results can be confusing.
-
-
-
-Edit the /etc/host.conf file
-
-This file should contain the following two lines:
-
-
-
- hosts
- bind
-
-
-which instructs the resolver to first look in the file
-/etc/hosts, and then to consult the DNS if the
-name was not found.
-
-
-
-
-Edit the /etc/hosts(5) file
-
-This file should contain the IP addresses and names of machines on your
-network. At a bare minimum it should contain entries for the machine
-which will be running ppp. Assuming that your machine is called
-foo.bar.com with the IP address 10.0.0.1, /etc/hosts should
-contain:
-
-
-
- 127.0.0.1 localhost
- 10.0.0.1 foo.bar.com foo
-
-
-
-The first line defines the alias ``localhost'' as a synonym for the
-current machine. Regardless of your own IP address, the IP address for
-this line should always be 127.0.0.1. The second line maps the name
-``foo.bar.com'' (and the shorthand ``foo'') to the IP address 10.0.0.1.
-
-If your provider allocates you a static IP address and name, then use
-these in place of the 10.0.0.1 entry.
-
-
-
-
-Edit the /etc/resolv.conf file
-
-/etc/resolv.conf tells the resolver how to behave. If you are
-running your own DNS, you may leave this file empty. Normally, you will
-need to enter the following line(s):
-
-
-
- nameserver x.x.x.x
- nameserver y.y.y.y
- domain bar.com
-
-
-
-The x.x.x.x and y.y.y.y addresses are those given
-to you by your ISP. Add as many ``nameserver'' lines as your ISP
-provides. The ``domain'' line defaults to your hostname's domain, and
-is probably unnecessary. Refer to the resolv.conf manual page for details
-of other possible entries in this file.
-
-
-
-
-
-PPP Configuration
-
-Both user ppp and pppd (the kernel level implementation of PPP)
-use configuration files located in the /etc/ppp directory.
-The sample configuration files provided are a good reference for
-user ppp, so don't delete them.
-
-Configuring ppp requires that you edit a number of files, depending
-on your requirements. What you put in them depends to some extent
-on whether your ISP allocates IP addresses statically (i.e., you get
-given one IP address, and always use that one) or dynamically (i.e.,
-your IP address can be different for each PPP session).
-
-
-
-PPP and Static IP addresses
-
-
-You will need to create a configuration file called
-/etc/ppp/ppp.conf. It should look similar to the example
-below. Note that lines that end in a ``:'' start in the first column,
-all other lines should be indented as shown using spaces or tabs.
-
-
-
-1 default:
-2 set device /dev/cuaa0
-3 set speed 115200
-4 set dial "ABORT BUSY ABORT NO\\sCARRIER TIMEOUT 5 \"\" ATE1Q0 OK-AT-OK
-\\dATDT\\T TIMEOUT 40 CONNECT"
-5 provider:
-6 set phone "(0123) 456 7890"
-7 set login "TIMEOUT 10 gin:-BREAK-gin: foo word: bar col: ppp"
-8 set timeout 300
-9 deny lqr
-10 set ifaddr x.x.x.x y.y.y.y
-11 delete ALL
-12 add 0 0 HISADDR
-
-
-Do not include the line numbers, they are just for reference in
-this discussion.
-
-
-
-Line 1:
-
-Identifies the default entry. Commands in this entry are
-executed automatically when ppp is run.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 2:
-
-
-Identifies the device to which the modem is connected.
-COM1: is /dev/cuaa0 and COM2: is /dev/cuaa1.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 3:
-
-
-Sets the speed you want to connect at. If 115200 doesn't
-work (it should with any reasonably new modem), try 38400
-instead.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 4:
-
-
-The dial string. User ppp uses an expect-send syntax similar
-to the chat(8) program. Refer to the manual page
-for information on the features of this language.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 5:
-
-
-Identifies an entry for a provider called ``provider''.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 6:
-
-
-Sets the phone number for this provider. Multiple phone
-numbers may be specified using the ``:'' or ``|'' character as
-a separator. The difference between these spearators is
-described in the ppp manual page. To summarize, if you want
-to rotate through the numbers, use the ``:''. If you want to
-always attempt to dial the first number first and only use
-the other numbers if the first number fails, use the ``|''.
-Always quote the entire set of phone numbers as shown.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 7:
-
-
-The login string is of the same chat-like syntax as the dial
-string. In this example, the string works for a service whose
-login session looks like this:
-
-
-
- J. Random Provider
- login: foo
- password: bar
- protocol: ppp
-
-
-
-You will need to alter this script to suit your own needs.
-If you're using PAP or CHAP, there will be no login at this
-point, so your login string can be left blank. See
-
-for further details.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 8:
-
-
-Sets the default timeout (in seconds) for the connection.
-Here, the connection will be closed automatically after
-300 seconds of inactivity. If you never want to timeout,
-set this value to zero.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 9:
-
-
-Ppp can be configured to exchange Link Quality Report (LQR)
-packets. These packets describe how good the physical link
-is. Ppp's LQR strategy is to close the connection when a
-number of these packets are missed. This is useful when
-you have a direct serial link to another machine and the
-DSR modem signal is not available to indicate that the line
-is up. When data saturates the line, LQR packets are
-sometimes ``missed'', causing ppp to close the connection
-prematurely. Refusing to negotiate lqr is sometimes prudent
-(if you are going through a modem) as it avoids this whole
-mess. By default, ppp will not attempt to negotiate LQR,
-but will accept LQR negotiation from the peer.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 10:
-
-
-Sets the interface addresses. The string x.x.x.x should be
-replaced by the IP address that your provider has allocated
-to you. The string y.y.y.y should be replaced by the IP
-address that your ISP indicated for their gateway (the
-machine to which you connect). If your ISP hasn't given you
-a gateway address, use 10.0.0.2/0. If you need to
-use a ``guessed'' address, make sure that you create an entry
-in /etc/ppp/ppp.linkup as per the instructions for
-.
-If this line is omitted, ppp cannot run in or
- mode.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 11:
-
-
-Deletes all existing routing table entries for the acquired
-tun device. This should not normally be necessary, but will
-make sure that PPP is starting with a clean bill of health.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 12:
-
-
-Adds a default route to your ISPs gateway. The special
-word HISADDR is replaced with the gateway address
-specified on line 9. It is important that this line appears
-after line 9, otherwise HISADDR will not yet be
-initialized.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-It is not necessary to add an entry to ppp.linkup when you have
-a static IP address as your routing table entries are already correct
-before you connect. You may however wish to create an entry to invoke
-programs after connection. This is explained later with the sendmail
-example.
-
-Example configuration files can be found in the /etc/ppp
-directory.
-
-
-
-
-PPP and Dynamic IP addresses
-
-
-If your service provider does not assign static IP numbers,
-ppp can be configured to negotiate the local and
-remote addresses. This is done by "guessing" an IP number
-and allowing ppp to set it up correctly using the IP Configuration
-Protocol (IPCP) after connecting. The ppp.conf configuration
-is the same as , with the following change:
-
-
-
-10 set ifaddr 10.0.0.1/0 10.0.0.2/0 255.255.255.0
-
-
-
-Again, do not include the line numbers, they are just for reference in
-this discussion. Indentation of at least one space is required.
-
-
-
-Line 10:
-
-The number after the ``/'' character is the number of bits of
-the address that ppp will insist on. You may wish to use
-IP numbers more appropriate to your circumstances, but the
-above example will almost always work. If it fails, you may
-be able to defeat some broken ppp implementations by
-supplying an additional 0.0.0.0 argument:
-
-
-
- set ifaddr 10.0.0.1/0 10.0.0.2/0 255.255.255.0 0.0.0.0
-
-
-
-This tells ppp to negotiate using address 0.0.0.0
-rather than 10.0.0.1. Do not use 0.0.0.0/0
-as the first argument to set ifaddr as it prevents
-ppp from setting up an initial route in and
- mode.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-You will also need to create an entry in /etc/ppp/ppp.linkup.
-Ppp.linkup is used after a connection has been established. At
-this point, ppp will know what IP addresses should really be
-used. The following entry will delete the existing bogus routes, and
-create correct ones:
-
-
-
-1 provider:
-2 delete ALL
-3 add 0 0 HISADDR
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 1:
-
-On establishing a connection, ppp will look for an entry in
-ppp.linkup according to the following rules: First,
-try to match the same label as we used in ppp.conf.
-If that fails, look for an entry for the IP number of our
-gateway. This entry is a four-octet IP style label. If
-we still haven't found an entry, look for the MYADDR
-entry.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 2:
-
-
-This line tells ppp to delete all existing routes for the
-acquired tun interface (except the direct route entry).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 3:
-
-
-This line tells ppp to add a default route that points to
-HISADDR. HISADDR will be replaced with
-the IP number of the gateway as negotiated in the IPCP.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-See the pmdemand entry in the files /etc/ppp/ppp.conf.sample and
-/etc/ppp/ppp.linkup.sample for a detailed example.
-
-
-
-
-Receiving incoming calls with PPP
-
-This section describes setting up ppp in a server role.
-
-When you configure ppp to receive incoming calls, you
-must decide whether you wish to forward packets for just
-ppp connections, for all interfaces, or not at all.
-To forward for just ppp connections, include the line
-
-
-
- enable proxy
-
-
-
-in your ppp.conf file. If you wish to forward packets on all
-interfaces, use the
-
-
-
- gateway=YES
-
-
-
-option in /etc/rc.conf (this file used to be called
-/etc/sysconfig).
-
-
-
-Which getty?
-
-
-provides a good description on enabling dialup services using getty.
-
-An alternative to getty is
-mgetty,
-a smarter version of getty designed with dialup lines in mind.
-
-The advantages of using mgetty is that it actively talks to
-modems, meaning if port is turned off in /etc/ttys then
-your modem won't answer the phone.
-
-Later versions of mgetty (from 0.99beta onwards) also support the
-automatic detection of PPP streams, allowing your clients script-less
-access to your server.
-
-Refer to for more
-information on mgetty.
-
-
-
-
-PPP permissions
-
-PPP must normally be run as user id 0. If however you wish to allow
-ppp to run in server mode as a normal user by executing ppp as described
-below, that user must be given permission to run ppp by adding them to
-the network group in /etc/group.
-
-
-
-
-Setting up a PPP shell for dynamic-IP users
-
-Create a file called /etc/ppp/ppp-shell containing the
-following:
-
-
-
- #!/bin/sh
- IDENT=`echo $0 | sed -e 's/^.*-\(.*\)$/\1/'`
- CALLEDAS="$IDENT"
- TTY=`tty`
-
- if [ x$IDENT = xdialup ]; then
- IDENT=`basename $TTY`
- fi
-
- echo "PPP for $CALLEDAS on $TTY"
- echo "Starting PPP for $IDENT"
-
- exec /usr/sbin/ppp -direct $IDENT
-
-
-
-This script should be executable. Now make a symbolic link called
-ppp-dialup to this script using the following commands:
-
-
-
- # ln -s /etc/ppp/ppp-shell /etc/ppp/ppp-dialup
-
-
-
-You should use this script as the shell for all your dialup
-ppp users. This is an example from /etc/password
-for a dialup PPP user with username pchilds. (remember don't directly
-edit the password file, use vipw)
-
-
-
- pchilds:*:1011:300:Peter Childs PPP:/home/ppp:/etc/ppp/ppp-dialup
-
-
-
-Create a /home/ppp directory that is world readable
-containing the following 0 byte files
-
-
-
- -r--r--r-- 1 root wheel 0 May 27 02:23 .hushlogin
- -r--r--r-- 1 root wheel 0 May 27 02:22 .rhosts
-
-
-
-which prevents /etc/motd from being displayed.
-
-
-
-
-Setting up a PPP shell for static-IP users
-
-Create the ppp-shell file as above and for each account with
-statically assigned IPs create a symbolic link to ppp-shell.
-
-For example, if you have three dialup customers fred, sam, and mary,
-that you route class C networks for, you would type the following:
-
-
-
- # ln -s /etc/ppp/ppp-shell /etc/ppp/ppp-fred
- # ln -s /etc/ppp/ppp-shell /etc/ppp/ppp-sam
- # ln -s /etc/ppp/ppp-shell /etc/ppp/ppp-mary
-
-
-
-Each of these users dialup accounts should have their shell set
-to the symbolic link created above. (ie. mary's shell should be
-/etc/ppp/ppp-mary).
-
-
-
-
-Setting up ppp.conf for dynamic-IP users
-
-The /etc/ppp/ppp.conf file should contain something along
-the lines of
-
-
-
- default:
- set debug phase lcp chat
- set timeout 0
-
- ttyd0:
- set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.100.20 255.255.255.255
- enable proxy
-
- ttyd1:
- set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.100.21 255.255.255.255
- enable proxy
-
-
-
-Note the indenting is important.
-
-The default: section is loaded for each session. For each
-dialup line enabled in /etc/ttys create an entry similar
-to the one for ttyd0: above. Each line should get a unique
-IP from your pool of ip address for dynamic users.
-
-
-
-
-Setting up ppp.conf for static-IP users
-
-Along with the contents of the sample /etc/ppp/ppp.conf
-above you should add a section for each of the statically assigned
-dialup users. We will continue with our fred, sam, and mary example.
-
-
-
- fred:
- set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.101.1 255.255.255.255
-
- sam:
- set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.102.1 255.255.255.255
-
- mary:
- set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.103.1 255.255.255.255
-
-
-
-The file /etc/ppp/ppp.linkup should also contain routing
-information for each static IP user if required. The line below
-would add a route for the 203.14.101.0 class C via
-the client's ppp link.
-
-
-
- fred:
- add 203.14.101.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 HISADDR
-
- sam:
- add 203.14.102.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 HISADDR
-
- mary:
- add 203.14.103.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 HISADDR
-
-
-
-
-
-
-More on mgetty, AutoPPP, and MS extensions
-
-
-
-Mgetty and AutoPPP
-
-
-Configuring and compiling mgetty with the AUTO_PPP option enabled
-allows mgetty to detect the LCP phase of PPP connections and automatically
-spawn off a ppp shell. However, since the default login/password sequence
-does not occur it is necessary to authenticate users using either PAP
-or CHAP.
-
-This section assumes the user has successfully configured, compiled, and
-installed a version of mgetty with the AUTO_PPP option (v0.99beta or later)
-
-Make sure your /usr/local/etc/mgetty+sendfax/login.config file
-has the following in it:
-
-
-
- /AutoPPP/ - - /etc/ppp/ppp-pap-dialup
-
-
-
-This will tell mgetty to run the ppp-pap-dialup script for
-detected PPP connections.
-
-Create a file called /etc/ppp/ppp-pap-dialup containing the
-following (the file should be executable):
-
-
-
- #!/bin/sh
- TTY=`tty`
- IDENT=`basename $TTY`
- exec /usr/sbin/ppp -direct pap$IDENT
-
-
-
-For each dialup line enabled in /etc/ttys create a corresponding
-entry in /etc/ppp/ppp.conf. This will happily co-exist with
-the definitions we created above.
-
-
-
- papttyd0:
- enable pap
- set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.100.20 255.255.255.255
- enable proxy
-
- papttyd1:
- enable pap
- set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.100.21 255.255.255.255
- enable proxy
-
-
-
-Each user logging in with this method will need to have a username/password
-in /etc/ppp/ppp.secret file, or alternatively add the
-
-
-
- enable passwdauth
-
-
-
-option to authenticate users via pap from the /etc/passwordd
-file. (*)
-
-(*) Note this option only available in 2.2-961014-SNAP or later, or by
-getting the updated ppp code for 2.1.x. (see MS extensions below for details)
-
-
-
-
-MS extentions
-
-From 2.2-961014-SNAP onwards it is possible to allow the automatic
-negotiation of DNS and NetBIOS name servers with clients supporting
-this feature (namely Win95/NT clients). See RFC1877 for more details
-on the protocol.
-
-An example of enabling these extensions in your
-/etc/ppp/ppp.conf file is illustrated below.
-
-
-
- default:
- set debug phase lcp chat
- set timeout 0
- enable msext
- set ns 203.14.100.1 203.14.100.2
- set nbns 203.14.100.5
-
-
-
-This will tell the clients the primary and secondary
-name server addresses, and a netbios nameserver host.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-PAP and CHAP authentication
-
-
-Some ISPs set their system up so that the authentication part of
-your connection is done using either of the PAP or CHAP authentication
-mechanisms. If this is the case, your ISP will not give a login:
-prompt when you connect, but will start talking PPP immediately.
-
-PAP is less secure than CHAP, but security is not normally an issue
-here as passwords, although being sent as plain text with PAP, are being
-transmitted down a serial line only. There's not much room for hackers
-to "eavesdrop".
-
-Referring back to the or sections, the following alterations
-must be made:
-
-
-
-7 set login
-.....
-13 set authname MyUserName
-14 set authkey MyPassword
-
-
-
-As always, do not include the line numbers, they are just for reference
-in this discussion. Indentation of at least one space is required.
-
-
-
-Line 7:
-
-Your ISP will not normally require that you log into the
-server if you're using PAP or CHAP. You must therefore
-disable your "set login" string.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 13:
-
-
-This line specifies your PAP/CHAP user name. You will need
-to insert the correct value for MyUserName.
-
-
-
-
-Line 14:
-
-
-This line specifies your PAP/CHAP password. You will need
-to insert the correct value for MyPassword.
-You may want to add an additional line
-
-15 accept PAP
-
-
-or
-
-15 accept CHAP
-
-
-to make it obvious that this is the intention, but PAP
-and CHAP are accepted by default.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-NOTE: Your authkey will be logged if you have
-command logging turned on (set log +command). Care should be
-taken when deciding the ppp log file permissions.
-
-
-
-
-Changing your ppp configuration on the fly
-
-It is possible to talk to the ppp program while it is running in
-the background, but only if a suitable password has been set up.
-
-By default, ppp will listen to a TCP port of 3000 + tunno,
-where tunno is the number of the tun device acquired, however,
-if a password for the local machine is not set up in
-/etc/ppp/ppp.secret, no server connection will be created.
-To set your password, put the following line in
-/etc/ppp/ppp.secret:
-
-
-
-foo MyPassword
-
-
-
-where foo is your local hostname (run hostname -s to
-determine the correct name), and MyPassword is the unencrypted
-password that you wish to use. /etc/ppp/ppp.secret should
-NOT be accessable by anyone without user id 0. This means that
-/, /etc and /etc/ppp should not be writable,
-and ppp.secret should be owned by user id 0 and have permissions
-0600.
-
-It is also possible to select a specific port number or to have ppp listen
-to a local unix domain socket rather than to a TCP socket. Refer to the
-set socket command in manual page for further details.
-
-Once a socket has been set up, the pppctl(8) program may be used
-in scripts that wish to manipulate the running program.
-
-
-
-
-
-Final system configuration
-
-
-You now have PPP configured, but there are a few more things to
-do before it is ready to work. They all involve editing the
-/etc/rc.conf file (was /etc/sysconfig).
-
-Working from the top down in this file, make sure the ``hostname='' line
-is set, e.g.:
-
-
-
- hostname=foo.bar.com
-
-
-
-If your ISP has supplied you with a static IP address and name, it's
-probably best that you use this name as your host name.
-
-Look for the network_interfaces variable. If you want to configure
-your system to dial your ISP on demand, make sure the tun0 device is
-added to the list, otherwise remove it.
-
-
-
- network_interfaces="lo0 tun0"
- ifconfig_tun0=
-
-
-
-Note, the ifconfig_tun0 variable should be empty, and
-a file called /etc/start_if.tun0 should be created. This file
-should contain the line
-
-
-
- ppp -auto mysystem
-
-
-
-This script is executed at network configuration time, starting
-your ppp daemon in automatic mode. If you have a LAN for which
-this machine is a gateway, you may also wish to use the
- switch. Refer to the manual page for further
-details.
-
-Set the router program to ``NO'' with the line
-
-
-
- router_enable=NO (/etc/rc.conf)
- router=NO (/etc/sysconfig)
-
-
-
-It is important that the routed daemon is not started
-(it's started by default) as routed tends to delete the default
-routing table entries created by ppp.
-
-It is probably worth your while ensuring that the ``sendmail_flags'' line
-does not include the ``-q'' option, otherwise sendmail will attempt to do
-a network lookup every now and then, possibly causing your machine to dial
-out. You may try:
-
-
-
- sendmail_flags="-bd"
-
-
-
-The upshot of this is that you must force sendmail to re-examine the
-mail queue whenever the ppp link is up by typing:
-
-
-
- # /usr/sbin/sendmail -q
-
-
-
-You may wish to use the !bg command in ppp.linkup to do this
-automatically:
-
-
-
-1 provider:
-2 delete ALL
-3 add 0 0 HISADDR
-4 !bg sendmail -bd -q30m
-
-
-
-If you don't like this, it is possible to set up a "dfilter" to block
-SMTP traffic. Refer to the sample files for further details.
-
-All that is left is to reboot the machine.
-
-After rebooting, you can now either type
-
-
-
- # ppp
-
-
-
-and then ``dial provider'' to start the PPP session, or, if you
-want ppp to establish sessions automatically when there is outbound
-traffic (and you haven't created the start_if.tun0 script), type
-
-
-
- # ppp -auto provider
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Summary
-
-To recap, the following steps are necessary when setting up ppp
-for the first time:
-
-Client side:
-
-
-
-
-
-Ensure that the tun device is built into your kernel.
-
-
-
-Ensure that the tunX device file is available in the
-/dev directory.
-
-
-
-Create an entry in /etc/ppp/ppp.conf. The
-pmdemand example should suffice for most
-ISPs.
-
-
-
-If you have a dynamic IP address, create an entry in
-/etc/ppp/ppp.linkup.
-
-
-
-Update your /etc/rc.conf (or sysconfig) file.
-
-
-
-Create a start_if.tun0 script if you require demand
-dialing.
-
-
-
-
-
-Server side:
-
-
-
-Ensure that the tun device is built into your kernel.
-
-
-
-Ensure that the tunX device file is available in the
-/dev directory.
-
-
-
-Create an entry in /etc/passwd (using the vipw(8)
-program).
-
-
-
-Create a profile in this users home directory that
-runs ``ppp -direct direct-server'' or similar.
-
-
-
-Create an entry in /etc/ppp/ppp.conf. The
-direct-server example should suffice.
-
-
-
-Create an entry in /etc/ppp/ppp.linkup.
-
-
-
-Update your /etc/rc.conf (or sysconfig) file.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Acknowledgments
-
-This section of the handbook was last updated on Sun Sep 7, 1997
-by &a.brian;
-
-Thanks to the following for their input, comments & suggestions:
-
-&a.nik;
-
-&a.dirkvangulik;
-
-&a.pjc;
-
-
-
-
-
-Setting up Kernel PPP
-
-Contributed by &a.gena;.
-
-Before you start setting up PPP on your machine make
-sure that pppd is located in /usr/sbin and directory /etc/ppp
-exists.
-
-pppd can work in two modes:
-
-
-
- as a "client" , i.e. you want to connect your machine to outside
-world via PPP serial connection or modem line.
-
-
-
-
- as a "server" , i.e. your machine is located on the network and
-used to connect other computers using PPP.
-
-
-
-
-In both cases you will need to set up an options file (/etc/ppp/options
-or ~/.ppprc if you have more then one user on your machine that uses
-PPP).
-
-You also will need some modem/serial software ( preferably kermit )
-so you can dial and establish connection with remote host.
-
-
-
-Working as a PPP client
-
-I used the following /etc/ppp/options to connect to CISCO terminal
-server PPP line.
-crtscts # enable hardware flow control
-modem # modem control line
-noipdefault # remote PPP server must supply your IP address.
- # if the remote host doesn't send your IP during IPCP
- # negotiation , remove this option
-passive # wait for LCP packets
-domain ppp.foo.com # put your domain name here
-
-:<remote_ip> # put the IP of remote PPP host here
- # it will be used to route packets via PPP link
- # if you didn't specified the noipdefault option
- # change this line to <local_ip>:<remote_ip>
-
-defaultroute # put this if you want that PPP server will be your
- # default router
-
-
-To connect:
-
-
-
- Dial to the remote host using kermit ( or other modem program )
-enter your user name and password ( or whatever is needed to enable PPP
-on the remote host )
-
-
-
-
- Exit kermit. ( without hanging up the line )
-
-
-
-
- enter:
-/usr/src/usr.sbin/pppd.new/pppd /dev/tty01 19200
-
-( put the appropriate speed and device name )
-
-
-
-
-
-Now your computer is connected with PPP. If the connection fails for some
-reasons you can add the "debug" option to the /etc/ppp/options file
-and check messages on the console to track the problem
-
-Following /etc/ppp/pppup script will make all 3 stages automatically:
-#!/bin/sh
-ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep
-pid=`ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
-if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
- echo 'killing pppd, PID=' ${pid}
- kill ${pid}
-fi
-ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep
-pid=`ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
-if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
- echo 'killing kermit, PID=' ${pid}
- kill -9 ${pid}
-fi
-
-ifconfig ppp0 down
-ifconfig ppp0 delete
-
-kermit -y /etc/ppp/kermit.dial
-pppd /dev/tty01 19200
-
-
-/etc/ppp/kermit.dial is kermit script that dials and makes all
-necessary authorization on the remote host.
-( Example of such script is attached to the end of this document )
-
-Use the following /etc/ppp/pppdown script to disconnect the PPP line:
-#!/bin/sh
-pid=`ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
-if [ X${pid} != "X" ] ; then
- echo 'killing pppd, PID=' ${pid}
- kill -TERM ${pid}
-fi
-
-ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep
-pid=`ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
-if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
- echo 'killing kermit, PID=' ${pid}
- kill -9 ${pid}
-fi
-
-/sbin/ifconfig ppp0 down
-/sbin/ifconfig ppp0 delete
-kermit -y /etc/ppp/kermit.hup
-/etc/ppp/ppptest
-
-
-Check if PPP is still running (/usr/etc/ppp/ppptest):
-#!/bin/sh
-pid=`ps ax| grep pppd |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
-if [ X${pid} != "X" ] ; then
- echo 'pppd running: PID=' ${pid-NONE}
-else
- echo 'No pppd running.'
-fi
-set -x
-netstat -n -I ppp0
-ifconfig ppp0
-
-
-Hangs up modem line (/etc/ppp/kermit.hup):
-set line /dev/tty01 ; put your modem device here
-set speed 19200
-set file type binary
-set file names literal
-set win 8
-set rec pack 1024
-set send pack 1024
-set block 3
-set term bytesize 8
-set command bytesize 8
-set flow none
-
-pau 1
-out +++
-inp 5 OK
-out ATH0\13
-echo \13
-exit
-
-
-Here is an alternate method using chat instead of
-kermit.
-
-Contributed by &a.rhuff;.
-
-The following two files are sufficient to accomplish a pppd
-connection.
-
-/etc/ppp/options:
- /dev/cuaa1 115200
-
-crtscts # enable hardware flow control
-modem # modem control line
-connect "/usr/bin/chat -f /etc/ppp/login.chat.script"
-noipdefault # remote PPP server must supply your IP address.
- # if the remote host doesn't send your IP during
- # IPCP negotiation, remove this option
-passive # wait for LCP packets
-domain <your.domain> # put your domain name here
-
-: # put the IP of remote PPP host here
- # it will be used to route packets via PPP link
- # if you didn't specified the noipdefault option
- # change this line to <local_ip>:<remote_ip>
-
-defaultroute # put this if you want that PPP server will be
- # your default router
-
-
-/etc/ppp/login.chat.script:
-
-(This should actually go into a single line.)
-
-
-ABORT BUSY ABORT 'NO CARRIER' "" AT OK ATDT<phone.number>
- CONNECT "" TIMEOUT 10 ogin:-\\r-ogin: <login-id>
- TIMEOUT 5 sword: <password>
-
-
-Once these are installed and modified correctly, all you need to
-do is
-
-pppd.
-
- This sample based primarily on information provided by: Trev Roydhouse
-<Trev.Roydhouse@f401.n711.z3.fidonet.org> and used by
-permission.
-
-
-
-
-Working as a PPP server
-
-/etc/ppp/options:
-crtscts # Hardware flow control
-netmask 255.255.255.0 # netmask ( not required )
-192.114.208.20:192.114.208.165 # ip's of local and remote hosts
- # local ip must be different from one
- # you assigned to the ethernet ( or other )
- # interface on your machine.
- # remote IP is ip address that will be
- # assigned to the remote machine
-domain ppp.foo.com # your domain
-passive # wait for LCP
-modem # modem line
-
-
-Following /etc/ppp/pppserv script will enable ppp server on your
-machine
-#!/bin/sh
-ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep
-pid=`ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
-if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
- echo 'killing pppd, PID=' ${pid}
- kill ${pid}
-fi
-ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep
-pid=`ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
-if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
- echo 'killing kermit, PID=' ${pid}
- kill -9 ${pid}
-fi
-
-# reset ppp interface
-ifconfig ppp0 down
-ifconfig ppp0 delete
-
-# enable autoanswer mode
-kermit -y /etc/ppp/kermit.ans
-
-# run ppp
-pppd /dev/tty01 19200
-
-
-Use this /etc/ppp/pppservdown script to stop ppp server:
-#!/bin/sh
-ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep
-pid=`ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
-if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
- echo 'killing pppd, PID=' ${pid}
- kill ${pid}
-fi
-ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep
-pid=`ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
-if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
- echo 'killing kermit, PID=' ${pid}
- kill -9 ${pid}
-fi
-ifconfig ppp0 down
-ifconfig ppp0 delete
-
-kermit -y /etc/ppp/kermit.noans
-
-
-Following kermit script will enable/disable autoanswer mode
-on your modem (/etc/ppp/kermit.ans):
-set line /dev/tty01
-set speed 19200
-set file type binary
-set file names literal
-set win 8
-set rec pack 1024
-set send pack 1024
-set block 3
-set term bytesize 8
-set command bytesize 8
-set flow none
-
-pau 1
-out +++
-inp 5 OK
-out ATH0\13
-inp 5 OK
-echo \13
-out ATS0=1\13 ; change this to out ATS0=0\13 if you want to disable
- ; autoanswer mod
-inp 5 OK
-echo \13
-exit
-
-
-This /etc/ppp/kermit.dial script is used for dialing and authorizing
-on remote host. You will need to customize it for your needs.
-Put your login and password in this script , also you will need
-to change input statement depending on responses from your modem
-and remote host.
-;
-; put the com line attached to the modem here:
-;
-set line /dev/tty01
-;
-; put the modem speed here:
-;
-set speed 19200
-set file type binary ; full 8 bit file xfer
-set file names literal
-set win 8
-set rec pack 1024
-set send pack 1024
-set block 3
-set term bytesize 8
-set command bytesize 8
-set flow none
-set modem hayes
-set dial hangup off
-set carrier auto ; Then SET CARRIER if necessary,
-set dial display on ; Then SET DIAL if necessary,
-set input echo on
-set input timeout proceed
-set input case ignore
-def \%x 0 ; login prompt counter
-goto slhup
-
-:slcmd ; put the modem in command mode
-echo Put the modem in command mode.
-clear ; Clear unread characters from input buffer
-pause 1
-output +++ ; hayes escape sequence
-input 1 OK\13\10 ; wait for OK
-if success goto slhup
-output \13
-pause 1
-output at\13
-input 1 OK\13\10
-if fail goto slcmd ; if modem doesn't answer OK, try again
-
-:slhup ; hang up the phone
-clear ; Clear unread characters from input buffer
-pause 1
-echo Hanging up the phone.
-output ath0\13 ; hayes command for on hook
-input 2 OK\13\10
-if fail goto slcmd ; if no OK answer, put modem in command mode
-
-:sldial ; dial the number
-pause 1
-echo Dialing.
-output atdt9,550311\13\10 ; put phone number here
-assign \%x 0 ; zero the time counter
-
-:look
-clear ; Clear unread characters from input buffer
-increment \%x ; Count the seconds
-input 1 {CONNECT }
-if success goto sllogin
-reinput 1 {NO CARRIER\13\10}
-if success goto sldial
-reinput 1 {NO DIALTONE\13\10}
-if success goto slnodial
-reinput 1 {\255}
-if success goto slhup
-reinput 1 {\127}
-if success goto slhup
-if < \%x 60 goto look
-else goto slhup
-
-:sllogin ; login
-assign \%x 0 ; zero the time counter
-pause 1
-echo Looking for login prompt.
-
-:slloop
-increment \%x ; Count the seconds
-clear ; Clear unread characters from input buffer
-output \13
-;
-; put your expected login prompt here:
-;
-input 1 {Username: }
-if success goto sluid
-reinput 1 {\255}
-if success goto slhup
-reinput 1 {\127}
-if success goto slhup
-if < \%x 10 goto slloop ; try 10 times to get a login prompt
-else goto slhup ; hang up and start again if 10 failures
-
-:sluid
-;
-; put your userid here:
-;
-output ppp-login\13
-input 1 {Password: }
-;
-; put your password here:
-;
-output ppp-password\13
-input 1 {Entering SLIP mode.}
-echo
-quit
-
-:slnodial
-echo \7No dialtone. Check the telephone line!\7
-exit 1
-
-; local variables:
-; mode: csh
-; comment-start: "; "
-; comment-start-skip: "; "
-; end:
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Setting up a SLIP Client
-
-Contributed by &a.asami;8 Aug 1995.
-
-The following is one way to set up a FreeBSD machine for SLIP on a
-static host network. For dynamic hostname assignments (i.e., your
-address changes each time you dial up), you probably need to do
-something much fancier.
-
-First, determine which serial port your modem is connected to. I have
-a symbolic link /dev/modem -> cuaa1, and only use the modem name in my
-configuration files. It can become quite cumbersome when you need to
-fix a bunch of files in /etc and .kermrc's all over the system! (Note
-that /dev/cuaa0 is COM1, cuaa1 is COM2, etc.)
-
-Make sure you have
-pseudo-device sl 1
-
-in your kernel's config file. It is included in the GENERIC kernel,
-so this will not be a problem unless you deleted it.
-
-
-
-Things you have to do only once
-
-
-
-
-
-Add your home machine, the gateway and nameservers to your
-/etc/hosts file. Mine looks like this:
-127.0.0.1 localhost loghost
-136.152.64.181 silvia.HIP.Berkeley.EDU silvia.HIP silvia
-
-136.152.64.1 inr-3.Berkeley.EDU inr-3 slip-gateway
-128.32.136.9 ns1.Berkeley.edu ns1
-128.32.136.12 ns2.Berkeley.edu ns2
-
-By the way, silvia is the name of the car that I had when I was
-back in Japan (it is called 2?0SX here in U.S.).
-
-
-
-
-Make sure you have "hosts" before "bind" in your /etc/host.conf.
-Otherwise, funny things may happen.
-
-
-
-
-Edit the file /etc/rc.conf. Note that you should edit
-the file /etc/sysconfig instead if you are running FreeBSD
-previous to version 2.2.2.
-
-
-
-Set your hostname by editing the line that says:
-hostname=myname.my.domain
-
-You should give it your full Internet hostname.
-
-
-
-
-Add sl0 to the list of network interfaces by changing the line
-that says:
-network_interfaces="lo0"
-
-to:
-network_interfaces="lo0 sl0"
-
-
-
-
-
-Set the startup flags of sl0 by adding a line:
-ifconfig_sl0="inet ${hostname} slip-gateway netmask 0xffffff00 up"
-
-
-
-
-
-Designate the default router by changing the line:
-defaultrouter=NO
-
-to:
-defaultrouter=slip-gateway
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Make a file /etc/resolv.conf which contains:
-domain HIP.Berkeley.EDU
-nameserver 128.32.136.9
-nameserver 128.32.136.12
-
-As you can see, these set up the nameserver hosts. Of course, the
-actual domain names and addresses depend on your environment.
-
-
-
-
-Set the password for root and toor (and any other accounts that
-does not have a password). Use passwd, do not edit the /etc/passwd
-or /etc/master.passwd files!
-
-
-
-
-Reboot your machine and make sure it comes up with the correct
-hostname.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Making a SLIP connection
-
-
-
-
-
-Dial up, type "slip" at the prompt, enter your machine name and
-password. The things you need to enter depends on your
-environment. I use kermit, with a script like this:
-# kermit setup
-set modem hayes
-set line /dev/modem
-set speed 115200
-set parity none
-set flow rts/cts
-set terminal bytesize 8
-set file type binary
-# The next macro will dial up and login
-define slip dial 643-9600, input 10 =>, if failure stop, -
-output slip\x0d, input 10 Username:, if failure stop, -
-output silvia\x0d, input 10 Password:, if failure stop, -
-output ***\x0d, echo \x0aCONNECTED\x0a
-
-(of course, you have to change the hostname and password to fit
-yours). Then you can just type "slip" from the kermit prompt to
-get connected.
-
-Note: leaving your password in plain text anywhere in the
-filesystem is generally a BAD idea. Do it at your own risk. I am
-just too lazy.
-
-
-
-
-Leave the kermit there (you can suspend it by "z") and as root,
-type
-slattach -h -c -s 115200 /dev/modem
-
-if you are able to "ping" hosts on the other side of the router,
-you are connected! If it does not work, you might want to try "-a"
-instead of "-c" as an argument to slattach.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-How to shutdown the connection
-
-Type "kill -INT `cat /var/run/slattach.modem.pid`" (as root) to
-kill slattach. Then go back to kermit ("fg" if you suspended it)
-and exit from it ("q").
-
-The slattach man page says you have to use "ifconfig sl0 down" to
-mark the interface down, but this does not seem to make any
-difference for me. ("ifconfig sl0" reports the same thing.)
-
-Some times, your modem might refuse to drop the carrier (mine
-often does). In that case, simply start kermit and quit it again.
-It usually goes out on the second try.
-
-
-
-
-Troubleshooting
-
-If it does not work, feel free to ask me. The things that people
-tripped over so far:
-
-
-
-Not using "-c" or "-a" in slattach (I have no idea why this can be
-fatal, but adding this flag solved the problem for at least one
-person)
-
-
-
-
-Using "s10" instead of "sl0" (might be hard to see the difference on
-some fonts).
-
-
-
-
-Try "ifconfig sl0" to see your interface status. I get:
-silvia# ifconfig sl0
-sl0: flags=10<POINTOPOINT>
- inet 136.152.64.181 --> 136.152.64.1 netmask ffffff00
-
-
-
-
-
-Also, netstat -r will give the routing table, in case you get
-the "no route to host" messages from ping. Mine looks like:
-silvia# netstat -r
-Routing tables
-Destination Gateway Flags Refs Use IfaceMTU Rtt
-Netmasks:
-(root node)
-(root node)
-
-Route Tree for Protocol Family inet:
-(root node) =>
-default inr-3.Berkeley.EDU UG 8 224515 sl0 - -
-localhost.Berkel localhost.Berkeley UH 5 42127 lo0 - 0.438
-inr-3.Berkeley.E silvia.HIP.Berkele UH 1 0 sl0 - -
-silvia.HIP.Berke localhost.Berkeley UGH 34 47641234 lo0 - 0.438
-(root node)
-
-(this is after transferring a bunch of files, your numbers should be
-smaller).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Setting up a SLIP Server
-
-Contributed by &a.ghelmer;.
-v1.0, 15 May 1995.
-
-This document provides suggestions for setting up SLIP Server services
-on a FreeBSD system, which typically means configuring your system to
-automatically startup connections upon login for remote SLIP clients.
-The author has written this document based on his experience;
-however, as your system and needs may be different, this document may
-not answer all of your questions, and the author cannot be responsible
-if you damage your system or lose data due to attempting to follow the
-suggestions here.
-
-This guide was originally written for SLIP Server services on a
-FreeBSD 1.x system. It has been modified to reflect changes in the
-pathnames and the removal of the SLIP interface compression flags in
-early versions of FreeBSD 2.X, which appear to be the only major
-changes between FreeBSD versions. If you do encounter mistakes in
-this document, please email the author with enough information to
-help correct the problem.
-
-
-
-Prerequisites
-
-This document is very technical in nature, so background knowledge is
-required. It is assumed that you are familiar with the TCP/IP network
-protocol, and in particular, network and node addressing, network
-address masks, subnetting, routing, and routing protocols, such as
-RIP. Configuring SLIP services on a dial-up server requires a
-knowledge of these concepts, and if you are not familiar with them,
-please read a copy of either Craig Hunt's TCP/IP Network
-Administration published by O'Reilly & Associates, Inc. (ISBN
-Number 0-937175-82-X), or Douglas Comer's books on the TCP/IP
-protocol.
-
-It is further assumed that you have already setup your modem(s) and
-configured the appropriate system files to allow logins through your
-modems. If you have not prepared your system for this yet, please see
-the tutorial for configuring dialup services; if you have a World-Wide
-Web browser available, browse the list of tutorials at
-http://www.freebsd.org/; otherwise, check the place
-where you found this document for a document named dialup.txt or
-something similar. You may also want to check the manual pages for
-sio(4) for information on the serial port device driver and
-ttys(5), gettytab(5), getty(8), & init(8) for
-information relevant to configuring the system to accept logins on
-modems, and perhaps stty(1) for information on setting serial
-port parameters [such as clocal for directly-connected
-serial interfaces].
-
-
-
-
-Quick Overview
-
-In its typical configuration, using FreeBSD as a SLIP server works as
-follows: a SLIP user dials up your FreeBSD SLIP Server system and logs
-in with a special SLIP login ID that uses /usr/sbin/sliplogin
-as the special user's shell. The sliplogin program browses the
-file /etc/sliphome/slip.hosts to find a matching line for
-the special user, and if it finds a match, connects the serial line to
-an available SLIP interface and then runs the shell script
-/etc/sliphome/slip.login to configure the SLIP interface.
-
-
-
-An Example of a SLIP Server Login
-
-For example, if a SLIP user ID were Shelmerg, Shelmerg's
-entry in /etc/master.passwd would look something like this
-(except it would be all on one line):
-
-
-
-Shelmerg:password:1964:89::0:0:Guy Helmer - SLIP:
- /usr/users/Shelmerg:/usr/sbin/sliplogin
-
-
-
-and, when Shelmerg logs in, sliplogin will search
-/etc/sliphome/slip.hosts for a line that had a matching user
-ID; for example, there may be a line in
-/etc/sliphome/slip.hosts that reads:
-
-
-
-Shelmerg dc-slip sl-helmer 0xfffffc00 autocomp
-
-
-
-sliplogin will find that matching line, hook the serial line into
-the next available SLIP interface, and then execute
-/etc/sliphome/slip.login like this:
-
-
-
-/etc/sliphome/slip.login 0 19200 Shelmerg dc-slip sl-helmer 0xfffffc00 autocomp
-
-
-
-If all goes well, /etc/sliphome/slip.login will issue an
-ifconfig for the SLIP interface to which sliplogin
-attached itself (slip interface 0, in the above example, which was the
-first parameter in the list given to slip.login) to set the
-local IP address (dc-slip), remote IP address
-(sl-helmer), network mask for the SLIP interface
-(0xfffffc00), and any additional flags (autocomp).
-If something goes wrong, sliplogin usually logs good
-informational messages via the daemon syslog facility, which usually
-goes into /var/log/messages (see the manual pages for
-syslogd(8) and syslog.conf(5), and perhaps check
-/etc/syslog.conf to see to which files syslogd is
-logging).
-
-OK, enough of the examples -- let us dive into setting up the system.
-
-
-
-
-
-Kernel Configuration
-
-FreeBSD's default kernels usually come with two SLIP interfaces
-defined (sl0 and sl1); you can use netstat
--i to see whether these interfaces are defined in your kernel.
-
-Sample output from netstat -i:
-
-
-
-Name Mtu Network Address Ipkts Ierrs Opkts Oerrs Coll
-ed0 1500 <Link>0.0.c0.2c.5f.4a 291311 0 174209 0 133
-ed0 1500 138.247.224 ivory 291311 0 174209 0 133
-lo0 65535 <Link> 79 0 79 0 0
-lo0 65535 loop localhost 79 0 79 0 0
-sl0* 296 <Link> 0 0 0 0 0
-sl1* 296 <Link> 0 0 0 0 0
-
-
-
-The sl0 and sl1 interfaces shown in netstat
--i's output indicate that there are two SLIP interfaces built
-into the kernel. (The asterisks after the sl0 and
-sl1 indicate that the interfaces are ``down''.)
-
-However, FreeBSD's default kernels do not come configured to forward
-packets (ie, your FreeBSD machine will not act as a router) due to
-Internet RFC requirements for Internet hosts (see RFC's 1009
-[Requirements for Internet Gateways], 1122
-[Requirements for Internet Hosts -- Communication Layers],
-and perhaps 1127 [A Perspective on the Host Requirements
-RFCs]), so if you want your FreeBSD SLIP Server to act as a
-router, you will have to edit the /etc/rc.conf file (called
-/etc/sysconfig in FreeBSD releases prior to 2.2.2) and change
-the setting of the gateway variable to YES. If you
-have an older system which predates even the /etc/sysconfig
-file, then add the following command:
-sysctl -w net.inet.ip.forwarding = 1
-
-to your /etc/rc.local file.
-
-You will then need to reboot for the new settings to take effect.
-
-You will notice that near the end of the default kernel configuration
-file (/sys/i386/conf/GENERIC) is a line that reads:
-
-
-
-pseudo-device sl 2
-
-
-
-which is the line that defines the number of SLIP devices available in
-the kernel; the number at the end of the line is the maximum number of
-SLIP connections that may be operating simultaneously.
-
-Please refer to
-for help in reconfiguring your kernel.
-
-
-
-
-Sliplogin Configuration
-
-As mentioned earlier, there are three files in the
-/etc/sliphome directory that are part of the configuration
-for /usr/sbin/sliplogin (see sliplogin(8) for the
-actual manual page for sliplogin): slip.hosts, which
-defines the SLIP users & their associated IP addresses;
-slip.login, which usually just configures the SLIP interface;
-and (optionally) slip.logout, which undoes
-slip.login's effects when the serial connection is
-terminated.
-
-
-
-slip.hosts Configuration
-
-/etc/sliphome/slip.hosts contains lines which have at least
-four items, separated by whitespace:
-
-
-
-
-
- SLIP user's login ID
-
-
-
- Local address (local to the SLIP server) of the SLIP link
-
-
-
- Remote address of the SLIP link
-
-
-
- Network mask
-
-
-
-
-
-The local and remote addresses may be host names (resolved to IP
-addresses by /etc/hosts or by the domain name service,
-depending on your specifications in /etc/host.conf), and I
-believe the network mask may be a name that can be resolved by a
-lookup into /etc/networks. On a sample system,
-/etc/sliphome/slip.hosts looks like this:
-
-
-
------ begin /etc/sliphome/slip.hosts -----
-#
-# login local-addr remote-addr mask opt1 opt2
-# (normal,compress,noicmp)
-#
-Shelmerg dc-slip sl-helmerg 0xfffffc00 autocomp
------ end /etc/sliphome/slip.hosts ------
-
-
-
-At the end of the line is one or more of the options.
-
-
-
-
-
-normal - no header compression
-
-
-
-compress - compress headers
-
-
-
-autocomp - compress headers if the remote end allows it
-
-
-
-noicmp - disable ICMP packets (so any ``ping'' packets will be
-dropped instead of using up your bandwidth)
-
-
-
-
-
-Note that sliplogin under early releases of FreeBSD 2 ignored
-the options that FreeBSD 1.x recognized, so the options
-normal, compress, autocomp, and noicmp had no effect
-until support was added in FreeBSD 2.2 (unless your slip.login script
-included code to make use of the flags).
-
-Your choice of local and remote addresses for your SLIP links depends
-on whether you are going to dedicate a TCP/IP subnet or if you are
-going to use ``proxy ARP'' on your SLIP server (it is not ``true''
-proxy ARP, but that is the terminology used in this document to
-describe it). If you are not sure which method to select or how to
-assign IP addresses, please refer to the TCP/IP books referenced in
-the section and/or consult your IP network manager.
-
-If you are going to use a separate subnet for your SLIP clients, you
-will need to allocate the subnet number out of your assigned IP
-network number and assign each of your SLIP client's IP numbers out of
-that subnet. Then, you will probably either need to configure a
-static route to the SLIP subnet via your SLIP server on your nearest
-IP router, or install gated on your FreeBSD SLIP server and
-configure it to talk the appropriate routing protocols to your other
-routers to inform them about your SLIP server's route to the SLIP
-subnet.
-
-Otherwise, if you will use the ``proxy ARP'' method, you will need to
-assign your SLIP client's IP addresses out of your SLIP server's
-Ethernet subnet, and you will also need to adjust your
-/etc/sliphome/slip.login and
-/etc/sliphome/slip.logout scripts to use arp(8) to
-manage the proxy-ARP entries in the SLIP server's ARP table.
-
-
-
-
-slip.login Configuration
-
-The typical /etc/sliphome/slip.login file looks like this:
-
-
-
------ begin /etc/sliphome/slip.login -----
-#!/bin/sh -
-#
-# @(#)slip.login 5.1 (Berkeley) 7/1/90
-
-#
-# generic login file for a slip line. sliplogin invokes this with
-# the parameters:
-# 1 2 3 4 5 6 7-n
-# slipunit ttyspeed loginname local-addr remote-addr mask opt-args
-#
-/sbin/ifconfig sl$1 inet $4 $5 netmask $6
------ end /etc/sliphome/slip.login -----
-
-
-
-This slip.login file merely ifconfig's the appropriate SLIP
-interface with the local and remote addresses and network mask of the
-SLIP interface.
-
-If you have decided to use the ``proxy ARP'' method (instead of using
-a separate subnet for your SLIP clients), your
-/etc/sliphome/slip.login file will need to look something
-like this:
-
-
-
------ begin /etc/sliphome/slip.login for "proxy ARP" -----
-#!/bin/sh -
-#
-# @(#)slip.login 5.1 (Berkeley) 7/1/90
-
-#
-# generic login file for a slip line. sliplogin invokes this with
-# the parameters:
-# 1 2 3 4 5 6 7-n
-# slipunit ttyspeed loginname local-addr remote-addr mask opt-args
-#
-/sbin/ifconfig sl$1 inet $4 $5 netmask $6
-# Answer ARP requests for the SLIP client with our Ethernet addr
-/usr/sbin/arp -s $5 00:11:22:33:44:55 pub
------ end /etc/sliphome/slip.login for "proxy ARP" -----
-
-
-
-The additional line in this slip.login, arp -s $5
-00:11:22:33:44:55 pub, creates an ARP entry in the SLIP server's
-ARP table. This ARP entry causes the SLIP server to respond with the
-SLIP server's Ethernet MAC address whenever a another IP node on the
-Ethernet asks to speak to the SLIP client's IP address.
-
-When using the example above, be sure to replace the Ethernet MAC
-address (00:11:22:33:44:55) with the MAC address of your
-system's Ethernet card, or your ``proxy ARP'' will definitely not work!
-You can discover your SLIP server's Ethernet MAC address by looking at
-the results of running netstat -i; the second line of the output
-should look something like:
-
-
-
-ed0 1500 <Link>0.2.c1.28.5f.4a 191923 0 129457 0 116
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-
-
-
-
-which indicates that this particular system's Ethernet MAC address is
-00:02:c1:28:5f:4a -- the periods in the Ethernet MAC address
-given by netstat -i must be changed to colons and leading zeros
-should be added to each single-digit hexadecimal number to convert the
-address into the form that arp(8) desires; see the manual page on
-arp(8) for complete information on usage.
-
-Note that when you create /etc/sliphome/slip.login and
-/etc/sliphome/slip.logout, the ``execute'' bit (ie,
-chmod 755 /etc/sliphome/slip.login
-/etc/sliphome/slip.logout) must be set, or sliplogin
-will be unable to execute it.
-
-
-
-
-slip.logout Configuration
-
-/etc/sliphome/slip.logout is not strictly needed (unless you
-are implementing ``proxy ARP''), but if you decide to create it, this
-is an example of a basic slip.logout script:
-
-
-
------ begin /etc/sliphome/slip.logout -----
-#!/bin/sh -
-#
-# slip.logout
-
-#
-# logout file for a slip line. sliplogin invokes this with
-# the parameters:
-# 1 2 3 4 5 6 7-n
-# slipunit ttyspeed loginname local-addr remote-addr mask opt-args
-#
-/sbin/ifconfig sl$1 down
------ end /etc/sliphome/slip.logout -----
-
-
-
-If you are using ``proxy ARP'', you will want to have
-/etc/sliphome/slip.logout remove the ARP entry for the SLIP
-client:
-
-
-
------ begin /etc/sliphome/slip.logout for "proxy ARP" -----
-#!/bin/sh -
-#
-# @(#)slip.logout
-
-#
-# logout file for a slip line. sliplogin invokes this with
-# the parameters:
-# 1 2 3 4 5 6 7-n
-# slipunit ttyspeed loginname local-addr remote-addr mask opt-args
-#
-/sbin/ifconfig sl$1 down
-# Quit answering ARP requests for the SLIP client
-/usr/sbin/arp -d $5
------ end /etc/sliphome/slip.logout for "proxy ARP" -----
-
-
-
-The arp -d $5 removes the ARP entry that the ``proxy ARP''
-slip.login added when the SLIP client logged in.
-
-It bears repeating: make sure /etc/sliphome/slip.logout has
-the execute bit set for after you create it (ie, chmod 755
-/etc/sliphome/slip.logout).
-
-
-
-
-
-Routing Considerations
-
-If you are not using the ``proxy ARP'' method for routing packets
-between your SLIP clients and the rest of your network (and perhaps
-the Internet), you will probably either have to add static routes to
-your closest default router(s) to route your SLIP client subnet via
-your SLIP server, or you will probably need to install and configure
-gated on your FreeBSD SLIP server so that it will tell your
-routers via appropriate routing protocols about your SLIP subnet.
-
-
-
-Static Routes
-
-Adding static routes to your nearest default routers can be
-troublesome (or impossible, if you do not have authority to do so...).
-If you have a multiple-router network in your organization, some
-routers, such as Cisco and Proteon, may not only need to be configured
-with the static route to the SLIP subnet, but also need to be told
-which static routes to tell other routers about, so some expertise and
-troubleshooting/tweaking may be necessary to get static-route-based
-routing to work.
-
-
-
-
-Running gated
-
-An alternative to the headaches of static routes is to install
-gated on your FreeBSD SLIP server and configure it to use the
-appropriate routing protocols (RIP/OSPF/BGP/EGP) to tell other routers
-about your SLIP subnet. You can use gated from the
- or retrieve and build it yourself
-from the GateD anonymous ftp site;
-I believe the current version as of this writing
-is gated-R3_5Alpha_8.tar.Z, which includes support for
-FreeBSD ``out-of-the-box''. Complete information and documentation on
-gated is available on the Web starting at
-the Merit GateD Consortium.
-Compile and install it, and
-then write a /etc/gated.conf file to configure your gated;
-here is a sample, similar to what the author used on a FreeBSD SLIP
-server:
-
-
-
------ begin sample /etc/gated.conf for gated version 3.5Alpha5 -----
-#
-# gated configuration file for dc.dsu.edu; for gated version 3.5alpha5
-# Only broadcast RIP information for xxx.xxx.yy out the ed Ethernet interface
-#
-#
-# tracing options
-#
-traceoptions "/var/tmp/gated.output" replace size 100k files 2 general ;
-
-rip yes {
- interface sl noripout noripin ;
- interface ed ripin ripout version 1 ;
- traceoptions route ;
-} ;
-
-#
-# Turn on a bunch of tracing info for the interface to the kernel:
-kernel {
- traceoptions remnants request routes info interface ;
-} ;
-
-#
-# Propagate the route to xxx.xxx.yy out the Ethernet interface via RIP
-#
-
-export proto rip interface ed {
- proto direct {
- xxx.xxx.yy mask 255.255.252.0 metric 1; # SLIP connections
- } ;
-} ;
-
-#
-# Accept routes from RIP via ed Ethernet interfaces
-
-import proto rip interface ed {
- all ;
-} ;
-
------ end sample /etc/gated.conf -----
-
-
-
-The above sample gated.conf file broadcasts routing
-information regarding the SLIP subnet xxx.xxx.yy via RIP onto
-the Ethernet; if you are using a different Ethernet driver than the
-ed driver, you will need to change the references to the ed
-interface appropriately. This sample file also sets up tracing to
-/var/tmp/gated.output for debugging gated's
-activity; you can certainly turn off the tracing options if
-gated works OK for you. You will need to change the
-xxx.xxx.yy's into the network address of your own SLIP subnet
-(be sure to change the net mask in the proto direct clause as
-well).
-
-When you get gated built and installed and create a
-configuration file for it, you will need to run gated in place
-of routed on your FreeBSD system; change the
-routed/gated startup parameters in /etc/netstart as
-appropriate for your system. Please see the manual page for
-gated for information on gated's command-line
-parameters.
-
-
-
-
-
-Acknowledgments
-
-Thanks to these people for comments and advice regarding this tutorial:
-
-
-
-&a.wilko;
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Piero Serini
-
-
-<Piero@Strider.Inet.IT>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Advanced Networking
-
-
-
-Gateways and Routes
-
-Contributed by &a.gryphon;.6 October 1995.
-
-For one machine to be able to find another, there must be a
-mechanism in place to describe how to get from one to the
-other. This is called Routing. A ``route'' is a defined
-pair of addresses: a destination and a
-gateway. The pair indicates that if you are
-trying to get to this destination, send along
-through this gateway. There are three types of
-destinations: individual hosts, subnets, and ``default''. The
-``default route'' is used if none of the other routes
-apply. We will talk a little bit more about default routes
-later on. There are also three types of gateways:
-individual hosts, interfaces (also called ``links''), and
-ethernet hardware addresses.
-
-
-
-An example
-
-To illustrate different aspects of routing, we will use
-the following example which is the output of the command
-netstat -r:
-
-
-
-Destination Gateway Flags Refs Use Netif Expire
-
-default outside-gw UGSc 37 418 ppp0
-localhost localhost UH 0 181 lo0
-test0 0:e0:b5:36:cf:4f UHLW 5 63288 ed0 77
-10.20.30.255 link#1 UHLW 1 2421
-foobar.com link#1 UC 0 0
-host1 0:e0:a8:37:8:1e UHLW 3 4601 lo0
-host2 0:e0:a8:37:8:1e UHLW 0 5 lo0 =>
-host2.foobar.com link#1 UC 0 0
-224 link#1 UC 0 0
-
-
-
-The first two lines specify the default route (which we
-will cover in the next section) and the localhost route.
-
-The interface (Netif column) that it specifies to use
-for localhost is lo0, also known as the
-loopback device. This says to keep all traffic for this
-destination internal, rather than sending it out over the
-LAN, since it will only end up back where it started
-anyway.
-
-The next thing that stands out are the
-``0:e0:...'' addresses. These are ethernet
-hardware addresses. FreeBSD will automatically identify any
-hosts (test0 in the example) on the local ethernet and
-add a route for that host, directly to it over the ethernet
-interface, ed0. There is also a timeout
-(Expire column) associated with this type of route,
-which is used if we fail to hear from the host in a
-specific amount of time. In this case the route will be
-automatically deleted. These hosts are identified using a
-mechanism known as RIP (Routing Information Protocol),
-which figures out routes to local hosts based upon a
-shortest path determination.
-
-FreeBSD will also add subnet routes for the local subnet
-(10.20.30.255 is the broadcast address for the subnet
-10.20.30, and foobar.com is the domain name
-associated with that subnet). The designation link#1
-refers to the first ethernet card in the machine. You will
-notice no additional interface is specified for those.
-
-Both of these groups (local network hosts and local
-subnets) have their routes automatically configured by a
-daemon called routed. If this is not run, then only
-routes which are statically defined (ie. entered
-explicitly) will exist.
-
-The host1 line refers to our host, which it knows by
-ethernet address. Since we are the sending host, FreeBSD
-knows to use the loopback interface (lo0) rather than
-sending it out over the ethernet interface.
-
-The two host2 lines are an example of what happens
-when we use an ifconfig alias (see the section of ethernet
-for reasons why we would do this). The =>
-symbol after the lo0 interface says that not only are
-we using the loopback (since this is address also refers to
-the local host), but specifically it is an alias. Such
-routes only show up on the host that supports the alias;
-all other hosts on the local network will simply have a
-link#1 line for such.
-
-The final line (destination subnet 224) deals with
-MultiCasting, which will be covered in a another section.
-
-The other column that we should talk about are the
-Flags. Each route has different attributes that are
-described in the column. Below is a short table of some of
-these flags and their meanings:
-
-
-
-U
-
-Up: The route is active.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-H
-
-
-Host: The route destination is a single host.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-G
-
-
-Gateway: Send anything for this destination
-on to this remote system, which will figure out from
-there where to send it.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-S
-
-
-Static: This route was configured manually,
-not automatically generated by the system.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-C
-
-
-Clone: Generates a new route based upon this
-route for machines we connect to. This type of route is
-normally used for local networks.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-W
-
-
-WasCloned Indicated a route that was
-auto-configured based upon a local area network (Clone)
-route.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-L
-
-
-Link: Route involves references to ethernet
-hardware.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Default routes
-
-When the local system needs to make a connection to
-remote host, it checks the routing table to determine if
-a known path exists. If the remote host falls into a
-subnet that we know how to reach (Cloned routes), then
-the system checks to see if it can connect along that
-interface.
-
-If all known paths fail, the system has one last option:
-the default route. This route is a special type
-of gateway route (usually the only one present in the
-system), and is always marked with a ``c'' in
-the flags field. For hosts on a local area network, this
-gateway is set to whatever machine has a direct
-connection to the outside world (whether via PPP link, or
-your hardware device attached to a dedicated data line).
-
-If you are configuring the default route for a machine
-which itself is functioning as the gateway to the outside
-world, then the default route will be the gateway machine
-at your Internet Service Provider's (ISP) site.
-
-Let us look at an example of default routes. This is a
-common configuration:
-
-[Local2] <--ether--> [Local1] <--PPP--> [ISP-Serv] <--ether--> [T1-GW]
-
-
-
-The hosts Local1 and Local2 are at your
-site, with the formed being your PPP connection to your
-ISP's Terminal Server. Your ISP has a local network at
-their site, which has, among other things, the server
-where you connect and a hardware device (T1-GW) attached
-to the ISP's Internet feed.
-
-The default routes for each of your machines will be:
-
-
-
-host default gateway interface
----- --------------- ---------
-Local2 Local1 ethernet
-Local1 T1-GW PPP
-
-
-
-A common question is ``Why (or how) would we set the
-T1-GW to be the default gateway for Local1, rather than
-the ISP server it is connected to?''.
-
-Remember, since the PPP interface is using an address on
-the ISP's local network for your side of the connection,
-routes for any other machines on the ISP's local network
-will be automatically generated. Hence, you will already
-know how to reach the T1-GW machine, so there is no need
-for the intermediate step of sending traffic to the ISP
-server.
-
-As a final note, it is common to use the address ``...1''
-as the gateway address for your local network. So (using
-the same example), if your local class-C address space
-was 10.20.30 and your ISP was using 10.9.9 then the
-default routes would be:
-
-
-
-Local2 (10.20.30.2) --> Local1 (10.20.30.1)
-Local1 (10.20.30.1, 10.9.9.30) --> T1-GW (10.9.9.1)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Dual homed hosts
-
-There is one other type of configuration that we should
-cover, and that is a host that sits on two different
-networks. Technically, any machine functioning as a
-gateway (in the example above, using a PPP connection)
-counts as a dual-homed host. But the term is really only
-used to refer to a machine that sits on two local-area
-networks.
-
-In one case, the machine as two ethernet cards, each
-having an address on the separate subnets. Alternately,
-the machine may only have one ethernet card, and be using
-ifconfig aliasing. The former is used if two physically
-separate ethernet networks are in use, the latter if
-there is one physical network segment, but two logically
-separate subnets.
-
-Either way, routing tables are set up so that each subnet
-knows that this machine is the defined gateway (inbound
-route) to the other subnet. This configuration, with the
-machine acting as a Bridge between the two subnets, is
-often used when we need to implement packet filtering or
-firewall security in either or both directions.
-
-
-
-
-Routing propagation
-
-We have already talked about how we define our routes to
-the outside world, but not about how the outside world
-finds us.
-
-We already know that routing tables can be set up so that
-all traffic for a particular address space (in our
-examples, a class-C subnet) can be sent to a particular
-host on that network, which will forward the packets
-inbound.
-
-When you get an address space assigned to your site, your
-service provider will set up their routing tables so that
-all traffic for your subnet will be sent down your PPP
-link to your site. But how do sites across the country
-know to send to your ISP?
-
-There is a system (much like the distributed DNS
-information) that keeps track of all assigned
-address-spaces, and defines their point of connection to
-the Internet Backbone. The ``Backbone'' are the main
-trunk lines that carry Internet traffic across the
-country, and around the world. Each backbone machine has
-a copy of a master set of tables, which direct traffic
-for a particular network to a specific backbone carrier,
-and from there down the chain of service providers until
-it reaches your network.
-
-It is the task of your service provider to advertise to
-the backbone sites that they are the point of connection
-(and thus the path inward) for your site. This is known
-as route propagation.
-
-
-
-
-Troubleshooting
-
-Sometimes, there is a problem with routing propagation,
-and some sites are unable to connect to you. Perhaps the
-most useful command for trying to figure out where a
-routing is breaking down is the traceroute(8)
-command. It is equally useful if you cannot seem to make
-a connection to a remote machine (ie. ping(8)
-fails).
-
-The traceroute(8) command is run with the name
-of the remote host you are trying to connect to. It will
-show the gateway hosts along the path of the attempt,
-eventually either reaching the target host, or
-terminating because of a lack of connection.
-
-For more information, see the manual page for
-traceroute(8).
-
-
-
-
-
-NFS
-
-Contributed by &a.jlind;.
-
-Certain Ethernet adapters for ISA PC systems have limitations which
-can lead to serious network problems, particularly with NFS. This
-difficulty is not specific to FreeBSD, but FreeBSD systems are affected
-by it.
-
-The problem nearly always occurs when (FreeBSD) PC systems are networked
-with high-performance workstations, such as those made by Silicon Graphics,
-Inc., and Sun Microsystems, Inc. The NFS mount will work fine, and some
-operations may succeed, but suddenly the server will seem to become
-unresponsive to the client, even though requests to and from other systems
-continue to be processed. This happens to the client system, whether the
-client is the FreeBSD system or the workstation. On many systems, there is
-no way to shut down the client gracefully once this problem has manifested
-itself. The only solution is often to reset the client, because the NFS
-situation cannot be resolved.
-
-Though the "correct" solution is to get a higher performance and capacity
-Ethernet adapter for the FreeBSD system, there is a simple workaround that
-will allow satisfactory operation. If the FreeBSD system is the SERVER,
-include the option "-w=1024" on the mount from the client. If the
-FreeBSD system is the CLIENT, then mount the NFS file system with the
-option "-r=1024". These options may be specified using the fourth
-field of the fstab entry on the client for automatic mounts, or by using
-the "-o" parameter of the mount command for manual mounts.
-
-It should be noted that there is a different problem,
-sometimes mistaken for this one,
-when the NFS servers and clients are on different networks.
-If that is the case, make CERTAIN that your routers are routing the
-necessary UDP information, or you will not get anywhere, no matter
-what else you are doing.
-
-In the following examples, "fastws" is the host (interface) name of a
-high-performance workstation, and "freebox" is the host (interface) name of
-a FreeBSD system with a lower-performance Ethernet adapter. Also,
-"/sharedfs" will be the exported NFS filesystem (see "man exports"), and
-"/project" will be the mount point on the client for the exported file
-system. In all cases, note that additional options, such as "hard" or
-"soft" and "bg" may be desirable in your application.
-
-Examples for the FreeBSD system ("freebox") as the client:
-in /etc/fstab on freebox:
-fastws:/sharedfs /project nfs rw,-r=1024 0 0
-as a manual mount command on freebox:
-mount -t nfs -o -r=1024 fastws:/sharedfs /project
-
-Examples for the FreeBSD system as the server:
-in /etc/fstab on fastws:
-freebox:/sharedfs /project nfs rw,-w=1024 0 0
-as a manual mount command on fastws:
-mount -t nfs -o -w=1024 freebox:/sharedfs /project
-
-Nearly any 16-bit Ethernet adapter will allow operation without the above
-restrictions on the read or write size.
-
-For anyone who cares, here is what happens when the failure occurs, which
-also explains why it is unrecoverable. NFS typically works with a "block"
-size of 8k (though it may do fragments of smaller sizes). Since the maximum
-Ethernet packet is around 1500 bytes, the NFS "block" gets split into
-multiple Ethernet packets, even though it is still a single unit to the
-upper-level code, and must be received, assembled, and ACKNOWLEDGED as a
-unit. The high-performance workstations can pump out the packets which
-comprise the NFS unit one right after the other, just as close together as
-the standard allows. On the smaller, lower capacity cards, the later
-packets overrun the earlier packets of the same unit before they can be
-transferred to the host and the unit as a whole cannot be reconstructed or
-acknowledged. As a result, the workstation will time out and try again,
-but it will try again with the entire 8K unit, and the process will be
-repeated, ad infinitum.
-
-By keeping the unit size below the Ethernet packet size limitation, we
-ensure that any complete Ethernet packet received can be acknowledged
-individually, avoiding the deadlock situation.
-
-Overruns may still occur when a high-performance workstations is slamming
-data out to a PC system, but with the better cards, such overruns are
-not guaranteed on NFS "units". When an overrun occurs, the units affected
-will be retransmitted, and there will be a fair chance that they will be
-received, assembled, and acknowledged.
-
-
-
-
-
-Diskless Operation
-
-Contributed by &a.martin;.
-
-netboot.com/netboot.rom allow you to boot your
-FreeBSD machine over the network and run FreeBSD without
-having a disk on your client. Under 2.0 it is now
-possible to have local swap. Swapping over NFS is also
-still supported.
-
-Supported Ethernet cards include: Western Digital/SMC
-8003, 8013, 8216 and compatibles; NE1000/NE2000 and
-compatibles (requires recompile)
-
-
-
-Setup Instructions
-
-
-
-
-
- Find a machine that will be your server. This
-machine will require enough disk space to hold the
-FreeBSD 2.0 binaries and have bootp, tftp and NFS
-services available.
-
-Tested machines:
-
-
-
-HP9000/8xx running HP-UX 9.04 or later (pre
-9.04 doesn't work)
-
-
-
-Sun/Solaris 2.3. (you may need to get
-bootp)
-
-
-
-
+ You can easily start out small with an inexpensive 386
+ class PC and upgrade as your enterprise grows.
+
+
+
+ Education: Are you a student of computer science
+ or a related engineering field? There is no better way
+ of learning about operating systems, computer
+ architecture and networking than the hands on, under the
+ hood experience that FreeBSD can provide. A number of
+ freely available CAD, mathematical and graphic design
+ packages also make it highly useful to those whose
+ primary interest in a computer is to get other
+ work done!
+
+
+
+ Research: With source code for the entire system
+ available, FreeBSD is an excellent platform for research
+ in operating systems as well as other branches of
+ computer science. FreeBSD's freely available nature also
+ makes it possible for remote groups to collaborate on
+ ideas or shared development without having to worry about
+ special licensing agreements or limitations on what
+ may be discussed in open forums.
+
+
+
+ Networking: Need a new router? A name server
+ (DNS)? A firewall to keep people out of your internal
+ network? FreeBSD can easily turn that unused 386 or 486 PC
+ sitting in the corner into an advanced router with
+ sophisticated packet filtering capabilities.
+
+
+
+ X Window workstation: FreeBSD is a fine
+ choice for an inexpensive X terminal solution, either
+ using the freely available XFree86 server or one
+ of the excellent commercial servers provided by X Inside.
+ Unlike an X
+ terminal, FreeBSD allows many applications to be run
+ locally, if desired, thus relieving the burden on a
+ central server. FreeBSD can even boot
+ "diskless", making individual workstations even cheaper
+ and easier to administer.
+
+
+
+ Software Development: The basic FreeBSD system
+ comes with a full compliment of development tools
+ including the renowned GNU C/C++ compiler and
+ debugger.
+
+
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD is available in both source and binary form on CDROM and
+ via anonymous ftp. See
+ for more details.
+
+
+
+
+
+ A Brief History of FreeBSD
+
+ Contributed by &a.jkh;.
+
+ The FreeBSD project had its genesis in the early part of 1993,
+ partially as an outgrowth of the "Unofficial 386BSD Patchkit" by the
+ patchkit's last 3 coordinators: Nate Williams, Rod Grimes and myself.
+
+ Our original goal was to produce an intermediate snapshot of 386BSD in
+ order to fix a number of problems with it that the patchkit mechanism
+ just was not capable of solving. Some of you may remember the early
+ working title for the project being "386BSD 0.5" or "386BSD Interim"
+ in reference to that fact.
+
+ 386BSD was Bill Jolitz's operating system, which had been up to that
+ point suffering rather severely from almost a year's worth of neglect.
+ As the patchkit swelled ever more uncomfortably with each passing day,
+ we were in unanimous agreement that something had to be done and
+ decided to try and assist Bill by providing this interim "cleanup"
+ snapshot. Those plans came to a rude halt when Bill Jolitz suddenly
+ decided to withdraw his sanction from the project and without any
+ clear indication of what would be done instead.
+
+ It did not take us long to decide that the goal remained worthwhile,
+ even without Bill's support, and so we adopted the name "FreeBSD",
+ coined by David Greenman. Our initial objectives were set after
+ consulting with the system's current users and, once it became clear
+ that the project was on the road to perhaps even becoming a reality,
+ I contacted Walnut Creek CDROM with an eye towards improving
+ FreeBSD's distribution channels for those many unfortunates without
+ easy access to the Internet. Walnut Creek CDROM not only supported
+ the idea of distributing FreeBSD on CD but went so far as to provide
+ the project with a machine to work on and a fast Internet connection.
+ Without Walnut Creek CDROM's almost unprecedented degree of faith in
+ what was, at the time, a completely unknown project, it is quite
+ unlikely that FreeBSD would have gotten as far, as fast, as it
+ has today.
+
+ The first CDROM (and general net-wide) distribution was FreeBSD 1.0,
+ released in December of 1993. This was based on the 4.3BSD-Lite
+ ("Net/2") tape from U.C. Berkeley, with many components also provided by
+ 386BSD and the Free Software Foundation. It was a fairly reasonable
+ success for a first offering, and we followed it with the highly successful
+ FreeBSD 1.1 release in May of 1994.
+
+ Around this time, some rather unexpected storm clouds formed on the
+ horizon as Novell and U.C. Berkeley settled their long-running lawsuit
+ over the legal status of the Berkeley Net/2 tape. A condition of that
+ settlement was U.C. Berkeley's concession that large parts of Net/2
+ were "encumbered" code and the property of Novell, who had in turn acquired
+ it from AT&T some time previously. What Berkeley got in return was
+ Novell's "blessing" that the 4.4BSD-Lite release, when it was finally
+ released, would be declared unencumbered and all existing Net/2 users
+ would be strongly encouraged to switch. This included FreeBSD, and the
+ project was given until the end of July 1994 to stop shipping its own
+ Net/2 based product. Under the terms of that agreement, the project
+ was allowed one last release before the deadline, that release being
+ FreeBSD 1.1.5.1.
+
+ FreeBSD then set about the arduous task of literally re-inventing itself
+ from a completely new and rather incomplete set of 4.4BSD-Lite bits. The
+ "Lite" releases were light in part because Berkeley's CSRG had removed
+ large chunks of code required for actually constructing a bootable running
+ system (due to various legal requirements) and the fact that the Intel
+ port of 4.4 was highly incomplete. It took the project until December of 1994
+ to make this transition, and in January of 1995 it released FreeBSD 2.0 to
+ the net and on CDROM. Despite being still more than a little rough around
+ the edges, the release was a significant success and was followed by the more
+ robust and easier to install FreeBSD 2.0.5 release in June of 1995.
+
+ We released FreeBSD 2.1.5 in August of 1996, and it appeared to be
+ popular enough among the ISP and commercial communities that another
+ release along the 2.1-stable branch was merited. This was FreeBSD 2.1.7.1,
+ released in February 1997 and capping the end of mainstream development
+ on 2.1-stable. Now in maintenance mode, only security enhancements and other
+ critical bug fixes will be done on this branch (RELENG_2_1_0).
+
+ FreeBSD 2.2 was branched from the development mainline ("-current") in
+ November 1996 as the RELENG_2_2 branch, and the first full release
+ (2.2.1) was released in April, 1997. Further releases along the 2.2 branch
+ were done in the Summer and Fall of '97, the latest being 2.2.6 which
+ appeared in late March of '98. The first official 3.0 release will appear
+ later in 1998.
+
+ Long term development projects for everything from SMP to DEC ALPHA support
+ will continue to take place in the 3.0-current branch and SNAPshot releases
+ of 3.0 on CDROM (and, of course, on the net).
+
+
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD Project Goals
+
+ Contributed by &a.jkh;.
+
+ The goals of the FreeBSD Project are to provide software that may
+ be used for any purpose and without strings attached. Many of us
+ have a significant investment in the code (and project) and would
+ certainly not mind a little financial compensation now and then,
+ but we're definitely not prepared to insist on it. We believe
+ that our first and foremost "mission" is to provide code to any
+ and all comers, and for whatever purpose, so that the code gets
+ the widest possible use and provides the widest possible benefit.
+ This is, I believe, one of the most fundamental goals of Free
+ Software and one that we enthusiastically support.
+
+ That code in our source tree which falls under the GNU Public License
+ (GPL) or GNU Library Public License (GLPL) comes with slightly more
+ strings attached, though at least on the side of enforced
+ access rather than the usual opposite. Due to the additional
+ complexities that can evolve in the commercial use of GPL software,
+ we do, however, endeavor to replace such software with submissions
+ under the more relaxed BSD copyright whenever possible.
+
+
+
+
+
+ The FreeBSD Development Model
+
+ Contributed by &a.asami;.
+
+ The development of FreeBSD is a very open and flexible process,
+ FreeBSD being literally built from the contributions of hundreds of
+ people around the world, as can be seen from our . We are constantly on the lookout for
+ new developers and ideas, and those interested in becoming more
+ closely involved with the project need simply contact us at the
+ &a.hackers;. Those who prefer to work more independently are also
+ accommodated, and they are free to use our FTP facilities at ftp.freebsd.org to distribute their own patches or work-in-progress
+ sources. The &a.announce; is also available to those wishing
+ to make other FreeBSD users aware of major areas of work.
+
+ Useful things to know about the FreeBSD project and its development process,
+ whether working independently or in close cooperation:
+
+
+
+ The CVS repository
+
+
+
+ The central source tree for FreeBSD is maintained by CVS
+ (Concurrent Version System), a freely available source code control
+ tool which comes bundled with FreeBSD. The primary CVS repository
+ resides on a machine in Concord CA, USA from where it is replicated
+ to numerous mirror machines throughout the world. The CVS tree, as well
+ as the and trees which are checked out of it, can be easily
+ replicated to your own machine as well. Please refer to the
+
+ section for more information on doing this.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The committers list
+
+
+
+
+ The are the people
+ who have write access to the CVS tree, and are thus
+ authorized to make modifications to the FreeBSD source (the term
+ ``committer'' comes from the cvs(1) ``commit''
+ command, which is used to bring new changes into the CVS repository).
+ The best way of making submissions for review by the committers list
+ is to use the send-pr(1) command, though if something appears to be jammed
+ in the system then you may also reach them by sending mail to committers@freebsd.org.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The FreeBSD core team
+
+
+
+
+ The would be
+ equivalent to the board of directors if the FreeBSD Project were a
+ company. The primary task of the core team is to make sure the
+ project, as a whole, is in good shape and is heading in the right
+ directions. Inviting dedicated and responsible developers to join our
+ group of committers is one of the functions of the core team, as is
+ the recruitment of new core team members as others move on. Most
+ current members of the core team started as committers who's addiction
+ to the project got the better of them.
+
+
+
+ Some core team members also have specific , meaning that they are committed to
+ ensuring that some large portion of the system works as advertised.
+ Note that most members of the core team are volunteers when it comes
+ to FreeBSD development and do not benefit from the project
+ financially, so "commitment" should also not be misconstrued as
+ meaning "guaranteed support." The ``board of directors'' analogy
+ above is not actually very accurate, and it may be more suitable to
+ say that these are the people who gave up their lives in favor of
+ FreeBSD against their better judgement! ;)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Outside contributors
+
+
+
+
+ Last, but definitely not least, the largest group of developers are
+ the users themselves who provide feedback and bug-fixes to us on an
+ almost constant basis. The primary way of keeping in touch with FreeBSD's
+ more non-centralized development is to subscribe to the &a.hackers;
+ (see ) where such
+ things are discussed.
+
+
+
+ of those who have
+ contributed something which made its way into our source tree is
+ a long and growing one, so why not join it by contributing something
+ back to FreeBSD today? :-)
+
+
+
+ Providing code is not the only way of contributing to the project;
+ for a more complete list of things that need doing, please refer to the section in this handbook.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ In summary, our development model is organized as a loose set of
+ concentric circles. The centralized model is designed for the
+ convenience of the users of FreeBSD, who are thereby provided
+ with an easy way of tracking one central code base, not to keep
+ potential contributors out! Our desire is to present a stable
+ operating system with a large set of coherent that the users can easily install and
+ use, and this model works very well in accomplishing that.
+
+ All we ask of those who would join us as FreeBSD developers is some of
+ the same dedication its current people have to its continued success!
+
+
+
+
+
+ About the Current Release
+
+ FreeBSD is a freely available, full source 4.4BSD-Lite
+ based release for Intel i386/i486/Pentium/PentiumPro/Pentium II
+ (or compatible) based PC's. It is based primarily on
+ software from U.C. Berkeley's CSRG group, with some
+ enhancements from NetBSD, OpenBSD, 386BSD, and the Free
+ Software Foundation.
+
+ Since our release of FreeBSD 2.0 in January of 95, the
+ performance, feature set, and stability of FreeBSD has
+ improved dramatically. The largest change is a
+ revamped virtual memory system with a merged VM/file buffer
+ cache that not only increases performance, but reduces
+ FreeBSD's memory footprint, making a 5MB configuration
+ a more acceptable minimum. Other enhancements include
+ full NIS client and server support, transaction TCP
+ support, dial-on-demand PPP, an improved SCSI
+ subsystem, early ISDN support, support for FDDI and
+ Fast Ethernet (100Mbit) adapters, improved support for
+ the Adaptec 2940 (WIDE and narrow) and many hundreds of
+ bug fixes.
+
+ We have also taken the comments and suggestions of many
+ of our users to heart and have attempted to provide
+ what we hope is a more sane and easily understood
+ installation process. Your feedback on this
+ (constantly evolving) process is especially welcome!
+
+ In addition to the base distributions, FreeBSD offers a
+ new ported software collection with hundreds of commonly
+ sought-after programs. At the end of March 1998 there were
+ more than 1300 ports! The list of ports ranges from
+ http (WWW) servers, to games, languages, editors and
+ almost everything in between. The entire ports collection
+ requires approximately 26MB of storage, all ports being
+ expressed as ``deltas'' to their original sources. This makes
+ it much easier for us to update ports, and greatly reduces
+ the disk space demands made by the older 1.0 ports
+ collection. To compile a port, you simply change to the
+ directory of the program you wish to install, type ``make
+ all'' followed by ``make install'' after successful
+ compilation and let the system do the rest. The full
+ original distribution for each port you build is retrieved
+ dynamically off the CDROM or a local ftp site, so you need
+ only enough disk space to build the ports you want.
+ (Almost) every port is also provided as a pre-compiled
+ "package" which can be installed with a simple command
+ (pkg_add) by those who do not wish to compile their own
+ ports from source.
+
+ A number of additional documents which you may find
+ very helpful in the process of installing and using
+ FreeBSD may now also be found in the
+ /usr/share/doc directory on any machine running
+ FreeBSD 2.1 or later. You may view the locally installed
+ manuals with any HTML capable browser using the
+ following URLs:
+
+
+
+ The FreeBSD handbook
+
+ file:/usr/share/doc/handbook/handbook.html
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The FreeBSD FAQ
+
+
+ file:/usr/share/doc/FAQ/FAQ.html
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ You can also visit the master (and most frequently
+ updated) copies at http://www.freebsd.org.
+
+ The core of FreeBSD does not contain DES code which
+ would inhibit its being exported outside the United
+ States. There is an add-on package to the core
+ distribution, for use only in the United States, that
+ contains the programs that normally use DES. The
+ auxiliary packages provided separately can be used by
+ anyone. A freely (from outside the U.S.) exportable
+ European distribution of DES for our non-U.S. users
+ also exists and is described in the FreeBSD FAQ.
+
+ If password security for FreeBSD is all you need, and
+ you have no requirement for copying encrypted passwords
+ from different hosts (Suns, DEC machines, etc) into
+ FreeBSD password entries, then FreeBSD's MD5 based
+ security may be all you require! We feel that our
+ default security model is more than a match for DES,
+ and without any messy export issues to deal with. If
+ you are outside (or even inside) the U.S., give it a
+ try!
+
+
+
+
+
+ Installing FreeBSD
+
+ So, you would like to try out FreeBSD on your system?
+ This section is a quick-start guide for what you need to
+ do. FreeBSD can be installed from a variety of media
+ including CD-ROM, floppy disk, magnetic tape, an MS-DOS
+ partition and, if you have a network connection, via
+ anonymous ftp or NFS.
+
+ Regardless of the installation media you choose, you can
+ get started by creating the installation disk
+ as described below. Booting your computer into the FreeBSD installer,
+ even if you aren't planning on installing FreeBSD right away, will
+ provide important information about compatibility between
+ FreeBSD and your hardware which may, in turn, dictate which
+ installation options are even possible. It can also provide
+ early clues to any compatibility problems which could prevent
+ FreeBSD running on your system at all. If you plan on
+ installing via anonymous FTP then this installation disk
+ is all you need to download (the installation will handle any
+ further required downloading itself).
+
+ For more information on obtaining the latest FreeBSD distributions,
+ please see in the Appendix.
+
+ So, to get the show on the road, follow these steps:
+
+
+
+
+
+ Review the section of this installation guide to
+ be sure that your hardware is supported by FreeBSD. It
+ may be helpful to make a list of any special cards you
+ have installed, such as SCSI controllers, Ethernet
+ adapters or sound cards. This list should include
+ relevant configuration parameters such as interrupts
+ (IRQ) and IO port addresses.
+
+
+
+
+
+ If you're installing FreeBSD from CDROM media then you have
+ several different installation options:
+
+
+
+
+
+ If the CD has been mastered with El Torrito boot support and
+ your system supports direct booting from CDROM (and many older systems
+ do not), simply insert the CD into the drive and boot
+ directly from it.
+
+
+
+
+
+ If you're running DOS and have the proper drivers to access
+ your CD, run the install.bat script provided on the CD. This will
+ attempt to boot into the FreeBSD installation straight from DOS
+ (note: You must do this from actual DOS and not a Windows DOS box). If you also want to install FreeBSD from your DOS partition
+ (perhaps because your CDROM drive is completely unsupported by
+ FreeBSD) then run the setup program first to copy the
+ appropriate files from the CD to your DOS partition, afterwards
+ running install.
+
+
+
+
+
+ If either of the two proceeding methods work then you can
+ simply skip the rest of this section, otherwise your final option
+ is to create a boot floppy from the floppies\boot.flp
+ image - proceed to step 4 for instructions on how to do
+ this.
+
+
+
-
-
-
-Set up a bootp server to provide the client with
-IP, gateway, netmask.
-
-diskless:\
- :ht=ether:\
- :ha=0000c01f848a:\
- :sm=255.255.255.0:\
- :hn:\
- :ds=192.1.2.3:\
- :ip=192.1.2.4:\
- :gw=192.1.2.5:\
- :vm=rfc1048:
-
-
-
-
-
-Set up a TFTP server (on same machine as bootp
-server) to provide booting information to client.
-The name of this file is cfg.X.X.X.X (or
-/tftpboot/cfg.X.X.X.X, it will try both)
-where X.X.X.X is the IP address of the
-client. The contents of this file can be any valid
-netboot commands. Under 2.0, netboot has the
-following commands:
-
-help - print help list
-ip <X.X.X.X> - print/set client's IP address
-server <X.X.X.X> - print/set bootp/tftp server address
-netmask <X.X.X.X> - print/set netmask
-hostname <name> - print/set hostname
-kernel <name> - print/set kernel name
-rootfs <ip:/fs> - print/set root filesystem
-swapfs <ip:/fs> - print/set swap filesystem
-swapsize <size> - set diskless swapsize in Kbytes
-diskboot - boot from disk
-autoboot - continue boot process
-trans <on|off> - turn transceiver on|off
-flags [bcdhsv] - set boot flags
-
-
-A typical completely diskless cfg file might contain:
-
-rootfs 192.1.2.3:/rootfs/myclient
-swapfs 192.1.2.3:/swapfs
-swapsize 20000
-hostname myclient.mydomain
-
-
-A cfg file for a machine with local swap might contain:
-
-rootfs 192.1.2.3:/rootfs/myclient
-hostname myclient.mydomain
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Ensure that your NFS server has exported the root
-(and swap if applicable) filesystems to your client,
-and that the client has root access to these
-filesystems
-
-A typical /etc/exports file on FreeBSD might
-look like:
-
-/rootfs/myclient -maproot=0:0 myclient.mydomain
-/swapfs -maproot=0:0 myclient.mydomain
-
-
-
-And on HP-UX:
-
-/rootfs/myclient -root=myclient.mydomain
-/swapfs -root=myclient.mydomain
-
-
-
-
-
-
-If you are swapping over NFS (completely diskless
-configuration) create a swap file for your client
-using dd. If your swapfs command has the
-arguments /swapfs and the size 20000 as in the
-example above, the swapfile for myclient will be called
-/swapfs/swap.X.X.X.X where X.X.X.X
-is the client's IP addr, eg:
-
-# dd if=/dev/zero of=/swapfs/swap.192.1.2.4 bs=1k count=20000
-
-
-
-Also, the client's swap space might contain sensitive
-information once swapping starts, so make sure to
-restrict read and write access to this file to prevent
-unauthorized access:
-
-# chmod 0600 /swapfs/swap.192.1.2.4
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Unpack the root filesystem in the directory the
-client will use for its root filesystem
-(/rootfs/myclient in the example above).
-
-
-
-
- On HP-UX systems: The server should be
-running HP-UX 9.04 or later for HP9000/800 series
-machines. Prior versions do not allow the
-creation of device files over NFS.
-
-
-
-
- When extracting /dev in
-/rootfs/myclient, beware that some
-systems (HPUX) will not create device files that
-FreeBSD is happy with. You may have to go to
-single user mode on the first bootup (press
-control-c during the bootup phase), cd
-/dev and do a "sh ./MAKEDEV
-all" from the client to fix this.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Run netboot.com on the client or make an EPROM
-from the netboot.rom file
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Using Shared / and /usr filesystems
-
-At present there isn't an officially sanctioned way of
-doing this, although I have been using a shared /usr
-filesystem and individual / filesystems for each client.
-If anyone has any suggestions on how to do this cleanly,
-please let me and/or the &a.core; know.
-
-
-
-
-Compiling netboot for specific setups
-
-Netboot can be compiled to support NE1000/2000 cards by
-changing the configuration in
-/sys/i386/boot/netboot/Makefile. See the
-comments at the top of this file.
-
-
-
-
-
-ISDN
-
-Last modified by &a.wlloyd;.
-
-A good resource for information on ISDN technology and hardware is
-Dan Kegel's ISDN Page.
-
-A quick simple roadmap to ISDN follows:
-
-
-
-If you live in Europe I suggest you investigate the ISDN card
-section.
-
-
-
-
-If you are planning to use ISDN primarily to connect to the
-Internet with an Internet Provider on a dialup non-dedicated basis, I
-suggest you look into Terminal Adapters. This will give you the most
-flexibility, with the fewest problems, if you change providers.
-
-
-
-
-If you are connecting two lans together, or connecting to the
-Internet with a dedicated ISDN connection, I suggest you consider the
-stand alone router/bridge option.
-
-
-
-
-
-Cost is a significant factor in determining what solution you will
-choose. The following options are listed from least expensive to most
-expensive.
-
-
-
-ISDN Cards
-
-Original Contribution by &a.hm;.
-
-This section is really only relevant to European ISDN users. The
-cards supported are not yet(?) available for North American ISDN
-standards.
-
-You should be aware that this code is largely under development.
-Specifically, drivers have only been written for two manufacturers
-cards.
-
-PC ISDN cards support the full bandwidth of ISDN, 128Kbs. These
-cards are often the least expensive type of ISDN equipment.
-
-Under FreeBSD 2.1.0 and 2.1.5, there is early unfinished ISDN code
-under /usr/src/gnu/isdn. This code is out of date and should not be
-used. If you want to go this route, get the bisdn stuff. This code
-has been removed from the main source tree starting with FreeBSD 2.2.
-
-There is the bisdn ISDN package available from
-hub.freebsd.org
-supporting FreeBSD 2.1R, FreeBSD-current and NetBSD.
-The latest source can be found on the above mentioned ftp server under
-directory isdn as file bisdn-097.tar.gz.
-
-There are drivers for the following cards:
-
-
-
-Currently all (passive) Teles cards and their clones are supported
-for the EuroISDN (DSS1) and 1TR6 protocols.
-
-
-
-Dr. Neuhaus - Niccy 1016
-
-
-
-
-
-There are several limitations with the bisdn stuff. Specifically the
-following features usually associated with ISDN are not supported.
-
-
-
-
-
-No PPP support, only raw hdlc. This means you cannot connect to most
-standalone routers.
-
-
-
-Bridging Control Protocol not supported.
-
-
-
-Multiple cards are not supported.
-
-
-
-No bandwidth on demand.
-
-
-
-No channel bundling.
-
-
-
-
-
-A majordomo maintained mailing list is available.
-To join the list, send mail to &a.majordomo; and specify:
-subscribe freebsd-isdn
-
-In the body of your message.
-
-
-
-
-ISDN Terminal Adapters
-
-Terminal adapters(TA), are to ISDN what modems are to regular phone
-lines.
-
-Most TA's use the standard hayes modem AT command set, and can be
-used as a drop in replacement for a modem.
-
-A TA will operate basically the same as a modem except connection and
-throughput speeds will be much faster than your old modem. You will
-need to configure exactly the same as for a
-modem setup. Make sure you set your serial speed as high as possible.
-
-The main advantage of using a TA to connect to an Internet Provider is
-that you can do Dynamic PPP. As IP address space becomes more and more
-scarce, most providers are not willing to provide you with a static IP
-anymore. Most standalone routers are not able to accommodate dynamic IP
-allocation.
-
-TA's completely rely on the PPP daemon that you are running for their
-features and stability of connection. This allows you to upgrade easily
-from using a modem to ISDN on a FreeBSD machine, if you already have PPP
-setup. However, at the same time any problems you experienced with the
-PPP program and are going to persist.
-
-If you want maximum stability, use the kernel
-option, not the user-land .
-
-The following TA's are know to work with FreeBSD.
-
-
-
-
-
-Motorola BitSurfer and Bitsurfer Pro
-
-
-
-Adtran
-
-
-
-
-
-Most other TA's will probably work as well, TA vendors try to make sure
-their product can accept most of the standard modem AT command set.
-
-The real problem with external TA's is like modems you need a good
-serial card in your computer.
-
-You should read the section in the
-handbook for a detailed understanding of serial devices, and the
-differences between asynchronous and synchronous serial ports.
-
-A TA running off a standard PC serial port (asynchronous) limits you to
-115.2Kbs, even though you have a 128Kbs connection. To fully utilize
-the 128Kbs that ISDN is capable of, you must move the TA to a
-synchronous serial card.
-
-Do not be fooled into buying an internal TA and thinking you have
-avoided the synchronous/asynchronous issue. Internal TA's simply have a
-standard PC serial port chip built into them. All this will do, is save
-you having to buy another serial cable, and find another empty
-electrical socket.
-
-A synchronous card with a TA is at least as fast as a standalone router,
-and with a simple 386 FreeBSD box driving it, probably more flexible.
-
-The choice of sync/TA vs standalone router is largely a religious
-issue. There has been some discussion of this in the mailing lists. I
-suggest you search the archives for the complete discussion.
-
-
-
-
-Standalone ISDN Bridges/Routers
-
-ISDN bridges or routers are not at all specific to FreeBSD or any
-other operating system. For a more complete description of routing and
-bridging technology, please refer to a Networking reference book.
-
-In the context of this page, I will use router and bridge
-interchangeably.
-
-As the cost of low end ISDN routers/bridges comes down, it will
-likely become a more and more popular choice. An ISDN router is a small
-box that plugs directly into your local Ethernet network(or card), and
-manages its own connection to the other bridge/router. It has all the
-software to do PPP and other protocols built in.
-
-A router will allow you much faster throughput that a standard TA, since
-it will be using a full synchronous ISDN connection.
-
-The main problem with ISDN routers and bridges is that interoperability
-between manufacturers can still be a problem. If you are planning to
-connect to an Internet provider, I recommend that you discuss your needs
-with them.
-
-If you are planning to connect two lan segments together, ie: home
-lan to the office lan, this is the simplest lowest maintenance
-solution. Since you are buying the equipment for both sides of the
-connection you can be assured that the link will work.
-
-For example to connect a home computer or branch office network to a
-head office network the following setup could be used.
-
-Branch office or Home network
-
-Network is 10 Base T Ethernet. Connect router to network cable with
-AUI/10BT transceiver, if necessary.
-
-
----Sun workstation
-|
----FreeBSD box
-|
----Windows 95 (Do not admit to owning it)
-|
-Standalone router
- |
-ISDN BRI line
-
-If your home/branch office is only one computer you can use a twisted
-pair crossover cable to connect to the standalone router directly.
-
-Head office or other lan
-
-Network is Twisted Pair Ethernet.
- -------Novell Server
- | H |
- | ---Sun
- | |
- | U ---FreeBSD
- | |
- | ---Windows 95
- | B |
- |___---Standalone router
- |
- ISDN BRI line
-
-
-One large advantage of most routers/bridges is that they allow you to
-have 2 SEPARATE INDEPENDENT PPP connections to 2 separate sites at the
-SAME time. This is not supported on most TA's, except for
-specific(expensive) models that have two serial ports. Do not confuse
-this with channel bonding, MPP etc.
-
-This can be very useful feature, for example if you have an dedicated
-internet ISDN connection at your office and would like to tap into it,
-but don't want to get another ISDN line at work. A router at the office
-location can manage a dedicated B channel connection (64Kbs) to the
-internet, as well as a use the other B channel for a separate data connection.
-The second B channel can be used for dialin, dialout or dynamically
-bond(MPP etc.) with the first B channel for more bandwidth.
-
-An Ethernet bridge will also allow you to transmit more than just
-IP traffic, you can also send IPX/SPX or whatever other protocols you
-use.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Electronic Mail
-
-Contributed by &a.wlloyd;.
-
- Electronic Mail configuration is the subject of many books. If you plan on doing anything beyond setting up one mailhost for your network, you need industrial strength help.
-
-Some parts of E-Mail configuration are controlled in the Domain Name System (DNS). If you are going to run your own own DNS server check out /etc/namedb and ' man -k named ' for more information.
-
-
-
-Basic Information
-
-These are the major programs involved in an E-Mail exchange.
-A mailhost is a server that is responsible for delivering and receiving all email for your host, and possibly your network.
-
-
-
-User program
-
- This is a program like elm, pine, mail , or something more sophisticated like a WWW browser. This program will simply pass off all e-mail transactions to the local mailhost , either by calling sendmail or delivering it over TCP.
-
-
-
-
-Mailhost Server Daemon
-
- Usually this program is sendmail or smail running in the background. Turn it off or change the command line options in /etc/rc.conf
-(or, prior to FreeBSD 2.2.2, /etc/sysconfig). It is best to leave it on, unless you have a specific reason to want it off. Example: You are building a .
-
-You should be aware that sendmail is a potential weak link in a secure site. Some versions of sendmail have known security problems.
-
- sendmail does two jobs. It looks after delivering and receiving mail.
-
-If sendmail needs to deliver mail off your site it will look up in the DNS to determine the actual host that will receive mail for the destination.
-
- If it is acting as a delivery agent sendmail will take the message from the local queue and deliver it across the Internet to another sendmail on the receivers computer.
-
-
-
-
-DNS - Name Service
-
-The Domain Name System and its daemon named , contain the database mapping hostname to IP address, and hostname to mailhost. The IP address is specified in an "A" record. The "MX" record specifies the mailhost that will receive mail for you. If you do not have a "MX" record mail for your hostname, the mail will be delivered to your host directly.
-
-Unless you are running your own DNS server, you will not be able to change any information in the DNS yourself. If you are using an Internet Provider, speak to them.
-
-
-
-
-POP Servers
-
- This program gets the mail from your mailbox and gives it to your browser. If you want to run a POP server on your computer, you will need to do 2 things.
-
-
-
-Get pop software from the Ports collection that can be found in /usr/ports
-or packages collection. This handbook section has a complete reference on the system.
-
-
-
-Modify /etc/inetd.conf to load the POP server.
-
-
-
-
-
-The pop program will have instructions with it. Read them.
-
-
-
-
-
-Configuration
-
-
-
-Basic
-
-As your FreeBSD system comes "out of the box"[TM], you should be able to send E-mail to external hosts as long as you have /etc/resolv.conf setup or are running a name server.
-If you want to have mail for your host delivered to your specific host,there are two methods:
-
-- Run a name server ( man -k named ) and have your own domain smallminingco.com
-
-- Get mail delivered to the current DNS name for your host. Ie: dorm6.ahouse.school.edu
-
-No matter what option you choose, to have mail delivered directly to your host, you must be a full Internet host. You must have a permanent IP address. IE: NO dynamic PPP. If you are behind a firewall, the firewall must be passing on smtp traffic to you. From /etc/services
-smtp 25/tcp mail #Simple Mail Transfer
-
-If you want to receive mail at your host itself, you must make sure that the DNS MX entry points to your host address, or there is no MX entry for your DNS name.
-
-Try this
-newbsdbox# hostname
-newbsdbox.freebsd.org
-newbsdbox# host newbsdbox.freebsd.org
-newbsdbox.freebsd.org has address 204.216.27.xx
-
-
-If that is all that comes out for your machine, mail directory to root@newbsdbox.freebsd.org will work no problems.
-
-If instead, you have this
-newbsdbox# host newbsdbox.freebsd.org
-newbsdbox.FreeBSD.org has address 204.216.27.xx
-newbsdbox.FreeBSD.org mail is handled (pri=10) by freefall.FreeBSD.org
-
-All mail sent to your host directly will end up on freefall, under the same username.
-
-This information is setup in your domain name server. This should be the same host that is listed as your primary nameserver in /etc/resolv.conf
-
-The DNS record that carries mail routing information is the Mail eXchange entry. If no MX entry exists, mail will be delivered directly to the host by way of the Address record.
-
-The MX entry for freefall.freebsd.org at one time.
- freefall MX 30 mail.crl.net
- freefall MX 40 agora.rdrop.com
- freefall HINFO Pentium FreeBSD
- freefall MX 10 freefall.FreeBSD.org
- freefall MX 20 who.cdrom.com
- freefall A 204.216.27.xx
- freefall CNAME www.FreeBSD.org
-
-
-Freefall has many MX entries. The lowest MX number gets the mail in the end. The others will queue mail temporarily, if freefall is busy or down.
-
-Alternate MX sites should have separate connections to the Internet, to be most useful. An Internet Provider or other friendly site can provide this service.
-
-dig, nslookup, and host are your friends.
-
-
-
-
-Mail for your Domain (Network).
-
-To setup up a network mailhost, you need to direct the mail from arriving at all the workstations. In other words, you want to hijack all mail for *.smallminingco.com and divert it to one machine, your mailhost.
-
-The network users on their workstations will most likely pick up their mail over POP or telnet.
-
-A user account with the SAME USERNAME should exist on both machines. Please use adduser to do this as required. If you set the shell to /nonexistent the user will not be allowed to login.
-
-The mailhost that you will be using must be designated the Mail eXchange for each workstation. This must be arranged in DNS (ie BIND, named). Please refer to a Networking book for in-depth information.
-
-You basically need to add these lines in your DNS server.
-pc24.smallminingco.com A xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx ; Workstation ip
- MX 10 smtp.smallminingco.com ; Your mailhost
-
-
-You cannot do this yourself unless you are running a DNS server. If you do not want to run a DNS server, get somebody else like your Internet Provider to do it.
-
-This will redirect mail for the workstation to the Mail eXchange host. It does not matter what machine the A record points to, the mail will be sent to the MX host.
-
-This feature is used to implement Virtual E-Mail Hosting.
-
-Example
-
-I have a customer with domain foo.bar and I want all mail for foo.bar to be sent to my machine smtp.smalliap.com. You must make an entry in your DNS server like:
-
-foo.bar MX 10 smtp.smalliap.com ; your mailhost
-
-The A record is not needed if you only want E-Mail for the domain. IE: Don't expect ping foo.bar to work unless an Address record for foo.bar exists as well.
-
-On the mailhost that actually accepts mail for final delivery to a mailbox, sendmail must be told what hosts it will be accepting mail for.
-
-Add pc24.smallminingco.com to /etc/sendmail.cw (if you are using FEATURE(use_cw_file)), or add a "Cw myhost.smalliap.com" line to /etc/sendmail.cf
-
-If you plan on doing anything serious with sendmail you should install the sendmail source. The source has plenty of documentation with it. You will find information on getting sendmail source from .
-
-
-
-
- Setting up UUCP.
-
-Stolen from the FAQ.
-
-The sendmail configuration that ships with FreeBSD is
-suited for sites that connect directly to the Internet.
-Sites that wish to exchange their mail via UUCP must install
-another sendmail configuration file.
-
-Tweaking /etc/sendmail.cf manually is considered
-something for purists. Sendmail version 8 comes with a
-new approach of generating config files via some m4
-preprocessing, where the actual hand-crafted configuration
-is on a higher abstraction level. You should use the
-configuration files under
-
-
- /usr/src/usr.sbin/sendmail/cf
-
-
-If you did not install your system with full sources,
-the sendmail config stuff has been
-broken out into a separate source distribution tarball just
-for you. Assuming you have your CD-ROM mounted, do:
-
-
- cd /usr/src
- tar -xvzf /cdrom/dists/src/ssmailcf.aa
-
-
-Do not panic, this is only a few hundred kilobytes in size.
-The file README in the cf directory can
-serve as a basic introduction to m4 configuration.
-
-For UUCP delivery, you are best advised to use the
-mailertable feature. This constitutes a database
-that sendmail can use to base its routing decision upon.
-
-First, you have to create your .mc file. The
-directory /usr/src/usr.sbin/sendmail/cf/cf is the
-home of these files. Look around, there are already a few
-examples. Assuming you have named your file foo.mc,
-all you need to do in order to convert it into a valid
-sendmail.cf is:
-
-
- cd /usr/src/usr.sbin/sendmail/cf/cf
- make foo.cf
-
-
-If you don't have a /usr/obj hiearchy, then:
-
-
- cp foo.cf /etc/sendmail.cf
-
-
-Otherwise:
-
-
- cp /usr/obj/`pwd`/foo.cf /etc/sendmail.cf
-
-
-A typical .mc file might look like:
-
-
- include(`../m4/cf.m4')
- VERSIONID(`Your version number')
- OSTYPE(bsd4.4)
-
- FEATURE(nodns)
- FEATURE(nocanonify)
- FEATURE(mailertable)
-
- define(`UUCP_RELAY', your.uucp.relay)
- define(`UUCP_MAX_SIZE', 200000)
-
- MAILER(local)
- MAILER(smtp)
- MAILER(uucp)
-
- Cw your.alias.host.name
- Cw youruucpnodename.UUCP
-
-
-The nodns and nocanonify features will
-prevent any usage of the DNS during mail delivery. The
-UUCP_RELAY clause is needed for bizarre reasons,
-do not ask. Simply put an Internet hostname there that
-is able to handle .UUCP pseudo-domain addresses; most likely,
-you will enter the mail relay of your ISP there.
-
-Once you have this, you need this file called
-/etc/mailertable. A typical example of this
-gender again:
-
-
- #
- # makemap hash /etc/mailertable.db < /etc/mailertable
- #
- horus.interface-business.de uucp-dom:horus
- .interface-business.de uucp-dom:if-bus
- interface-business.de uucp-dom:if-bus
- .heep.sax.de smtp8:%1
- horus.UUCP uucp-dom:horus
- if-bus.UUCP uucp-dom:if-bus
- . uucp-dom:sax
-
-
-As you can see, this is part of a real-life file. The first
-three lines handle special cases where domain-addressed mail
-should not be sent out to the default route, but instead to
-some UUCP neighbor in order to ``shortcut'' the delivery
-path. The next line handles mail to the local Ethernet
-domain that can be delivered using SMTP. Finally, the UUCP
-neighbors are mentioned in the .UUCP pseudo-domain notation,
-to allow for a ``uucp-neighbor!recipient'' override of the
-default rules. The last line is always a single dot, matching
-everything else, with UUCP delivery to a UUCP neighbor that
-serves as your universal mail gateway to the world. All of
-the node names behind the uucp-dom: keyword must
-be valid UUCP neighbors, as you can verify using the
-command uuname.
-
-As a reminder that this file needs to be converted into a
-DBM database file before being usable, the command line to
-accomplish this is best placed as a comment at the top of
-the mailertable. You always have to execute this command
-each time you change your mailertable.
-
-Final hint: if you are uncertain whether some particular
-mail routing would work, remember the option to
-sendmail. It starts sendmail in address test mode;
-simply enter ``0 '', followed by the address you wish to
-test for the mail routing. The last line tells you the used
-internal mail agent, the destination host this agent will be
-called with, and the (possibly translated) address. Leave
-this mode by typing Control-D.
-
-
- j@uriah 191% sendmail -bt
- ADDRESS TEST MODE (ruleset 3 NOT automatically invoked)
- Enter <ruleset> <address>
- > 0 foo@interface-business.de
- rewrite: ruleset 0 input: foo @ interface-business . de
- ...
- rewrite: ruleset 0 returns: $# uucp-dom $@ if-bus $: foo \
- < @ interface-business . de >
- > ^D
- j@uriah 192%
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FAQ
-
-Migration from FAQ.
-
-
-
-Why do I have to use the FQDN for hosts on my site?
-
-You will probably find that the host is actually in a different
-domain; for example, if you are in foo.bar.edu and you wish to reach
-a host called ``mumble'' in the bar.edu domain, you will have to
-refer to it by the fully-qualified domain name, ``mumble.bar.edu'',
-instead of just ``mumble''.
-
-Traditionally, this was allowed by BSD BIND resolvers. However
-the current version of BIND that ships with FreeBSD
-no longer provides default abbreviations for non-fully
-qualified domain names other than the domain you are in.
-So an unqualified host mumble must either be found
-as mumble.foo.bar.edu, or it will be searched for
-in the root domain.
-
-This is different from the previous behavior, where the
-search continued across mumble.bar.edu, and
-mumble.edu. Have a look at RFC 1535 for why this
-was considered bad practice, or even a security hole.
-
-As a good workaround, you can place the line
-
-search foo.bar.edu bar.edu
-
-instead of the previous
-
-domain foo.bar.edu
-
-into your /etc/resolv.conf. However, make sure
-that the search order does not go beyond the ``boundary
-between local and public administration'', as RFC 1535
-calls it.
-
-
-
-
-Sendmail says ``mail loops back to myself''
-
-This is answered in the sendmail FAQ as follows:-
- * I am getting "Local configuration error" messages, such as:
-
- 553 relay.domain.net config error: mail loops back to myself
- 554 <user@domain.net>... Local configuration error
-
- How can I solve this problem?
-
- You have asked mail to the domain (e.g., domain.net) to be
- forwarded to a specific host (in this case, relay.domain.net)
- by using an MX record, but the relay machine does not recognize
- itself as domain.net. Add domain.net to /etc/sendmail.cw
- (if you are using FEATURE(use_cw_file)) or add "Cw domain.net"
- to /etc/sendmail.cf.
-
-
-
-The sendmail FAQ is in /usr/src/usr.sbin/sendmail
-and is recommended reading if you want to do any
-``tweaking'' of your mail setup.
-
-
-
-
-How can I do E-Mail with a dialup PPP host?
-
-You want to connect a FreeBSD box on a lan, to the Internet. The FreeBSD box will be a mail gateway for the lan. The PPP connection is non-dedicated.
-
-There are at least two way to do this.
-
-The other is to use UUCP.
-
-The key is to get a Internet site to provide secondary MX services for your domain.
-For example:
-bigco.com. MX 10 bigco.com.
- MX 20 smalliap.com.
-
-
-Only one host should be specified as the final recipient ( add ``Cw bigco.com'' in /etc/sendmail.cf on bigco.com).
-
-When the senders sendmail is trying to deliver the mail it will try to connect to you over the modem link. It will most likely time out because you are not online. Sendmail will automatically deliver it to the secondary MX site, ie your Internet provider. The secondary MX site will try every (sendmail_flags = "-bd -q15m" in /etc/rc.conf ) 15 minutes to connect to your host to deliver the mail to the primary MX site.
-
-You might wat to use something like this as a login script.
-#!/bin/sh
-# Put me in /usr/local/bin/pppbigco
-( sleep 60 ; /usr/sbin/sendmail -q ) &
-/usr/sbin/ppp -direct pppbigco
-
-If you are going to create a separate login script for a user you could use sendmail -qRbigco.com instead in the script above. This will force all mail in your queue for bigco.com to be processed immediately.
-
-A further refinement of the situation is as follows.
-
-Message stolen from the freebsd-isp mailing list.
-> we provide the secondary mx for a customer. The customer connects to
-> our services several times a day automatically to get the mails to
-> his primary mx (We do not call his site when a mail for his domains
-> arrived). Our sendmail sends the mailqueue every 30 minutes. At the
-> moment he has to stay 30 minutes online to be sure that all mail is
-> gone to the primary mx.
->
-> Is there a command that would initiate sendmail to send all the mails
-> now? The user has not root-privileges on our machine of course.
-
-In the 'privacy flags' section of sendmail.cf, there is a definition
-Opgoaway,restrictqrun
-
-Remove restrictqrun to allow non-root users to start the queue processing.
-You might also like to rearrange the MXs. We are the 1st MX for our
-customers like this, and we have defined:
-
-# If we are the best MX for a host, try directly instead of generating
-# local config error.
-OwTrue
-
-That way a remote site will deliver straight to you, without trying
-the customer connection. You then send to your customer. Only works for
-"hosts", so you need to get your customer to name their mail machine
-"customer.com" as well as "hostname.customer.com" in the DNS. Just put
-an A record in the DNS for "customer.com".
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Advanced topics
-
-
-
-The Cutting Edge: FreeBSD-current and FreeBSD-stable
-
-FreeBSD is under constant development between releases. For
-people who want to be on the cutting edge, there are several
-easy mechanisms for keeping your system in sync with the latest
-developments. Be warned: the cutting edge is not for everyone!
-This chapter will help you decide if you want to track the development
-system, or stick with one of the released versions.
-
-
-
-Staying Current with FreeBSD
-
-Contributed by &a.jkh;.
-
-
-
-What is FreeBSD-current?
-
-FreeBSD-current is, quite literally, nothing more than a daily
-snapshot of the working sources for FreeBSD. These include work in
-progress, experimental changes and transitional mechanisms that may or
-may not be present in the next official release of the software.
-While many of us compile almost daily from FreeBSD-current sources,
-there are periods of time when the sources are literally un-compilable.
-These problems are generally resolved as expeditiously as possible,
-but whether or not FreeBSD-current sources bring disaster or greatly
-desired functionality can literally be a matter of which part of any
-given 24 hour period you grabbed them in!
-
-
-
-
-Who needs FreeBSD-current?
-
-FreeBSD-current is made generally available for 3 primary interest groups:
-
-
-
- Members of the FreeBSD group who are actively working on some
-part of the source tree and for whom keeping `current' is an
-absolute requirement.
-
-
-
-
- Members of the FreeBSD group who are active testers,
-willing to spend time working through problems in order to
-ensure that FreeBSD-current remains as sane as possible. These
-are also people who wish to make topical suggestions on changes
-and the general direction of FreeBSD.
-
-
-
-
- Peripheral members of the FreeBSD (or some other) group who merely
-wish to keep an eye on things and use the current sources for
-reference purposes (e.g. for reading, not running). These
-people also make the occasional comment or contribute code.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-What is FreeBSD-current NOT?
-
-
-
-
-
- A fast-track to getting pre-release bits because you heard there is
-some cool new feature in there and you want to be the first on
-your block to have it.
-
-
-
-
- A quick way of getting bug fixes.
-
-
-
-
- In any way ``officially supported'' by us.
-
-We do our best to help people genuinely in one of the 3
-``legitimate'' FreeBSD-current categories, but we simply do not
-have the time to provide tech support for it.
-This is not because we are mean and nasty people who do not like
-helping people out (we would not even be doing FreeBSD if we were),
-it is literally because we cannot answer 400 messages a day
-and actually work on FreeBSD! I am sure that, if given
-the choice between having us answer lots of questions or continuing to
-improve FreeBSD, most of you would vote for us improving it.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Using FreeBSD-current
-
-
-
-
-
- Join the &a.current; and the &a.cvsall; .
-This is not just a good idea, it is essential.
-If you are not on the FreeBSD-current mailing list you
-will not see the comments that people are making about the
-current state of the system and thus will probably end up stumbling
-over a lot of problems that others have already found and
-solved. Even more importantly, you will miss out on
-potentially critical information (e.g. ``Yo, Everybody!
-Before you rebuild /usr/src, you must
-rebuild the kernel or your system will crash horribly!").
-
-The cvs-all mailing list will allow you to see the commit log
-entry for each change as it is made along with any pertinent
-information on possible side-effects.
-
-To join these lists, send mail to &a.majordomo; and specify:
-subscribe freebsd-current
-subscribe cvs-all
-
-In the body of your message. Optionally, you can also say `help'
-and Majordomo will send you full help on how to subscribe and
-unsubscribe to the various other mailing lists we support.
-
-
-
-
- Grab the sources from ftp.FreeBSD.ORG. You can do this in
-three ways:
-
-
-
-
- Use the facility. Unless you
-have a good TCP/IP connection at a flat rate, this is
-the way to do it.
-
-
-
-
- Use the program with
-this supfile.
-This is the second most recommended method, since it allows
-you to grab the entire collection once and then only what has
-changed from then on. Many people run cvsup from cron
-and keep their sources up-to-date automatically.
-
-
-
-
- Use ftp. The source tree for FreeBSD-current is always
-"exported" on:
-ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/FreeBSD-current
-We also use `wu-ftpd' which allows compressed/tar'd grabbing
-of whole trees. e.g. you see:
- usr.bin/lex
-
-You can do:
- ftp> cd usr.bin
- ftp> get lex.tar.Z
-
-And it will get the whole directory for you as a compressed
-tar file.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Essentially, if you need rapid on-demand access to the source and
-communications bandwidth is not a consideration, use cvsup or ftp.
-Otherwise, use CTM.
-
-
-
-
- If you are grabbing the sources to run, and not just look at,
-then grab all of current, not just selected portions. The
-reason for this is that various parts of the source depend on
-updates elsewhere, and trying to compile just a subset is almost
-guaranteed to get you into trouble.
-
-
-
-
- Before compiling current, read the Makefile in /usr/src
-carefully. You should at least run a `' the first time through as part of the upgrading
-process. Reading the &a.current; will keep you up-to-date on other
-bootstrapping procedures that sometimes become necessary as we move
-towards the next release.
-
-
-
-
- Be active! If you are running FreeBSD-current, we want to know
-what you have to say about it, especially if you have suggestions
-for enhancements or bug fixes. Suggestions with accompanying code
-are received most enthusiastically!
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Staying Stable with FreeBSD
-
-Contributed by &a.jkh;.
-
-
-
-What is FreeBSD-stable?
-
-FreeBSD-stable is our development branch for a more low-key and
-conservative set of changes intended for our next mainstream release.
-Changes of an experimental or untested nature do not go into this
-branch (see ).
-
-
-
-
-Who needs FreeBSD-stable?
-
-If you are a commercial user or someone who puts maximum stability of
-their FreeBSD system before all other concerns, you should consider tracking
-stable. This is especially true if you have installed the most
-recent release (&rel.current;-RELEASE at the time of this writing) since the stable
-branch is effectively a bug-fix stream relative to the previous release.
-
-Please note that the stable tree endeavors, above all, to
-be fully compilable and stable at all times, but we do occasionally
-make mistakes (these are still active sources with quickly-transmitted
-updates, after all). We also do our best to thoroughly test fixes in
-current before bringing them into stable, but sometimes
-our tests fail to catch every case. If something breaks for you in
-stable, please let us know immediately! (see
-next section).
-
-
-
-
-Using FreeBSD-stable
-
-
-
-
-
- Join the &a.stable; . This will
-keep you informed of build-dependencies that may appear in
-stable or any other issues requiring special attention.
-Developers will also make announcements in this mailing list when
-they are contemplating some controversial fix or update, giving
-the users a chance to respond if they have any issues to raise concerning
-the proposed change.
-
-To join this list, send mail to &a.majordomo; and say:
- subscribe freebsd-stable
-
-In the body of your message. Optionally, you can also say `help'
-and Majordomo will send you full help on how to subscribe and
-unsubscribe to the various other mailing lists we support.
-
-
-
-
- Grab the sources from ftp.FreeBSD.ORG. You can do this in
-three ways:
-
-
-
-
- Use the facility. Unless you
-have a good TCP/IP connection at a flat rate, this is
-the way to do it.
-
-
-
-
- Use the program with
-this supfile.
-This is the second most recommended method, since it allows
-you to grab the entire collection once and then only what has
-changed from then on. Many people run cvsup from cron
-to keep their sources up-to-date automatically.
-
-
-
-
- Use ftp. The source tree for FreeBSD-stable is always
-"exported" on:
-ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/FreeBSD-stable
-
-
-
-We also use `wu-ftpd' which allows compressed/tar'd grabbing
-of whole trees. e.g. you see:
- usr.bin/lex
-
-You can do:
- ftp> cd usr.bin
- ftp> get lex.tar.Z
-
-And it will get the whole directory for you as a compressed
-tar file.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Essentially, if you need rapid on-demand access to the source and
-communications bandwidth is not a consideration, use cvsup or ftp.
-Otherwise, use CTM.
-
-
-
-
- Before compiling stable, read the Makefile in /usr/src
-carefully. You should at least run a `' the first time through as part of the upgrading
-process. Reading the &a.stable; will keep you up-to-date on other
-bootstrapping procedures that sometimes become necessary as we move
-towards the next release.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Synchronizing Source Trees over the Internet
-
-Contributed by &a.jkh;.
-
-There are various ways of using an Internet (or email) connection
-to stay up-to-date with any given area of the FreeBSD project sources,
-or all areas, depending on what interests you. The primary
-services we offer are CVSup and CTM.
-
-CVSup uses the pull model of updating. The
-user (or a cron script) invokes the cvsup program, and it
-interacts with a cvsupd server somewhere to bring your files
-up to date. The updates you receive are up-to-the-minute and you get
-them when, and only when, you want them. You can easily restrict your
-updates to the specific files or directories that are of interest to
-you. Updates are generated on the fly by the server, according to
-what you have and what you want to have.
-
-CTM, on the other hand, does not interactively compare
-the sources you have with those on the master archive. Instead, a script
-which identifies changes in files since its previous run is executed several
-times a day on the master archive, any detected changes being compressed,
-stamped with a sequence-number and encoded for transmission over email
-(printable ASCII only). Once received, these "CTM deltas" can then be
-handed to the ctm_rmail(1) utility which will automatically decode, verify
-and apply the changes to the user's copy of the sources. This process is
-far more efficient than CVSup, and places less strain on our server resources
-since it is a push rather than a pull model.
-
-There are other trade-offs, of course. If you
-inadvertently wipe out portions of your archive, CVSup will detect
-and rebuild the damaged portions for you. CTM won't do this, and if
-you wipe some portion of your source tree out (and don't have it backed
-up) then you will have to start from scratch (from the most recent CVS
-"base delta") and rebuild it all.
-
-For more information on CTM and CVSup, please
-see one of the following sections:
-
-
-
-CTM
-
-Contributed by &a.phk;. Updated 19-October-1997.
-
-CTM is a method for keeping a remote directory tree in sync with a
-central one. It has been developed for usage with FreeBSD's source
-trees, though other people may find it useful for other purposes as
-time goes by. Little, if any, documentation currently exists at
-this time on the process of creating deltas, so talk to &a.phk;
-for more information should you wish to use CTM for other things.
-
-
-
-Why should I use CTM?
-
-CTM will give you a local copy of the FreeBSD source trees.
-There are a number of ``flavors'' of the tree available. Whether
-you wish to track the entire cvs tree or just one of the branches,
-CTM can provide you the information.
-If you are an active developer on FreeBSD, but have lousy
-or non-existent TCP/IP connectivity, or simply wish to have the
-changes automatically sent to you, CTM was made for you.
-You will need to obtain up to three deltas per day for the most
-active branches. However, you should consider having them sent
-by automatic email. The sizes of the updates are
-always kept as small as possible. This is typically less than 5K,
-with an occasional (one in ten) being 10-50K and every now and
-then a biggie of 100K+ or more coming around.
-
-You will also need to make yourself aware of the various caveats
-related to working directly from the development sources rather
-than a pre-packaged release. This is particularly true if you
-choose the ``current'' sources. It is recommended that
-you read .
-
-
-
-
-What do I need to use CTM?
-
-You will need two things: The ``CTM'' program and the initial
-deltas to feed it (to get up to ``current'' levels).
-
-The CTM program has been part of FreeBSD ever since version 2.0
-was released, and lives in /usr/src/usr.sbin/CTM if you
-have a copy of the source online.
-
-If you are running a pre-2.0 version of FreeBSD, you can fetch the
-current CTM sources directly from:
-
-ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/FreeBSD-current/src/usr.sbin/ctm
-
-The ``deltas'' you feed CTM can be had two ways, FTP or e-mail.
-If you have general FTP access to the Internet then the following
-FTP sites support access to CTM:
-
-ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/CTM
-
-or see section .
-
-FTP the relevant directory and fetch the README file,
-starting from there.
-
-If you may wish to get your deltas via email:
-
-Send email to &a.majordomo; to subscribe to one of the CTM
-distribution lists. ``ctm-cvs-cur'' supports the entire cvs tree.
-``ctm-src-cur'' supports the head of the development branch.
-``ctm-src-2_2'' supports the 2.2 release branch, etc.
-(If you do not know how to subscribe
-yourself using majordomo, send a message first containing the
-word ``help'' - it will send you back usage instructions.)
-
-When you begin receiving your CTM updates in the mail, you may
-use the ctm_rmail program to unpack and apply them. You
-can actually use the ctm_rmail program directly from a entry
-in /etc/aliases if you want to have the process run in a
-fully automated fashion. Check the ctm_rmail man page for more
-details.
-
-NOTE: No matter what method you use to get the CTM
-deltas, you should subscribe to the ctm-announce@FreeBSD.ORG
-mailing list. In the future, this will be the only place where
-announcements concerning the operations of the CTM system will be
-posted. Send an email to &a.majordomo; with a single
-line of ``subscribe ctm-announce'' to get added to the list.
-
-
-
-
-Starting off with CTM for the first time
-
-Before you can start using CTM deltas, you will need to get a
-to a starting point for the deltas produced subsequently to it.
-
-First you should determine what you already have. Everyone can
-start from an ``Empty'' directory. However, since the trees are
-many tens of megabytes, you should prefer to start from something
-already at hand. If you have a RELEASE CD, you can copy or extract
-an initial source from it. This will save a significant transfer
-of data.
-
-Once you identify a suitable starting point, you must use an initial
-``transition'' delta to transform your starting point into a
-CTM supported tree.
-
-You can recognize these transition deltas by the ``X'' appended
-to the number (src-cur.3210XEmpty.gz for instance).
-The designation following the ``X'' corresponds to the origin
-of your initial ``seed''. ``Empty'' is an empty directory, ``R225''
-would designate the 2.2.5 release, etc.
-As a rule a base transition from ``Empty'' is producted
-every 100 deltas. By the way, they are large! 25 to 30
-Megabytes of gzip'ed data is common for the ``XEmpty'' deltas.
-
-Once you've picked a base delta to start from, you will also need
-all deltas with higher numbers following it.
-
-
-
-
-Using CTM in your daily life
-
-To apply the deltas, simply say:
-
-cd /where/ever/you/want/the/stuff
-ctm -v -v /where/you/store/your/deltas/src-xxx.*
-
-
-
-
-CTM understands deltas which have been put through gzip,
-so you do not need to gunzip them first, this saves disk space.
-
-Unless it feels very secure about the entire process, CTM will
-not touch your tree. To verify a delta you can also use the
-``'' flag and CTM will not actually touch your tree; it will
-merely verify the integrity of the delta and see if it would apply
-cleanly to your current tree.
-
-There are other options to CTM as well, see the manual pages
-or look in the sources for more information.
-
-I would also be very happy if somebody could help with the ``user
-interface'' portions, as I have realized that I cannot make up my
-mind on what options should do what, how and when...
-
-That's really all there is to it. Every time you get a new delta,
-just run it through CTM to keep your sources up to date.
-
-Do not remove the deltas if they are hard to download again. You
-just might want to keep them around in case something bad happens.
-Even if you only have floppy disks, consider using fdwrite to
-make a copy.
-
-
-
-
-Keeping your local changes
-
-As a developer one would like to experiment with and change
-files in the source tree. CTM supports local modifications in a
-limited way: before checking for the presence of a file
-foo, it first looks for foo.ctm. If this
-file exists, CTM will operate on it instead of foo.
-
-This behaviour gives us a simple way to maintain local changes:
-simply copy the files you plan to modify to the corresponding
-file names with a .ctm suffix. Then you can freely hack
-the code, while CTM keeps the .ctm file up-to-date.
-
-
-
-
-Other interesting CTM options
-
-
-
-Finding out exactly what would be touched by an update
-
-You can determine the list of changes that CTM will make on your
-source repository using the ``'' option to CTM.
-
-This is useful if you would like to keep logs of the changes,
-pre- or post- process the modified files in any manner, or just
-are feeling a tad paranoid :-).
-
-
-
-
-Making backups before updating
-
-Sometimes you may want to backup all the files that would be changed
-by a CTM update.
-
-Specifying the ``'' option causes
-CTM to backup all files that would be touched by a given CTM
-delta to backup-file.
-
-
-
-
-Restricting the files touched by an update
-
-Sometimes you would be interested in restricting the scope of a
-given CTM update, or may be interested in extracting just a few
-files from a sequence of deltas.
-
-You can control the list of files that CTM would operate on by
-specifying filtering regular expressions using the
-``'' and ``'' options.
-
-For example, to extract an up-to-date copy of
-lib/libc/Makefile from your collection of saved CTM deltas,
-run the commands:
-
-cd /where/ever/you/want/to/extract/it/
-ctm -e '^lib/libc/Makefile' ~ctm/src-xxx.*
-
-
-
-
-For every file specified in a CTM delta, the ``'' and
-``'' options are applied in the order given on the
-command line. The file is processed by CTM only if it is
-marked as eligible after all the ``'' and
-``'' options are applied to it.
-
-
-
-
-
-Future plans for CTM
-
-Tons of them:
-
-
-
-Use some kind of authentication into the CTM system, so as to
-allow detection of spoofed CTM updates.
-
-
-
-Clean up the options to CTM, they became confusing and
-counter intuitive.
-
-
-
-
-
-The bad news is that I am very busy, so any help in doing this will
-be most welcome. And do not forget to tell me what you want also...
-
-
-
-
-Miscellaneous stuff
-
-All the ``DES infected'' (e.g. export controlled) source is not
-included. You will get the ``international'' version only. If
-sufficient interest appears, we will set up a ``sec-cur''
-sequence too.
-There is a sequence of deltas for the ports collection too,
-but interest has not been all that high yet. Tell me if you want
-an email list for that too and we will consider setting it up.
-
-
-
-
-Thanks!
-
-
-
-&a.bde;
-
-for his pointed pen and invaluable comments.
-
-
-
-
-&a.sos;
-
-
-for patience.
-
-
-
-
-Stephen McKay
-
-
-wrote ctm_[rs]mail, much appreciated.
-
-
-
-
-&a.jkh;
-
-
-for being so stubborn that I had to make it better.
-
-
-
-
-All the users
-
-
-I hope you like it...
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CVSup
-
-Contributed by &a.jdp;.
-
-
-
-Introduction
-
-CVSup is a software package for distributing and updating source
-trees from a master CVS repository on a remote server host. The
-FreeBSD sources are maintained in a CVS repository on a central
-development machine in California. With CVSup, FreeBSD users can
-easily keep their own source trees up to date.
-
-CVSup uses the so-called pull model of updating. Under the pull
-model, each client asks the server for updates, if and when they are
-wanted. The server waits passively for update requests from its
-clients. Thus all updates are instigated by the client. The server
-never sends unsolicited updates. Users must either run the CVSup client
-manually to get an update, or they must set up a cron job to run it
-automatically on a regular basis.
-
-The term "CVSup", capitalized just so, refers to the entire software
-package. Its main components are the client "cvsup" which runs on each
-user's machine, and the server "cvsupd" which runs at each of the
-FreeBSD mirror sites.
-
-As you read the FreeBSD documentation and mailing lists, you may
-see references to sup. Sup was the predecessor of CVSup,
-and it served a similar purpose. CVSup is in used in much the same
-way as sup and, in fact, uses configuration files which are
-backward-compatible with sup's. Sup is no longer used in the FreeBSD
-project, because CVSup is both faster and more flexible.
-
-
-
-
-Installation
-
-The easiest way to install CVSup if you are running FreeBSD 2.2 or
-later is to use either the port from the FreeBSD or the corresponding binary package, depending on whether you prefer to roll your
-own or not.
-
-If you are running FreeBSD-2.1.6 or 2.1.7, you unfortunately cannot use the
-binary package versions due to the fact that it requires a version of
-the C library that does not yet exist in FreeBSD-2.1.{6,7}. You can easily
-use the port, however, just as with FreeBSD 2.2. Simply unpack
-the tar file, cd to the cvsup subdirectory and type "make install".
-
-Because CVSup is written in Modula-3, both the package and the port require that the
-Modula-3 runtime libraries be installed. These are available as the
-lang/modula-3-lib port and the lang/modula-3-lib-3.6 package. If you follow the same
-directions as for cvsup, these libraries will be compiled and/or
-installed automatically when you install the CVSup port or package.
-
-The Modula-3 libraries are rather large, and fetching and compiling
-them is not an instantaneous process. For that reason, a third option
-is provided. You can get statically linked FreeBSD
-executables for CVSup from either the USA distribution site:
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsup-bin-15.3.tar.gz
-(client including GUI).
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsup.nogui-bin-15.3.tar.gz
-(client without GUI).
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsupd-bin-15.3.tar.gz
-(server).
-
-
-
-
-
-or the German mirror:
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.cs.tu-berlin.de/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsup-bin-15.3.tar.gz
-(client including GUI).
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.cs.tu-berlin.de/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsup.nogui-bin-15.3.tar.gz
-(client without GUI).
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.cs.tu-berlin.de/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsupd-bin-15.3.tar.gz
-(server).
-
-
-
-
-
-Most users will need only the client. These executables are entirely
-self-contained, and they will run on any version of FreeBSD from
-FreeBSD-2.1.0 to FreeBSD-current.
-
-In summary, your options for installing CVSup are:
-
-
-
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.2 or later: static binary, port, or package
-
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.1.6, 2.1.7: static binary or port
-
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.1.5 or earlier: static binary
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Configuration
-
-CVSup's operation is controlled by a configuration file called the
-"supfile". Beginning with FreeBSD-2.2, there are some sample supfiles
-in the directory /usr/share/examples/cvsup. These examples are also available
-from ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/FreeBSD-current/src/share/examples/cvsup/ if you are on a pre-2.2 system.
-
-The information in a supfile answers the following questions for cvsup:
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-In the following sections, we will construct a typical supfile by
-answering each of these questions in turn. First, we describe the
-overall structure of a supfile.
-
-A supfile is a text file. Comments begin with "#" and extend to
-the end of the line. Lines that are blank and lines that contain only
-comments are ignored.
-
-Each remaining line describes a set of files that the user wishes
-to receive. The line begins with the name of a "collection", a
-logical grouping of files defined by the server. The name of the
-collection tells the server which files you want. After the
-collection name come zero or more fields, separated by white space.
-These fields answer the questions listed above. There are two types
-of fields: flag fields and value fields. A flag field consists of a
-keyword standing alone, e.g., "delete" or "compress". A value field
-also begins with a keyword, but the keyword is followed without
-intervening white space by "=" and a second word. For example,
-"release=cvs" is a value field.
-
-A supfile typically specifies more than one collection to receive.
-One way to structure a supfile is to specify all of the relevant
-fields explicitly for each collection. However, that tends to make
-the supfile lines quite long, and it is inconvenient because most
-fields are the same for all of the collections in a supfile. CVSup
-provides a defaulting mechanism to avoid these problems. Lines
-beginning with the special pseudo-collection name "*default" can be
-used to set flags and values which will be used as defaults for the
-subsequent collections in the supfile. A default value can be
-overridden for an individual collection, by specifying a different
-value with the collection itself. Defaults can also be changed or
-augmented in mid-supfile by additional "*default" lines.
-
-With this background, we will now proceed to construct a supfile
-for receiving and updating the main source tree of .
-
-
-
-
-
-Which files do you want to receive?
-
-
-
-The files available via CVSup are organized into named
-groups called "collections". The collections that are available are
-described .
-In this example, we wish to receive the
-entire main source tree for the FreeBSD system. There is a single
-large collection "src-all" which will give us all of that, except the
-export-controlled cryptography support. Let us assume for this
-example that we are in the USA or Canada. Then we can get the
-cryptography code with one additional collection, "cvs-crypto".
-As a first step toward constructing our supfile, we
-simply list these collections, one per line:
-
-
- src-all
- cvs-crypto
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Which version(s) of them do you want?
-
-
-
-With CVSup, you can receive virtually any version of the sources
-that ever existed. That is possible because the cvsupd server works
-directly from the CVS repository, which contains all of the versions.
-You specify which one of them you want using the "tag=" and "date="
-value fields.
-
-
-
-WARNING: Be very careful to specify any "tag=" fields
-correctly. Some tags are valid only for certain collections of
-files. If you specify an incorrect or misspelled tag, CVSup will
-delete files which you probably do not want deleted.
-In particular, use only "tag=." for the "ports-*"
-collections.
-
-
-
-The "tag=" field names a symbolic tag in the repository. There are
-two kinds of tags, revision tags and branch tags. A revision tag
-refers to a specific revision. Its meaning stays the same from day to
-day. A branch tag, on the other hand, refers to the latest revision
-on a given line of development, at any given time. Because a branch
-tag does not refer to a specific revision, it may mean something
-different tomorrow than it means today.
-
-
-
-Here are the branch tags that users might be interested in:
-
-
-
-tag=.
-
-The main line of development, also known as FreeBSD-current.
-Note: the "." is not punctuation; it is the name of the tag.
-Valid for all collections.
-
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_2
-
-
-The line of development for FreeBSD-2.2.x, also known as
-FreeBSD-stable.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_1_0
-
-
-The line of development for FreeBSD-2.1.x - this branch
-is largely obsolete.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Here are the revision tags that users might be interested in:
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_2_6_RELEASE
-
-FreeBSD-2.2.6.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_2_5_RELEASE
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.2.5.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_2_2_RELEASE
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.2.2.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_2_1_RELEASE
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.2.1.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_2_0_RELEASE
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.2.0.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_1_7_RELEASE
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.1.7.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_1_6_1_RELEASE
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.1.6.1.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_1_6_RELEASE
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.1.6.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_1_5_RELEASE
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.1.5.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_1_0_RELEASE
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.1.0.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-WARNING: Be very careful to type the tag name exactly as
-shown. CVSup cannot distinguish between valid and invalid tags.
-If you misspell the tag, CVSup will behave as though you had
-specified a valid tag which happens to refer to no files at all.
-It will delete your existing sources in that case.
-
-
-
-When you specify a branch tag, you normally receive the latest versions
-of the files on that line of development. If you wish to receive some
-past version, you can do so by specifying a date with the "date=" value
-field. The cvsup(1) manual page explains how to do that.
-
-
-
-For our example, we wish to receive FreeBSD-current. We add this line
-at the beginning of our supfile:
-
-
- *default tag=.
-
-
-
-
-There is an important special case that comes into play if you specify
-neither a "tag=" field nor a "date=" field. In that case, you receive
-the actual RCS files directly from the server's CVS repository, rather
-than receiving a particular version. Developers generally prefer this
-mode of operation. By maintaining a copy of the repository itself on
-their systems, they gain the ability to browse the revision histories
-and examine past versions of files. This gain is achieved at a large
-cost in terms of disk space, however.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Where do you want to get them from?
-
-
-
-We use the "host=" field to tell cvsup where to obtain its updates.
-Any of the will do,
-though you should try to select one that's near to you.
-In this example, we'll use the primary FreeBSD distribution site,
-"cvsup.FreeBSD.org":
-
-
- *default host=cvsup.FreeBSD.org
-
-
-
-
-On any particular run of cvsup, you can override this setting on the
-command line, with "-h hostname".
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Where do you want to put them on your own machine?
-
-
-
-The "prefix=" field tells cvsup where to put the files it receives.
-In this example, we will put the source files directly into our main
-source tree, "/usr/src". The "src" directory is already implicit in the
-collections we have chosen to receive, so this is the correct
-specification:
-
-
- *default prefix=/usr
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Where should cvsup maintain its status files?
-
-
-
-The cvsup client maintains certain status files in what is called
-the "base" directory. These files help CVSup to work more
-efficiently, by keeping track of which updates you have already
-received. We will use the standard base directory,
-"/usr/local/etc/cvsup":
-
-
- *default base=/usr/local/etc/cvsup
-
-
-
-
-This setting is used by default if it is not specified in the
-supfile, so we actually do not need the above line.
-
-
-
-If your base directory does not already exist, now would be a good
-time to create it. The cvsup client will refuse to run if the base
-directory does not exist.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Miscellaneous supfile settings:
-
-
-
-There is one more line of boiler plate that normally needs to be
-present in the supfile:
-
-
- *default release=cvs delete use-rel-suffix compress
-
-
-
-
-"release=cvs" indicates that the server should get its information
-out of the main FreeBSD CVS repository. This is virtually always the
-case, but there are other possibilities which are beyond the scope of
-this discussion.
-
-
-
-"delete" gives CVSup permission to delete files. You should always
-specify this, so that CVSup can keep your source tree fully up to
-date. CVSup is careful to delete only those files for which it is
-responsible. Any extra files you happen to have will be left strictly
-alone.
-
-
-
-"use-rel-suffix" is ... arcane. If you really want to know about
-it, see the cvsup(1) manual page. Otherwise, just specify it and
-do not worry about it.
-
-
-
-"compress" enables the use of gzip-style compression on the
-communication channel. If your network link is T1 speed or faster,
-you probably should not use compression. Otherwise, it helps
-substantially.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Putting it all together:
-
-
-
-Here is the entire supfile for our example:
-
-
- *default tag=.
- *default host=cvsup.FreeBSD.org
- *default prefix=/usr
- *default base=/usr/local/etc/cvsup
- *default release=cvs delete use-rel-suffix compress
- src-all
- cvs-crypto
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Running CVSup
-
-You are now ready to try an update. The command line for doing this is
-quite simple:
-
-
- cvsup supfile
-
-
-where "supfile" is of course the name of the supfile you have just created.
-Assuming you are running under X11, cvsup will display a GUI window with
-some buttons to do the usual things. Press the "go" button, and watch
-it run.
-
-Since you are updating your actual "/usr/src" tree in this example, you
-will need to run the program as root so that cvsup has the permissions
-it needs to update your files. Having just created your configuration
-file, and having never used this program before, that might
-understandably make you nervous. There is an easy way to do a trial run
-without touching your precious files. Just create an empty directory
-somewhere convenient, and name it as an extra argument on the command
-line:
-
-
- mkdir /var/tmp/dest
- cvsup supfile /var/tmp/dest
-
-
-The directory you specify will be used as the destination directory
-for all file updates. CVSup will examine your usual files in
-"/usr/src", but it will not modify or delete any of them. Any file
-updates will instead land in "/var/tmp/dest/usr/src". CVSup will also
-leave its base directory status files untouched when run this way.
-The new versions of those files will be written into the specified
-directory. As long as you have read access to "/usr/src", you do not
-even need to be root to perform this kind of trial run.
-
-If you are not running X11 or if you just do not like GUIs, you
-should add a couple of options to the command line when you run cvsup:
-
-
- cvsup -g -L 2 supfile
-
-
-The "-g" tells cvsup not to use its GUI. This is automatic if you are
-not running X11, but otherwise you have to specify it.
-
-The "-L 2" tells cvsup to print out the details of all the file updates
-it is doing. There are three levels of verbosity, from "-L 0" to "-L 2".
-The default is 0, which means total silence except for error messages.
-
-There are plenty of other options available. For a brief list of them,
-type "cvsup -H". For more detailed descriptions, see the manual page.
-
-Once you are satisfied with the way updates are working, you can arrange
-for regular runs of cvsup using cron(8). Obviously, you should not let
-cvsup use its GUI when running it from cron.
-
-
-
-
-CVSup File Collections
-
-The file collections available via CVSup are organized
-hierarchically. There are a few large collections, and they are
-divided into smaller sub-collections. Receiving a large collection
-is equivalent to receiving each of its sub-collections.
-The hierarchical relationships among collections are reflected by
-the use of indentation in the list below.
-
- The most commonly used collections are src-all,
-cvs-crypto, and ports-all. The other collections are used
-only by small groups of people for specialized purposes, and some mirror
-sites may not carry all of them.
-
-
-
-cvs-all release=cvs
-
-The main FreeBSD CVS repository, excluding the export-restricted
-cryptography code.
-
-
-
-distrib release=cvs
-
-Files related to the distribution and mirroring of FreeBSD.
-
-
-
-
-doc-all release=cvs
-
-
-Sources for the FreeBSD handbook and other documentation.
-
-
-
-
-ports-all release=cvs
-
-
-The FreeBSD ports collection.
-
-
-
-ports-archivers release=cvs
-
-Archiving tools.
-
-
-
-
-ports-astro release=cvs
-
-
-Astronomical ports.
-
-
-
-
-ports-audio release=cvs
-
-
-Sound support.
-
-
-
-
-ports-base release=cvs
-
-
-Miscellaneous files at the top of /usr/ports.
-
-
-
-
-ports-benchmarks release=cvs
-
-
-Benchmarks.
-
-
-
-
-ports-biology release=cvs
-
-
-Biology.
-
-
-
-
-ports-cad release=cvs
-
-
-Computer aided design tools.
-
-
-
-
-ports-chinese release=cvs
-
-
-Chinese language support.
-
-
-
-
-ports-comms release=cvs
-
-
-Communication software.
-
-
-
-
-ports-converters release=cvs
-
-
-character code converters.
-
-
-
-
-ports-databases release=cvs
-
-
-Databases.
-
-
-
-
-ports-devel release=cvs
-
-
-Development utilities.
-
-
-
-
-ports-editors release=cvs
-
-
-Editors.
-
-
-
-
-ports-emulators release=cvs
-
-
-Emulators for other operating systems.
-
-
-
-
-ports-games release=cvs
-
-
-Games.
-
-
-
-
-ports-german release=cvs
-
-
-German language support.
-
-
-
-
-ports-graphics release=cvs
-
-
-Graphics utilities.
-
-
-
-
-ports-japanese release=cvs
-
-
-Japanese language support.
-
-
-
-
-ports-korean release=cvs
-
-
-Korean language support.
-
-
-
-
-ports-lang release=cvs
-
-
-Programming languages.
-
-
-
-
-ports-mail release=cvs
-
-
-Mail software.
-
-
-
-
-ports-math release=cvs
-
-
-Numerical computation software.
-
-
-
-
-ports-mbone release=cvs
-
-
-MBone applications.
-
-
-
-
-ports-misc release=cvs
-
-
-Miscellaneous utilities.
-
-
-
-
-ports-net release=cvs
-
-
-Networking software.
-
-
-
-
-ports-news release=cvs
-
-
-USENET news software.
-
-
-
-
-ports-plan9 release=cvs
-
-
-Various programs from Plan9.
-
-
-
-
-ports-print release=cvs
-
-
-Printing software.
-
-
-
-
-ports-russian release=cvs
-
-
-Russian language support.
-
-
-
-
-ports-security release=cvs
-
-
-Security utilities.
-
-
-
-
-ports-shells release=cvs
-
-
-Command line shells.
-
-
-
-
-ports-sysutils release=cvs
-
-
-System utilities.
-
-
-
-
-ports-textproc release=cvs
-
-
-text processing utilities (does not include desktop publishing).
-
-
-
-
-ports-vietnamese release=cvs
-
-
-Vietnamese language support.
-
-
-
-
-ports-www release=cvs
-
-
-Software related to the World Wide Web.
-
-
-
-
-ports-x11 release=cvs
-
-
-X11 software.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-src-all release=cvs
-
-
-The main FreeBSD sources, excluding the export-restricted cryptography
-code.
-
-
-
-src-base release=cvs
-
-Miscellaneous files at the top of /usr/src.
-
-
-
-
-src-bin release=cvs
-
-
-User utilities that may be needed in single-user mode
-(/usr/src/bin).
-
-
-
-
-src-contrib release=cvs
-
-
-Utilities and libraries from outside the FreeBSD project, used
-relatively unmodified (/usr/src/contrib).
-
-
-
-
-src-etc release=cvs
-
-
-System configuration files (/usr/src/etc).
-
-
-
-
-src-games release=cvs
-
-
-Games (/usr/src/games).
-
-
-
-
-src-gnu release=cvs
-
-
-Utilities covered by the GNU Public License (/usr/src/gnu).
-
-
-
-
-src-include release=cvs
-
-
-Header files (/usr/src/include).
-
-
-
-
-src-kerberosIV release=cvs
-
-
-KerberosIV security package (/usr/src/kerberosIV).
-
-
-
-
-src-lib release=cvs
-
-
-Libraries (/usr/src/lib).
-
-
-
-
-src-libexec release=cvs
-
-
-System programs normally executed by other programs
-(/usr/src/libexec).
-
-
-
-
-src-release release=cvs
-
-
-Files required to produce a FreeBSD release (/usr/src/release).
-
-
-
-
-src-sbin release=cvs
-
-
-System utilities for single-user mode (/usr/src/sbin).
-
-
-
-
-src-share release=cvs
-
-
-Files that can be shared across multiple systems (/usr/src/share).
-
-
-
-
-src-sys release=cvs
-
-
-The kernel (/usr/src/sys).
-
-
-
-
-src-tools release=cvs
-
-
-Various tools for the maintenance of FreeBSD (/usr/src/tools).
-
-
-
-
-src-usrbin release=cvs
-
-
-User utilities (/usr/src/usr.bin).
-
-
-
-
-src-usrsbin release=cvs
-
-
-System utilities (/usr/src/usr.sbin).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-www release=cvs
-
-
-The sources for the World Wide Web data.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvs-crypto release=cvs
-
-
-The export-restricted cryptography code.
-
-
-
-src-crypto release=cvs
-
-Export-restricted utilities and libraries from outside the FreeBSD
-project, used relatively unmodified (/usr/src/crypto).
-
-
-
-
-src-eBones release=cvs
-
-
-Kerberos and DES (/usr/src/eBones).
-
-
-
-
-src-secure release=cvs
-
-
-DES (/usr/src/secure).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-distrib release=self
-
-
-The CVSup server's own configuration files. Used by CVSup mirror sites.
-
-
-
-
-gnats release=current
-
-
-The GNATS bug-tracking database.
-
-
-
-
-mail-archive release=current
-
-
-FreeBSD mailing list archive.
-
-
-
-
-www release=current
-
-
-The installed World Wide Web data. Used by WWW mirror sites.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Announcements, Questions, and Bug Reports
-
-Most FreeBSD-related discussion of CVSup takes place on the
-&a.hackers;. New versions of the software are announced there, as
-well as on the &a.announce;.
-
-Questions and bug reports should be addressed to the author of the
-program at cvsup-bugs@polstra.com.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Using make world to rebuild your system
-
-Contributed by &a.nik;.
-
-Once you have synchronised your local source tree against a particular
-version of FreeBSD (stable, current and so on) you
-must then use the source tree to rebuild the system.
-
-Currently, the best source of information on how to do that is a
-tutorial available from http://www.nothing-going-on.demon.co.uk/FreeBSD/make-world/make-world.html.
-
-A successor to this tutorial will be integrated into the handbook.
-
-
-
-
-
-Contributing to FreeBSD
-
-Contributed by &a.jkh;.
-
-So you want to contribute something to FreeBSD? That is great!
-We can always use the help, and FreeBSD is one of those systems
-that relies on the contributions of its user base in order
-to survive. Your contributions are not only appreciated, they are
-vital to FreeBSD's continued growth!
-
-Contrary to what some people might also have you believe, you do not
-need to be a hot-shot programmer or a close personal friend of the
-FreeBSD core team in order to have your contributions accepted. The
-FreeBSD Project's development is done by a large and growing number of
-international contributors whose ages and areas of technical expertise
-vary greatly, and there is always more work to be done than there are
-people available to do it.
-
-Since the FreeBSD project is responsible for an entire operating
-system environment (and its installation) rather than just a kernel or
-a few scattered utilities, our "TODO" list also spans a very wide
-range of tasks, from documentation, beta testing and presentation to
-highly specialized types of kernel development. No matter what your
-skill level, there is almost certainly something you can do to help the
-project!
-
-Commercial entities engaged in FreeBSD-related enterprises are
-also encouraged to contact us. Need a special extension to make your
-product work? You will find us receptive to your requests, given that
-they are not too outlandish. Working on a value-added product? Please
-let us know! We may be able to work cooperatively on some aspect of
-it. The free software world is challenging a lot of existing
-assumptions about how software is developed, sold, and maintained
-throughout its life cycle, and we urge you to at least give it a
-second look.
-
-
-
-What Is Needed
-
-The following list of tasks and sub-projects represents something
-of an amalgam of the various core team TODO lists and user requests
-we have collected over the last couple of months. Where possible, tasks
-have been ranked by degree of urgency. If you are interested in
-working on one of the tasks you see here, send mail to the coordinator
-listed by clicking on their names. If no coordinator has been
-appointed, maybe you would like to volunteer?
-
-
-
-High priority tasks
-
-The following tasks are considered to be urgent, usually because
-they represent something that is badly broken or sorely needed:
-
-
-
-3-stage boot issues. Overall coordination:
-&a.hackers;
-
-
-
-
-
-Autodetect memory over 64MB properly.
-
-
-
-Move userconfig (-c) into 3rd stage boot.
-
-
-
-Do WinNT compatible drive tagging so that the 3rd stage can
-provide an accurate mapping of BIOS geometries for disks.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Filesystem problems. Overall coordination:
-&a.fs;
-
-
-
-Fix the MSDOS file system.
-
-
-
-Clean up and document the nullfs filesystem code. Coordinator: &a.gibbs;
-
-
-
-Fix the union file system. Coordinator: &a.dyson;
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Implement kernel and user vm86 support. Coordinator: &a.hackers;
-
-
-
-Implement Int13 vm86 disk driver. Coordinator: &a.hackers;
-
-
-
-SCSI driver issues. Overall coordination: &a.hackers;
-
-
-
-
-
-Support tagged queuing generically. Requires a rewrite of how we do
-our command queuing, but we need this anyway to for prioritized I/O
-(CD-R writers/scanners).
-
-
-
-Better error handling (Busy status and retries).
-
-
-
-Merged Scatter-Gather list creation code.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Kernel issues. Overall coordination:
-&a.hackers;
-
-
-
-
-
-Complete the eisaconf conversion of all existing drivers.
-
-
-
-Change all interrupt routines to take a (void *) instead of
-using unit numbers.
-
-
-
-Merge EISA/PCI/ISA interrupt registration code.
-
-
-
-Split PCI/EISA/ISA probes out from drivers like bt742a.c (WIP)
-
-
-
-Fix the syscons ALT-Fn/vt switching hangs. Coordinator: &a.sos;
-
-
-
-Rewrite the Intel Etherexpress 16 driver.
-
-
-
-Merge the 3c509 and 3c590 drivers (essentially provide a PCI probe for
-ep.c).
-
-
-
-Support Adaptec 3985 (first as a simple 3 channel SCSI card)
-Coordinator: &a.gibbs;
-
-
-
-Support Advansys SCSI controller products. Coordinator: &a.gibbs;
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Medium priority tasks
-
-The following tasks need to be done, but not with any particular
-urgency:
-
-
-
-Port AFS (Andrew File System) to FreeBSD Coordinator: Alexander Seth Jones
-
-
-
-
-MCA support? This should be finalized one way or the other.
-
-
-
-Full LKM based driver support/Configuration Manager.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Devise a way to do all LKM registration without ld. This means
-some kind of symbol table in the kernel.
-
-
-
-Write a configuration manager (in the 3rd stage boot?) that probes
-your hardware in a sane manner, keeps only the LKMs required for
-your hardware, etc.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-PCMCIA/PCCARD. Coordinators: &a.nate; and &a.phk;
-
-
-
-Documentation!
-
-
-
-Reliable operation of the pcic driver (needs testing).
-
-
-
-Recognizer and handler for sio.c (mostly done).
-
-
-
-Recognizer and handler for ed.c (mostly done).
-
-
-
-Recognizer and handler for ep.c (mostly done).
-
-
-
-User-mode recognizer and handler (partially done).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Advanced Power Management. Coordinators: &a.nate; and &a.phk;
-
-
-
-APM sub-driver (mostly done).
-
-
-
-IDE/ATA disk sub-driver (partially done).
-
-
-
-syscons/pcvt sub-driver.
-
-
-
-Integration with the PCMCIA/PCCARD drivers (suspend/resume).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Low priority tasks
-
-The following tasks are purely cosmetic or represent such an
-investment of work that it is not likely that anyone will get them done
-anytime soon:
-
-The first 20 items are from Terry Lambert <terry@lambert.org>
-
-
-
-Ability to make BIOS calls from protected mode using V86 mode
-on the processor and return the results via a mapped interrupt
-IPC mechanism to the protected mode caller.
-
-
-
-
-Drivers built into the kernel that use the BIOS call mechanism
-to allow them to be independent of the actual underlying hardware
-the same way that DOS is independent of the underlying hardware.
-This includes NetWork and ASPI drivers loaded in DOS prior to
-BSD being loaded by a DOS-based loader program, which means
-potential polling, which means DOS-not-busy interrupt generation
-for V86 machines by the protected mode kernel.
-
-
-
-
-An image format that allows tagging of such drivers data and
-text areas in the default kernel executable so that that portion
-of the kernel address space may be recovered at a later time,
-after hardware specific protected mode drivers have been loaded
-and activated. This includes separation of BIOS based drivers
-from each other, since it is better to run with a BIOS based
-driver in all cases than to not run at all.
-
-
-
-
-Abstraction of the bus interface mechanism. Currently, PCMCIA,
-EISA, and PCI busses are assumed to be bridged from ISA. This
-is not something which should be assumed.
-
-
-
-
-A configuration manager that knows about PNP events, including
-power management events, insertion, extraction, and bus (PNP ISA
-and PCMCIA bridging chips) vs. card level event management.
-
-
-
-
-A topological sort mechanism for assigning reassignable addresses
-that do not collide with other reassignable and non-reassignable
-device space resource usage by fixed devices.
-
-
-
-
-A registration based mechanism for hardware services registration.
-Specifically, a device centric registration mechanism for timer
-and sound and other system critical service providers. Consider
-Timer2 and Timer0 and speaker services as one example of a single
-monolithic service provider.
-
-
-
-
-A kernel exported symbol space in the kernel data space accessible
-by an LKM loader mechanism that does relocation and symbol space
-manipulation. The intent of this interface is to support the
-ability to demand load and unload kernel modules.
-
-
-
-
-NetWare Server (protected mode ODI driver) loader and subservices
-to allow the use of ODI card drivers supplied with network cards.
-The same thing for NDIS drivers and NetWare SCSI drivers.
-
-
-
-
-An "upgrade system" option that works on Linux boxes instead
-of just previous rev FreeBSD boxes.
-
-
-
-
-Splitting of the console driver into abstraction layers, both to
-make it easier to port and to kill the X and ThinkPad and PS/2
-mouse and LED and console switching and bouncing NumLock problems
-once and for all.
-
-
-
-
-Other kernel emulation environments for other foreign drivers
-as opportunity permits. SCO and Solaris are good candidates,
-followed by UnixWare, etc.
-
-
-
-
-Processor emulation environments for execution of foreign binaries.
-This is easier than it sounds if the system call interface does not
-change much.
-
-
-
-
-Streams to allow the use of commercial streams drivers.
-
-
-
-
-Kernel multithreading (requires kernel preemption).
-
-
-
-
-Symmetric Multiprocessing with kernel preemption (requires kernel
-preemption).
-
-
-
-
-A concerted effort at support for portable computers. This is
-somewhat handled by changing PCMCIA bridging rules and power
-management event handling. But there are things like detecting
-internal vs. external display and picking a different screen
-resolution based on that fact, not spinning down the disk if
-the machine is in dock, and allowing dock-based cards to disappear
-without affecting the machines ability to boot (same issue for
-PCMCIA).
-
-
-
-
-Reorganization of the source tree for multiple platform ports.
-
-
-
-
-A "make world" that "makes the world" (rename the current one
-to "make regress" if that is all it is good for).
-
-
-
-
-A 4M (preferably smaller!) memory footprint.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Smaller tasks
-
-Most of the tasks listed in the previous sections require either a
-considerable investment of time or an in-depth knowledge of the FreeBSD
-kernel (or both). However, there are also many useful tasks which are
-suitable for "weekend hackers", or people without programming
-skills.
-
-
-
-
-
-If you run FreeBSD-current and have a good Internet connection,
-there is a machine current.freebsd.org which builds a full release
-once a day - every now and again, try and install the latest release
-from it and report any failures in the process.
-
-
-
-
-Read the freebsd-bugs mailing list. There might be a problem
-you can comment constructively on or with patches you can test. Or
-you could even try to fix one of the problems yourself.
-
-
-
-
-Read through the FAQ and Handbook periodically. If anything is
-badly explained, out of date or even just completely wrong, let us
-know. Even better, send us a fix (SGML is not difficult to learn, but
-there is no objection to ASCII submissions).
-
-
-
-
-Help translate FreeBSD documentation into your native language (if
-not already available) - just send an email to &a.doc; asking if anyone is
-working on it. Note that you are not committing yourself to translating
-every single FreeBSD document by doing this - in fact, the documentation
-most in need of translation is the installation instructions.
-
-
-
-
-Read the freebsd-questions mailing list and the newsgroup
-comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.misc occasionally (or even regularly). It can
-be very satisfying to share your expertise and help people solve their
-problems; sometimes you may even learn something new yourself! These
-forums can also be a source of ideas for things to work on.
-
-
-
-
-If you know of any bugfixes which have been successfully applied
-to -current but have not been merged into -stable after a decent
-interval (normally a couple of weeks), send the committer a polite
-reminder.
-
-
-
-
-Move contributed software to src/contrib in the source tree.
-
-
-
-
-Make sure code in src/contrib is up to date.
-
-
-
-
-Look for year 2000 bugs (and fix any you find!)
-
-
-
-
-Build the source tree (or just part of it) with extra warnings
-enabled and clean up the warnings.
-
-
-
-
-Fix warnings for ports which do deprecated things like using
-gets() or including malloc.h.
-
-
-
-
-If you have contributed any ports, send your patches back to the
-original author (this will make your life easier when they bring out
-the next version)
-
-
-
-
-Suggest further tasks for this list!
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-How to Contribute
-
-Contributions to the system generally fall into one or more of
-the following 6 categories:
-
-
-
-Bug reports and general commentary
-
-
-An idea or suggestion of general technical interest
-should be mailed to the &a.hackers;. Likewise, people with an
-interest in such things (and a tolerance for a high
-volume of mail!) may subscribe to the hackers mailing list by
-sending mail to &a.majordomo;. See
-
-for more information about this and other mailing lists.
-
-If you find a bug or are submitting a specific change, please report
-it using the send-pr(1) program or its
-WEB-based equivalent.
-Try to fill-in each field of the bug report. Unless they exceed
-65KB, include any patches directly in the report. Consider compressing
-them and using uuencode(1) if they exceed 20KB.
-
-After filing a report, you should receive confirmation along with
-a tracking number. Keep this tracking number so that you can
-update us with details about the problem by sending mail to
-bug-followup@FreeBSD.ORG. Use the number as the
-message subject, e.g. "Re: kern/3377". Additional
-information for any bug report should be submitted this way.
-
-If you do not receive confirmation in a timely fashion (3 days to
-a week, depending on your email connection) or are, for some
-reason, unable to use the send-pr(1) command,
-then you may ask someone to file it for you by sending mail
-to the &a.bugs;.
-
-
-
-
-Changes to the documentation
-
-Changes to the documentation are overseen by the &a.doc;.
-Send submissions and changes (even small ones are welcome!)
-using send-pr as described in
-.
-
-
-
-
-Changes to existing source code
-
-An addition or change to the existing source code is a somewhat trickier
-affair and depends a lot on how far out of date you are with the current
-state of the core FreeBSD development. There is a special on-going release
-of FreeBSD known as ``FreeBSD-current'' which is made available in
-a variety of ways for the convenience of developers working
-actively on the system. See for more information about getting and using
-FreeBSD-current.
-
-Working from older sources unfortunately means that your changes may
-sometimes be too obsolete or too divergent for easy re-integration into
-FreeBSD. Chances of this can be minimized somewhat by subscribing to the
-&a.announce; and the &a.current; lists, where discussions
-on the current state of the system take place.
-
-Assuming that you can manage to secure fairly up-to-date sources to base
-your changes on, the next step is to produce a set of diffs to send to the
-FreeBSD maintainers. This is done with the diff(1) command,
-with the `context diff' form being preferred. For example:
-
-diff -c oldfile newfile
-
-
-or
-
-diff -c -r olddir newdir
-
-
-would generate such a set of context diffs for the given source file
-or directory hierarchy. See the man page for diff(1) for more
-details.
-
-Once you have a set of diffs (which you may test with the
-patch(1) command), you should submit them for inclusion
-with FreeBSD. Use the send-pr(1) program as described in
-.
-Do not just send the diffs to the &a.hackers; or they will get
-lost! We greatly appreciate your submission (this is a volunteer
-project!); because we are busy, we may not be able to address it
-immediately, but it will remain in the pr database until we do.
-
-If you feel it appropriate (e.g. you have added, deleted, or
-renamed files), bundle your changes into a tar file
-and run the uuencode(1) program on it. Shar archives are
-also welcome.
-
-If your change is of a potentially sensitive nature, e.g.
-you are unsure of copyright issues governing its further distribution
-or you are simply not ready to release it without a tighter review first,
-then you should send it to &a.core; directly rather than submitting
-it with send-pr(1). The core mailing list
-reaches a much smaller group of people who do much of the
-day-to-day work on FreeBSD. Note that this group is also
-very busy and so you should only send mail to them
-where it is truly necessary.
-
-Please refer to man 9 intro and man 9 style
-for some information on coding style. We would appreciate
-it if you were at least aware of this information before
-submitting code.
-
-
-
-
-New code or major value-added packages
-
-In the rare case of a significant contribution of a large body
-work, or the addition of an important new feature to FreeBSD,
-it becomes almost always necessary to either send changes as
-uuencode'd tar files or upload them to our ftp site ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/incoming.
-
-When working with large amounts of code, the touchy subject of
-copyrights also invariably comes up. Acceptable copyrights
-for code included in FreeBSD are:
-
-
-
-
-
-The BSD copyright. This copyright is most preferred
-due to its ``no strings attached'' nature and general
-attractiveness to commercial enterprises. Far from
-discouraging such commercial use, the FreeBSD Project
-actively encourages such participation by commercial interests
-who might eventually be inclined to invest something of their own
-into FreeBSD.
-
-
-
-
-The GNU Public License, or ``GPL''. This license is not quite
-as popular with us due to the amount of extra effort demanded
-of anyone using the code for commercial purposes, but given
-the sheer quantity of GPL'd code we currently require (compiler,
-assembler, text formatter, etc) it would be silly to refuse
-additional contributions under this license. Code under the GPL
-also goes into a different part of the tree, that being
-/sys/gnu or /usr/src/gnu, and is therefore
-easily identifiable to anyone for whom the GPL presents a problem.
-
-
-
-
-
-Contributions coming under any other type of copyright must be
-carefully reviewed before their inclusion into FreeBSD will
-be considered. Contributions for which particularly restrictive
-commercial copyrights apply are generally rejected, though the
-authors are always encouraged to make such changes available
-through their own channels.
-
-To place a ``BSD-style'' copyright on your work, include the following
-text at the very beginning of every source code file you wish
-to protect, replacing the text between the `%%' with
-the appropriate information.
-
-Copyright (c) %%proper_years_here%%
- %%your_name_here%%, %%your_state%% %%your_zip%%. All rights reserved.
-
-Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
-modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
-are met:
-1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
- notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer as
- the first lines of this file unmodified.
-2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
- notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
- documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
-
-THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY %%your_name_here%% ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR
-IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES
-OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED.
-IN NO EVENT SHALL %%your_name_here%% BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT,
-INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT
-NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
-DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
-THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
-(INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF
-THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
-
- $Id$
-
-
-For your convenience, a copy of this text can be found in
-/usr/share/examples/etc/bsd-style-copyright.
-
-
-
-
-Porting an existing piece of free software
-
-Contributed by &a.jkh;, &a.gpalmer;, &a.asami; and
-&a.obrien;.28 August 1996.
-
-The porting of freely available software, while perhaps not as
-gratifying as developing your own from scratch, is still a vital part
-of FreeBSD's growth and of great usefulness to those who would not
-otherwise know where to turn for it. All ported software is organized
-into a carefully organized hierarchy known as ``the ports collection''.
-The collection enables a new user to get a quick and complete overview
-of what is available for FreeBSD in an easy-to-compile form. It also
-saves considerable space by not actually containing the majority
-of the sources being ported, but merely those differences required for
-running under FreeBSD.
-
-What follows are some guidelines for creating a new port for
-FreeBSD 3.x. The bulk of the work is done by
-/usr/share/mk/bsd.port.mk, which all port Makefiles include.
-Please refer to that file for more details on the inner workings of
-the ports collection. Even if you don't hack Makefiles daily, it is
-well commented, and you will still gain much knowledge from it.
-
-
-
-Before Starting the Port
-
-Note: Only a fraction of the overridable variables
-(${..}) are mentioned in this document. Most
-(if not all) are documented at the start of
-bsd.port.mk. This file uses a non-standard tab
-setting. Emacs and Vim should recognize the setting
-on loading the file. vi or ex can be set to
-using the correct value by typing `:set tabstop=4'
-once the file has been loaded.
-
-You may come across code that needs modifications or
-conditional compilation based upon what version of UNIX it is
-running under. If you need to make such changes to the code
-for conditional compilation, make sure you make the changes as
-general as possible so that we can back-port code to FreeBSD
-1.x systems and cross-port to other BSD systems such as 4.4BSD
-from CSRG, BSD/386, 386BSD, NetBSD, and OpenBSD.
-
-The preferred way to tell 4.3BSD/Reno (1990) and newer versions of
-the BSD code apart is by using the `BSD' macro
-defined in <sys/param.h>. Hopefully that file
-is already included; if not, add the code:
-
-
-
-#ifdef (defined(__unix__) || defined(unix)) && !defined(USG)
-#include <sys/param.h>
-#endif
-
-
-
-to the proper place in the .c file. We believe that every
-system that defines these to symbols has sys/param.h. If you find
-a system that doesn't, we would like to know. Please send
-mail to &a.ports;.
-
-Another way is to use the GNU Autoconf style of doing this:
-
-
-
-#ifdef HAVE_SYS_PARAM_H
-#include <sys/param.h>
-#endif
-
-
-
-Don't forget to add -DHAVE_SYS_PARAM_H to the CFLAGS
-in the Makefile for this method.
-
-Once you have <sys/param.h> included, you may use:
-
-
-
-#if (defined(BSD) && (BSD >= 199103))
-
-
-
-to detect if the code is being compiled on a 4.3 Net2 code
-base or newer (e.g. FreeBSD 1.x, 4.3/Reno, NetBSD 0.9, 386BSD,
-BSD/386 1.1 and below).
-
-Use:
-
-
-
-#if (defined(BSD) && (BSD >= 199306))
-
-
-
-to detect if the code is being compiled on a 4.4 code base or
-newer (e.g. FreeBSD 2.x, 4.4, NetBSD 1.0, BSD/386 2.0 or
-above).
-
-The value of the BSD macro is 199506 for the 4.4BSD-Lite2 code
-base. This is stated for informational purposes only. It should
-not be used to distinguish between version of FreeBSD based only
-on 4.4-Lite vs. versions that have merged in changes from 4.4-Lite2.
-The __FreeBSD__ macro should be used instead.
-
-Use sparingly:
-
-
-
-
-
-__FreeBSD__ is defined in all versions of
-FreeBSD. Use it if the change you are making ONLY affects
-FreeBSD. Porting gotchas like the use of
-sys_errlist[] vs strerror() are
-Berkeleyisms, not FreeBSD changes.
-
-
-
-
-In FreeBSD 2.x, __FreeBSD__ is defined to be
-2. In earlier versions, it is 1. Later
-versions will bump it to match their major version number.
-
-
-
-
-If you need to tell the difference between a FreeBSD 1.x
-system and a FreeBSD 2.x or 3.x system, usually the right answer is
-to use the BSD macros described above. If there
-actually is a FreeBSD specific change (such as special
-shared library options when using `ld') then it is
-OK to use __FreeBSD__ and `#if __FreeBSD__ >
-1' to detect a FreeBSD 2.x and later system.
-
-If you need more granularity in detecting FreeBSD systems since
-2.0-RELEASE you can use the following:
-
-
-#if __FreeBSD__ >= 2
-#include <osreldate.h>
-# if __FreeBSD_version >= 199504
- /* 2.0.5+ release specific code here */
-# endif
-#endif
-
-
-__FreeBSD_version values:
-
-2.0-RELEASE: 199411
-2.1-current's: 199501, 199503
-2.0.5-RELEASE: 199504
-2.2-current before 2.1: 199508
-2.1.0-RELEASE: 199511
-2.2-current before 2.1.5: 199512
-2.1.5-RELEASE: 199607
-2.2-current before 2.1.6: 199608
-2.1.6-RELEASE: 199612
-2.1.7-RELEASE: 199612
-2.2-RELEASE: 220000
-2.2.1-RELEASE: 220000 (yes, no change)
-2.2-STABLE after 2.2.1-RELEASE: 220000 (yes, still no change)
-2.2-STABLE after texinfo-3.9: 221001
-2.2-STABLE after top: 221002
-2.2.2-RELEASE: 222000
-2.2-STABLE after 2.2.2-RELEASE: 222001
-2.2.5-RELEASE: 225000
-2.2-STABLE after 2.2.5-RELEASE: 225001
-2.2-STABLE after ldconfig -R merge: 225002
-2.2.6-RELEASE: 226000
-2.2-STABLE after 2.2.6-RELEASE: 226001
-3.0-current before mount(2) change: 300000
-3.0-current as of Nov 1997: 300001
-
-
-(Note that 2.2-STABLE sometimes identifies itself as
-"2.2.5-STABLE" after the 2.2.5-RELEASE.)
-The pattern used to be year followed by the month, but we
-decided to change it to a more straightforward major/minor
-system starting from 2.2. This is because the parallel
-development on several branches made it infeasible to
-classify the releases simply by their real release dates.
-(Note that if you are making a port now, you don't have to
-worry about old -current's; they are listed here just for
-your reference.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-In the hundreds of ports that have been done, there have
-only been one or two cases where __FreeBSD__
-should have been used. Just because an earlier port
-screwed up and used it in the wrong place does not mean
-you should do so too.
-
-
-
-
-Quick Porting
-
-This section tells you how to do a quick port. In many
-cases, it is not enough, but we will see.
-
-First, get the original tarball and put it into
-${DISTDIR}, which defaults to
-/usr/ports/distfiles.
-
-Note: The following assumes that the software compiled
-out-of-the-box, i.e., there was absolutely no change required
-for the port to work on your FreeBSD box. If you needed to
-change something, you will have to refer to the next section
-too.
-
-
-
-Writing the Makefile
-
-The minimal Makefile would look something like this:
-
-
-
- # New ports collection makefile for: oneko
- # Version required: 1.1b
- # Date created: 5 December 1994
- # Whom: asami
- #
- # $Id$
- #
-
- DISTNAME= oneko-1.1b
- CATEGORIES= games
- MASTER_SITES= ftp://ftp.cs.columbia.edu/archives/X11R5/contrib/
-
- MAINTAINER= asami@FreeBSD.ORG
-
- USE_IMAKE= yes
-
- .include <bsd.port.mk>
-
-
-
-See if you can figure it out. Do not worry about the contents
-of the $Id$ line, it will be filled in
-automatically by CVS when the port is imported to our main
-ports tree. You can find a more detailed example in the section.
-
-
-
-
-Writing the description files
-
-There are three required description files that are
-required for any port, whether they actually package or not.
-They are COMMENT, DESCR, and
-PLIST, and reside in the pkg subdirectory.
-
-
-
-COMMENT
-
-This is the one-line description of the port. PLEASE
-do not include the package name (or version number of the
-software) in the comment.
-Here is an example:
-
-A cat chasing a mouse all over the screen.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-DESCR
-
-This is a longer description of the port. One to a few
-paragraphs concisely explaining what the port does is
-sufficient. Note: This is not a manual nor an
-in-depth description on how to use or compile the port.
-In particular, please do not just copy the README
-file here, unless, of course, it is a concise description
-of the port.
-
-It is recommended that you sign the name at the end of
-this file, as in:
-
-
-
-This is a port of oneko, in which a cat chases a poor mouse all over
-the screen.
- :
-(etc.)
-
-- Satoshi
-asami@cs.berkeley.edu
-
-
-
-
-
-
-PLIST
-
-This file lists all the files installed by the port. It
-is also called the `packing list' because the package is
-generated by packing the files listed here. The pathnames
-are relative to the installation prefix (usually
-/usr/local or /usr/X11R6). Also it is assumed
-the manpages will be compressed.
-
-Here is a small example:
-
-
-
-bin/oneko
-man/man1/oneko.1.gz
-lib/X11/app-defaults/Oneko
-lib/X11/oneko/cat1.xpm
-lib/X11/oneko/cat2.xpm
-lib/X11/oneko/mouse.xpm
-
-
-
-Refer to the pkg_create(1) man page for details
-on the packing list.
-
-
-
-
-
-Creating the checksum file
-
-Just type `make makesum'. The ports make rules
-will automatically generate the file files/md5.
-
-
-
-
-Testing the port
-
-You should make sure that the port rules do exactly what
-you want it to do, including packaging up the port. Try
-doing `make install', `make package' and
-then `make deinstall' and see if all
-the files and directories are correctly deleted. Then do a
-`pkg_add `make package-name`.tgz' and see if everything
-re-appears and works correctly. Then do another
-`make deinstall' and then `make
-reinstall; make package' to make sure you haven't
-included in the packing list any files that are not
-installed by your port.
-
-
-
-
-Submitting the port
-
-Now that you are happy with your port, the only thing
-remaining is to put it in the main FreeBSD ports tree and
-make everybody else happy about it too. To accomplish this,
-pack the necessary files (everything described in this
-section -- in particular do not include the
-original source tarball, the `work' subdirectory or
-the package) into a .tar.gz file, stick it in the
-directory
-
-ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/incoming/
-
-
-and send mail to us using send-pr(1) (please
-classify it as category `ports' and class `change-request').
-There is no need to upload the package, we will build it by
-ourselves.
-We will take a look, get back to you if necessary, and put
-it in the tree. Your name will also appear in the list of
-`Additional FreeBSD contributors' on the FreeBSD Handbook
-and other files. Isn't that great?!? :)
-
-
-
-
-
-Slow Porting
-
-Ok, so it was not that simple, and the port required some
-modifications to get it to work. In this section, we will
-explain, step by step, how to modify it to get it to work with
-the ports paradigm.
-
-
-
-How things work
-
-First, this is the sequence of events which occurs when the
-user first types `make' in your port's directory,
-and you may find that having bsd.port.mk in another
-window while you read this really helps to understand it.
-
-But do not worry if you do not really understand what
-bsd.port.mk is doing, not many people
-do... :>
-
-
-
-
-
-The fetch target is run. The fetch target is
-responsible for making sure that the tarball exists
-locally in ${DISTDIR}. If fetch cannot
-find the required files in ${DISTDIR} it
-will look up the URL ${MASTER_SITES},
-which is set in the Makefile, as well as our main ftp
-site at ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/distfiles/,
-where we put sanctioned distfiles as backup. It will then
-attempt to
-fetch the named distribution file with
-${FETCH}, assuming that the requesting
-site has direct access to the Internet. If that succeeds,
-it will save the file in ${DISTDIR} for
-future use and proceed.
-
-
-
-
-The extract target is run. It looks for your ports'
-distribution file in ${DISTDIR} (typically
-a gzip'd tarball) and unpacks it into a temporary
-subdirectory specified by ${WRKDIR}
-(defaults to work).
-
-
-
-
-The patch target is run. First, any patches defined
-in ${PATCHFILES} are applied. Second, if
-any patches are found in ${PATCHDIR}
-(defaults to the patches subdirectory), they are
-applied at this time in alphabetical order.
-
-
-
-
-The configure target is run. This can do any one of
-many different things.
-
-
-
-
-If it exists, scripts/configure is run.
-
-
-
-
-If ${HAS_CONFIGURE} or
-${GNU_CONFIGURE} is set,
-${WRKSRC}/configure is run.
-
-
-
-
-If ${USE_IMAKE} is set,
-${XMKMF} (default: `xmkmf
--a') is run.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The build target is run. This is responsible for
-descending into the ports' private working directory
-(${WRKSRC}) and building it. If
-${USE_GMAKE} is set, GNU make
-will be used, otherwise the system make will be
-used.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The above are the default actions. In addition, you can
-define targets `pre-<something>' or
-`post-<something>', or put scripts with those
-names, in the scripts subdirectory, and they will
-be run before or after the default actions are done.
-
-For example, if you have a post-extract target
-defined in your Makefile, and a file pre-build in
-the scripts subdirectory, the
-post-extract target will be called after the
-regular extraction actions, and the pre-build
-script will be executed before the default build rules are
-done. It is recommended that you use Makefile targets if
-the actions are simple enough, because it will be easier for
-someone to figure out what kind of non-default action the
-port requires.
-
-The default actions are done by the bsd.port.mk
-targets `do-<something>'. For example, the
-commands to extract a port are in the target
-`do-extract'. If you are not happy with the
-default target, you can fix it by redefining the
-`do-<something>' target in your Makefile.
-
-Note that the `main' targets (e.g., extract,
-configure, etc.) do nothing more than make sure all
-the stages up to that one is completed and call the real
-targets or scripts, and they are not intended to be
-changed. If you want to fix the extraction, fix
-do-extract, but never ever touch extract!
-
-Now that you understand what goes on when the user types
-`make', let us go through the recommended steps to
-create the perfect port.
-
-
-
-
-Getting the original sources
-
-Get the original sources (normally) as a compressed tarball
-(<foo>.tar.gz or <foo>.tar.Z)
-and copy it into ${DISTDIR}. Always use
-mainstream sources when and where you can.
-
-If you cannot find a ftp/http site that is well-connected
-to the net, or can only find sites that have irritatingly
-non-standard formats, we can `house' it ourselves by putting
-it on
-
-ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/distfiles/LOCAL_PORTS/
-
-
-as the last resort. Please refer to this location as
-${MASTER_SITE_LOCAL}. Send mail to the &a.ports;if you are not sure what to do.
-
-If your port requires some additional `patches' that are
-available on the Internet, fetch them too and put them in
-${DISTDIR}. Do not worry if they come from
-site other than where you got the main source tarball,
-we have a way to handle these situations (see the
-description of below).
-
-
-
-
-Modifying the port
-
-Unpack a copy of the tarball in a private directory and
-make whatever changes are necessary to get the port to
-compile properly under the current version of FreeBSD. Keep
-careful track of everything you do, as you will be
-automating the process shortly. Everything, including the
-deletion, addition or modification of files should be doable
-using an automated script or patch file when your port is
-finished.
-
-If your port requires significant user
-interaction/customization to compile or install, you should
-take a look at one of Larry Wall's classic Configure scripts
-and perhaps do something similar yourself. The goal of the
-new ports collection is to make each port as `plug-and-play'
-as possible for the end-user while using a minimum of disk
-space.
-
-Note: Unless explicitly stated, patch files, scripts, and
-other files you have created and contributed to the FreeBSD
-ports collection are assumed to be covered by the standard
-BSD copyright conditions.
-
-
-
-
-Patching
-
-In the preparation of the port, files that have been added
-or changed can be picked up with a recursive diff for later
-feeding to patch. Each set of patches you wish to apply
-should be collected into a file named
-`patch-<xx>' where <xx>
-denotes the sequence in which the patches will be applied --
-these are done in alphabetical order, thus
-`aa' first, `ab' second and so on. These
-files should be stored in ${PATCHDIR}, from
-where they will be automatically applied. All patches
-should be relative to ${WRKSRC} (generally
-the directory your port's tarball unpacks itself into, that
-being where the build is done). To make fixes and upgrades
-easier you should avoid having more than one patch fix the
-same file (e.g., patch-aa and patch-ab both changing
-${WRKSRC}/foobar.c).
-
-
-
-
-Configuring
-
-Include any additional customization commands to your
-configure script and save it in the
-`scripts' subdirectory. As mentioned above, you
-can also do this as Makefile targets and/or scripts with the
-name pre-configure or post-configure.
-
-
-
-
-Handling user input
-
-If your port requires user input to build, configure or
-install, then set IS_INTERACTIVE in your Makefile.
-This will allow `overnight builds' to skip your port if the
-user sets the variable BATCH in his environment
-(and if the user sets the variable INTERACTIVE,
-then only those ports requiring interaction are
-built).
-
-
-
-
-
-Configuring the Makefile
-
-Configuring the Makefile is pretty simple, and again we
-suggest that you look at existing examples before starting.
-Also, there is a in this handbook, so take a look and please follow
-the ordering of variables and sections in that template to
-make your port easier for others to read.
-
-Now, consider the following problems in sequence as you
-design your new Makefile:
-
-
-
-The original source
-
-Does it live in ${DISTDIR} as a standard
-gzip'd tarball? If so, you can go on to the next step. If
-not, you should look at overriding any of the
-${EXTRACT_CMD},
-${EXTRACT_BEFORE_ARGS},
-${EXTRACT_AFTER_ARGS},
-${EXTRACT_SUFX}, or
-${DISTFILES} variables, depending on how
-alien a format your port's distribution file is. (The most
-common case is `EXTRACT_SUFX=.tar.Z', when the
-tarball is condensed by regular compress, not gzip.)
-
-In the worst case, you can simply create your own
-`do-extract' target to override the default, though
-this should be rarely, if ever, necessary.
-
-
-
-
-DISTNAME
-
-You should set ${DISTNAME} to be the base
-name of your port. The default rules expect the
-distribution file list (${DISTFILES}) to be
-named
-${DISTNAME}${EXTRACT_SUFX}
-by default which, if it is a normal tarball, is going to be
-something like:
-
-
-foozolix-1.0.tar.gz
-
-
-for a setting of `DISTNAME=foozolix-1.0'.
-
-The default rules also expect the tarball(s) to extract into
-a subdirectory called work/${DISTNAME}, e.g.
-
-
-work/foozolix-1.0/
-
-
-
-All this behavior can be overridden, of course, it simply
-represents the most common time-saving defaults. For a port
-requiring multiple distribution files, simply set
-${DISTFILES} explicitly. If only a subset
-of ${DISTFILES} are actual extractable
-archives, then set them up in
-${EXTRACT_ONLY}, which will override the
-${DISTFILES} list when it comes to
-extraction, and the rest will be just left in
-${DISTDIR} for later use.
-
-
-
-
-CATEGORIES
-
-When a package is created, it is put under
-/usr/ports/packages/All and links are made from one
-or more subdirectories of /usr/ports/packages. The
-names of these subdirectories are specified by the variable
-${CATEGORIES}. It is intended to make life
-easier for the user when he is wading through the pile of
-packages on the ftp site or the CD-ROM. Please take a look
-at the existing categories (you can find them in the ports page) and pick the ones that are suitable for your port.
-If your port truly belongs to something that is different
-from all the existing ones, you can even create a new
-category name.
-
-
-
-
-MASTER_SITES
-
-Record the directory part of the ftp/http-URL pointing at
-the original tarball in ${MASTER_SITES}.
-Do not forget the trailing slash (/)!
-
-The make macros will try to use this specification for
-grabbing the distribution file with ${FETCH}
-if they cannot find it already on the system.
-
-It is recommended that you put multiple sites on this list,
-preferably from different continents. This will safeguard
-against wide-area network problems, and we are even planning
-to add support for automatically determining the closest
-master site and fetching from there!
-
-If the original tarball is part of one of the following
-popular archives: X-contrib, GNU, Perl CPAN, TeX CTAN, or
-Linux Sunsite, you refer to those sites in an easy compact
-form using MASTER_SITE_XCONTRIB, MASTER_SITE_GNU,
-MASTER_SITE_PERL_CPAN, MASTER_SITE_TEX_CTAN, and
-MASTER_SITE_SUNSITE. Simply set MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR to the path
-with in the archive. Here is an example:
-
-MASTER_SITES= ${MASTER_SITE_XCONTRIB}
-MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR= applications
-
-
-
-The user can also set the MASTER_SITE_* variables in
-/etc/make.conf to override our choices, and use their
-favorite mirrors of these popular archives instead.
-
-
-
-
-PATCHFILES
-
-If your port requires some additional patches that are
-available by ftp or http, set ${PATCHFILES}
-to the names of the files and ${PATCH_SITES}
-to the URL of the directory that contains them (the format
-is the same as ${MASTER_SITES}).
-
-If the patch is not relative to the top of the source tree
-(i.e., ${WKRSRC}) because it contains some
-extra pathnames, set ${PATCH_DIST_STRIP}
-accordingly. For instance, if all the pathnames in the
-patch has an extra `foozolix-1.0/' in front of the
-filenames, then set `PATCH_DIST_STRIP=-p1'.
-
-Do not worry if the patches are compressed, they will be
-decompressed automatically if the filenames end with
-`.gz' or `.Z'.
-
-If the patch is distributed with some other files, such as
-documentation, in a gzip'd tarball, you can't just use
-${PATCHFILES}. If that is the case, add the
-name and the location of the patch tarball to
-${DISTFILES} and
-${MASTER_SITES}. Then, from the
-pre-patch target, apply the patch either by running
-the patch command from there, or copying the patch file into
-the ${PATCHDIR} directory and calling it
-patch-<xx>. (Note the tarball will have been
-extracted alongside the regular source by then, so there is
-no need to explicitly extract it if it is a regular gzip'd
-or compress'd tarball.) If you do the latter, take extra
-care not to overwrite something that already exists in that
-directory. Also do not forget to add a command to remove
-the copied patch in the pre-clean target.
-
-
-
-
-MAINTAINER
-
-Set your mail-address here. Please. :)
-
-For detailed description of the responsibility of maintainers,
-refer to section.
-
-
-
-
-Dependencies
-
-Many ports depend on other ports. There are five
-variables that you can use to ensure that all the required
-bits will be on the user's machine.
-
-
-
-LIB_DEPENDS
-
-This variable specifies the shared libraries this port
-depends on. It is a list of `lib:dir' pairs
-where lib is the name of the shared library, and
-dir is the directory in which to find it in case
-it is not available. For example,
-
-LIB_DEPENDS= jpeg\\.6\\.:${PORTSDIR}/graphics/jpeg
-
-
-will check for a shared jpeg library with major version 6,
-and descend into the graphics/jpeg subdirectory
-of your ports tree to build and install it if it is not
-found.
-
-Note that the lib part is just an argument given
-to `ldconfig -r | grep', so periods should be
-escaped by two backslashes like in the example above.
-
-The dependency is checked from within the extract
-target. Also, the name of the dependency is put in to the
-package so that pkg_add will automatically
-install it if it is not on the user's system.
-
-
-
-
-RUN_DEPENDS
-
-This variable specifies executables or files this port
-depends on during run-time. It is a list of
-`path:dir' pairs where path is the name
-of the executable or file, and dir is the
-directory in which to find it in case it is not
-available. If path starts with a slash
-(/), it is treated as a file and its existence is
-tested with `test -e'; otherwise, it is assumed
-to be an executable, and `which -s' is used to
-determine if the program exists in the user's search path.
-
-For example,
-
-RUN_DEPENDS= ${PREFIX}/etc/innd:${PORTSDIR}/news/inn \
- wish:${PORTSDIR}/x11/tk
-
-
-will check if the file `/usr/local/etc/innd'
-exists, and build and install it from the
-news/inn subdirectory of the ports tree if it is
-not found. It will also see if an executable called
-`wish' is in your search path, and descend into
-the x11/tk subdirectory of your ports tree to
-build and install it if it is not found. (Note that in
-this case, `innd' is actually an executable; if
-an executable is in a place that is not expected to be in
-a normal user's search path, you should use the full
-pathname.)
-
-The dependency is checked from within the install
-target. Also, the name of the dependency is put in to the
-package so that pkg_add will automatically
-install it if it is not on the user's system.
-
-
-
-
-BUILD_DEPENDS
-
-This variable specifies executables or files this port
-requires to build. Like RUN_DEPENDS, it is a
-list of `path:dir' pairs. For example,
-
-BUILD_DEPENDS= unzip:${PORTSDIR}/archivers/unzip
-
-
-will check for an executable called `unzip', and
-descend into the archivers/unzip subdirectory of
-your ports tree to build and install it if it is not found.
-
-Note that `build' here means everything from extracting to
-compilation. The dependency is checked from within the
-extract target.
-
-
-
-
-FETCH_DEPENDS
-
-This variable specifies executables or files this port
-requires to fetch. Like the previous two, it is a list of
-`path:dir' pairs. For example,
-
-FETCH_DEPENDS= ncftp2:${PORTSDIR}/net/ncftp2
-
-
-will check for an executable called `ncftp2', and
-descend into the net/ncftp2 subdirectory of
-your ports tree to build and install it if it is not found.
-
-The dependency is checked from within the fetch
-target.
-
-
-
-
-DEPENDS
-
-If there is a dependency that does not fall into either of
-the above four categories, or your port requires to have
-the source of the other port extracted (i.e., having them
-installed is not enough), then use this variable. This is
-just a list of directories, as there is nothing to check,
-unlike the previous four.
-
-
-
-
-
-Building mechanisms
-
-If your package uses GNU make, set
-`USE_GMAKE=yes'. If your package uses GNU
-configure, set `GNU_CONFIGURE=yes'. If
-you want to give some extra arguments to GNU
-configure (other than the default
-`--prefix=${PREFIX}'),
-set those extra arguments in
-${CONFIGURE_ARGS}.
-
-If your package is an X application that creates Makefiles
-from Imakefiles using imake, then set
-`USE_IMAKE=yes'. This will cause the configure
-stage to automatically do an xmkmf -a. If the
-`' flag is a problem for your port, set
-`XMKMF=xmkmf'.
-
-If your port's source Makefile has something else than
-`all' as the main build target, set
-${ALL_TARGET} accordingly. Same goes for
-`install' and ${INSTALL_TARGET}.
-
-
-
-
-NO_INSTALL_MANPAGES
-
-If the port uses imake but does not understand the
-`install.man' target,
-`NO_INSTALL_MANPAGES=yes' should be set. In
-addition, the author of the original port should be
-shot. :>
-
-
-
-
-
-Ports that require Motif
-
-There are many programs that require a Motif library
-(available from several commercial vendors, while there is (at
-least) one effort to create a free clone) to compile. Since
-it is a popular toolkit and their licenses usually permit
-redistribution of statically linked binaries, we have made
-special provisions for handling ports that require Motif in a
-way that we can easily compile binaries linked either
-dynamically or statically.
-
-
-
-REQUIRES_MOTIF
-
-If your port requires Motif, define this variable in the
-Makefile. This will prevent people who don't own a copy of
-Motif from even attempting to build it.
-
-
-
-
-${MOTIFLIB}
-
-This variable will be set by bsd.port.mk to be the
-appropriate reference to the Motif library. Please patch
-the source to use this wherever the Motif library is
-referenced in the Makefile or Imakefile.
-
-There are two common cases:
-
-
-
-If the port refers to the Motif library as
-`' in its Makefile or Imakefile, simply
-substitute `${MOTIFLIB}' for it.
-
-
-
-
-If the port uses `XmClientLibs' in its
-Imakefile, change it to `${MOTIFLIB}
-${XTOOLLIB} ${XLIB}'.
-
-
-
-
-
-Note that ${MOTIFLIB} (usually) expands to
-`' or
-`/usr/X11R6/lib/libXm.a', so there is no need to
-add `' or `' in front.
-
-
-
-
-
-Info files
-
-The new version of texinfo (included in 2.2.2-RELEASE and
-onwards) contains a utility called `install-info' to add
-and delete entries to the `dir' file. If your port
-installs any info documents, please follow these instructions
-so your port/package will correctly update the user's
-${PREFIX}/info/dir file. (Sorry for the length
-of this section, but it is imperative to weave all the info
-files together. If done correctly, it will produce a
-beautiful listing, so please bear with me! :)
-
-First, this is what you (as a porter) need to know:
-
-
-
-% install-info --help
-install-info [OPTION]... [INFO-FILE [DIR-FILE]]
- Install INFO-FILE in the Info directory file DIR-FILE.
-
-Options:
---delete Delete existing entries in INFO-FILE;
- don't insert any new entries.
- :
---entry=TEXT Insert TEXT as an Info directory entry.
- :
---section=SEC Put this file's entries in section SEC of the directory.
- :
-
-
-
-Note that this program will not actually install
-info files; it merely inserts or deletes entries in the
-dir file.
-
-Here's a seven-step procedure to convert ports to use
-install-info. I will use editors/emacs as an
-example.
-
-
-
-
-
-Look at the texinfo sources and make a patch to insert
-@dircategory and @direntry statements to files
-that don't have them. This is part of my patch:
-
-
---- ./man/vip.texi.org Fri Jun 16 15:31:11 1995
-+++ ./man/vip.texi Tue May 20 01:28:33 1997
-@@ -2,6 +2,10 @@
-
- @setfilename ../info/vip
- @settitle VIP
-+@dircategory The Emacs editor and associated tools
-+@direntry
-+* VIP: (vip). A VI-emulation for Emacs.
-+@end direntry
-
- @iftex
- @finalout
- :
-
-
-
-
-
-The format should be self-explanatory. Many authors leave
-a dir file in the source tree that contains all the
-entries you need, so look around before you try to write
-your own. Also, make sure you look into related ports and
-make the section names and entry indentations consistent (we
-recommend that all entry text start at the 4th tab stop).
-
-
-
-Note that you can put only one info entry per file because
-of a bug in `install-info --delete' that deletes
-only the first entry if you specify multiple entries in the
-@direntry section.
-
-
-
-You can give the dir entries to install-info as
-arguments ( and ) instead of
-patching the texinfo sources. I do not think this is a good
-idea for ports because you need to duplicate the same
-information in three places (Makefile and
-@exec/@unexec of PLIST; see below). However,
-if you have a Japanese (or other multibyte encoding) info
-files, you will have to use the extra arguments to
-install-info because makeinfo can't handle those
-texinfo sources. (See Makefile and PLIST of
-japanese/skk for examples on how to do this).
-
-
-
-
-
-Go back to the port directory and do a `make clean;
-make' and verify that the info files are regenerated
-from the texinfo sources. Since the texinfo sources are
-newer than the info files, they should be rebuilt when you
-type make; but many Makefiles don't include
-correct dependencies for info files. In emacs' case, I had
-to patch the main Makefile.in so it will descend into
-the man subdirectory to rebuild the info pages.
-
-
---- ./Makefile.in.org Mon Aug 19 21:12:19 1996
-+++ ./Makefile.in Tue Apr 15 00:15:28 1997
-@@ -184,7 +184,7 @@
- # Subdirectories to make recursively. `lisp' is not included
- # because the compiled lisp files are part of the distribution
- # and you cannot remake them without installing Emacs first.
--SUBDIR = lib-src src
-+SUBDIR = lib-src src man
-
- # The makefiles of the directories in $SUBDIR.
- SUBDIR_MAKEFILES = lib-src/Makefile man/Makefile src/Makefile oldXMenu/Makefile lwlib/Makefile
---- ./man/Makefile.in.org Thu Jun 27 15:27:19 1996
-+++ ./man/Makefile.in Tue Apr 15 00:29:52 1997
-@@ -66,6 +66,7 @@
- ${srcdir}/gnu1.texi \
- ${srcdir}/glossary.texi
-
-+all: info
- info: $(INFO_TARGETS)
-
- dvi: $(DVI_TARGETS)
-
-
-
-
-
-The second hunk was necessary because the default target in
-the man subdir is called info, while the
-main Makefile wants to call all. I also deleted the
-installation of the info info file because we already
-have one with the same name in /usr/share/info
-(that patch is not shown here).
-
-
-
-
-
-If there is a place in the Makefile that is
-installing the dir file, delete it. Your port may not
-be doing it. Also, remove any commands that are otherwise
-mucking around with the dir file.
-
-
---- ./Makefile.in.org Mon Aug 19 21:12:19 1996
-+++ ./Makefile.in Mon Apr 14 23:38:07 1997
-@@ -368,14 +368,8 @@
- if [ `(cd ${srcdir}/info && /bin/pwd)` != `(cd ${infodir} && /bin/pwd)` ]; \
- then \
- (cd ${infodir}; \
-- if [ -f dir ]; then \
-- if [ ! -f dir.old ]; then mv -f dir dir.old; \
-- else mv -f dir dir.bak; fi; \
-- fi; \
- cd ${srcdir}/info ; \
-- (cd $${thisdir}; ${INSTALL_DATA} ${srcdir}/info/dir ${infodir}/dir); \
-- (cd $${thisdir}; chmod a+r ${infodir}/dir); \
- for f in ccmode* cl* dired-x* ediff* emacs* forms* gnus* info* message* mh-e* sc* vip*; do \
- (cd $${thisdir}; \
- ${INSTALL_DATA} ${srcdir}/info/$$f ${infodir}/$$f; \
- chmod a+r ${infodir}/$$f); \
-
-
-
-
-
-
-(This step is only necessary if you are modifying an
-existing port.) Take a look at pkg/PLIST and
-delete anything that is trying to patch up
-info/dir. They may be in pkg/INSTALL or
-some other file, so search extensively.
-
-
-Index: pkg/PLIST
-===================================================================
-RCS file: /usr/cvs/ports/editors/emacs/pkg/PLIST,v
-retrieving revision 1.15
-diff -u -r1.15 PLIST
---- PLIST 1997/03/04 08:04:00 1.15
-+++ PLIST 1997/04/15 06:32:12
-@@ -15,9 +15,6 @@
- man/man1/emacs.1.gz
- man/man1/etags.1.gz
- man/man1/ctags.1.gz
--@unexec cp %D/info/dir %D/info/dir.bak
--info/dir
--@unexec cp %D/info/dir.bak %D/info/dir
- info/cl
- info/cl-1
- info/cl-2
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Add a post-install target to the Makefile to create
-a dir file if it is not there. Also, call
-install-info with the installed info files.
-
-
-Index: Makefile
-===================================================================
-RCS file: /usr/cvs/ports/editors/emacs/Makefile,v
-retrieving revision 1.26
-diff -u -r1.26 Makefile
---- Makefile 1996/11/19 13:14:40 1.26
-+++ Makefile 1997/05/20 10:25:09 1.28
-@@ -20,5 +20,11 @@
- post-install:
- .for file in emacs-19.34 emacsclient etags ctags b2m
- strip ${PREFIX}/bin/${file}
- .endfor
-+ if [ ! -f ${PREFIX}/info/dir ]; then \
-+ ${SED} -ne '1,/Menu:/p' /usr/share/info/dir > ${PREFIX}/info/dir; \
-+ fi
-+.for info in emacs vip viper forms gnus mh-e cl sc dired-x ediff ccmode
-+ install-info ${PREFIX}/info/${info} ${PREFIX}/info/dir
-+.endfor
-
- .include <bsd.port.mk>
-
-
-
-
-
-Do not use anything other than /usr/share/info/dir
-and the above command to create a new info file. In fact,
-I'd add the first three lines of the above patch to
-bsd.port.mk if you (the porter) wouldn't have to do it
-in PLIST by yourself anyway.
-
-
-
-
-
-Edit PLIST and add equivalent @exec statements
-and also @unexec for pkg_delete. You do not need
-to delete info/dir with @unexec.
-
-
-Index: pkg/PLIST
-===================================================================
-RCS file: /usr/cvs/ports/editors/emacs/pkg/PLIST,v
-retrieving revision 1.15
-diff -u -r1.15 PLIST
---- PLIST 1997/03/04 08:04:00 1.15
-+++ PLIST 1997/05/20 10:25:12 1.17
-@@ -16,7 +14,15 @@
- man/man1/etags.1.gz
- man/man1/ctags.1.gz
-+@unexec install-info --delete %D/info/emacs %D/info/dir
- :
-+@unexec install-info --delete %D/info/ccmode %D/info/dir
- info/cl
- info/cl-1
-@@ -87,6 +94,18 @@
- info/viper-3
- info/viper-4
-+@exec [ -f %D/info/dir ] || sed -ne '1,/Menu:/p' /usr/share/info/dir > %D/info/dir
-+@exec install-info %D/info/emacs %D/info/dir
- :
-+@exec install-info %D/info/ccmode %D/info/dir
- libexec/emacs/19.34/i386--freebsd/cvtmail
- libexec/emacs/19.34/i386--freebsd/digest-doc
-
-
-
-
-
-Note that the `@unexec install-info --delete'
-commands have to be listed before the info files themselves
-so they can read the files. Also, the `@exec
-install-info' commands have to be after the info files
-and the @exec command that creates the the dir
-file.
-
-
-
-
-
-Test and admire your work. :) The sequence I
-recommend is: `make package', `pkg_delete', then
-`pkg_add'. Check the dir file before and after
-each step.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Licensing Problems
-
-Some software packages have restrictive licenses or can be in
-violation to the law (PKP's patent on public key crypto,
-ITAR (export of crypto software) to name just two of them).
-What we can do with them vary a lot, depending on the exact
-wordings of the respective licenses.
-
-Note that it is your responsibility as a porter to read the
-licensing terms of the software and make sure that the FreeBSD
-project will not be held accountable of violating them by
-redistributing the source or compiled binaries either via ftp
-or CD-ROM. If in doubt, please contact the &a.ports;.
-
-There are two variables you can set in the Makefile to handle
-the situations that arise frequently:
-
-
-
-
-
-If the port has a `do not sell for profit' type of
-license, set the variable NO_CDROM. We will make
-sure such ports won't go into the CD-ROM come release time.
-The distfile and package will still be available via ftp.
-
-
-
-
-If the resulting package needs to be built uniquely for
-each site, or the resulting binary package can't be distributed
-due to licensing; set the variable NO_PACKAGE.
-We will make sure such packages won't go on the ftp site, nor
-into the CD-ROM come release time. The distfile will still be
-included on both however.
-
-
-
-
-If the port has legal restrictions on who can use it
-(e.g., crypto stuff) or has a `no commercial use' license,
-set the variable RESTRICTED to be the string
-describing the reason why. For such ports, the
-distfiles/packages will not be available even from our ftp
-sites.
-
-
-
-
-
-Note: The GNU General Public License (GPL), both version 1
-and 2, should not be a problem for ports.
-
-Note: If you are a committer, make sure you update the
-ports/LEGAL file too.
-
-
-
-
-Upgrading
-
-When you notice that a port is out of date compared to the
-latest version from the original authors, first make sure you
-have the latest port. You can find them in the
-ports-current directory of the ftp mirror sites.
-
-The next step is to send a mail to the maintainer, if one is
-listed in the port's Makefile. That person may already be
-working on an upgrade, or have a reason to not upgrade the
-port right now (because of, for example, stability problems
-of the new version).
-
-If the maintainer asks you to do the upgrade or there isn't
-any such person to begin with, please make the upgrade and
-send the recursive diff (either unified or context diff is
-fine, but port committers appear to prefer unified diff more)
-of the new and old ports directories
-to us (i.e., if your modified ports directory is called
-`superedit' and the original as in our tree is
-`superedit.bak', then send us the result of `diff
--ruN superedit.bak superedit'). Please examine the output
-to make sure all the changes make sense. The best way to send
-us the diff is by including it to send-pr(1) (category
-`ports'). Please
-mention any added or deleted files in the message, as they
-have to be explicitly specified to CVS when doing a commit.
-If the diff is more than about 20KB, please compress and
-uuencode it; otherwise, just include it in as is in the PR.
-
-
-
-
-Do's and Dont's
-
-Here is a list of common do's and dont's that you encounter
-during the porting process.
-
-
-
-WRKDIR
-
-Do not leave anything valuable lying around in the
-work subdirectory, `make clean' will
-nuke it completely! If you need auxiliary files
-that are not scripts or patches, put them in the
-${FILESDIR} subdirectory (files by default)
-and use the post-extract target to
-copy them to the work subdirectory.
-
-
-
-
-Package information
-
-Do include package information, i.e. COMMENT,
-DESCR, and PLIST, in
-pkg. Note that these files are not used only for
-packaging anymore, and are mandatory now, even if
-${NO_PACKAGE} is set.
-
-
-
-
-Compress manpages, strip binaries
-
-Do compress manpages and strip binaries. If the original
-source already strips the binary, fine; otherwise, you can add a
-post-install rule to do it yourself. Here is an example:
-
- post-install:
- strip ${PREFIX}/bin/xdl
-
-
-
-Use the file command on the installed executable
-to check whether the binary is stripped or not. If it
-does not say `not stripped', it is stripped.
-
-To automagically compress the manpages, use the MAN[1-9LN]
-variables. They will check the variable
-NOMANCOMPRESS that the user can set in
-/etc/make.conf to disable man page compression.
-Place them last in the section below the
-MAINTAINER variable. Here is an example:
-
-MAN1= foo.1 bar.1
-MAN5= foo.conf.5
-MAN8= baz.8
-
-
-
-Note that this is not usually necessary with ports that are X
-applications and use Imake to build.
-
-If your port anchors its man tree somewhere other than
-PREFIX, you can use the MANPREFIX to set it.
-Also, if only manpages in certain section go in a
-non-standard place, such as many Perl modules ports, you
-can set individual man paths using
-MANsectPREFIX (where sect is one
-of 1-9, L or N).
-
-
-
-
-INSTALL_* macros
-
-Do use the macros provided in bsd.port.mk to
-ensure correct modes and ownership of files in your own
-*-install targets. They are:
-
-
-
-
-
-${INSTALL_PROGRAM} is a command to install
-binary executables.
-
-
-
-${INSTALL_SCRIPT} is a command to install
-executable scripts.
-
-
-
-${INSTALL_DATA} is a command to install
-sharable data.
-
-
-
-${INSTALL_MAN} is a command to install
-manpages and other documentation (it doesn't compress anything).
-
-
-
-
-
-These are basically the install command with all
-the appropriate flags. See below for an example on how to
-use them.
-
-
-
-
-INSTALL package script
-
-If your port needs execute commands when the binary package
-is installed with pkg_add you can do with via the pkg/INSTALL
-script. This script will automatically be added to the
-package, and will be run twice by pkg_add. The first time
-will as `INSTALL ${PKGNAME} PRE-INSTALL'
-and the second time as `INSTALL ${PKGNAME} POST-INSTALL'.
-`$2' can be tested to determine which mode
-the script is being run in.
-The `PKG_PREFIX' environmental variable will be set to
-the package installation directory. See man pkg_add(1)
-for additional information.
-Note, that this script is not run automatically if you install
-the port with `make install'. If you are depending
-on it being run, you will have to explicitly call it on your
-port's Makefile.
-
-
-
-
-REQ package script
-
-If your port needs to determine if it should install or not, you
-can create a pkg/REQ ``requirements'' script. It will be invoked
-automatically at installation/deinstallation time to determine
-whether or not installation/deinstallation should proceed.
-See man pkg_create(1) and man pkg_add(1) for
-more information.
-
-
-
-
-Install additional documentation
-
-If your software has some documentation other than the
-standard man and info pages that you think is useful for the
-user, install it under ${PREFIX}/share/doc.
-This can be done, like the previous item, in the
-post-install target.
-
-Create a new directory for your port. The directory name
-should reflect what the port is. This usually means
-${PKGNAME} minus the version part. However,
-if you think the user might want different versions of the
-port to be installed at the same time, you
-can use the whole ${PKGNAME}.
-
-Make the installation dependent to the variable
-NOPORTDOCS so that users can disable it in
-/etc/make.conf, like this:
-
- post-install:
- .if !defined(NOPORTDOCS)
- ${MKDIR} ${PREFIX}/share/doc/xv
- ${INSTALL_MAN} ${WRKSRC}/docs/xvdocs.ps ${PREFIX}/share/doc/xv
- .endif
-
-
-
-Do not forget to add them to pkg/PLIST too! (Do not
-worry about NOPORTDOCS here; there is currently no
-way for the packages to read variables from
-/etc/make.conf.)
-
-If you need to display a message to the installer, you may
-place the message in pkg/MESSAGE. This capibility
-is often useful to display additional installation steps to
-be taken after a pkg_add, or to display licensing information.
-(note: the MESSAGE file does not need to be added to pkg/PLIST).
-
-
-
-
-DIST_SUBDIR
-
-Do not let your port clutter /usr/ports/distfiles. If
-your port requires a lot of files to be
-fetched, or contains a file that has a name that might conflict
-with other ports (e.g., `Makefile'), set
-${DIST_SUBDIR} to the name of the port
-(${PKGNAME} without the version part should work
-fine). This will change ${DISTDIR} from the
-default /usr/ports/distfiles to
-/usr/ports/distfiles/${DIST_SUBDIR}, and in
-effect puts everything that is required for your port into that
-subdirectory.
-
-It will also look at the subdirectory with the same name on the
-backup master site at ftp.freebsd.org. (Setting
-${DISTDIR} explicitly in your Makefile will not
-accomplish this, so please use ${DIST_SUBDIR}.)
-
-Note this does not affect the ${MASTER_SITES}
-you define in your Makefile.
-
-
-
-
-Feedback
-
-Do send applicable changes/patches to the original
-author/maintainer for inclusion in next release of the code.
-This will only make your job that much easier for the next
-release.
-
-
-
-
-RCS strings
-
-Do not put RCS strings in patches. CVS will mangle them
-when we put the files into the ports tree, and when we check
-them out again, they will come out different and the patch
-will fail. RCS strings are surrounded by dollar
-(`$') signs, and typically start with
-`$Id' or `$RCS'.
-
-
-
-
-Recursive diff
-
-Using the recurse (`') option to diff
-to generate patches is fine, but please take a look at the
-resulting patches to make sure you don't have any
-unnecessary junk in there. In particular, diffs between two
-backup files, Makefiles when the port uses Imake or GNU
-configure, etc., are unnecessary and should be deleted.
-Also, if you had to delete a file, then you can do it in the
-post-extract target rather than as part of the
-patch. Once you are happy with the resuling diff, please
-split it up into one source file per patch file.
-
-
-
-
-PREFIX
-
-Do try to make your port install relative to
-${PREFIX}. (The value of this variable will be
-set to ${LOCALBASE} (default
-/usr/local), unless ${USE_IMAKE} or
-${USE_X11} is set, in which case it will be
-${X11BASE} (default /usr/X11R6).)
-
-Not hard-coding `/usr/local' or `/usr/X11R6'
-anywhere in the source will make the port much more flexible and
-able to cater to the needs of other sites. For X ports that use
-imake, this is automatic; otherwise, this can often be done by
-simply replacing the occurrences of `/usr/local' (or
-`/usr/X11R6' for X ports that do not use imake) in the
-various scripts/Makefiles in the port to read
-`${PREFIX}', as this variable is automatically
-passed down to every stage of the build and install processes.
-
-The variable ${PREFIX} can be reassigned in your
-Makefile or in the user's environment. However, it is strongly
-discouraged for individual ports to set this variable explicitly
-in the Makefiles. (If your port is an X port but does not use
-imake, set USE_X11=yes; this is quite different from
-setting PREFIX=/usr/X11R6.)
-
-Also, refer to programs/files from other ports with the
-variables mentioned above, not explicit pathnames. For instance,
-if your port requires a macro PAGER to be the full
-pathname of less, use the compiler flag:
--DPAGER=\"${PREFIX}/bin/less\"
- or
--DPAGER=\"${LOCALBASE}/bin/less\"
- if this is an
-X port, instead of
--DPAGER=\"/usr/local/bin/less\".
-
-This way it will have a better chance of working if the system
-administrator has moved the whole `/usr/local' tree somewhere
-else.
-
-
-
-
-Subdirectories
-
-Try to let the port put things in the right subdirectories
-of ${PREFIX}. Some ports lump everything
-and put it in the subdirectory with the port's name, which is
-incorrect. Also, many ports put everything except binaries,
-header files and manual pages in the a subdirectory of
-`lib', which does not bode well with the BSD
-paradigm. Many of the files should be moved to one of the
-following: `etc' (setup/configuration files),
-`libexec' (executables started internally),
-`sbin' (executables for superusers/managers),
-`info' (documentation for info browser) or
-`share' (architecture independent files). See man
-hier(7) for details, the rule governing
-/usr pretty much applies to /usr/local
-too. The exception are ports dealing with USENET `news'.
-They may use ${PREFIX}/news as a destination
-for their files.
-
-
-
-
-ldconfig
-
-If your port installs a shared library, add a
-post-install target to your Makefile that runs
-`/sbin/ldconfig -m' on the directory where the new
-library is installed (usually ${PREFIX}/lib)
-to register it into the shared library cache.
-
-Also, add an @exec line to your pkg/PLIST
-file so that a user who installed the package can start
-using the shared library immediately. This line should
-immediately follow the line for the shared library itself,
-as in:
-
-lib/libtcl80.so.1.0
-@exec /sbin/ldconfig -m %D/lib
-
-
-
-Never, ever, ever add a line that says
-`ldconfig' without any arguments to your Makefile
-or pkg/PLIST. This will reset the shared library cache to
-the contents of /usr/lib only, and will royally
-screw up the user's machine ("Help, xinit does not run
-anymore after I install this port!"). Anybody who does this
-will be shot and cut into 65,536 pieces by a rusty knife and
-have his liver chopped out by a bunch of crows and will
-eternally rot to death in the deepest bowels of hell (not
-necessarily in that order)....
-
-
-
-
-UIDs
-
-If your port requires a certain user ID to be on the
-installed system, let the pkg/INSTALL script call
-pw to create it automatically. Look at
-japanese/Wnn or net/cvsup-mirror for
-examples. It is customary to use UIDs in the upper 2-digit
-range (i.e., from around 50 to 99) for this purpose.
-
-Make sure you don't use a UID already used by the system or
-other ports. This is the current list of UIDs between 50
-and 99.
-
-
-
-majordom:*:54:1024:Majordomo Pseudo User:/usr/local/majordomo:/nonexistent
-cyrus:*:60:248:the cyrus mail server:/nonexistent:/nonexistent
-gnats:*:61:1:GNATS database owner:/usr/local/share/gnats/gnats-db:/bin/sh
-uucp:*:66:66:UUCP pseudo-user:/var/spool/uucppublic:/usr/libexec/uucp/uucico
-xten:*:67:67:X-10 daemon:/usr/local/xten:/nonexistent
-pop:*:68:6:Post Office Owner:/nonexistent:/nonexistent
-wnn:*:69:7:Wnn:/nonexistent:/nonexistent
-ifmail:*:70:66:Ifmail user:/nonexistent:/nonexistent
-pgsql:*:71:246:PostgreSQL pseudo-user:/usr/local/pgsql:/bin/sh
-msql:*:80:249:mSQL-2 pseudo-user:/var/db/msqldb:/bin/sh
-
-
-
-Please send a notice to &a.ports; if you submit or commit a
-port that allocates a new UID in this range so we can keep
-this list up to date.
-
-
-
-
-If you are stuck....
-
-Do look at existing examples and the bsd.port.mk
-file before asking us questions! ;)
-
-Do ask us questions if you have any trouble! Do not just
-beat your head against a wall! :)
-
-
-
-
-
-A Sample Makefile
-
-Here is a sample Makefile that you can use to create a new
-port. Make sure you remove all the extra comments (ones
-between brackets)!
-
-It is recommended that you follow this format (ordering of
-variables, empty lines between sections, etc.). Not all of
-the existing Makefiles are in this format (mostly old ones),
-but we are trying to uniformize how they look. This format is
-designed so that the most important information is easy to
-locate.
-
-
-
- [the header...just to make it easier for us to identify the ports.]
- # New ports collection makefile for: xdvi
- [the version required header should updated when upgrading a port.]
- # Version required: pl18 [things like "1.5alpha" are fine here too]
- [this is the date when the first version of this Makefile was created.
- Never change this when doing an update of the port.]
- # Date created: 26 May 1995
- [this is the person who did the original port to FreeBSD, in particular, the
- person who wrote the first version of this Makefile. Remember, this should
- not be changed when upgrading the port later.]
- # Whom: Satoshi Asami <asami@FreeBSD.ORG>
- #
- # $Id$
- [ ^^^^ This will be automatically replaced with RCS ID string by CVS
- when it is committed to our repository.]
- #
-
- [section to describe the port itself and the master site - DISTNAME
- is always first, followed by PKGNAME (if necessary), CATEGORIES,
- and then MASTER_SITES, which can be followed by MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR.
- After those, one of EXTRACT_SUFX or DISTFILES can be specified too.]
- DISTNAME= xdvi
- PKGNAME= xdvi-pl18
- CATEGORIES= print
- [do not forget the trailing slash ("/")!
- if you aren't using MASTER_SITE_* macros]
- MASTER_SITES= ${MASTER_SITE_XCONTRIB}
- MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR= applications
- [set this if the source is not in the standard ".tar.gz" form]
- EXTRACT_SUFX= .tar.Z
-
- [section for distributed patches -- can be empty]
- PATCH_SITES= ftp://ftp.sra.co.jp/pub/X11/japanese/
- PATCHFILES= xdvi-18.patch1.gz xdvi-18.patch2.gz
-
- [maintainer; *mandatory*! This is the person (preferably with commit
- privileges) who a user can contact for questions and bug reports - this
- person should be the porter or someone who can forward questions to the
- original porter reasonably promptly. If you really do not want to have
- your address here, set it to "ports@FreeBSD.ORG".]
- MAINTAINER= asami@FreeBSD.ORG
-
- [dependencies -- can be empty]
- RUN_DEPENDS= gs:${PORTSDIR}/print/ghostscript
- LIB_DEPENDS= Xpm\\.4\\.:${PORTSDIR}/graphics/xpm
-
- [this section is for other standard bsd.port.mk variables that do not
- belong to any of the above]
- [If it asks questions during configure, build, install...]
- IS_INTERACTIVE= yes
- [If it extracts to a directory other than ${DISTNAME}...]
- WRKSRC= ${WRKDIR}/xdvi-new
- [If the distributed patches were not made relative to ${WRKSRC}, you
- may need to tweak this]
- PATCH_DIST_STRIP= -p1
- [If it requires a "configure" script generated by GNU autoconf to be run]
- GNU_CONFIGURE= yes
- [If it requires GNU make, not /usr/bin/make, to build...]
- USE_GMAKE= yes
- [If it is an X application and requires "xmkmf -a" to be run...]
- USE_IMAKE= yes
- [et cetera.]
-
- [non-standard variables to be used in the rules below]
- MY_FAVORITE_RESPONSE= "yeah, right"
-
- [then the special rules, in the order they are called]
- pre-fetch:
- i go fetch something, yeah
-
- post-patch:
- i need to do something after patch, great
-
- pre-install:
- and then some more stuff before installing, wow
-
- [and then the epilogue]
- .include <bsd.port.mk>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Package Names
-
-The following are the conventions you should follow in
-naming your packages. This is to have our package directory
-easy to scan, as there are already lots and lots of packages
-and users are going to turn away if they hurt their eyes!
-
-The package name should look like
-
-
-
-[<language>-]<name>[[-]<compiled.specifics>]-<version.string.numbers>;
-
-
-
-If your ${DISTNAME} doesn't look like that,
-set ${PKGNAME} to something in that format.
-
-
-
-
-
-FreeBSD strives to support the native language of its
-users. The `<language>' part should be a two letter
-abbreviation of the natural language defined by ISO-639 if
-the port is specific to a certain language. Examples are
-`ja' for Japanese, `ru' for Russian, `vi' for Vietnamese,
-`zh' for Chinese, `ko' for Korean and `de' for German.
-
-
-
-
-The `<name>' part should be all
-lowercases, except for a really large package (with lots of
-programs in it). Things like XFree86 (yes there really is a
-package of it, check it out) and ImageMagick fall into this
-category. Otherwise, convert the name (or at least the
-first letter) to lowercase. If the software in question
-really is called that way, you can have numbers, hyphens and
-underscores in the name too (like `kinput2').
-
-
-
-
-If the port can be built with different hardcoded
-defaults (usually specified as environment variables or on
-the make command line), the
-`<compiled.specifics>' part should state the
-compiled-in defaults (the hyphen is optional). Examples are
-papersize and font units.
-
-
-
-
-The version string should be a period-separated list of
-integers and single lowercase alphabetics. The only exception
-is the string `pl' (meaning `patchlevel'), which can be used
-only when there are no major and minor version
-numbers in the software.
-
-
-
-
-
-Here are some (real) examples on how to convert a
-${DISTNAME} into a suitable
-${PKGNAME}:
-
-
-
-DISTNAME PKGNAME Reason
-mule-2.2.2 mule-2.2.2 no prob at all
-XFree86-3.1.2 XFree86-3.1.2 ditto
-EmiClock-1.0.2 emiclock-1.0.2 no uppercase names for single programs
-gmod1.4 gmod-1.4 need hyphen after `<name>'
-xmris.4.02 xmris-4.02 ditto
-rdist-1.3alpha rdist-1.3a no strings like `alpha' allowed
-es-0.9-beta1 es-0.9b1 ditto
-v3.3beta021.src tiff-3.3 what the heck was that anyway? ;)
-tvtwm tvtwm-pl11 version string always required
-piewm piewm-1.0 ditto
-xvgr-2.10pl1 xvgr-2.10.1 `pl' allowed only when no maj/minor numbers
-gawk-2.15.6 ja-gawk-2.15.6 Japanese language version
-psutils-1.13 psutils-letter-1.13 papersize hardcoded at package build time
-pkfonts pkfonts300-1.0 package for 300dpi fonts
-
-
-
-If there is absolutely no trace of version information in the
-original source and it is unlikely that the original author
-will ever release another version, just set the version string
-to `1.0' (like the piewm example above). Otherwise, ask the
-original author or use the date string (`yy.mm.dd') as the
-version.
-
-
-
-
-That is It, Folks!
-
-Boy, this sure was a long tutorial, wasn't it? Thanks for
-following us to here, really.
-
-Well, now that you know how to do a port, let us go at it and
-convert everything in the world into ports! That is the
-easiest way to start contributing to the FreeBSD Project!
-:)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Money, Hardware or Internet access
-
-We are always very happy to accept donations to further the cause of
-the FreeBSD Project and, in a volunteer effort like ours, a little can go
-a long way! Donations of hardware are also very important to expanding
-our list of supported peripherals since we generally lack the funds to
-buy such items ourselves.
-
-
-
-Donating funds
-
-While the FreeBSD Project is not a 501(C3) (non-profit) corporation and
-hence cannot offer special tax incentives for any donations made, any such
-donations will be gratefully accepted on behalf of the project by
-FreeBSD, Inc.
-
-FreeBSD, Inc. was founded in early 1995 by &a.jkh; and &a.davidg; with the
-goal of furthering the aims of the FreeBSD Project and giving it a minimal
-corporate presence. Any and all funds donated (as well as any profits
-that may eventually be realized by FreeBSD, Inc.) will be used exclusively
-to further the project's goals.
-
-Please make any checks payable to FreeBSD, Inc., sent in care of the
-following address:
-
-
-
-FreeBSD, Inc.
-c/o Jordan Hubbard
-4041 Pike Lane, suite #D.
-Concord CA, 94520
-
-[temporarily using the Walnut Creek CDROM address until a PO box can be
-opened]
-
-
-
-Wire transfers may also be sent directly to:
-
-
-
-Bank Of America
-Concord Main Office
-P.O. Box 37176
-San Francisco CA, 94137-5176
-
-Routing #: 121-000-358
-Account #: 01411-07441 (FreeBSD, Inc.)
-
-
-
-Any correspondence related to donations should be sent to
-Jordan Hubbard, either
-via email or to the FreeBSD, Inc. postal address given above.
-
-If you do not wish to be listed in our
-section, please specify this when making your donation. Thanks!
-
-
-
-
-Donating hardware
-
-Donations of hardware in any of the 3 following categories are also gladly
-accepted by the FreeBSD Project:
-
-
-
-
-
-General purpose hardware such as disk drives, memory or complete
-systems should be sent to the FreeBSD, Inc. address listed in the
-donating funds section.
-
-
-
-
-Hardware for which ongoing compliance testing is desired.
-We are currently trying to put together a testing lab of all components
-that FreeBSD supports so that proper regression testing can be done with
-each new release. We are still lacking many important pieces (network cards,
-motherboards, etc) and if you would like to make such a donation, please contact
-&a.davidg; for information on which items are still required.
-
-
-
-
-Hardware currently unsupported by FreeBSD for which you would like to
-see such support added. Please contact the &a.core; before sending
-such items as we will need to find a developer willing to take on the task
-before we can accept delivery of new hardware.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Donating Internet access
-
-We can always use new mirror sites for FTP, WWW or cvsup.
-If you would like to be such a mirror, please contact
-the FreeBSD project administrators for more information.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Donors Gallery
-
-The FreeBSD Project is indebted to the following donors and would
-like to publically thank them here!
-
-
-
-
-
-Contributors to the central server project:
-
-
-The following individuals and businesses made it possible for
-the FreeBSD Project to build a new central server machine to eventually
-replace freefall.freebsd.org by donating the following items:
-
-
-
-
-
-Ade Barkah
-and his employer, Hemisphere Online, donated a Pentium Pro (P6) 200Mhz CPU
-
-
-
-
-ASA Computers
-donated a Tyan 1662 motherboard.
-
-
-
-
-Joe McGuckin of
-ViaNet Communications
-donated a Kingston ethernet controller.
-
-
-
-
-Jack O'Neill donated an NCR 53C875 SCSI
-controller card.
-
-
-
-
-Ulf Zimmermann
-of Alameda Networks
-donated 128MB of memory, a 4 Gb disk drive
-and the case.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Direct funding:
-
-
-The following individuals and businesses have generously contributed
-direct funding to the project:
-
-
-
-
-
-Annelise Anderson
-
-
-
-
-Matt Dillon
-
-
-
-
-Epilogue Technology Corporation
-
-
-
-
-Sean Eric Fagan
-
-
-
-
-Gianmarco Giovannelli
-
-
-
-
-Josef C. Grosch
-
-
-
-
-Chuck Robey
-
-
-
-
-Kenneth P. Stox of Imaginary Landscape, LLC.
-
-
-
-
-Dmitry S. Kohmanyuk
-
-
-
-
-Laser5
-of Japan (a portion of the profits from sales of their
-various FreeBSD CD-ROMs.
-
-
-
-
-Fuki Shuppan Publishing Co. donated a portion of
-their profits from Hajimete no FreeBSD
-(FreeBSD, Getting started) to the FreeBSD and XFree86
-projects.
-
-
-
-ASCII Corp. donated a portion of
-their profits from several FreeBSD-related books to the
-FreeBSD project.
-
-
-
-Yokogawa Electric Corp has generously donated
-significant funding to the FreeBSD project.
-
-
-
-BuffNET
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Hardware contributors:
-
-
-The following individuals and businesses have generously contributed
-hardware for testing and device driver development/support:
-
-
-
-
-
-Walnut Creek CDROM for providing the Pentium P5-90 and
-486/DX2-66 EISA/VL systems that are being used for our development
-work, to say nothing of the network access and other donations of
-hardware resources.
-
-
-
-
-TRW Financial Systems, Inc. provided 130 PCs, three 68 GB
-fileservers, twelve Ethernets, two routers and an ATM
-switch for debugging the diskless code. They also keep a
-couple of FreeBSD hackers alive and busy. Thanks!
-
-
-
-
-Dermot McDonnell donated the Toshiba XM3401B CDROM drive
-currently used in freefall.
-
-
-
-
-&a.chuck; contributed his floppy tape streamer for experimental
-work.
-
-
-
-
-Larry Altneu <larry@ALR.COM>, and &a.wilko;,
-provided Wangtek and Archive QIC-02 tape drives in order to
-improve the wt driver.
-
-
-
-
-Ernst Winter <ewinter@lobo.muc.de> contributed a 2.88 MB
-floppy drive to the project. This will hopefully increase the
-pressure for rewriting the floppy disk driver. ;-)
-
-
-
-
-Tekram Technologies
-sent one each of their DC-390, DC-390U and DC-390F FAST and ULTRA
-SCSI host adapter cards for regression testing of the NCR and AMD
-drivers with their cards. They are also to be applauded for making
-driver sources for free operating systems available from their
-FTP server ftp://ftp.tekram.com/scsi/FreeBSD.
-
-
-
-
-Larry M. Augustin
-contributed not only a Symbios Sym8751S SCSI card, but also a set
-of data books, including one about the forthcoming Sym53c895 chip
-with Ultra-2 and LVD support, and the latest programming manual with
-information on how to safely use the advanced features of the latest
-Symbios SCSI chips. Thanks a lot!
-
-
-
-
-Christoph Kukulies
-donated an FX120 12 speed Mitsumi CDROM drive for IDE CDROM driver
-development.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Special contributors:
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Walnut Creek CDROM
-has donated almost more than we can say (see the
- document for more details).
-In particular, we would like to thank them for the original hardware
-used for freefall.FreeBSD.ORG, our primary development
-machine, and for thud.FreeBSD.ORG, a testing and build box.
-We are also indebted to them for funding various contributors over
-the years and providing us with unrestricted use of their T1
-connection to the Internet.
-
-
-
-The interface business GmbH, Dresden has been patiently
-supporting &a.joerg; who has often preferred FreeBSD work over
-paywork, and used to fall back to their (quite expensive) EUnet
-Internet connection whenever his private connection became too
-slow or flakey to work with it...
-
-
-
-Berkeley Software Design, Inc. has contributed their DOS emulator code to the
-remaining BSD world, which is used in the dosemu
-command.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Derived Software Contributors
-
-This software was originally derived from William
-F. Jolitz's 386BSD release 0.1, though almost none of the
-original 386BSD specific code remains. This software has
-been essentially re-implemented from the 4.4BSD-Lite
-release provided by the Computer Science Research Group
-(CSRG) at the University of California, Berkeley and
-associated academic contributors.
-
-There are also portions of NetBSD that have been integrated
-into FreeBSD as well, and we would therefore like to thank
-all the contributors to NetBSD for their work.
-
-
-
-
-Additional FreeBSD Contributors
-
-(in alphabetical order by first name):
-
-
-
-
-
-A JOSEPH KOSHY <koshy@india.hp.com>
-
-
-
-ABURAYA Ryushirou <rewsirow@ff.iij4u.or.jp>
-
-
-
-Ada T Lim <ada@bsd.org>
-
-
-
-Adam Glass <glass@postgres.berkeley.edu>
-
-
-
-Adrian T. Filipi-Martin <atf3r@agate.cs.virginia.edu>
-
-
-
-Akito Fujita <fujita@zoo.ncl.omron.co.jp>
-
-
-
-Alain Kalker <A.C.P.M.Kalker@student.utwente.nl>
-
-
-
-Alan Cox <alc@cs.rice.edu>
-
-
-
-Andreas Kohout <shanee@rabbit.augusta.de>
-
-
-
-Andreas Lohr <andreas@marvin.RoBIN.de>
-
-
-
-Andrew Gordon <andrew.gordon@net-tel.co.uk>
-
-
-
-Andrew Herbert <andrew@werple.apana.org.au>
-
-
-
-Andrew McRae <amcrae@cisco.com>
-
-
-
-Andrew Moore <alm@FreeBSD.org>
-
-
-
-Andrew Stevenson <andrew@ugh.net.au>
-
-
-
-Andrew V. Stesin <stesin@elvisti.kiev.ua>
-
-
-
-Andrey Zakhvatov <andy@icc.surw.chel.su>
-
-
-
-Andy Whitcroft <andy@sarc.city.ac.uk>
-
-
-
-Angelo Turetta <ATuretta@stylo.it>
-
-
-
-Anthony Yee-Hang Chan <yeehang@netcom.com>
-
-
-
-Ari Suutari <ari@suutari.iki.fi>
-
-
-
-Brent J. Nordquist <bjn@visi.com>
-
-
-
-Bernd Rosauer <br@schiele-ct.de>
-
-
-
-Bill Kish <kish@osf.org>
-
-
-
-&a.wlloyd;
-
-
-
-Bob Wilcox <bob@obiwan.uucp>
-
-
-
-Boyd Faulkner <faulkner@mpd.tandem.com>
-
-
-
-Brent J. Nordquist <bjn@visi.com>
-
-
-
-Brett Taylor <brett@peloton.physics.montana.edu>
-
-
-
-Brian Clapper <bmc@willscreek.com>
-
-
-
-Brian Handy <handy@lambic.space.lockheed.com>
-
-
-
-Brian Tao <taob@risc.org>
-
-
-
-Brion Moss <brion@queeg.com>
-
-
-
-Bruce Gingery <bgingery@gtcs.com>
-
-
-
-Carey Jones <mcj@acquiesce.org>
-
-
-
-Carl Fongheiser <cmf@netins.net>
-
-
-
-Charles Hannum <mycroft@ai.mit.edu>
-
-
-
-Charles Mott <cmott@srv.net>
-
-
-
-Chet Ramey <chet@odin.INS.CWRU.Edu>
-
-
-
-Chris Dabrowski < chris@vader.org>
-
-
-
-Chris G. Demetriou <cgd@postgres.berkeley.edu>
-
-
-
-Chris Shenton <cshenton@angst.it.hq.nasa.gov>
-
-
-
-Chris Stenton <jacs@gnome.co.uk>
-
-
-
-Chris Timmons <skynyrd@opus.cts.cwu.edu>
-
-
-
-Chris Torek <torek@ee.lbl.gov>
-
-
-
-Christian Gusenbauer <cg@fimp01.fim.uni-linz.ac.at>
-
-
-
-Christian Haury <Christian.Haury@sagem.fr>
-
-
-
-Christoph Robitschko <chmr@edvz.tu-graz.ac.at>
-
-
-
-Choi Jun Ho <junker@jazz.snu.ac.kr>
-
-
-
-Chuck Hein <chein@cisco.com>
-
-
-
-Conrad Sabatier <conrads@neosoft.com>
-
-
-
-Cornelis van der Laan <nils@guru.ims.uni-stuttgart.de>
-
-
-
-Craig Struble <cstruble@vt.edu>
-
-
-
-Cristian Ferretti <cfs@riemann.mat.puc.cl>
-
-
-
-Curt Mayer <curt@toad.com>
-
-
-
-Dai Ishijima <ishijima@tri.pref.osaka.jp>
-
-
-
-Dan Cross <tenser@spitfire.ecsel.psu.edu>
-
-
-
-Daniel Baker <dbaker@crash.ops.neosoft.com>
-
-
-
-Daniel M. Eischen <deischen@iworks.InterWorks.org>
-
-
-
-Daniel O'Connor <doconnor@gsoft.com.au>
-
-
-
-Danny J. Zerkel <dzerkel@feephi.phofarm.com>
-
-
-
-Dave Bodenstab <imdave@synet.net>
-
-
-
-Dave Burgess <burgess@hrd769.brooks.af.mil>
-
-
-
-Dave Chapeskie <dchapes@zeus.leitch.com>
-
-
-
-Dave Edmondson <davided@sco.com>
-
-
-
-Dave Rivers <rivers@ponds.uucp>
-
-
-
-David A. Bader <dbader@umiacs.umd.edu>
-
-
-
-David Dawes <dawes@physics.su.OZ.AU>
-
-
-
-David Holloway <daveh@gwythaint.tamis.com>
-
-
-
-David Leonard <d@scry.dstc.edu.au>
-
-
-
-Dean Huxley <dean@fsa.ca>
-
-
-
-Dirk Froemberg <dirk@hal.in-berlin.de>
-
-
-
-Dmitrij Tejblum <dima@tejblum.dnttm.rssi.ru>
-
-
-
-Dmitry Kohmanyuk <dk@farm.org>
-
-
-
-&a.whiteside;
-
-
-
-Don Yuniskis <dgy@rtd.com>
-
-
-
-Donald Burr <d_burr@ix.netcom.com>
-
-
-
-Doug Ambrisko <ambrisko@ambrisko.roble.com>
-
-
-
-Douglas Carmichael <dcarmich@mcs.com>
-
-
-
-Eiji-usagi-MATSUmoto <usagi@ruby.club.or.jp>
-
-
-
-ELISA Font Project
-
-
-
-Eric A. Griff <eagriff@global2000.net>
-
-
-
-Eric Blood <eblood@cs.unr.edu>
-
-
-
-Eric J. Chet <ejc@bazzle.com>
-
-
-
-Eric J. Schwertfeger <eric@cybernut.com>
-
-
-
-Francis M J Hsieh <mjhsieh@life.nthu.edu.tw>
-
-
-
-Frank Bartels <knarf@camelot.de>
-
-
-
-Frank Chen Hsiung Chan <frankch@waru.life.nthu.edu.tw>
-
-
-
-Frank Maclachlan <fpm@crash.cts.com>
-
-
-
-Frank Nobis <fn@trinity.radio-do.de>
-
-
-
-FUJIMOTO Kensaku <fujimoto@oscar.elec.waseda.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-FURUSAWA Kazuhisa <furusawa@com.cs.osakafu-u.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Gary A. Browning <gab10@griffcd.amdahl.com>
-
-
-
-Gary Kline <kline@thought.org>
-
-
-
-Gerard Roudier <groudier@club-internet.fr>
-
-
-
-Greg Ungerer <gerg@stallion.oz.au>
-
-
-
-Harlan Stenn <Harlan.Stenn@pfcs.com>
-
-
-
-Havard Eidnes <Havard.Eidnes@runit.sintef.no>
-
-
-
-Hideaki Ohmon <ohmon@tom.sfc.keio.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Hidekazu Kuroki <hidekazu@cs.titech.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Hidetoshi Shimokawa <simokawa@sat.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Hideyuki Suzuki <hideyuki@sat.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Hironori Ikura <hikura@kaisei.org>
-
-
-
-Holger Veit <Holger.Veit@gmd.de>
-
-
-
-Hung-Chi Chu <hcchu@r350.ee.ntu.edu.tw>
-
-
-
-Ian Vaudrey <i.vaudrey@bigfoot.com>
-
-
-
-Igor Vinokurov <igor@zynaps.ru>
-
-
-
-Ikuo Nakagawa <ikuo@isl.intec.co.jp>
-
-
-
-IMAMURA Tomoaki <tomoak-i@is.aist-nara.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Ishii Masahiro
-
-
-
- Issei Suzuki<issei@t-cnet.or.jp>
-
-
-
-Itsuro Saito <saito@miv.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-J. David Lowe <lowe@saturn5.com>
-
-
-
-J.T. Conklin <jtc@cygnus.com>
-
-
-
-James Clark <jjc@jclark.com>
-
-
-
-James da Silva <jds@cs.umd.edu> et al
-
-
-
-Janusz Kokot <janek@gaja.ipan.lublin.pl>
-
-
-
-Jason Thorpe <thorpej@nas.nasa.gov>
-
-
-
-Javier Martin Rueda <jmrueda@diatel.upm.es>
-
-
-
-Jeff Bartig <jeffb@doit.wisc.edu>
-
-
-
-Jeffrey Wheat <jeff@cetlink.net>
-
-
-
-Jian-Da Li <jdli@csie.NCTU.edu.tw>
-
-
-
-Jim Binkley <jrb@cs.pdx.edu>
-
-
-
-Jim Lowe <james@cs.uwm.edu>
-
-
-
-Jim Wilson <wilson@moria.cygnus.com>
-
-
-
-Joao Carlos Mendes Luis <jonny@coppe.ufrj.br>
-
-
-
-Joel Sutton <sutton@aardvark.apana.org.au>
-
-
-
-Johann Tonsing <jtonsing@mikom.csir.co.za>
-
-
-
-John Capo <jc@irbs.com>
-
-
-
-John Heidemann <johnh@isi.edu>
-
-
-
-John Perry <perry@vishnu.alias.net>
-
-
-
-John Polstra <jdp@polstra.com>
-
-
-
-John Rochester <jr@cs.mun.ca>
-
-
-
-Josef Karthauser <joe@uk.freebsd.org>
-
-
-
-Joseph Stein <joes@seaport.net>
-
-
-
-Josh Gilliam <josh@quick.net>
-
-
-
-Josh Tiefenbach <josh@ican.net>
-
-
-
-Juergen Lock <nox@jelal.hb.north.de>
-
-
-
-Juha Inkari <inkari@cc.hut.fi>
-
-
-
-Julian Assange <proff@suburbia.net>
-
-
-
-Julian Jenkins <kaveman@magna.com.au>
-
-
-
-Julian Stacey <jhs@freebsd.org>
-
-
-
-Junichi Satoh <junichi@jp.freebsd.org>
-
-
-
-Kapil Chowksey <kchowksey@hss.hns.com>
-
-
-
-Kazuhiko Kiriyama <kiri@kiri.toba-cmt.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Keith Bostic <bostic@bostic.com>
-
-
-
-Keith Moore
-
-
-
-Kenneth Monville <desmo@bandwidth.org>
-
-
-
-Kent Vander Velden <graphix@iastate.edu>
-
-
-
-Kirk McKusick <mckusick@mckusick.com>
-
-
-
-Kiroh HARADA <kiroh@kh.rim.or.jp>
-
-
-
-Koichi Sato <copan@ppp.fastnet.or.jp>
-
-
-
-Kostya Lukin <lukin@okbmei.msk.su>
-
-
-
-Kurt Olsen <kurto@tiny.mcs.usu.edu>
-
-
-
-Lars Koeller <Lars.Koeller@Uni-Bielefeld.DE>
-
-
-
-Lucas James <Lucas.James@ldjpc.apana.org.au>
-
-
-
-Luigi Rizzo <luigi@iet.unipi.it>
-
-
-
-Makoto MATSUSHITA <matusita@jp.freebsd.org>
-
-
-
-Manu Iyengar <iyengar@grunthos.pscwa.psca.com>
-
-
-
-Marc Frajola <marc@dev.com>
-
-
-
-Marc Ramirez <mrami@mramirez.sy.yale.edu>
-
-
-
-Marc Slemko <marcs@znep.com>
-
-
-
-Marc van Kempen <wmbfmk@urc.tue.nl>
-
-
-
-Mario Sergio Fujikawa Ferreira <lioux@gns.com.br>
-
-
-
-Mark Huizer <xaa@stack.nl>
-
-
-
-Mark J. Taylor <mtaylor@cybernet.com>
-
-
-
-Mark Krentel <krentel@rice.edu>
-
-
-
-Mark Tinguely <tinguely@plains.nodak.edu>
-<tinguely@hookie.cs.ndsu.NoDak.edu>
-
-
-
-Martin Birgmeier
-
-
-
-Martti Kuparinen <erakupa@kk.etx.ericsson.se>
-
-
-
-Masachika ISHIZUKA <ishizuka@isis.min.ntt.jp>
-
-
-
-Mats Lofkvist <mal@algonet.se>
-
-
-
-Matt Bartley <mbartley@lear35.cytex.com>
-
-
-
-Matt Thomas <thomas@lkg.dec.com>
-
-
-
-Matt White <mwhite+@CMU.EDU>
-
-
-
-Matthew Hunt <mph@pobox.com>
-
-
-
-Matthew N. Dodd <winter@jurai.net>
-
-
-
-Matthew Stein <matt@bdd.net>
-
-
-
-Maurice Castro <maurice@planet.serc.rmit.edu.au>
-
-
-
-Michael Butschky <butsch@computi.erols.com>
-
-
-
-Michael Elbel <me@FreeBSD.ORG>
-
-
-
-Michael Searle <searle@longacre.demon.co.uk>
-
-
-
-Miguel Angel Sagreras <msagre@cactus.fi.uba.ar>
-
-
-
-Mikael Hybsch <micke@dynas.se>
-
-
-
-Mikhail Teterin <mi@aldan.ziplink.net>
-
-
-
-Mike McGaughey <mmcg@cs.monash.edu.au>
-
-
-
-Mike Peck <mike@binghamton.edu>
-
-
-
-Ming-I Hseh <PA@FreeBSD.ee.Ntu.edu.TW>
-
-
-
-MITA Yoshio <mita@jp.FreeBSD.ORG>
-
-
-
-MOROHOSHI Akihiko <moro@race.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Murray Stokely <murray@cdrom.com>
-
-
-
-NAKAMURA Kazushi <nkazushi@highway.or.jp>
-
-
-
-Naoki Hamada <nao@tom-yam.or.jp>
-
-
-
-Narvi <narvi@haldjas.folklore.ee>
-
-
-
-NIIMI Satoshi <sa2c@and.or.jp>
-
-
-
-Nick Sayer <nsayer@quack.kfu.com>
-
-
-
-Nicolas Souchu <Nicolas.Souchu@prism.uvsq.fr>
-
-
-
-Nisha Talagala <nisha@cs.berkeley.edu>
-
-
-
-Nobuhiro Yasutomi <nobu@psrc.isac.co.jp>
-
-
-
-Nobuyuki Koganemaru <kogane@kces.koganemaru.co.jp>
-
-
-
-Noritaka Ishizumi <graphite@jp.FreeBSD.ORG>
-
-
-
-Oliver Fromme <oliver.fromme@heim3.tu-clausthal.de>
-
-
-
-Oliver Laumann <net@informatik.uni-bremen.de>
-
-
-
-Oliver Oberdorf <oly@world.std.com>
-
-
-
-Paul Fox <pgf@foxharp.boston.ma.us>
-
-
-
-Paul Kranenburg <pk@cs.few.eur.nl>
-
-
-
-Paul Mackerras <paulus@cs.anu.edu.au>
-
-
-
-Paulo Menezes <paulo@isr.uc.pt>
-
-
-
-Paul T. Root <proot@horton.iaces.com>
-
-
-
-Pedro Giffuni <giffunip@asme.org>
-
-
-
-Pedro A M Vazquez <vazquez@IQM.Unicamp.BR>
-
-
-
-Peter Cornelius <pc@inr.fzk.de>
-
-
-
-Peter Haight <peterh@prognet.com>
-
-
-
-Peter Hawkins <peter@rhiannon.clari.net.au>
-
-
-
-Peter Stubbs <PETERS@staidan.qld.edu.au>
-
-
-
-Pierre Beyssac <bp@fasterix.freenix.org>
-
-
-
-Phil Maker <pjm@cs.ntu.edu.au>
-
-
-
-R. Kym Horsell
-
-
-
-Randall Hopper <rhh@stealth.ct.picker.com>
-
-
-
-Richard Hwang <rhwang@bigpanda.com>
-
-
-
-Richard Seaman, Jr. <dick@tar.com>
-
-
-
-Richard Stallman <rms@gnu.ai.mit.edu>
-
-
-
-Richard Wiwatowski <rjwiwat@adelaide.on.net>
-
-
-
-Rob Mallory <rmallory@csusb.edu>
-
-
-
-Rob Shady <rls@id.net>
-
-
-
-Rob Snow <rsnow@txdirect.net>
-
-
-
-Robert Sanders <rsanders@mindspring.com>
-
-
-
-Robert Withrow <witr@rwwa.com>
-
-
-
-Ronald Kuehn <kuehn@rz.tu-clausthal.de>
-
-
-
-Roland Jesse <jesse@cs.uni-magdeburg.de>
-
-
-
-Ruslan Shevchenko <rssh@cki.ipri.kiev.ua>
-
-
-
-Samuel Lam <skl@ScalableNetwork.com>
-
-
-
-Sander Vesik <sander@haldjas.folklore.ee>
-
-
-
-Sandro Sigala <ssigala@globalnet.it>
-
-
-
-Sascha Blank <blank@fox.uni-trier.de>
-
-
-
-Sascha Wildner <swildner@channelz.GUN.de>
-
-
-
-Satoshi Taoka <taoka@infonets.hiroshima-u.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Scott Blachowicz <scott.blachowicz@seaslug.org>
-
-
-
-Scott A. Kenney <saken@rmta.ml.org>
-
-
-
-Serge V. Vakulenko <vak@zebub.msk.su>
-
-
-
-Sheldon Hearn <axl@iafrica.com>
-
-
-
-Simon Marlow <simonm@dcs.gla.ac.uk>
-
-
-
-Slaven Rezic (Tomic) <eserte@cs.tu-berlin.de>
-
-
-
-Soren Dayton <csdayton@midway.uchicago.edu>
-
-
-
-Soren Dossing <sauber@netcom.com>
-
-
-
-Stefan Moeding <moeding@bn.DeTeMobil.de>
-
-
-
-Stephane Legrand <stephane@lituus.fr>
-
-
-
-Stephen J. Roznowski <sjr@home.net>
-
-
-
-Steve Gerakines <steve2@genesis.tiac.net>
-
-
-
-Suzuki Yoshiaki <zensyo@ann.tama.kawasaki.jp>
-
-
-
-Tadashi Kumano <kumano@strl.nhk.or.jp>
-
-
-
-Taguchi Takeshi <taguchi@tohoku.iij.ad.jp>
-
-
-
-Takayuki Ariga <a00821@cc.hc.keio.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Terry Lambert <terry@lambert.org>
-
-
-
-Terry Lee <terry@uivlsi.csl.uiuc.edu>
-
-
-
-Tetsuya Furukawa <tetsuya@secom-sis.co.jp>
-
-
-
-Theo Deraadt <deraadt@fsa.ca>
-
-
-
-Thomas König <Thomas.Koenig@ciw.uni-karlsruhe.de>
-
-
-
-Þórður Ívarsson <totii@est.is>
-
-
-
-Tim Kientzle <kientzle@netcom.com>
-
-
-
-Tim Wilkinson <tim@sarc.city.ac.uk>
-
-
-
-Tom Samplonius <tom@misery.sdf.com>
-
-
-
-Torbjorn Granlund <tege@matematik.su.se>
-
-
-
-Toshihiro Kanda <candy@fct.kgc.co.jp>
-
-
-
-Trefor S. <trefor@flevel.co.uk>
-
-
-
-Ville Eerola <ve@sci.fi>
-
-
-
-Werner Griessl <werner@btp1da.phy.uni-bayreuth.de>
-
-
-
-Wes Santee <wsantee@wsantee.oz.net>
-
-
-
-Wilko Bulte <wilko@yedi.iaf.nl>
-
-
-
-Wolfgang Stanglmeier <wolf@kintaro.cologne.de>
-
-
-
-Wu Ching-hong <woju@FreeBSD.ee.Ntu.edu.TW>
-
-
-
-Yen-Shuo Su <yssu@CCCA.NCTU.edu.tw>
-
-
-
-Yoshiaki Uchikawa <yoshiaki@kt.rim.or.jp>
-
-
-
-Yoshiro Mihira <sanpei@yy.cs.keio.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Yukihiro Nakai <nakai@mlab.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Yuval Yarom <yval@cs.huji.ac.il>
-
-
-
-Yves Fonk <yves@cpcoup5.tn.tudelft.nl>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-386BSD Patch Kit Patch Contributors
-
-(in alphabetical order by first name):
-
-
-
-
-
-Adam Glass <glass@postgres.berkeley.edu>
-
-
-
-Adrian Hall <adrian@ibmpcug.co.uk>
-
-
-
-Andrey A. Chernov <ache@astral.msk.su>
-
-
-
-Andrew Herbert <andrew@werple.apana.org.au>
-
-
-
-Andrew Moore <alm@netcom.com>
-
-
-
-Andy Valencia <ajv@csd.mot.com>
-<jtk@netcom.com>
-
-
-
-Arne Henrik Juul <arnej@Lise.Unit.NO>
-
-
-
-Bakul Shah <bvs@bitblocks.com>
-
-
-
-Barry Lustig <barry@ictv.com>
-
-
-
-Bob Wilcox <bob@obiwan.uucp>
-
-
-
-Branko Lankester
-
-
-
-Brett Lymn <blymn@mulga.awadi.com.AU>
-
-
-
-Charles Hannum <mycroft@ai.mit.edu>
-
-
-
-Chris G. Demetriou <cgd@postgres.berkeley.edu>
-
-
-
-Chris Torek <torek@ee.lbl.gov>
-
-
-
-Christoph Robitschko <chmr@edvz.tu-graz.ac.at>
-
-
-
-Daniel Poirot <poirot@aio.jsc.nasa.gov>
-
-
-
-Dave Burgess <burgess@hrd769.brooks.af.mil>
-
-
-
-Dave Rivers <rivers@ponds.uucp>
-
-
-
-David Dawes <dawes@physics.su.OZ.AU>
-
-
-
-David Greenman <davidg@Root.COM>
-
-
-
-Eric J. Haug <ejh@slustl.slu.edu>
-
-
-
-Felix Gaehtgens <felix@escape.vsse.in-berlin.de>
-
-
-
-Frank Maclachlan <fpm@crash.cts.com>
-
-
-
-Gary A. Browning <gab10@griffcd.amdahl.com>
-
-
-
-Gary Howland <gary@hotlava.com>
-
-
-
-Geoff Rehmet <csgr@alpha.ru.ac.za>
-
-
-
-Goran Hammarback <goran@astro.uu.se>
-
-
-
-Guido van Rooij <guido@gvr.win.tue.nl>
-
-
-
-Guy Harris <guy@auspex.com>
-
-
-
-Havard Eidnes <Havard.Eidnes@runit.sintef.no>
-
-
-
-Herb Peyerl <hpeyerl@novatel.cuc.ab.ca>
-
-
-
-Holger Veit <Holger.Veit@gmd.de>
-
-
-
-Ishii Masahiro, R. Kym Horsell
-
-
-
-J.T. Conklin <jtc@cygnus.com>
-
-
-
-Jagane D Sundar < jagane@netcom.com >
-
-
-
-James Clark <jjc@jclark.com>
-
-
-
-James Jegers <jimj@miller.cs.uwm.edu>
-
-
-
-James W. Dolter
-
-
-
-James da Silva <jds@cs.umd.edu> et al
-
-
-
-Jay Fenlason <hack@datacube.com>
-
-
-
-Jim Wilson <wilson@moria.cygnus.com>
-
-
-
-Jörg Lohse <lohse@tech7.informatik.uni-hamburg.de>
-
-
-
-Jörg Wunsch <joerg_wunsch@uriah.heep.sax.de>
-
-
-
-John Dyson - <formerly dyson@ref.tfs.com>
-
-
-
-John Woods <jfw@eddie.mit.edu>
-
-
-
-Jordan K. Hubbard <jkh@whisker.hubbard.ie>
-
-
-
-Julian Elischer <julian@dialix.oz.au>
-
-
-
-Julian Stacey <jhs@freebsd.org>
-
-
-
-Karl Lehenbauer <karl@NeoSoft.com>
-<karl@one.neosoft.com>
-
-
-
-Keith Bostic <bostic@toe.CS.Berkeley.EDU>
-
-
-
-Ken Hughes
-
-
-
-Kent Talarico <kent@shipwreck.tsoft.net>
-
-
-
-Kevin Lahey <kml%rokkaku.UUCP@mathcs.emory.edu>
-<kml@mosquito.cis.ufl.edu>
-
-
-
-Marc Frajola <marc@dev.com>
-
-
-
-Mark Tinguely <tinguely@plains.nodak.edu>
-<tinguely@hookie.cs.ndsu.NoDak.edu>
-
-
-
-Martin Renters <martin@tdc.on.ca>
-
-
-
-Michael Clay <mclay@weareb.org>
-
-
-
-Michael Galassi <nerd@percival.rain.com>
-
-
-
-Mike Durkin <mdurkin@tsoft.sf-bay.org>
-
-
-
-Naoki Hamada <nao@tom-yam.or.jp>
-
-
-
-Nate Williams <nate@bsd.coe.montana.edu>
-
-
-
-Nick Handel <nhandel@NeoSoft.com>
-<nick@madhouse.neosoft.com>
-
-
-
-Pace Willisson <pace@blitz.com>
-
-
-
-Paul Kranenburg <pk@cs.few.eur.nl>
-
-
-
-Paul Mackerras <paulus@cs.anu.edu.au>
-
-
-
-Paul Popelka <paulp@uts.amdahl.com>
-
-
-
-Peter da Silva <peter@NeoSoft.com>
-
-
-
-Phil Sutherland <philsuth@mycroft.dialix.oz.au>
-
-
-
-Poul-Henning Kamp<phk@FreeBSD.ORG>
-
-
-
-Ralf Friedl <friedl@informatik.uni-kl.de>
-
-
-
-Rick Macklem <root@snowhite.cis.uoguelph.ca>
-
-
-
-Robert D. Thrush <rd@phoenix.aii.com>
-
-
-
-Rodney W. Grimes <rgrimes@cdrom.com>
-
-
-
-Sascha Wildner <swildner@channelz.GUN.de>
-
-
-
-Scott Burris <scott@pita.cns.ucla.edu>
-
-
-
-Scott Reynolds <scott@clmqt.marquette.mi.us>
-
-
-
-Sean Eric Fagan <sef@kithrup.com>
-
-
-
-Simon J Gerraty <sjg@melb.bull.oz.au>
-<sjg@zen.void.oz.au>
-
-
-
-Stephen McKay <syssgm@devetir.qld.gov.au>
-
-
-
-Terry Lambert <terry@icarus.weber.edu>
-
-
-
-Terry Lee <terry@uivlsi.csl.uiuc.edu>
-
-
-
-Tor Egge <Tor.Egge@idi.ntnu.no>
-
-
-
-Warren Toomey <wkt@csadfa.cs.adfa.oz.au>
-
-
-
-Wiljo Heinen <wiljo@freeside.ki.open.de>
-
-
-
-William Jolitz <withheld>
-
-
-
-Wolfgang Solfrank <ws@tools.de>
-
-
-
-Wolfgang Stanglmeier <wolf@dentaro.GUN.de>
-
-
-
-Yuval Yarom <yval@cs.huji.ac.il>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Source Tree Guidelines and Policies
-
-
-Contributed by &a.phk;.
-
-This chapter documents various guidelines and policies in force
-for the FreeBSD source tree.
-
-
-
-MAINTAINER on Makefiles
-
-
-June 1996.
-
-If a particular portion of the FreeBSD distribution is being maintained by a
-person or group of persons, they can communicate this fact to the
-world by adding a
-
-
- MAINTAINER= email-addresses
-
-
-line to the makefiles covering this portion of the source tree.
-
-The semantics of this are as follows:
-
-The maintainer owns and is responsible for that code. This means
-that he is responsible for fixing bugs and answer problem reports
-pertaining to that piece of the code, and in the case of contributed
-software, for tracking new versions, as appropriate.
-
-Changes to directories which have a maintainer defined shall be
-sent to the
-maintainer for review before being committed. Only if the maintainer does not respond
-for an unacceptable period of time, to several emails, will it be
-acceptable to commit changes without review by the maintainer.
-However, it is suggested that you try and have the changes reviewed
-by someone else if at all possible.
-
-It is of course not acceptable to add a person or group as maintainer
-unless they agree to assume this duty. On the other hand it doesn't
-have to be a committer and it can easily be a group of people.
-
-
-
-
-Contributed Software
-
-June 1996.
-
-Some parts of the FreeBSD distribution consist of software that
-is actively being maintained outside the FreeBSD project. For
-historical reasons, we call this contributed software. Some
-examples are perl, gcc and patch.
-
-Over the last couple of years, various methods have been used in
-dealing with this type of software and all have some number of
-advantages and drawbacks. No clear winner has emerged.
-
-Since this is the case, after some debate one of these methods has
-been selected as the "official" method and will be required for
-future imports of software of this kind. Furthermore, it is strongly
-suggested that existing contributed software converge on this model
-over time, as it has significant advantages over the old method,
-including the ability to easily obtain diffs relative to the
-"official" versions of the source by everyone (even without cvs
-access). This will make it significantly easier to return changes
-to the primary developers of the contributed software.
-
-Ultimately, however, it comes down to the people actually doing
-the work. If using this model is particularly unsuited to the
-package being dealt with, exceptions to these rules may be granted
-only with the approval of the core team and with the general
-consensus of the other developers. The ability to maintain the
-package in the future will be a key issue in the decisions.
-
-The Tcl embedded programming language will be used as example
-of how this model works:
-
-
-src/contrib/tcl
- contains the source as distributed by the maintainers
-of this package. Parts that are entirely not applicable for FreeBSD
-can be removed. In the case of Tcl, the "mac", "win" and "compat"
-subdirectories were eliminated before the import
-
-
-src/lib/libtcl
- contains only a "bmake style" Makefile that uses
-the standard bsd.lib.mk makefile rules to produce the library and
-install the documentation.
-
-
-src/usr.bin/tclsh
- contains only a bmake style Makefile which will
-produce and install the "tclsh" program and its associated man-pages
-using the standard bsd.prog.mk rules.
-
-
-src/tools/tools/tcl_bmake
- contains a couple of shell-scripts that can be of help
-when the tcl software needs updating. These are not part of the
-built or installed software.
-
-The important thing here is that the "src/contrib/tcl" directory
-is created according to the rules: It is supposed to contain the
-sources as distributed (on a proper CVS vendor-branch) with as few
-FreeBSD-specific changes as possible. The 'easy-import' tool on
-freefall will assist in doing the import, but if there are any
-doubts on how to go about it, it is imperative that you ask first
-and not blunder ahead and hope it "works out". CVS is not forgiving
-of import accidents and a fair amount of effort is required to back
-out major mistakes.
-
-Because of some unfortunate design limitations with CVS's vendor
-branches, it is required that "official" patches from the vendor
-be applied to the original distributed sources and the result
-re-imported onto the vendor branch again. Official patches should
-never be patched into the FreeBSD checked out version and
-"committed", as this destroys the vendor branch coherency and makes
-importing future versions rather difficult as there will be conflicts.
-
-Since many packages contain files that are meant for compatibility
-with other architectures and environments that FreeBSD, it is
-permissible to remove parts of the distribution tree that are of no interest
-to FreeBSD in order to save space. Files containing copyright
-notices and release-note kind of information applicable to the
-remaining files shall not be removed.
-
-If it seems easier, the "bmake" makefiles can be produced from the
-dist tree automatically by some utility, something which would
-hopefully make it even easier to upgrade to a new version. If this
-is done, be sure to check in such utilities (as necessary) in the
-src/tools directory along with the port itself so that it is available
-to future maintainers.
-
-In the src/contrib/tcl level directory, a file called FREEBSD-upgrade
-should be added and it should states things like:
-
-
-
-
-
- Which files have been left out
-
-
-
- Where the original distribution was obtained from and/or the official
-master site.
-
-
-
- Where to send patches back to the original authors
-
-
-
- Perhaps an overview of the FreeBSD-specific changes that have been made.
-
-
-
-
-
-However, please do not import FREEBSD-upgrade with the contributed source.
-Rather you should ``cvs add FREEBSD-upgrade ; cvs ci'' after the
-initial import. Example wording from ``src/contrib/cpio'' is below:
-
-
-This directory contains virgin sources of the original distribution files
-on a "vendor" branch. Do not, under any circumstances, attempt to upgrade
-the files in this directory via patches and a cvs commit. New versions or
-official-patch versions must be imported.
-
-For the import of GNU cpio 2.4.2, the following files were removed:
-
- INSTALL cpio.info mkdir.c
- Makefile.in cpio.texi mkinstalldirs
-
-To upgrade to a newer version of cpio, when it is available:
- 1. Unpack the new version into an empty directory.
- [Do not make ANY changes to the files.]
-
- 2. Remove the files listed above and any others that don't apply to
- FreeBSD.
-
- 3. Use the command:
- cvs import -m 'Virgin import of GNU cpio v<version>' \
- src/contrib/cpio GNU v<version>
-
- For example, to do the import of version 2.4.2, I typed:
- cvs import -m 'Virgin import of GNU v2.4.2' \
- src/contrib/cpio GNU v2.4.2
-
- 4. Follow the instructions printed out in step 3 to resolve any
- conflicts between local FreeBSD changes and the newer version.
-
-Do not, under any circumstances, deviate from this procedure.
-
-To make local changes to cpio, simply patch and commit to the main
-branch (aka HEAD). Never make local changes on the GNU branch.
-
-All local changes should be submitted to "cpio@gnu.ai.mit.edu" for
-inclusion in the next vendor release.
-
-obrien@freebsd.org - 30 March 1997
-
-
-
-
-
-Shared Libraries
-
-
-Contributed by &a.asami;, &a.peter;, and &a.obrien;.
-9 December 1996.
-
-If you are adding shared library support to a port or other piece
-of software that doesn't have one, the version numbers should
-follow these rules. Generally, the resulting numbers will have
-nothing to do with the release version of the software.
-
-The three principles of shared library building are:
-
-
-
-
-
-Start from 1.0
-
-
-
-If there is a change that is backwards compatible, bump
-minor number
-
-
-
-If there is an incompatible change, bump major number
-
-
-
-
-
-For instance, added functions and bugfixes result in the minor
-version number being bumped, while deleted functions, changed
-function call syntax etc. will force the major version number
-to change.
-
-Stick to version numbers of the form major.minor (x.y). Our dynamic
-linker does not handle version numbers of the form x.y.z well. Any
-version number after the ``y'' (ie. the third digit) is totally ignored
-when comparing shared lib version numbers to decide which library to
-link with. Given two shared libraries that differ only in the `micro'
-revision, ld.so will link with the higher one. Ie: if you link with
-libfoo.so.3.3.3, the linker only records 3.3 in the headers, and will
-link with anything starting with libfoo.so.3.(anything >= 3).(highest
-available).
-
-Note that ld.so will always use the highest "minor" revision.
-Ie: it will use libc.so.2.2 in preference to libc.so.2.0, even if the
-program was initially linked with libc.so.2.0.
-
-For non-port libraries, it is also our policy to change the
-shared library version number only once between releases. When
-you make a change to a system library that requires the version
-number to be bumped, check the Makefile's commit logs. It is the
-responsibility of the committer to ensure that the first such
-change since the release will result in the shared library version
-number in the Makefile to be updated, and any subsequent changes
-will not.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Adding New Kernel Configuration Options
-
-Contributed by &a.joerg;
-
-Note: You should be familiar with the section about before reading here.
-
-
-
-What's a Kernel Option, Anyway?
-
-The use of kernel options is basically described in the section.
-There's also an explanation of ``historic'' and ``new-style''
-options. The ultimate goal is to eventually turn all the supported
-options in the kernel into new-style ones, so for people who
-correctly did a make depend in their kernel compile directory
-after running config(8), the build process will automatically
-pick up modified options, and only recompile those files where it is
-necessary. Wiping out the old compile directory on each run of
-config(8) as it is still done now can then be eliminated again.
-
-Basically, a kernel option is nothing else than the definition of
-a C preprocessor macro for the kernel compilation process. To make
-the build truly optional, the corresponding part of the kernel
-source (or kernel .h file) must be written with the option
-concept in mind, i. e. the default must have been made overridable
-by the config option. This is usually done with something like:
-
-
-#ifndef THIS_OPTION
-#define THIS_OPTION (some_default_value)
-#endif /* THIS_OPTION */
-
-
-This way, an administrator mentioning another value for the
-option in his config file will take the default out of effect, and
-replace it with his new value. Clearly, the new value will be
-substituted into the source code during the preprocessor run, so it
-must be a valid C expression in whatever context the default value
-would have been used.
-
-It is also possible to create value-less options that simply
-enable or disable a particular piece of code by embracing it in
-
-
-#ifdef THAT_OPTION
-
-[your code here]
-
-#endif
-
-
-Simply mentioning THAT_OPTION in the config file (with or
-without any value) will then turn on the corresponding piece of
-code.
-
-People familiar with the C language will immediately recognize
-that everything could be counted as a ``config option'' where
-there is at least a single #ifdef referencing it... However,
-it's unlikely that many people would put
-
-
- options notyet,notdef
-
-
-in their config file, and then wonder why the kernel compilation
-falls over. :-)
-
-Clearly, using arbitrary names for the options makes it very
-hard to track their usage throughout the kernel source tree. That is
-the rationale behind the new-style option scheme, where each
-option goes into a separate .h file in the kernel compile
-directory, which is by convention named opt_foo.h.
-This way, the usual Makefile dependencies could be applied, and
-make can determine what needs to be recompiled once an option
-has been changed.
-
-The old-style option mechanism still has one advantage for local
-options or maybe experimental options that have a short anticipated
-lifetime: since it is easy to add a new #ifdef to the kernel
-source, this has already made it a kernel config option.
-In this case, the administrator using such an
-option is responsible himself for knowing about its implications
-(and maybe manually forcing the recompilation of parts of his
-kernel). Once the transition of all supported options has been
-done, config(8) will warn whenever an unsupported option
-appears in the config file, but it will nevertheless include it into
-the kernel Makefile.
-
-
-
-
-Now What Do I Have to Do for it?
-
-First, edit sys/conf/options (or
-sys/i386/conf/options.<arch>, e. g.
-sys/i386/conf/options.i386), and select an
-opt_foo.h file where your new option would best go
-into.
-
-If there is already something that comes close to the purpose of
-the new option, pick this. For example, options modifying the
-overall behaviour of the SCSI subsystem can go into opt_scsi.h.
-By default, simply mentioning an option in the appropriate option
-file, say FOO, implies its value will go into the
-corresponding file opt_foo.h. This can be overridden on the
-right-hand side of a rule by specifying another filename.
-
-If there is no opt_foo.h already available for
-the intended new option, invent a new name. Make it meaningful, and
-comment the new section in the
-options[.<arch>] file. config(8) will
-automagically pick up the change, and create that file next time it
-is run. Most options should go in a header file by themselves..
-
-Packing too many options into a single
-opt_foo.h will cause too many kernel files to be
-rebuilt when one of the options has been changed in the config file.
-
-Finally, find out which kernel files depend on the new option.
-Unless you have just invented your option, and it does not exist
-anywhere yet,
-
-
- find /usr/src/sys -name type f | xargs fgrep NEW_OPTION
-
-
-is your friend in finding them. Go and edit all those files, and
-add
-
-
-#include "opt_foo.h"
-
-
-on top, before all the #include <xxx.h>
-stuff. This sequence is most important as the options could
-override defaults from the regular include files, if the
-defaults are of the form
-
-
-#ifndef NEW_OPTION
-#define NEW_OPTION (something)
-#endif
-
-
-in the regular header.
-
-Adding an option that overrides something in a system header file
-(i. e., a file sitting in /usr/include/sys/) is almost
-always a mistake. opt_foo.h cannot be included
-into those files since it would break the headers more seriously,
-but if it is not included, then places that include it may get an
-inconsistent value for the option. Yes, there are precedents for
-this right now, but that does not make them more correct.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Kernel Debugging
-
-Contributed by &a.paul; and &a.joerg;
-
-
-
-Debugging a Kernel Crash Dump with KGDB
-
-Here are some instructions for getting kernel debugging
-working on a crash dump. They assume that you have enough swap
-space for a crash dump. If you have multiple swap
-partitions and the first one is too small to hold the dump,
-you can configure your kernel to use an alternate dump device
-(in the config kernel line), or
-you can specify an alternate using the dumpon(8) command.
-Dumps to non-swap devices,
-tapes for example, are currently not supported. Config your
-kernel using config -g.
-See for
-details on configuring the FreeBSD kernel.
-
-Use the dumpon(8) command to tell the kernel where to dump
-to (note that this will have to be done after configuring the
-partition in question as swap space via swapon(8)). This is
-normally arranged via /etc/rc.conf and /etc/rc.
-Alternatively, you can
-hard-code the dump device via the `dump' clause in the `config' line
-of your kernel config file. This is deprecated and should be used only if you
-want a crash dump from a kernel that crashes during booting.
-
-Note: In the following, the term `kgdb' refers
-to gdb run in `kernel debug mode'. This can be accomplished by
-either starting the gdb with the option , or by linking
-and starting it under the name kgdb. This is not being
-done by default, however, and the idea is basically deprecated since
-the GNU folks do not like their tools to behave differently when
-called by another name. This feature may well be discontinued
-in further releases.
-
-When the kernel has been built make a copy of it, say
-kernel.debug, and then run strip -d on the
-original. Install the original as normal. You may also install
-the unstripped kernel, but symbol table lookup time for some
-programs will drastically increase, and since
-the whole kernel is loaded entirely at boot time and cannot be
-swapped out later, several megabytes of
-physical memory will be wasted.
-
-If you are testing a new kernel, for example by typing the new
-kernel's name at the boot prompt, but need to boot a different
-one in order to get your system up and running again, boot it
-only into single user state using the flag at the
-boot prompt, and then perform the following steps:
-
- fsck -p
- mount -a -t ufs # so your file system for /var/crash is writable
- savecore -N /kernel.panicked /var/crash
- exit # ...to multi-user
-
-
-This instructs savecore(8) to use another kernel for symbol name
-extraction. It would otherwise default to the currently running kernel
-and most likely not do anything at all since the crash dump and the
-kernel symbols differ.
-
-Now, after a crash dump, go to /sys/compile/WHATEVER and run
-kgdb. From kgdb do:
-
- symbol-file kernel.debug
- exec-file /var/crash/kernel.0
- core-file /var/crash/vmcore.0
-
-
-and voila, you can debug the crash dump using the kernel sources
-just like you can for any other program.
-
-Here is a script log of a kgdb session illustrating the
-procedure. Long
-lines have been folded to improve readability, and the lines are
-numbered for reference. Despite this, it is a real-world error
-trace taken during the development of the pcvt console driver.
-
- 1:Script started on Fri Dec 30 23:15:22 1994
- 2:uriah # cd /sys/compile/URIAH
- 3:uriah # kgdb kernel /var/crash/vmcore.1
- 4:Reading symbol data from /usr/src/sys/compile/URIAH/kernel...done.
- 5:IdlePTD 1f3000
- 6:panic: because you said to!
- 7:current pcb at 1e3f70
- 8:Reading in symbols for ../../i386/i386/machdep.c...done.
- 9:(kgdb) where
- 10:#0 boot (arghowto=256) (../../i386/i386/machdep.c line 767)
- 11:#1 0xf0115159 in panic ()
- 12:#2 0xf01955bd in diediedie () (../../i386/i386/machdep.c line 698)
- 13:#3 0xf010185e in db_fncall ()
- 14:#4 0xf0101586 in db_command (-266509132, -266509516, -267381073)
- 15:#5 0xf0101711 in db_command_loop ()
- 16:#6 0xf01040a0 in db_trap ()
- 17:#7 0xf0192976 in kdb_trap (12, 0, -272630436, -266743723)
- 18:#8 0xf019d2eb in trap_fatal (...)
- 19:#9 0xf019ce60 in trap_pfault (...)
- 20:#10 0xf019cb2f in trap (...)
- 21:#11 0xf01932a1 in exception:calltrap ()
- 22:#12 0xf0191503 in cnopen (...)
- 23:#13 0xf0132c34 in spec_open ()
- 24:#14 0xf012d014 in vn_open ()
- 25:#15 0xf012a183 in open ()
- 26:#16 0xf019d4eb in syscall (...)
- 27:(kgdb) up 10
- 28:Reading in symbols for ../../i386/i386/trap.c...done.
- 29:#10 0xf019cb2f in trap (frame={tf_es = -260440048, tf_ds = 16, tf_\
- 30:edi = 3072, tf_esi = -266445372, tf_ebp = -272630356, tf_isp = -27\
- 31:2630396, tf_ebx = -266427884, tf_edx = 12, tf_ecx = -266427884, tf\
- 32:_eax = 64772224, tf_trapno = 12, tf_err = -272695296, tf_eip = -26\
- 33:6672343, tf_cs = -266469368, tf_eflags = 66066, tf_esp = 3072, tf_\
- 34:ss = -266427884}) (../../i386/i386/trap.c line 283)
- 35:283 (void) trap_pfault(&frame, FALSE);
- 36:(kgdb) frame frame->tf_ebp frame->tf_eip
- 37:Reading in symbols for ../../i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_drv.c...done.
- 38:#0 0xf01ae729 in pcopen (dev=3072, flag=3, mode=8192, p=(struct p\
- 39:roc *) 0xf07c0c00) (../../i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_drv.c line 403)
- 40:403 return ((*linesw[tp->t_line].l_open)(dev, tp));
- 41:(kgdb) list
- 42:398
- 43:399 tp->t_state |= TS_CARR_ON;
- 44:400 tp->t_cflag |= CLOCAL; /* cannot be a modem (:-) */
- 45:401
- 46:402 #if PCVT_NETBSD || (PCVT_FREEBSD >= 200)
- 47:403 return ((*linesw[tp->t_line].l_open)(dev, tp));
- 48:404 #else
- 49:405 return ((*linesw[tp->t_line].l_open)(dev, tp, flag));
- 50:406 #endif /* PCVT_NETBSD || (PCVT_FREEBSD >= 200) */
- 51:407 }
- 52:(kgdb) print tp
- 53:Reading in symbols for ../../i386/i386/cons.c...done.
- 54:$1 = (struct tty *) 0x1bae
- 55:(kgdb) print tp->t_line
- 56:$2 = 1767990816
- 57:(kgdb) up
- 58:#1 0xf0191503 in cnopen (dev=0x00000000, flag=3, mode=8192, p=(st\
- 59:ruct proc *) 0xf07c0c00) (../../i386/i386/cons.c line 126)
- 60: return ((*cdevsw[major(dev)].d_open)(dev, flag, mode, p));
- 61:(kgdb) up
- 62:#2 0xf0132c34 in spec_open ()
- 63:(kgdb) up
- 64:#3 0xf012d014 in vn_open ()
- 65:(kgdb) up
- 66:#4 0xf012a183 in open ()
- 67:(kgdb) up
- 68:#5 0xf019d4eb in syscall (frame={tf_es = 39, tf_ds = 39, tf_edi =\
- 69: 2158592, tf_esi = 0, tf_ebp = -272638436, tf_isp = -272629788, tf\
- 70:_ebx = 7086, tf_edx = 1, tf_ecx = 0, tf_eax = 5, tf_trapno = 582, \
- 71:tf_err = 582, tf_eip = 75749, tf_cs = 31, tf_eflags = 582, tf_esp \
- 72:= -272638456, tf_ss = 39}) (../../i386/i386/trap.c line 673)
- 73:673 error = (*callp->sy_call)(p, args, rval);
- 74:(kgdb) up
- 75:Initial frame selected; you cannot go up.
- 76:(kgdb) quit
- 77:uriah # exit
- 78:exit
- 79:
- 80:Script done on Fri Dec 30 23:18:04 1994
-
-
-Comments to the above script:
-
-
-
-line 6:
-
-This is a dump taken from within DDB (see below), hence the
-panic comment ``because you said to!'', and a rather long
-stack trace; the initial reason for going into DDB has been
-a page fault trap though.
-
-
-
-
-line 20:
-
-
-This is the location of function trap()
-in the stack trace.
-
-
-
-
-line 36:
-
-
-Force usage of a new stack frame; this is no longer
-necessary now. The stack frames are supposed to point to
-the right locations now, even in case of a trap.
-(I do not have a new core dump handy <g>, my kernel
-has not panicked for a rather long time.)
-From looking at the code in source line 403,
-there is a high probability that either the pointer
-access for ``tp'' was messed up, or the array access was
-out of bounds.
-
-
-
-
-line 52:
-
-
-The pointer looks suspicious, but happens to be a valid
-address.
-
-
-
-
-line 56:
-
-
-However, it obviously points to garbage, so we have found our
-error! (For those unfamiliar with that particular piece
-of code: tp->t_line refers to the line discipline
-of the console device here, which must be a rather small integer
-number.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Post-mortem Analysis of a Dump
-
-What do you do if a kernel dumped core but you did not expect
-it, and it is therefore not compiled using config -g?
-Not everything is lost here. Do not panic!
-
-Of course, you still need to enable crash dumps. See above
-on the options you have to specify in order to do this.
-
-Go to your kernel compile directory, and edit the line
-containing COPTFLAGS?=-O. Add the option
-there (but do not change anything on the level of
-optimization). If you do already know roughly the probable
-location of the failing piece of code (e.g., the pcvt
-driver in the example above), remove all the object files for
-this code. Rebuild the kernel. Due to the time stamp change on
-the Makefile, there will be some other object files rebuild,
-for example trap.o. With a bit of luck, the added
- option will not change anything for the generated
-code, so you will finally get a new kernel with similar code to
-the faulting one but some debugging symbols. You should at
-least verify the old and new sizes with the size(1) command. If
-there is a mismatch, you probably need to give up here.
-
-Go and examine the dump as described above. The debugging
-symbols might be incomplete for some places, as can be seen in
-the stack trace in the example above where some functions are
-displayed without line numbers and argument lists. If you need
-more debugging symbols, remove the appropriate object files and
-repeat the kgdb session until you know enough.
-
-All this is not guaranteed to work, but it will do it fine in
-most cases.
-
-
-
-
-On-line Kernel Debugging Using DDB
-
-While kgdb as an offline debugger provides a very
-high level of user interface, there are some things it cannot do.
-The most important ones being breakpointing and single-stepping
-kernel code.
-
-If you need to do low-level debugging on your kernel, there is
-an on-line debugger available called DDB. It allows to
-setting breakpoints, single-steping kernel functions, examining
-and changing kernel variables, etc. However, it cannot
-access kernel source files, and only has access to the global
-and static symbols, not to the full debug information like
-kgdb.
-
-To configure your kernel to include DDB, add the option line
-
- options DDB
-
-
-to your config file, and rebuild. (See for details on configuring the
-FreeBSD kernel. Note that if you have an older version of the
-boot blocks, your debugger symbols might not be loaded at all.
-Update the boot blocks; the recent ones load the DDB symbols
-automagically.)
-
-Once your DDB kernel is running, there are several ways to
-enter DDB. The first, and earliest way is to type the boot
-flag right at the boot prompt. The kernel will
-start up in debug mode and enter DDB prior to any device
-probing. Hence you can even debug the device
-probe/attach functions.
-
-The second scenario is a hot-key on the keyboard, usually
-Ctrl-Alt-ESC. For syscons, this can be remapped; some of
-the distributed maps do this, so watch out.
-There is an option
-available for serial consoles
-that allows the use of a serial line BREAK on the console line to
-enter DDB (``options BREAK_TO_DEBUGGER''
-in the kernel config file). It is not the default since there are a lot of
-crappy serial adapters around that gratuitously generate a
-BREAK condition, for example when pulling the cable.
-
-The third way is that any panic condition will branch to DDB if
-the kernel is configured to use it.
-For this reason, it is not wise to
-configure a kernel with DDB for a machine running unattended.
-
-The DDB commands roughly resemble some gdb commands. The first
-thing you probably need to do is to set a breakpoint:
-
- b function-name
- b address
-
-
-
-Numbers are taken hexadecimal by default, but to make them
-distinct from symbol names; hexadecimal numbers starting with the
-letters a-f need to be preceded with
-0x (this is optional for other numbers). Simple
-expressions are allowed, for example: function-name + 0x103.
-
-To continue the operation of an interrupted kernel, simply type
-
- c
-
-
-To get a stack trace, use
-
- trace
-
-
-Note that when entering DDB via a hot-key, the kernel is currently
-servicing an interrupt, so the stack trace might be not of much use
-for you.
-
-If you want to remove a breakpoint, use
-
- del
- del address-expression
-
-
-The first form will be accepted immediately after a breakpoint hit,
-and deletes the current breakpoint. The second form can remove any
-breakpoint, but you need to specify the exact address; this can be
-obtained from
-
- show b
-
-
-To single-step the kernel, try
-
- s
-
-
-This will step into functions, but you can make DDB trace them until
-the matching return statement is reached by
-
- n
-
-
-Note: this is different from gdb's `next' statement; it is like
-gdb's `finish'.
-
-To examine data from memory, use (for example):
-
- x/wx 0xf0133fe0,40
- x/hd db_symtab_space
- x/bc termbuf,10
- x/s stringbuf
-
-
-for word/halfword/byte access, and hexadecimal/decimal/character/
-string display. The number after the comma is the object count.
-To display the next 0x10 items, simply use
-
- x ,10
-
-
-Similarly, use
-
- x/ia foofunc,10
-
-
-to disassemble the first 0x10 instructions of foofunc, and display
-them along with their offset from the beginning of foofunc.
-
-To modify memory, use the write command:
-
- w/b termbuf 0xa 0xb 0
- w/w 0xf0010030 0 0
-
-
-The command modifier (b/h/w)
-specifies the size of the data to be written, the first
-following expression is the address to write to and the remainder
-is interpreted as data to write to successive memory locations.
-
-If you need to know the current registers, use
-
- show reg
-
-
-Alternatively, you can display a single register value by e.g.
-
- p $eax
-
-
-and modify it by
-
- set $eax new-value
-
-
-
-Should you need to call some kernel functions from DDB, simply
-say
-
- call func(arg1, arg2, ...)
-
-
-The return value will be printed.
-
-For a ps(1) style summary of all running processes, use
-
- ps
-
-
-
-Now you have now examined why your kernel failed, and you wish to
-reboot. Remember that, depending on the severity of previous
-malfunctioning, not all parts of the kernel might still be working
-as expected. Perform one of the following actions to shut down and
-reboot your system:
-
- call diediedie()
-
-
-
-This will cause your kernel to dump core and reboot, so you can
-later analyze the core on a higher level with kgdb. This
-command usually must be followed by another
-`continue' statement.
-There is now an alias for this: `panic'.
-
-
-
- call boot(0)
-
-
-might be a good way to cleanly shut down the running system, sync()
-all disks, and finally reboot. As long as the disk and file system
-interfaces of the kernel are not damaged, this might be a good way
-for an almost clean shutdown.
-
-
-
- call cpu_reset()
-
-
-is the final way out of disaster and almost the same as hitting
-the Big Red Button.
-
-If you need a short command summary, simply type
-
- help
-
-
-However, it is highly recommended to have a printed copy of the
-ddb(4) manual page ready for a debugging session.
-Remember that it is hard to read the on-line manual while
-single-stepping the kernel.
-
-
-
-
-On-line Kernel Debugging Using Remote GDB
-
-This feature has been supported since FreeBSD 2.2, and it's actually
-a very neat one.
-
-GDB has already supported remote debugging for a long time.
-This is done using a very simple protocol along a
-serial line. Unlike the other methods
-described above, you will need two machines for doing this. One is
-the host providing the debugging environment, including all
-the sources, and a copy of the kernel binary with all the
-symbols in it, and the other one is the target machine that
-simply runs a similar copy of the very same kernel (but stripped
-of the debugging information).
-
-You should configure the kernel in question with config -g,
-include DDB into the configuration, and compile it as usual.
-This gives a large blurb of a binary, due
-to the debugging information. Copy this kernel to the target
-machine, strip the debugging symbols off with strip -x,
-and boot it using the boot option. Connect the first
-serial line of the target machine to any serial line of the
-debugging host. Now, on the debugging machine, go to the compile
-directory of the target kernel, and start gdb:
-
-% gdb -k kernel
-GDB is free software and you are welcome to distribute copies of it
- under certain conditions; type "show copying" to see the conditions.
-There is absolutely no warranty for GDB; type "show warranty" for details.
-GDB 4.16 (i386-unknown-freebsd),
-Copyright 1996 Free Software Foundation, Inc...
-(kgdb)
-
-
-
-Initialize the remote debugging session (assuming the first serial
-port is being used) by:
-
-(kgdb) target remote /dev/cuaa0
-
-
-
-Now, on the target host (the one that entered DDB right before even starting
-the device probe), type:
-
-Debugger("Boot flags requested debugger")
-Stopped at Debugger+0x35: movb $0, edata+0x51bc
-db> gdb
-
-
-
-DDB will respond with:
-
-Next trap will enter GDB remote protocol mode
-
-
-
-Every time you type ``gdb'', the mode will be toggled between
-remote GDB and local DDB. In order to force a next trap
-immediately, simply type ``s'' (step). Your hosting GDB will
-now gain control over the target kernel:
-
-Remote debugging using /dev/cuaa0
-Debugger (msg=0xf01b0383 "Boot flags requested debugger")
- at ../../i386/i386/db_interface.c:257
-(kgdb)
-
-
-
-You can use this session almost as any other GDB session, including
-full access to the source, running it in gud-mode inside an Emacs
-window (which gives you an automatic source code display in another
-Emacs window) etc.
-
-Remote GDB can also be used to debug LKMs. First build the LKM
-with debugging symbols:
-
-# cd /usr/src/lkm/linux
-# make clean; make COPTS=-g
-
-
-
-Then install this version of the module on the target machine, load it
-and use modstat to find out where it was loaded:
-
-# linux
-# modstat
-Type Id Off Loadaddr Size Info Rev Module Name
-EXEC 0 4 f5109000 001c f510f010 1 linux_mod
-
-
-
-Take the load address of the module and add 0x20 (probably to account
-for the a.out header). This is the address that the module code was
-relocated to. Use the add-symbol-file command in GDB to tell the
-debugger about the module:
-
-(kgdb) add-symbol-file /usr/src/lkm/linux/linux_mod.o 0xf5109020
-add symbol table from file "/usr/src/lkm/linux/linux_mod.o" at
-text_addr = 0xf5109020?
-(y or n) y
-(kgdb)
-
-
-
-You now have access to all the symbols in the LKM.
-
-
-
-
-Debugging a Console Driver
-
-Since you need a console driver to run DDB on, things are more
-complicated if the console driver itself is failing. You might
-remember the use of a serial console (either with modified boot
-blocks, or by specifying at the Boot:
-prompt), and hook up a standard
-terminal onto your first serial port. DDB works on any configured
-console driver, of course also on a serial console.
-
-
-
-
-
-Linux Emulation
-
-Contributed by &a.handy; and &a.rich;
-
-
-
-How to Install the Linux Emulator
-
-Linux emulation in FreeBSD has reached a point where it is possible
-to run a large fraction of Linux binaries in both a.out and ELF
-format. The linux emulation in the 2.1-STABLE branch is capable of
-running Linux DOOM and Mathematica; the version present in
-FreeBSD-2.2-RELEASE is vastly more capable and runs all these as well as
-Quake, Abuse, IDL, netrek for Linux and a whole host of other
-programs.
-
-There are some Linux-specific operating system features that are not
-supported on FreeBSD. Linux binaries will not work on FreeBSD if they
-use the Linux /proc filesystem (which is different from the optional
-FreeBSD /proc filesystem) or i386-specific calls, such as enabling
-virtual 8086 mode.
-
-To tell whether your kernel is configured for Linux
-compatibility simply run any Linux binary. If it
-prints the error message
-
-linux-executable: Exec format error. Wrong Architecture.
-
-
-then you do not have linux compatibility support and
-you need to configure and install a new kernel.
-
-Depending on which version of FreeBSD you are running, how you get
-Linux-emulation up will vary slightly:
-
-
-
-Installing Linux Emulation in 2.1-STABLE
-
-The GENERIC kernel in 2.1-STABLE is not configured for linux
-compatibility so you must reconfigure your kernel for it. There
-are two ways to do this: 1. linking the emulator statically in the
-kernel itself and 2. configuring your kernel to dynamically load the
-linux loadable kernel module (LKM).
-
-To enable the emulator, add the following to your configuration file
-(c.f. /sys/i386/conf/LINT):
-
-options COMPAT_LINUX
-
-
-If you want to run doom or other applications
-that need shared memory,
-also add the following.
-
-options SYSVSHM
-
-
-The linux system calls require 4.3BSD system call compatibility. So
-make sure you have the following.
-
-options "COMPAT_43"
-
-
-
-If you prefer to statically link the emulator in the kernel rather than
-use the loadable kernel module (LKM), then add
-
-options LINUX
-
-
-Then run config and install the new kernel as described in the
- section.
-
-If you decide to use the LKM you must also install the loadable
-module. A mismatch of versions between the kernel and loadable
-module can cause the kernel to crash, so the safest thing to do is to
-reinstall the LKM when you install the kernel.
-
-% cd /usr/src/lkm/linux
-% make all install
-
-
-Once you have installed the kernel and the LKM, you can invoke
-`linux' as root to load the LKM.
-
-% linux
-Linux emulator installed
-Module loaded as ID 0
-%
-
-
-To see whether the LKM is loaded, run `modstat'.
-
-% modstat
-Type Id Off Loadaddr Size Info Rev Module Name
-EXEC 0 3 f0baf000 0018 f0bb4000 1 linux_emulator
-%
-
-
-You can cause the LKM to be loaded when the system boots in either of
-two ways. In FreeBSD 2.2.1-RELEASE and 2.1-STABLE enable it in
-/etc/sysconfig
-
-linux=YES
-
-
-by changing it from NO to YES. FreeBSD 2.1 RELEASE and earlier do not
-have such a line and on those you will need to edit /etc/rc.local to
-add the following line.
-
-linux
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Installing Linux Emulation in 2.2.2-RELEASE and later
-
-It is no longer necessary to specify ``options LINUX''
-or ``options COMPAT_LINUX''. Linux emulation is done with an LKM
-(``Loadable Kernel Module'') so it can be installed on the fly without
-having to reboot. You will need the following things in your startup files,
-however:
-
-
-
- In /etc/rc.conf, you need the following line:
-
-linux_enable=YES
-
-
-
-
-
- This, in turn, triggers the following action in /etc/rc.i386:
-
-# Start the Linux binary emulation if requested.
-if [ "X${linux_enable}" = X"YES" ]; then
- echo -n ' linux'; linux > /dev/null 2>&1
-fi
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-If you want to verify it is running, modstat will do that:
-
-% modstat
-Type Id Off Loadaddr Size Info Rev Module Name
-EXEC 0 4 f09e6000 001c f09ec010 1 linux_mod
-%
-
-
-However, there have been reports that this fails on some 2.2-RELEASE and
-later systems. If for some reason you cannot load the linux
-LKM, then statically link the emulator in the kernel by adding
-
-options LINUX
-
-
-to your kernel config file. Then run config and install the new
-kernel as described in the section.
-
-
-
-
-Installing Linux Runtime Libraries
-
-
-
-Installing using the linux_lib port
-
-Most linux applications use shared libraries, so you are still not
-done until you install the shared libraries. It is possible to do
-this by hand, however, it is vastly simpler to just grab the
-linux_lib port:
-
-% cd /usr/ports-current/emulators/linux_lib
-% make all install
-
-
-
-and you should have a working linux emulator. Legend (and the mail
-archives :-) seems to hold that Linux emulation works best with
-linux binaries linked against the ZMAGIC libraries; QMAGIC libraries
-(such as those used in Slackware V2.0) may tend to give the
-Linuxulator heartburn. As of this writing (March 1996) ELF emulation
-is still in the formulative stages but seems to work pretty well. Also,
-expect some programs to complain about incorrect minor versions. In
-general this does not seem to be a problem.
-
-
-
-
-Installing libraries manually
-
-If you do not have the ``ports'' distribution, you can install the
-libraries by hand instead. You will need the Linux shared libraries
-that the program depends on and the runtime linker. Also, you will
-need to create a "shadow root" directory, /compat/linux, for Linux
-libraries on your FreeBSD system. Any shared libraries opened by
-Linux programs run under FreeBSD will look in this tree first. So, if
-a Linux program loads, for example, /lib/libc.so, FreeBSD will first
-try to open /compat/linux/lib/libc.so, and if that does not exist then
-it will try /lib/libc.so. Shared libraries should be installed in the
-shadow tree /compat/linux/lib rather than the paths that the Linux
-ld.so reports.
-
-FreeBSD-2.2-RELEASE and later works slightly differently with respect to
-/compat/linux. On -CURRENT, all files, not just libraries, are
-searched for from the ``shadow root'' /compat/linux.
-
-Generally, you will need to look for the shared libraries that Linux
-binaries depend on only the first few times that you install a Linux
-program on your FreeBSD system. After a while, you will have a sufficient
-set of Linux shared libraries on your system to be able to run newly
-imported Linux binaries without any extra work.
-
-
-
-
-How to install additional shared libraries
-
-What if you install the linux_lib port and your application still
-complains about missing shared libraries? How do you know which
-shared libraries Linux binaries need, and where to get them?
-Basically, there are 2 possibilities (when following these
-instructions: you will need to be root on your FreeBSD system to do
-the necessary installation steps).
-
-If you have access to a Linux system, see what shared libraries
-it needs, and copy them to your FreeBSD system. Example: you have
-just ftp'ed the Linux binary of Doom. Put it on the Linux
-system you have access to, and check which shared libraries it
-needs by running `ldd linuxxdoom':
-
-
-
-% ldd linuxxdoom
-libXt.so.3 (DLL Jump 3.1) => /usr/X11/lib/libXt.so.3.1.0
-libX11.so.3 (DLL Jump 3.1) => /usr/X11/lib/libX11.so.3.1.0
-libc.so.4 (DLL Jump 4.5pl26) => /lib/libc.so.4.6.29
-
-
-
-You would need to get all the files from the last column, and
-put them under /compat/linux, with the names in the first column
-as symbolic links pointing to them. This means you eventually have
-these files on your FreeBSD system:
-
-/compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libXt.so.3.1.0
-/compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libXt.so.3 -> libXt.so.3.1.0
-/compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libX11.so.3.1.0
-/compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libX11.so.3 -> libX11.so.3.1.0
-/compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4.6.29
-/compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4 -> libc.so.4.6.29
-
-
-
-Note that if you already have a Linux shared library with a
-matching major revision number to the first column of the 'ldd'
-output, you will not need to copy the file named in the last column to
-your system, the one you already have should work. It is advisable to
-copy the shared library anyway if it is a newer version, though. You
-can remove the old one, as long as you make the symbolic link point to
-the new one. So, if you have these libraries on your system:
-
-/compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4.6.27
-/compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4 -> libc.so.4.6.27
-
-
-
-and you find a new binary that claims to require a later version
-according to the output of ldd:
-
-libc.so.4 (DLL Jump 4.5pl26) -> libc.so.4.6.29
-
-
-
-If it is only one or two versions out of date in the in the trailing
-digit then do not worry about copying /lib/libc.so.4.6.29 too, because
-the program should work fine with the slightly older version.
-However, if you like you can decide to replace the libc.so anyway, and
-that should leave you with:
-
-/compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4.6.29
-/compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4 -> libc.so.4.6.29
-
-
-
-Please note that the symbolic link mechanism is only
-needed for Linux binaries. The FreeBSD runtime linker takes care of
-looking for matching major revision numbers itself and you do not need to
-worry about it.
-
-
-
-
-Configuring the ld.so -- for FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE only
-
-This section applies only to FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE and later. Those running
-2.1-STABLE should skip this section.
-
-Finally, if you run FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE you must make sure that you
-have the Linux runtime linker and its config files on your system. You
-should copy these files from the Linux system to their appropriate
-place on your FreeBSD system (to the /compat/linux tree):
-
-/compat/linux/lib/ld.so
-/compat/linux/etc/ld.so.config
-
-
-
-If you do not have access to a Linux system, you should get the
-extra files you need from various ftp sites. Information on where to
-look for the various files is appended below. For now, let us assume
-you know where to get the files.
-
-Retrieve the following files (all from the same ftp site to avoid any
-version mismatches), and install them under /compat/linux
-(i.e. /foo/bar is installed as /compat/linux/foo/bar):
-
-/sbin/ldconfig
-/usr/bin/ldd
-/lib/libc.so.x.y.z
-/lib/ld.so
-
-
-
-ldconfig and ldd do not necessarily need to be under /compat/linux;
-you can install them elsewhere in the system too. Just make sure they
-do not conflict with their FreeBSD counterparts. A good idea would be
-to install them in /usr/local/bin as ldconfig-linux and ldd-linux.
-
-Create the file /compat/linux/etc/ld.so.conf, containing the
-directories in which the Linux runtime linker should look
-for shared libs. It is a plain text file, containing a directory
-name on each line. /lib and /usr/lib are standard, you could
-add the following:
-
-/usr/X11/lib
-/usr/local/lib
-
-
-
-When a linux binary opens a library such as /lib/libc.so the
-emulator maps the name to /compat/linux/lib/libc.so internally. All
-linux libraries should be installed under /compat/linux (e.g.
-/compat/linux/lib/libc.so, /compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libX11.so, etc.)
-in order for the emulator to find them.
-
-Those running FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE should run the Linux ldconfig program.
-
-% cd /compat/linux/lib
-% /compat/linux/sbin/ldconfig
-
-
-
-Ldconfig is statically linked, so it does not need any shared
-libraries to run. It creates the file /compat/linux/etc/ld.so.cache
-which contains the names of all the shared libraries and should be rerun
-to recreate this file whenever you install additional shared
-libraries.
-
-On 2.1-STABLE do not install /compat/linux/etc/ld.so.cache or run
-ldconfig; in 2.1-STABLE the syscalls are implemented
-differently and ldconfig is not needed or used.
-
-You should now be set up for Linux binaries which only need a
-shared libc. You can test this by running the Linux ldd on
-itself. Supposing that you have it installed as ldd-linux, it should
-produce something like:
-
-% ldd-linux `which ldd-linux`
-libc.so.4 (DLL Jump 4.5pl26) => /lib/libc.so.4.6.29
-
-
-
-This being done, you are ready to install new Linux binaries.
-Whenever you install a new Linux program, you should check if it needs
-shared libraries, and if so, whether you have them installed in the
-/compat/linux tree. To do this, you run the Linux version ldd on the
-new program, and watch its output. ldd (see also the manual page for
-ldd(1)) will print a list of shared libraries that the program depends
-on, in the form majorname (jumpversion) => fullname.
-
-If it prints "not found" instead of fullname it means that you
-need an extra library. The library needed is shown in majorname
-and will be of the form libXXXX.so.N. You will need to find a
-libXXXX.so.N.mm on a Linux ftp site, and install it on your
-system. The XXXX (name) and N (major revision number) should match;
-the minor number(s) mm are less important, though it is advised to
-take the most recent version.
-
-
-
-
-
-Configuring the host name resolver
-
-If DNS does not work or you get the messages
-
-resolv+: "bind" is an invalid keyword
-resolv+: "hosts" is an invalid keyword
-
-
-
-then you need to configure a /compat/linux/etc/host.conf file
-containing:
-
-order hosts, bind
-multi on
-
-
-
-where the order here specifies that /etc/hosts is searched first and
-DNS is searched second. When /compat/linux/etc/host.conf is not
-installed linux applications find FreeBSD's /etc/host.conf and
-complain about the incompatible FreeBSD syntax. You should remove
-`bind,' if you have not configured a name-server using the
-/etc/resolv.conf file.
-
-Lastly, those who run 2.1-STABLE need to set an the
-RESOLV_HOST_CONF environment variable so that applications will know
-how to search the host tables. If you run FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE, you can
-skip this. For the /bin/csh shell use:
-
-setenv RESOLV_HOST_CONF /compat/linux/etc/host.conf
-
-
-
-For /bin/sh use:
-
-RESOLV_HOST_CONF=/compat/linux/etc/host.conf; export RESOLV_HOST_CONF
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Finding the necessary files
-
-Note: the information below is valid as of the time this document
-was written, but certain details such as names of ftp sites,
-directories and distribution names may have changed by the time you
-read this.
-
-Linux is distributed by several groups that make their own set
-of binaries that they distribute. Each distribution has its own
-name, like ``Slackware'' or ``Yggdrasil''. The distributions are
-available on a lot of ftp sites. Sometimes the files are unpacked,
-and you can get the individual files you need, but mostly they
-are stored in distribution sets, usually consisting of subdirectories
-with gzipped tar files in them. The primary ftp sites for the
-distributions are:
-sunsite.unc.edu:/pub/Linux/distributions
-tsx-11.mit.edu:/pub/linux/distributions
-
-
-Some European mirrors:
-ftp.luth.se:/pub/linux/distributions
-ftp.demon.co.uk:/pub/linux/distributions
-src.doc.ic.ac.uk:/packages/linux/distributions
-
-
-For simplicity, let us concentrate on Slackware here. This
-distribution consists of a number of subdirectories, containing
-separate packages. Normally, they are controlled by an install
-program, but you can retrieve files "by hand" too. First of all, you
-will need to look in the "contents" subdir of the distribution. You
-will find a lot of small text files here describing the contents of the
-separate packages. The fastest way to look something up is to retrieve
-all the files in the contents subdirectory, and grep through them for
-the file you need. Here is an example of a list of files that you
-might need, and in which contents-file you will find it by grepping
-through them:
-
-
-
-So, in this case, you will need the packages ldso, shlibs, xf_lib
-and oldlibs. In each of the contents-files for these packages, look
-for a line saying ``PACKAGE LOCATION'', it will tell you on which `disk'
-the package is, in our case it will tell us in which subdirectory we
-need to look. For our example, we would find the following locations:
-
-Note: The 8237 does allow two channels to
-be connected together to allow memory-to-memory DMA
-operations in a non-``fly-by'' mode, but nobody in the PC
-industry uses this scarce resource this way since it is
-faster to move data between memory locations using the
-CPU.
-
-
-
-In the PC architecture, each DMA channel is normally
-activated only when the hardware that uses a given DMA channel
-requests a transfer by asserting the DRQ line for that
-channel.
-
-
-
-A Sample DMA transfer
-
-Here is an example of the steps that occur to cause and perform
-a DMA transfer. In this example, the floppy disk
-controller (FDC) has just read a byte from a diskette and
-wants the DMA to place it in memory at location
-0x00123456. The process begins by the FDC asserting the
-DRQ2 signal (the DRQ line for DMA channel 2) to alert the DMA
-controller.
-
-The DMA controller will note that the DRQ2 signal is asserted.
-The DMA controller will then make sure that DMA channel 2
-has been programmed and is unmasked (enabled). The DMA controller
-also makes sure that none of the other DMA channels are active
-or want to be active and have a higher priority. Once these checks
-are complete, the DMA asks the CPU to release the bus so that
-the DMA may use the bus. The DMA requests the bus by
-asserting the HRQ signal which goes to the CPU.
-
-The CPU detects the HRQ signal, and will complete
-executing the current instruction. Once the processor
-has reached a state where it can release the bus, it
-will. Now all of the signals normally generated by the
-CPU (-MEMR, -MEMW, -IOR, -IOW and a few others) are
-placed in a tri-stated condition (neither high or low)
-and then the CPU asserts the HLDA signal which tells the
-DMA controller that it is now in charge of the bus.
-
-Depending on the processor, the CPU may be able to
-execute a few additional instructions now that it no
-longer has the bus, but the CPU will eventually have to
-wait when it reaches an instruction that must read
-something from memory that is not in the internal
-processor cache or pipeline.
-
-Now that the DMA ``is in charge'', the DMA activates its
--MEMR, -MEMW, -IOR, -IOW output signals, and the address
-outputs from the DMA are set to 0x3456, which will be
-used to direct the byte that is about to transferred to a
-specific memory location.
-
-The DMA will then let the device that requested the DMA
-transfer know that the transfer is commencing. This is
-done by asserting the -DACK signal, or in the case of the
-floppy disk controller, -DACK2 is asserted.
-
-The floppy disk controller is now responsible for placing
-the byte to be transferred on the bus Data lines. Unless
-the floppy controller needs more time to get the data
-byte on the bus (and if the peripheral does need more time it
-alerts the DMA via the READY signal), the DMA will wait
-one DMA clock, and then de-assert the -MEMW and -IOR
-signals so that the memory will latch and store the byte
-that was on the bus, and the FDC will know that the byte
-has been transferred.
-
-Since the DMA cycle only transfers a single byte at a
-time, the FDC now drops the DRQ2 signal, so the DMA knows that
-it is no longer needed. The DMA will de-assert the
--DACK2 signal, so that the FDC knows it must stop placing
-data on the bus.
-
-The DMA will now check to see if any of the other DMA
-channels have any work to do. If none of the channels
-have their DRQ lines asserted, the DMA controller has
-completed its work and will now tri-state the -MEMR,
--MEMW, -IOR, -IOW and address signals.
-
-Finally, the DMA will de-assert the HRQ signal. The CPU
-sees this, and de-asserts the HOLDA signal. Now the CPU
-activates its -MEMR, -MEMW, -IOR, -IOW and address lines,
-and it resumes executing instructions and accessing main
-memory and the peripherals.
-
-For a typical floppy disk sector, the above process is
-repeated 512 times, once for each byte. Each time a byte
-is transferred, the address register in the DMA is
-incremented and the counter in the DMA that shows how many
-bytes are to be transferred is decremented.
-
-When the counter reaches zero, the DMA asserts the EOP
-signal, which indicates that the counter has reached zero
-and no more data will be transferred until the DMA
-controller is reprogrammed by the CPU. This event is
-also called the Terminal Count (TC). There is only one
-EOP signal, and since only DMA channel can be active at
-any instant, the DMA channel that is currently active must
-be the DMA channel that just completed its task.
-
-If a peripheral wants to generate an interrupt when the
-transfer of a buffer is complete, it can test for its
--DACKn signal and the EOP signal both being asserted at
-the same time. When that happens, it means the DMA will not
-transfer any more information for that peripheral without
-intervention by the CPU. The peripheral can then assert
-one of the interrupt signals to get the processors'
-attention. In the PC architecture, the DMA chip itself is not
-capable of generating an interrupt. The peripheral and its
-associated hardware is responsible for generating any
-interrupt that occurs. Subsequently, it is possible to have
-a peripheral that uses DMA but does not use interrupts.
-
-It is important to understand that although the CPU
-always releases the bus to the DMA when the DMA makes the
-request, this action is invisible to both applications
-and the operating systems, except for slight changes in
-the amount of time the processor takes to execute
-instructions when the DMA is active. Subsequently, the
-processor must poll the peripheral, poll the registers in
-the DMA chip, or receive an interrupt from the peripheral
-to know for certain when a DMA transfer has completed.
-
-
-
-
-DMA Page Registers and 16Meg address space limitations
-
-You may have noticed earlier that instead of the DMA
-setting the address lines to 0x00123456 as we said
-earlier, the DMA only set 0x3456. The reason for this
-takes a bit of explaining.
-
-When the original IBM PC was designed, IBM elected to use
-both DMA and interrupt controller chips that were
-designed for use with the 8085, an 8-bit processor with
-an address space of 16 bits (64K). Since the IBM PC
-supported more than 64K of memory, something had to be
-done to allow the DMA to read or write memory locations
-above the 64K mark. What IBM did to solve this problem
-was to add an external data latch for each DMA channel that
-holds the upper bits of the address to be read to or written from.
-Whenever a DMA channel is active, the contents of that
-latch are written to the address bus and kept there until
-the DMA operation for the channel ends. IBM called these latches
-``Page Registers''.
-
-So for our example above, the DMA would put the 0x3456
-part of the address on the bus, and the Page Register for
-DMA channel 2 would put 0x0012xxxx on the bus. Together,
-these two values form the complete address in memory that
-is to be accessed.
-
-Because the Page Register latch is independent of the DMA
-chip, the area of memory to be read or written must not
-span a 64K physical boundary. For example, if the DMA accesses
-memory location 0xffff, after that transfer the DMA will then
-increment the address register and the DMA will access the next
-byte at location 0x0000, not 0x10000. The results of letting
-this happen are probably not intended.
-
-
-
-Note: ``Physical'' 64K boundaries should
-not be confused with 8086-mode 64K ``Segments'', which
-are created by mathematically adding a segment register with an
-offset register. Page Registers have no address overlap and
-are mathematically OR-ed together.
-
-
-
-To further complicate matters, the external DMA address
-latches on the PC/AT hold only eight bits, so that gives
-us 8+16=24 bits, which means that the DMA can only point
-at memory locations between 0 and 16Meg. For newer
-computers that allow more than 16Meg of memory, the standard
-PC-compatible DMA cannot access memory locations above 16Meg.
-
-To get around this restriction, operating systems will
-reserve a RAM buffer in an area below 16Meg that also does not
-span a physical 64K boundary. Then the DMA will be
-programmed to transfer data from the peripheral and into that
-buffer. Once the DMA has moved the data into this buffer,
-the operating system will then copy the data from the buffer
-to the address where the data is really supposed to be stored.
-
-When writing data from an address above 16Meg to a
-DMA-based peripheral, the data must be first copied from
-where it resides into a buffer located below 16Meg, and
-then the DMA can copy the data from the buffer to the
-hardware. In FreeBSD, these reserved buffers are called
-``Bounce Buffers''. In the MS-DOS world, they are
-sometimes called ``Smart Buffers''.
-
-
-
-Note: A new implementation of the 8237, called the
-82374, allows 16 bits of page register to be specified, allows
-access to the entire 32 bit address space, without the use of
-bounce buffers.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-DMA Operational Modes and Settings
-
-The 8237 DMA can be operated in several modes. The main
-ones are:
-
-
-
-Single
-
-A single byte (or word) is transferred.
-The DMA must release and re-acquire the bus for each
-additional byte. This is commonly-used by devices
-that cannot transfer the entire block of data
-immediately. The peripheral will request the DMA
-each time it is ready for another transfer.
-
-The standard PC-compatible floppy disk controller (NEC 765)
-only has a one-byte buffer, so it uses this mode.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Block/Demand
-
-
-Once the DMA acquires the
-system bus, an entire block of data is transferred,
-up to a maximum of 64K. If the peripheral needs
-additional time, it can assert the READY signal to
-suspend the transfer briefly. READY should not be
-used excessively, and for slow peripheral transfers,
-the Single Transfer Mode should be used instead.
-
-The difference between Block and Demand is that once a
-Block transfer is started, it runs until the transfer
-count reaches zero. DRQ only needs to be asserted
-until -DACK is asserted. Demand Mode will transfer
-one more bytes until DRQ is de-asserted, at which point the DMA
-suspends the transfer and releases the bus back to the CPU.
-When DRQ is asserted later, the transfer resumes where
-it was suspended.
-
-Older hard disk controllers used Demand Mode until
-CPU speeds increased to the point that it was more
-efficient to transfer the data using the CPU, particularly
-if the memory locations used in the transfer were above the
-16Meg mark.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Cascade
-
-
-This mechanism allows a DMA channel
-to request the bus, but then the attached peripheral
-device is responsible for placing the addressing
-information on the bus instead of the DMA. This is also
-used to implement a technique known as ``Bus Mastering''.
-
-When a DMA channel in Cascade Mode receives control
-of the bus, the DMA does not place addresses and I/O
-control signals on the bus like the DMA normally does
-when it is active. Instead, the DMA only asserts the
--DACK signal for the active DMA channel.
-
-At this point it is up to the peripheral connected to that
-DMA channel to provide address and bus control signals.
-The peripheral has complete control over the system
-bus, and can do reads and/or writes to any address
-below 16Meg. When the peripheral is finished with
-the bus, it de-asserts the DRQ line, and the DMA
-controller can then return control to the CPU or to some
-other DMA channel.
-
-Cascade Mode can be used to chain multiple DMA controllers
-together, and this is exactly what DMA Channel 4 is used
-for in the PC architecture. When a peripheral requests
-the bus on DMA channels 0, 1, 2 or 3, the slave DMA
-controller asserts HLDREQ, but this wire is actually connected
-to DRQ4 on the primary DMA controller instead of to the CPU.
-The primary DMA controller, thinking it has work to do on
-Channel 4, requests the bus from the CPU using HLDREQ signal.
-Once the CPU grants the bus to the primary DMA controller,
--DACK4 is asserted, and that wire is actually connected to
-the HLDA signal on the slave DMA controller. The slave DMA
-controller then transfers data for the DMA channel that
-requested it (0, 1, 2 or 3), or the slave DMA may grant the bus
-to a peripheral that wants to perform its own bus-mastering,
-such as a SCSI controller.
-
-Because of this wiring arrangement, only DMA channels
-0, 1, 2, 3, 5, 6 and 7 are usable with peripherals on PC/AT
-systems.
-
-
-
-Note: DMA channel 0 was reserved for
-refresh operations in early IBM PC computers, but
-is generally available for use by peripherals in
-modern systems.
-
-
-
-When a peripheral is performing Bus Mastering, it is
-important that the peripheral transmit data to or
-from memory constantly while it holds the system bus.
-If the peripheral cannot do this, it must release the
-bus frequently so that the system can perform refresh
-operations on main memory.
-
-The Dynamic RAM used in all PCs for main memory must be
-accessed frequently to keep the bits stored in the
-components "charged". Dynamic RAM essentially consists
-of millions of capacitors with each one holding one bit
-of data. These capacitors are charged with power to
-represent a "1" or drained to represent a "0". Because
-all capacitors leak, power must be added at regular intervals
-to keep the "1" values intact. The RAM chips actually handle
-the task of pumping power back into all of the appropriate
-locations in RAM, but they must be told when to do it by
-the rest of the computer so that the refresh activity won't
-interfere with the computer wanting to access RAM normally.
-If the computer is unable to refresh memory, the contents
-of memory will become corrupted in just a few milliseconds.
-
-Since memory read and write cycles ``count'' as refresh
-cycles (a dynamic RAM refresh cycle is actually an incomplete
-memory read cycle), as long as the peripheral
-controller continues reading or writing data to
-sequential memory locations, that action will refresh
-all of memory.
-
-Bus-mastering is found in some SCSI host interfaces and
-other high-performance peripheral controllers.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Autoinitialize
-
-
-This mode causes the DMA to
-perform Byte, Block or Demand transfers, but when the
-DMA transfer counter reaches zero, the counter and
-address are set back to where they were when the DMA
-channel was originally programmed. This means that
-as long as the peripheral requests transfers, they will
-be granted. It is up to the CPU to move new data
-into the fixed buffer ahead of where the DMA is about
-to transfer it when doing output operations, and read new
-data out of the buffer behind where the DMA is writing
-when doing input operations.
-
-This technique is frequently used on audio devices that
-have small or no hardware ``sample'' buffers. There is
-additional CPU overhead to manage this ``circular'' buffer,
-but in some cases this may be the only way to eliminate the
-latency that occurs when the DMA counter reaches zero
-and the DMA stops transfers until it is reprogrammed.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Programming the DMA
-
-The DMA channel that is to be programmed should always
-be ``masked'' before loading any settings. This is because
-the hardware might unexpectedly assert the DRQ for that channel,
-and the DMA might respond, even though not all of the parameters
-have been loaded or updated.
-
-Once masked, the host must specify the direction of the
-transfer (memory-to-I/O or I/O-to-memory), what mode of
-DMA operation is to be used for the transfer (Single,
-Block, Demand, Cascade, etc), and finally the address and
-length of the transfer are loaded. The length that is
-loaded is one less than the amount you expect the DMA to
-transfer. The LSB and MSB of the address and length are
-written to the same 8-bit I/O port, so another port must
-be written to first to guarantee that the DMA accepts the
-first byte as the LSB and the second byte as the MSB of
-the length and address.
-
-Then, be sure to update the Page Register, which is
-external to the DMA and is accessed through a different
-set of I/O ports.
-
-Once all the settings are ready, the DMA channel can be
-un-masked. That DMA channel is now considered to be
-``armed'', and will respond when the DRQ line for that channel
-is asserted.
-
-Refer to a hardware data book for precise programming
-details for the 8237. You will also need to refer to the
-I/O port map for the PC system, which describes where
-the DMA and Page Register ports are located. A complete
-port map table is located below.
-
-
-
-
-DMA Port Map
-
-All systems based on the IBM-PC and PC/AT have the DMA
-hardware located at the same I/O ports. The complete
-list is provided below. Ports assigned to DMA Controller
-#2 are undefined on non-AT designs.
-
-
-
-0x00 - 0x1f DMA Controller #1 (Channels 0, 1, 2 and 3)
-
-DMA Address and Count Registers
-
-
-0x00 write Channel 0 starting address
-0x00 read Channel 0 current address
-0x01 write Channel 0 starting word count
-0x01 read Channel 0 remaining word count
-
-0x02 write Channel 1 starting address
-0x02 read Channel 1 current address
-0x03 write Channel 1 starting word count
-0x03 read Channel 1 remaining word count
-
-0x04 write Channel 2 starting address
-0x04 read Channel 2 current address
-0x05 write Channel 2 starting word count
-0x05 read Channel 2 remaining word count
-
-0x06 write Channel 3 starting address
-0x06 read Channel 3 current address
-0x07 write Channel 3 starting word count
-0x07 read Channel 3 remaining word count
-
-
-DMA Command Registers
-
-
-0x08 write Command Register
-0x08 read Status Register
-0x09 write Request Register
-0x09 read -
-0x0a write Single Mask Register Bit
-0x0a read -
-0x0b write Mode Register
-0x0b read -
-0x0c write Clear LSB/MSB Flip-Flop
-0x0c read -
-0x0d write Master Clear/Reset
-0x0d read Temporary Register (not available on newer versions)
-0x0e write Clear Mask Register
-0x0e read -
-0x0f write Write All Mask Register Bits
-0x0f read Read All Mask Register Bits (only in Intel 82374)
-
-
-
-
-
-0xc0 - 0xdf DMA Controller #2 (Channels 4, 5, 6 and 7)
-
-DMA Address and Count Registers
-
-
-0xc0 write Channel 4 starting address
-0xc0 read Channel 4 current address
-0xc2 write Channel 4 starting word count
-0xc2 read Channel 4 remaining word count
-
-0xc4 write Channel 5 starting address
-0xc4 read Channel 5 current address
-0xc6 write Channel 5 starting word count
-0xc6 read Channel 5 remaining word count
-
-0xc8 write Channel 6 starting address
-0xc8 read Channel 6 current address
-0xca write Channel 6 starting word count
-0xca read Channel 6 remaining word count
-
-0xcc write Channel 7 starting address
-0xcc read Channel 7 current address
-0xce write Channel 7 starting word count
-0xce read Channel 7 remaining word count
-
-
-DMA Command Registers
-
-
-0xd0 write Command Register
-0xd0 read Status Register
-0xd2 write Request Register
-0xd2 read -
-0xd4 write Single Mask Register Bit
-0xd4 read -
-0xd6 write Mode Register
-0xd6 read -
-0xd8 write Clear LSB/MSB Flip-Flop
-0xd8 read -
-0xda write Master Clear/Reset
-0xda read Temporary Register (not present in Intel 82374)
-0xdc write Clear Mask Register
-0xdc read -
-0xde write Write All Mask Register Bits
-0xdf read Read All Mask Register Bits (only in Intel 82374)
-
-
-
-
-
-0x80 - 0x9f DMA Page Registers
-
-
-0x87 r/w Channel 0 Low byte (23-16) page Register
-0x83 r/w Channel 1 Low byte (23-16) page Register
-0x81 r/w Channel 2 Low byte (23-16) page Register
-0x82 r/w Channel 3 Low byte (23-16) page Register
-
-0x8b r/w Channel 5 Low byte (23-16) page Register
-0x89 r/w Channel 6 Low byte (23-16) page Register
-0x8a r/w Channel 7 Low byte (23-16) page Register
-0x8f r/w Low byte page Refresh
-
-
-
-
-
-0x400 - 0x4ff 82374 Enhanced DMA Registers
-
-The Intel 82374 EISA System Component (ESC) was introduced in early 1996
-and includes a DMA controller that provides a superset of 8237 functionality
-as well as other PC-compatible core peripheral components in a single
-package. This chip is targeted at both EISA and PCI platforms, and provides
-modern DMA features like scatter-gather, ring buffers as well as direct
-access by the system DMA to all 32 bits of address space.
-
-If these features are used, code should also be included to provide similar
-functionality in the previous 16 years worth of PC-compatible computers.
-For compatibility reasons, some of the 82374 registers must be programmed
-after programming the traditional 8237 registers for each
-transfer. Writing to a traditional 8237 register forces the contents
-of some of the 82374 enhanced registers to zero to provide backward
-software compatibility.
-
-
-0x401 r/w Channel 0 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
-0x403 r/w Channel 1 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
-0x405 r/w Channel 2 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
-0x407 r/w Channel 3 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
-0x4c6 r/w Channel 5 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
-0x4ca r/w Channel 6 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
-0x4ce r/w Channel 7 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
-
-0x487 r/w Channel 0 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
-0x483 r/w Channel 1 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
-0x481 r/w Channel 2 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
-0x482 r/w Channel 3 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
-0x48b r/w Channel 5 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
-0x489 r/w Channel 6 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
-0x48a r/w Channel 6 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
-0x48f r/w High byte page Refresh
-
-0x4e0 r/w Channel 0 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
-0x4e1 r/w Channel 0 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
-0x4e2 r/w Channel 0 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
-0x4e4 r/w Channel 1 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
-0x4e5 r/w Channel 1 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
-0x4e6 r/w Channel 1 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
-0x4e8 r/w Channel 2 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
-0x4e9 r/w Channel 2 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
-0x4ea r/w Channel 2 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
-0x4ec r/w Channel 3 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
-0x4ed r/w Channel 3 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
-0x4ee r/w Channel 3 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
-0x4f4 r/w Channel 5 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
-0x4f5 r/w Channel 5 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
-0x4f6 r/w Channel 5 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
-0x4f8 r/w Channel 6 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
-0x4f9 r/w Channel 6 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
-0x4fa r/w Channel 6 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
-0x4fc r/w Channel 7 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
-0x4fd r/w Channel 7 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
-0x4fe r/w Channel 7 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
-
-0x40a write Channels 0-3 Chaining Mode Register
-0x40a read Channel Interrupt Status Register
-0x4d4 write Channels 4-7 Chaining Mode Register
-0x4d4 read Chaining Mode Status
-0x40c read Chain Buffer Expiration Control Register
-
-0x410 write Channel 0 Scatter-Gather Command Register
-0x411 write Channel 1 Scatter-Gather Command Register
-0x412 write Channel 2 Scatter-Gather Command Register
-0x413 write Channel 3 Scatter-Gather Command Register
-0x415 write Channel 5 Scatter-Gather Command Register
-0x416 write Channel 6 Scatter-Gather Command Register
-0x417 write Channel 7 Scatter-Gather Command Register
-
-0x418 read Channel 0 Scatter-Gather Status Register
-0x419 read Channel 1 Scatter-Gather Status Register
-0x41a read Channel 2 Scatter-Gather Status Register
-0x41b read Channel 3 Scatter-Gather Status Register
-0x41d read Channel 5 Scatter-Gather Status Register
-0x41e read Channel 5 Scatter-Gather Status Register
-0x41f read Channel 7 Scatter-Gather Status Register
-
-0x420-0x423 r/w Channel 0 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
-0x424-0x427 r/w Channel 1 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
-0x428-0x42b r/w Channel 2 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
-0x42c-0x42f r/w Channel 3 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
-0x434-0x437 r/w Channel 5 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
-0x438-0x43b r/w Channel 6 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
-0x43c-0x43f r/w Channel 7 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Appendices
-
-
-
-Obtaining FreeBSD
-
-
-
-CD-ROM Publishers
-
-FreeBSD is available on CD-ROM from Walnut Creek CDROM:
-
-Walnut Creek CDROM
-4041 Pike Lane, Suite F
-Concord CA 94520 USA
-Phone: +1 925 674-0783
-Fax: +1 925 674-0821
-Email: info@cdrom.com
-WWW: http://www.cdrom.com/
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FTP Sites
-
-The official sources for FreeBSD are available via anonymous FTP from:
-
-ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD.
-
-
-
-Additionally, FreeBSD is available via anonymous FTP from the
-following mirror sites. If you choose to obtain FreeBSD via
-anonymous FTP, please try to use a site near you.
-
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-,
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-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-South Africa, backup server for old deltas
-
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.internat.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CTM
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Taiwan/R.O.C, Chiayi
-
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ctm.tw.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CTM
-
-
-
-ftp://ctm2.tw.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CTM
-
-
-
-ftp://ctm3.tw.freebsd.org/pub/freebsd/CTM
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-If you did not find a mirror near to you or the mirror is incomplete,
-try
-FTP search at
-http://ftpsearch.ntnu.no/ftpsearch.
-FTP search is a great free archie server in Trondheim, Norway.
-
-
-
-
-CVSup Sites
-
- servers for FreeBSD are running at
-the following sites:
-
-
-
-Argentina
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.ar.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Australia
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.au.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Brazil
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.br.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Canada
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.ca.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Estonia
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.ee.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Finland
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.fi.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Germany
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.de.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-cvsup2.de.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-cvsup3.de.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Japan
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.jp.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-cvsup2.jp.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Netherlands
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.nl.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Norway
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.no.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Russia
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.ru.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-South Africa
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.za.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-cvsup2.za.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Taiwan
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.tw.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Ukraine
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup2.ua.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-United Kingdom
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.uk.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-USA
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-cvsup2.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-cvsup3.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The export-restricted code for FreeBSD (eBones and secure) is
-available via CVSup at the following international repository.
-Please use this site to get the export-restricted code, if you are
-outside the USA or Canada.
-
-
-
-South Africa
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.internat.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The following CVSup site is especially designed for users. Unlike the other CVSup mirrors, it is kept
-up-to-date by CTM. That means if you CVSup cvs-all with
-release=cvs from this site, you get a version of the
-repository (including the inevitable .ctm_status file)
-which is suitable for being updated using the CTM cvs-cur
-deltas. This allows users who track the entire cvs-all
-tree to go from CVSup to CTM without having to rebuild their
-repository from scratch using a fresh CTM base delta.
-
-Please note that this special feature only works for the
-cvs-all distribution with cvs as the release tag.
-CVSupping any other distribution and/or release will get you the
-specified distribution, but it will not be suitable for CTM updating.
-
-Also please note that, because the current version of CTM does
-not preserve the timestamps of files, the timestamps at this mirror
-site are not the same as those at other mirror sites. Switching
-between this site and other sites is not recommended. It will work
-correctly, but will be somewhat inefficient.
-
-
-
-Germany
-
-
-
-
-
-ctm.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Bibliography
-
-While the manual pages provide the definitive reference
-for individual pieces of the FreeBSD operating system,
-they are notorious for not illustrating how to put the
-pieces together to make the whole operating system run
-smoothly. For this, there is no substitute for a good
-book on UNIX system administration and a good users'
-manual.
-
-
-
-Books & Magazines Specific to FreeBSD
-
-International books & Magazines:
-
-
-
-
-
-Using FreeBSD (in Chinese).
-
-
-
-FreeBSD for PC 98'ers (in Japanese), published by SHUWA
-System Co, LTD. ISBN 4-87966-468-5 C3055 P2900E.
-
-
-
-FreeBSD (in Japanese), published by CUTT.
-ISBN 4-906391-22-2 C3055 P2400E.
-
-
-
-Complete Introduction to FreeBSD (in Japanese),
-published by Shoeisha Co., Ltd. ISBN 4-88135-473-6 P3600E.
-
-
-
-Personal UNIX Starter Kit FreeBSD (in Japanese),
-published by ASCII. ISBN 4-7561-1733-3 P3000E.
-
-
-
-FreeBSD Handbook (Japanese translation),
-published by ASCII. ISBN 4-7561-1580-2 P3800E.
-
-
-
-
-
-English language books & Magazines:
-
-
-
-
-
-The Complete FreeBSD, published by Walnut Creek CDROM.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Users' Guides
-
-
-
-
-
-Computer Systems Research Group, UC Berkeley.
-4.4BSD User's Reference Manual.
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1994.
-ISBN 1-56592-075-9
-
-
-
-Computer Systems Research Group, UC Berkeley.
-4.4BSD User's Supplementary Documents.
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1994.
-ISBN 1-56592-076-7
-
-
-
-UNIX in a Nutshell.
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1990.
-ISBN 093717520X
-
-
-
-Mui, Linda.
-What You Need To Know When You Can't Find Your UNIX
-System Administrator.
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1995.
-ISBN 1-56592-104-6
-
-
-
-Ohio State University has written
-a UNIX Introductory Course which is available online
-in HTML and postscript format.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Administrators' Guides
-
-
-
-
-
-Albitz, Paul and Liu, Cricket. DNS and
-BIND, 2nd Ed.
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1997.
-ISBN 1-56592-236-0
-
-
-
-Computer Systems Research Group, UC Berkeley.
-4.4BSD System Manager's Manual.
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1994.
-ISBN 1-56592-080-5
-
-
-
-Costales, Brian, et al.
-Sendmail, 2nd Ed. O'Reilly &
-Associates, Inc., 1997.
-ISBN 1-56592-222-0
-
-
-
-Frisch, Æleen. Essential System
-Administration, 2nd Ed. O'Reilly &
-Associates, Inc., 1995. ISBN 1-56592-127-5
-
-
-
-Hunt, Craig. TCP/IP Network Administration.
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1992.
-ISBN 0-937175-82-X
-
-
-
-Nemeth, Evi. UNIX System Administration
-Handbook. 2nd ed. Prentice Hall, 1995.
-ISBN 0131510517
-
-
-
-Stern, Hal Managing NFS and NIS
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1991.
-ISBN 0-937175-75-7
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Programmers' Guides
-
-
-
-
-
-Asente, Paul. X Window System
-Toolkit. Digital Press.
-ISBN 1-55558-051-3
-
-
-
-Computer Systems Research Group, UC Berkeley.
-4.4BSD Programmer's Reference Manual.
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1994.
-ISBN 1-56592-078-3
-
-
-
-Computer Systems Research Group, UC Berkeley.
-4.4BSD Programmer's Supplementary Documents.
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1994.
-ISBN 1-56592-079-1
-
-
-
-Ellis, Margaret A. and Stroustrup,
-Bjarne. The Annotated C++ Reference
-Manual. Addison-Wesley, 1990.
-ISBN 0-201-51459-1
-
-
-
-Harbison, Samuel P. and Steele, Guy
-L. Jr. C: A Reference Manual. 4rd ed. Prentice
-Hall, 1995. ISBN 0-13-326224-3
-
-
-
-Kernighan, Brian and Dennis M. Ritchie.
-The C Programming Language..
-PTR Prentice Hall, 1988.
-ISBN 0-13-110362-9
-
-
-
-Lehey, Greg.
-Port UNIX Software.
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1995.
-ISBN 1-56592-126-7
-
-
-
-Plauger, P. J. The Standard C
-Library. Prentice Hall, 1992.
-ISBN 0-13-131509-9
-
-
-
-Stevens, W. Richard. Advanced
-Programming in the UNIX Environment.
-Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1992
-ISBN 0-201-56317-7
-
-
-
-Stevens, W. Richard. UNIX Network
-Programming. PTR Prentice Hall, 1990.
-ISBN 0-13-949876-1
-
-
-
-Wells, Bill. "Writing Serial Drivers for UNIX".
-Dr. Dobb's Journal. 19(15), December
-1994. pp68-71, 97-99.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Operating System Internals
-
-
-
-
-
-Andleigh, Prabhat K. UNIX System Architecture.
-Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1990.
-ISBN 0-13-949843-5
-
-
-
-Jolitz, William. "Porting UNIX to the
-386". Dr. Dobb's Journal. January
-1991-July 1992.
-
-
-
-Leffler, Samuel J., Marshall Kirk McKusick,
-Michael J Karels and John Quarterman The Design and
-Implementation of the 4.3BSD UNIX Operating
-System. Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1989.
-ISBN 0-201-06196-1
-
-
-
-Leffler, Samuel J., Marshall Kirk McKusick,
-The Design and Implementation of the 4.3BSD
-UNIX Operating System: Answer Book.
-Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1991.
-ISBN 0-201-54629-9
-
-
-
-McKusick, Marshall Kirk, Keith Bostic, Michael J Karels,
-and John Quarterman. The Design and
-Implementation of the 4.4BSD Operating
-System. Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1996.
-ISBN 0-201-54979-4
-
-
-
-Stevens, W. Richard. TCP/IP Illustrated,
-Volume 1: The Protocols.
-Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1996.
-ISBN 0-201-63346-9
-
-
-
-Stevens, W. Richard. TCP/IP Illustrated,
-Volume 3: TCP for Transactions, HTTP, NNTP
-and the UNIX Domain Protocols.
-Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1996.
-ISBN 0-201-63495-3
-
-
-
-Vahalia, Uresh. UNIX Internals -- The New Frontiers.
-Prentice Hall, 1996.
-ISBN 0-13-101908-2
-
-
-
-Wright, Gary R. and W. Richard Stevens.
-TCP/IP Illustrated, Volume 2:
-The Implementation.
-Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1995.
-ISBN 0-201-63354-X
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Security Reference
-
-
-
-
-
-Cheswick, William R. and Steven M. Bellovin.
-Firewalls and Internal Security:
-Repelling the Wily Hacker.
-Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1995.
-ISBN 0-201-63357-4
-
-
-
-Garfinkel, Simson and Gene Spafford.
-Practical UNIX Security. 2nd Ed.
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1996.
-ISBN 1-56592-148-8
-
-
-
-Garfinkel, Simson.
-PGP Pretty Good Privacy
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1995.
-ISBN 1-56592-098-8
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Hardware Reference
-
-
-
-
-
-Anderson, Don and Tom Shanley.
-Pentium Processor System Architecture.
-2nd ed. Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1995.
-ISBN 0-201-40992-5
-
-
-
-Ferraro, Richard F. Programmer's Guide
-to the EGA, VGA, and Super VGA Cards.
-3rd ed. Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1995.
-ISBN 0-201-62490-7
-
-
-
-Shanley, Tom. 80486 System
-Architecture. 3rd ed. Reading, Mass. :
-Addison-Wesley, 1995. ISBN
-0-201-40994-1
-
-
-
-Shanley, Tom. ISA System
-Architecture. 3rd ed. Reading, Mass. :
-Addison-Wesley, 1995.
-ISBN 0-201-40996-8
-
-
-
-Shanley, Tom. PCI System
-Architecture. 3rd ed. Reading, Mass. :
-Addison-Wesley, 1995. ISBN
-0-201-40993-3
-
-
-
-Van Gilluwe, Frank. The Undocumented PC.
-Reading, Mass: Addison-Wesley Pub. Co., 1994.
-ISBN 0-201-62277-7
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-UNIX History
-
-
-
-
-
-Lion, John Lion's Commentary on UNIX, 6th Ed.
-With Source Code.
-ITP Media Group, 1996.
-ISBN 1573980137
-
-
-
-Raymond, Eric s. The New Hacker's Dictonary,
-3rd edition. MIT Press, 1996.
-ISBN 0-262-68092-0
-Also known as the
-Jargon File
-
-
-
-Salus, Peter H. A quarter century of UNIX.
-Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, Inc., 1994.
-ISBN 0-201-54777-5
-
-
-
-Simon Garfinkel, Daniel Weise, Steven Strassmann.
-The UNIX-HATERS Handbook.
-IDG Books Worldwide, Inc., 1994.
-ISBN 1-56884-203-1
-
-
-
-Don Libes, Sandy Ressler Life with UNIX - special
-edition. Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1989.
-ISBN 0-13-536657-7
-
-
-
-The BSD family tree. 1997.
-http://www.de.freebsd.org/de/ftp/unix-stammbaum
-or local on a FreeBSD-current machine.
-
-
-
-The BSD Release Announcements collection. 1997.
-http://www.de.FreeBSD.ORG/de/ftp/releases/
-
-
-
-Networked Computer Science Technical Reports Library.
-http://www.ncstrl.org/
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Magazines and Journals
-
-
-
-
-
-The C/C++ Users Journal. R&D Publications
-Inc. ISSN 1075-2838
-
-
-
-Sys Admin - The Journal for UNIX System
-Administrators Miller Freeman, Inc., ISSN 1061-2688
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Resources on the Internet
-
-Contributed by &a.jkh;.
-
-The rapid pace of FreeBSD progress makes print media impractical as a
-means of following the latest developments. Electronic resources are
-the best, if not often the only, way stay informed of the latest advances.
-Since FreeBSD is a volunteer effort, the user community itself also
-generally serves as a `technical support department' of sorts, with
-electronic mail and USENET news being the most effective way of reaching
-that community.
-
-The most important points of contact with the FreeBSD
-user community are outlined below. If you are aware of other
-resources not mentioned here, please send them to the &a.doc;so that they may also be included.
-
-
-
-Mailing lists
-
-Though many of the FreeBSD development members read USENET, we cannot
-always guarantee that we will get to your questions in a timely fashion
-(or at all) if you post them only to one of the comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.*
-groups. By addressing your questions to the appropriate mailing list
-you will reach both us and a concentrated FreeBSD audience, invariably
-assuring a better (or at least faster) response.
-
-The charters for the various lists are given at the bottom of this
-document. Please read the charter before joining or sending
-mail to any list. Most of our list subscribers now receive many hundreds
-of FreeBSD related messages every day, and by setting down charters
-and rules for proper use we are striving to keep the signal-to-noise ratio
-of the lists high. To do less would see the mailing lists ultimately fail
-as an effective communications medium for the project.
-
-Archives are kept for all of the mailing lists and can be searched
-using the FreeBSD World Wide Web server. The keyword searchable archive
-offers an excellent way of finding answers to frequently asked
-questions and should be consulted before posting a question.
-
-
-
-List summary
-
-General lists: The following are general lists which
-anyone is free to join:
-List Purpose
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-freebsd-announce Important events and project milestones
-freebsd-bugs Bug reports
-freebsd-chat Non-technical items related to the FreeBSD community
-freebsd-current Discussion concerning the use of FreeBSD-current
-freebsd-stable Discussion concerning the use of FreeBSD-stable
-freebsd-isp Issues for Internet Service Providers using FreeBSD
-freebsd-jobs FreeBSD employment and consulting opportunities
-freebsd-questions User questions
-
-
-Technical lists: The following lists are for technical discussion.
-You should read the charter for each list carefully before joining or
-sending mail to one as there are firm guidelines for their use and content.
-List Purpose
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-freebsd-afs Porting AFS to FreeBSD
-freebsd-alpha Porting FreeBSD to the Alpha
-freebsd-doc The FreeBSD Documentation project
-freebsd-emulation Emulation of other systems such as Linux/DOS/Windows
-freebsd-fs Filesystems
-freebsd-hackers General technical discussion
-freebsd-hardware General discussion of hardware for running FreeBSD
-freebsd-isdn ISDN developers
-freebsd-java Java developers and people porting JDKs to FreeBSD
-freebsd-mobile Discussions about mobile computing
-freebsd-multimedia Multimedia discussion
-freebsd-platforms Concerning ports to non-Intel architecture platforms
-freebsd-ports Discussion of the ports collection
-freebsd-scsi The SCSI subsystem
-freebsd-security Security issues
-freebsd-smp Design discussions for [A]Symmetric MultiProcessing
-freebsd-sparc Porting FreeBSD to Sparc systems.
-
-
-Limited lists: The following lists require approval from
-core@FreeBSD.ORG to join,
-though anyone is free to send messages to them which fall within the
-scope of their charters. It is also a good idea establish a presence
-in the technical lists before asking to join one of these limited lists.
-List Purpose
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-freebsd-admin Administrative issues
-freebsd-arch Architecture and design discussions
-freebsd-core FreeBSD core team
-freebsd-hubs People running mirror sites (infrastructural support)
-freebsd-install Installation development
-freebsd-security-notifications Security notifications
-freebsd-user-groups User group coordination
-
-
-CVS lists: The following lists are for people interested in
-seeing the log messages for changes to various areas of the source tree.
-They are Read-Only lists and should not have mail sent to them.
-
-
-List name Source area Area Description (source for)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-cvs-CVSROOT /usr/src/[A-Z]* Top level /usr/src file changes
-cvs-all /usr/src All changes to the tree (superset)
-cvs-bin /usr/src/bin System binaries
-cvs-etc /usr/src/etc System files
-cvs-games /usr/src/games Games
-cvs-gnu /usr/src/gnu GPL'd utilities
-cvs-include /usr/src/include Include files
-cvs-kerberosIV /usr/src/kerberosIV Kerberos encryption code
-cvs-lib /usr/src/lib System libraries
-cvs-libexec /usr/src/libexec System binaries
-cvs-ports /usr/ports Ported software
-cvs-sbin /usr/src/sbin System binaries
-cvs-share /usr/src/share System shared files
-cvs-sys /usr/src/sys Kernel
-cvs-usrbin /usr/src/usr.bin Use binaries
-cvs-usrsbin /usr/src/usr.sbin System binaries
-
-
-
-
-
-How to subscribe
-
-All mailing lists live on FreeBSD.ORG, so to post to a
-given list you simply mail to listname@FreeBSD.ORG. It
-will then be redistributed to mailing list members world-wide.
-
-To subscribe to a list, send mail to &a.majordomo; and include
-
-subscribe <listname> [<optional address>]
-
-
-In the body of your message. For example, to subscribe yourself to
-freebsd-announce, you'd do:
-
-% mail majordomo@FreeBSD.ORG
-subscribe freebsd-announce
-^D
-
-
-If you want to subscribe yourself under a different name, or submit a
-subscription request for a local mailing list (note: this is more efficient
-if you have several interested parties at one site, and highly appreciated by
-us!), you would do something like:
-
-% mail majordomo@FreeBSD.ORG
-subscribe freebsd-announce local-announce@somesite.com
-^D
-
-
-Finally, it is also possible to unsubscribe yourself from a list, get a
-list of other list members or see the list of mailing lists again by
-sending other types of control messages to majordomo. For a complete
-list of available commands, do this:
-
-% mail majordomo@FreeBSD.ORG
-help
-^D
-
-
-Again, we would like to request that you keep discussion in the technical mailing
-lists on a technical track. If you are only interested in the "high points"
-then it is suggested that you join freebsd-announce, which is intended only
-for infrequent traffic.
-
-
-
-
-List charters
-
-AllFreeBSD mailing lists have certain basic rules
-which must be adhered to by anyone using them. Failure to comply
-with these guidelines will result in two (2) written warnings from the
-FreeBSD Postmaster,
-after which, on a third offense, the poster will removed from all
-FreeBSD mailing lists and filtered from further posting to them.
-We regret that such rules and measures are necessary at all, but
-today's Internet is a pretty harsh environment, it would seem, and
-many fail to appreciate just how fragile some of its mechanisms are.
-
-Rules of the road:
-
-
-
-The topic of any posting should adhere to the basic charter of the list
-it is posted to, e.g. if the list is about technical issues then your
-posting should contain technical discussion. Ongoing irrelevant chatter
-or flaming only detracts from the value of the mailing list for everyone
-on it and will not be tolerated. For free-form discussion on no
-particular topic, the freebsd-chat mailing list is freely available and should
-be used instead.
-
-
-
-No posting should be made to more than 2 mailing lists, and only
-to 2 when a clear and obvious need to post to both lists exists.
-For most lists, there is already a great deal of subscriber overlap
-and except for the most esoteric mixes (say "-stable & -scsi"), there
-really is no reason to post to more than one list at a time.
-If a message is sent to you in such a way that multiple mailing lists
-appear on the Cc line then the cc line should also be trimmed before
-sending it out again.
-You are still responsible for your own cross-postings, no
-matter who the originator might have been.
-
-
-
-Personal attacks and profanity (in the context of an argument) are
-not allowed, and that includes users and developers alike. Gross
-breaches of netiquette, like excerpting or reposting private mail
-when permission to do so was not and would not be forthcoming,
-are frowned upon but not specifically enforced. However,
-there are also very few cases where such content would fit within the
-charter of a list and it would therefore probably rate a warning
-(or ban) on that basis alone.
-
-
-
-Advertising of non-FreeBSD related products or services is
-strictly prohibited and will result in an immediate ban if it
-is clear that the offender is advertising by spam.
-
-
-
-
-
-Individual list charters:
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-AFS
-
-Andrew File System
-This list is for discussion on porting and using AFS from CMU/Transarc
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-ADMIN
-
-
-Administrative issues
-This list is purely for discussion of freebsd.org related issues
-and to report problems or abuse of project resources. It is a closed
-list, though anyone may report a problem (with our systems!) to it.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-ANNOUNCE
-
-
-Important events / milestones
-This is the mailing list for people interested only in occasional
-announcements of significant freebsd events. This includes
-announcements about snapshots and other releases. It contains
-announcements of new FreeBSD capabilities. It may contain calls
-for volunteers etc. This is a low volume, strictly moderated mailing list.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-ARCH
-
-
-Architecture and design discussions
-This is the mailing list for people discussing FreeBSD architectural
-issues. It is a closed list, and not for general subscription.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-BUGS
-
-
-Bug reports
-This is the mailing list for reporting bugs in FreeBSD
-Whenever possible, bugs should be submitted using the "send-pr(1)"
-command or the WEB interface to it.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-CHAT
-
-
-Non technical items related to the
-FreeBSD community
-This list contains the overflow from the other lists about
-non-technical, social information. It includes discussion about
-whether Jordan looks like a toon ferret or not, whether or not to
-type in capitals, who is drinking too much coffee, where the best
-beer is brewed, who is brewing beer in their basement, and so on.
-Occasional announcements of important events (such as upcoming
-parties, weddings, births, new jobs, etc) can be made to the
-technical lists, but the follow ups should be directed to this
--chat list.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-CORE
-
-
-FreeBSD core team
-This is an internal mailing list for use by the core members.
-Messages can be sent to it when a serious FreeBSD-related matter
-requires arbitration or high-level scrutiny.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-CURRENT
-
-
-Discussions about the use of
-FreeBSD-current This is the mailing list for users
-of freebsd-current. It includes warnings about new features
-coming out in -current that will affect the users, and
-instructions on steps that must be taken to remain -current.
-Anyone running "current" must subscribe to this list.
-This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
-content is expected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-CURRENT-DIGEST
-
-
-Discussions about the use of
-FreeBSD-current This is the digest version of the
-freebsd-current mailing list. The digest consists of all
-messages sent to freebsd-current bundled together and mailed out
-as a single message. The average digest size is about 40kB.
-This list is Read-Only and should not be posted to.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-STABLE
-
-
-Discussions about the use of
-FreeBSD-stable This is the mailing list for users
-of freebsd-stable. It includes warnings about new features
-coming out in -stable that will affect the users, and
-instructions on steps that must be taken to remain -stable.
-Anyone running ``stable'' should subscribe to this list.
-This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
-content is expected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-DOC
-
-
-Documentation project
-This mailing list belongs to the FreeBSD Doc Project and is for
-the discussion of documentation related issues and projects.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-FS
-
-
-Filesystems
-Discussions concerning FreeBSD filesystems.
-This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
-content is expected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-ISDN
-
-
-ISDN Communications
-This is the mailing list for people discussing the development
-of ISDN support for FreeBSD.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-JAVA
-
-
-Java Development
-This is the mailing list for people discussing the development of
-significant Java applications for FreeBSD and the porting and maintenance
-of JDKs.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-HACKERS
-
-
-Technical discussions
-This is a forum for technical discussions related to FreeBSD. This
-is the primary technical mailing list. It
-is for individuals actively working on FreeBSD, to bring up problems
-or discuss alternative solutions. Individuals interested in
-following the technical discussion are also welcome.
-This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
-content is expected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-HACKERS-DIGEST
-
-
-Technical
-discussions This is the digest version of the
-freebsd-hackers mailing list. The digest consists of all
-messages sent to freebsd-hackers bundled together and mailed out
-as a single message. The average digest size is about 40kB.
-This list is Read-Only and should not be posted to.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-HARDWARE
-
-
-General discussion of FreeBSD
-hardware General discussion about the types of
-hardware that FreeBSD runs on, various problems and suggestions
-concerning what to buy or avoid.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-INSTALL
-
-
-Installation discussion
-This mailing list is for discussing FreeBSD installation
-development for the future releases and is closed.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-ISP
-
-
-Issues for Internet Service Providers
-This mailing list is for discussing topics relevant to Internet
-Service Providers (ISPs) using FreeBSD.
-This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
-content is expected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-MULTIMEDIA
-
-
-Multimedia discussions
-This is a forum about multimedia applications using FreeBSD.
-Discussion center around multimedia applications, their installation, their
-development and their support within FreeBSD
-This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
-content is expected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-PLATFORMS
-
-
-Porting to Non-Intel
-platforms Cross-platform freebsd issues, general
-discussion and proposals for non-Intel FreeBSD ports.
-This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
-content is expected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-PORTS
-
-
-Discussion of "ports"
-Discussions concerning FreeBSD's "ports collection" (/usr/ports), proposed
-ports, modifications to ports collection infrastructure and general
-coordination efforts.
-This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
-content is expected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-QUESTIONS
-
-
-User questions
-This is the mailing list for questions about FreeBSD. You should not
-send "how to" questions to the technical lists unless you consider the
-question to be pretty technical.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-QUESTIONS-DIGEST
-
-
-User questions
-This is the digest version of the freebsd-questions mailing list.
-The digest consists of all messages sent to freebsd-questions
-bundled together and mailed out as a single message. The average
-digest size is about 40kB.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-SCSI
-
-
-SCSI subsystem
-This is the mailing list for people working on the scsi subsystem
-for FreeBSD.
-This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
-content is expected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-SECURITY
-
-
-Security issues
-FreeBSD computer security issues (DES, Kerberos, known security holes and
-fixes, etc).
-This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
-content is expected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-SECURITY-NOTIFICATIONS
-
-
-Security Notifications
-Notifications of FreeBSD security problems and fixes. This is not
-a discussion list. The discussion list is FreeBSD-security.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-USER-GROUPS
-
-
-User Group Coordination List
-This is the mailing list for the coordinators from each of the
-local area Users Groups to discuss matters with each other and a
-designated individual from the Core Team. This mail list should
-be limited to meeting synopsis and coordination of projects that span
-User Groups. It is a closed list.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Usenet newsgroups
-
-In addition to two FreeBSD specific newsgroups, there
-are many others in which FreeBSD is discussed or are
-otherwise relevant to FreeBSD users. Keyword searchable archives are available for
-some of these newsgroups from courtesy of Warren Toomey
-<wkt@cs.adfa.oz.au>.
-
-
-
-BSD specific newsgroups
-
-
-
-
-
-comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.announce
-
-
-
-comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.misc
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Other Unix newsgroups of interest
-
-
-
-
-
-comp.unix
-
-
-
-comp.unix.questions
-
-
-
-comp.unix.admin
-
-
-
-comp.unix.programmer
-
-
-
-comp.unix.shell
-
-
-
-comp.unix.user-friendly
-
-
-
-comp.security.unix
-
-
-
-comp.sources.unix
-
-
-
-comp.unix.advocacy
-
-
-
-comp.unix.misc
-
-
-
-comp.os.386bsd.announc
-
-
-
-comp.os.386bsd.app
-
-
-
-comp.os.386bsd.bugs
-
-
-
-comp.os.386bsd.development
-
-
-
-comp.os.386bsd.misc
-
-
-
-comp.os.386bsd.questions
-
-
-
-comp.bugs.4bsd
-
-
-
-comp.bugs.4bsd.ucb-fixes
-
-
-
-comp.unix.bsd
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-X Window System
-
-
-
-
-
-comp.windows.x.i386unix
-
-
-
-comp.windows.x
-
-
-
-comp.windows.x.apps
-
-
-
-comp.windows.x.announce
-
-
-
-comp.windows.x.intrinsics
-
-
-
-comp.windows.x.motif
-
-
-
-comp.windows.x.pex
-
-
-
-comp.emulators.ms-windows.wine
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-World Wide Web servers
-
-
-
-
-
-http://www.FreeBSD.ORG/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.au.freebsd.org/FreeBSD/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.br.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.ca.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://sunsite.mff.cuni.cz/www.freebsd.org/.
-
-
-
-http://sunsite.auc.dk/www.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.ee.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.fi.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.de.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.ie.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.jp.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.kr.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.nl.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.pt.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.se.freebsd.org/www.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.tw.freebsd.org/freebsd.html .
-
-
-
-http://www2.ua.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FreeBSD Project Staff
-
-The FreeBSD Project is managed and operated by the following
-groups of people:
-
-
-
-The FreeBSD Core Team
-
-The FreeBSD core team constitutes the project's ``Board of Directors'',
-responsible for deciding the project's overall goals and direction
-as well as managing of
-the FreeBSD project landscape.
-
-(in alphabetical order by last name):
-
-
-
-
-
-&a.asami;
-
-
-
-&a.jmb;
-
-
-
-&a.ache;
-
-
-
-&a.dyson;
-
-
-
-&a.bde;
-
-
-
-&a.gibbs;
-
-
-
-&a.davidg;
-
-
-
-&a.jkh;
-
-
-
-&a.phk;
-
-
-
-&a.rich;
-
-
-
-&a.gpalmer;
-
-
-
-&a.jdp;
-
-
-
-&a.guido;
-
-
-
-&a.sos;
-
-
-
-&a.peter;
-
-
-
-&a.wollman;
-
-
-
-&a.joerg;
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The FreeBSD Developers
-
-These are the people who have commit privileges and do the engineering
-work on the FreeBSD source tree. All core team members and most
-FreeBSD Documentation project personnel are also developers.
-
-
-
-
-
-&a.mbarkah;
-
-
-
-&a.stb;
-
-
-
-&a.jb;
-
-
-
-&a.torstenb;
-
-
-
-&a.danny;
-
-
-
-&a.charnier;
-
-
-
-&a.kjc;
-
-
-
-&a.gclarkii;
-
-
-
-&a.cracauer;
-
-
-
-&a.adam;
-
-
-
-&a.dufault;
-
-
-
-&a.uhclem;
-
-
-
-&a.tegge;
-
-
-
-&a.eivind;
-
-
-
-&a.julian;
-
-
-
-&a.rse;
-
-
-
-&a.se;
-
-
-
-&a.sef;
-
-
-
-&a.fenner;
-
-
-
-&a.jfieber;
-
-
-
-&a.jfitz;
-
-
-
-&a.lars;
-
-
-
-&a.scrappy;
-
-
-
-&a.tg;
-
-
-
-&a.brandon;
-
-
-
-&a.graichen;
-
-
-
-&a.jgreco;
-
-
-
-&a.rgrimes;
-
-
-
-&a.jmg;
-
-
-
-&a.hanai;
-
-
-
-&a.ahasty;
-
-
-
-&a.jhay;
-
-
-
-&a.helbig;
-
-
-
-&a.erich;
-
-
-
-&a.hsu;
-
-
-
-&a.itojun;
-
-
-
-&a.ugen;
-
-
-
-&a.gj;
-
-
-
-&a.nsj;
-
-
-
-&a.ljo;
-
-
-
-&a.kato;
-
-
-
-&a.andreas;
-
-
-
-&a.imp;
-
-
-
-&a.smace;
-
-
-
-&a.mckay;
-
-
-
-&a.jlemon;
-
-
-
-&a.tedm;
-
-
-
-&a.amurai;
-
-
-
-&a.markm;
-
-
-
-&a.max;
-
-
-
-&a.alex;
-
-
-
-&a.davidn;
-
-
-
-&a.obrien;
-
-
-
-&a.fsmp;
-
-
-
-&a.smpatel;
-
-
-
-&a.wpaul;
-
-
-
-&a.jmacd;
-
-
-
-&a.steve;
-
-
-
-&a.mpp;
-
-
-
-&a.dfr;
-
-
-
-&a.jraynard;
-
-
-
-&a.darrenr;
-
-
-
-&a.csgr;
-
-
-
-&a.martin;
-
-
-
-&a.paul;
-
-
-
-&a.roberto;
-
-
-
-&a.chuckr;
-
-
-
-&a.dima;
-
-
-
-&a.wosch;
-
-
-
-&a.ats;
-
-
-
-&a.jseger;
-
-
-
-&a.vanilla;
-
-
-
-&a.msmith;
-
-
-
-&a.brian;
-
-
-
-&a.stark;
-
-
-
-&a.karl;
-
-
-
-&a.cwt;
-
-
-
-&a.pst;
-
-
-
-&a.hoek;
-
-
-
-&a.swallace;
-
-
-
-&a.nate;
-
-
-
-&a.yokota;
-
-
-
-&a.jmz;
-
-
-
-&a.hosokawa;
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The FreeBSD Documentation Project
-
-
-The FreeBSD Documentation Project is responsible for a
-number of different services, each service being run by an
-individual and his deputies (if any):
-
-
-
-Documentation Project Manager
-
-&a.jfieber;
-
-
-
-
-Webmaster
-
-
-&a.mbarkah;
-
-Deputy: &a.paul;
-
-
-
-
-Handbook & FAQ Editor
-
-
-&a.faq;
-
-
-
-
-Build Engineer
-
-
-&a.paul;
-
-Deputy: &a.dave;
-
-
-
-
-Mirror Manager
-
-
-&a.ulf;
-
-Deputy: &a.john;
-
-
-
-
-News Editor
-
-
-&a.nsj;
-
-Deputy: &a.john;
-
-
-
-
-Gallery and Commercial Editor
-
-
-&a.nsj;
-
-Deputy: &a.cawimm;
-
-
-
-
-Style Police & Art Director
-
-
-&a.dave;
-
-Deputy: &a.opsys;
-
-
-
-
-Database Engineer
-
-
-&a.mayo;
-
-Deputy: &a.cracauer;
-
-
-
-
-CGI Engineer
-
-
-&a.cracauer;
-
-Deputy: &a.stb;
-
-
-
-
-Bottle Washing
-
-
-&a.nsj;
-
-Drying plates: &a.nik;
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Who Is Responsible for What
-
-
-
-Principal Architect
-
-&a.davidg;
-
-
-
-
-Documentation Project Manager
-
-
-&a.jfieber;
-
-
-
-
-Internationalization
-
-
-&a.ache;
-
-
-
-
-Networking
-
-
-&a.wollman;
-
-
-
-
-Postmaster
-
-
-&a.jmb;
-
-
-
-
-Release Coordinator
-
-
-&a.jkh;
-
-
-
-
-Public Relations & Corporate Liaison
-
-
-&a.jkh;
-
-
-
-
-Security Officer
-
-
-&a.guido;
-
-
-
-
-Source Repository Managers
-
-
-Principal: &a.peter;
-Assistant: &a.jdp;
-International (Crypto): &a.markm;
-
-
-
-
-Ports Manager
-
-
-&a.asami;
-
-
-
-
-XFree86 Project, Inc. Liaison
-
-
-&a.rich;
-
-
-
-
-Usenet Support
-
-
-&a.joerg;
-
-
-
-
-GNATS Administrator
-
-
-&a.steve;
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-PGP keys
-
- In case you need to verify a signature or send encrypted
-email to one of the officers or core team members a
-number of keys are provided here for your convenience.
-
-
-
-Officers
-
-
-
-FreeBSD Security Officer <security-officer@freebsd.org>
-
-
-
-
-FreeBSD Security Officer <security-officer@freebsd.org>
-Fingerprint = 41 08 4E BB DB 41 60 71 F9 E5 0E 98 73 AF 3F 11
-
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-Rich Murphey <rich@FreeBSD.org>
-fingerprint = AF A0 60 C4 84 D6 0C 73 D1 EF C0 E9 9D 21 DB E4
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-Guido van Rooij <guido@gvr.win.tue.nl>
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-&a.peter;
-
-
-
-Peter Wemm <peter@FreeBSD.org>
- aka <peter@spinner.dialix.com>
- aka <peter@haywire.dialix.com>
- aka <peter@perth.dialix.oz.au>
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-&a.joerg;
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-
-
-Type Bits/KeyID Date User ID
-pub 1024/76A3F7B1 1996/04/27 Joerg Wunsch <joerg_wunsch@uriah.heep.sax.de>
- Key fingerprint = DC 47 E6 E4 FF A6 E9 8F 93 21 E0 7D F9 12 D6 4E
- Joerg Wunsch <joerg_wunsch@interface-business.de>
- Joerg Wunsch <j@uriah.heep.sax.de>
- Joerg Wunsch <j@interface-business.de>
-
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-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
+
+
+
+
+
+ If you don't have a CDROM distribution then simply download the installation boot disk image file to your hard
+ drive, being sure to tell your browser to
+ save rather than display the file.
+ Note: This disk image can only be used with
+ 1.44 megabyte 3.5 inch floppy disks.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Make the installation boot disk from the image file:
+
+
+
+
+
+ If you are using MS-DOS then download
+ fdimage.exe or get it from tools\fdimage.exe
+ on the CDROM and then run it like so:
+
+ E:\> tools\fdimage floppies\boot.flp a:
+
+ The fdimage
+ program will format the A: drive and then copy the
+ boot.flp image onto it (assuming that you're at the top
+ level of a FreeBSD distribution and the floppy images
+ live in the floppies subdirectory, as is typically the case).
+
+
+
+
+
+ If you are using a UNIX system to create the floppy image:
+
+ % dd if=boot.flp of=disk_device
+
+
+ where disk_device is the /dev
+ entry for the floppy drive. On FreeBSD systems, this
+ is /dev/rfd0 for the A: drive and
+ /dev/rfd1 for the B: drive.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ With the installation disk in the A: drive, reboot your
+ computer. You should get a boot prompt something like this:
+
+ >> FreeBSD BOOT ...
+ Usage: [[[0:][wd](0,a)]/kernel][-abcCdhrsv]
+ Use 1:sd(0,a)kernel to boot sd0 if it is BIOS drive 1
+ Use ? for file list or press Enter for defaults
+ Boot:
+
+
+ If you do not type anything, FreeBSD will automatically boot
+ with its default configuration after a delay of about
+ five seconds. As FreeBSD boots, it probes your computer
+ to determine what hardware is installed. The results of
+ this probing is displayed on the screen.
+
+
+
+
+
+ When the booting process is finished, The main FreeBSD
+ installation menu will be displayed.
+
+
+
+
+
+ If something goes wrong...
+
+ Due to limitations of the PC architecture, it is
+ impossible for probing to be 100 percent reliable. In the event
+ that your hardware is incorrectly identified, or that the
+ probing causes your computer to lock up, first check the
+ section of this installation guide to be
+ sure that your hardware is indeed supported by FreeBSD.
+
+ If your hardware is supported, reset the computer and when
+ the Boot: prompt comes up, type . This puts
+ FreeBSD into a configuration mode where you can supply
+ hints about your hardware. The FreeBSD kernel on the
+ installation disk is configured assuming that most hardware
+ devices are in their factory default configuration in terms
+ of IRQs, IO addresses and DMA channels. If your hardware
+ has been reconfigured, you will most likely need to use the
+ option at boot to tell FreeBSD where things are.
+
+ It is also possible that a probe for a device not present
+ will cause a later probe for another device that is present
+ to fail. In that case, the probes for the conflicting
+ driver(s) should be disabled.
+
+ In the configuration mode, you can:
+
+
+
+
+
+ List the device drivers installed in the kernel.
+
+
+
+ Disable device drivers for hardware not present in your
+ system.
+
+
+
+ Change the IRQ, DRQ, and IO port addresses used by a
+ device driver.
+
+
+
+
+
+ While at the config> prompt, type
+ help for more information on the available
+ commands. After adjusting the kernel to match how you have
+ your hardware configured, type quit at the
+ config> prompt to continue booting with the new
+ settings.
+
+ After FreeBSD has been installed, changes made in the
+ configuration mode will be permanent so you do not have
+ to reconfigure every time you boot. Even so, it is likely
+ that you will want to build a custom kernel to optimize the
+ performance of your system. See for more information on
+ creating custom kernels.
+
+
+
+ Supported Configurations
+
+ FreeBSD currently runs on a wide variety of ISA, VLB,
+ EISA and PCI bus based PC's, ranging from 386sx to
+ Pentium class machines (though the 386sx is not
+ recommended). Support for generic IDE or ESDI drive
+ configurations, various SCSI controller, network and
+ serial cards is also provided.
+
+ A minimum of four megabytes of RAM is required to run FreeBSD.
+ To run the X Window System, eight megabytes of RAM is the
+ recommended minimum.
+
+ Following is a list of all disk controllers and Ethernet
+ cards currently known to work with FreeBSD. Other
+ configurations may very well work, and we have simply not
+ received any indication of this.
+
+
+
+ Disk Controllers
+
+
+
+
+
+ WD1003 (any generic MFM/RLL)
+
+
+
+ WD1007 (any generic IDE/ESDI)
+
+
+
+ IDE
+
+
+
+ ATA
+
+
+
+
+ Adaptec 1505 ISA SCSI controller
+
+
+
+ Adaptec 152x series ISA SCSI controllers
+
+
+
+ Adaptec 1535 ISA SCSI controllers
+
+
+
+ Adaptec 154x series ISA SCSI controllers
+
+
+
+ Adaptec 174x series EISA SCSI controller in
+ standard and enhanced mode.
+
+
+
+ Adaptec 274x/284x/2940/2940U/3940
+ (Narrow/Wide/Twin)
+ series EISA/VLB/PCI SCSI controllers
+
+
+
+ Adaptec AIC7850 on-board SCSI controllers
+
+
+
+ Adaptec
+ AIC-6360 based boards,
+ which includes the AHA-152x and SoundBlaster SCSI
+ cards.
+
+ Note: You cannot boot from the
+ SoundBlaster cards as they have no on-board BIOS,
+ which is necessary for mapping the boot device into
+ the system BIOS I/O vectors. They are perfectly
+ usable for external tapes, CDROMs, etc, however.
+ The same goes for any other AIC-6x60 based card
+ without a boot ROM. Some systems DO have a boot
+ ROM, which is generally indicated by some sort of
+ message when the system is first powered up or
+ reset. Check your system/board documentation for
+ more details.
+
+
+
+
+ Buslogic 545S & 545c
+ Note: that Buslogic was formerly known as "Bustek".
+
+
+
+ Buslogic 445S/445c VLB SCSI controller
+
+
+
+ Buslogic 742A/747S/747c EISA SCSI controller.
+
+
+
+ Buslogic 946c PCI SCSI controller
+
+
+
+ Buslogic 956c PCI SCSI controller
+
+
+
+
+ NCR 53C810/53C815/53C825/53C860/53C875 PCI SCSI controller.
+
+
+
+ NCR5380/NCR53400 (``ProAudio Spectrum'') SCSI controller.
+
+
+
+
+ DTC 3290 EISA SCSI controller in 1542 emulation mode.
+
+
+
+
+ UltraStor 14F/24F/34F SCSI controllers.
+
+
+
+
+ Seagate ST01/02 SCSI controllers.
+
+
+
+
+ Future Domain 8xx/950 series SCSI controllers.
+
+
+
+
+ WD7000 SCSI controllers.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ With all supported SCSI controllers, full support is
+ provided for SCSI-I & SCSI-II peripherals,
+ including Disks, tape drives (including DAT) and CD ROM
+ drives.
+
+ The following CD-ROM type systems are supported at this
+ time:
+
+
+
+
+
+ SoundBlaster SCSI and ProAudio Spectrum SCSI (cd)
+
+
+
+ Mitsumi (all models) proprietary interface (mcd)
+
+
+
+ Matsushita/Panasonic (Creative)
+ CR-562/CR-563 proprietary interface (matcd)
+
+
+
+ Sony proprietary interface (scd)
+
+
+
+ ATAPI IDE interface
+ (experimental and should be considered ALPHA quality!)
+ (wcd)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Ethernet cards
+
+
+
+
+
+ Allied-Telesis AT1700 and RE2000 cards
+
+
+
+
+ SMC Elite 16 WD8013 Ethernet interface, and
+ most other WD8003E, WD8003EBT, WD8003W, WD8013W,
+ WD8003S, WD8003SBT and WD8013EBT based clones. SMC
+ Elite Ultra and 9432TX based cards are also supported.
+
+
+
+
+ DEC EtherWORKS III NICs (DE203, DE204, and DE205)
+
+
+
+ DEC EtherWORKS II NICs (DE200, DE201, DE202, and DE422)
+
+
+
+ DEC DC21040/DC21041/DC21140 based NICs:
+
+
+
+ ASUS PCI-L101-TB
+
+
+
+ Accton ENI1203
+
+
+
+ Cogent EM960PCI
+
+
+
+ Compex CPXPCI/32C
+
+
+
+ D-Link DE-530
+
+
+
+ DEC DE435
+
+
+
+ Danpex EN-9400P3
+
+
+
+ JCIS Condor JC1260
+
+
+
+ Kingston KNE100TX
+
+
+
+ Linksys EtherPCI
+
+
+
+ Mylex LNP101
+
+
+
+ SMC EtherPower 10/100 (Model 9332)
+
+
+
+ SMC EtherPower (Model 8432)
+
+
+
+ SMC EtherPower (2)
+
+
+
+ Zynx ZX314
+
+
+
+ Zynx ZX342
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ DEC FDDI (DEFPA/DEFEA) NICs
+
+
+
+
+ Fujitsu FMV-181 and FMV-182
+
+
+
+
+ Fujitsu MB86960A/MB86965A
+
+
+
+
+ Intel EtherExpress
+
+
+
+
+ Intel EtherExpress Pro/100B 100Mbit.
+
+
+
+
+ Isolan AT 4141-0 (16 bit)
+
+
+
+ Isolink 4110 (8 bit)
+
+
+
+
+ Lucent WaveLAN wireless networking interface.
+
+
+
+
+ Novell NE1000, NE2000, and NE2100 ethernet interface.
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com 3C501 cards
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com 3C503 Etherlink II
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com 3c505 Etherlink/+
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com 3C507 Etherlink 16/TP
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com 3C509, 3C579, 3C589 (PCMCIA) Etherlink III
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com 3C590, 3C595 Etherlink III
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com 3C90x cards.
+
+
+
+
+ HP PC Lan Plus (27247B and 27252A)
+
+
+
+
+ Toshiba ethernet cards
+
+
+
+
+ PCMCIA ethernet cards from IBM and National
+ Semiconductor are also supported.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Note: FreeBSD does not currently support
+ PnP (plug-n-play) features present on some ethernet
+ cards. If your card has PnP and is giving you problems,
+ try disabling its PnP features.
+
+
+
+
+ Miscellaneous devices
+
+
+
+
+
+ AST 4 port serial card using shared IRQ.
+
+
+
+
+ ARNET 8 port serial card using shared IRQ.
+
+
+
+
+ BOCA IOAT66 6 port serial card using shared IRQ.
+
+
+
+
+ BOCA 2016 16 port serial card using shared IRQ.
+
+
+
+
+ Cyclades Cyclom-y Serial Board.
+
+
+
+
+ STB 4 port card using shared IRQ.
+
+
+
+
+ SDL Communications Riscom/8 Serial Board.
+
+
+
+
+ SDL Communications RISCom/N2 and N2pci sync serial cards.
+
+
+
+
+ Digiboard Sync/570i high-speed sync serial card.
+
+
+
+
+ Decision-Computer Intl. "Eight-Serial" 8 port serial cards
+ using shared IRQ.
+
+
+
+
+ Adlib, SoundBlaster, SoundBlaster Pro,
+ ProAudioSpectrum, Gravis UltraSound, Gravis UltraSound MAX
+ and Roland MPU-401 sound cards.
+
+
+
+
+ Matrox Meteor video frame grabber.
+
+
+
+
+ Creative Labs Video spigot frame grabber.
+
+
+
+
+ Omnimedia Talisman frame grabber.
+
+
+
+
+ Brooktree BT848 chip based frame grabbers.
+
+
+
+
+ X-10 power controllers.
+
+
+
+
+ PC joystick and speaker.
+
+
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD does not currently support IBM's microchannel (MCA) bus.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Preparing for the Installation
+
+ There are a number of different methods by which FreeBSD
+ can be installed. The following describes what
+ preparation needs to be done for each type.
+
+
+
+ Before installing from CDROM
+
+ If your CDROM is of an unsupported type, then please
+ skip to .
+
+ There is not a lot of preparatory work that needs to be done to
+ successfully install from one of Walnut Creek's FreeBSD CDROMs (other
+ CDROM distributions may work as well, though we cannot say for certain
+ as we have no hand or say in how they are created). You can either
+ boot into the CD installation directly from DOS using Walnut Creek's
+ supplied ``install.bat'' batch file or you can make a boot floppy with
+ the ``makeflp.bat'' command. [NOTE: If you are running
+ FreeBSD 2.1-RELEASE and have an IDE CDROM, use the
+ inst_ide.bat or atapiflp.bat batch files instead].
+
+ For the easiest interface of all (from DOS), type
+ ``view''. This will bring up a DOS menu utility that
+ leads you through all the available options.
+
+ If you are creating the boot floppy from a UNIX machine,
+ see for examples. of how to create the boot floppy.
+
+ Once you have booted from DOS or floppy, you should then
+ be able to select CDROM as the media type in the Media
+ menu and load the entire distribution from CDROM. No
+ other types of installation media should be required.
+
+ After your system is fully installed and you have rebooted
+ from the hard disk, you can mount the CDROM at any time by
+ typing: mount /cdrom
+
+ Before removing the CD again, also note that it is necessary to first
+ type: umount /cdrom. Do not just remove it from the drive!
+
+
+
+ Special note: Before invoking the
+ installation, be sure that the CDROM is in the drive
+ so that the install probe can find it. This is also
+ true if you wish the CDROM to be added to the default
+ system configuration automatically during the install
+ (whether or not you actually use it as the
+ installation media).
+
+
+
+ Finally, if you would like people to be able to FTP
+ install FreeBSD directly from the CDROM in your
+ machine, you will find it quite easy. After the machine
+ is fully installed, you simply need to add the
+ following line to the password file (using the vipw
+ command):
+
+
+
+ ftp:*:99:99::0:0:FTP:/cdrom:/nonexistent
+
+
+
+ Anyone with network connectivity to your machine (and permission
+ to log into it) can now chose a Media type of FTP and type
+ in: ftp://your machine after picking ``Other''
+ in the ftp sites menu.
+
+
+
+
+ Before installing from Floppy
+
+ If you must install from floppy disks, either due to
+ unsupported hardware or simply because you enjoy doing
+ things the hard way, you must first prepare some
+ floppies for the install.
+
+ You will need, at minimum, as many 1.44MB or 1.2MB floppies as
+ it takes to hold all files in the bin (binary distribution)
+ directory. If you are preparing these floppies under DOS, then
+ THESE floppies *must* be formatted using the MS-DOS FORMAT
+ command. If you are using Windows, use the Windows File
+ Manager format command.
+
+ Do not trust Factory Preformatted floppies! Format
+ them again yourself, just to make sure. Many problems
+ reported by our users in the past have resulted from the use
+ of improperly formatted media, which is why I am taking such
+ special care to mention it here!
+
+ If you are creating the floppies from another FreeBSD machine,
+ a format is still not a bad idea though you do not need to put
+ a DOS filesystem on each floppy. You can use the `disklabel'
+ and `newfs' commands to put a UFS filesystem on them instead,
+ as the following sequence of commands (for a 3.5" 1.44MB floppy
+ disk) illustrates:
+
+
+
+ fdformat -f 1440 fd0.1440
+ disklabel -w -r fd0.1440 floppy3
+ newfs -t 2 -u 18 -l 1 -i 65536 /dev/rfd0
+
+ (Use "fd0.1200" and "floppy5" for 5.25" 1.2MB disks).
+
+
+
+ Then you can mount and write to them like any other file
+ system.
+
+ After you have formatted the floppies, you will need to copy
+ the files onto them. The distribution files are split into
+ chunks conveniently sized so that 5 of them will fit on a
+ conventional 1.44MB floppy. Go through all your floppies,
+ packing as many files as will fit on each one, until you have
+ got all the distributions you want packed up in this fashion.
+ Each distribution should go into a subdirectory on the
+ floppy, e.g.: a:\bin\bin.aa,
+ a:\bin\bin.ab, and so on.
+
+ Once you come to the Media screen of the install,
+ select ``Floppy'' and you will be prompted for the rest.
+
+
+
+
+ Before installing from a MS-DOS partition
+
+ To prepare for installation from an MS-DOS partition,
+ copy the files from the distribution into a directory
+ called C:\FREEBSD. The directory tree structure
+ of the CDROM must be partially reproduced within this directory
+ so we suggest using the DOS xcopy
+ command. For example, to prepare for a minimal installation of
+ FreeBSD:
+
+ C> MD C:\FREEBSD
+ C> XCOPY /S E:\BIN C:\FREEBSD\BIN\
+ C> XCOPY /S E:\MANPAGES C:\FREEBSD\MANPAGES\
+
+
+ assuming that C: is where you have free space
+ and E: is where your CDROM is mounted.
+
+ For as many `DISTS' you wish to install from MS-DOS
+ (and you have free space for), install each one under
+ C:\FREEBSD - the BIN dist is only the
+ minimal requirement.
+
+
+
+
+ Before installing from QIC/SCSI Tape
+
+ Installing from tape is probably the easiest method,
+ short of an on-line install using FTP or a CDROM
+ install. The installation program expects the files to
+ be simply tar'ed onto the tape, so after getting all of
+ the files for distribution you are interested in, simply
+ tar them onto the tape with a command like:
+
+ cd /freebsd/distdir
+ tar cvf /dev/rwt0 (or /dev/rst0) dist1 .. dist2
+
+
+
+ When you go to do the installation, you should also
+ make sure that you leave enough room in some temporary
+ directory (which you will be allowed to choose) to
+ accommodate the full contents of the tape you have
+ created. Due to the non-random access nature of tapes,
+ this method of installation requires quite a bit of
+ temporary storage. You should expect to require as
+ much temporary storage as you have stuff written on
+ tape.
+
+
+
+ Note: When going to do the
+ installation, the tape must be in the drive
+ before booting from the boot floppy. The
+ installation probe may otherwise fail to find it.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Before installing over a network
+
+ You can do network installations over 3 types of
+ communications links:
+
+ Serial port
+
+ SLIP or PPP
+
+
+
+
+ Parallel port
+
+
+ PLIP (laplink cable)
+
+
+
+
+ Ethernet
+
+
+ A
+ standard ethernet controller (includes some PCMCIA).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ SLIP support is rather primitive, and limited primarily
+ to hard-wired links, such as a serial cable running
+ between a laptop computer and another computer. The
+ link should be hard-wired as the SLIP installation
+ does not currently offer a dialing capability; that
+ facility is provided with the PPP utility, which should
+ be used in preference to SLIP whenever possible.
+
+ If you are using a modem, then PPP is almost certainly
+ your only choice. Make sure that you have your service
+ provider's information handy as you will need to know it
+ fairly soon in the installation process. You will need
+ to know how to dial your ISP using the ``AT commands''
+ specific to your modem, as the PPP dialer provides only a
+ very simple terminal emulator. If you're using PAP or
+ CHAP, you'll need to type the necessary ``set authname''
+ and ``set authkey'' commands before typing ``term''.
+ Refer to the user-ppp
+ and FAQ entries
+ for further information. If you have problems, logging can
+ be directed to the screen using the command set log
+ local ....
+
+ If a hard-wired connection to another FreeBSD (2.0R or
+ later) machine is available, you might also consider
+ installing over a ``laplink'' parallel port cable. The
+ data rate over the parallel port is much higher than
+ what is typically possible over a serial line (up to
+ 50k/sec), thus resulting in a quicker installation.
+
+ Finally, for the fastest possible network installation,
+ an ethernet adaptor is always a good choice! FreeBSD
+ supports most common PC ethernet cards, a table of
+ supported cards (and their required settings) is
+ provided in . If you are using one of the supported
+ PCMCIA ethernet cards, also be sure that it is plugged
+ in before the laptop is powered on! FreeBSD
+ does not, unfortunately, currently support hot
+ insertion of PCMCIA cards during installation.
+
+ You will also need to know your IP address on the
+ network, the netmask value for your address class,
+ and the name of your machine. Your system
+ administrator can tell you which values to use for your
+ particular network setup. If you will be referring to
+ other hosts by name rather than IP address, you will also
+ need a name server and possibly the address of a
+ gateway (if you are using PPP, it is your provider's IP
+ address) to use in talking to it. If you do not know
+ the answers to all or most of these questions, then you
+ should really probably talk to your system
+ administrator first before trying this type of
+ installation.
+
+ Once you have a network link of some sort working, the
+ installation can continue over NFS or FTP.
+
+
+
+ Preparing for NFS installation
+
+ NFS installation is fairly straight-forward: Simply
+ copy the FreeBSD distribution files you want onto a
+ server somewhere and then point the NFS media
+ selection at it.
+
+ If this server supports only ``privileged port'' access
+ (as is generally the default for Sun workstations),
+ you will need to set this option in the Options menu
+ before installation can proceed.
+
+ If you have a poor quality ethernet card which
+ suffers from very slow transfer rates, you may also
+ wish to toggle the appropriate Options flag.
+
+ In order for NFS installation to work, the server
+ must support subdir mounts, e.g., if your FreeBSD
+ &rel.current; distribution directory lives on:
+ ziggy:/usr/archive/stuff/FreeBSD Then ziggy will have
+ to allow the direct mounting of
+ /usr/archive/stuff/FreeBSD, not just /usr or
+ /usr/archive/stuff.
+
+ In FreeBSD's /etc/exports file, this is controlled by
+ the ``'' option. Other NFS servers may have
+ different conventions. If you are getting
+ `Permission Denied' messages from the server then
+ it is likely that you do not have this enabled
+ properly.
+
+
+
+
+ Preparing for FTP Installation
+
+ FTP installation may be done from any mirror site
+ containing a reasonably up-to-date version of FreeBSD
+ &rel.current;. A full menu of reasonable choices from almost
+ anywhere in the world is provided by the FTP site
+ menu.
+
+ If you are installing from some other FTP site not
+ listed in this menu, or you are having troubles
+ getting your name server configured properly, you can
+ also specify your own URL by selecting the ``Other''
+ choice in that menu. A URL can also be a direct IP
+ address, so the following would work in the absence
+ of a name server:
+
+
+
+ ftp://165.113.121.81/pub/FreeBSD/&rel.current;-RELEASE
+
+
+
+ There are two FTP installation modes you can use:
+
+
+
+ FTP Active
+
+ For all FTP transfers, use ``Active'' mode. This
+ will not work through firewalls, but will often
+ work with older ftp servers that do not support
+ passive mode. If your connection hangs with
+ passive mode (the default), try active!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FTP Passive
+
+
+ For all FTP transfers, use ``Passive'' mode. This
+ allows the user to pass through firewalls that do
+ not allow incoming connections on random port
+ addresses.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Note: Active and passive modes are
+ not the same as a `proxy' connection, where a proxy
+ FTP server is listening and forwarding FTP requests!
+
+
+
+ For a proxy FTP server, you should usually give name of
+ the server you really want as a part of the username,
+ after an @-sign. The proxy server then 'fakes' the real
+ server. An example: Say you want to install from
+ ftp.freebsd.org, using the proxy FTP server foo.bar.com,
+ listening on port 1234.
+
+ In this case, you go to the options menu, set the FTP
+ username to ftp@ftp.freebsd.org, and the password to your
+ e-mail address. As your installation media, you specify
+ FTP (or passive FTP, if the proxy support it), and the URL
+
+ ftp://foo.bar.com:1234/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+ /pub/FreeBSD from ftp.freebsd.org is proxied under
+ foo.bar.com, allowing you to install from _that_ machine
+ (which fetch the files from ftp.freebsd.org as your
+ installation requests them).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Installing FreeBSD
+
+ Once you have taken note of the appropriate
+ preinstallation steps, you should be able to install
+ FreeBSD without any further trouble.
+
+ Should this not be true, then you may wish to go back and
+ re-read the relevant preparation section above
+ for the installation media type you are trying to use,
+ perhaps there is a helpful hint there that you missed the
+ first time? If you are having hardware trouble, or
+ FreeBSD refuses to boot at all, read the Hardware Guide
+ provided on the boot floppy for a list of possible
+ solutions.
+
+ The FreeBSD boot floppy contains all the on-line
+ documentation you should need to be able to navigate
+ through an installation and if it does not then we would
+ like to know what you found most confusing. Send your
+ comments to the &a.doc;.
+ It is the objective of the
+ FreeBSD installation program (sysinstall) to be
+ self-documenting enough that painful ``step-by-step''
+ guides are no longer necessary. It may take us a little
+ while to reach that objective, but that is the objective!
+
+ Meanwhile, you may also find the following ``typical
+ installation sequence'' to be helpful:
+
+
+
+
+
+ Boot the boot floppy. After a boot sequence
+ which can take anywhere from 30 seconds to 3
+ minutes, depending on your hardware, you should be
+ presented with a menu of initial choices. If the
+ floppy does not boot at all, or the boot hangs at some
+ stage, go read the Q&A section of the Hardware Guide
+ for possible causes.
+
+
+
+
+ Press F1. You should see some basic usage
+ instructions on the menu system and general
+ navigation. If you have not used this menu system
+ before then PLEASE read this thoroughly!
+
+
+
+
+ Select the Options item and set any special
+ preferences you may have.
+
+
+
+
+ Select a Novice, Custom or Express install, depending on
+ whether or not you would like the installation to help
+ you through a typical installation, give you a high degree of
+ control over each step of the installation or simply whizz
+ through it (using reasonable defaults when possible) as fast
+ as possible. If you have never used FreeBSD before then the
+ Novice installation method is most recommended.
+
+
+
+
+ The final configuration menu choice allows you to
+ further configure your FreeBSD installation by giving you
+ menu-driven access to various system defaults. Some
+ items, like networking, may be especially important
+ if you did a CDROM/Tape/Floppy installation and have
+ not yet configured your network interfaces (assuming
+ you have any). Properly configuring such interfaces
+ here will allow FreeBSD to come up on the network
+ when you first reboot from the hard disk.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ MS-DOS User's Questions and Answers
+
+ Many FreeBSD users wish to install FreeBSD on PCs inhabited
+ by MS-DOS. Here are some commonly asked questions about
+ installing FreeBSD on such systems.
+
+ Help! I have no space! Do I need to delete
+ everything first?
+
+ If your machine is already running MS-DOS and has little
+ or no free space available for FreeBSD's installation,
+ all is not lost! You may find the FIPS utility, provided
+ in the tools directory on the FreeBSD CDROM or
+ on the various FreeBSD ftp sites, to be quite useful.
+
+ FIPS allows you to split an existing MS-DOS partition
+ into two pieces, preserving the original partition and
+ allowing you to install onto the second free piece. You
+ first defragment your MS-DOS partition, using the DOS
+ 6.xx DEFRAG utility or the Norton Disk tools, then run
+ FIPS. It will prompt you for the rest of the information
+ it needs. Afterwards, you can reboot and install FreeBSD
+ on the new free slice. See the Distributions
+ menu for an estimation of how much free space you will need
+ for the kind of installation you want.
+
+ Can I use compressed MS-DOS filesystems from
+ FreeBSD?
+
+ No. If you are using a utility such as Stacker(tm) or
+ DoubleSpace(tm), FreeBSD will only be able to use
+ whatever portion of the filesystem you leave
+ uncompressed. The rest of the filesystem will show up as
+ one large file (the stacked/dblspaced file!). Do not
+ remove that file! You will probably regret it
+ greatly!
+
+ It is probably better to create another uncompressed
+ MS-DOS primary partition and use this for communications
+ between MS-DOS and FreeBSD.
+
+ Can I mount my MS-DOS extended partitions?
+
+ Yes. DOS extended partitions are mapped in at the end of the other
+ ``slices'' in FreeBSD, e.g. your D: drive might be /dev/sd0s5,
+ your E: drive /dev/sd0s6, and so on. This example assumes, of
+ course, that your extended partition is on SCSI drive 0. For IDE drives,
+ substitute ``wd'' for ``sd'' appropriately. You otherwise mount extended
+ partitions exactly like you would mount any other DOS drive, e.g.:
+
+
+
+ mount -t msdos /dev/sd0s5 /dos_d
+
+
+
+ Can I run MS-DOS binaries under FreeBSD?
+
+ BSDI has donated their DOS emulator to the BSD world and
+ this has been ported to FreeBSD.
+
+ There is also a (technically) nice application available in the
+ called pcemu
+ which allows you to run many basic MS-DOS text-mode binaries
+ by entirely emulating an 8088 CPU.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Unix Basics
+
+
+
+ The Online Manual
+
+ The most comprehensive documentation on FreeBSD is in
+ the form of man pages. Nearly every program
+ on the system comes with a short reference manual
+ explaining the basic operation and various arguments.
+ These manuals can be view with the
+ man command. Use of the
+ man command is simple:
+
+ mancommand
+
+
+ where command is the name of the command
+ you wish to learn about. For example, to learn more about
+ ls command type:
+
+ % man ls
+
+
+
+ The online manual is divided up into numbered
+ sections:
+
+
+
+ User commands
+
+
+
+ System calls and error numbers
+
+
+
+ Functions in the C libraries
+
+
+
+ Device drivers
+
+
+
+ File formats
+
+
+
+ Games and other diversions
+
+
+
+ Miscellaneous information
+
+
+
+ System maintenance and operation commands
+
+
+
+
+ in some cases, the same topic may appear in more than
+ one section of the on-line manual. For example, there
+ is a chmod user command and a
+ chmod() system call. In this case,
+ you can tell the man command which
+ one you want by specifying the section:
+
+ % man 1 chmod
+
+
+ which will display the manual page for the user command
+ chmod. References to a particular
+ section of the on-line manual are traditionally placed
+ in parenthesis in written documentation, so
+ chmod(1) refers to the chmod user command and chmod(2)
+ refers to the system call.
+
+ This is fine if you know the name of the command and
+ simply wish to know how to use it, but what if you cannot recall the
+ command name? You can use man to
+ search for keywords in the command descriptions by
+ using the switch:
+
+ % man -k mail
+
+
+ With this command you will be presented with a list of
+ commands that have the keyword `mail' in their
+ descriptions. This is actually functionally equivalent to
+ using the apropos command.
+
+ So, you are looking at all those fancy commands in /usr/bin but do not even have the faintest idea
+ what most of them actually do? Simply do a
+
+ % cd /usr/bin; man -f *
+
+
+ or
+
+ % cd /usr/bin; whatis *
+
+
+ which does the same thing.
+
+
+
+
+ GNU Info Files
+
+ FreeBSD includes many applications and utilities
+ produced by the Free Software Foundation (FSF). In
+ addition to man pages, these programs come with more
+ extensive hypertext documents called info
+ files which can be viewed with the info
+ command or, if you installed emacs, the info
+ mode of emacs.
+
+ To use the info(1) command, simply type:
+
+ % info
+
+ For a brief
+ introduction, type h. For a quick
+ command reference, type ?.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Installing Applications: The Ports collection
+
+ Contributed by &a.jraynard;.
+
+ The FreeBSD Ports collection allows you to compile and install a very
+ wide range of applications with a minimum of effort.
+
+ For all the hype about open standards, getting a program to work
+ on different versions of Unix in the real world can be a tedious and
+ tricky business, as anyone who has tried it will know. You may be lucky
+ enough to find that the program you want will compile cleanly on your
+ system, install itself in all the right places and run flawlessly
+ ``out of the box'', but this is unfortunately rather rare. With most
+ programs, you will find yourself doing a fair bit of head-scratching,
+ and there are quite a few programs that will result in premature
+ greying, or even chronic alopecia...
+
+ Some software distributions have attacked this problem by
+ providing configuration scripts. Some of these are very clever, but
+ they have an unfortunate tendency to triumphantly announce that your
+ system is something you have never heard of and then ask you lots of
+ questions that sound like a final exam in system-level Unix
+ programming (``Does your system's gethitlist function return a const
+ pointer to a fromboz or a pointer to a const fromboz? Do you have
+ Foonix style unacceptable exception handling? And if not, why not?'').
+
+ Fortunately, with the Ports collection, all the hard work involved
+ has already been done, and you can just type 'make install' and get a
+ working program.
+
+
+
+ Why Have a Ports Collection?
+
+ The base FreeBSD system comes with a very wide range of tools and
+ system utilities, but a lot of popular programs are not in the base
+ system, for good reasons:-
+
+
+
+
+
+ Programs that some people cannot live without and other people
+ cannot stand, such as a certain Lisp-based editor.
+
+
+
+
+ Programs which are too specialised to put in the base system
+ (CAD, databases).
+
+
+
+
+ Programs which fall into the ``I must have a look at
+ that when I get a spare minute'' category, rather than system-critical
+ ones (some languages, perhaps).
+
+
+
+
+ Programs that are far too much fun to be supplied with a serious
+ operating system like FreeBSD ;-)
+
+
+
+
+ However many programs you put in the base system, people will
+ always want more, and a line has to be drawn somewhere (otherwise
+ FreeBSD distributions would become absolutely enormous).
+
+
+
+
+
+ Obviously it would be unreasonable to expect everyone to port their
+ favourite programs by hand (not to mention a tremendous amount of
+ duplicated work), so the FreeBSD Project came up with an ingenious
+ way of using standard tools that would automate the process.
+
+ Incidentally, this is an excellent illustration of how ``the Unix way''
+ works in practice by combining a set of simple but very flexible tools
+ into something very powerful.
+
+
+
+
+ How Does the Ports Collection Work?
+
+ Programs are typically distributed on the Internet as a
+ consisting of
+ a Makefile and the source code for the program and usually
+ some instructions (which are unfortunately not always as instructive
+ as they could be), with perhaps a configuration script.
+
+ The standard scenario is that you FTP down the tarball, extract it
+ somewhere, glance through the instructions, make any changes that seem
+ necessary, run the configure script to set things up and use the standard
+ `make' program to compile and install the program from the source.
+
+ FreeBSD ports still use the tarball mechanism, but use a
+ to hold the "knowledge"
+ of how to get the program working on FreeBSD, rather than expecting the
+ user to be able to work it out. They also supply their own customised
+ , so that almost every port
+ can be built in the same way.
+
+ If you look at a port skeleton (either on your FreeBSD system or the FTP site) and expect to find all sorts of pointy-headed rocket
+ science lurking there, you may be disappointed by the one or two
+ rather unexciting-looking files and directories you find there.
+ (We will discuss in a minute how to go about ).
+
+ ``How on earth can this do anything?'' I hear you cry. ``There
+ is no source code there!''
+
+ Fear not, gentle reader, all will become clear (hopefully). Let's
+ see what happens if we try and install a port. I have chosen `ElectricFence',
+ a useful tool for developers, as the skeleton is more straightforward than
+ most.
+
+ Note if you are trying this at home, you will need to be root.
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports/devel/ElectricFence
+ # make install
+ >> Checksum OK for ElectricFence-2.0.5.tar.gz.
+ ===> Extracting for ElectricFence-2.0.5
+ ===> Patching for ElectricFence-2.0.5
+ ===> Applying FreeBSD patches for ElectricFence-2.0.5
+ ===> Configuring for ElectricFence-2.0.5
+ ===> Building for ElectricFence-2.0.5
+ [lots of compiler output...]
+ ===> Installing for ElectricFence-2.0.5
+ ===> Warning: your umask is "0002".
+ If this is not desired, set it to an appropriate value
+ and install this port again by ``make reinstall''.
+ install -c -o bin -g bin -m 444 /usr/ports/devel/ElectricFence/work/ElectricFence-2.0.5/libefence.a /usr/local/lib
+ install -c -o bin -g bin -m 444 /usr/ports/devel/ElectricFence/work/ElectricFence-2.0.5/libefence.3 /usr/local/man/man3
+ ===> Compressing manual pages for ElectricFence-2.0.5
+ ===> Registering installation for ElectricFence-2.0.5
+
+
+ To avoid confusing the issue, I have completely removed the build output.
+
+ If you tried this yourself, you may well have got something like this at
+ the start:-
+
+
+ # make install
+ >> ElectricFence-2.0.5.tar.gz doesn't seem to exist on this system.
+ >> Attempting to fetch from ftp://ftp.doc.ic.ac.uk/Mirrors/sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/devel/lang/c/.
+
+
+ The `make' program has noticed that you did not have a local copy
+ of the source code and tried to FTP it down so it could get the job
+ done. I already had the
+ source handy in my example, so it did not need to fetch it.
+
+ Let's go through this and see what the `make' program was doing.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Locate the source code If it is not available locally, try to grab it from an
+ FTP site.
+
+
+
+
+ Run a test on the
+ tarball to make sure it has not been tampered with, accidentally
+ truncated, downloaded in ASCII mode, struck by neutrinos while in transit, etc.
+
+
+
+
+ Extract the tarball into a temporary work directory.
+
+
+
+
+ Apply any needed to get
+ the source to compile and run under FreeBSD.
+
+
+
+
+ Run any configuration script required by the build process and
+ correctly answer any questions it asks.
+
+
+
+
+ (Finally!) Compile the code.
+
+
+
+
+ Install the program executable and other supporting files, man
+ pages, etc. under the /usr/local hierarchy, where they will not get mixed
+ up with system programs. This also makes sure that all the ports you
+ install will go in the same place, instead of being flung all over
+ your system.
+
+
+
+
+ Register the installation in a database. This means
+ that, if you do not like the program, you can cleanly all traces of it from your system.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Scroll up to the make output and see if you can match these steps to it.
+ And if you were not impressed before, you should be by now!
+
+
+
+
+ Getting a FreeBSD Port
+
+ There are two ways of getting hold of the FreeBSD port for a
+ program. One requires a , the other involves using an
+
+
+
+ Compiling ports from CDROM
+
+ If you answered yes to the question ``Do you want to link the ports
+ collection to your CDROM'' during the FreeBSD installation, the initial
+ setting up will already have been done for you.
+
+ If not, make sure the FreeBSD CDROM is in the drive and mounted on,
+ say, /cdrom. Then do
+
+
+ # mkdir /usr/ports
+ # cd /usr/ports
+ # ln -s /cdrom/ports/distfiles distfiles
+
+
+ to enable the ports make mechanism to find the tarballs (it expects to
+ find them in /usr/ports/distfiles, which is why we sym-linked the
+ CDROM's tarball directory to that directory).
+
+ Now, suppose you want to install the gnats program from the databases
+ directory. Here is how to do it:-
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports
+ # mkdir databases
+ # cp -R /cdrom/ports/databases/gnats databases
+ # cd databases/gnats
+ # make install
+
+
+ Or if you are a serious database user and you want to compare all the
+ ones available in the Ports collection, do
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports
+ # cp -R /cdrom/ports/databases .
+ # cd databases
+ # make install
+
+
+ (yes, that really is a dot on its own after the cp command and not a
+ mistake. It is Unix-ese for ``the current directory'')
+
+ and the ports make mechanism will automatically compile and install
+ all the ports in the databases directory for you!
+
+ If you do not like this method, here is a completely different way of
+ doing it:-
+
+ Create a "link tree" to it using the lndir(1) command that
+ comes with the XFree86 distribution. Find a location with
+ some free space, create a directory there and then cd to it. Then
+ invoke the lndir(1) command with the full pathname of the ``ports''
+ directory on the CDROM as the first argument and . (the current directory)
+ as the second. This might be, for example, something like:
+ lndir /cdrom/ports .
+
+
+ Then you can build ports directly off the CDROM by building them in the
+ link tree you have created.
+
+ Note that there are some ports for which we cannot provide the original
+ source in the CDROM due to licensing limitations. In that case,
+ you will need to look at the section on
+
+
+
+
+ Compiling ports from the Internet
+
+ If you do not have a CDROM, or you want to make sure you get the very
+ latest version of the port you want, you will need to download the
+ for the port. Now this
+ might sound like rather a fiddly job
+ full of pitfalls, but it is actually very easy.
+
+ The key to it is that the FreeBSD FTP server can create on-the-fly
+ for you. Here is how it works,
+ with the gnats program in the databases directory as an example (the
+ bits in square brackets are comments. Do not type them in if you are
+ trying this yourself!):-
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports
+ # mkdir databases
+ # cd databases
+ # ftp ftp.freebsd.org
+ [log in as `ftp' and give your email address when asked for a
+ password. Remember to use binary (also known as image) mode!]
+ > cd /pub/FreeBSD/ports/databases
+ > get gnats.tar [tars up the gnats skeleton for us]
+ > quit
+ # tar xf gnats.tar [extract the gnats skeleton]
+ # cd gnats
+ # make install [build and install gnats]
+
+
+ What happened here? We connected to the FTP server in the usual way
+ and went to its databases sub-directory. When we gave it the command
+ `get gnats.tar', the FTP server up the gnats directory for us.
+
+ We then extracted the gnats skeleton and went into the gnats directory
+ to build the port. As we explained , the make process noticed we did not have a copy of the
+ source locally, so it fetched one before extracting, patching and
+ building it.
+
+ Let's try something more ambitious now. Instead of getting a single
+ port skeleton, let's get a whole sub-directory, for example all the
+ database skeletons in the ports collection. It looks almost the same:-
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports
+ # ftp ftp.freebsd.org
+ [log in as `ftp' and give your email address when asked for a
+ password. Remember to use binary (also known as image) mode!]
+ > cd /pub/FreeBSD/ports
+ > get databases.tar [tars up the databases directory for us]
+ > quit
+ # tar xf databases.tar [extract all the database skeletons]
+ # cd databases
+ # make install [build and install all the database ports]
+
+
+ With half a dozen straightforward commands, we have now got a set of
+ database programs on our FreeBSD machine! All we did that was
+ different from getting a single port skeleton and building it was that
+ we got a whole directory at once, and compiled everything in it at
+ once. Pretty impressive, no?
+
+ If you expect to be installing many ports, it is
+ probably worth downloading all the ports directories.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Skeletons
+
+ A team of compulsive hackers who have forgotten to eat in a frantic
+ attempt to make a deadline? Something unpleasant lurking in the FreeBSD
+ attic? No, a skeleton here is a minimal framework that supplies everything
+ needed to make the ports magic work.
+
+
+
+ Makefile
+
+ The most important component of a skeleton is the Makefile. This contains
+ various statements that specify how the port should be compiled and
+ installed. Here is the Makefile for ElectricFence:-
+
+
+ # New ports collection makefile for: Electric Fence
+ # Version required: 2.0.5
+ # Date created: 13 November 1997
+ # Whom: jraynard
+ #
+ # $Id: handbook.sgml,v 1.2 1998-04-01 19:12:43 nik Exp $
+ #
+
+ DISTNAME= ElectricFence-2.0.5
+ CATEGORIES= devel
+ MASTER_SITES= ${MASTER_SITE_SUNSITE}
+ MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR= devel/lang/c
+
+ MAINTAINER= jraynard@freebsd.org
+
+ MAN3= libefence.3
+
+ do-install:
+ ${INSTALL_DATA} ${WRKSRC}/libefence.a ${PREFIX}/lib
+ ${INSTALL_MAN} ${WRKSRC}/libefence.3 ${PREFIX}/man/man3
+
+ .include <bsd.port.mk>
+
+
+ The lines beginning with a "#" sign are comments for the benefit
+ of human readers (as in most Unix script files).
+
+ `DISTNAME" specifies the name of the , but without the extension.
+
+ `CATEGORIES" states what kind of program this is. In this case, a
+ utility for developers.
+
+ `MASTER_SITES" is the URL(s) of the master FTP site, which is
+ used to retrieve the if it is not
+ available on the local system. This is a site which is regarded as
+ reputable, and is normally the one from which the program is officially
+ distributed (in so far as any software is "officially" distributed
+ on the Internet).
+
+ `MAINTAINER" is the email address of the person who is
+ responsible for updating the skeleton if, for example a new version
+ of the program comes out.
+
+ Skipping over the next few lines for a minute, the line
+ .include <bsd.port.mk>
+
+ says that the other statements and commands
+ needed for this port are in a standard file called
+ `bsd.port.mk". As these are the same for all ports, there is
+ no point in duplicating them all over the place, so they are kept in a
+ single standard file.
+
+ This is probably not the place to go into a detailed examination of
+ how Makefiles work; suffice it to say that the line starting with ``MAN3''
+ ensures that the ElectricFence man page is compressed after installation,
+ to help conserve your precious disk space. The original port did not
+ provide an ``install'' target, so the three lines from ``do-install''
+ ensure that the files produced by this port are placed in the correct
+ destination.
+
+
+
+
+ The files directory
+
+ The file containing the for
+ the port is called "md5", after the MD5 algorithm
+ used for ports checksums. It lives in a directory with the slightly
+ confusing name of "files".
+
+ This directory can also contain other miscellaneous files that are required
+ by the port and do not belong anywhere else.
+
+
+
+
+ The patches directory
+
+ This directory contains the needed
+ to make everything work properly under FreeBSD.
+
+
+
+
+ The pkg directory
+
+ This program contains three quite useful files:-
+
+
+
+
+
+ COMMENT - a one-line description of the program.
+
+
+
+
+ DESCR - a more detailed description.
+
+
+
+
+ PLIST - a list of all the files that will be created when the program is installed.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ What to do when a port does not work.
+
+ Oh. You can do one of four (4) things :
+
+
+
+
+
+ Fix it yourself. Technical details on how ports work can be found in
+
+
+
+
+ Gripe. This is done by e-mail *ONLY*! Send such e-mail to the &a.ports;
+ and please include the name/version of the port, where you got both the port
+ source & distfile(s) from, and what the text of the error was.
+
+
+
+
+ Forget it. This is the easiest for most - very few of the programs in
+ ports can be classified as `essential'!
+
+
+
+
+ Grab the pre-compiled package from a ftp server. The ``master'' package
+ collection is on FreeBSD's FTP server in the packages directory, though check your local mirror first, please!
+
+ These are more likely to work (on the whole) than trying to compile from
+ source and a lot faster besides! Use the pkg_add(1)
+ program to install a package file on your system.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ I Want to Make a Port!
+
+ Great! Please see the
+ for detailed instructions on how to do this.
+
+
+
+
+ Some Questions and Answers
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I thought this was going to be a discussion about modems??!
+
+
+ A. Ah. You must be thinking of the serial ports on the back of your
+ computer. We are using `port' here to mean the result of `porting' a
+ program from one version of Unix to another. (It is an unfortunate bad
+ habit of computer people to use the same word to refer to several
+ completely different things).
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I thought you were supposed to use packages to install extra
+ programs?
+
+
+ A. Yes, that is usually the quickest and easiest way of doing it.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. So why bother with ports then?
+
+
+ A. Several reasons:-
+
+
+
+
+
+ The licensing conditions on some software distributions
+ require that they be distributed as source code, not binaries.
+
+
+
+
+ Some people do not trust binary distributions. At least with
+ source code you can (in theory) read through it and look for potential
+ problems yourself.
+
+
+
+
+ If you have some local patches, you will need the source to add
+ them yourself.
+
+
+
+
+ You might have opinions on how a program should be compiled
+ that differ from the person who did the package - some people have
+ strong views on what optimisation setting should be used, whether to
+ build debug versions and then strip them or not, etc. etc.
+
+
+
+
+ Some people like having code around, so they can read it if
+ they get bored, hack around with it, borrow from it (licence terms
+ permitting, of course!) and so on.
+
+
+
+
+ If you ain't got the source, it ain't software! ;-)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. What is a patch?
+
+
+ A. A patch is a small (usually) file that specifies how to go from one
+ version of a file to another. It contains text that says, in effect,
+ things like ``delete line 23'', ``add these two lines after line 468''
+ or ``change line 197 to this''. Also known as a `diff', since it is
+ generated by a program of that name.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. What is all this about tarballs?
+
+
+ A. It is a file ending in .tar or .tar.gz (with variations like .tar.Z, or
+ even .tgz if you are trying to squeeze the names into a DOS filesystem).
+
+ Basically, it is a directory tree that has been archived into a single
+ file (.tar) and optionally compressed (.gz). This technique was originally
+ used for Tape ARchives (hence the name `tar'), but it is a
+ widely used way of distributing program source code around the
+ Internet.
+
+ You can see what files are in them, or even extract them yourself, by
+ using the standard Unix tar program, which comes with the base FreeBSD
+ system, like this:-
+
+
+ tar tvzf foobar.tar.gz # View contents of foobar.tar.gz
+ tar xzvf foobar.tar.gz # Extract contents into the current directory
+ tar tvf foobar.tar # View contents of foobar.tar
+ tar xvf foobar.tar # Extract contents into the current directory
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. And a checksum?
+
+
+ A. It is a number generated by adding up all the data in the file you
+ want to check. If any of the characters change, the checksum will no
+ longer be equal to the total, so a simple comparison will allow you to
+ spot the difference. (In practice, it is done in a more complicated way
+ to spot problems like position-swapping, which will not show up with a
+ simplistic addition).
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I did what you said for and it worked great until I tried to install the kermit
+ port:-
+
+ # make install
+ >> cku190.tar.gz doesn't seem to exist on this system.
+ >> Attempting to fetch from ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/archives/.
+
+
+ Why can it not be found? Have I got a dud CDROM?
+
+
+ A. The licensing terms for kermit do not allow us to put the tarball
+ for it on the CDROM, so you will have to fetch it by hand - sorry!
+ The reason why you got all those error messages was because you
+ were not connected to the Internet at the time. Once you have downloaded
+ it from any of the sites above, you can re-start the process (try and
+ choose the nearest site to you, though, to save your time and the
+ Internet's bandwidth).
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I did that, but when I tried to put it into /usr/ports/distfiles I
+ got some error about not having permission.
+
+
+ A. The ports mechanism looks for the tarball in /usr/ports/distfiles,
+ but you will not be able to copy anything there because it is sym-linked
+ to the CDROM, which is read-only. You can tell it to look somewhere
+ else by doing
+
+
+ DISTDIR=/where/you/put/it make install
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. Does the ports scheme only work if you have everything in
+ /usr/ports? My system administrator says I must put everything under
+ /u/people/guests/wurzburger, but it does not seem to work.
+
+
+ A. You can use the PORTSDIR and PREFIX variables to tell the ports
+ mechanism to use different directories. For instance,
+
+
+ make PORTSDIR=/u/people/guests/wurzburger/ports install
+
+
+ will compile the port in /u/people/guests/wurzburger/ports and install
+ everything under /usr/local.
+
+
+
+ make PREFIX=/u/people/guests/wurzburger/local install
+
+
+ will compile it in /usr/ports and install it in
+ /u/people/guests/wurzburger/local.
+
+ And of course
+
+
+ make PORTSDIR=.../ports PREFIX=.../local install
+
+
+ will combine the two (it is too long to fit on the page if I write it
+ in full, but I am sure you get the idea).
+
+ If you do not fancy typing all that in every time you install a port
+ (and to be honest, who would?), it is a good idea to put these variables
+ into your environment.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I do not have a FreeBSD CDROM, but I would like to have all the tarballs
+ handy on my system so I do not have to wait for a download every time I
+ install a port. Is there an easy way to get them all at once?
+
+
+ A. To get every single tarball for the ports collection, do
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports
+ # make fetch
+
+
+ For all the tarballs for a single ports directory, do
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports/directory
+ # make fetch
+
+
+ and for just one port - well, I think you have guessed already.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I know it is probably faster to fetch the tarballs from one of the
+ FreeBSD mirror sites close by. Is there any way to tell the port to
+ fetch them from servers other than ones listed in the MASTER_SITES?
+
+
+ A. Yes. If you know, for example, ftp.FreeBSD.ORG is much closer than
+ sites listed in MASTER_SITES, do as following example.
+ # cd /usr/ports/directory
+ # make MASTER_SITE_OVERRIDE=ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/distfiles/ fetch
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I want to know what files make is going to need before it tries to
+ pull them down.
+
+
+ A. 'make fetch-list' will display a list of the files needed for a port.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. Is there any way to stop the port from compiling? I want to do some
+ hacking on the source before I install it, but it is a bit tiresome having
+ to watch it and hit control-C every time.
+
+
+ A. Doing 'make extract' will stop it after it has fetched and
+ extracted the source code.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I am trying to make my own port and I want to be able to stop it
+ compiling until I have had a chance to see if my patches worked properly.
+ Is there something like 'make extract', but for patches?
+
+
+ A. Yep, 'make patch' is what you want. You will probably find the
+ PATCH_DEBUG option useful as well. And by the way, thank you for
+ your efforts!
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I have heard that some compiler options can cause bugs. Is this true?
+ How can I make sure that I compile ports with the right settings?
+
+
+ A. Yes, with version 2.6.3 of gcc (the version shipped with FreeBSD
+ 2.1.0 and 2.1.5), the -O2 option could result in buggy code unless you
+ used the -fno-strength-reduce option as well. (Most of the ports don't
+ use -O2). You should be able to specify the compiler options
+ used by something like
+
+
+ make CFLAGS='-O2 -fno-strength-reduce' install
+
+
+ or by editing /etc/make.conf, but unfortunately not all ports respect
+ this. The surest way is to do 'make configure', then go into the
+ source directory and inspect the Makefiles by hand, but this can get
+ tedious if the source has lots of sub-directories, each with their own
+ Makefiles.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. There are so many ports it is hard to find the one I want. Is there a
+ list anywhere of what ports are available?
+
+
+ A. Look in the INDEX file in /usr/ports.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I went to install the 'foo' port but the system suddenly stopped
+ compiling it and starting compiling the 'bar' port. What's going on?
+
+
+ A. The 'foo' port needs something that is supplied with 'bar' - for
+ instance, if 'foo' uses graphics, 'bar' might have a library with
+ useful graphics processing routines. Or 'bar' might be a tool that is
+ needed to compile the 'foo' port.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I installed the grizzle program from the ports and frankly it is a
+ complete waste of disk space. I want to delete it but I do not know
+ where it put all the files. Any clues?
+
+
+ A. No problem, just do
+
+
+ pkg_delete grizzle-6.5
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. Hang on a minute, you have to know the version number to use that
+ command. You do not seriously expect me to remember that, do you??
+
+
+ A. Not at all, you can find it out by doing
+
+
+ pkg_info -a | grep grizzle
+
+
+ And it will tell you:-
+
+
+ Information for grizzle-6.5:
+ grizzle-6.5 - the combined piano tutorial, LOGO interpreter and shoot 'em up arcade game.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. Talking of disk space, the ports directory seems to be taking up
+ an awful lot of room. Is it safe to go in there and delete things?
+
+
+ A. Yes, if you have installed the program and are fairly certain you
+ will not need the source again, there is no point in keeping it hanging
+ around. The best way to do this is
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports
+ # make clean
+
+
+ which will go through all the ports subdirectories and delete
+ everything except the skeletons for each port.
+
+
+
+ Q. I tried that and it still left all those tarballs or whatever you
+ called them in the distfiles directory. Can I delete those as well?
+
+
+ A. Yes, if you are sure you have finished with them, those can go as
+ well.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I like having lots and lots of programs to play with. Is there any
+ way of installing all the ports in one go?
+
+
+ A. Just do
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports
+ # make install
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. OK, I tried that, but I thought it would take a very long time so I
+ went to bed and left it to get on with it. When I looked at the
+ computer this morning, it had only done three and a half ports. Did
+ something go wrong?
+
+
+ A. No, the problem is that some of the ports need to ask you questions
+ that we cannot answer for you (eg ``Do you want to print on A4 or US
+ letter sized paper?'') and they need to have someone on hand to answer
+ them.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I really do not want to spend all day staring at the monitor. Any
+ better ideas?
+
+
+ A. OK, do this before you go to bed/work/the local park:-
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports
+ # make -DBATCH install
+
+
+ This will install every port that does not require user
+ input. Then, when you come back, do
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports
+ # make -DIS_INTERACTIVE install
+
+
+ to finish the job.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. At work, we are using frobble, which is in your ports collection,
+ but we have altered it quite a bit to get it to do what we need. Is
+ there any way of making our own packages, so we can distribute it more
+ easily around our sites?
+
+
+ A. No problem, assuming you know how to make patches for your changes:-
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports/somewhere/frobble
+ # make extract
+ # cd work/frobble-2.8
+ [Apply your patches]
+ # cd ../..
+ # make package
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. This ports stuff is really clever. I am desperate to find out how
+ you did it. What is the secret?
+
+
+ A. Nothing secret about it at all, just look at the bsd.ports.mk and
+ bsd.ports.subdir.mk files in your makefiles directory.
+ (Note: readers with an aversion to intricate shell-scripts are advised
+ not to follow this link...)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ System Administration
+
+
+
+ Configuring the FreeBSD Kernel
+
+ Contributed by &a.jehamby;.6 October 1995.
+
+ This large section of the handbook discusses the basics of
+ building your own custom kernel for FreeBSD. This section
+ is appropriate for both novice system administrators and
+ those with advanced Unix experience.
+
+
+
+ Why Build a Custom Kernel?
+
+ Building a custom kernel is one of the most important
+ rites of passage every Unix system administrator must
+ endure. This process, while time-consuming, will provide
+ many benefits to your FreeBSD system. Unlike the GENERIC
+ kernel, which must support every possible SCSI and
+ network card, along with tons of other rarely used
+ hardware support, a custom kernel only contains support
+ for your PC's hardware. This has a number of
+ benefits:
+
+
+
+
+
+ It will take less time to boot because it does not
+ have to spend time probing for hardware which you
+ do not have.
+
+
+
+
+ A custom kernel often uses less memory, which is
+ important because the kernel is the one process which
+ must always be present in memory, and so all of that
+ unused code ties up pages of RAM that your programs
+ would otherwise be able to use. Therefore, on a
+ system with limited RAM, building a custom kernel is
+ of critical importance.
+
+
+
+
+ Finally, there are several kernel options which
+ you can tune to fit your needs, and device driver
+ support for things like sound cards which you can
+ include in your kernel but are not present
+ in the GENERIC kernel.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Building and Installing a Custom Kernel
+
+ First, let us take a quick tour of the kernel build
+ directory. All directories mentioned will be relative to
+ the main /usr/src/sys directory, which is also
+ accessible through /sys. There are a number of
+ subdirectories here representing different parts of the
+ kernel, but the most important, for our purposes, are
+ i386/conf, where you will edit your custom
+ kernel configuration, and compile, which is the
+ staging area where your kernel will be built. Notice the
+ logical organization of the directory tree, with each
+ supported device, filesystem, and option in its own
+ subdirectory. Also, anything inside the i386
+ directory deals with PC hardware only, while everything
+ outside the i386 directory is common to all
+ platforms which FreeBSD could potentially be ported to.
+
+
+
+ Note: If there is not a
+ /usr/src/sys directory on your system, then the
+ kernel source has not been been installed. Follow the
+ instructions for installing packages to add this package
+ to your system.
+
+
+
+ Next, move to the i386/conf directory and copy
+ the GENERIC configuration file to the name you want to
+ give your kernel. For example:
+
+ # cd /usr/src/sys/i386/conf
+ # cp GENERIC MYKERNEL
+
+
+ Traditionally, this name is in all capital letters and,
+ if you are maintaining multiple FreeBSD machines with
+ different hardware, it is a good idea to name it after
+ your machine's hostname. We will call it MYKERNEL for
+ the purpose of this example.
+
+
+
+ Note: You must execute these and all of the
+ following commands under the root account or you will get
+ ``permission denied'' errors.
+
+
+
+ Now, edit MYKERNEL with your favorite text editor. If
+ you are just starting out, the only editor available will
+ probably be vi, which is too complex to explain
+ here, but is covered well in many books in the . Feel free to change the
+ comment lines at the top to reflect your configuration or the
+ changes you have made to differentiate it from GENERIC.
+
+ If you have build a kernel under SunOS or some other BSD
+ operating system, much of this file will be very familiar
+ to you. If you are coming from some other operating
+ system such as DOS, on the other hand, the GENERIC
+ configuration file might seem overwhelming to you, so
+ follow the descriptions in the
+ section slowly and carefully.
+
+
+
+ Note: If you are trying to upgrade your kernel from an
+ older version of FreeBSD, you will probably have to get a new
+ version of config(8) from the same place you got the new
+ kernel sources. It is located in /usr/src/usr.sbin, so
+ you will need to download those sources as well. Re-build and install
+ it before running the next commands.
+
+
+
+ When you are finished, type the following to compile and
+ install your kernel:
+
+ # /usr/sbin/config MYKERNEL
+ # cd ../../compile/MYKERNEL
+ # make depend
+ # make
+ # make install
+
+
+ The new kernel will be copied to the root directory as
+ /kernel and the old kernel will be moved to
+ /kernel.old. Now, shutdown the system and
+ reboot to use your kernel. In case something goes wrong,
+ there are some instructions at the end of this
+ document. Be sure to read the section which explains how
+ to recover in case your new kernel .
+
+
+
+ Note: If you have added any new devices (such
+ as sound cards) you may have to add some to your
+ /dev directory before you can use them.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The Configuration File
+
+ The general format of a configuration file is quite simple.
+ Each line contains a keyword and one or more arguments. For
+ simplicity, most lines only contain one argument. Anything
+ following a # is considered a comment and ignored.
+ The following sections describe each keyword, generally in the
+ order they are listed in GENERIC, although some related
+ keywords have been grouped together in a single section (such
+ as Networking) even though they are actually scattered
+ throughout the GENERIC file.
+ An exhaustive list of options and more detailed explanations
+ of the device lines is present in the LINT configuration file,
+ located in the same directory as GENERIC. If you are in doubt
+ as to the purpose or necessity of a line, check first in LINT.
+
+ The kernel is currently being moved to a better organization
+ of the option handling. Traditionally, each option in the
+ config file was simply converted into a switch
+ for the CFLAGS line of the kernel Makefile. Naturally,
+ this caused a creeping optionism, with nobody really knowing
+ which option has been referenced in what files.
+
+ In the new scheme, every #ifdef that is intended to
+ be dependent upon an option gets this option out of an
+ opt_foo.h declaration file created in the
+ compile directory by config. The list of valid options
+ for config lives in two files: options that do not
+ depend on the architecture are listed in
+ /sys/conf/options, architecture-dependent ones
+ in /sys/arch/conf/options.arch,
+ with arch being for example i386.
+
+
+
+ Mandatory Keywords
+
+ These keywords are required in every kernel you build.
+
+
+
+ machine ``i386''
+
+
+
+ The first keyword is machine, which,
+ since FreeBSD only runs on Intel 386 and compatible
+ chips, is i386.
+
+
+
+ Note: that any keyword which
+ contains numbers used as text must be enclosed in
+ quotation marks, otherwise config gets
+ confused and thinks you mean the actual number
+ 386.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cpu ``cpu_type''
+
+
+
+
+ The next keyword is cpu, which includes
+ support for each CPU supported by FreeBSD. The
+ possible values of cpu_type
+ include:
+
+
+
+ I386_CPU
+
+
+
+ I486_CPU
+
+
+
+ I586_CPU
+
+
+
+ I686_CPU
+
+
+
+
+ and multiple instances of the cpu line may
+ be present with different values of
+ cpu_type as are present in the
+ GENERIC kernel. For a custom kernel, it is best to
+ specify only the cpu you have. If, for example,
+ you have an Intel Pentium, use I586_CPU
+ for cpu_type.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ ident machine_name
+
+
+
+
+ Next, we have ident, which is the
+ identification of the kernel. You should change
+ this from GENERIC to whatever you named your
+ kernel, in this example, MYKERNEL. The value you
+ put in ident will print when you boot up
+ the kernel, so it is useful to give a kernel a
+ different name if you want to keep it separate from
+ your usual kernel (if you want to build an
+ experimental kernel, for example). Note that, as
+ with machine and cpu, enclose
+ your kernel's name in quotation marks if it
+ contains any numbers.
+
+ Since this name is passed to the C compiler as a
+ switch, do not use names like DEBUG, or something that could be confused
+ with another machine or CPU name, like vax.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ maxusers number
+
+
+
+
+ This file sets the size of a number of important
+ system tables. This number is supposed to be
+ roughly equal to the number of simultaneous users
+ you expect to have on your machine. However, under
+ normal circumstances, you will want to set
+ maxusers to at least four, especially if
+ you are using the X Window System or compiling software. The
+ reason is that the most important table set by
+ maxusers is the maximum number of
+ processes, which is set to 20 + 16 *
+ maxusers, so if you set maxusers
+ to one, then you can only have 36 simultaneous
+ processes, including the 18 or so that the system
+ starts up at boot time, and the 15 or so you will
+ probably create when you start the X Window System. Even a
+ simple task like reading a man page will
+ start up nine processes to filter, decompress, and
+ view it. Setting maxusers to 4 will allow
+ you to have up to 84 simultaneous processes, which
+ should be enough for anyone. If, however, you see
+ the dreaded ``proc table full'' error when trying
+ to start another program, or are running a server
+ with a large number of simultaneous users (like
+ Walnut Creek CDROM's FTP site), you can always
+ increase this number and rebuild.
+
+
+
+ Note:maxuser does
+ not limit the number of users which can
+ log into your machine. It simply sets various
+ table sizes to reasonable values considering the
+ maximum number of users you will likely have on
+ your system and how many processes each of them
+ will be running. One keyword which
+ does limit the number of simultaneous
+ remote logins is .
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ config kernel_name root on root_device
+
+
+
+
+ This line specifies the location and name of the
+ kernel. Traditionally the kernel is called
+ vmunix but in FreeBSD, it is aptly named
+ kernel. You should always use
+ kernel for kernel_name because
+ changing it will render numerous system utilities
+ inoperative. The second part of the line specifies
+ the disk and partition where the root filesystem
+ and kernel can be found. Typically this will be
+ wd0 for systems with non-SCSI drives, or
+ sd0 for systems with SCSI drives.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ General Options
+
+ These lines provide kernel support for various
+ filesystems and other options.
+
+
+
+ options MATH_EMULATE
+
+
+
+ This line allows the kernel to simulate a math
+ co-processor if your computer does not have one (386
+ or 486SX). If you have a Pentium, a 486DX, or a
+ 386 or 486SX with a separate 387 or 487 chip, you
+ can comment this line out.
+
+
+
+ Note: The normal math co-processor
+ emulation routines that come with FreeBSD are
+ not very accurate. If you do not have a
+ math co-processor, and you need the best accuracy,
+ I recommend that you change this option to
+ GPL_MATH_EMULATE to use the superior GNU
+ math support, which is not included by default
+ for licensing reasons.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options ``COMPAT_43''
+
+
+
+
+ Compatibility with 4.3BSD. Leave this in; some
+ programs will act strangely if you comment this
+ out.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options BOUNCE_BUFFERS
+
+
+
+
+ ISA devices and EISA devices operating in an ISA
+ compatibility mode can only perform DMA (Direct
+ Memory Access) to memory below 16 megabytes. This
+ option enables such devices to work in systems with
+ more than 16 megabytes of memory.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options UCONSOLE
+
+
+
+
+ Allow users to grab the console, useful for X
+ Windows. For example, you can create a console
+ xterm by typing xterm -C, which will
+ display any `write', `talk', and other messages you
+ receive, as well as any console messages sent by the
+ kernel.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options SYSVSHM
+
+
+
+
+ This option
+ provides for System V shared memory. The most
+ common use of this is the XSHM extension in X
+ Windows, which many graphics-intensive programs
+ (such as the movie player XAnim, and Linux DOOM)
+ will automatically take advantage of for extra
+ speed. If you use the X Window System, you will definitely
+ want to include this.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options SYSVSEM
+
+
+
+
+ Support for System V
+ semaphores. Less commonly used but only adds a few
+ hundred bytes to the kernel.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options SYSVMSG
+
+
+
+
+ Support for System V
+ messages. Again, only adds a few hundred bytes to
+ the kernel.
+
+
+
+ Note: The ipcs(1) command will
+ tell will list any processes using each of
+ these System V facilities.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Filesystem Options
+
+ These options add support for various filesystems.
+ You must include at least one of these to support the
+ device you boot from; typically this will be
+ FFS if you boot from a hard drive, or
+ NFS if you are booting a diskless workstation
+ from Ethernet. You can include other commonly-used
+ filesystems in the kernel, but feel free to comment out
+ support for filesystems you use less often (perhaps the
+ MS-DOS filesystem?), since they will be dynamically
+ loaded from the Loadable Kernel Module directory
+ /lkm the first time you mount a partition of
+ that type.
+
+
+
+ options FFS
+
+
+
+ The basic hard drive
+ filesystem; leave it in if you boot from the hard
+ disk.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options NFS
+
+
+
+
+ Network Filesystem. Unless
+ you plan to mount partitions from a Unix file
+ server over Ethernet, you can comment this out.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options MSDOSFS
+
+
+
+
+ MS-DOS Filesystem. Unless
+ you plan to mount a DOS formatted hard drive
+ partition at boot time, you can safely comment this
+ out. It will be automatically loaded the first
+ time you mount a DOS partition, as described above.
+ Also, the excellent mtools software (in
+ the ports collection) allows you to access DOS
+ floppies without having to mount and unmount them
+ (and does not require MSDOSFS at all).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options ``CD9660''
+
+
+
+
+ ISO 9660 filesystem for
+ CD-ROMs. Comment it out if you do not have a
+ CD-ROM drive or only mount data CD's occasionally
+ (since it will be dynamically loaded the first time
+ you mount a data CD). Audio CD's do not need this
+ filesystem.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options PROCFS
+
+
+
+
+ Process filesystem. This
+ is a pretend filesystem mounted on /proc which
+ allows programs like ps(1) to give you
+ more information on what processes are running.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options MFS
+
+
+
+
+ Memory-mapped file system.
+ This is basically a RAM disk for fast storage of
+ temporary files, useful if you have a lot of swap
+ space that you want to take advantage of. A
+ perfect place to mount an MFS partition is on the
+ /tmp directory, since many programs store
+ temporary data here. To mount an MFS RAM disk on
+ /tmp, add the following line to
+ /etc/fstab and then reboot or type
+ mount /tmp:
+
+ /dev/wd1s2b /tmp mfs rw 0 0
+
+
+
+
+
+ Note: Replace the /dev/wd1s2b
+ with the name of your swap partition, which will
+ be listed in your /etc/fstab as follows:
+
+ /dev/wd1s2b none swap sw 0 0
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Note: Also, the MFS filesystem
+ can not be dynamically loaded, so you
+ must compile it into your kernel if you
+ want to experiment with it.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options "EXT2FS"
+
+
+
+
+ Linux's native file system.
+ With ext2fs support you are able to read and write to Linux
+ partitions. This is useful if you dual-boot FreeBSD and Linux
+ and want to share data between the two systems.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options QUOTA
+
+
+
+
+ Enable disk quotas. If you
+ have a public access system, and do not want users
+ to be able to overflow the /home
+ partition, you can establish disk quotas for each
+ user. Refer to the
+
+ section for more information.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Basic Controllers and Devices
+
+ These sections describe the basic disk, tape, and
+ CD-ROM controllers supported by FreeBSD. There are
+ separate sections for controllers and cards.
+
+
+
+ controller isa0
+
+
+
+ All PC's supported by
+ FreeBSD have one of these. If you have an IBM PS/2
+ (Micro Channel Architecture), then you cannot run
+ FreeBSD at this time.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller pci0
+
+
+
+
+ Include this if you have a
+ PCI motherboard. This enables auto-detection of
+ PCI cards and gatewaying from the PCI to the ISA
+ bus.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller fdc0
+
+
+
+
+ Floppy drive controller:
+ fd0 is the ``A:'' floppy drive, and
+ fd1 is the ``B:'' drive. ft0 is
+ a QIC-80 tape drive attached to the floppy
+ controller. Comment out any lines corresponding to
+ devices you do not have.
+
+
+
+ Note: QIC-80 tape support requires a
+ separate filter program called ft(8), see
+ the manual page for details.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller wdc0
+
+
+
+
+ This is the primary IDE
+ controller. wd0 and wd1 are the
+ master and slave hard drive, respectively.
+ wdc1 is a secondary IDE controller where
+ you might have a third or fourth hard drive, or an
+ IDE CD-ROM. Comment out the lines which do not
+ apply (if you have a SCSI hard drive, you will
+ probably want to comment out all six lines, for
+ example).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device wcd0
+
+
+
+
+ This device
+ provides IDE CD-ROM support. Be sure to leave
+ wdc0 uncommented, and wdc1 if you have
+ more than one IDE controller and your CD-ROM is on
+ the second one card. To use this, you must
+ also include the line options ATAPI.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device npx0 at isa? port ``IO_NPX'' irq 13 vector npxintr
+
+
+
+
+ npx0 is the interface to the floating point math
+ unit in FreeBSD, either the hardware co-processor or the
+ software math emulator. It is NOT optional.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device wt0 at isa? port 0x300 bio irq 5 drq 1 vector wtintr
+
+
+
+
+ Wangtek and Archive
+ QIC-02/QIC-36 tape drive support
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Proprietary CD-ROM support
+
+
+
+
+ The following
+ drivers are for the so-called proprietary
+ CD-ROM drives. These drives have their own
+ controller card or might plug into a sound card
+ such as the SoundBlaster 16. They are not
+ IDE or SCSI. Most older single-speed and
+ double-speed CD-ROMs use these interfaces, while
+ newer quad-speeds are likely to be or .
+
+
+
+ device mcd0 at isa? port 0x300 bio irq 10 vector mcdintr
+
+
+
+ Mitsumi CD-ROM (LU002,
+ LU005, FX001D).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device scd0 at isa? port 0x230 bio
+
+
+
+
+ Sony CD-ROM (CDU31, CDU33A).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller matcd0 at isa? port ? bio
+
+
+
+
+ Matsushita/Panasonic CD-ROM (sold by Creative
+ Labs for SoundBlaster).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ SCSI Device Support
+
+ This section describes the various SCSI controllers
+ and devices supported by FreeBSD.
+
+
+
+ SCSI Controllers
+
+
+
+ The next ten or so lines include support for
+ different kinds of SCSI controllers. Comment out
+ all except for the one(s) you have:
+
+
+
+ controller bt0 at isa? port ``IO_BT0'' bio irq ? vector btintr
+
+
+
+ Most Buslogic controllers
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller uha0 at isa? port ``IO_UHA0'' bio irq ? drq 5 vector uhaintr
+
+
+
+
+ UltraStor 14F and 34F
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller ahc0
+
+
+
+
+ Adaptec 274x/284x/294x
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller ahb0 at isa? bio irq ? vector ahbintr
+
+
+
+
+ Adaptec 174x
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller aha0 at isa? port ``IO_AHA0'' bio irq ? drq 5 vector ahaintr
+
+
+
+
+ Adaptec 154x
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller aic0 at isa? port 0x340 bio irq 11 vector aicintr
+
+
+
+
+ Adaptec 152x and sound cards using Adaptec AIC-6360 (slow!)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller nca0 at isa? port 0x1f88 bio irq 10 vector ncaintr
+
+
+
+
+ ProAudioSpectrum cards using NCR 5380 or Trantor T130
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller sea0 at isa? bio irq 5 iomem 0xc8000 iosiz 0x2000 vector seaintr
+
+
+
+
+ Seagate ST01/02 8 bit controller (slow!)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller wds0 at isa? port 0x350 bio irq 15 drq 6 vector wdsintr
+
+
+
+
+ Western Digital WD7000 controller
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller ncr0
+
+
+
+
+ NCR 53C810, 53C815, 53C825, 53C860, 53C875 PCI SCSI controller
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options ``SCSI_DELAY=15''
+
+
+
+
+ This causes the
+ kernel to pause 15 seconds before probing each SCSI
+ device in your system. If you only have IDE hard
+ drives, you can ignore this, otherwise you will
+ probably want to lower this number, perhaps to 5
+ seconds, to speed up booting. Of course if you do
+ this, and FreeBSD has trouble recognizing your SCSI
+ devices, you will have to raise it back up.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller scbus0
+
+
+
+
+ If you have any SCSI
+ controllers, this line provides generic SCSI
+ support. If you do not have SCSI, you can comment
+ this, and the following three lines, out.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device sd0
+
+
+
+
+ Support for SCSI hard
+ drives.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device st0
+
+
+
+
+ Support for SCSI tape
+ drives.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device cd0
+
+
+
+
+ Support for SCSI CD-ROM
+ drives.
+
+
+
+ Note that the number 0 in the above entries
+ is slightly misleading: all these devices are
+ automatically configured as they are found, regardless
+ of how many of them are hooked up to the SCSI bus(es),
+ and which target IDs they have.
+
+ If you want to ``wire down'' specific target IDs to
+ particular devices, refer to the appropriate section
+ of the LINT kernel config file.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Console, Bus Mouse, and X Server Support
+
+ You must choose one of these two console types, and, if you plan
+ to use the X Window System with the vt220 console, enable the
+ XSERVER option and optionally, a bus mouse or PS/2 mouse device.
+
+
+
+ device sc0 at isa? port ``IO_KBD' tty irq 1 vector scintr
+
+
+
+ sc0 is the default
+ console driver, which resembles an SCO console.
+ Since most full-screen programs access the console
+ through a terminal database library like
+ termcap, it should not matter much whether
+ you use this or vt0, the VT220 compatible
+ console driver. When you log in, set your TERM
+ variable to ``scoansi'' if full-screen programs
+ have trouble running under this console.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device vt0 at isa? port ``IO_KBD'' tty irq 1 vector pcrint
+
+
+
+
+ This is a VT220-compatible
+ console driver, backwards compatible to VT100/102.
+ It works well on some laptops which have hardware
+ incompatibilities with sc0. Also, set
+ your TERM variable to ``vt100'' or ``vt220'' when
+ you log in. This driver might also prove useful
+ when connecting to a large number of different
+ machines over the network, where the termcap
+ or terminfo entries for the sc0
+ device are often not available -- ``vt100'' should be
+ available on virtually any platform.
+
+
+
+ options ``PCVT_FREEBSD=210''
+
+
+
+ Required
+ with the vt0 console driver.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options XSERVER
+
+
+
+
+ Only applicable with the vt0 console driver.
+ This includes code
+ required to run the XFree86 X Window
+ Server under the vt0 console driver.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device mse0 at isa? port 0x23c tty irq 5 vector ms
+
+
+
+
+ Use this device if you have a Logitech or
+ ATI InPort bus mouse card.
+
+
+
+ Note: If you have a serial mouse,
+ ignore these two lines, and instead, make sure
+ the appropriate port is enabled (probably
+ COM1).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device psm0 at isa? port ``IO_KBD'' conflicts tty irq 12 vector psmintr
+
+
+
+
+ Use this device if your
+ mouse plugs into the PS/2 mouse port.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Serial and Parallel Ports
+
+ Nearly all systems have these. If you are attaching a
+ printer to one of these ports, the section of the handbook is very
+ useful. If you are using modem, provides extensive detail on
+ serial port configuration for use with such devices.
+
+
+
+ device sio0 at isa? port ``IO_COM1'' tty irq 4 vector siointr
+
+
+
+ sio0
+ through sio3 are the four serial ports
+ referred to as COM1 through COM4 in the MS-DOS
+ world. Note that if you have an internal modem on
+ COM4 and a serial port at COM2 you will have to
+ change the IRQ of the modem to 2 (for obscure
+ technical reasons IRQ 2 = IRQ 9) in order to access
+ it from FreeBSD. If you have a multiport serial
+ card, check the manual page for sio(4) for
+ more information on the proper values for these
+ lines. Some video cards (notably
+ those based on S3 chips) use IO addresses of the
+ form 0x*2e8, and since many cheap serial
+ cards do not fully decode the 16-bit IO address
+ space, they clash with these cards, making the
+ COM4 port practically unavailable.
+
+ Each serial port is required to have a unique
+ IRQ (unless you are using one of the multiport cards
+ where shared interrupts are supported), so the default
+ IRQs for COM3 and COM4 cannot be used.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device lpt0 at isa? port? tty irq 7 vector lptintr
+
+
+
+
+ lpt0 through lpt2
+ are the three printer ports you could conceivably
+ have. Most people just have one, though, so feel
+ free to comment out the other two lines if you do
+ not have them.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Networking
+
+ FreeBSD, as with Unix in general, places a
+ big emphasis on networking. Therefore, even
+ if you do not have an Ethernet card, pay attention to
+ the mandatory options and the dial-up networking
+ support.
+
+
+
+ options INET
+
+ Networking support. Leave it in even if you do not plan
+ to be connected to a network. Most programs require at least
+ loopback networking (i.e. making network connections within your
+ PC) so this is essentially mandatory.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Ethernet cards
+
+
+
+
+ The next lines enable support for various Ethernet
+ cards. If you do not have a network card, you can
+ comment out all of these lines. Otherwise, you will
+ want to leave in support for your particular
+ Ethernet card(s):
+
+
+
+ device de0
+
+
+
+ Ethernet adapters based on Digital Equipment DC21040,
+ DC21041 or DC21140 chips
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device fxp0
+
+
+
+
+ Intel EtherExpress Pro/100B
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device vx0
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com 3C590 and 3C595 (buggy)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device cx0 at isa? port 0x240 net irq 15 drq 7 vector cxintr
+
+
+
+
+ Cronyx/Sigma multiport
+ sync/async (with Cisco or PPP framing)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device ed0 at isa? port 0x280 net irq 5 iomem 0xd8000 vector edintr
+
+
+
+
+ Western Digital and SMC 80xx and 8216; Novell NE1000
+ and NE2000; 3Com 3C503; HP PC Lan Plus (HP27247B and HP27252A)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device el0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 9 vector elintr
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com 3C501 (slow!)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device eg0 at isa? port 0x310 net irq 5 vector egintr
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com 3C505
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device ep0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 10 vector epintr
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com 3C509 (buggy)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device fe0 at isa? port 0x240 net irq ? vector feintr
+
+
+
+
+ Fujitsu MB86960A/MB86965A Ethernet
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device fea0 at isa? net irq ? vector feaintr
+
+
+
+
+ DEC DEFEA EISA FDDI adapter
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device ie0 at isa? port 0x360 net irq 7 iomem 0xd0000 vector ieintr
+
+
+
+
+ AT&T StarLAN 10 and EN100; 3Com 3C507;
+ unknown NI5210
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device ix0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 10 iomem 0xd0000 iosiz 32768 vector ixintr
+
+
+
+
+ Intel EtherExpress 16
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device le0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 5 iomem 0xd0000 vector le_intr
+
+
+
+
+ Digital Equipment EtherWorks 2 and EtherWorks
+ 3 (DEPCA, DE100, DE101, DE200, DE201, DE202,
+ DE203, DE204, DE205, DE422)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device lnc0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 10 drq 0 vector lncintr
+
+
+
+
+ Lance/PCnet cards (Isolan, Novell NE2100,
+ NE32-VL)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device ze0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 5 iomem 0xd8000 vector zeintr
+
+
+
+
+ IBM/National Semiconductor PCMCIA ethernet
+ controller.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device zp0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 10 iomem 0xd8000 vector zpintr
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com PCMCIA Etherlink III
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Note: With certain cards (notably the
+ NE2000) you will have to change the port and/or IRQ
+ since there is no ``standard'' location for these
+ cards.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device loop
+
+
+
+
+ loop is the
+ generic loopback device for TCP/IP. If you telnet
+ or FTP to localhost
+ (a.k.a. 127.0.0.1) it will come back at
+ you through this pseudo-device. Mandatory.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device ether
+
+
+
+
+ ether is only
+ needed if you have an Ethernet card and includes
+ generic Ethernet protocol code.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device sl number
+
+
+
+
+ sl is for SLIP (Serial Line Internet
+ Protocol) support. This has been almost entirely
+ supplanted by PPP, which is easier to set up,
+ better suited for modem-to-modem connections, as
+ well as more powerful. The number after
+ sl specifies how many simultaneous SLIP
+ sessions to support. This handbook has more
+ information on setting up a SLIP or .
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device ppp number
+
+
+
+
+ ppp is for kernel-mode PPP (Point-to-Point
+ Protocol) support for dial-up Internet connections.
+ There is also version of PPP implemented as a user
+ application that uses the tun and offers
+ more flexibility and features such as demand
+ dialing. If you still want to use this PPP driver,
+ read the
+ section of the handbook. As with the sl
+ device, number specifies how many
+ simultaneous PPP connections to support.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device tun number
+
+
+
+
+ tun is used by the user-mode PPP software.
+ This program is easy to set up and very fast. It
+ also has special features such as automatic
+ dial-on-demand. The number after tun
+ specifies the number of simultaneous PPP sessions
+ to support. See the section of the handbook for
+ more information.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device bpfilter number
+
+
+
+
+ Berkeley packet filter. This pseudo-device allows
+ network interfaces to be placed in promiscuous
+ mode, capturing every packet on a broadcast network
+ (e.g. an ethernet). These packets can be captured
+ to disk and/or examined with the
+ tcpdump(1) program. Note that
+ implementation of this capability can seriously
+ compromise your overall network security.
+ The number after bpfilter is the number of
+ interfaces that can be examined
+ simultaneously. Optional, not recommended except
+ for those who are fully aware of the potential
+ pitfalls. Not all network cards support this
+ capability.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Sound cards
+
+ This is the first section containing lines that are
+ not in the GENERIC kernel. To include sound card
+ support, you will have to copy the appropriate lines from
+ the LINT kernel (which contains support for
+ every device) as follows:
+
+
+
+ controller snd0
+
+
+
+ Generic sound driver code.
+ Required for all of the following sound cards
+ except pca.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device pas0 at isa? port 0x388 irq 10 drq 6 vector pasintr
+
+
+
+
+ ProAudioSpectrum digital audio and MIDI.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device sb0 at isa? port 0x220 irq 7 conflicts drq 1 vector sbintr
+
+
+
+
+ SoundBlaster digital audio.
+
+
+
+ Note: If your SoundBlaster is on a
+ different IRQ (such as 5), change irq 7
+ to, for example, irq 5 and remove the
+ conflicts keyword. Also, you must add
+ the line: options ``SBC_IRQ=5''
+
+ Note: If your SB16 is on a different
+ 16-bit DMA channel (such as 6 or 7), change the
+ drq 5 keyword appropriately, and then
+ add the line: options
+ "SB16_DMA=6"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device sbmidi0 at isa? port 0x330
+
+
+
+
+ SoundBlaster 16 MIDI interface. If you have a
+ SoundBlaster 16, you must include this line, or the
+ kernel will not compile.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device gus0 at isa? port 0x220 irq 10 drq 1 vector gusintr
+
+
+
+
+ Gravis Ultrasound.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device mss0 at isa? port 0x530 irq 10 drq 1 vector adintr
+
+
+
+
+ Microsoft Sound System.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device opl0 at isa? port 0x388 conflicts
+
+
+
+
+ AdLib FM-synthesis audio. Include this line for
+ AdLib, SoundBlaster, and ProAudioSpectrum users, if
+ you want to play MIDI songs with a program such as
+ playmidi (in the ports collection).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device mpu0 at isa? port 0x330 irq 6 drq 0
+
+
+
+
+ Roland MPU-401 stand-alone card.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device uart0 at isa? port 0x330 irq 5 vector ``m6850intr''
+
+
+
+
+ Stand-alone 6850 UART for MIDI.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device pca0 at isa? port ``IO_TIMER1'' tty
+
+
+
+
+ Digital audio through PC speaker. This is going to
+ be very poor sound quality and quite CPU-intensive,
+ so you have been warned (but it does not require a
+ sound card).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Note: There is some additional
+ documentation in
+ /usr/src/sys/i386/isa/sound/sound.doc.
+ Also, if you add any of these devices, be sure to
+ create the sound .
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Pseudo-devices
+
+ Pseudo-device drivers are parts of the kernel that act
+ like device drivers but do not correspond to any actual
+ hardware in the machine. The
+ pseudo-devices are in that section, while the remainder
+ are here.
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device gzip
+
+
+
+ gzip allows you to run FreeBSD programs
+ that have been compressed with gzip. The
+ programs in /stand are compressed so it
+ is a good idea to have this option in your kernel.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device log
+
+
+
+
+ log is used for logging of kernel error
+ messages. Mandatory.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device pty number
+
+
+
+
+ pty is a ``pseudo-terminal'' or simulated
+ login port. It is used by incoming telnet
+ and rlogin sessions, xterm, and some other
+ applications such as emacs. The number
+ indicates the number of ptys to create.
+ If you need more than GENERIC default of 16
+ simultaneous xterm windows and/or remote logins, be
+ sure to increase this number accordingly, up to a
+ maximum of 64.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device snp number
+
+
+
+
+ Snoop device. This pseudo-device allows one
+ terminal session to watch another using the
+ watch(8) command. Note that
+ implementation of this capability has important
+ security and privacy implications. The
+ number after snp is the total number of
+ simultaneous snoop sessions. Optional.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device vn
+
+
+
+
+ Vnode driver. Allows a file to be treated as a
+ device after being set up with the
+ vnconfig(8) command. This driver can be
+ useful for manipulating floppy disk images and
+ using a file as a swap device (e.g. an MS Windows
+ swap file). Optional.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device ccd number
+
+
+
+
+ Concatenated disks. This pseudo-device allows you to
+ concatenate multiple disk partitions into one large
+ ``meta''-disk. The number after ccd is the
+ total number of concatenated disks (not total number of
+ disks that can be concatenated) that can be created.
+ (See ccd(4) and ccdconfig(8) man pages
+ for more details.) Optional.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Joystick, PC Speaker, Miscellaneous
+
+ This section describes some miscellaneous hardware
+ devices supported by FreeBSD. Note that none of these
+ lines are included in the GENERIC kernel, you will have
+ to copy them from this handbook or the LINT kernel
+ (which contains support for every device):
+
+
+
+ device joy0 at isa? port ``IO_GAME''
+
+
+
+ PC joystick device.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device speaker
+
+
+
+
+ Supports IBM BASIC-style noises through the PC
+ speaker. Some fun programs which use this are
+ /usr/sbin/spkrtest, which is a shell
+ script that plays some simple songs, and
+ /usr/games/piano which lets you play songs
+ using the keyboard as a simple piano (this file
+ only exists if you have installed the games
+ package). Also, the excellent text role-playing
+ game NetHack (in the ports collection) can be
+ configured to use this device to play songs when
+ you play musical instruments in the game.
+
+
+
+ See also the device.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Making Device Nodes
+
+ Almost every device in the kernel has a corresponding
+ ``node'' entry in the /dev directory. These
+ nodes look like regular files, but are actually special
+ entries into the kernel which programs use to access the
+ device. The shell script /dev/MAKEDEV, which is
+ executed when you first install the operating system,
+ creates nearly all of the device nodes supported.
+ However, it does not create all of them, so when
+ you add support for a new device, it pays to make sure
+ that the appropriate entries are in this directory, and
+ if not, add them. Here is a simple example:
+
+ Suppose you add the IDE CD-ROM support to the kernel.
+ The line to add is:
+
+ controller wcd0
+
+
+ This means that you should look for some entries that
+ start with wcd0 in the /dev directory,
+ possibly followed by a letter, such as `c', or preceded
+ by the letter 'r', which means a `raw' device. It turns
+ out that those files are not there, so I must change to
+ the /dev directory and type:
+
+ # sh MAKEDEV wcd0
+
+
+ When this script finishes, you will find that there are
+ now wcd0c and rwcd0c entries in
+ /dev so you know that it executed correctly.
+
+ For sound cards, the command:
+
+ # sh MAKEDEV snd0
+
+
+ creates the appropriate entries. Note: when creating device
+ nodes for devices such as sound cards, if other people have
+ access to your machine, it may be desirable to
+ protect the devices from outside access by adding them to the
+ /etc/fbtab file. See man fbtab for
+ more information.
+
+ Follow this simple procedure for any other non-GENERIC
+ devices which do not have entries.
+
+
+
+ Note: All SCSI controllers use the same set
+ of /dev entries, so you do not need to create
+ these. Also, network cards and SLIP/PPP pseudo-devices
+ do not have entries in /dev at all, so you do
+ not have to worry about these either.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ If Something Goes Wrong
+
+ There are four categories of trouble that can occur when
+ building a custom kernel. They are:
+
+
+
+ Config command fails
+
+
+
+ If the config
+ command fails when you give it your kernel
+ description, you have probably made a simple error
+ somewhere. Fortunately, config will print
+ the line number that it had trouble with, so you can
+ quickly skip to it with vi. For example, if
+ you see:
+
+ config: line 17: syntax error
+
+
+ you can skip to the problem in vi by typing
+ ``17G'' in command mode. Make sure the keyword is
+ typed correctly, by comparing it to the GENERIC
+ kernel or another reference.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Make command fails
+
+
+
+
+ If the make
+ command fails, it usually signals an error in your
+ kernel description, but not severe enough for
+ config to catch it. Again, look over your
+ configuration, and if you still cannot resolve the
+ problem, send mail to the &a.questions; with your kernel
+ configuration, and it should be diagnosed very
+ quickly.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Kernel will not boot
+
+
+
+
+ If your new kernel
+ does not boot, or fails to recognize your devices,
+ do not panic! Fortunately, BSD has an excellent
+ mechanism for recovering from incompatible kernels.
+ Simply type the name of the kernel you want to boot
+ from (i.e. ``kernel.old'') at the FreeBSD boot
+ prompt instead of pressing return. When
+ reconfiguring a kernel, it is always a good idea to
+ keep a kernel that is known to work on hand.
+
+ After booting with a good kernel you can check over
+ your configuration file and try to build it again.
+ One helpful resource is the
+ /var/log/messages file which records, among
+ other things, all of the kernel messages from every
+ successful boot. Also, the dmesg(8) command
+ will print the kernel messages from the current boot.
+
+
+
+ Note: If you are having trouble building
+ a kernel, make sure to keep a GENERIC, or some
+ other kernel that is known to work on hand as a
+ different name that will not get erased on the next
+ build. You cannot rely on kernel.old
+ because when installing a new kernel,
+ kernel.old is overwritten with the last
+ installed kernel which may be non-functional.
+ Also, as soon as possible, move the working kernel
+ to the proper ``kernel'' location or commands such
+ as ps(1) will not work properly. The
+ proper command to ``unlock'' the kernel file that
+ make installs (in order to move another
+ kernel back permanently) is:
+
+ # chflags noschg /kernel
+
+
+ And, if you want to ``lock'' your new kernel into place, or any file
+ for that matter, so that it cannot be moved or tampered with:
+
+ # chflags schg /kernel
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Kernel works, but ps does not work any more!
+
+
+
+
+ If you have installed a different version
+ of the kernel from the one that the system utilities
+ have been built with, for example, an experimental
+ ``2.2.0'' kernel on a 2.1.0-RELEASE system, many
+ system-status commands like ps(1) and
+ vmstat(8) will not work any more. You must
+ recompile the libkvm library as well as
+ these utilities. This is one reason it is not
+ normally a good idea to use a different version of
+ the kernel from the rest of the operating system.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Security
+
+
+
+ DES, MD5, and Crypt
+
+ Contributed by &a.wollman;24 September 1995.
+
+ In order to protect the security of passwords on UN*X systems from
+ being easily exposed, passwords have traditionally been scrambled in
+ some way. Starting with Bell Labs' Seventh Edition Unix, passwords
+ were encrypted using what the security people call a ``one-way hash
+ function''. That is to say, the password is transformed in such a way
+ that the original password cannot be regained except by brute-force
+ searching the space of possible passwords. Unfortunately, the only
+ secure method that was available to the AT&T researchers at the
+ time was based on DES, the Data Encryption Standard. This causes only
+ minimal difficulty for commercial vendors, but is a serious problem
+ for an operating system like FreeBSD where all the source code is
+ freely available, because national governments in many places like to
+ place restrictions on cross-border transport of DES and other
+ encryption software.
+
+ So, the FreeBSD team was faced with a dilemma: how could we provide
+ compatibility with all those UNIX systems out there while still not
+ running afoul of the law? We decided to take a dual-track approach:
+ we would make distributions which contained only a non-regulated
+ password scrambler, and then provide as a separate add-on library the
+ DES-based password hash. The password-scrambling function was moved
+ out of the C library to a separate library, called `libcrypt'
+ because the name of the C function to implement it is
+ `crypt'. In FreeBSD 1.x and some pre-release 2.0 snapshots,
+ the non-regulated scrambler uses an insecure function written by Nate
+ Williams; in subsequent releases this was replaced by a mechanism
+ using the RSA Data Security, Inc., MD5 one-way hash function. Because
+ neither of these functions involve encryption, they are believed to be
+ exportable from the US and importable into many other countries.
+
+ Meanwhile, work was also underway on the DES-based password hash
+ function. First, a version of the `crypt' function which was
+ written outside the US was imported, thus synchronizing the US and
+ non-US code. Then, the library was modified and split into two; the
+ DES `libcrypt' contains only the code involved in performing
+ the one-way password hash, and a separate `libcipher' was
+ created with the entry points to actually perform encryption. The
+ code was partitioned in this way to make it easier to get an export
+ license for the compiled library.
+
+
+
+ Recognizing your `crypt' mechanism
+
+ It is fairly easy to recognize whether a particular password
+ string was created using the DES- or MD5-based hash function.
+ MD5 password strings always begin with the characters
+ `$1$'. DES password strings do not have
+ any particular identifying characteristics, but they are shorter
+ than MD5 passwords, and are coded in a 64-character alphabet
+ which does not include the `$' character, so a
+ relatively short string which doesn't begin with a dollar sign is
+ very likely a DES password.
+
+ Determining which library is being used on your system is fairly
+ easy for most programs, except for those like `init' which
+ are statically linked. (For those programs, the only way is to try
+ them on a known password and see if it works.) Programs which use
+ `crypt' are linked against `libcrypt', which for
+ each type of library is a symbolic link to the appropriate
+ implementation. For example, on a system using the DES versions:
+
+
+
+ $ cd /usr/lib
+ $ ls -l /usr/lib/libcrypt*
+ lrwxr-xr-x 1 bin bin 13 Sep 5 12:50 libcrypt.a -> libdescrypt.a
+ lrwxr-xr-x 1 bin bin 18 Sep 5 12:50 libcrypt.so.2.0 -> libdescrypt.so.2.0
+ lrwxr-xr-x 1 bin bin 15 Sep 5 12:50 libcrypt_p.a -> libdescrypt_p.a
+
+
+
+ On a system using the MD5-based libraries, the same links will be
+ present, but the target will be `libscrypt' rather than
+ `libdescrypt'.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ S/Key
+
+ Contributed by &a.wollman;25 September 1995.
+
+ S/Key is a one-time password scheme based on a one-way hash function
+ (in our version, this is MD4 for compatibility; other versions have
+ used MD5 and DES-MAC). S/Key has been a standard part of all FreeBSD
+ distributions since version 1.1.5, and is also implemented on a large
+ and growing number of other systems. S/Key is a registered trademark
+ of Bell Communications Research, Inc.
+
+ There are three different sorts of passwords which we will talk about
+ in the discussion below. The first is your usual UNIX-style or Kerberos
+ password; we will call this a ``UNIX password''. The second sort is the
+ one-time password which is generated by the S/Key `key' program and
+ accepted by the `keyinit' program and the login prompt; we will call
+ this a ``one-time password''. The final sort of password is the
+ secret password which you give to the `key' program (and sometimes the
+ `keyinit' program) which it uses to generate one-time passwords; we will
+ call it a ``secret password'' or just unqualified ``password''.
+
+ The secret password does not necessarily have anything to do with your
+ UNIX password (while they can be the same, this is not recommended).
+ While UNIX passwords are limited to eight characters in length, your
+ S/Key secret password can be as long as you like; I use seven-word
+ phrases. In general, the S/Key system operates completely
+ independently of the UNIX password system.
+
+ There are in addition two other sorts of data involved in the S/Key
+ system; one is called the ``seed'' or (confusingly) ``key'', and
+ consists of two letters and five digits, and the other is the
+ ``iteration count'' and is a number between 100 and 1. S/Key
+ constructs a one-time password from these components by concatenating
+ the seed and the secret password, then applying a one-way hash (the
+ RSA Data Security, Inc., MD4 secure hash function) iteration-count
+ times, and turning the result into six short English words. The
+ `login' and `su' programs keep track of the last one-time
+ password used, and the user is authenticated if the hash of the
+ user-provided password is equal to the previous password. Because a
+ one-way hash function is used, it is not possible to generate future
+ one-time passwords having overheard one which was successfully used;
+ the iteration count is decremented after each successful login to keep
+ the user and login program in sync. (When you get the iteration count
+ down to 1, it is time to reinitialize S/Key.)
+
+ There are four programs involved in the S/Key system which we will
+ discuss below. The `key' program accepts an iteration count, a
+ seed, and a secret password, and generates a one-time password. The
+ `keyinit' program is used to initialized S/Key, and to change
+ passwords, iteration counts, or seeds; it takes either a secret
+ password, or an iteration count, seed, and one-time password. The
+ `keyinfo' program examines the /etc/skeykeys file and
+ prints out the invoking user's current iteration count and seed.
+ Finally, the `login' and `su' programs contain the necessary
+ logic to accept S/Key one-time passwords for authentication. The
+ `login' program is also capable of disallowing the use of UNIX
+ passwords on connections coming from specified addresses.
+
+ There are four different sorts of operations we will cover. The first
+ is using the `keyinit' program over a secure connection to set up
+ S/Key for the first time, or to change your password or seed. The
+ second operation is using the `keyinit' program over an insecure
+ connection, in conjunction with the `key' program over a secure
+ connection, to do the same. The third is using the `key' program to
+ log in over an insecure connection. The fourth is using the `key'
+ program to generate a number of keys which can be written down or
+ printed out to carry with you when going to some location without
+ secure connections to anywhere (like at a conference).
+
+
+
+ Secure connection initialization
+
+ To initialize S/Key, change your password, or change your seed while
+ logged in over a secure connection (e.g., on the console of a machine),
+ use the `keyinit' command without any parameters while logged in as
+ yourself:
+
+
+
+ $ keyinit
+ Updating wollman: ) these will not appear if you
+ Old key: ha73895 ) have not used S/Key before
+ Reminder - Only use this method if you are directly connected.
+ If you are using telnet or rlogin exit with no password and use keyinit -s.
+ Enter secret password: ) I typed my pass phrase here
+ Again secret password: ) I typed it again
+
+ ID wollman s/key is 99 ha73896 ) discussed below
+ SAG HAS FONT GOUT FATE BOOM )
+
+
+
+ There is a lot of information here. At the `Enter secret password:'
+ prompt, you should enter some password or phrase (I use phrases of
+ minimum seven words) which will be needed to generate login keys. The
+ line starting `ID' gives the parameters of your particular S/Key
+ instance: your login name, the iteration count, and seed. When
+ logging in with S/Key, the system will remember these parameters and
+ present them back to you so you do not have to remember them. The last
+ line gives the particular one-time password which corresponds to those
+ parameters and your secret password; if you were to re-login
+ immediately, this one-time password is the one you would use.
+
+
+
+
+ Insecure connection initialization
+
+ To initialize S/Key or change your password or seed over an insecure
+ connection, you will need to already have a secure connection to some
+ place where you can run the `key' program; this might be in the form
+ of a desk accessory on a Macintosh, or a shell prompt on a machine you
+ trust (we will show the latter). You will also need to make up an
+ iteration count (100 is probably a good value), and you may make up
+ your own seed or use a randomly-generated one. Over on the insecure
+ connection (to the machine you are initializing), use the `keyinit -s'
+ command:
+
+
+
+ $ keyinit -s
+ Updating wollman:
+ Old key: kh94741
+ Reminder you need the 6 English words from the skey command.
+ Enter sequence count from 1 to 9999: 100 ) I typed this
+ Enter new key [default kh94742]:
+ s/key 100 kh94742
+
+
+
+ To accept the default seed (which the `keyinit' program confusingly
+ calls a `key'), press return. Then move over to your secure
+ connection or S/Key desk accessory, and give it the same parameters:
+
+
+
+ $ key 100 kh94742
+ Reminder - Do not use this program while logged in via telnet or rlogin.
+ Enter secret password: ) I typed my secret password
+ HULL NAY YANG TREE TOUT VETO
+
+
+
+ Now switch back over to the insecure connection, and copy the one-time
+ password generated by `key' over to the `keyinit' program:
+
+
+
+ s/key access password: HULL NAY YANG TREE TOUT VETO
+
+ ID wollman s/key is 100 kh94742
+ HULL NAY YANG TREE TOUT VETO
+
+
+
+ The rest of the description from the previous section applies here as
+ well.
+
+
+
+
+ Diversion: a login prompt
+
+ Before explaining how to generate one-time passwords, we should go
+ over an S/Key login prompt:
+
+
+
+ $ telnet himalia
+ Trying 18.26.0.186...
+ Connected to himalia.lcs.mit.edu.
+ Escape character is '^]'.
+ s/key 92 hi52030
+ Password:
+
+
+
+ Note that, before prompting for a password, the login program
+ prints out the iteration number and seed which you will need in order
+ to generate the appropriate key. You will also find a useful feature
+ (not shown here): if you press return at the password prompt, the
+ login program will turn echo on, so you can see what you are typing.
+ This can be extremely useful if you are attempting to type in an S/Key
+ by hand, such as from a printout.
+
+ If this machine were configured to disallow UNIX passwords over a
+ connection from my machine, the prompt would have also included the
+ annotation `(s/key required)', indicating that only S/Key one-time
+ passwords will be accepted.
+
+
+
+
+ Generating a single one-time password
+
+ Now, to generate the one-time password needed to answer this login
+ prompt, we use a trusted machine and the `key' program. (There are
+ versions of the `key' program from DOS and Windows machines, and there
+ is an S/Key desk accessory for Macintosh computers as well.) The
+ command-line `key' program takes as its parameters the iteration count
+ and seed; you can cut-and-paste right from the login prompt starting
+ at ``key'' to the end of the line. Thus:
+
+
+
+ $ key 92 hi52030 ) pasted from previous section
+ Reminder - Do not use this program while logged in via telnet or rlogin.
+ Enter secret password: ) I typed my secret password
+ ADEN BED WOLF HAW HOT STUN
+
+
+
+ And in the other window:
+
+
+
+ s/key 92 hi52030 ) from previous section
+ Password:
+ (turning echo on)
+ Password:ADEN BED WOLF HAW HOT STUN
+ Last login: Wed Jun 28 15:31:00 from halloran-eldar.l
+ [etc.]
+
+
+
+ This is the easiest mechanism if you have a trusted machine.
+ There is a Java S/Key key applet,
+ The Java OTP Calculator,
+ that you can download and run locally on any Java supporting brower.
+
+
+
+
+ Generating multiple one-time passwords
+
+ Sometimes we have to go places where no trusted machines or
+ connections are available. In this case, it is possible to use the
+ `key' command to generate a number of one-time passwords in the same
+ command; these can then be printed out. For example:
+
+
+
+ $ key -n 25 57 zz99999
+ Reminder - Do not use this program while logged in via telnet or rlogin.
+ Enter secret password:
+ 33: WALT THY MALI DARN NIT HEAD
+ 34: ASK RICE BEAU GINA DOUR STAG
+ [...]
+ 56: AMOS BOWL LUG FAT CAIN INCH
+ 57: GROW HAYS TUN DISH CAR BALM
+
+
+
+ The `' requests twenty-five keys in sequence; the `57' indicates
+ the ending iteration number; and the rest is as before. Note that
+ these are printed out in reverse order of eventual use. If you are
+ really paranoid, you might want to write the results down by hand;
+ otherwise you can cut-and-paste into `lpr'. Note that each line shows
+ both the iteration count and the one-time password; you may still find
+ it handy to scratch off passwords as you use them.
+
+
+
+
+ Restricting use of UNIX passwords
+
+ The configuration file /etc/skey.access can be used to
+ configure restrictions on the use of UNIX passwords based on the host
+ name, user name, terminal port, or IP address of a login session. The
+ complete format of the file is documented in the skey.access(5)
+ manual page; there are also some security cautions there which should
+ be read before depending on this file for security.
+
+ If there is no /etc/skey.access file (which is the default
+ state as FreeBSD is shipped), then all users will be allowed to use
+ UNIX passwords. If the file exists, however, then all users will be
+ required to use S/Key unless explicitly permitted to do otherwise by
+ configuration statements in the skey.access file. In all cases,
+ UNIX passwords are permitted on the console.
+
+ Here is a sample configuration file which illustrates the three most
+ common sorts of configuration statements:
+
+
+
+ permit internet 18.26.0.0 255.255.0.0
+ permit user jrl
+ permit port ttyd0
+
+
+
+ The first line (`permit internet') allows users whose IP source
+ address (which is vulnerable to spoofing) matches the specified value
+ and mask, to use UNIX passwords. This should not be considered a
+ security mechanism, but rather, a means to remind authorized users
+ that they are using an insecure network and need to use S/Key for
+ authentication.
+
+ The second line (`permit user') allows the specified user to
+ use UNIX passwords at any time. Generally speaking, this should only
+ be used for people who are either unable to use the `key'
+ program, like those with dumb terminals, or those who are uneducable.
+
+ The third line (`permit port') allows all users logging in on
+ the specified terminal line to use UNIX passwords; this would be used
+ for dial-ups.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Kerberos
+
+ Contributed by &a.markm; (based on contribution by &a.md;).
+
+ Kerberos is a network add-on system/protocol that allows users to
+ authenticate themselves through the services of a secure server.
+ Services such as remote login, remote copy, secure inter-system
+ file copying and other high-risk tasks are made considerably safer
+ and more controllable.
+
+ The following instructions can be used as a guide on how to
+ set up Kerberos as distributed for FreeBSD. However, you should refer
+ to the relevant manual pages for a complete description.
+
+ In FreeBSD, the Kerberos is not that from the original 4.4BSD-Lite,
+ distribution, but eBones, which had been previously ported to
+ FreeBSD 1.1.5.1, and was sourced from outside the USA/Canada,
+ and is thus available to system owners outside those countries.
+
+ For those needing to get a legal foreign distribution of this
+ software, please DO NOT get it from a USA or Canada site.
+ You will get that site in big trouble! A legal copy of this is
+ available from skeleton.mikom.csir.co.za, which is in South
+ Africa.
+
+
+
+ Creating the initial database
+
+ This is done on the Kerberos server only. First make sure that you
+ do not have any old Kerberos databases around. You should change to the
+ directory /etc/kerberosIV and check that only the following
+ files are present:
+
+
+
+ grunt# cd /etc/kerberosIV
+ grunt# ls
+ README krb.conf krb.realms
+
+
+
+ If any additional files (such as principal.* or
+ master_key) exist, then use the kdb_destroy
+ command to destroy the old Kerberos database, of if Kerberos
+ is not running, simply delete the extra files with rm.
+
+ You should now edit the krb.conf and krb.realms
+ files to define your Kerberos realm. In this case the realm will
+ be GRONDAR.ZA and the server is grunt.grondar.za.
+ We edit or create the krb.conf file:
+
+
+
+ grunt# cat krb.conf
+ GRONDAR.ZA
+ GRONDAR.ZA grunt.grondar.za admin server
+ CS.BERKELEY.EDU okeeffe.berkeley.edu
+ ATHENA.MIT.EDU kerberos.mit.edu
+ ATHENA.MIT.EDU kerberos-1.mit.edu
+ ATHENA.MIT.EDU kerberos-2.mit.edu
+ ATHENA.MIT.EDU kerberos-3.mit.edu
+ LCS.MIT.EDU kerberos.lcs.mit.edu
+ TELECOM.MIT.EDU bitsy.mit.edu
+ ARC.NASA.GOV trident.arc.nasa.gov
+
+
+
+ In this case, the other realms do not need to be there.
+ They are here as an example of how a machine may be made aware
+ of multiple realms. You may wish to not include them for simplicity.
+
+ The first line names the realm in which this system works. The other
+ lines contain realm/host entries. The first item on a line is a realm,
+ and the second is a host in that realm that is acting as a ``key
+ distribution centre''. The words ``admin server'' following a hosts
+ name means that host also provides an administrative database server.
+ For further explanation of these terms, please consult the Kerberos
+ man pages.
+
+ Now we have to add grunt.grondar.za to the GRONDAR.ZA
+ realm and also add an entry to put all hosts in the .grondar.za
+ domain in the GRONDAR.ZA realm. The krb.realms file
+ would be updated as follows:
+
+
+
+ grunt# cat krb.realms
+ grunt.grondar.za GRONDAR.ZA
+ .grondar.za GRONDAR.ZA
+ .berkeley.edu CS.BERKELEY.EDU
+ .MIT.EDU ATHENA.MIT.EDU
+ .mit.edu ATHENA.MIT.EDU
+
+
+
+ Again, the other realms do not need to be there.
+ They are here as an example of how a machine may be made aware
+ of multiple realms. You may wish to remove them to simplify things.
+
+ The first line puts the specific system into the named
+ realm. The rest of the lines show how to default systems of a
+ particular subdomain to a named realm.
+
+ Now we are ready to create the database. This only needs to run on
+ the Kerberos server (or Key Distribution Centre). Issue the
+ kdb_init command to do this:
+
+
+
+ grunt# kdb_init
+ Realm name [default ATHENA.MIT.EDU ]: GRONDAR.ZA
+ You will be prompted for the database Master Password.
+ It is important that you NOT FORGET this password.
+
+ Enter Kerberos master key:
+
+
+
+ Now we have to save the key so that servers on the local
+ machine can pick it up. Use the kstash command to
+ do this.
+
+
+
+ grunt# kstash
+
+ Enter Kerberos master key:
+
+ Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
+
+ Master key entered. BEWARE!
+
+
+
+ This saves the encrypted master password in
+ /etc/kerberosIV/master_key.
+
+
+
+
+ Making it all run
+
+ Two principals need to be added to the database for each
+ system that will be secured with Kerberos. Their names are
+ kpasswd and rcmd These two principals are
+ made for each system, with the instance being the name of the
+ individual system.
+
+ These daemons, kpasswd and rcmd allow other systems
+ to change Kerberos passwords and run commands like rcp,
+ rlogin and rsh.
+
+ Now let's add these entries:
+
+
+
+ grunt# kdb_edit
+ Opening database...
+
+ Enter Kerberos master key:
+
+ Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
+
+ Master key entered. BEWARE!
+ Previous or default values are in [brackets] ,
+ enter return to leave the same, or new value.
+
+ Principal name: passwd
+ Instance: grunt
+
+ <Not found>, Create [y] ? y
+
+ Principal: passwd, Instance: grunt, kdc_key_ver: 1
+ New Password: <---- enter RANDOM here
+ Verifying password
+
+ New Password: <---- enter RANDOM here
+
+ Random password [y] ? y
+
+ Principal's new key version = 1
+ Expiration date (enter yyyy-mm-dd) [ 2000-01-01 ] ?
+ Max ticket lifetime (*5 minutes) [ 255 ] ?
+ Attributes [ 0 ] ?
+ Edit O.K.
+ Principal name: rcmd
+ Instance: grunt
+
+ <Not found>, Create [y] ?
+
+ Principal: rcmd, Instance: grunt, kdc_key_ver: 1
+ New Password: <---- enter RANDOM here
+ Verifying password
+
+ New Password: <---- enter RANDOM here
+
+ Random password [y] ?
+
+ Principal's new key version = 1
+ Expiration date (enter yyyy-mm-dd) [ 2000-01-01 ] ?
+ Max ticket lifetime (*5 minutes) [ 255 ] ?
+ Attributes [ 0 ] ?
+ Edit O.K.
+ Principal name: <---- null entry here will cause an exit
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Creating the server file
+
+ We now have to extract all the instances which define the services
+ on each machine. For this we use the ext_srvtab command.
+ This will create a file which must be copied or moved by secure
+ means to each Kerberos client's /etc/kerberosIV directory. This
+ file must be present on each server and client, and is crucial to the
+ operation of Kerberos.
+
+
+
+ grunt# ext_srvtab grunt
+
+ Enter Kerberos master key:
+
+ Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
+
+ Master key entered. BEWARE!
+ Generating 'grunt-new-srvtab'....
+
+
+
+ Now, this command only generates a temporary file
+ which must be renamed to srvtab so that all the
+ server can pick it up. Use the mv command to move it
+ into place on the original system:
+
+
+
+ grunt# mv grunt-new-srvtab srvtab
+
+
+
+ If the file is for a client system, and the network is not
+ deemed safe, then copy the <client>-new-srvtab to
+ removable media and transport it by secure physical means. Be
+ sure to rename it to srvtab in the client's
+ /etc/kerberosIV directory, and make sure it is mode 600:
+
+
+
+ grumble# mv grumble-new-srvtab srvtab
+ grumble# chmod 600 srvtab
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Populating the database
+
+ We now have to add some user entries into the database.
+ First let's create an entry for the user jane. Use
+ the kdb_edit command to do this:
+
+
+
+ grunt# kdb_edit
+ Opening database...
+
+ Enter Kerberos master key:
+
+ Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
+
+ Master key entered. BEWARE!
+ Previous or default values are in [brackets] ,
+ enter return to leave the same, or new value.
+
+ Principal name: jane
+ Instance:
+
+ <Not found>, Create [y] ? y
+
+ Principal: jane, Instance: , kdc_key_ver: 1
+ New Password: <---- enter a secure password here
+ Verifying password
+
+ New Password: <---- re-enter the password here
+
+ Principal's new key version = 1
+ Expiration date (enter yyyy-mm-dd) [ 2000-01-01 ] ?
+ Max ticket lifetime (*5 minutes) [ 255 ] ?
+ Attributes [ 0 ] ?
+ Edit O.K.
+ Principal name: <---- null entry here will cause an exit
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Testing it all out
+
+ First we have to start the Kerberos daemons. NOTE that if you have
+ correctly edited your /etc/rc.conf then this will happen
+ automatically when you reboot. This is only necessary on the Kerberos
+ server. Kerberos clients will automagically get what they need from
+ the /etc/kerberosIV directory.
+
+
+
+ grunt# kerberos &
+ grunt# Kerberos server starting
+ Sleep forever on error
+ Log file is /var/log/kerberos.log
+ Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
+
+ Master key entered. BEWARE!
+
+ Current Kerberos master key version is 1
+ Local realm: GRONDAR.ZA
+ grunt# kadmind -n &
+ grunt# KADM Server KADM0.0A initializing
+ Please do not use 'kill -9' to kill this job, use a
+ regular kill instead
+
+ Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
+
+ Master key entered. BEWARE!
+
+
+
+ Now we can try using the kinit command to get a ticket for
+ the id jane that we created above:
+
+
+
+ grunt$ kinit jane
+ MIT Project Athena (grunt.grondar.za)
+ Kerberos Initialization for "jane"
+ Password:
+
+
+
+ Try listing the tokens using klist to see if we really have them:
+
+
+
+ grunt$ klist
+ Ticket file: /tmp/tkt245
+ Principal: jane@GRONDAR.ZA
+
+ Issued Expires Principal
+ Apr 30 11:23:22 Apr 30 19:23:22 krbtgt.GRONDAR.ZA@GRONDAR.ZA
+
+
+
+ Now try changing the password using passwd to check if the
+ kpasswd daemon can get authorization to the Kerberos database:
+
+
+
+ grunt$ passwd
+ realm GRONDAR.ZA
+ Old password for jane:
+ New Password for jane:
+ Verifying password
+ New Password for jane:
+ Password changed.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Adding su privileges
+
+ Kerberos allows us to give each user who needs root
+ privileges their own separatesupassword. We
+ could now add an id which is authorized to su to root.
+ This is controlled by having an instance of root associated
+ with a principal. Using kdb_edit we can create the entry
+ jane.root in the Kerberos database:
+
+
+
+ grunt# kdb_edit
+ Opening database...
+
+ Enter Kerberos master key:
+
+ Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
+
+ Master key entered. BEWARE!
+ Previous or default values are in [brackets] ,
+ enter return to leave the same, or new value.
+
+ Principal name: jane
+ Instance: root
+
+ <Not found>, Create [y] ? y
+
+ Principal: jane, Instance: root, kdc_key_ver: 1
+ New Password: <---- enter a SECURE password here
+ Verifying password
+
+ New Password: <---- re-enter the password here
+
+ Principal's new key version = 1
+ Expiration date (enter yyyy-mm-dd) [ 2000-01-01 ] ?
+ Max ticket lifetime (*5 minutes) [ 255 ] ? 12 <--- Keep this short!
+ Attributes [ 0 ] ?
+ Edit O.K.
+ Principal name: <---- null entry here will cause an exit
+
+
+
+ Now try getting tokens for it to make sure it works:
+
+
+
+ grunt# kinit jane.root
+ MIT Project Athena (grunt.grondar.za)
+ Kerberos Initialization for "jane.root"
+ Password:
+
+
+
+
+ Now we need to add the user to root's .klogin file:
+
+
+
+ grunt# cat /root/.klogin
+ jane.root@GRONDAR.ZA
+
+
+
+ Now try doing the su:
+
+
+
+ [jane@grunt 10407] su
+ Password:
+ grunt#
+
+
+
+
+ and take a look at what tokens we have:
+
+
+
+ grunt# klist
+ Ticket file: /tmp/tkt_root_245
+ Principal: jane.root@GRONDAR.ZA
+
+ Issued Expires Principal
+ May 2 20:43:12 May 3 04:43:12 krbtgt.GRONDAR.ZA@GRONDAR.ZA
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Using other commands
+
+ In an earlier example, we created a principal called jane
+ with an instance root. This was based on a user with the
+ same name as the principal, and this is a Kerberos default; that a
+ <principal>.<instance> of the form
+ <username>.root will allow that
+ <username> to su to root if the necessary
+ entries are in the .klogin file in root's home
+ directory:
+
+
+
+ grunt# cat /root/.klogin
+ jane.root@GRONDAR.ZA
+
+
+
+ Likewise, if a user has in their own home directory lines of the
+ form:
+
+
+
+ [jane@grunt 10543] cat ~/.klogin
+ jane@GRONDAR.ZA
+ jack@GRONDAR.ZA
+
+
+
+ This allows anyone in the GRONDAR.ZA realm who has
+ authenticated themselves to jane or jack (via
+ kinit, see above) access to rlogin to jane's
+ account or files on this system (grunt) via rlogin,
+ rsh or rcp.
+
+ For example, Jane now logs into another system, using Kerberos:
+
+
+
+ [jane@grumble 573] kinit
+ MIT Project Athena (grunt.grondar.za)
+ Password:
+ [jane@grumble 574] rlogin grunt
+ Last login: Mon May 1 21:14:47 from grumble
+ Copyright (c) 1980, 1983, 1986, 1988, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994
+ The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
+
+ FreeBSD BUILT-19950429 (GR386) #0: Sat Apr 29 17:50:09 SAT 1995
+
+ [jane@grunt 10567]
+
+
+
+ Or Jack logs into Jane's account on the same machine (Jane having set up
+ the .klogin file as above, and the person in charge of Kerberos
+ having set up principal jack with a null instance:
+
+
+
+ [jack@grumble 573] kinit
+ [jack@grumble 574] rlogin grunt -l jane
+ MIT Project Athena (grunt.grondar.za)
+ Password:
+ Last login: Mon May 1 21:16:55 from grumble
+ Copyright (c) 1980, 1983, 1986, 1988, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994
+ The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
+
+ FreeBSD BUILT-19950429 (GR386) #0: Sat Apr 29 17:50:09 SAT 1995
+
+ [jane@grunt 10578]
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Firewalls
+
+ Contributed by &a.gpalmer; and &a.alex;.
+
+ Firewalls are an area of increasing interest for people who are
+ connected to the Internet, and are even finding applications on
+ private networks to provide enhanced security. This section will
+ hopefully explain what firewalls are, how to use them, and how to use
+ the facilities provided in the FreeBSD kernel to implement them.
+
+
+
+ Note: People often think that having a firewall between
+ your companies internal network and the ``Big Bad Internet'' will
+ solve all your security problems. It may help, but a poorly setup
+ firewall system is more of a security risk than not having one at all.
+ A firewall can only add another layer of security to your systems, but
+ they will not be able to stop a really determined hacker from
+ penetrating your internal network. If you let internal security lapse
+ because you believe your firewall to be impenetrable, you have just
+ made the hackers job that bit easier.
+
+
+
+
+
+ What is a firewall?
+
+ There are currently two distinct types of firewalls in common
+ use on the Internet today. The first type is more properly called
+ a packet filtering router, where the kernel on a
+ multi-homed machine chooses whether to forward or block packets
+ based on a set of rules. The second type, known as proxy
+ servers, rely on daemons to provide authentication and to
+ forward packets, possibly on a multi-homed machine which has
+ kernel packet forwarding disabled.
+
+ Sometimes sites combine the two types of firewalls, so that only a
+ certain machine (known as a bastion host) is allowed to send
+ packets through a packet filtering router onto an internal
+ network. Proxy services are run on the bastion host, which are
+ generally more secure than normal authentication mechanisms.
+
+ FreeBSD comes with a kernel packet filter (known as IPFW),
+ which is what the rest of this section will concentrate on. Proxy
+ servers can be built on FreeBSD from third party software, but there
+ is such a variety of proxy servers available that it would be
+ impossible to cover them in this document.
+
+
+
+ Packet filtering routers
+
+ A router is a machine which forwards packets between two or more
+ networks. A packet filtering router has an extra piece of code in its
+ kernel, which compares each packet to a list of rules before deciding
+ if it should be forwarded or not. Most modern IP routing software has
+ packet filtering code in it, which defaults to forwarding all
+ packets. To enable the filters, you need to define a set of rules for
+ the filtering code, so that it can decide if the packet should be
+ allowed to pass or not.
+
+ To decide if a packet should be passed on or not, the code looks
+ through its set of rules for a rule which matches the contents of
+ this packets headers. Once a match is found, the rule action is
+ obeyed. The rule action could be to drop the packet, to forward the
+ packet, or even to send an ICMP message back to the originator. Only
+ the first match counts, as the rules are searched in order. Hence, the
+ list of rules can be referred to as a ``rule chain''.
+
+ The packet matching criteria varies depending on the software used,
+ but typically you can specify rules which depend on the source IP
+ address of the packet, the destination IP address, the source port
+ number, the destination port number (for protocols which support
+ ports), or even the packet type (UDP, TCP, ICMP, etc).
+
+
+
+
+ Proxy servers
+
+ Proxy servers are machines which have had the normal system daemons
+ (telnetd, ftpd, etc) replaced with special servers. These servers are
+ called proxy servers as they normally only allow onward
+ connections to be made. This enables you to run (for example) a proxy
+ telnet server on your firewall host, and people can telnet in to your
+ firewall from the outside, go through some authentication mechanism,
+ and then gain access to the internal network (alternatively, proxy
+ servers can be used for signals coming from the internal network and
+ heading out).
+
+ Proxy servers are normally more secure than normal servers, and
+ often have a wider variety of authentication mechanisms available,
+ including ``one-shot'' password systems so that even if someone
+ manages to discover what password you used, they will not be able to use
+ it to gain access to your systems as the password instantly
+ expires. As they do not actually give users access to the host machine,
+ it becomes a lot more difficult for someone to install backdoors
+ around your security system.
+
+ Proxy servers often have ways of restricting access further, so
+ that only certain hosts can gain access to the servers, and often they
+ can be set up so that you can limit which users can talk to which
+ destination machine. Again, what facilities are available depends
+ largely on what proxy software you choose.
+
+
+
+
+
+ What does IPFW allow me to do?
+
+ IPFW, the software supplied with FreeBSD, is a packet
+ filtering and accounting system which resides in the kernel, and has a
+ user-land control utility, ipfw(8). Together, they
+ allow you to define and query the rules currently used by the kernel
+ in its routing decisions.
+
+ There are two related parts to IPFW. The firewall section
+ allows you to perform packet filtering. There is also an IP accounting
+ section which allows you to track usage of your router, based on
+ similar rules to the firewall section. This allows you to see (for
+ example) how much traffic your router is getting from a certain
+ machine, or how much WWW (World Wide Web) traffic it is forwarding.
+
+ As a result of the way that IPFW is designed, you can use
+ IPFW on non-router machines to perform packet filtering on
+ incoming and outgoing connections. This is a special case of the more
+ general use of IPFW, and the same commands and techniques
+ should be used in this situation.
+
+
+
+
+ Enabling IPFW on FreeBSD
+
+ As the main part of the IPFW system lives in the kernel, you will
+ need to add one or more options to your kernel configuration
+ file, depending on what facilities you want, and recompile your kernel. See
+ for more
+ details on how to recompile your kernel.
+
+ There are currently three kernel configuration options
+ relevant to IPFW:
+
+
+
+ options IPFIREWALL
+
+ Compiles into the kernel the code for packet
+ filtering.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options IPFIREWALL_VERBOSE
+
+
+ Enables code to allow logging of
+ packets through syslogd(8). Without this option, even if you
+ specify that packets should be logged in the filter rules, nothing
+ will happen.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options IPFIREWALL_VERBOSE_LIMIT=10
+
+
+ Limits the number of
+ packets logged through syslogd(8) on a per entry basis.
+ You may wish to use this option in hostile environments in which
+ you want to log firewall activity, but do not want to be open to
+ a denial of service attack via syslog flooding.
+
+
+
+ When a chain entry reaches the packet limit specified, logging
+ is turned off for that particular entry. To resume logging, you
+ will need to reset the associated counter using the ipfw(8)
+ utility:
+
+
+
+ ipfw zero 4500
+
+
+
+ Where 4500 is the chain entry you wish to continue logging.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Previous versions of FreeBSD contained an IPFIREWALL_ACCT
+ option. This is now obsolete as the firewall code automatically
+ includes accounting facilities.
+
+
+
+
+ Configuring IPFW
+
+ The configuration of the IPFW software is done through the
+ ipfw(8) utility. The syntax for this command looks
+ quite complicated, but it is relatively simple once you understand
+ its structure.
+
+ There are currently four different command categories used by the
+ utility: addition/deletion, listing, flushing, and clearing.
+ Addition/deletion is used to build the rules that control how packets
+ are accepted, rejected, and logged. Listing is used to examine the
+ contents of your rule set (otherwise known as the chain) and packet
+ counters (accounting). Flushing is used to remove all entries from
+ the chain. Clearing is used to zero out one or more accounting
+ entries.
+
+
+
+ Altering the IPFW rules
+
+ The syntax for this form of the command is:
+
+ ipfw [-N] command [index]
+ action [log] protocoladdresses
+ [options]
+
+
+
+ There is one valid flag when using this form of the command:
+
+
+
+ -N
+
+ Resolve addresses and service names in output.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The command given can be shortened to the shortest unique
+ form. The valid commands are:
+
+
+
+ add
+
+ Add an entry to the firewall/accounting rule list
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ delete
+
+
+ Delete an entry from the firewall/accounting rule list
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Previous versions of IPFW used separate firewall and
+ accounting entries. The present version provides packet accounting
+ with each firewall entry.
+
+ If an index value is supplied, it used to place the entry
+ at a specific point in the chain. Otherwise, the entry is placed at
+ the end of the chain at an index 100 greater than the last chain
+ entry (this does not include the default policy, rule 65535, deny).
+
+ The log option causes matching rules to be output to the
+ system console if the kernel was compiled with IPFIREWALL_VERBOSE.
+
+ Valid actions are:
+
+
+
+ reject
+
+ Drop the packet, and send an ICMP host or port
+ unreachable (as appropriate) packet to the source.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ allow
+
+
+ Pass the packet on as normal. (aliases: pass and
+ accept)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ deny
+
+
+ Drop the packet. The source is not notified via an ICMP
+ message (thus it appears that the packet never arrived at the
+ destination).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ count
+
+
+ Update packet counters but do not allow/deny the packet
+ based on this rule. The search continues with the next chain entry.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Each action will be recognized by the shortest unambiguous
+ prefix.
+
+ The protocols which can be specified are:
+
+
+
+ all
+
+ Matches any IP packet
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ icmp
+
+
+ Matches ICMP packets
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ tcp
+
+
+ Matches TCP packets
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ udp
+
+
+ Matches UDP packets
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The address specification is:
+
+ from <address/mask>[port] to
+ <address/mask>[port] [via <interface>]
+
+
+
+ You can only specify port in conjunction with
+ protocols which support ports (UDP and TCP).
+
+ The via is optional and may specify the IP address or
+ domain name of a local IP interface, or an interface name (e.g.
+ ed0) to match only packets coming through this interface.
+ Interface unit numbers can be specified with an optional wildcard.
+ For example, ppp* would match all kernel PPP interfaces.
+
+ The syntax used to specify an <address/mask> is:
+
+ <address>
+
+
+ or
+
+ <address>/mask-bits
+
+
+ or
+
+ <address>:mask-pattern
+
+
+
+ A valid hostname may be specified in place of the IP
+ address. mask-bits is a decimal number representing how many
+ bits in the address mask should be set. e.g. specifying
+
+ 192.216.222.1/24
+
+
+ will create a mask which will allow any address in a class C subnet
+ (in this case, 192.216.222) to be matched. mask-pattern is an IP
+ address which will be logically AND'ed with the address given. The
+ keyword any may be used to specify ``any IP address''.
+
+ The port numbers to be blocked are specified as:
+
+ port[,port[,port[...]]]
+
+
+ to specify either a single port or a list of ports, or
+
+ port-port
+
+
+ to specify a range of ports. You may also combine a single range with a
+ list, but the range must always be specified first.
+
+ The options available are:
+
+
+
+ frag
+
+ Matches if the packet is not the first fragment of the datagram.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ in
+
+
+ Matches if the packet is on the way in.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ out
+
+
+ Matches if the packet is on the way out.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ ipoptions spec
+
+
+ Matches if the IP header contains the
+ comma separated list of options specified in spec. The
+ supported list of IP options are: ssrr (strict source route),
+ lsrr (loose source route), rr (record packet route),
+ and ts (timestamp). The absence of a particular option may
+ be denoted with a leading '!'.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ established
+
+
+ Matches if the packet is part of an already established
+ TCP connection (i.e. it has the RST or ACK bits set). You can optimize
+ the performance of the firewall by placing established rules
+ early in the chain.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ setup
+
+
+ Matches if the packet is an attempt to establish a TCP connection
+ (the SYN bit set is set but the ACK bit is not).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ tcpflags flags
+
+
+ Matches if the TCP header contains
+ the comma separated list of flags. The supported flags
+ are fin, syn, rst, psh, ack,
+ and urg. The absence of a particular flag may be indicated
+ by a leading '!'.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ icmptypes types
+
+
+ Matches if the ICMP type is present in
+ the list types. The list may be specified as any combination
+ of ranges and/or individual types separated by commas. Commonly used
+ ICMP types are: 0 echo reply (ping reply), 5
+ redirect, 8 echo request (ping request), and 11
+ time exceeded (used to indicate TTL expiration as with
+ traceroute(8)).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Listing the IPFW rules
+
+ The syntax for this form of the command is:
+
+ ipfw [-atN] l
+
+
+
+ There are three valid flags when using this form of the command:
+
+
+
+ -a
+
+ While listing, show counter values. This option is the only
+ way to see accounting counters.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ -t
+
+
+ Display the last match times for each chain entry. The time
+ listing is incompatible with the input syntax used by the
+ ipfw(8) utility.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ -N
+
+
+ Attempt to resolve given addresses and service names.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Flushing the IPFW rules
+
+ The syntax for flushing the chain is:
+
+ ipfw flush
+
+
+
+ This causes all entries in the firewall chain to be removed except
+ the fixed default policy enforced by the kernel (index 65535). Use
+ caution when flushing rules, the default deny policy will leave your
+ system cut off from the network until allow entries are added to the
+ chain.
+
+
+
+
+ Clearing the IPFW packet counters
+
+ The syntax for clearing one or more packet counters is:
+
+ ipfw zero [index]
+
+
+
+ When used without an index argument, all packet counters
+ are cleared. If an index is supplied, the clearing operation
+ only affects a specific chain entry.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Example commands for ipfw
+
+ This command will deny all packets from the host
+ evil.hacker.org to the telnet port of the host
+ nice.people.org by being forwarded by the router:
+
+
+
+ ipfw add deny tcp from evil.hacker.org to nice.people.org 23
+
+
+
+ The next example denies and logs any TCP traffic from the entire
+ hacker.org network (a class C) to the nice.people.org
+ machine (any port).
+
+
+
+ ipfw add deny log tcp from evil.hacker.org/24 to nice.people.org
+
+
+
+ If you do not want people sending X sessions to your internal network
+ (a subnet of a class C), the following command will do the necessary
+ filtering:
+
+
+
+ ipfw add deny tcp from any to my.org/28 6000 setup
+
+
+
+ To see the accounting records:
+
+ ipfw -a list
+
+
+ or in the short form
+
+ ipfw -a l
+
+
+ You can also see the last time a chain entry was matched with
+
+ ipfw -at l
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Building a packet filtering firewall
+
+
+
+ Note: The following suggestions are just that:
+ suggestions. The requirements of each firewall are different and I
+ cannot tell you how to build a firewall to meet your particular
+ requirements.
+
+
+
+ When initially setting up your firewall, unless you have a test
+ bench setup where you can configure your firewall host in a controlled
+ environment, I strongly recommend you use the logging version of the
+ commands and enable logging in the kernel. This will allow you to
+ quickly identify problem areas and cure them without too much
+ disruption. Even after the initial setup phase is complete, I
+ recommend using the logging for of `deny' as it allows tracing of
+ possible attacks and also modification of the firewall rules if your
+ requirements alter.
+
+
+
+ Note: If you use the logging versions of the
+ accept command, it can generate large amounts
+ of log data as one log line will be generated for every packet
+ that passes through the firewall, so large ftp/http transfers,
+ etc, will really slow the system down. It also increases the
+ latencies on those packets as it requires more work to be done by
+ the kernel before the packet can be passed on. syslogd with also
+ start using up a lot more processor time as it logs all the extra
+ data to disk, and it could quite easily fill the partition
+ /var/log is located on.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Synchronous Serial Transmission
+
+ Synchronous serial transmission requires that the sender and
+ receiver share a clock with one another, or that the sender provide
+ a strobe or other timing signal so that the receiver knows when to
+ "read" the next bit of the data. In most forms of serial
+ Synchronous communication, if there is no data available at a given
+ instant to transmit, a fill character must be sent instead so that
+ data is always being transmitted. Synchronous communication is
+ usually more efficient because only data bits are transmitted
+ between sender and receiver, and synchronous communication can be
+ more more costly if extra wiring and circuits are required to
+ share a clock signal between the sender and receiver.
+
+ A form of Synchronous transmission is used with printers and
+ fixed disk devices in that the data is sent on one set of wires
+ while a clock or strobe is sent on a different wire. Printers and
+ fixed disk devices are not normally serial devices because most
+ fixed disk interface standards send an entire word of data for each
+ clock or strobe signal by using a separate wire for each bit of the
+ word. In the PC industry, these are known as Parallel devices.
+
+ The standard serial communications hardware in the PC does not
+ support Synchronous operations. This mode is described here for
+ comparison purposes only.
+
+
+
+
+ Asynchronous Serial Transmission
+
+ Asynchronous transmission allows data to be transmitted without
+ the sender having to send a clock signal to the receiver. Instead,
+ the sender and receiver must agree on timing parameters in advance
+ and special bits are added to each word which are used to
+ synchronize the sending and receiving units.
+
+ When a word is given to the UART for Asynchronous transmissions,
+ a bit called the "Start Bit" is added to the beginning of each word
+ that is to be transmitted. The Start Bit is used to alert the
+ receiver that a word of data is about to be sent, and to force the
+ clock in the receiver into synchronization with the clock in the
+ transmitter. These two clocks must be accurate enough to not
+ have the frequency drift by more than 10% during the transmission
+ of the remaining bits in the word. (This requirement was set in
+ the days of mechanical teleprinters and is easily met by modern
+ electronic equipment.)
+
+ After the Start Bit, the individual bits of the word of data are
+ sent, with the Least Significant Bit (LSB) being sent first. Each
+ bit in the transmission is transmitted for exactly the same
+ amount of time as all of the other bits, and the receiver "looks"
+ at the wire at approximately halfway through the period assigned
+ to each bit to determine if the bit is a "1" or a "0". For example,
+ if it takes two seconds to send each bit, the receiver will examine
+ the signal to determine if it is a "1" or a "0" after one second
+ has passed, then it will wait two seconds and then examine the value
+ of the next bit, and so on.
+
+ The sender does not know when the receiver has "looked" at the
+ value of the bit. The sender only knows when the clock says to
+ begin transmitting the next bit of the word.
+
+ When the entire data word has been sent, the transmitter may add
+ a Parity Bit that the transmitter generates. The Parity Bit may
+ be used by the receiver to perform simple error checking. Then at
+ least one Stop Bit is sent by the transmitter.
+
+ When the receiver has received all of the bits in the data word,
+ it may check for the Parity Bits (both sender and receiver must
+ agree on whether a Parity Bit is to be used), and then the receiver
+ looks for a Stop Bit. If the Stop Bit does not appear when it is
+ supposed to, the UART considers the entire word to be garbled and
+ will report a Framing Error to the host processor when the data
+ word is read. The usual cause of a Framing Error is that the sender
+ and receiver clocks were not running at the same speed, or that
+ the signal was interrupted.
+
+ Regardless of whether the data was received correctly or not, the
+ UART automatically discards the Start, Parity and Stop bits. If the
+ sender and receiver are configured identically, these bits are not
+ passed to the host.
+
+ If another word is ready for transmission, the Start Bit for the new
+ word can be sent as soon as the Stop Bit for the previous
+ word has been sent.
+
+ Because asynchronous data is "self synchronizing", if there is no
+ data to transmit, the transmission line can be idle.
+
+
+
+
+ Other UART Functions
+
+ In addition to the basic job of converting data from parallel to
+ serial for transmission and from serial to parallel on reception,
+ a UART will usually provide additional circuits for signals that
+ can be used to indicate the state of the transmission media, and
+ to regulate the flow of data in the event that the remote device
+ is not prepared to accept more data. For example, when the
+ device connected to the UART is a modem, the modem may report the
+ presence of a carrier on the phone line while the computer may be
+ able to instruct the modem to reset itself or to not take calls
+ by asserting or deasserting one more more of these extra signals.
+ The function of each of these additional signals is defined in
+ the EIA RS232-C standard.
+
+
+
+
+ The RS232-C and V.24 Standards
+
+ In most computer systems, the UART is connected to circuitry that
+ generates signals that comply with the EIA RS232-C specification.
+ There is also a CCITT standard named V.24 that mirrors the
+ specifications included in RS232-C.
+
+
+
+ RS232-C Bit Assignments (Marks and Spaces)
+
+ In RS232-C, a value of "1" is called a "Mark" and a value of "0"
+ is called a "Space". When a communication line is idle, the line
+ is said to be "Marking", or transmitting continuous "1" values.
+
+ The Start bit always has a value of "0" (a Space). The Stop Bit
+ always has a value of "1" (a Mark). This means that there will
+ always be a Mark (1) to Space (0) transition on the line at the
+ start of every word, even when multiple word are
+ transmitted back to back. This guarantees that sender and
+ receiver can resynchronize their clocks regardless of the content
+ of the data bits that are being transmitted.
+
+ The idle time between Stop and Start bits does not have
+ to be an exact multiple (including zero) of the bit rate of the
+ communication link, but most UARTs are designed this way for
+ simplicity.
+
+ In RS232-C, the "Marking" signal (a "1") is represented by a voltage
+ between -2 VDC and -12 VDC, and a "Spacing" signal (a "0") is
+ represented by a voltage between 0 and +12 VDC. The transmitter
+ is supposed to send +12 VDC or -12 VDC, and the receiver is supposed
+ to allow for some voltage loss in long cables. Some transmitters
+ in low power devices (like portable computers) sometimes use only
+ +5 VDC and -5 VDC, but these values are still acceptable to a
+ RS232-C receiver, provided that the cable lengths are short.
+
+
+
+
+ RS232-C Break Signal
+
+ RS232-C also specifies a signal called a "Break", which is caused
+ by sending continuous Spacing values (no Start or Stop bits). When
+ there is no electricity present on the data circuit, the line is
+ considered to be sending "Break".
+
+ The "Break" signal must be of a duration longer than the time
+ it takes to send a complete byte plus Start, Stop and Parity bits.
+ Most UARTs can distinguish between a Framing Error and a
+ Break, but if the UART cannot do this, the Framing Error detection
+ can be used to identify Breaks.
+
+ In the days of teleprinters, when numerous printers around the
+ country were wired in series (such as news services), any unit
+ could cause a "Break" by temporarily opening the entire circuit
+ so that no current flowed. This was used to allow a location with
+ urgent news to interrupt some other location that was currently
+ sending information.
+
+ In modern systems there are two types of Break signals. If the
+ Break is longer than 1.6 seconds, it is considered a "Modem Break",
+ and some modems can be programmed to terminate the conversation and
+ go on-hook or enter the modems' command mode when the modem detects
+ this signal. If the Break is smaller than 1.6 seconds, it signifies
+ a Data Break and it is up to the remote computer to respond to
+ this signal. Sometimes this form of Break is used as an Attention
+ or Interrupt signal and sometimes is accepted as a substitute for
+ the ASCII CONTROL-C character.
+
+ Marks and Spaces are also equivalent to "Holes" and "No Holes"
+ in paper tape systems.
+
+ Note that Breaks cannot be generated from paper tape or from any
+ other byte value, since bytes are always sent with Start and Stop
+ bit. The UART is usually capable of generating the continuous
+ Spacing signal in response to a special command from the host
+ processor.
+
+
+
+
+ RS232-C DTE and DCE Devices
+
+ The RS232-C specification defines two types of equipment: the Data
+ Terminal Equipment (DTE) and the Data Carrier Equipment (DCE).
+ Usually, the DTE device is the terminal (or computer), and the DCE
+ is a modem. Across the phone line at the other end of a
+ conversation, the receiving modem is also a DCE device and the
+ computer that is connected to that modem is a DTE device. The DCE
+ device receives signals on the pins that the DTE device transmits on,
+ and vice versa.
+
+ When two devices that are both DTE or both DCE must be connected
+ together without a modem or a similar media translater between them,
+ a NULL modem must be used. The NULL modem electrically re-arranges
+ the cabling so that the transmitter output is connected to the
+ receiver input on the other device, and vice versa. Similar
+ translations are performed on all of the control signals so that
+ each device will see what it thinks are DCE (or DTE) signals from
+ the other device.
+
+ The number of signals generated by the DTE and DCE devices are
+ not symmetrical. The DTE device generates fewer signals for
+ the DCE device than the DTE device receives from the DCE.
+
+
+
+
+ RS232-C Pin Assignments
+
+ The EIA RS232-C specification (and the ITU equivalent, V.24) calls
+ for a twenty-five pin connector (usually a DB25) and defines the
+ purpose of most of the pins in that connector.
+
+ In the IBM Personal Computer and similar systems, a subset of
+ RS232-C signals are provided via nine pin connectors (DB9).
+ The signals that are not included on the PC connector deal mainly
+ with synchronous operation, and this transmission mode is not
+ supported by the UART that IBM selected for use in the IBM PC.
+
+ Depending on the computer manufacturer, a DB25, a DB9, or
+ both types of connector may be used for RS232-C communications.
+ (The IBM PC also uses a DB25 connector for the parallel printer
+ interface which causes some confusion.)
+
+ Below is a table of the RS232-C signal assignments in the DB25
+ and DB9 connectors.
+
+
+ DB25 DB9 EIA CCITT Common Signal Description
+ RS232-C IBM PC Circuit Circuit Name Source
+ Pin Pin Symbol Symbol
+
+ 1 - AA 101 PG/FG --- Frame/Protective Ground
+ 2 3 BA 103 TD DTE Transmit Data
+ 3 2 BB 104 RD DCE Receive Data
+ 4 7 CA 105 RTS DTE Request to Send
+ 5 8 CB 106 CTS DCE Clear to Send
+ 6 6 CC 107 DSR DCE Data Set Ready
+ 7 5 AV 102 SG/GND --- Signal Ground
+ 8 1 CF 109 DCD/CD DCE Data Carrier Detect
+ 9 - - - - - Reserved for Test
+ 10 - - - - - Reserved for Test
+ 11 - - - - - Unassigned
+ 12 - CI 122 SRLSD DCE Sec. Recv. Line Signal Detector
+ 13 - SCB 121 SCTS DCE Secondary Clear To Send
+ 14 - SBA 118 STD DTE Secondary Transmit Data
+ 15 - DB 114 TSET DCE Trans. Sig. Element Timing
+ 16 - SBB 119 SRD DCE Secondary Received Data
+ 17 - DD 115 RSET DCE Receiver Signal Element Timing
+ 18 - - 141 LOOP DTE Local Loopback
+ 19 - SCA 120 SRS DTE Secondary Request to Send
+ 20 4 CD 108.2 DTR DTE Data Terminal Ready
+ 21 - - - RDL DTE Remote Digital Loopback
+ 22 9 CE 125 RI DCE Ring Indicator
+ 23 - CH 111 DSRS DTE Data Signal Rate Selector
+ 24 - DA 113 TSET DTE Trans. Sig. Element Timing
+ 25 - - 142 - DCE Test Mode
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Bits, Baud and Symbols
+
+ Baud is a measurement of transmission speed in asynchronous
+ communication. Because of advances in modem communication
+ technology, this term is frequently misused when describing
+ the data rates in newer devices.
+
+ Traditionally, a Baud Rate represents the number of bits that are
+ actually being sent over the media, not the amount of data
+ that is actually moved from one DTE device to the other. The
+ Baud count includes the overhead bits Start, Stop and Parity
+ that are generated by the sending UART and removed by the
+ receiving UART. This means that seven-bit words of data
+ actually take 10 bits to be completely transmitted.
+ Therefore, a modem capable of moving 300 bits per second from one
+ place to another can normally only move 30 7-bit words if
+ Parity is used and one Start and Stop bit are present.
+
+ If 8-bit data words are used and Parity bits are also used, the
+ data rate falls to 27.27 words per second, because it now
+ takes 11 bits to send the eight-bit words, and the modem still
+ only sends 300 bits per second.
+
+ The formula for converting bytes per second into a baud rate
+ and vice versa was simple until error-correcting modems
+ came along. These modems receive the serial stream of bits
+ from the UART in the host computer (even when internal modems
+ are used the data is still frequently serialized) and converts
+ the bits back into bytes. These bytes are then combined into
+ packets and sent over the phone line using a Synchronous
+ transmission method. This means that the Stop, Start, and Parity
+ bits added by the UART in the DTE (the computer) were removed by
+ the modem before transmission by the sending modem. When these
+ bytes are received by the remote modem, the remote modem adds
+ Start, Stop and Parity bits to the words, converts them to a
+ serial format and then sends them to the receiving UART in the remote
+ computer, who then strips the Start, Stop and Parity bits.
+
+ The reason all these extra conversions are done is so that the
+ two modems can perform error correction, which means that the
+ receiving modem is able to ask the sending modem to resend a
+ block of data that was not received with the correct checksum.
+ This checking is handled by the modems, and the DTE devices are
+ usually unaware that the process is occurring.
+
+ By striping the Start, Stop and Parity bits, the additional bits of
+ data that the two modems must share between themselves to perform
+ error-correction are mostly concealed from the effective
+ transmission rate seen by the sending and receiving DTE equipment.
+ For example, if a modem sends ten 7-bit words to another modem
+ without including the Start, Stop and Parity bits, the sending
+ modem will be able to add 30 bits of its own information that
+ the receiving modem can use to do error-correction without
+ impacting the transmission speed of the real data.
+
+ The use of the term Baud is further confused by modems that perform
+ compression. A single 8-bit word passed over the telephone
+ line might represent a dozen words that were transmitted to
+ the sending modem. The receiving modem will expand the data back
+ to its original content and pass that data to the receiving DTE.
+
+ Modern modems also include buffers that allow the rate that
+ bits move across the phone line (DCE to DCE) to be a different speed
+ than the speed that the bits move between the DTE and DCE on both
+ ends of the conversation. Normally the speed between the DTE and
+ DCE is higher than the DCE to DCE speed because of the use of
+ compression by the modems.
+
+ Because the number of bits needed to describe a byte varied
+ during the trip between the two machines plus the differing
+ bits-per-seconds speeds that are used present on the DTE-DCE and
+ DCE-DCE links, the usage of the term Baud to describe the
+ overall communication speed causes problems and can misrepresent
+ the true transmission speed. So Bits Per Second (bps) is the correct
+ term to use to describe the transmission rate seen at the
+ DCE to DCE interface and Baud or Bits Per Second are acceptable
+ terms to use when a connection is made between two systems with a
+ wired connection, or if a modem is in use that is not performing
+ error-correction or compression.
+
+ Modern high speed modems (2400, 9600, 14,400, and 19,200bps) in
+ reality still operate at or below 2400 baud, or more accurately,
+ 2400 Symbols per second. High speed modem are able to encode more
+ bits of data into each Symbol using a technique called Constellation
+ Stuffing, which is why the effective bits per second rate of the
+ modem is higher, but the modem continues to operate within the
+ limited audio bandwidth that the telephone system provides.
+ Modems operating at 28,800 and higher speeds have variable Symbol
+ rates, but the technique is the same.
+
+
+
+
+ The IBM Personal Computer UART
+
+ Starting with the original IBM Personal Computer, IBM selected
+ the National Semiconductor INS8250 UART for use in the IBM PC
+ Parallel/Serial Adapter. Subsequent generations of compatible
+ computers from IBM and other vendors continued to use the INS8250
+ or improved versions of the National Semiconductor UART family.
+
+
+
+ National Semiconductor UART Family Tree
+
+ There have been several versions and subsequent generations of
+ the INS8250 UART. Each major version is described below.
+
+
+ INS8250 -> INS8250B
+ \
+ \
+ \-> INS8250A -> INS82C50A
+ \
+ \
+ \-> NS16450 -> NS16C450
+ \
+ \
+ \-> NS16550 -> NS16550A -> PC16550D
+
+
+
+
+ INS8250
+
+ This part was used in the original IBM PC and
+ IBM PC/XT. The original name for this part was the INS8250 ACE
+ (Asynchronous Communications Element) and it is made from NMOS
+ technology.
+
+ The 8250 uses eight I/O ports and has a one-byte send and
+ a one-byte receive buffer. This original UART has several
+ race conditions and other flaws. The original IBM BIOS
+ includes code to work around these flaws, but this made
+ the BIOS dependent on the flaws being present, so subsequent
+ parts like the 8250A, 16450 or 16550 could not be used in
+ the original IBM PC or IBM PC/XT.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ INS8250-B
+
+
+ This is the slower speed of the INS8250 made
+ from NMOS technology. It contains the same problems as the original
+ INS8250.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ INS8250A
+
+
+ An improved version of the INS8250 using XMOS
+ technology with various functional flaws corrected. The INS8250A
+ was used initially in PC clone computers by vendors who used
+ "clean" BIOS designs. Because of the corrections in the chip, this
+ part could not be used with a BIOS compatible with the INS8250
+ or INS8250B.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ INS82C50A
+
+
+ This is a CMOS version (low power consumption)
+ of the INS8250A and has similar functional characteristics.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ NS16450
+
+
+ Same as NS8250A with improvements so it can be
+ used with faster CPU bus designs. IBM used this part in the IBM AT
+ and updated the IBM BIOS to no longer rely on the bugs in the
+ INS8250.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ NS16C450
+
+
+ This is a CMOS version (low power consumption)
+ of the NS16450.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ NS16550
+
+
+ Same as NS16450 with a 16-byte send and receive
+ buffer but the buffer design was flawed and could not be reliably
+ be used.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ NS16550A
+
+
+ Same as NS16550 with the buffer flaws corrected.
+ The 16550A and its successors have become the most popular UART
+ design in the PC industry, mainly due it its ability to reliably
+ handle higher data rates on operating systems with sluggish interrupt
+ response times.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ NS16C552
+
+
+ This component consists of two NS16C550A CMOS
+ UARTs in a single package.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ PC16550D
+
+
+ Same as NS16550A with subtle flaws corrected. This
+ is revision D of the 16550 family and is the latest design available
+ from National Semiconductor.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The NS16550AF and the PC16550D are the same thing
+
+ National reorganized their part numbering system a few years ago,
+ and the NS16550AFN no longer exists by that name. (If you
+ have a NS16550AFN, look at the date code on the part, which is a
+ four digit number that usually starts with a nine. The first two
+ digits of the number are the year, and the last two digits are the
+ week in that year when the part was packaged. If you have a
+ NS16550AFN, it is probably a few years old.)
+
+ The new numbers are like PC16550DV, with minor differences in the
+ suffix letters depending on the package material and its shape.
+ (A description of the numbering system can be found below.)
+
+ It is important to understand that in some stores, you may pay
+ $15(US) for a NS16550AFN made in 1990 and in the next bin are the
+ new PC16550DN parts with minor fixes that National has made since the
+ AFN part was in production, the PC16550DN was probably made in the
+ past six months and it costs half (as low as $5(US) in volume) as
+ much as the NS16550AFN because they are readily available.
+
+ As the supply of NS16550AFN chips continues to shrink, the price will
+ probably continue to increase until more people discover and accept
+ that the PC16550DN really has the same function as the old part
+ number.
+
+
+
+
+ National Semiconductor Part Numbering System
+
+ The older NSnnnnnrqp part numbers are now of the
+ format PCnnnnnrgp.
+
+ The "r" is the revision field. The current revision of
+ the 16550 from National Semiconductor is "D".
+
+ The "p" is the package-type field. The types are:
+ "F" QFP (quad flat pack) L lead type
+ "N" DIP (dual inline package) through hole straight lead type
+ "V" LPCC (lead plastic chip carrier) J lead type
+
+
+ The "g" is the product grade field. If an "I" precedes
+ the package-type letter, it indicates an "industrial" grade part,
+ which has higher specs than a standard part but not as high as
+ Military Specification (Milspec) component. This is an optional field.
+
+ So what we used to call a NS16550AFN (DIP Package) is now called a
+ PC16550DN or PC16550DIN.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Other Vendors and Similar UARTs
+
+ Over the years, the 8250, 8250A, 16450 and 16550 have been licensed
+ or copied by other chip vendors. In the case of the 8250, 8250A
+ and 16450, the exact circuit (the "megacell") was licensed to many
+ vendors, including Western Digital and Intel. Other vendors
+ reverse-engineered the part or produced emulations that had similar
+ behavior.
+
+ In internal modems, the modem designer will frequently emulate the
+ 8250A/16450 with the modem microprocessor, and the emulated UART will
+ frequently have a hidden buffer consisting of several hundred bytes.
+ Because of the size of the buffer, these emulations can be as
+ reliable as a 16550A in their ability to handle high speed data.
+ However, most operating systems will still report that
+ the UART is only a 8250A or 16450, and may not make effective use
+ of the extra buffering present in the emulated UART unless special
+ drivers are used.
+
+ Some modem makers are driven by market forces to abandon a design
+ that has hundreds of bytes of buffer and instead use a 16550A UART
+ so that the product will compare favorably in market comparisons
+ even though the effective performance may be lowered by this action.
+
+ A common misconception is that all parts with "16550A" written on
+ them are identical in performance. There are differences, and in
+ some cases, outright flaws in most of these 16550A clones.
+
+ When the NS16550 was developed, the National Semiconductor obtained
+ several patents on the design and they also limited licensing, making
+ it harder for other vendors to provide a chip with similar features.
+ Because of the patents, reverse-engineered designs and emulations
+ had to avoid infringing the claims covered by the patents.
+ Subsequently, these copies almost never perform exactly the same as
+ the NS16550A or PC16550D, which are the parts most computer and
+ modem makers want to buy but are sometimes unwilling to pay the
+ price required to get the genuine part.
+
+ Some of the differences in the clone 16550A parts are unimportant,
+ while others can prevent the device from being used at all with a
+ given operating system or driver. These differences may show up
+ when using other drivers, or when particular combinations of events
+ occur that were not well tested or considered in the Windows driver.
+ This is because most modem vendors and 16550-clone makers use the
+ Microsoft drivers from Windows for Workgroups 3.11 and the Microsoft
+ MSD utility as the primary tests for compatibility with the
+ NS16550A. This over-simplistic criteria means that if a different
+ operating system is used, problems could appear due to subtle
+ differences between the clones and genuine components.
+
+ National Semiconductor has made available a program named COMTEST
+ that performs compatibility tests independent of any OS drivers.
+ It should be remembered that the purpose of this type of program is
+ to demonstrate the flaws in the products of the competition, so the
+ program will report major as well as extremely subtle differences in
+ behavior in the part being tested.
+
+ In a series of tests performed by the author of this document in
+ 1994, components made by National Semiconductor, TI, StarTech, and
+ CMD as well as megacells and emulations embedded in internal modems
+ were tested with COMTEST. A difference count for some of these
+ components is listed below. Because these tests were performed in
+ 1994, they may not reflect the current performance of the given
+ product from a vendor.
+
+ It should be noted that COMTEST normally aborts when an excessive
+ number or certain types of problems have been detected. As part of
+ this testing, COMTEST was modified so that it would not abort no
+ matter how many differences were encountered.
+
+
+ Vendor Part number Errors aka "differences" reported
+ National (PC16550DV) 0 *
+
+ National (NS16550AFN) 0
+
+ National (NS16C552V) 0 *
+
+ TI (TL16550AFN) 3
+
+ CMD (16C550PE) 19
+
+ StarTech (ST16C550J) 23
+
+ Rockwell reference modem
+ with internal 16550 or an
+ emulation (RC144DPi/C3000-25) 117
+
+ Sierra modem with an internal
+ 16550 (SC11951/SC11351) 91
+
+
+ It is important to understand that a simple count of differences
+ from COMTEST does not reveal a lot about what differences are
+ important and which are not. For example, about half of the
+ differences reported in the two modems listed above that have
+ internal UARTs were caused by the clone UARTs not supporting
+ five- and six-bit character modes. The real 16550, 16450, and
+ 8250 UARTs all support these modes and COMTEST checks the
+ functionality of these modes so over fifty differences are
+ reported. However, almost no modern modem supports five- or
+ six-bit characters, particularly those with error-correction
+ and compression capabilities. This means that the differences
+ related to five- and six-bit character modes can be discounted.
+
+ Many of the differences COMTEST reports have to do with timing. In
+ many of the clone designs, when the host reads from one port, the
+ status bits in some other port may not update in the same amount
+ of time (some faster, some slower) as a real NS16550AFN
+ and COMTEST looks for these differences. This means that the number
+ of differences can be misleading in that one device may only have
+ one or two differences but they are extremely serious, and some
+ other device that updates the status registers faster or slower
+ than the reference part (that would probably never affect the
+ operation of a properly written driver) could have dozens of
+ differences reported.
+
+ * To date, the author of this document has not found any non-National
+ parts that report zero differences using the COMTEST program. It
+ should also be noted that National has had five versions of the
+ 16550 over the years and the newest parts behave a bit differently
+ than the classic NS16550AFN that is considered the benchmark for
+ functionality. COMTEST appears to turn a blind eye to the
+ differences within the National product line and reports no errors
+ on the National parts (except for the original 16550) even when
+ there are official erratas that describe bugs in the A, B and C
+ revisions of the parts, so this bias in COMTEST must be taken into
+ account.
+
+ COMTEST can be used as a screening tool to alert the administrator
+ to the presence of potentially incompatible components
+ that might cause problems or have to be handled as a special case.
+
+ If you run COMTEST on a 16550 that is in a modem or a modem is
+ attached to the serial port, you need to first issue a ATE0&W
+ command to the modem so that the modem will not echo any of the test
+ characters. If you forget to do this, COMTEST will report at least
+ this one difference:
+
+ This is a user process PPP software package. Normally, PPP is
+ implemented as a part of the kernel (e.g. as managed by pppd) and
+ it is thus somewhat hard to debug and/or modify its behavior. However,
+ in this implementation PPP is done as a user process with the help of
+ the tunnel device driver (tun).
+
+
+
+ In essence, this means that rather than running a PPP daemon, the ppp
+ program can be run as and when desired. No PPP interface needs to be
+ compiled into the kernel, as the program can use the generic tunnel
+ device to get data into and out of the kernel.
+
+ From here on out, user ppp will be referred to simply as ppp unless a
+ distinction needs to be made between it and any other PPP client/server
+ software such as pppd. Unless otherwise stated, all commands in this
+ section should be executed as root.
+
+
+
+ Before you start
+
+ This document assumes you are in roughly this position:
+
+ You have an account with an Internet Service Provider (ISP) which lets you
+ use PPP. Further, you have a modem (or other device) connected and
+ configured correctly which allows you to connect to your ISP.
+
+ You are going to need the following information to hand:
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Your ISPs phone number(s).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Your login name and password. This can be either a regular
+ unix style login/password pair, or a PPP PAP or CHAP
+ login/password pair.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The IP address of your ISP's gateway. The gateway is the
+ machine to which you will connect and will
+ be set up as your default route. If your ISP hasn't
+ given you this number, don't worry. We can make one up and
+ your ISP's PPP server will tell us when we connect.
+
+ This number is known from now on as HISADDR.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Your ISP's netmask setting. Again, if your ISP hasn't given
+ you this information, you can safely use a netmask of
+ 255.255.255.0.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The IP addresses of one or more nameservers. Normally, you
+ will be given two IP numbers. You MUST have this
+ information unless you run your own nameserver.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ If your ISP allocates you a static IP address and hostname
+ then you will need this information too. If not, you will need
+ to know from what range of IP addresses your allocated IP address
+ will belong. If you haven't been given this range, don't worry.
+ You can configure PPP to accept any IP number (as explained later).
+
+
+
+
+
+ If you do not have any of the required information, contact your ISP
+ and make sure they provide it to you.
+
+
+
+
+ Building a ppp ready kernel
+
+ As the description states, ``ppp'' uses the kernel ``tun'' device.
+ It is necessary to make sure that your kernel has support for this
+ device compiled in.
+
+ To check this, go to your kernel compile directory (/sys/i386/conf
+ or /sys/pc98/conf) and examine your kernel configuration file.
+ It needs to have the line
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device tun 1
+
+
+
+ in it somewhere. The stock GENERIC kernel has this as standard, so
+ if you have not installed a custom kernel or you do not have a /sys
+ directory, you do not have to change anything.
+
+ If your kernel configuration file does not have this line in it, or
+ you need to configure more than one tun device (for example, if
+ you are setting up a server and could have 16 dialup ppp connections
+ at any one time then you will need to use ``16'' instead of ``1''),
+ then you should add the line, re-compile, re-install and boot the new
+ kernel. Please refer to the
+
+ section for more information on kernel configuration.
+
+ You can check how many tunnel devices your current kernel has by
+ typing the following:
+
+
+
+ # ifconfig -a
+ tun0: flags=8051<UP,POINTOPOINT,RUNNING,MULTICAST> mtu 1500
+ inet 200.10.100.1 --> 203.10.100.24 netmask 0xffffffff
+ tun1: flags=8050<POINTOPOINT,RUNNING,MULTICAST> mtu 576
+ tun2: flags=8051<UP,POINTOPOINT,RUNNING,MULTICAST> mtu 1500
+ inet 203.10.100.1 --> 203.10.100.20 netmask 0xffffffff
+ tun3: flags=8050<POINTOPOINT,RUNNING,MULTICAST> mtu 1500
+
+
+
+ which in this case shows four tunnel devices, two of which are
+ currently configured and being used.
+
+ If you have a kernel without the tun device, and you can not
+ rebuild it for some reason, all is not lost. You should be
+ able to dynamically load the code. Refer to the appropriate
+ modload(8) and lkm(4) pages for further details.
+
+ You may also wish to take this opportunity to configure a firewall.
+ Details can be found in the
+ section.
+
+
+
+
+ Check the tun device
+
+ Most users will only require one ``tun'' device (tun0). If you have
+ used more (i.e., a number other than `1' in the pseudo-device line
+ in the kernel configuration file) then alter all references to ``tun0''
+ below to reflect whichever device number you are using.
+
+ The easiest way to make sure that the tun0 device is configured correctly
+ is to re-make it. To do this, execute the following commands:
+
+
+
+ # cd /dev
+ # ./MAKEDEV tun0
+
+
+
+ If you require 16 tunnel devices in your kernel, you will need to
+ create more than just tun0:
+
+
+
+ # cd /dev
+ # ./MAKEDEV tun15
+
+
+
+ Also, to confirm that the kernel is configured correctly,
+ the following command should give the indicated output:
+
+
+
+ $ ifconfig tun0
+ tun0: flags=8050<POINTOPOINT,RUNNING,MULTICAST> mtu 1500
+ $
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Name Resolution Configuration
+
+ The resolver is the part of the system that turns IP addresses
+ into hostnames and vice versa. It can be configured to look for
+ maps that describe IP to hostname mappings in one of two places.
+ The first is a file called /etc/hosts (man 5 hosts).
+ The second is the Internet Domain Name Service (DNS), a distributed
+ data base, the discussion of which is beyond the scope of this document.
+
+ This section describes briefly how to configure your resolver.
+
+ The resolver is a set of system calls that do the name mappings, but
+ you have to tell them where to find their information. You do
+ this by first editing the file /etc/host.conf. Do
+ not call this file /etc/hosts.conf (note the extra
+ ``s'') as the results can be confusing.
+
+
+
+ Edit the /etc/host.conf file
+
+ This file should contain the following two lines:
+
+
+
+ hosts
+ bind
+
+
+ which instructs the resolver to first look in the file
+ /etc/hosts, and then to consult the DNS if the
+ name was not found.
+
+
+
+
+ Edit the /etc/hosts(5) file
+
+ This file should contain the IP addresses and names of machines on your
+ network. At a bare minimum it should contain entries for the machine
+ which will be running ppp. Assuming that your machine is called
+ foo.bar.com with the IP address 10.0.0.1, /etc/hosts should
+ contain:
+
+
+
+ 127.0.0.1 localhost
+ 10.0.0.1 foo.bar.com foo
+
+
+
+ The first line defines the alias ``localhost'' as a synonym for the
+ current machine. Regardless of your own IP address, the IP address for
+ this line should always be 127.0.0.1. The second line maps the name
+ ``foo.bar.com'' (and the shorthand ``foo'') to the IP address 10.0.0.1.
+
+ If your provider allocates you a static IP address and name, then use
+ these in place of the 10.0.0.1 entry.
+
+
+
+
+ Edit the /etc/resolv.conf file
+
+ /etc/resolv.conf tells the resolver how to behave. If you are
+ running your own DNS, you may leave this file empty. Normally, you will
+ need to enter the following line(s):
+
+
+
+ nameserver x.x.x.x
+ nameserver y.y.y.y
+ domain bar.com
+
+
+
+ The x.x.x.x and y.y.y.y addresses are those given
+ to you by your ISP. Add as many ``nameserver'' lines as your ISP
+ provides. The ``domain'' line defaults to your hostname's domain, and
+ is probably unnecessary. Refer to the resolv.conf manual page for details
+ of other possible entries in this file.
+
+
+
+
+
+ PPP Configuration
+
+ Both user ppp and pppd (the kernel level implementation of PPP)
+ use configuration files located in the /etc/ppp directory.
+ The sample configuration files provided are a good reference for
+ user ppp, so don't delete them.
+
+ Configuring ppp requires that you edit a number of files, depending
+ on your requirements. What you put in them depends to some extent
+ on whether your ISP allocates IP addresses statically (i.e., you get
+ given one IP address, and always use that one) or dynamically (i.e.,
+ your IP address can be different for each PPP session).
+
+
+
+ PPP and Static IP addresses
+
+
+ You will need to create a configuration file called
+ /etc/ppp/ppp.conf. It should look similar to the example
+ below. Note that lines that end in a ``:'' start in the first column,
+ all other lines should be indented as shown using spaces or tabs.
+
+
+
+ 1 default:
+ 2 set device /dev/cuaa0
+ 3 set speed 115200
+ 4 set dial "ABORT BUSY ABORT NO\\sCARRIER TIMEOUT 5 \"\" ATE1Q0 OK-AT-OK
+ \\dATDT\\T TIMEOUT 40 CONNECT"
+ 5 provider:
+ 6 set phone "(0123) 456 7890"
+ 7 set login "TIMEOUT 10 gin:-BREAK-gin: foo word: bar col: ppp"
+ 8 set timeout 300
+ 9 deny lqr
+ 10 set ifaddr x.x.x.x y.y.y.y
+ 11 delete ALL
+ 12 add 0 0 HISADDR
+
+
+ Do not include the line numbers, they are just for reference in
+ this discussion.
+
+
+
+ Line 1:
+
+ Identifies the default entry. Commands in this entry are
+ executed automatically when ppp is run.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 2:
+
+
+ Identifies the device to which the modem is connected.
+ COM1: is /dev/cuaa0 and COM2: is /dev/cuaa1.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 3:
+
+
+ Sets the speed you want to connect at. If 115200 doesn't
+ work (it should with any reasonably new modem), try 38400
+ instead.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 4:
+
+
+ The dial string. User ppp uses an expect-send syntax similar
+ to the chat(8) program. Refer to the manual page
+ for information on the features of this language.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 5:
+
+
+ Identifies an entry for a provider called ``provider''.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 6:
+
+
+ Sets the phone number for this provider. Multiple phone
+ numbers may be specified using the ``:'' or ``|'' character as
+ a separator. The difference between these spearators is
+ described in the ppp manual page. To summarize, if you want
+ to rotate through the numbers, use the ``:''. If you want to
+ always attempt to dial the first number first and only use
+ the other numbers if the first number fails, use the ``|''.
+ Always quote the entire set of phone numbers as shown.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 7:
+
+
+ The login string is of the same chat-like syntax as the dial
+ string. In this example, the string works for a service whose
+ login session looks like this:
+
+
+
+ J. Random Provider
+ login: foo
+ password: bar
+ protocol: ppp
+
+
+
+ You will need to alter this script to suit your own needs.
+ If you're using PAP or CHAP, there will be no login at this
+ point, so your login string can be left blank. See
+
+ for further details.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 8:
+
+
+ Sets the default timeout (in seconds) for the connection.
+ Here, the connection will be closed automatically after
+ 300 seconds of inactivity. If you never want to timeout,
+ set this value to zero.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 9:
+
+
+ Ppp can be configured to exchange Link Quality Report (LQR)
+ packets. These packets describe how good the physical link
+ is. Ppp's LQR strategy is to close the connection when a
+ number of these packets are missed. This is useful when
+ you have a direct serial link to another machine and the
+ DSR modem signal is not available to indicate that the line
+ is up. When data saturates the line, LQR packets are
+ sometimes ``missed'', causing ppp to close the connection
+ prematurely. Refusing to negotiate lqr is sometimes prudent
+ (if you are going through a modem) as it avoids this whole
+ mess. By default, ppp will not attempt to negotiate LQR,
+ but will accept LQR negotiation from the peer.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 10:
+
+
+ Sets the interface addresses. The string x.x.x.x should be
+ replaced by the IP address that your provider has allocated
+ to you. The string y.y.y.y should be replaced by the IP
+ address that your ISP indicated for their gateway (the
+ machine to which you connect). If your ISP hasn't given you
+ a gateway address, use 10.0.0.2/0. If you need to
+ use a ``guessed'' address, make sure that you create an entry
+ in /etc/ppp/ppp.linkup as per the instructions for
+ .
+ If this line is omitted, ppp cannot run in or
+ mode.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 11:
+
+
+ Deletes all existing routing table entries for the acquired
+ tun device. This should not normally be necessary, but will
+ make sure that PPP is starting with a clean bill of health.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 12:
+
+
+ Adds a default route to your ISPs gateway. The special
+ word HISADDR is replaced with the gateway address
+ specified on line 9. It is important that this line appears
+ after line 9, otherwise HISADDR will not yet be
+ initialized.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ It is not necessary to add an entry to ppp.linkup when you have
+ a static IP address as your routing table entries are already correct
+ before you connect. You may however wish to create an entry to invoke
+ programs after connection. This is explained later with the sendmail
+ example.
+
+ Example configuration files can be found in the /etc/ppp
+ directory.
+
+
+
+
+ PPP and Dynamic IP addresses
+
+
+ If your service provider does not assign static IP numbers,
+ ppp can be configured to negotiate the local and
+ remote addresses. This is done by "guessing" an IP number
+ and allowing ppp to set it up correctly using the IP Configuration
+ Protocol (IPCP) after connecting. The ppp.conf configuration
+ is the same as , with the following change:
+
+
+
+ 10 set ifaddr 10.0.0.1/0 10.0.0.2/0 255.255.255.0
+
+
+
+ Again, do not include the line numbers, they are just for reference in
+ this discussion. Indentation of at least one space is required.
+
+
+
+ Line 10:
+
+ The number after the ``/'' character is the number of bits of
+ the address that ppp will insist on. You may wish to use
+ IP numbers more appropriate to your circumstances, but the
+ above example will almost always work. If it fails, you may
+ be able to defeat some broken ppp implementations by
+ supplying an additional 0.0.0.0 argument:
+
+
+
+ set ifaddr 10.0.0.1/0 10.0.0.2/0 255.255.255.0 0.0.0.0
+
+
+
+ This tells ppp to negotiate using address 0.0.0.0
+ rather than 10.0.0.1. Do not use 0.0.0.0/0
+ as the first argument to set ifaddr as it prevents
+ ppp from setting up an initial route in and
+ mode.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ You will also need to create an entry in /etc/ppp/ppp.linkup.
+ Ppp.linkup is used after a connection has been established. At
+ this point, ppp will know what IP addresses should really be
+ used. The following entry will delete the existing bogus routes, and
+ create correct ones:
+
+
+
+ 1 provider:
+ 2 delete ALL
+ 3 add 0 0 HISADDR
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 1:
+
+ On establishing a connection, ppp will look for an entry in
+ ppp.linkup according to the following rules: First,
+ try to match the same label as we used in ppp.conf.
+ If that fails, look for an entry for the IP number of our
+ gateway. This entry is a four-octet IP style label. If
+ we still haven't found an entry, look for the MYADDR
+ entry.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 2:
+
+
+ This line tells ppp to delete all existing routes for the
+ acquired tun interface (except the direct route entry).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 3:
+
+
+ This line tells ppp to add a default route that points to
+ HISADDR. HISADDR will be replaced with
+ the IP number of the gateway as negotiated in the IPCP.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ See the pmdemand entry in the files /etc/ppp/ppp.conf.sample and
+ /etc/ppp/ppp.linkup.sample for a detailed example.
+
+
+
+
+ Receiving incoming calls with PPP
+
+ This section describes setting up ppp in a server role.
+
+ When you configure ppp to receive incoming calls, you
+ must decide whether you wish to forward packets for just
+ ppp connections, for all interfaces, or not at all.
+ To forward for just ppp connections, include the line
+
+
+
+ enable proxy
+
+
+
+ in your ppp.conf file. If you wish to forward packets on all
+ interfaces, use the
+
+
+
+ gateway=YES
+
+
+
+ option in /etc/rc.conf (this file used to be called
+ /etc/sysconfig).
+
+
+
+ Which getty?
+
+
+ provides a good description on enabling dialup services using getty.
+
+ An alternative to getty is
+ mgetty,
+ a smarter version of getty designed with dialup lines in mind.
+
+ The advantages of using mgetty is that it actively talks to
+ modems, meaning if port is turned off in /etc/ttys then
+ your modem won't answer the phone.
+
+ Later versions of mgetty (from 0.99beta onwards) also support the
+ automatic detection of PPP streams, allowing your clients script-less
+ access to your server.
+
+ Refer to for more
+ information on mgetty.
+
+
+
+
+ PPP permissions
+
+ PPP must normally be run as user id 0. If however you wish to allow
+ ppp to run in server mode as a normal user by executing ppp as described
+ below, that user must be given permission to run ppp by adding them to
+ the network group in /etc/group.
+
+
+
+
+ Setting up a PPP shell for dynamic-IP users
+
+ Create a file called /etc/ppp/ppp-shell containing the
+ following:
+
+
+
+ #!/bin/sh
+ IDENT=`echo $0 | sed -e 's/^.*-\(.*\)$/\1/'`
+ CALLEDAS="$IDENT"
+ TTY=`tty`
+
+ if [ x$IDENT = xdialup ]; then
+ IDENT=`basename $TTY`
+ fi
+
+ echo "PPP for $CALLEDAS on $TTY"
+ echo "Starting PPP for $IDENT"
+
+ exec /usr/sbin/ppp -direct $IDENT
+
+
+
+ This script should be executable. Now make a symbolic link called
+ ppp-dialup to this script using the following commands:
+
+
+
+ # ln -s /etc/ppp/ppp-shell /etc/ppp/ppp-dialup
+
+
+
+ You should use this script as the shell for all your dialup
+ ppp users. This is an example from /etc/password
+ for a dialup PPP user with username pchilds. (remember don't directly
+ edit the password file, use vipw)
+
+
+
+ pchilds:*:1011:300:Peter Childs PPP:/home/ppp:/etc/ppp/ppp-dialup
+
+
+
+ Create a /home/ppp directory that is world readable
+ containing the following 0 byte files
+
+
+
+ -r--r--r-- 1 root wheel 0 May 27 02:23 .hushlogin
+ -r--r--r-- 1 root wheel 0 May 27 02:22 .rhosts
+
+
+
+ which prevents /etc/motd from being displayed.
+
+
+
+
+ Setting up a PPP shell for static-IP users
+
+ Create the ppp-shell file as above and for each account with
+ statically assigned IPs create a symbolic link to ppp-shell.
+
+ For example, if you have three dialup customers fred, sam, and mary,
+ that you route class C networks for, you would type the following:
+
+
+
+ # ln -s /etc/ppp/ppp-shell /etc/ppp/ppp-fred
+ # ln -s /etc/ppp/ppp-shell /etc/ppp/ppp-sam
+ # ln -s /etc/ppp/ppp-shell /etc/ppp/ppp-mary
+
+
+
+ Each of these users dialup accounts should have their shell set
+ to the symbolic link created above. (ie. mary's shell should be
+ /etc/ppp/ppp-mary).
+
+
+
+
+ Setting up ppp.conf for dynamic-IP users
+
+ The /etc/ppp/ppp.conf file should contain something along
+ the lines of
+
+
+
+ default:
+ set debug phase lcp chat
+ set timeout 0
+
+ ttyd0:
+ set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.100.20 255.255.255.255
+ enable proxy
+
+ ttyd1:
+ set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.100.21 255.255.255.255
+ enable proxy
+
+
+
+ Note the indenting is important.
+
+ The default: section is loaded for each session. For each
+ dialup line enabled in /etc/ttys create an entry similar
+ to the one for ttyd0: above. Each line should get a unique
+ IP from your pool of ip address for dynamic users.
+
+
+
+
+ Setting up ppp.conf for static-IP users
+
+ Along with the contents of the sample /etc/ppp/ppp.conf
+ above you should add a section for each of the statically assigned
+ dialup users. We will continue with our fred, sam, and mary example.
+
+
+
+ fred:
+ set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.101.1 255.255.255.255
+
+ sam:
+ set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.102.1 255.255.255.255
+
+ mary:
+ set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.103.1 255.255.255.255
+
+
+
+ The file /etc/ppp/ppp.linkup should also contain routing
+ information for each static IP user if required. The line below
+ would add a route for the 203.14.101.0 class C via
+ the client's ppp link.
+
+
+
+ fred:
+ add 203.14.101.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 HISADDR
+
+ sam:
+ add 203.14.102.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 HISADDR
+
+ mary:
+ add 203.14.103.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 HISADDR
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ More on mgetty, AutoPPP, and MS extensions
+
+
+
+ Mgetty and AutoPPP
+
+
+ Configuring and compiling mgetty with the AUTO_PPP option enabled
+ allows mgetty to detect the LCP phase of PPP connections and automatically
+ spawn off a ppp shell. However, since the default login/password sequence
+ does not occur it is necessary to authenticate users using either PAP
+ or CHAP.
+
+ This section assumes the user has successfully configured, compiled, and
+ installed a version of mgetty with the AUTO_PPP option (v0.99beta or later)
+
+ Make sure your /usr/local/etc/mgetty+sendfax/login.config file
+ has the following in it:
+
+
+
+ /AutoPPP/ - - /etc/ppp/ppp-pap-dialup
+
+
+
+ This will tell mgetty to run the ppp-pap-dialup script for
+ detected PPP connections.
+
+ Create a file called /etc/ppp/ppp-pap-dialup containing the
+ following (the file should be executable):
+
+
+
+ #!/bin/sh
+ TTY=`tty`
+ IDENT=`basename $TTY`
+ exec /usr/sbin/ppp -direct pap$IDENT
+
+
+
+ For each dialup line enabled in /etc/ttys create a corresponding
+ entry in /etc/ppp/ppp.conf. This will happily co-exist with
+ the definitions we created above.
+
+
+
+ papttyd0:
+ enable pap
+ set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.100.20 255.255.255.255
+ enable proxy
+
+ papttyd1:
+ enable pap
+ set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.100.21 255.255.255.255
+ enable proxy
+
+
+
+ Each user logging in with this method will need to have a username/password
+ in /etc/ppp/ppp.secret file, or alternatively add the
+
+
+
+ enable passwdauth
+
+
+
+ option to authenticate users via pap from the /etc/passwordd
+ file. (*)
+
+ (*) Note this option only available in 2.2-961014-SNAP or later, or by
+ getting the updated ppp code for 2.1.x. (see MS extensions below for details)
+
+
+
+
+ MS extentions
+
+ From 2.2-961014-SNAP onwards it is possible to allow the automatic
+ negotiation of DNS and NetBIOS name servers with clients supporting
+ this feature (namely Win95/NT clients). See RFC1877 for more details
+ on the protocol.
+
+ An example of enabling these extensions in your
+ /etc/ppp/ppp.conf file is illustrated below.
+
+
+
+ default:
+ set debug phase lcp chat
+ set timeout 0
+ enable msext
+ set ns 203.14.100.1 203.14.100.2
+ set nbns 203.14.100.5
+
+
+
+ This will tell the clients the primary and secondary
+ name server addresses, and a netbios nameserver host.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ PAP and CHAP authentication
+
+
+ Some ISPs set their system up so that the authentication part of
+ your connection is done using either of the PAP or CHAP authentication
+ mechanisms. If this is the case, your ISP will not give a login:
+ prompt when you connect, but will start talking PPP immediately.
+
+ PAP is less secure than CHAP, but security is not normally an issue
+ here as passwords, although being sent as plain text with PAP, are being
+ transmitted down a serial line only. There's not much room for hackers
+ to "eavesdrop".
+
+ Referring back to the or sections, the following alterations
+ must be made:
+
+
+
+ 7 set login
+ .....
+ 13 set authname MyUserName
+ 14 set authkey MyPassword
+
+
+
+ As always, do not include the line numbers, they are just for reference
+ in this discussion. Indentation of at least one space is required.
+
+
+
+ Line 7:
+
+ Your ISP will not normally require that you log into the
+ server if you're using PAP or CHAP. You must therefore
+ disable your "set login" string.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 13:
+
+
+ This line specifies your PAP/CHAP user name. You will need
+ to insert the correct value for MyUserName.
+
+
+
+
+ Line 14:
+
+
+ This line specifies your PAP/CHAP password. You will need
+ to insert the correct value for MyPassword.
+ You may want to add an additional line
+
+ 15 accept PAP
+
+
+ or
+
+ 15 accept CHAP
+
+
+ to make it obvious that this is the intention, but PAP
+ and CHAP are accepted by default.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ NOTE: Your authkey will be logged if you have
+ command logging turned on (set log +command). Care should be
+ taken when deciding the ppp log file permissions.
+
+
+
+
+ Changing your ppp configuration on the fly
+
+ It is possible to talk to the ppp program while it is running in
+ the background, but only if a suitable password has been set up.
+
+ By default, ppp will listen to a TCP port of 3000 + tunno,
+ where tunno is the number of the tun device acquired, however,
+ if a password for the local machine is not set up in
+ /etc/ppp/ppp.secret, no server connection will be created.
+ To set your password, put the following line in
+ /etc/ppp/ppp.secret:
+
+
+
+ foo MyPassword
+
+
+
+ where foo is your local hostname (run hostname -s to
+ determine the correct name), and MyPassword is the unencrypted
+ password that you wish to use. /etc/ppp/ppp.secret should
+ NOT be accessable by anyone without user id 0. This means that
+ /, /etc and /etc/ppp should not be writable,
+ and ppp.secret should be owned by user id 0 and have permissions
+ 0600.
+
+ It is also possible to select a specific port number or to have ppp listen
+ to a local unix domain socket rather than to a TCP socket. Refer to the
+ set socket command in manual page for further details.
+
+ Once a socket has been set up, the pppctl(8) program may be used
+ in scripts that wish to manipulate the running program.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Final system configuration
+
+
+ You now have PPP configured, but there are a few more things to
+ do before it is ready to work. They all involve editing the
+ /etc/rc.conf file (was /etc/sysconfig).
+
+ Working from the top down in this file, make sure the ``hostname='' line
+ is set, e.g.:
+
+
+
+ hostname=foo.bar.com
+
+
+
+ If your ISP has supplied you with a static IP address and name, it's
+ probably best that you use this name as your host name.
+
+ Look for the network_interfaces variable. If you want to configure
+ your system to dial your ISP on demand, make sure the tun0 device is
+ added to the list, otherwise remove it.
+
+
+
+ network_interfaces="lo0 tun0"
+ ifconfig_tun0=
+
+
+
+ Note, the ifconfig_tun0 variable should be empty, and
+ a file called /etc/start_if.tun0 should be created. This file
+ should contain the line
+
+
+
+ ppp -auto mysystem
+
+
+
+ This script is executed at network configuration time, starting
+ your ppp daemon in automatic mode. If you have a LAN for which
+ this machine is a gateway, you may also wish to use the
+ switch. Refer to the manual page for further
+ details.
+
+ Set the router program to ``NO'' with the line
+
+
+
+ router_enable=NO (/etc/rc.conf)
+ router=NO (/etc/sysconfig)
+
+
+
+ It is important that the routed daemon is not started
+ (it's started by default) as routed tends to delete the default
+ routing table entries created by ppp.
+
+ It is probably worth your while ensuring that the ``sendmail_flags'' line
+ does not include the ``-q'' option, otherwise sendmail will attempt to do
+ a network lookup every now and then, possibly causing your machine to dial
+ out. You may try:
+
+
+
+ sendmail_flags="-bd"
+
+
+
+ The upshot of this is that you must force sendmail to re-examine the
+ mail queue whenever the ppp link is up by typing:
+
+
+
+ # /usr/sbin/sendmail -q
+
+
+
+ You may wish to use the !bg command in ppp.linkup to do this
+ automatically:
+
+
+
+ 1 provider:
+ 2 delete ALL
+ 3 add 0 0 HISADDR
+ 4 !bg sendmail -bd -q30m
+
+
+
+ If you don't like this, it is possible to set up a "dfilter" to block
+ SMTP traffic. Refer to the sample files for further details.
+
+ All that is left is to reboot the machine.
+
+ After rebooting, you can now either type
+
+
+
+ # ppp
+
+
+
+ and then ``dial provider'' to start the PPP session, or, if you
+ want ppp to establish sessions automatically when there is outbound
+ traffic (and you haven't created the start_if.tun0 script), type
+
+
+
+ # ppp -auto provider
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Summary
+
+ To recap, the following steps are necessary when setting up ppp
+ for the first time:
+
+ Client side:
+
+
+
+
+
+ Ensure that the tun device is built into your kernel.
+
+
+
+ Ensure that the tunX device file is available in the
+ /dev directory.
+
+
+
+ Create an entry in /etc/ppp/ppp.conf. The
+ pmdemand example should suffice for most
+ ISPs.
+
+
+
+ If you have a dynamic IP address, create an entry in
+ /etc/ppp/ppp.linkup.
+
+
+
+ Update your /etc/rc.conf (or sysconfig) file.
+
+
+
+ Create a start_if.tun0 script if you require demand
+ dialing.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Server side:
+
+
+
+ Ensure that the tun device is built into your kernel.
+
+
+
+ Ensure that the tunX device file is available in the
+ /dev directory.
+
+
+
+ Create an entry in /etc/passwd (using the vipw(8)
+ program).
+
+
+
+ Create a profile in this users home directory that
+ runs ``ppp -direct direct-server'' or similar.
+
+
+
+ Create an entry in /etc/ppp/ppp.conf. The
+ direct-server example should suffice.
+
+
+
+ Create an entry in /etc/ppp/ppp.linkup.
+
+
+
+ Update your /etc/rc.conf (or sysconfig) file.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Acknowledgments
+
+ This section of the handbook was last updated on Sun Sep 7, 1997
+ by &a.brian;
+
+ Thanks to the following for their input, comments & suggestions:
+
+ &a.nik;
+
+ &a.dirkvangulik;
+
+ &a.pjc;
+
+
+
+
+
+ Setting up Kernel PPP
+
+ Contributed by &a.gena;.
+
+ Before you start setting up PPP on your machine make
+ sure that pppd is located in /usr/sbin and directory /etc/ppp
+ exists.
+
+ pppd can work in two modes:
+
+
+
+ as a "client" , i.e. you want to connect your machine to outside
+ world via PPP serial connection or modem line.
+
+
+
+
+ as a "server" , i.e. your machine is located on the network and
+ used to connect other computers using PPP.
+
+
+
+
+ In both cases you will need to set up an options file (/etc/ppp/options
+ or ~/.ppprc if you have more then one user on your machine that uses
+ PPP).
+
+ You also will need some modem/serial software ( preferably kermit )
+ so you can dial and establish connection with remote host.
+
+
+
+ Working as a PPP client
+
+ I used the following /etc/ppp/options to connect to CISCO terminal
+ server PPP line.
+ crtscts # enable hardware flow control
+ modem # modem control line
+ noipdefault # remote PPP server must supply your IP address.
+ # if the remote host doesn't send your IP during IPCP
+ # negotiation , remove this option
+ passive # wait for LCP packets
+ domain ppp.foo.com # put your domain name here
+
+ :<remote_ip> # put the IP of remote PPP host here
+ # it will be used to route packets via PPP link
+ # if you didn't specified the noipdefault option
+ # change this line to <local_ip>:<remote_ip>
+
+ defaultroute # put this if you want that PPP server will be your
+ # default router
+
+
+ To connect:
+
+
+
+ Dial to the remote host using kermit ( or other modem program )
+ enter your user name and password ( or whatever is needed to enable PPP
+ on the remote host )
+
+
+
+
+ Exit kermit. ( without hanging up the line )
+
+
+
+
+ enter:
+ /usr/src/usr.sbin/pppd.new/pppd /dev/tty01 19200
+
+ ( put the appropriate speed and device name )
+
+
+
+
+
+ Now your computer is connected with PPP. If the connection fails for some
+ reasons you can add the "debug" option to the /etc/ppp/options file
+ and check messages on the console to track the problem
+
+ Following /etc/ppp/pppup script will make all 3 stages automatically:
+ #!/bin/sh
+ ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep
+ pid=`ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
+ if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
+ echo 'killing pppd, PID=' ${pid}
+ kill ${pid}
+ fi
+ ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep
+ pid=`ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
+ if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
+ echo 'killing kermit, PID=' ${pid}
+ kill -9 ${pid}
+ fi
+
+ ifconfig ppp0 down
+ ifconfig ppp0 delete
+
+ kermit -y /etc/ppp/kermit.dial
+ pppd /dev/tty01 19200
+
+
+ /etc/ppp/kermit.dial is kermit script that dials and makes all
+ necessary authorization on the remote host.
+ ( Example of such script is attached to the end of this document )
+
+ Use the following /etc/ppp/pppdown script to disconnect the PPP line:
+ #!/bin/sh
+ pid=`ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
+ if [ X${pid} != "X" ] ; then
+ echo 'killing pppd, PID=' ${pid}
+ kill -TERM ${pid}
+ fi
+
+ ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep
+ pid=`ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
+ if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
+ echo 'killing kermit, PID=' ${pid}
+ kill -9 ${pid}
+ fi
+
+ /sbin/ifconfig ppp0 down
+ /sbin/ifconfig ppp0 delete
+ kermit -y /etc/ppp/kermit.hup
+ /etc/ppp/ppptest
+
+
+ Check if PPP is still running (/usr/etc/ppp/ppptest):
+ #!/bin/sh
+ pid=`ps ax| grep pppd |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
+ if [ X${pid} != "X" ] ; then
+ echo 'pppd running: PID=' ${pid-NONE}
+ else
+ echo 'No pppd running.'
+ fi
+ set -x
+ netstat -n -I ppp0
+ ifconfig ppp0
+
+
+ Hangs up modem line (/etc/ppp/kermit.hup):
+ set line /dev/tty01 ; put your modem device here
+ set speed 19200
+ set file type binary
+ set file names literal
+ set win 8
+ set rec pack 1024
+ set send pack 1024
+ set block 3
+ set term bytesize 8
+ set command bytesize 8
+ set flow none
+
+ pau 1
+ out +++
+ inp 5 OK
+ out ATH0\13
+ echo \13
+ exit
+
+
+ Here is an alternate method using chat instead of
+ kermit.
+
+ Contributed by &a.rhuff;.
+
+ The following two files are sufficient to accomplish a pppd
+ connection.
+
+ /etc/ppp/options:
+ /dev/cuaa1 115200
+
+ crtscts # enable hardware flow control
+ modem # modem control line
+ connect "/usr/bin/chat -f /etc/ppp/login.chat.script"
+ noipdefault # remote PPP server must supply your IP address.
+ # if the remote host doesn't send your IP during
+ # IPCP negotiation, remove this option
+ passive # wait for LCP packets
+ domain <your.domain> # put your domain name here
+
+ : # put the IP of remote PPP host here
+ # it will be used to route packets via PPP link
+ # if you didn't specified the noipdefault option
+ # change this line to <local_ip>:<remote_ip>
+
+ defaultroute # put this if you want that PPP server will be
+ # your default router
+
+
+ /etc/ppp/login.chat.script:
+
+ (This should actually go into a single line.)
+
+
+ ABORT BUSY ABORT 'NO CARRIER' "" AT OK ATDT<phone.number>
+ CONNECT "" TIMEOUT 10 ogin:-\\r-ogin: <login-id>
+ TIMEOUT 5 sword: <password>
+
+
+ Once these are installed and modified correctly, all you need to
+ do is
+
+ pppd.
+
+ This sample based primarily on information provided by: Trev Roydhouse
+ <Trev.Roydhouse@f401.n711.z3.fidonet.org> and used by
+ permission.
+
+
+
+
+ Working as a PPP server
+
+ /etc/ppp/options:
+ crtscts # Hardware flow control
+ netmask 255.255.255.0 # netmask ( not required )
+ 192.114.208.20:192.114.208.165 # ip's of local and remote hosts
+ # local ip must be different from one
+ # you assigned to the ethernet ( or other )
+ # interface on your machine.
+ # remote IP is ip address that will be
+ # assigned to the remote machine
+ domain ppp.foo.com # your domain
+ passive # wait for LCP
+ modem # modem line
+
+
+ Following /etc/ppp/pppserv script will enable ppp server on your
+ machine
+ #!/bin/sh
+ ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep
+ pid=`ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
+ if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
+ echo 'killing pppd, PID=' ${pid}
+ kill ${pid}
+ fi
+ ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep
+ pid=`ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
+ if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
+ echo 'killing kermit, PID=' ${pid}
+ kill -9 ${pid}
+ fi
+
+ # reset ppp interface
+ ifconfig ppp0 down
+ ifconfig ppp0 delete
+
+ # enable autoanswer mode
+ kermit -y /etc/ppp/kermit.ans
+
+ # run ppp
+ pppd /dev/tty01 19200
+
+
+ Use this /etc/ppp/pppservdown script to stop ppp server:
+ #!/bin/sh
+ ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep
+ pid=`ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
+ if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
+ echo 'killing pppd, PID=' ${pid}
+ kill ${pid}
+ fi
+ ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep
+ pid=`ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
+ if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
+ echo 'killing kermit, PID=' ${pid}
+ kill -9 ${pid}
+ fi
+ ifconfig ppp0 down
+ ifconfig ppp0 delete
+
+ kermit -y /etc/ppp/kermit.noans
+
+
+ Following kermit script will enable/disable autoanswer mode
+ on your modem (/etc/ppp/kermit.ans):
+ set line /dev/tty01
+ set speed 19200
+ set file type binary
+ set file names literal
+ set win 8
+ set rec pack 1024
+ set send pack 1024
+ set block 3
+ set term bytesize 8
+ set command bytesize 8
+ set flow none
+
+ pau 1
+ out +++
+ inp 5 OK
+ out ATH0\13
+ inp 5 OK
+ echo \13
+ out ATS0=1\13 ; change this to out ATS0=0\13 if you want to disable
+ ; autoanswer mod
+ inp 5 OK
+ echo \13
+ exit
+
+
+ This /etc/ppp/kermit.dial script is used for dialing and authorizing
+ on remote host. You will need to customize it for your needs.
+ Put your login and password in this script , also you will need
+ to change input statement depending on responses from your modem
+ and remote host.
+ ;
+ ; put the com line attached to the modem here:
+ ;
+ set line /dev/tty01
+ ;
+ ; put the modem speed here:
+ ;
+ set speed 19200
+ set file type binary ; full 8 bit file xfer
+ set file names literal
+ set win 8
+ set rec pack 1024
+ set send pack 1024
+ set block 3
+ set term bytesize 8
+ set command bytesize 8
+ set flow none
+ set modem hayes
+ set dial hangup off
+ set carrier auto ; Then SET CARRIER if necessary,
+ set dial display on ; Then SET DIAL if necessary,
+ set input echo on
+ set input timeout proceed
+ set input case ignore
+ def \%x 0 ; login prompt counter
+ goto slhup
+
+ :slcmd ; put the modem in command mode
+ echo Put the modem in command mode.
+ clear ; Clear unread characters from input buffer
+ pause 1
+ output +++ ; hayes escape sequence
+ input 1 OK\13\10 ; wait for OK
+ if success goto slhup
+ output \13
+ pause 1
+ output at\13
+ input 1 OK\13\10
+ if fail goto slcmd ; if modem doesn't answer OK, try again
+
+ :slhup ; hang up the phone
+ clear ; Clear unread characters from input buffer
+ pause 1
+ echo Hanging up the phone.
+ output ath0\13 ; hayes command for on hook
+ input 2 OK\13\10
+ if fail goto slcmd ; if no OK answer, put modem in command mode
+
+ :sldial ; dial the number
+ pause 1
+ echo Dialing.
+ output atdt9,550311\13\10 ; put phone number here
+ assign \%x 0 ; zero the time counter
+
+ :look
+ clear ; Clear unread characters from input buffer
+ increment \%x ; Count the seconds
+ input 1 {CONNECT }
+ if success goto sllogin
+ reinput 1 {NO CARRIER\13\10}
+ if success goto sldial
+ reinput 1 {NO DIALTONE\13\10}
+ if success goto slnodial
+ reinput 1 {\255}
+ if success goto slhup
+ reinput 1 {\127}
+ if success goto slhup
+ if < \%x 60 goto look
+ else goto slhup
+
+ :sllogin ; login
+ assign \%x 0 ; zero the time counter
+ pause 1
+ echo Looking for login prompt.
+
+ :slloop
+ increment \%x ; Count the seconds
+ clear ; Clear unread characters from input buffer
+ output \13
+ ;
+ ; put your expected login prompt here:
+ ;
+ input 1 {Username: }
+ if success goto sluid
+ reinput 1 {\255}
+ if success goto slhup
+ reinput 1 {\127}
+ if success goto slhup
+ if < \%x 10 goto slloop ; try 10 times to get a login prompt
+ else goto slhup ; hang up and start again if 10 failures
+
+ :sluid
+ ;
+ ; put your userid here:
+ ;
+ output ppp-login\13
+ input 1 {Password: }
+ ;
+ ; put your password here:
+ ;
+ output ppp-password\13
+ input 1 {Entering SLIP mode.}
+ echo
+ quit
+
+ :slnodial
+ echo \7No dialtone. Check the telephone line!\7
+ exit 1
+
+ ; local variables:
+ ; mode: csh
+ ; comment-start: "; "
+ ; comment-start-skip: "; "
+ ; end:
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Setting up a SLIP Client
+
+ Contributed by &a.asami;8 Aug 1995.
+
+ The following is one way to set up a FreeBSD machine for SLIP on a
+ static host network. For dynamic hostname assignments (i.e., your
+ address changes each time you dial up), you probably need to do
+ something much fancier.
+
+ First, determine which serial port your modem is connected to. I have
+ a symbolic link /dev/modem -> cuaa1, and only use the modem name in my
+ configuration files. It can become quite cumbersome when you need to
+ fix a bunch of files in /etc and .kermrc's all over the system! (Note
+ that /dev/cuaa0 is COM1, cuaa1 is COM2, etc.)
+
+ Make sure you have
+ pseudo-device sl 1
+
+ in your kernel's config file. It is included in the GENERIC kernel,
+ so this will not be a problem unless you deleted it.
+
+
+
+ Things you have to do only once
+
+
+
+
+
+ Add your home machine, the gateway and nameservers to your
+ /etc/hosts file. Mine looks like this:
+ 127.0.0.1 localhost loghost
+ 136.152.64.181 silvia.HIP.Berkeley.EDU silvia.HIP silvia
+
+ 136.152.64.1 inr-3.Berkeley.EDU inr-3 slip-gateway
+ 128.32.136.9 ns1.Berkeley.edu ns1
+ 128.32.136.12 ns2.Berkeley.edu ns2
+
+ By the way, silvia is the name of the car that I had when I was
+ back in Japan (it is called 2?0SX here in U.S.).
+
+
+
+
+ Make sure you have "hosts" before "bind" in your /etc/host.conf.
+ Otherwise, funny things may happen.
+
+
+
+
+ Edit the file /etc/rc.conf. Note that you should edit
+ the file /etc/sysconfig instead if you are running FreeBSD
+ previous to version 2.2.2.
+
+
+
+ Set your hostname by editing the line that says:
+ hostname=myname.my.domain
+
+ You should give it your full Internet hostname.
+
+
+
+
+ Add sl0 to the list of network interfaces by changing the line
+ that says:
+ network_interfaces="lo0"
+
+ to:
+ network_interfaces="lo0 sl0"
+
+
+
+
+
+ Set the startup flags of sl0 by adding a line:
+ ifconfig_sl0="inet ${hostname} slip-gateway netmask 0xffffff00 up"
+
+
+
+
+
+ Designate the default router by changing the line:
+ defaultrouter=NO
+
+ to:
+ defaultrouter=slip-gateway
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Make a file /etc/resolv.conf which contains:
+ domain HIP.Berkeley.EDU
+ nameserver 128.32.136.9
+ nameserver 128.32.136.12
+
+ As you can see, these set up the nameserver hosts. Of course, the
+ actual domain names and addresses depend on your environment.
+
+
+
+
+ Set the password for root and toor (and any other accounts that
+ does not have a password). Use passwd, do not edit the /etc/passwd
+ or /etc/master.passwd files!
+
+
+
+
+ Reboot your machine and make sure it comes up with the correct
+ hostname.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Making a SLIP connection
+
+
+
+
+
+ Dial up, type "slip" at the prompt, enter your machine name and
+ password. The things you need to enter depends on your
+ environment. I use kermit, with a script like this:
+ # kermit setup
+ set modem hayes
+ set line /dev/modem
+ set speed 115200
+ set parity none
+ set flow rts/cts
+ set terminal bytesize 8
+ set file type binary
+ # The next macro will dial up and login
+ define slip dial 643-9600, input 10 =>, if failure stop, -
+ output slip\x0d, input 10 Username:, if failure stop, -
+ output silvia\x0d, input 10 Password:, if failure stop, -
+ output ***\x0d, echo \x0aCONNECTED\x0a
+
+ (of course, you have to change the hostname and password to fit
+ yours). Then you can just type "slip" from the kermit prompt to
+ get connected.
+
+ Note: leaving your password in plain text anywhere in the
+ filesystem is generally a BAD idea. Do it at your own risk. I am
+ just too lazy.
+
+
+
+
+ Leave the kermit there (you can suspend it by "z") and as root,
+ type
+ slattach -h -c -s 115200 /dev/modem
+
+ if you are able to "ping" hosts on the other side of the router,
+ you are connected! If it does not work, you might want to try "-a"
+ instead of "-c" as an argument to slattach.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ How to shutdown the connection
+
+ Type "kill -INT `cat /var/run/slattach.modem.pid`" (as root) to
+ kill slattach. Then go back to kermit ("fg" if you suspended it)
+ and exit from it ("q").
+
+ The slattach man page says you have to use "ifconfig sl0 down" to
+ mark the interface down, but this does not seem to make any
+ difference for me. ("ifconfig sl0" reports the same thing.)
+
+ Some times, your modem might refuse to drop the carrier (mine
+ often does). In that case, simply start kermit and quit it again.
+ It usually goes out on the second try.
+
+
+
+
+ Troubleshooting
+
+ If it does not work, feel free to ask me. The things that people
+ tripped over so far:
+
+
+
+ Not using "-c" or "-a" in slattach (I have no idea why this can be
+ fatal, but adding this flag solved the problem for at least one
+ person)
+
+
+
+
+ Using "s10" instead of "sl0" (might be hard to see the difference on
+ some fonts).
+
+
+
+
+ Try "ifconfig sl0" to see your interface status. I get:
+ silvia# ifconfig sl0
+ sl0: flags=10<POINTOPOINT>
+ inet 136.152.64.181 --> 136.152.64.1 netmask ffffff00
+
+
+
+
+
+ Also, netstat -r will give the routing table, in case you get
+ the "no route to host" messages from ping. Mine looks like:
+ silvia# netstat -r
+ Routing tables
+ Destination Gateway Flags Refs Use IfaceMTU Rtt
+ Netmasks:
+ (root node)
+ (root node)
+
+ Route Tree for Protocol Family inet:
+ (root node) =>
+ default inr-3.Berkeley.EDU UG 8 224515 sl0 - -
+ localhost.Berkel localhost.Berkeley UH 5 42127 lo0 - 0.438
+ inr-3.Berkeley.E silvia.HIP.Berkele UH 1 0 sl0 - -
+ silvia.HIP.Berke localhost.Berkeley UGH 34 47641234 lo0 - 0.438
+ (root node)
+
+ (this is after transferring a bunch of files, your numbers should be
+ smaller).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Setting up a SLIP Server
+
+ Contributed by &a.ghelmer;.
+ v1.0, 15 May 1995.
+
+ This document provides suggestions for setting up SLIP Server services
+ on a FreeBSD system, which typically means configuring your system to
+ automatically startup connections upon login for remote SLIP clients.
+ The author has written this document based on his experience;
+ however, as your system and needs may be different, this document may
+ not answer all of your questions, and the author cannot be responsible
+ if you damage your system or lose data due to attempting to follow the
+ suggestions here.
+
+ This guide was originally written for SLIP Server services on a
+ FreeBSD 1.x system. It has been modified to reflect changes in the
+ pathnames and the removal of the SLIP interface compression flags in
+ early versions of FreeBSD 2.X, which appear to be the only major
+ changes between FreeBSD versions. If you do encounter mistakes in
+ this document, please email the author with enough information to
+ help correct the problem.
+
+
+
+ Prerequisites
+
+ This document is very technical in nature, so background knowledge is
+ required. It is assumed that you are familiar with the TCP/IP network
+ protocol, and in particular, network and node addressing, network
+ address masks, subnetting, routing, and routing protocols, such as
+ RIP. Configuring SLIP services on a dial-up server requires a
+ knowledge of these concepts, and if you are not familiar with them,
+ please read a copy of either Craig Hunt's TCP/IP Network
+ Administration published by O'Reilly & Associates, Inc. (ISBN
+ Number 0-937175-82-X), or Douglas Comer's books on the TCP/IP
+ protocol.
+
+ It is further assumed that you have already setup your modem(s) and
+ configured the appropriate system files to allow logins through your
+ modems. If you have not prepared your system for this yet, please see
+ the tutorial for configuring dialup services; if you have a World-Wide
+ Web browser available, browse the list of tutorials at
+ http://www.freebsd.org/; otherwise, check the place
+ where you found this document for a document named dialup.txt or
+ something similar. You may also want to check the manual pages for
+ sio(4) for information on the serial port device driver and
+ ttys(5), gettytab(5), getty(8), & init(8) for
+ information relevant to configuring the system to accept logins on
+ modems, and perhaps stty(1) for information on setting serial
+ port parameters [such as clocal for directly-connected
+ serial interfaces].
+
+
+
+
+ Quick Overview
+
+ In its typical configuration, using FreeBSD as a SLIP server works as
+ follows: a SLIP user dials up your FreeBSD SLIP Server system and logs
+ in with a special SLIP login ID that uses /usr/sbin/sliplogin
+ as the special user's shell. The sliplogin program browses the
+ file /etc/sliphome/slip.hosts to find a matching line for
+ the special user, and if it finds a match, connects the serial line to
+ an available SLIP interface and then runs the shell script
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.login to configure the SLIP interface.
+
+
+
+ An Example of a SLIP Server Login
+
+ For example, if a SLIP user ID were Shelmerg, Shelmerg's
+ entry in /etc/master.passwd would look something like this
+ (except it would be all on one line):
+
+
+
+ Shelmerg:password:1964:89::0:0:Guy Helmer - SLIP:
+ /usr/users/Shelmerg:/usr/sbin/sliplogin
+
+
+
+ and, when Shelmerg logs in, sliplogin will search
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.hosts for a line that had a matching user
+ ID; for example, there may be a line in
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.hosts that reads:
+
+
+
+ Shelmerg dc-slip sl-helmer 0xfffffc00 autocomp
+
+
+
+ sliplogin will find that matching line, hook the serial line into
+ the next available SLIP interface, and then execute
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.login like this:
+
+
+
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.login 0 19200 Shelmerg dc-slip sl-helmer 0xfffffc00 autocomp
+
+
+
+ If all goes well, /etc/sliphome/slip.login will issue an
+ ifconfig for the SLIP interface to which sliplogin
+ attached itself (slip interface 0, in the above example, which was the
+ first parameter in the list given to slip.login) to set the
+ local IP address (dc-slip), remote IP address
+ (sl-helmer), network mask for the SLIP interface
+ (0xfffffc00), and any additional flags (autocomp).
+ If something goes wrong, sliplogin usually logs good
+ informational messages via the daemon syslog facility, which usually
+ goes into /var/log/messages (see the manual pages for
+ syslogd(8) and syslog.conf(5), and perhaps check
+ /etc/syslog.conf to see to which files syslogd is
+ logging).
+
+ OK, enough of the examples -- let us dive into setting up the system.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Kernel Configuration
+
+ FreeBSD's default kernels usually come with two SLIP interfaces
+ defined (sl0 and sl1); you can use netstat
+ -i to see whether these interfaces are defined in your kernel.
+
+ Sample output from netstat -i:
+
+
+
+ Name Mtu Network Address Ipkts Ierrs Opkts Oerrs Coll
+ ed0 1500 <Link>0.0.c0.2c.5f.4a 291311 0 174209 0 133
+ ed0 1500 138.247.224 ivory 291311 0 174209 0 133
+ lo0 65535 <Link> 79 0 79 0 0
+ lo0 65535 loop localhost 79 0 79 0 0
+ sl0* 296 <Link> 0 0 0 0 0
+ sl1* 296 <Link> 0 0 0 0 0
+
+
+
+ The sl0 and sl1 interfaces shown in netstat
+ -i's output indicate that there are two SLIP interfaces built
+ into the kernel. (The asterisks after the sl0 and
+ sl1 indicate that the interfaces are ``down''.)
+
+ However, FreeBSD's default kernels do not come configured to forward
+ packets (ie, your FreeBSD machine will not act as a router) due to
+ Internet RFC requirements for Internet hosts (see RFC's 1009
+ [Requirements for Internet Gateways], 1122
+ [Requirements for Internet Hosts -- Communication Layers],
+ and perhaps 1127 [A Perspective on the Host Requirements
+ RFCs]), so if you want your FreeBSD SLIP Server to act as a
+ router, you will have to edit the /etc/rc.conf file (called
+ /etc/sysconfig in FreeBSD releases prior to 2.2.2) and change
+ the setting of the gateway variable to YES. If you
+ have an older system which predates even the /etc/sysconfig
+ file, then add the following command:
+ sysctl -w net.inet.ip.forwarding = 1
+
+ to your /etc/rc.local file.
+
+ You will then need to reboot for the new settings to take effect.
+
+ You will notice that near the end of the default kernel configuration
+ file (/sys/i386/conf/GENERIC) is a line that reads:
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device sl 2
+
+
+
+ which is the line that defines the number of SLIP devices available in
+ the kernel; the number at the end of the line is the maximum number of
+ SLIP connections that may be operating simultaneously.
+
+ Please refer to
+ for help in reconfiguring your kernel.
+
+
+
+
+ Sliplogin Configuration
+
+ As mentioned earlier, there are three files in the
+ /etc/sliphome directory that are part of the configuration
+ for /usr/sbin/sliplogin (see sliplogin(8) for the
+ actual manual page for sliplogin): slip.hosts, which
+ defines the SLIP users & their associated IP addresses;
+ slip.login, which usually just configures the SLIP interface;
+ and (optionally) slip.logout, which undoes
+ slip.login's effects when the serial connection is
+ terminated.
+
+
+
+ slip.hosts Configuration
+
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.hosts contains lines which have at least
+ four items, separated by whitespace:
+
+
+
+
+
+ SLIP user's login ID
+
+
+
+ Local address (local to the SLIP server) of the SLIP link
+
+
+
+ Remote address of the SLIP link
+
+
+
+ Network mask
+
+
+
+
+
+ The local and remote addresses may be host names (resolved to IP
+ addresses by /etc/hosts or by the domain name service,
+ depending on your specifications in /etc/host.conf), and I
+ believe the network mask may be a name that can be resolved by a
+ lookup into /etc/networks. On a sample system,
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.hosts looks like this:
+
+
+
+ ----- begin /etc/sliphome/slip.hosts -----
+ #
+ # login local-addr remote-addr mask opt1 opt2
+ # (normal,compress,noicmp)
+ #
+ Shelmerg dc-slip sl-helmerg 0xfffffc00 autocomp
+ ----- end /etc/sliphome/slip.hosts ------
+
+
+
+ At the end of the line is one or more of the options.
+
+
+
+
+
+ normal - no header compression
+
+
+
+ compress - compress headers
+
+
+
+ autocomp - compress headers if the remote end allows it
+
+
+
+ noicmp - disable ICMP packets (so any ``ping'' packets will be
+ dropped instead of using up your bandwidth)
+
+
+
+
+
+ Note that sliplogin under early releases of FreeBSD 2 ignored
+ the options that FreeBSD 1.x recognized, so the options
+ normal, compress, autocomp, and noicmp had no effect
+ until support was added in FreeBSD 2.2 (unless your slip.login script
+ included code to make use of the flags).
+
+ Your choice of local and remote addresses for your SLIP links depends
+ on whether you are going to dedicate a TCP/IP subnet or if you are
+ going to use ``proxy ARP'' on your SLIP server (it is not ``true''
+ proxy ARP, but that is the terminology used in this document to
+ describe it). If you are not sure which method to select or how to
+ assign IP addresses, please refer to the TCP/IP books referenced in
+ the section and/or consult your IP network manager.
+
+ If you are going to use a separate subnet for your SLIP clients, you
+ will need to allocate the subnet number out of your assigned IP
+ network number and assign each of your SLIP client's IP numbers out of
+ that subnet. Then, you will probably either need to configure a
+ static route to the SLIP subnet via your SLIP server on your nearest
+ IP router, or install gated on your FreeBSD SLIP server and
+ configure it to talk the appropriate routing protocols to your other
+ routers to inform them about your SLIP server's route to the SLIP
+ subnet.
+
+ Otherwise, if you will use the ``proxy ARP'' method, you will need to
+ assign your SLIP client's IP addresses out of your SLIP server's
+ Ethernet subnet, and you will also need to adjust your
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.login and
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.logout scripts to use arp(8) to
+ manage the proxy-ARP entries in the SLIP server's ARP table.
+
+
+
+
+ slip.login Configuration
+
+ The typical /etc/sliphome/slip.login file looks like this:
+
+
+
+ ----- begin /etc/sliphome/slip.login -----
+ #!/bin/sh -
+ #
+ # @(#)slip.login 5.1 (Berkeley) 7/1/90
+
+ #
+ # generic login file for a slip line. sliplogin invokes this with
+ # the parameters:
+ # 1 2 3 4 5 6 7-n
+ # slipunit ttyspeed loginname local-addr remote-addr mask opt-args
+ #
+ /sbin/ifconfig sl$1 inet $4 $5 netmask $6
+ ----- end /etc/sliphome/slip.login -----
+
+
+
+ This slip.login file merely ifconfig's the appropriate SLIP
+ interface with the local and remote addresses and network mask of the
+ SLIP interface.
+
+ If you have decided to use the ``proxy ARP'' method (instead of using
+ a separate subnet for your SLIP clients), your
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.login file will need to look something
+ like this:
+
+
+
+ ----- begin /etc/sliphome/slip.login for "proxy ARP" -----
+ #!/bin/sh -
+ #
+ # @(#)slip.login 5.1 (Berkeley) 7/1/90
+
+ #
+ # generic login file for a slip line. sliplogin invokes this with
+ # the parameters:
+ # 1 2 3 4 5 6 7-n
+ # slipunit ttyspeed loginname local-addr remote-addr mask opt-args
+ #
+ /sbin/ifconfig sl$1 inet $4 $5 netmask $6
+ # Answer ARP requests for the SLIP client with our Ethernet addr
+ /usr/sbin/arp -s $5 00:11:22:33:44:55 pub
+ ----- end /etc/sliphome/slip.login for "proxy ARP" -----
+
+
+
+ The additional line in this slip.login, arp -s $5
+ 00:11:22:33:44:55 pub, creates an ARP entry in the SLIP server's
+ ARP table. This ARP entry causes the SLIP server to respond with the
+ SLIP server's Ethernet MAC address whenever a another IP node on the
+ Ethernet asks to speak to the SLIP client's IP address.
+
+ When using the example above, be sure to replace the Ethernet MAC
+ address (00:11:22:33:44:55) with the MAC address of your
+ system's Ethernet card, or your ``proxy ARP'' will definitely not work!
+ You can discover your SLIP server's Ethernet MAC address by looking at
+ the results of running netstat -i; the second line of the output
+ should look something like:
+
+
+
+ ed0 1500 <Link>0.2.c1.28.5f.4a 191923 0 129457 0 116
+ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+
+
+
+ which indicates that this particular system's Ethernet MAC address is
+ 00:02:c1:28:5f:4a -- the periods in the Ethernet MAC address
+ given by netstat -i must be changed to colons and leading zeros
+ should be added to each single-digit hexadecimal number to convert the
+ address into the form that arp(8) desires; see the manual page on
+ arp(8) for complete information on usage.
+
+ Note that when you create /etc/sliphome/slip.login and
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.logout, the ``execute'' bit (ie,
+ chmod 755 /etc/sliphome/slip.login
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.logout) must be set, or sliplogin
+ will be unable to execute it.
+
+
+
+
+ slip.logout Configuration
+
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.logout is not strictly needed (unless you
+ are implementing ``proxy ARP''), but if you decide to create it, this
+ is an example of a basic slip.logout script:
+
+
+
+ ----- begin /etc/sliphome/slip.logout -----
+ #!/bin/sh -
+ #
+ # slip.logout
+
+ #
+ # logout file for a slip line. sliplogin invokes this with
+ # the parameters:
+ # 1 2 3 4 5 6 7-n
+ # slipunit ttyspeed loginname local-addr remote-addr mask opt-args
+ #
+ /sbin/ifconfig sl$1 down
+ ----- end /etc/sliphome/slip.logout -----
+
+
+
+ If you are using ``proxy ARP'', you will want to have
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.logout remove the ARP entry for the SLIP
+ client:
+
+
+
+ ----- begin /etc/sliphome/slip.logout for "proxy ARP" -----
+ #!/bin/sh -
+ #
+ # @(#)slip.logout
+
+ #
+ # logout file for a slip line. sliplogin invokes this with
+ # the parameters:
+ # 1 2 3 4 5 6 7-n
+ # slipunit ttyspeed loginname local-addr remote-addr mask opt-args
+ #
+ /sbin/ifconfig sl$1 down
+ # Quit answering ARP requests for the SLIP client
+ /usr/sbin/arp -d $5
+ ----- end /etc/sliphome/slip.logout for "proxy ARP" -----
+
+
+
+ The arp -d $5 removes the ARP entry that the ``proxy ARP''
+ slip.login added when the SLIP client logged in.
+
+ It bears repeating: make sure /etc/sliphome/slip.logout has
+ the execute bit set for after you create it (ie, chmod 755
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.logout).
+
+
+
+
+
+ Routing Considerations
+
+ If you are not using the ``proxy ARP'' method for routing packets
+ between your SLIP clients and the rest of your network (and perhaps
+ the Internet), you will probably either have to add static routes to
+ your closest default router(s) to route your SLIP client subnet via
+ your SLIP server, or you will probably need to install and configure
+ gated on your FreeBSD SLIP server so that it will tell your
+ routers via appropriate routing protocols about your SLIP subnet.
+
+
+
+ Static Routes
+
+ Adding static routes to your nearest default routers can be
+ troublesome (or impossible, if you do not have authority to do so...).
+ If you have a multiple-router network in your organization, some
+ routers, such as Cisco and Proteon, may not only need to be configured
+ with the static route to the SLIP subnet, but also need to be told
+ which static routes to tell other routers about, so some expertise and
+ troubleshooting/tweaking may be necessary to get static-route-based
+ routing to work.
+
+
+
+
+ Running gated
+
+ An alternative to the headaches of static routes is to install
+ gated on your FreeBSD SLIP server and configure it to use the
+ appropriate routing protocols (RIP/OSPF/BGP/EGP) to tell other routers
+ about your SLIP subnet. You can use gated from the
+ or retrieve and build it yourself
+ from the GateD anonymous ftp site;
+ I believe the current version as of this writing
+ is gated-R3_5Alpha_8.tar.Z, which includes support for
+ FreeBSD ``out-of-the-box''. Complete information and documentation on
+ gated is available on the Web starting at
+ the Merit GateD Consortium.
+ Compile and install it, and
+ then write a /etc/gated.conf file to configure your gated;
+ here is a sample, similar to what the author used on a FreeBSD SLIP
+ server:
+
+
+
+ ----- begin sample /etc/gated.conf for gated version 3.5Alpha5 -----
+ #
+ # gated configuration file for dc.dsu.edu; for gated version 3.5alpha5
+ # Only broadcast RIP information for xxx.xxx.yy out the ed Ethernet interface
+ #
+ #
+ # tracing options
+ #
+ traceoptions "/var/tmp/gated.output" replace size 100k files 2 general ;
+
+ rip yes {
+ interface sl noripout noripin ;
+ interface ed ripin ripout version 1 ;
+ traceoptions route ;
+ } ;
+
+ #
+ # Turn on a bunch of tracing info for the interface to the kernel:
+ kernel {
+ traceoptions remnants request routes info interface ;
+ } ;
+
+ #
+ # Propagate the route to xxx.xxx.yy out the Ethernet interface via RIP
+ #
+
+ export proto rip interface ed {
+ proto direct {
+ xxx.xxx.yy mask 255.255.252.0 metric 1; # SLIP connections
+ } ;
+ } ;
+
+ #
+ # Accept routes from RIP via ed Ethernet interfaces
+
+ import proto rip interface ed {
+ all ;
+ } ;
+
+ ----- end sample /etc/gated.conf -----
+
+
+
+ The above sample gated.conf file broadcasts routing
+ information regarding the SLIP subnet xxx.xxx.yy via RIP onto
+ the Ethernet; if you are using a different Ethernet driver than the
+ ed driver, you will need to change the references to the ed
+ interface appropriately. This sample file also sets up tracing to
+ /var/tmp/gated.output for debugging gated's
+ activity; you can certainly turn off the tracing options if
+ gated works OK for you. You will need to change the
+ xxx.xxx.yy's into the network address of your own SLIP subnet
+ (be sure to change the net mask in the proto direct clause as
+ well).
+
+ When you get gated built and installed and create a
+ configuration file for it, you will need to run gated in place
+ of routed on your FreeBSD system; change the
+ routed/gated startup parameters in /etc/netstart as
+ appropriate for your system. Please see the manual page for
+ gated for information on gated's command-line
+ parameters.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Acknowledgments
+
+ Thanks to these people for comments and advice regarding this tutorial:
+
+
+
+ &a.wilko;
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Piero Serini
+
+
+ <Piero@Strider.Inet.IT>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Advanced Networking
+
+
+
+ Gateways and Routes
+
+ Contributed by &a.gryphon;.6 October 1995.
+
+ For one machine to be able to find another, there must be a
+ mechanism in place to describe how to get from one to the
+ other. This is called Routing. A ``route'' is a defined
+ pair of addresses: a destination and a
+ gateway. The pair indicates that if you are
+ trying to get to this destination, send along
+ through this gateway. There are three types of
+ destinations: individual hosts, subnets, and ``default''. The
+ ``default route'' is used if none of the other routes
+ apply. We will talk a little bit more about default routes
+ later on. There are also three types of gateways:
+ individual hosts, interfaces (also called ``links''), and
+ ethernet hardware addresses.
+
+
+
+ An example
+
+ To illustrate different aspects of routing, we will use
+ the following example which is the output of the command
+ netstat -r:
+
+
+
+ Destination Gateway Flags Refs Use Netif Expire
+
+ default outside-gw UGSc 37 418 ppp0
+ localhost localhost UH 0 181 lo0
+ test0 0:e0:b5:36:cf:4f UHLW 5 63288 ed0 77
+ 10.20.30.255 link#1 UHLW 1 2421
+ foobar.com link#1 UC 0 0
+ host1 0:e0:a8:37:8:1e UHLW 3 4601 lo0
+ host2 0:e0:a8:37:8:1e UHLW 0 5 lo0 =>
+ host2.foobar.com link#1 UC 0 0
+ 224 link#1 UC 0 0
+
+
+
+ The first two lines specify the default route (which we
+ will cover in the next section) and the localhost route.
+
+ The interface (Netif column) that it specifies to use
+ for localhost is lo0, also known as the
+ loopback device. This says to keep all traffic for this
+ destination internal, rather than sending it out over the
+ LAN, since it will only end up back where it started
+ anyway.
+
+ The next thing that stands out are the
+ ``0:e0:...'' addresses. These are ethernet
+ hardware addresses. FreeBSD will automatically identify any
+ hosts (test0 in the example) on the local ethernet and
+ add a route for that host, directly to it over the ethernet
+ interface, ed0. There is also a timeout
+ (Expire column) associated with this type of route,
+ which is used if we fail to hear from the host in a
+ specific amount of time. In this case the route will be
+ automatically deleted. These hosts are identified using a
+ mechanism known as RIP (Routing Information Protocol),
+ which figures out routes to local hosts based upon a
+ shortest path determination.
+
+ FreeBSD will also add subnet routes for the local subnet
+ (10.20.30.255 is the broadcast address for the subnet
+ 10.20.30, and foobar.com is the domain name
+ associated with that subnet). The designation link#1
+ refers to the first ethernet card in the machine. You will
+ notice no additional interface is specified for those.
+
+ Both of these groups (local network hosts and local
+ subnets) have their routes automatically configured by a
+ daemon called routed. If this is not run, then only
+ routes which are statically defined (ie. entered
+ explicitly) will exist.
+
+ The host1 line refers to our host, which it knows by
+ ethernet address. Since we are the sending host, FreeBSD
+ knows to use the loopback interface (lo0) rather than
+ sending it out over the ethernet interface.
+
+ The two host2 lines are an example of what happens
+ when we use an ifconfig alias (see the section of ethernet
+ for reasons why we would do this). The =>
+ symbol after the lo0 interface says that not only are
+ we using the loopback (since this is address also refers to
+ the local host), but specifically it is an alias. Such
+ routes only show up on the host that supports the alias;
+ all other hosts on the local network will simply have a
+ link#1 line for such.
+
+ The final line (destination subnet 224) deals with
+ MultiCasting, which will be covered in a another section.
+
+ The other column that we should talk about are the
+ Flags. Each route has different attributes that are
+ described in the column. Below is a short table of some of
+ these flags and their meanings:
+
+
+
+ U
+
+ Up: The route is active.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ H
+
+
+ Host: The route destination is a single host.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ G
+
+
+ Gateway: Send anything for this destination
+ on to this remote system, which will figure out from
+ there where to send it.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ S
+
+
+ Static: This route was configured manually,
+ not automatically generated by the system.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ C
+
+
+ Clone: Generates a new route based upon this
+ route for machines we connect to. This type of route is
+ normally used for local networks.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ W
+
+
+ WasCloned Indicated a route that was
+ auto-configured based upon a local area network (Clone)
+ route.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ L
+
+
+ Link: Route involves references to ethernet
+ hardware.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Default routes
+
+ When the local system needs to make a connection to
+ remote host, it checks the routing table to determine if
+ a known path exists. If the remote host falls into a
+ subnet that we know how to reach (Cloned routes), then
+ the system checks to see if it can connect along that
+ interface.
+
+ If all known paths fail, the system has one last option:
+ the default route. This route is a special type
+ of gateway route (usually the only one present in the
+ system), and is always marked with a ``c'' in
+ the flags field. For hosts on a local area network, this
+ gateway is set to whatever machine has a direct
+ connection to the outside world (whether via PPP link, or
+ your hardware device attached to a dedicated data line).
+
+ If you are configuring the default route for a machine
+ which itself is functioning as the gateway to the outside
+ world, then the default route will be the gateway machine
+ at your Internet Service Provider's (ISP) site.
+
+ Let us look at an example of default routes. This is a
+ common configuration:
+
+ [Local2] <--ether--> [Local1] <--PPP--> [ISP-Serv] <--ether--> [T1-GW]
+
+
+
+ The hosts Local1 and Local2 are at your
+ site, with the formed being your PPP connection to your
+ ISP's Terminal Server. Your ISP has a local network at
+ their site, which has, among other things, the server
+ where you connect and a hardware device (T1-GW) attached
+ to the ISP's Internet feed.
+
+ The default routes for each of your machines will be:
+
+
+
+ host default gateway interface
+ ---- --------------- ---------
+ Local2 Local1 ethernet
+ Local1 T1-GW PPP
+
+
+
+ A common question is ``Why (or how) would we set the
+ T1-GW to be the default gateway for Local1, rather than
+ the ISP server it is connected to?''.
+
+ Remember, since the PPP interface is using an address on
+ the ISP's local network for your side of the connection,
+ routes for any other machines on the ISP's local network
+ will be automatically generated. Hence, you will already
+ know how to reach the T1-GW machine, so there is no need
+ for the intermediate step of sending traffic to the ISP
+ server.
+
+ As a final note, it is common to use the address ``...1''
+ as the gateway address for your local network. So (using
+ the same example), if your local class-C address space
+ was 10.20.30 and your ISP was using 10.9.9 then the
+ default routes would be:
+
+
+
+ Local2 (10.20.30.2) --> Local1 (10.20.30.1)
+ Local1 (10.20.30.1, 10.9.9.30) --> T1-GW (10.9.9.1)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Dual homed hosts
+
+ There is one other type of configuration that we should
+ cover, and that is a host that sits on two different
+ networks. Technically, any machine functioning as a
+ gateway (in the example above, using a PPP connection)
+ counts as a dual-homed host. But the term is really only
+ used to refer to a machine that sits on two local-area
+ networks.
+
+ In one case, the machine as two ethernet cards, each
+ having an address on the separate subnets. Alternately,
+ the machine may only have one ethernet card, and be using
+ ifconfig aliasing. The former is used if two physically
+ separate ethernet networks are in use, the latter if
+ there is one physical network segment, but two logically
+ separate subnets.
+
+ Either way, routing tables are set up so that each subnet
+ knows that this machine is the defined gateway (inbound
+ route) to the other subnet. This configuration, with the
+ machine acting as a Bridge between the two subnets, is
+ often used when we need to implement packet filtering or
+ firewall security in either or both directions.
+
+
+
+
+ Routing propagation
+
+ We have already talked about how we define our routes to
+ the outside world, but not about how the outside world
+ finds us.
+
+ We already know that routing tables can be set up so that
+ all traffic for a particular address space (in our
+ examples, a class-C subnet) can be sent to a particular
+ host on that network, which will forward the packets
+ inbound.
+
+ When you get an address space assigned to your site, your
+ service provider will set up their routing tables so that
+ all traffic for your subnet will be sent down your PPP
+ link to your site. But how do sites across the country
+ know to send to your ISP?
+
+ There is a system (much like the distributed DNS
+ information) that keeps track of all assigned
+ address-spaces, and defines their point of connection to
+ the Internet Backbone. The ``Backbone'' are the main
+ trunk lines that carry Internet traffic across the
+ country, and around the world. Each backbone machine has
+ a copy of a master set of tables, which direct traffic
+ for a particular network to a specific backbone carrier,
+ and from there down the chain of service providers until
+ it reaches your network.
+
+ It is the task of your service provider to advertise to
+ the backbone sites that they are the point of connection
+ (and thus the path inward) for your site. This is known
+ as route propagation.
+
+
+
+
+ Troubleshooting
+
+ Sometimes, there is a problem with routing propagation,
+ and some sites are unable to connect to you. Perhaps the
+ most useful command for trying to figure out where a
+ routing is breaking down is the traceroute(8)
+ command. It is equally useful if you cannot seem to make
+ a connection to a remote machine (ie. ping(8)
+ fails).
+
+ The traceroute(8) command is run with the name
+ of the remote host you are trying to connect to. It will
+ show the gateway hosts along the path of the attempt,
+ eventually either reaching the target host, or
+ terminating because of a lack of connection.
+
+ For more information, see the manual page for
+ traceroute(8).
+
+
+
+
+
+ NFS
+
+ Contributed by &a.jlind;.
+
+ Certain Ethernet adapters for ISA PC systems have limitations which
+ can lead to serious network problems, particularly with NFS. This
+ difficulty is not specific to FreeBSD, but FreeBSD systems are affected
+ by it.
+
+ The problem nearly always occurs when (FreeBSD) PC systems are networked
+ with high-performance workstations, such as those made by Silicon Graphics,
+ Inc., and Sun Microsystems, Inc. The NFS mount will work fine, and some
+ operations may succeed, but suddenly the server will seem to become
+ unresponsive to the client, even though requests to and from other systems
+ continue to be processed. This happens to the client system, whether the
+ client is the FreeBSD system or the workstation. On many systems, there is
+ no way to shut down the client gracefully once this problem has manifested
+ itself. The only solution is often to reset the client, because the NFS
+ situation cannot be resolved.
+
+ Though the "correct" solution is to get a higher performance and capacity
+ Ethernet adapter for the FreeBSD system, there is a simple workaround that
+ will allow satisfactory operation. If the FreeBSD system is the SERVER,
+ include the option "-w=1024" on the mount from the client. If the
+ FreeBSD system is the CLIENT, then mount the NFS file system with the
+ option "-r=1024". These options may be specified using the fourth
+ field of the fstab entry on the client for automatic mounts, or by using
+ the "-o" parameter of the mount command for manual mounts.
+
+ It should be noted that there is a different problem,
+ sometimes mistaken for this one,
+ when the NFS servers and clients are on different networks.
+ If that is the case, make CERTAIN that your routers are routing the
+ necessary UDP information, or you will not get anywhere, no matter
+ what else you are doing.
+
+ In the following examples, "fastws" is the host (interface) name of a
+ high-performance workstation, and "freebox" is the host (interface) name of
+ a FreeBSD system with a lower-performance Ethernet adapter. Also,
+ "/sharedfs" will be the exported NFS filesystem (see "man exports"), and
+ "/project" will be the mount point on the client for the exported file
+ system. In all cases, note that additional options, such as "hard" or
+ "soft" and "bg" may be desirable in your application.
+
+ Examples for the FreeBSD system ("freebox") as the client:
+ in /etc/fstab on freebox:
+ fastws:/sharedfs /project nfs rw,-r=1024 0 0
+ as a manual mount command on freebox:
+ mount -t nfs -o -r=1024 fastws:/sharedfs /project
+
+ Examples for the FreeBSD system as the server:
+ in /etc/fstab on fastws:
+ freebox:/sharedfs /project nfs rw,-w=1024 0 0
+ as a manual mount command on fastws:
+ mount -t nfs -o -w=1024 freebox:/sharedfs /project
+
+ Nearly any 16-bit Ethernet adapter will allow operation without the above
+ restrictions on the read or write size.
+
+ For anyone who cares, here is what happens when the failure occurs, which
+ also explains why it is unrecoverable. NFS typically works with a "block"
+ size of 8k (though it may do fragments of smaller sizes). Since the maximum
+ Ethernet packet is around 1500 bytes, the NFS "block" gets split into
+ multiple Ethernet packets, even though it is still a single unit to the
+ upper-level code, and must be received, assembled, and ACKNOWLEDGED as a
+ unit. The high-performance workstations can pump out the packets which
+ comprise the NFS unit one right after the other, just as close together as
+ the standard allows. On the smaller, lower capacity cards, the later
+ packets overrun the earlier packets of the same unit before they can be
+ transferred to the host and the unit as a whole cannot be reconstructed or
+ acknowledged. As a result, the workstation will time out and try again,
+ but it will try again with the entire 8K unit, and the process will be
+ repeated, ad infinitum.
+
+ By keeping the unit size below the Ethernet packet size limitation, we
+ ensure that any complete Ethernet packet received can be acknowledged
+ individually, avoiding the deadlock situation.
+
+ Overruns may still occur when a high-performance workstations is slamming
+ data out to a PC system, but with the better cards, such overruns are
+ not guaranteed on NFS "units". When an overrun occurs, the units affected
+ will be retransmitted, and there will be a fair chance that they will be
+ received, assembled, and acknowledged.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Diskless Operation
+
+ Contributed by &a.martin;.
+
+ netboot.com/netboot.rom allow you to boot your
+ FreeBSD machine over the network and run FreeBSD without
+ having a disk on your client. Under 2.0 it is now
+ possible to have local swap. Swapping over NFS is also
+ still supported.
+
+ Supported Ethernet cards include: Western Digital/SMC
+ 8003, 8013, 8216 and compatibles; NE1000/NE2000 and
+ compatibles (requires recompile)
+
+
+
+ Setup Instructions
+
+
+
+
+
+ Find a machine that will be your server. This
+ machine will require enough disk space to hold the
+ FreeBSD 2.0 binaries and have bootp, tftp and NFS
+ services available.
+
+ Tested machines:
+
+
+
+ HP9000/8xx running HP-UX 9.04 or later (pre
+ 9.04 doesn't work)
+
+
+
+ Sun/Solaris 2.3. (you may need to get
+ bootp)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Set up a bootp server to provide the client with
+ IP, gateway, netmask.
+
+ diskless:\
+ :ht=ether:\
+ :ha=0000c01f848a:\
+ :sm=255.255.255.0:\
+ :hn:\
+ :ds=192.1.2.3:\
+ :ip=192.1.2.4:\
+ :gw=192.1.2.5:\
+ :vm=rfc1048:
+
+
+
+
+
+ Set up a TFTP server (on same machine as bootp
+ server) to provide booting information to client.
+ The name of this file is cfg.X.X.X.X (or
+ /tftpboot/cfg.X.X.X.X, it will try both)
+ where X.X.X.X is the IP address of the
+ client. The contents of this file can be any valid
+ netboot commands. Under 2.0, netboot has the
+ following commands:
+
+ help - print help list
+ ip <X.X.X.X> - print/set client's IP address
+ server <X.X.X.X> - print/set bootp/tftp server address
+ netmask <X.X.X.X> - print/set netmask
+ hostname <name> - print/set hostname
+ kernel <name> - print/set kernel name
+ rootfs <ip:/fs> - print/set root filesystem
+ swapfs <ip:/fs> - print/set swap filesystem
+ swapsize <size> - set diskless swapsize in Kbytes
+ diskboot - boot from disk
+ autoboot - continue boot process
+ trans <on|off> - turn transceiver on|off
+ flags [bcdhsv] - set boot flags
+
+
+ A typical completely diskless cfg file might contain:
+
+ rootfs 192.1.2.3:/rootfs/myclient
+ swapfs 192.1.2.3:/swapfs
+ swapsize 20000
+ hostname myclient.mydomain
+
+
+ A cfg file for a machine with local swap might contain:
+
+ rootfs 192.1.2.3:/rootfs/myclient
+ hostname myclient.mydomain
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Ensure that your NFS server has exported the root
+ (and swap if applicable) filesystems to your client,
+ and that the client has root access to these
+ filesystems
+
+ A typical /etc/exports file on FreeBSD might
+ look like:
+
+ /rootfs/myclient -maproot=0:0 myclient.mydomain
+ /swapfs -maproot=0:0 myclient.mydomain
+
+
+
+ And on HP-UX:
+
+ /rootfs/myclient -root=myclient.mydomain
+ /swapfs -root=myclient.mydomain
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ If you are swapping over NFS (completely diskless
+ configuration) create a swap file for your client
+ using dd. If your swapfs command has the
+ arguments /swapfs and the size 20000 as in the
+ example above, the swapfile for myclient will be called
+ /swapfs/swap.X.X.X.X where X.X.X.X
+ is the client's IP addr, eg:
+
+ # dd if=/dev/zero of=/swapfs/swap.192.1.2.4 bs=1k count=20000
+
+
+
+ Also, the client's swap space might contain sensitive
+ information once swapping starts, so make sure to
+ restrict read and write access to this file to prevent
+ unauthorized access:
+
+ # chmod 0600 /swapfs/swap.192.1.2.4
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Unpack the root filesystem in the directory the
+ client will use for its root filesystem
+ (/rootfs/myclient in the example above).
+
+
+
+
+ On HP-UX systems: The server should be
+ running HP-UX 9.04 or later for HP9000/800 series
+ machines. Prior versions do not allow the
+ creation of device files over NFS.
+
+
+
+
+ When extracting /dev in
+ /rootfs/myclient, beware that some
+ systems (HPUX) will not create device files that
+ FreeBSD is happy with. You may have to go to
+ single user mode on the first bootup (press
+ control-c during the bootup phase), cd
+ /dev and do a "sh ./MAKEDEV
+ all" from the client to fix this.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Run netboot.com on the client or make an EPROM
+ from the netboot.rom file
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Using Shared / and /usr filesystems
+
+ At present there isn't an officially sanctioned way of
+ doing this, although I have been using a shared /usr
+ filesystem and individual / filesystems for each client.
+ If anyone has any suggestions on how to do this cleanly,
+ please let me and/or the &a.core; know.
+
+
+
+
+ Compiling netboot for specific setups
+
+ Netboot can be compiled to support NE1000/2000 cards by
+ changing the configuration in
+ /sys/i386/boot/netboot/Makefile. See the
+ comments at the top of this file.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ISDN
+
+ Last modified by &a.wlloyd;.
+
+ A good resource for information on ISDN technology and hardware is
+ Dan Kegel's ISDN Page.
+
+ A quick simple roadmap to ISDN follows:
+
+
+
+ If you live in Europe I suggest you investigate the ISDN card
+ section.
+
+
+
+
+ If you are planning to use ISDN primarily to connect to the
+ Internet with an Internet Provider on a dialup non-dedicated basis, I
+ suggest you look into Terminal Adapters. This will give you the most
+ flexibility, with the fewest problems, if you change providers.
+
+
+
+
+ If you are connecting two lans together, or connecting to the
+ Internet with a dedicated ISDN connection, I suggest you consider the
+ stand alone router/bridge option.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Cost is a significant factor in determining what solution you will
+ choose. The following options are listed from least expensive to most
+ expensive.
+
+
+
+ ISDN Cards
+
+ Original Contribution by &a.hm;.
+
+ This section is really only relevant to European ISDN users. The
+ cards supported are not yet(?) available for North American ISDN
+ standards.
+
+ You should be aware that this code is largely under development.
+ Specifically, drivers have only been written for two manufacturers
+ cards.
+
+ PC ISDN cards support the full bandwidth of ISDN, 128Kbs. These
+ cards are often the least expensive type of ISDN equipment.
+
+ Under FreeBSD 2.1.0 and 2.1.5, there is early unfinished ISDN code
+ under /usr/src/gnu/isdn. This code is out of date and should not be
+ used. If you want to go this route, get the bisdn stuff. This code
+ has been removed from the main source tree starting with FreeBSD 2.2.
+
+ There is the bisdn ISDN package available from
+ hub.freebsd.org
+ supporting FreeBSD 2.1R, FreeBSD-current and NetBSD.
+ The latest source can be found on the above mentioned ftp server under
+ directory isdn as file bisdn-097.tar.gz.
+
+ There are drivers for the following cards:
+
+
+
+ Currently all (passive) Teles cards and their clones are supported
+ for the EuroISDN (DSS1) and 1TR6 protocols.
+
+
+
+ Dr. Neuhaus - Niccy 1016
+
+
+
+
+
+ There are several limitations with the bisdn stuff. Specifically the
+ following features usually associated with ISDN are not supported.
+
+
+
+
+
+ No PPP support, only raw hdlc. This means you cannot connect to most
+ standalone routers.
+
+
+
+ Bridging Control Protocol not supported.
+
+
+
+ Multiple cards are not supported.
+
+
+
+ No bandwidth on demand.
+
+
+
+ No channel bundling.
+
+
+
+
+
+ A majordomo maintained mailing list is available.
+ To join the list, send mail to &a.majordomo; and specify:
+ subscribe freebsd-isdn
+
+ In the body of your message.
+
+
+
+
+ ISDN Terminal Adapters
+
+ Terminal adapters(TA), are to ISDN what modems are to regular phone
+ lines.
+
+ Most TA's use the standard hayes modem AT command set, and can be
+ used as a drop in replacement for a modem.
+
+ A TA will operate basically the same as a modem except connection and
+ throughput speeds will be much faster than your old modem. You will
+ need to configure exactly the same as for a
+ modem setup. Make sure you set your serial speed as high as possible.
+
+ The main advantage of using a TA to connect to an Internet Provider is
+ that you can do Dynamic PPP. As IP address space becomes more and more
+ scarce, most providers are not willing to provide you with a static IP
+ anymore. Most standalone routers are not able to accommodate dynamic IP
+ allocation.
+
+ TA's completely rely on the PPP daemon that you are running for their
+ features and stability of connection. This allows you to upgrade easily
+ from using a modem to ISDN on a FreeBSD machine, if you already have PPP
+ setup. However, at the same time any problems you experienced with the
+ PPP program and are going to persist.
+
+ If you want maximum stability, use the kernel
+ option, not the user-land .
+
+ The following TA's are know to work with FreeBSD.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Motorola BitSurfer and Bitsurfer Pro
+
+
+
+ Adtran
+
+
+
+
+
+ Most other TA's will probably work as well, TA vendors try to make sure
+ their product can accept most of the standard modem AT command set.
+
+ The real problem with external TA's is like modems you need a good
+ serial card in your computer.
+
+ You should read the section in the
+ handbook for a detailed understanding of serial devices, and the
+ differences between asynchronous and synchronous serial ports.
+
+ A TA running off a standard PC serial port (asynchronous) limits you to
+ 115.2Kbs, even though you have a 128Kbs connection. To fully utilize
+ the 128Kbs that ISDN is capable of, you must move the TA to a
+ synchronous serial card.
+
+ Do not be fooled into buying an internal TA and thinking you have
+ avoided the synchronous/asynchronous issue. Internal TA's simply have a
+ standard PC serial port chip built into them. All this will do, is save
+ you having to buy another serial cable, and find another empty
+ electrical socket.
+
+ A synchronous card with a TA is at least as fast as a standalone router,
+ and with a simple 386 FreeBSD box driving it, probably more flexible.
+
+ The choice of sync/TA vs standalone router is largely a religious
+ issue. There has been some discussion of this in the mailing lists. I
+ suggest you search the archives for the complete discussion.
+
+
+
+
+ Standalone ISDN Bridges/Routers
+
+ ISDN bridges or routers are not at all specific to FreeBSD or any
+ other operating system. For a more complete description of routing and
+ bridging technology, please refer to a Networking reference book.
+
+ In the context of this page, I will use router and bridge
+ interchangeably.
+
+ As the cost of low end ISDN routers/bridges comes down, it will
+ likely become a more and more popular choice. An ISDN router is a small
+ box that plugs directly into your local Ethernet network(or card), and
+ manages its own connection to the other bridge/router. It has all the
+ software to do PPP and other protocols built in.
+
+ A router will allow you much faster throughput that a standard TA, since
+ it will be using a full synchronous ISDN connection.
+
+ The main problem with ISDN routers and bridges is that interoperability
+ between manufacturers can still be a problem. If you are planning to
+ connect to an Internet provider, I recommend that you discuss your needs
+ with them.
+
+ If you are planning to connect two lan segments together, ie: home
+ lan to the office lan, this is the simplest lowest maintenance
+ solution. Since you are buying the equipment for both sides of the
+ connection you can be assured that the link will work.
+
+ For example to connect a home computer or branch office network to a
+ head office network the following setup could be used.
+
+ Branch office or Home network
+
+ Network is 10 Base T Ethernet. Connect router to network cable with
+ AUI/10BT transceiver, if necessary.
+
+
+ ---Sun workstation
+ |
+ ---FreeBSD box
+ |
+ ---Windows 95 (Do not admit to owning it)
+ |
+ Standalone router
+ |
+ ISDN BRI line
+
+ If your home/branch office is only one computer you can use a twisted
+ pair crossover cable to connect to the standalone router directly.
+
+ Head office or other lan
+
+ Network is Twisted Pair Ethernet.
+ -------Novell Server
+ | H |
+ | ---Sun
+ | |
+ | U ---FreeBSD
+ | |
+ | ---Windows 95
+ | B |
+ |___---Standalone router
+ |
+ ISDN BRI line
+
+
+ One large advantage of most routers/bridges is that they allow you to
+ have 2 SEPARATE INDEPENDENT PPP connections to 2 separate sites at the
+ SAME time. This is not supported on most TA's, except for
+ specific(expensive) models that have two serial ports. Do not confuse
+ this with channel bonding, MPP etc.
+
+ This can be very useful feature, for example if you have an dedicated
+ internet ISDN connection at your office and would like to tap into it,
+ but don't want to get another ISDN line at work. A router at the office
+ location can manage a dedicated B channel connection (64Kbs) to the
+ internet, as well as a use the other B channel for a separate data connection.
+ The second B channel can be used for dialin, dialout or dynamically
+ bond(MPP etc.) with the first B channel for more bandwidth.
+
+ An Ethernet bridge will also allow you to transmit more than just
+ IP traffic, you can also send IPX/SPX or whatever other protocols you
+ use.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Electronic Mail
+
+ Contributed by &a.wlloyd;.
+
+ Electronic Mail configuration is the subject of many books. If you plan on doing anything beyond setting up one mailhost for your network, you need industrial strength help.
+
+ Some parts of E-Mail configuration are controlled in the Domain Name System (DNS). If you are going to run your own own DNS server check out /etc/namedb and ' man -k named ' for more information.
+
+
+
+ Basic Information
+
+ These are the major programs involved in an E-Mail exchange.
+ A mailhost is a server that is responsible for delivering and receiving all email for your host, and possibly your network.
+
+
+
+ User program
+
+ This is a program like elm, pine, mail , or something more sophisticated like a WWW browser. This program will simply pass off all e-mail transactions to the local mailhost , either by calling sendmail or delivering it over TCP.
+
+
+
+
+ Mailhost Server Daemon
+
+ Usually this program is sendmail or smail running in the background. Turn it off or change the command line options in /etc/rc.conf
+ (or, prior to FreeBSD 2.2.2, /etc/sysconfig). It is best to leave it on, unless you have a specific reason to want it off. Example: You are building a .
+
+ You should be aware that sendmail is a potential weak link in a secure site. Some versions of sendmail have known security problems.
+
+ sendmail does two jobs. It looks after delivering and receiving mail.
+
+ If sendmail needs to deliver mail off your site it will look up in the DNS to determine the actual host that will receive mail for the destination.
+
+ If it is acting as a delivery agent sendmail will take the message from the local queue and deliver it across the Internet to another sendmail on the receivers computer.
+
+
+
+
+ DNS - Name Service
+
+ The Domain Name System and its daemon named , contain the database mapping hostname to IP address, and hostname to mailhost. The IP address is specified in an "A" record. The "MX" record specifies the mailhost that will receive mail for you. If you do not have a "MX" record mail for your hostname, the mail will be delivered to your host directly.
+
+ Unless you are running your own DNS server, you will not be able to change any information in the DNS yourself. If you are using an Internet Provider, speak to them.
+
+
+
+
+ POP Servers
+
+ This program gets the mail from your mailbox and gives it to your browser. If you want to run a POP server on your computer, you will need to do 2 things.
+
+
+
+ Get pop software from the Ports collection that can be found in /usr/ports
+ or packages collection. This handbook section has a complete reference on the system.
+
+
+
+ Modify /etc/inetd.conf to load the POP server.
+
+
+
+
+
+ The pop program will have instructions with it. Read them.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Configuration
+
+
+
+ Basic
+
+ As your FreeBSD system comes "out of the box"[TM], you should be able to send E-mail to external hosts as long as you have /etc/resolv.conf setup or are running a name server.
+ If you want to have mail for your host delivered to your specific host,there are two methods:
+
+ - Run a name server ( man -k named ) and have your own domain smallminingco.com
+
+ - Get mail delivered to the current DNS name for your host. Ie: dorm6.ahouse.school.edu
+
+ No matter what option you choose, to have mail delivered directly to your host, you must be a full Internet host. You must have a permanent IP address. IE: NO dynamic PPP. If you are behind a firewall, the firewall must be passing on smtp traffic to you. From /etc/services
+ smtp 25/tcp mail #Simple Mail Transfer
+
+ If you want to receive mail at your host itself, you must make sure that the DNS MX entry points to your host address, or there is no MX entry for your DNS name.
+
+ Try this
+ newbsdbox# hostname
+ newbsdbox.freebsd.org
+ newbsdbox# host newbsdbox.freebsd.org
+ newbsdbox.freebsd.org has address 204.216.27.xx
+
+
+ If that is all that comes out for your machine, mail directory to root@newbsdbox.freebsd.org will work no problems.
+
+ If instead, you have this
+ newbsdbox# host newbsdbox.freebsd.org
+ newbsdbox.FreeBSD.org has address 204.216.27.xx
+ newbsdbox.FreeBSD.org mail is handled (pri=10) by freefall.FreeBSD.org
+
+ All mail sent to your host directly will end up on freefall, under the same username.
+
+ This information is setup in your domain name server. This should be the same host that is listed as your primary nameserver in /etc/resolv.conf
+
+ The DNS record that carries mail routing information is the Mail eXchange entry. If no MX entry exists, mail will be delivered directly to the host by way of the Address record.
+
+ The MX entry for freefall.freebsd.org at one time.
+ freefall MX 30 mail.crl.net
+ freefall MX 40 agora.rdrop.com
+ freefall HINFO Pentium FreeBSD
+ freefall MX 10 freefall.FreeBSD.org
+ freefall MX 20 who.cdrom.com
+ freefall A 204.216.27.xx
+ freefall CNAME www.FreeBSD.org
+
+
+ Freefall has many MX entries. The lowest MX number gets the mail in the end. The others will queue mail temporarily, if freefall is busy or down.
+
+ Alternate MX sites should have separate connections to the Internet, to be most useful. An Internet Provider or other friendly site can provide this service.
+
+ dig, nslookup, and host are your friends.
+
+
+
+
+ Mail for your Domain (Network).
+
+ To setup up a network mailhost, you need to direct the mail from arriving at all the workstations. In other words, you want to hijack all mail for *.smallminingco.com and divert it to one machine, your mailhost.
+
+ The network users on their workstations will most likely pick up their mail over POP or telnet.
+
+ A user account with the SAME USERNAME should exist on both machines. Please use adduser to do this as required. If you set the shell to /nonexistent the user will not be allowed to login.
+
+ The mailhost that you will be using must be designated the Mail eXchange for each workstation. This must be arranged in DNS (ie BIND, named). Please refer to a Networking book for in-depth information.
+
+ You basically need to add these lines in your DNS server.
+ pc24.smallminingco.com A xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx ; Workstation ip
+ MX 10 smtp.smallminingco.com ; Your mailhost
+
+
+ You cannot do this yourself unless you are running a DNS server. If you do not want to run a DNS server, get somebody else like your Internet Provider to do it.
+
+ This will redirect mail for the workstation to the Mail eXchange host. It does not matter what machine the A record points to, the mail will be sent to the MX host.
+
+ This feature is used to implement Virtual E-Mail Hosting.
+
+ Example
+
+ I have a customer with domain foo.bar and I want all mail for foo.bar to be sent to my machine smtp.smalliap.com. You must make an entry in your DNS server like:
+
+ foo.bar MX 10 smtp.smalliap.com ; your mailhost
+
+ The A record is not needed if you only want E-Mail for the domain. IE: Don't expect ping foo.bar to work unless an Address record for foo.bar exists as well.
+
+ On the mailhost that actually accepts mail for final delivery to a mailbox, sendmail must be told what hosts it will be accepting mail for.
+
+ Add pc24.smallminingco.com to /etc/sendmail.cw (if you are using FEATURE(use_cw_file)), or add a "Cw myhost.smalliap.com" line to /etc/sendmail.cf
+
+ If you plan on doing anything serious with sendmail you should install the sendmail source. The source has plenty of documentation with it. You will find information on getting sendmail source from .
+
+
+
+
+ Setting up UUCP.
+
+ Stolen from the FAQ.
+
+ The sendmail configuration that ships with FreeBSD is
+ suited for sites that connect directly to the Internet.
+ Sites that wish to exchange their mail via UUCP must install
+ another sendmail configuration file.
+
+ Tweaking /etc/sendmail.cf manually is considered
+ something for purists. Sendmail version 8 comes with a
+ new approach of generating config files via some m4
+ preprocessing, where the actual hand-crafted configuration
+ is on a higher abstraction level. You should use the
+ configuration files under
+
+
+ /usr/src/usr.sbin/sendmail/cf
+
+
+ If you did not install your system with full sources,
+ the sendmail config stuff has been
+ broken out into a separate source distribution tarball just
+ for you. Assuming you have your CD-ROM mounted, do:
+
+
+ cd /usr/src
+ tar -xvzf /cdrom/dists/src/ssmailcf.aa
+
+
+ Do not panic, this is only a few hundred kilobytes in size.
+ The file README in the cf directory can
+ serve as a basic introduction to m4 configuration.
+
+ For UUCP delivery, you are best advised to use the
+ mailertable feature. This constitutes a database
+ that sendmail can use to base its routing decision upon.
+
+ First, you have to create your .mc file. The
+ directory /usr/src/usr.sbin/sendmail/cf/cf is the
+ home of these files. Look around, there are already a few
+ examples. Assuming you have named your file foo.mc,
+ all you need to do in order to convert it into a valid
+ sendmail.cf is:
+
+
+ cd /usr/src/usr.sbin/sendmail/cf/cf
+ make foo.cf
+
+
+ If you don't have a /usr/obj hiearchy, then:
+
+
+ cp foo.cf /etc/sendmail.cf
+
+
+ Otherwise:
+
+
+ cp /usr/obj/`pwd`/foo.cf /etc/sendmail.cf
+
+
+ A typical .mc file might look like:
+
+
+ include(`../m4/cf.m4')
+ VERSIONID(`Your version number')
+ OSTYPE(bsd4.4)
+
+ FEATURE(nodns)
+ FEATURE(nocanonify)
+ FEATURE(mailertable)
+
+ define(`UUCP_RELAY', your.uucp.relay)
+ define(`UUCP_MAX_SIZE', 200000)
+
+ MAILER(local)
+ MAILER(smtp)
+ MAILER(uucp)
+
+ Cw your.alias.host.name
+ Cw youruucpnodename.UUCP
+
+
+ The nodns and nocanonify features will
+ prevent any usage of the DNS during mail delivery. The
+ UUCP_RELAY clause is needed for bizarre reasons,
+ do not ask. Simply put an Internet hostname there that
+ is able to handle .UUCP pseudo-domain addresses; most likely,
+ you will enter the mail relay of your ISP there.
+
+ Once you have this, you need this file called
+ /etc/mailertable. A typical example of this
+ gender again:
+
+
+ #
+ # makemap hash /etc/mailertable.db < /etc/mailertable
+ #
+ horus.interface-business.de uucp-dom:horus
+ .interface-business.de uucp-dom:if-bus
+ interface-business.de uucp-dom:if-bus
+ .heep.sax.de smtp8:%1
+ horus.UUCP uucp-dom:horus
+ if-bus.UUCP uucp-dom:if-bus
+ . uucp-dom:sax
+
+
+ As you can see, this is part of a real-life file. The first
+ three lines handle special cases where domain-addressed mail
+ should not be sent out to the default route, but instead to
+ some UUCP neighbor in order to ``shortcut'' the delivery
+ path. The next line handles mail to the local Ethernet
+ domain that can be delivered using SMTP. Finally, the UUCP
+ neighbors are mentioned in the .UUCP pseudo-domain notation,
+ to allow for a ``uucp-neighbor!recipient'' override of the
+ default rules. The last line is always a single dot, matching
+ everything else, with UUCP delivery to a UUCP neighbor that
+ serves as your universal mail gateway to the world. All of
+ the node names behind the uucp-dom: keyword must
+ be valid UUCP neighbors, as you can verify using the
+ command uuname.
+
+ As a reminder that this file needs to be converted into a
+ DBM database file before being usable, the command line to
+ accomplish this is best placed as a comment at the top of
+ the mailertable. You always have to execute this command
+ each time you change your mailertable.
+
+ Final hint: if you are uncertain whether some particular
+ mail routing would work, remember the option to
+ sendmail. It starts sendmail in address test mode;
+ simply enter ``0 '', followed by the address you wish to
+ test for the mail routing. The last line tells you the used
+ internal mail agent, the destination host this agent will be
+ called with, and the (possibly translated) address. Leave
+ this mode by typing Control-D.
+
+
+ j@uriah 191% sendmail -bt
+ ADDRESS TEST MODE (ruleset 3 NOT automatically invoked)
+ Enter <ruleset> <address>
+ > 0 foo@interface-business.de
+ rewrite: ruleset 0 input: foo @ interface-business . de
+ ...
+ rewrite: ruleset 0 returns: $# uucp-dom $@ if-bus $: foo \
+ < @ interface-business . de >
+ > ^D
+ j@uriah 192%
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FAQ
+
+ Migration from FAQ.
+
+
+
+ Why do I have to use the FQDN for hosts on my site?
+
+ You will probably find that the host is actually in a different
+ domain; for example, if you are in foo.bar.edu and you wish to reach
+ a host called ``mumble'' in the bar.edu domain, you will have to
+ refer to it by the fully-qualified domain name, ``mumble.bar.edu'',
+ instead of just ``mumble''.
+
+ Traditionally, this was allowed by BSD BIND resolvers. However
+ the current version of BIND that ships with FreeBSD
+ no longer provides default abbreviations for non-fully
+ qualified domain names other than the domain you are in.
+ So an unqualified host mumble must either be found
+ as mumble.foo.bar.edu, or it will be searched for
+ in the root domain.
+
+ This is different from the previous behavior, where the
+ search continued across mumble.bar.edu, and
+ mumble.edu. Have a look at RFC 1535 for why this
+ was considered bad practice, or even a security hole.
+
+ As a good workaround, you can place the line
+
+ search foo.bar.edu bar.edu
+
+ instead of the previous
+
+ domain foo.bar.edu
+
+ into your /etc/resolv.conf. However, make sure
+ that the search order does not go beyond the ``boundary
+ between local and public administration'', as RFC 1535
+ calls it.
+
+
+
+
+ Sendmail says ``mail loops back to myself''
+
+ This is answered in the sendmail FAQ as follows:-
+ * I am getting "Local configuration error" messages, such as:
+
+ 553 relay.domain.net config error: mail loops back to myself
+ 554 <user@domain.net>... Local configuration error
+
+ How can I solve this problem?
+
+ You have asked mail to the domain (e.g., domain.net) to be
+ forwarded to a specific host (in this case, relay.domain.net)
+ by using an MX record, but the relay machine does not recognize
+ itself as domain.net. Add domain.net to /etc/sendmail.cw
+ (if you are using FEATURE(use_cw_file)) or add "Cw domain.net"
+ to /etc/sendmail.cf.
+
+
+
+ The sendmail FAQ is in /usr/src/usr.sbin/sendmail
+ and is recommended reading if you want to do any
+ ``tweaking'' of your mail setup.
+
+
+
+
+ How can I do E-Mail with a dialup PPP host?
+
+ You want to connect a FreeBSD box on a lan, to the Internet. The FreeBSD box will be a mail gateway for the lan. The PPP connection is non-dedicated.
+
+ There are at least two way to do this.
+
+ The other is to use UUCP.
+
+ The key is to get a Internet site to provide secondary MX services for your domain.
+ For example:
+ bigco.com. MX 10 bigco.com.
+ MX 20 smalliap.com.
+
+
+ Only one host should be specified as the final recipient ( add ``Cw bigco.com'' in /etc/sendmail.cf on bigco.com).
+
+ When the senders sendmail is trying to deliver the mail it will try to connect to you over the modem link. It will most likely time out because you are not online. Sendmail will automatically deliver it to the secondary MX site, ie your Internet provider. The secondary MX site will try every (sendmail_flags = "-bd -q15m" in /etc/rc.conf ) 15 minutes to connect to your host to deliver the mail to the primary MX site.
+
+ You might wat to use something like this as a login script.
+ #!/bin/sh
+ # Put me in /usr/local/bin/pppbigco
+ ( sleep 60 ; /usr/sbin/sendmail -q ) &
+ /usr/sbin/ppp -direct pppbigco
+
+ If you are going to create a separate login script for a user you could use sendmail -qRbigco.com instead in the script above. This will force all mail in your queue for bigco.com to be processed immediately.
+
+ A further refinement of the situation is as follows.
+
+ Message stolen from the freebsd-isp mailing list.
+ > we provide the secondary mx for a customer. The customer connects to
+ > our services several times a day automatically to get the mails to
+ > his primary mx (We do not call his site when a mail for his domains
+ > arrived). Our sendmail sends the mailqueue every 30 minutes. At the
+ > moment he has to stay 30 minutes online to be sure that all mail is
+ > gone to the primary mx.
+ >
+ > Is there a command that would initiate sendmail to send all the mails
+ > now? The user has not root-privileges on our machine of course.
+
+ In the 'privacy flags' section of sendmail.cf, there is a definition
+ Opgoaway,restrictqrun
+
+ Remove restrictqrun to allow non-root users to start the queue processing.
+ You might also like to rearrange the MXs. We are the 1st MX for our
+ customers like this, and we have defined:
+
+ # If we are the best MX for a host, try directly instead of generating
+ # local config error.
+ OwTrue
+
+ That way a remote site will deliver straight to you, without trying
+ the customer connection. You then send to your customer. Only works for
+ "hosts", so you need to get your customer to name their mail machine
+ "customer.com" as well as "hostname.customer.com" in the DNS. Just put
+ an A record in the DNS for "customer.com".
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Advanced topics
+
+
+
+ The Cutting Edge: FreeBSD-current and FreeBSD-stable
+
+ FreeBSD is under constant development between releases. For
+ people who want to be on the cutting edge, there are several
+ easy mechanisms for keeping your system in sync with the latest
+ developments. Be warned: the cutting edge is not for everyone!
+ This chapter will help you decide if you want to track the development
+ system, or stick with one of the released versions.
+
+
+
+ Staying Current with FreeBSD
+
+ Contributed by &a.jkh;.
+
+
+
+ What is FreeBSD-current?
+
+ FreeBSD-current is, quite literally, nothing more than a daily
+ snapshot of the working sources for FreeBSD. These include work in
+ progress, experimental changes and transitional mechanisms that may or
+ may not be present in the next official release of the software.
+ While many of us compile almost daily from FreeBSD-current sources,
+ there are periods of time when the sources are literally un-compilable.
+ These problems are generally resolved as expeditiously as possible,
+ but whether or not FreeBSD-current sources bring disaster or greatly
+ desired functionality can literally be a matter of which part of any
+ given 24 hour period you grabbed them in!
+
+
+
+
+ Who needs FreeBSD-current?
+
+ FreeBSD-current is made generally available for 3 primary interest groups:
+
+
+
+ Members of the FreeBSD group who are actively working on some
+ part of the source tree and for whom keeping `current' is an
+ absolute requirement.
+
+
+
+
+ Members of the FreeBSD group who are active testers,
+ willing to spend time working through problems in order to
+ ensure that FreeBSD-current remains as sane as possible. These
+ are also people who wish to make topical suggestions on changes
+ and the general direction of FreeBSD.
+
+
+
+
+ Peripheral members of the FreeBSD (or some other) group who merely
+ wish to keep an eye on things and use the current sources for
+ reference purposes (e.g. for reading, not running). These
+ people also make the occasional comment or contribute code.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ What is FreeBSD-current NOT?
+
+
+
+
+
+ A fast-track to getting pre-release bits because you heard there is
+ some cool new feature in there and you want to be the first on
+ your block to have it.
+
+
+
+
+ A quick way of getting bug fixes.
+
+
+
+
+ In any way ``officially supported'' by us.
+
+ We do our best to help people genuinely in one of the 3
+ ``legitimate'' FreeBSD-current categories, but we simply do not
+ have the time to provide tech support for it.
+ This is not because we are mean and nasty people who do not like
+ helping people out (we would not even be doing FreeBSD if we were),
+ it is literally because we cannot answer 400 messages a day
+ and actually work on FreeBSD! I am sure that, if given
+ the choice between having us answer lots of questions or continuing to
+ improve FreeBSD, most of you would vote for us improving it.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Using FreeBSD-current
+
+
+
+
+
+ Join the &a.current; and the &a.cvsall; .
+ This is not just a good idea, it is essential.
+ If you are not on the FreeBSD-current mailing list you
+ will not see the comments that people are making about the
+ current state of the system and thus will probably end up stumbling
+ over a lot of problems that others have already found and
+ solved. Even more importantly, you will miss out on
+ potentially critical information (e.g. ``Yo, Everybody!
+ Before you rebuild /usr/src, you must
+ rebuild the kernel or your system will crash horribly!").
+
+ The cvs-all mailing list will allow you to see the commit log
+ entry for each change as it is made along with any pertinent
+ information on possible side-effects.
+
+ To join these lists, send mail to &a.majordomo; and specify:
+ subscribe freebsd-current
+ subscribe cvs-all
+
+ In the body of your message. Optionally, you can also say `help'
+ and Majordomo will send you full help on how to subscribe and
+ unsubscribe to the various other mailing lists we support.
+
+
+
+
+ Grab the sources from ftp.FreeBSD.ORG. You can do this in
+ three ways:
+
+
+
+
+ Use the facility. Unless you
+ have a good TCP/IP connection at a flat rate, this is
+ the way to do it.
+
+
+
+
+ Use the program with
+ this supfile.
+ This is the second most recommended method, since it allows
+ you to grab the entire collection once and then only what has
+ changed from then on. Many people run cvsup from cron
+ and keep their sources up-to-date automatically.
+
+
+
+
+ Use ftp. The source tree for FreeBSD-current is always
+ "exported" on:
+ ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/FreeBSD-current
+ We also use `wu-ftpd' which allows compressed/tar'd grabbing
+ of whole trees. e.g. you see:
+ usr.bin/lex
+
+ You can do:
+ ftp> cd usr.bin
+ ftp> get lex.tar.Z
+
+ And it will get the whole directory for you as a compressed
+ tar file.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Essentially, if you need rapid on-demand access to the source and
+ communications bandwidth is not a consideration, use cvsup or ftp.
+ Otherwise, use CTM.
+
+
+
+
+ If you are grabbing the sources to run, and not just look at,
+ then grab all of current, not just selected portions. The
+ reason for this is that various parts of the source depend on
+ updates elsewhere, and trying to compile just a subset is almost
+ guaranteed to get you into trouble.
+
+
+
+
+ Before compiling current, read the Makefile in /usr/src
+ carefully. You should at least run a `' the first time through as part of the upgrading
+ process. Reading the &a.current; will keep you up-to-date on other
+ bootstrapping procedures that sometimes become necessary as we move
+ towards the next release.
+
+
+
+
+ Be active! If you are running FreeBSD-current, we want to know
+ what you have to say about it, especially if you have suggestions
+ for enhancements or bug fixes. Suggestions with accompanying code
+ are received most enthusiastically!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Staying Stable with FreeBSD
+
+ Contributed by &a.jkh;.
+
+
+
+ What is FreeBSD-stable?
+
+ FreeBSD-stable is our development branch for a more low-key and
+ conservative set of changes intended for our next mainstream release.
+ Changes of an experimental or untested nature do not go into this
+ branch (see ).
+
+
+
+
+ Who needs FreeBSD-stable?
+
+ If you are a commercial user or someone who puts maximum stability of
+ their FreeBSD system before all other concerns, you should consider tracking
+ stable. This is especially true if you have installed the most
+ recent release (&rel.current;-RELEASE at the time of this writing) since the stable
+ branch is effectively a bug-fix stream relative to the previous release.
+
+ Please note that the stable tree endeavors, above all, to
+ be fully compilable and stable at all times, but we do occasionally
+ make mistakes (these are still active sources with quickly-transmitted
+ updates, after all). We also do our best to thoroughly test fixes in
+ current before bringing them into stable, but sometimes
+ our tests fail to catch every case. If something breaks for you in
+ stable, please let us know immediately! (see
+ next section).
+
+
+
+
+ Using FreeBSD-stable
+
+
+
+
+
+ Join the &a.stable; . This will
+ keep you informed of build-dependencies that may appear in
+ stable or any other issues requiring special attention.
+ Developers will also make announcements in this mailing list when
+ they are contemplating some controversial fix or update, giving
+ the users a chance to respond if they have any issues to raise concerning
+ the proposed change.
+
+ To join this list, send mail to &a.majordomo; and say:
+ subscribe freebsd-stable
+
+ In the body of your message. Optionally, you can also say `help'
+ and Majordomo will send you full help on how to subscribe and
+ unsubscribe to the various other mailing lists we support.
+
+
+
+
+ Grab the sources from ftp.FreeBSD.ORG. You can do this in
+ three ways:
+
+
+
+
+ Use the facility. Unless you
+ have a good TCP/IP connection at a flat rate, this is
+ the way to do it.
+
+
+
+
+ Use the program with
+ this supfile.
+ This is the second most recommended method, since it allows
+ you to grab the entire collection once and then only what has
+ changed from then on. Many people run cvsup from cron
+ to keep their sources up-to-date automatically.
+
+
+
+
+ Use ftp. The source tree for FreeBSD-stable is always
+ "exported" on:
+ ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/FreeBSD-stable
+
+
+
+ We also use `wu-ftpd' which allows compressed/tar'd grabbing
+ of whole trees. e.g. you see:
+ usr.bin/lex
+
+ You can do:
+ ftp> cd usr.bin
+ ftp> get lex.tar.Z
+
+ And it will get the whole directory for you as a compressed
+ tar file.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Essentially, if you need rapid on-demand access to the source and
+ communications bandwidth is not a consideration, use cvsup or ftp.
+ Otherwise, use CTM.
+
+
+
+
+ Before compiling stable, read the Makefile in /usr/src
+ carefully. You should at least run a `' the first time through as part of the upgrading
+ process. Reading the &a.stable; will keep you up-to-date on other
+ bootstrapping procedures that sometimes become necessary as we move
+ towards the next release.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Synchronizing Source Trees over the Internet
+
+ Contributed by &a.jkh;.
+
+ There are various ways of using an Internet (or email) connection
+ to stay up-to-date with any given area of the FreeBSD project sources,
+ or all areas, depending on what interests you. The primary
+ services we offer are CVSup and CTM.
+
+ CVSup uses the pull model of updating. The
+ user (or a cron script) invokes the cvsup program, and it
+ interacts with a cvsupd server somewhere to bring your files
+ up to date. The updates you receive are up-to-the-minute and you get
+ them when, and only when, you want them. You can easily restrict your
+ updates to the specific files or directories that are of interest to
+ you. Updates are generated on the fly by the server, according to
+ what you have and what you want to have.
+
+ CTM, on the other hand, does not interactively compare
+ the sources you have with those on the master archive. Instead, a script
+ which identifies changes in files since its previous run is executed several
+ times a day on the master archive, any detected changes being compressed,
+ stamped with a sequence-number and encoded for transmission over email
+ (printable ASCII only). Once received, these "CTM deltas" can then be
+ handed to the ctm_rmail(1) utility which will automatically decode, verify
+ and apply the changes to the user's copy of the sources. This process is
+ far more efficient than CVSup, and places less strain on our server resources
+ since it is a push rather than a pull model.
+
+ There are other trade-offs, of course. If you
+ inadvertently wipe out portions of your archive, CVSup will detect
+ and rebuild the damaged portions for you. CTM won't do this, and if
+ you wipe some portion of your source tree out (and don't have it backed
+ up) then you will have to start from scratch (from the most recent CVS
+ "base delta") and rebuild it all.
+
+ For more information on CTM and CVSup, please
+ see one of the following sections:
+
+
+
+ CTM
+
+ Contributed by &a.phk;. Updated 19-October-1997.
+
+ CTM is a method for keeping a remote directory tree in sync with a
+ central one. It has been developed for usage with FreeBSD's source
+ trees, though other people may find it useful for other purposes as
+ time goes by. Little, if any, documentation currently exists at
+ this time on the process of creating deltas, so talk to &a.phk;
+ for more information should you wish to use CTM for other things.
+
+
+
+ Why should I use CTM?
+
+ CTM will give you a local copy of the FreeBSD source trees.
+ There are a number of ``flavors'' of the tree available. Whether
+ you wish to track the entire cvs tree or just one of the branches,
+ CTM can provide you the information.
+ If you are an active developer on FreeBSD, but have lousy
+ or non-existent TCP/IP connectivity, or simply wish to have the
+ changes automatically sent to you, CTM was made for you.
+ You will need to obtain up to three deltas per day for the most
+ active branches. However, you should consider having them sent
+ by automatic email. The sizes of the updates are
+ always kept as small as possible. This is typically less than 5K,
+ with an occasional (one in ten) being 10-50K and every now and
+ then a biggie of 100K+ or more coming around.
+
+ You will also need to make yourself aware of the various caveats
+ related to working directly from the development sources rather
+ than a pre-packaged release. This is particularly true if you
+ choose the ``current'' sources. It is recommended that
+ you read .
+
+
+
+
+ What do I need to use CTM?
+
+ You will need two things: The ``CTM'' program and the initial
+ deltas to feed it (to get up to ``current'' levels).
+
+ The CTM program has been part of FreeBSD ever since version 2.0
+ was released, and lives in /usr/src/usr.sbin/CTM if you
+ have a copy of the source online.
+
+ If you are running a pre-2.0 version of FreeBSD, you can fetch the
+ current CTM sources directly from:
+
+ ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/FreeBSD-current/src/usr.sbin/ctm
+
+ The ``deltas'' you feed CTM can be had two ways, FTP or e-mail.
+ If you have general FTP access to the Internet then the following
+ FTP sites support access to CTM:
+
+ ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/CTM
+
+ or see section .
+
+ FTP the relevant directory and fetch the README file,
+ starting from there.
+
+ If you may wish to get your deltas via email:
+
+ Send email to &a.majordomo; to subscribe to one of the CTM
+ distribution lists. ``ctm-cvs-cur'' supports the entire cvs tree.
+ ``ctm-src-cur'' supports the head of the development branch.
+ ``ctm-src-2_2'' supports the 2.2 release branch, etc.
+ (If you do not know how to subscribe
+ yourself using majordomo, send a message first containing the
+ word ``help'' - it will send you back usage instructions.)
+
+ When you begin receiving your CTM updates in the mail, you may
+ use the ctm_rmail program to unpack and apply them. You
+ can actually use the ctm_rmail program directly from a entry
+ in /etc/aliases if you want to have the process run in a
+ fully automated fashion. Check the ctm_rmail man page for more
+ details.
+
+ NOTE: No matter what method you use to get the CTM
+ deltas, you should subscribe to the ctm-announce@FreeBSD.ORG
+ mailing list. In the future, this will be the only place where
+ announcements concerning the operations of the CTM system will be
+ posted. Send an email to &a.majordomo; with a single
+ line of ``subscribe ctm-announce'' to get added to the list.
+
+
+
+
+ Starting off with CTM for the first time
+
+ Before you can start using CTM deltas, you will need to get a
+ to a starting point for the deltas produced subsequently to it.
+
+ First you should determine what you already have. Everyone can
+ start from an ``Empty'' directory. However, since the trees are
+ many tens of megabytes, you should prefer to start from something
+ already at hand. If you have a RELEASE CD, you can copy or extract
+ an initial source from it. This will save a significant transfer
+ of data.
+
+ Once you identify a suitable starting point, you must use an initial
+ ``transition'' delta to transform your starting point into a
+ CTM supported tree.
+
+ You can recognize these transition deltas by the ``X'' appended
+ to the number (src-cur.3210XEmpty.gz for instance).
+ The designation following the ``X'' corresponds to the origin
+ of your initial ``seed''. ``Empty'' is an empty directory, ``R225''
+ would designate the 2.2.5 release, etc.
+ As a rule a base transition from ``Empty'' is producted
+ every 100 deltas. By the way, they are large! 25 to 30
+ Megabytes of gzip'ed data is common for the ``XEmpty'' deltas.
+
+ Once you've picked a base delta to start from, you will also need
+ all deltas with higher numbers following it.
+
+
+
+
+ Using CTM in your daily life
+
+ To apply the deltas, simply say:
+
+ cd /where/ever/you/want/the/stuff
+ ctm -v -v /where/you/store/your/deltas/src-xxx.*
+
+
+
+
+ CTM understands deltas which have been put through gzip,
+ so you do not need to gunzip them first, this saves disk space.
+
+ Unless it feels very secure about the entire process, CTM will
+ not touch your tree. To verify a delta you can also use the
+ ``'' flag and CTM will not actually touch your tree; it will
+ merely verify the integrity of the delta and see if it would apply
+ cleanly to your current tree.
+
+ There are other options to CTM as well, see the manual pages
+ or look in the sources for more information.
+
+ I would also be very happy if somebody could help with the ``user
+ interface'' portions, as I have realized that I cannot make up my
+ mind on what options should do what, how and when...
+
+ That's really all there is to it. Every time you get a new delta,
+ just run it through CTM to keep your sources up to date.
+
+ Do not remove the deltas if they are hard to download again. You
+ just might want to keep them around in case something bad happens.
+ Even if you only have floppy disks, consider using fdwrite to
+ make a copy.
+
+
+
+
+ Keeping your local changes
+
+ As a developer one would like to experiment with and change
+ files in the source tree. CTM supports local modifications in a
+ limited way: before checking for the presence of a file
+ foo, it first looks for foo.ctm. If this
+ file exists, CTM will operate on it instead of foo.
+
+ This behaviour gives us a simple way to maintain local changes:
+ simply copy the files you plan to modify to the corresponding
+ file names with a .ctm suffix. Then you can freely hack
+ the code, while CTM keeps the .ctm file up-to-date.
+
+
+
+
+ Other interesting CTM options
+
+
+
+ Finding out exactly what would be touched by an update
+
+ You can determine the list of changes that CTM will make on your
+ source repository using the ``'' option to CTM.
+
+ This is useful if you would like to keep logs of the changes,
+ pre- or post- process the modified files in any manner, or just
+ are feeling a tad paranoid :-).
+
+
+
+
+ Making backups before updating
+
+ Sometimes you may want to backup all the files that would be changed
+ by a CTM update.
+
+ Specifying the ``'' option causes
+ CTM to backup all files that would be touched by a given CTM
+ delta to backup-file.
+
+
+
+
+ Restricting the files touched by an update
+
+ Sometimes you would be interested in restricting the scope of a
+ given CTM update, or may be interested in extracting just a few
+ files from a sequence of deltas.
+
+ You can control the list of files that CTM would operate on by
+ specifying filtering regular expressions using the
+ ``'' and ``'' options.
+
+ For example, to extract an up-to-date copy of
+ lib/libc/Makefile from your collection of saved CTM deltas,
+ run the commands:
+
+ cd /where/ever/you/want/to/extract/it/
+ ctm -e '^lib/libc/Makefile' ~ctm/src-xxx.*
+
+
+
+
+ For every file specified in a CTM delta, the ``'' and
+ ``'' options are applied in the order given on the
+ command line. The file is processed by CTM only if it is
+ marked as eligible after all the ``'' and
+ ``'' options are applied to it.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Future plans for CTM
+
+ Tons of them:
+
+
+
+ Use some kind of authentication into the CTM system, so as to
+ allow detection of spoofed CTM updates.
+
+
+
+ Clean up the options to CTM, they became confusing and
+ counter intuitive.
+
+
+
+
+
+ The bad news is that I am very busy, so any help in doing this will
+ be most welcome. And do not forget to tell me what you want also...
+
+
+
+
+ Miscellaneous stuff
+
+ All the ``DES infected'' (e.g. export controlled) source is not
+ included. You will get the ``international'' version only. If
+ sufficient interest appears, we will set up a ``sec-cur''
+ sequence too.
+ There is a sequence of deltas for the ports collection too,
+ but interest has not been all that high yet. Tell me if you want
+ an email list for that too and we will consider setting it up.
+
+
+
+
+ Thanks!
+
+
+
+ &a.bde;
+
+ for his pointed pen and invaluable comments.
+
+
+
+
+ &a.sos;
+
+
+ for patience.
+
+
+
+
+ Stephen McKay
+
+
+ wrote ctm_[rs]mail, much appreciated.
+
+
+
+
+ &a.jkh;
+
+
+ for being so stubborn that I had to make it better.
+
+
+
+
+ All the users
+
+
+ I hope you like it...
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ CVSup
+
+ Contributed by &a.jdp;.
+
+
+
+ Introduction
+
+ CVSup is a software package for distributing and updating source
+ trees from a master CVS repository on a remote server host. The
+ FreeBSD sources are maintained in a CVS repository on a central
+ development machine in California. With CVSup, FreeBSD users can
+ easily keep their own source trees up to date.
+
+ CVSup uses the so-called pull model of updating. Under the pull
+ model, each client asks the server for updates, if and when they are
+ wanted. The server waits passively for update requests from its
+ clients. Thus all updates are instigated by the client. The server
+ never sends unsolicited updates. Users must either run the CVSup client
+ manually to get an update, or they must set up a cron job to run it
+ automatically on a regular basis.
+
+ The term "CVSup", capitalized just so, refers to the entire software
+ package. Its main components are the client "cvsup" which runs on each
+ user's machine, and the server "cvsupd" which runs at each of the
+ FreeBSD mirror sites.
+
+ As you read the FreeBSD documentation and mailing lists, you may
+ see references to sup. Sup was the predecessor of CVSup,
+ and it served a similar purpose. CVSup is in used in much the same
+ way as sup and, in fact, uses configuration files which are
+ backward-compatible with sup's. Sup is no longer used in the FreeBSD
+ project, because CVSup is both faster and more flexible.
+
+
+
+
+ Installation
+
+ The easiest way to install CVSup if you are running FreeBSD 2.2 or
+ later is to use either the port from the FreeBSD or the corresponding binary package, depending on whether you prefer to roll your
+ own or not.
+
+ If you are running FreeBSD-2.1.6 or 2.1.7, you unfortunately cannot use the
+ binary package versions due to the fact that it requires a version of
+ the C library that does not yet exist in FreeBSD-2.1.{6,7}. You can easily
+ use the port, however, just as with FreeBSD 2.2. Simply unpack
+ the tar file, cd to the cvsup subdirectory and type "make install".
+
+ Because CVSup is written in Modula-3, both the package and the port require that the
+ Modula-3 runtime libraries be installed. These are available as the
+ lang/modula-3-lib port and the lang/modula-3-lib-3.6 package. If you follow the same
+ directions as for cvsup, these libraries will be compiled and/or
+ installed automatically when you install the CVSup port or package.
+
+ The Modula-3 libraries are rather large, and fetching and compiling
+ them is not an instantaneous process. For that reason, a third option
+ is provided. You can get statically linked FreeBSD
+ executables for CVSup from either the USA distribution site:
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsup-bin-15.3.tar.gz
+ (client including GUI).
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsup.nogui-bin-15.3.tar.gz
+ (client without GUI).
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsupd-bin-15.3.tar.gz
+ (server).
+
+
+
+
+
+ or the German mirror:
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.cs.tu-berlin.de/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsup-bin-15.3.tar.gz
+ (client including GUI).
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.cs.tu-berlin.de/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsup.nogui-bin-15.3.tar.gz
+ (client without GUI).
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.cs.tu-berlin.de/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsupd-bin-15.3.tar.gz
+ (server).
+
+
+
+
+
+ Most users will need only the client. These executables are entirely
+ self-contained, and they will run on any version of FreeBSD from
+ FreeBSD-2.1.0 to FreeBSD-current.
+
+ In summary, your options for installing CVSup are:
+
+
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.2 or later: static binary, port, or package
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.1.6, 2.1.7: static binary or port
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.1.5 or earlier: static binary
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Configuration
+
+ CVSup's operation is controlled by a configuration file called the
+ "supfile". Beginning with FreeBSD-2.2, there are some sample supfiles
+ in the directory /usr/share/examples/cvsup. These examples are also available
+ from ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/FreeBSD-current/src/share/examples/cvsup/ if you are on a pre-2.2 system.
+
+ The information in a supfile answers the following questions for cvsup:
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ In the following sections, we will construct a typical supfile by
+ answering each of these questions in turn. First, we describe the
+ overall structure of a supfile.
+
+ A supfile is a text file. Comments begin with "#" and extend to
+ the end of the line. Lines that are blank and lines that contain only
+ comments are ignored.
+
+ Each remaining line describes a set of files that the user wishes
+ to receive. The line begins with the name of a "collection", a
+ logical grouping of files defined by the server. The name of the
+ collection tells the server which files you want. After the
+ collection name come zero or more fields, separated by white space.
+ These fields answer the questions listed above. There are two types
+ of fields: flag fields and value fields. A flag field consists of a
+ keyword standing alone, e.g., "delete" or "compress". A value field
+ also begins with a keyword, but the keyword is followed without
+ intervening white space by "=" and a second word. For example,
+ "release=cvs" is a value field.
+
+ A supfile typically specifies more than one collection to receive.
+ One way to structure a supfile is to specify all of the relevant
+ fields explicitly for each collection. However, that tends to make
+ the supfile lines quite long, and it is inconvenient because most
+ fields are the same for all of the collections in a supfile. CVSup
+ provides a defaulting mechanism to avoid these problems. Lines
+ beginning with the special pseudo-collection name "*default" can be
+ used to set flags and values which will be used as defaults for the
+ subsequent collections in the supfile. A default value can be
+ overridden for an individual collection, by specifying a different
+ value with the collection itself. Defaults can also be changed or
+ augmented in mid-supfile by additional "*default" lines.
+
+ With this background, we will now proceed to construct a supfile
+ for receiving and updating the main source tree of .
+
+
+
+
+
+ Which files do you want to receive?
+
+
+
+ The files available via CVSup are organized into named
+ groups called "collections". The collections that are available are
+ described .
+ In this example, we wish to receive the
+ entire main source tree for the FreeBSD system. There is a single
+ large collection "src-all" which will give us all of that, except the
+ export-controlled cryptography support. Let us assume for this
+ example that we are in the USA or Canada. Then we can get the
+ cryptography code with one additional collection, "cvs-crypto".
+ As a first step toward constructing our supfile, we
+ simply list these collections, one per line:
+
+
+ src-all
+ cvs-crypto
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Which version(s) of them do you want?
+
+
+
+ With CVSup, you can receive virtually any version of the sources
+ that ever existed. That is possible because the cvsupd server works
+ directly from the CVS repository, which contains all of the versions.
+ You specify which one of them you want using the "tag=" and "date="
+ value fields.
+
+
+
+ WARNING: Be very careful to specify any "tag=" fields
+ correctly. Some tags are valid only for certain collections of
+ files. If you specify an incorrect or misspelled tag, CVSup will
+ delete files which you probably do not want deleted.
+ In particular, use only "tag=." for the "ports-*"
+ collections.
+
+
+
+ The "tag=" field names a symbolic tag in the repository. There are
+ two kinds of tags, revision tags and branch tags. A revision tag
+ refers to a specific revision. Its meaning stays the same from day to
+ day. A branch tag, on the other hand, refers to the latest revision
+ on a given line of development, at any given time. Because a branch
+ tag does not refer to a specific revision, it may mean something
+ different tomorrow than it means today.
+
+
+
+ Here are the branch tags that users might be interested in:
+
+
+
+ tag=.
+
+ The main line of development, also known as FreeBSD-current.
+ Note: the "." is not punctuation; it is the name of the tag.
+ Valid for all collections.
+
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_2
+
+
+ The line of development for FreeBSD-2.2.x, also known as
+ FreeBSD-stable.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_1_0
+
+
+ The line of development for FreeBSD-2.1.x - this branch
+ is largely obsolete.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Here are the revision tags that users might be interested in:
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_2_6_RELEASE
+
+ FreeBSD-2.2.6.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_2_5_RELEASE
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.2.5.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_2_2_RELEASE
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.2.2.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_2_1_RELEASE
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.2.1.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_2_0_RELEASE
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.2.0.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_1_7_RELEASE
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.1.7.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_1_6_1_RELEASE
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.1.6.1.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_1_6_RELEASE
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.1.6.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_1_5_RELEASE
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.1.5.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_1_0_RELEASE
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.1.0.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ WARNING: Be very careful to type the tag name exactly as
+ shown. CVSup cannot distinguish between valid and invalid tags.
+ If you misspell the tag, CVSup will behave as though you had
+ specified a valid tag which happens to refer to no files at all.
+ It will delete your existing sources in that case.
+
+
+
+ When you specify a branch tag, you normally receive the latest versions
+ of the files on that line of development. If you wish to receive some
+ past version, you can do so by specifying a date with the "date=" value
+ field. The cvsup(1) manual page explains how to do that.
+
+
+
+ For our example, we wish to receive FreeBSD-current. We add this line
+ at the beginning of our supfile:
+
+
+ *default tag=.
+
+
+
+
+ There is an important special case that comes into play if you specify
+ neither a "tag=" field nor a "date=" field. In that case, you receive
+ the actual RCS files directly from the server's CVS repository, rather
+ than receiving a particular version. Developers generally prefer this
+ mode of operation. By maintaining a copy of the repository itself on
+ their systems, they gain the ability to browse the revision histories
+ and examine past versions of files. This gain is achieved at a large
+ cost in terms of disk space, however.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Where do you want to get them from?
+
+
+
+ We use the "host=" field to tell cvsup where to obtain its updates.
+ Any of the will do,
+ though you should try to select one that's near to you.
+ In this example, we'll use the primary FreeBSD distribution site,
+ "cvsup.FreeBSD.org":
+
+
+ *default host=cvsup.FreeBSD.org
+
+
+
+
+ On any particular run of cvsup, you can override this setting on the
+ command line, with "-h hostname".
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Where do you want to put them on your own machine?
+
+
+
+ The "prefix=" field tells cvsup where to put the files it receives.
+ In this example, we will put the source files directly into our main
+ source tree, "/usr/src". The "src" directory is already implicit in the
+ collections we have chosen to receive, so this is the correct
+ specification:
+
+
+ *default prefix=/usr
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Where should cvsup maintain its status files?
+
+
+
+ The cvsup client maintains certain status files in what is called
+ the "base" directory. These files help CVSup to work more
+ efficiently, by keeping track of which updates you have already
+ received. We will use the standard base directory,
+ "/usr/local/etc/cvsup":
+
+
+ *default base=/usr/local/etc/cvsup
+
+
+
+
+ This setting is used by default if it is not specified in the
+ supfile, so we actually do not need the above line.
+
+
+
+ If your base directory does not already exist, now would be a good
+ time to create it. The cvsup client will refuse to run if the base
+ directory does not exist.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Miscellaneous supfile settings:
+
+
+
+ There is one more line of boiler plate that normally needs to be
+ present in the supfile:
+
+
+ *default release=cvs delete use-rel-suffix compress
+
+
+
+
+ "release=cvs" indicates that the server should get its information
+ out of the main FreeBSD CVS repository. This is virtually always the
+ case, but there are other possibilities which are beyond the scope of
+ this discussion.
+
+
+
+ "delete" gives CVSup permission to delete files. You should always
+ specify this, so that CVSup can keep your source tree fully up to
+ date. CVSup is careful to delete only those files for which it is
+ responsible. Any extra files you happen to have will be left strictly
+ alone.
+
+
+
+ "use-rel-suffix" is ... arcane. If you really want to know about
+ it, see the cvsup(1) manual page. Otherwise, just specify it and
+ do not worry about it.
+
+
+
+ "compress" enables the use of gzip-style compression on the
+ communication channel. If your network link is T1 speed or faster,
+ you probably should not use compression. Otherwise, it helps
+ substantially.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Putting it all together:
+
+
+
+ Here is the entire supfile for our example:
+
+
+ *default tag=.
+ *default host=cvsup.FreeBSD.org
+ *default prefix=/usr
+ *default base=/usr/local/etc/cvsup
+ *default release=cvs delete use-rel-suffix compress
+ src-all
+ cvs-crypto
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Running CVSup
+
+ You are now ready to try an update. The command line for doing this is
+ quite simple:
+
+
+ cvsup supfile
+
+
+ where "supfile" is of course the name of the supfile you have just created.
+ Assuming you are running under X11, cvsup will display a GUI window with
+ some buttons to do the usual things. Press the "go" button, and watch
+ it run.
+
+ Since you are updating your actual "/usr/src" tree in this example, you
+ will need to run the program as root so that cvsup has the permissions
+ it needs to update your files. Having just created your configuration
+ file, and having never used this program before, that might
+ understandably make you nervous. There is an easy way to do a trial run
+ without touching your precious files. Just create an empty directory
+ somewhere convenient, and name it as an extra argument on the command
+ line:
+
+
+ mkdir /var/tmp/dest
+ cvsup supfile /var/tmp/dest
+
+
+ The directory you specify will be used as the destination directory
+ for all file updates. CVSup will examine your usual files in
+ "/usr/src", but it will not modify or delete any of them. Any file
+ updates will instead land in "/var/tmp/dest/usr/src". CVSup will also
+ leave its base directory status files untouched when run this way.
+ The new versions of those files will be written into the specified
+ directory. As long as you have read access to "/usr/src", you do not
+ even need to be root to perform this kind of trial run.
+
+ If you are not running X11 or if you just do not like GUIs, you
+ should add a couple of options to the command line when you run cvsup:
+
+
+ cvsup -g -L 2 supfile
+
+
+ The "-g" tells cvsup not to use its GUI. This is automatic if you are
+ not running X11, but otherwise you have to specify it.
+
+ The "-L 2" tells cvsup to print out the details of all the file updates
+ it is doing. There are three levels of verbosity, from "-L 0" to "-L 2".
+ The default is 0, which means total silence except for error messages.
+
+ There are plenty of other options available. For a brief list of them,
+ type "cvsup -H". For more detailed descriptions, see the manual page.
+
+ Once you are satisfied with the way updates are working, you can arrange
+ for regular runs of cvsup using cron(8). Obviously, you should not let
+ cvsup use its GUI when running it from cron.
+
+
+
+
+ CVSup File Collections
+
+ The file collections available via CVSup are organized
+ hierarchically. There are a few large collections, and they are
+ divided into smaller sub-collections. Receiving a large collection
+ is equivalent to receiving each of its sub-collections.
+ The hierarchical relationships among collections are reflected by
+ the use of indentation in the list below.
+
+ The most commonly used collections are src-all,
+ cvs-crypto, and ports-all. The other collections are used
+ only by small groups of people for specialized purposes, and some mirror
+ sites may not carry all of them.
+
+
+
+ cvs-all release=cvs
+
+ The main FreeBSD CVS repository, excluding the export-restricted
+ cryptography code.
+
+
+
+ distrib release=cvs
+
+ Files related to the distribution and mirroring of FreeBSD.
+
+
+
+
+ doc-all release=cvs
+
+
+ Sources for the FreeBSD handbook and other documentation.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-all release=cvs
+
+
+ The FreeBSD ports collection.
+
+
+
+ ports-archivers release=cvs
+
+ Archiving tools.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-astro release=cvs
+
+
+ Astronomical ports.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-audio release=cvs
+
+
+ Sound support.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-base release=cvs
+
+
+ Miscellaneous files at the top of /usr/ports.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-benchmarks release=cvs
+
+
+ Benchmarks.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-biology release=cvs
+
+
+ Biology.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-cad release=cvs
+
+
+ Computer aided design tools.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-chinese release=cvs
+
+
+ Chinese language support.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-comms release=cvs
+
+
+ Communication software.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-converters release=cvs
+
+
+ character code converters.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-databases release=cvs
+
+
+ Databases.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-devel release=cvs
+
+
+ Development utilities.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-editors release=cvs
+
+
+ Editors.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-emulators release=cvs
+
+
+ Emulators for other operating systems.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-games release=cvs
+
+
+ Games.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-german release=cvs
+
+
+ German language support.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-graphics release=cvs
+
+
+ Graphics utilities.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-japanese release=cvs
+
+
+ Japanese language support.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-korean release=cvs
+
+
+ Korean language support.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-lang release=cvs
+
+
+ Programming languages.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-mail release=cvs
+
+
+ Mail software.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-math release=cvs
+
+
+ Numerical computation software.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-mbone release=cvs
+
+
+ MBone applications.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-misc release=cvs
+
+
+ Miscellaneous utilities.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-net release=cvs
+
+
+ Networking software.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-news release=cvs
+
+
+ USENET news software.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-plan9 release=cvs
+
+
+ Various programs from Plan9.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-print release=cvs
+
+
+ Printing software.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-russian release=cvs
+
+
+ Russian language support.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-security release=cvs
+
+
+ Security utilities.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-shells release=cvs
+
+
+ Command line shells.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-sysutils release=cvs
+
+
+ System utilities.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-textproc release=cvs
+
+
+ text processing utilities (does not include desktop publishing).
+
+
+
+
+ ports-vietnamese release=cvs
+
+
+ Vietnamese language support.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-www release=cvs
+
+
+ Software related to the World Wide Web.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-x11 release=cvs
+
+
+ X11 software.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ src-all release=cvs
+
+
+ The main FreeBSD sources, excluding the export-restricted cryptography
+ code.
+
+
+
+ src-base release=cvs
+
+ Miscellaneous files at the top of /usr/src.
+
+
+
+
+ src-bin release=cvs
+
+
+ User utilities that may be needed in single-user mode
+ (/usr/src/bin).
+
+
+
+
+ src-contrib release=cvs
+
+
+ Utilities and libraries from outside the FreeBSD project, used
+ relatively unmodified (/usr/src/contrib).
+
+
+
+
+ src-etc release=cvs
+
+
+ System configuration files (/usr/src/etc).
+
+
+
+
+ src-games release=cvs
+
+
+ Games (/usr/src/games).
+
+
+
+
+ src-gnu release=cvs
+
+
+ Utilities covered by the GNU Public License (/usr/src/gnu).
+
+
+
+
+ src-include release=cvs
+
+
+ Header files (/usr/src/include).
+
+
+
+
+ src-kerberosIV release=cvs
+
+
+ KerberosIV security package (/usr/src/kerberosIV).
+
+
+
+
+ src-lib release=cvs
+
+
+ Libraries (/usr/src/lib).
+
+
+
+
+ src-libexec release=cvs
+
+
+ System programs normally executed by other programs
+ (/usr/src/libexec).
+
+
+
+
+ src-release release=cvs
+
+
+ Files required to produce a FreeBSD release (/usr/src/release).
+
+
+
+
+ src-sbin release=cvs
+
+
+ System utilities for single-user mode (/usr/src/sbin).
+
+
+
+
+ src-share release=cvs
+
+
+ Files that can be shared across multiple systems (/usr/src/share).
+
+
+
+
+ src-sys release=cvs
+
+
+ The kernel (/usr/src/sys).
+
+
+
+
+ src-tools release=cvs
+
+
+ Various tools for the maintenance of FreeBSD (/usr/src/tools).
+
+
+
+
+ src-usrbin release=cvs
+
+
+ User utilities (/usr/src/usr.bin).
+
+
+
+
+ src-usrsbin release=cvs
+
+
+ System utilities (/usr/src/usr.sbin).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ www release=cvs
+
+
+ The sources for the World Wide Web data.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvs-crypto release=cvs
+
+
+ The export-restricted cryptography code.
+
+
+
+ src-crypto release=cvs
+
+ Export-restricted utilities and libraries from outside the FreeBSD
+ project, used relatively unmodified (/usr/src/crypto).
+
+
+
+
+ src-eBones release=cvs
+
+
+ Kerberos and DES (/usr/src/eBones).
+
+
+
+
+ src-secure release=cvs
+
+
+ DES (/usr/src/secure).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ distrib release=self
+
+
+ The CVSup server's own configuration files. Used by CVSup mirror sites.
+
+
+
+
+ gnats release=current
+
+
+ The GNATS bug-tracking database.
+
+
+
+
+ mail-archive release=current
+
+
+ FreeBSD mailing list archive.
+
+
+
+
+ www release=current
+
+
+ The installed World Wide Web data. Used by WWW mirror sites.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Announcements, Questions, and Bug Reports
+
+ Most FreeBSD-related discussion of CVSup takes place on the
+ &a.hackers;. New versions of the software are announced there, as
+ well as on the &a.announce;.
+
+ Questions and bug reports should be addressed to the author of the
+ program at cvsup-bugs@polstra.com.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Using make world to rebuild your system
+
+ Contributed by &a.nik;.
+
+ Once you have synchronised your local source tree against a particular
+ version of FreeBSD (stable, current and so on) you
+ must then use the source tree to rebuild the system.
+
+ Currently, the best source of information on how to do that is a
+ tutorial available from http://www.nothing-going-on.demon.co.uk/FreeBSD/make-world/make-world.html.
+
+ A successor to this tutorial will be integrated into the handbook.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Contributing to FreeBSD
+
+ Contributed by &a.jkh;.
+
+ So you want to contribute something to FreeBSD? That is great!
+ We can always use the help, and FreeBSD is one of those systems
+ that relies on the contributions of its user base in order
+ to survive. Your contributions are not only appreciated, they are
+ vital to FreeBSD's continued growth!
+
+ Contrary to what some people might also have you believe, you do not
+ need to be a hot-shot programmer or a close personal friend of the
+ FreeBSD core team in order to have your contributions accepted. The
+ FreeBSD Project's development is done by a large and growing number of
+ international contributors whose ages and areas of technical expertise
+ vary greatly, and there is always more work to be done than there are
+ people available to do it.
+
+ Since the FreeBSD project is responsible for an entire operating
+ system environment (and its installation) rather than just a kernel or
+ a few scattered utilities, our "TODO" list also spans a very wide
+ range of tasks, from documentation, beta testing and presentation to
+ highly specialized types of kernel development. No matter what your
+ skill level, there is almost certainly something you can do to help the
+ project!
+
+ Commercial entities engaged in FreeBSD-related enterprises are
+ also encouraged to contact us. Need a special extension to make your
+ product work? You will find us receptive to your requests, given that
+ they are not too outlandish. Working on a value-added product? Please
+ let us know! We may be able to work cooperatively on some aspect of
+ it. The free software world is challenging a lot of existing
+ assumptions about how software is developed, sold, and maintained
+ throughout its life cycle, and we urge you to at least give it a
+ second look.
+
+
+
+ What Is Needed
+
+ The following list of tasks and sub-projects represents something
+ of an amalgam of the various core team TODO lists and user requests
+ we have collected over the last couple of months. Where possible, tasks
+ have been ranked by degree of urgency. If you are interested in
+ working on one of the tasks you see here, send mail to the coordinator
+ listed by clicking on their names. If no coordinator has been
+ appointed, maybe you would like to volunteer?
+
+
+
+ High priority tasks
+
+ The following tasks are considered to be urgent, usually because
+ they represent something that is badly broken or sorely needed:
+
+
+
+ 3-stage boot issues. Overall coordination:
+ &a.hackers;
+
+
+
+
+
+ Autodetect memory over 64MB properly.
+
+
+
+ Move userconfig (-c) into 3rd stage boot.
+
+
+
+ Do WinNT compatible drive tagging so that the 3rd stage can
+ provide an accurate mapping of BIOS geometries for disks.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Filesystem problems. Overall coordination:
+ &a.fs;
+
+
+
+ Fix the MSDOS file system.
+
+
+
+ Clean up and document the nullfs filesystem code. Coordinator: &a.gibbs;
+
+
+
+ Fix the union file system. Coordinator: &a.dyson;
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Implement kernel and user vm86 support. Coordinator: &a.hackers;
+
+
+
+ Implement Int13 vm86 disk driver. Coordinator: &a.hackers;
+
+
+
+ SCSI driver issues. Overall coordination: &a.hackers;
+
+
+
+
+
+ Support tagged queuing generically. Requires a rewrite of how we do
+ our command queuing, but we need this anyway to for prioritized I/O
+ (CD-R writers/scanners).
+
+
+
+ Better error handling (Busy status and retries).
+
+
+
+ Merged Scatter-Gather list creation code.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Kernel issues. Overall coordination:
+ &a.hackers;
+
+
+
+
+
+ Complete the eisaconf conversion of all existing drivers.
+
+
+
+ Change all interrupt routines to take a (void *) instead of
+ using unit numbers.
+
+
+
+ Merge EISA/PCI/ISA interrupt registration code.
+
+
+
+ Split PCI/EISA/ISA probes out from drivers like bt742a.c (WIP)
+
+
+
+ Fix the syscons ALT-Fn/vt switching hangs. Coordinator: &a.sos;
+
+
+
+ Rewrite the Intel Etherexpress 16 driver.
+
+
+
+ Merge the 3c509 and 3c590 drivers (essentially provide a PCI probe for
+ ep.c).
+
+
+
+ Support Adaptec 3985 (first as a simple 3 channel SCSI card)
+ Coordinator: &a.gibbs;
+
+
+
+ Support Advansys SCSI controller products. Coordinator: &a.gibbs;
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Medium priority tasks
+
+ The following tasks need to be done, but not with any particular
+ urgency:
+
+
+
+ Port AFS (Andrew File System) to FreeBSD Coordinator: Alexander Seth Jones
+
+
+
+
+ MCA support? This should be finalized one way or the other.
+
+
+
+ Full LKM based driver support/Configuration Manager.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Devise a way to do all LKM registration without ld. This means
+ some kind of symbol table in the kernel.
+
+
+
+ Write a configuration manager (in the 3rd stage boot?) that probes
+ your hardware in a sane manner, keeps only the LKMs required for
+ your hardware, etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ PCMCIA/PCCARD. Coordinators: &a.nate; and &a.phk;
+
+
+
+ Documentation!
+
+
+
+ Reliable operation of the pcic driver (needs testing).
+
+
+
+ Recognizer and handler for sio.c (mostly done).
+
+
+
+ Recognizer and handler for ed.c (mostly done).
+
+
+
+ Recognizer and handler for ep.c (mostly done).
+
+
+
+ User-mode recognizer and handler (partially done).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Advanced Power Management. Coordinators: &a.nate; and &a.phk;
+
+
+
+ APM sub-driver (mostly done).
+
+
+
+ IDE/ATA disk sub-driver (partially done).
+
+
+
+ syscons/pcvt sub-driver.
+
+
+
+ Integration with the PCMCIA/PCCARD drivers (suspend/resume).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Low priority tasks
+
+ The following tasks are purely cosmetic or represent such an
+ investment of work that it is not likely that anyone will get them done
+ anytime soon:
+
+ The first 20 items are from Terry Lambert <terry@lambert.org>
+
+
+
+ Ability to make BIOS calls from protected mode using V86 mode
+ on the processor and return the results via a mapped interrupt
+ IPC mechanism to the protected mode caller.
+
+
+
+
+ Drivers built into the kernel that use the BIOS call mechanism
+ to allow them to be independent of the actual underlying hardware
+ the same way that DOS is independent of the underlying hardware.
+ This includes NetWork and ASPI drivers loaded in DOS prior to
+ BSD being loaded by a DOS-based loader program, which means
+ potential polling, which means DOS-not-busy interrupt generation
+ for V86 machines by the protected mode kernel.
+
+
+
+
+ An image format that allows tagging of such drivers data and
+ text areas in the default kernel executable so that that portion
+ of the kernel address space may be recovered at a later time,
+ after hardware specific protected mode drivers have been loaded
+ and activated. This includes separation of BIOS based drivers
+ from each other, since it is better to run with a BIOS based
+ driver in all cases than to not run at all.
+
+
+
+
+ Abstraction of the bus interface mechanism. Currently, PCMCIA,
+ EISA, and PCI busses are assumed to be bridged from ISA. This
+ is not something which should be assumed.
+
+
+
+
+ A configuration manager that knows about PNP events, including
+ power management events, insertion, extraction, and bus (PNP ISA
+ and PCMCIA bridging chips) vs. card level event management.
+
+
+
+
+ A topological sort mechanism for assigning reassignable addresses
+ that do not collide with other reassignable and non-reassignable
+ device space resource usage by fixed devices.
+
+
+
+
+ A registration based mechanism for hardware services registration.
+ Specifically, a device centric registration mechanism for timer
+ and sound and other system critical service providers. Consider
+ Timer2 and Timer0 and speaker services as one example of a single
+ monolithic service provider.
+
+
+
+
+ A kernel exported symbol space in the kernel data space accessible
+ by an LKM loader mechanism that does relocation and symbol space
+ manipulation. The intent of this interface is to support the
+ ability to demand load and unload kernel modules.
+
+
+
+
+ NetWare Server (protected mode ODI driver) loader and subservices
+ to allow the use of ODI card drivers supplied with network cards.
+ The same thing for NDIS drivers and NetWare SCSI drivers.
+
+
+
+
+ An "upgrade system" option that works on Linux boxes instead
+ of just previous rev FreeBSD boxes.
+
+
+
+
+ Splitting of the console driver into abstraction layers, both to
+ make it easier to port and to kill the X and ThinkPad and PS/2
+ mouse and LED and console switching and bouncing NumLock problems
+ once and for all.
+
+
+
+
+ Other kernel emulation environments for other foreign drivers
+ as opportunity permits. SCO and Solaris are good candidates,
+ followed by UnixWare, etc.
+
+
+
+
+ Processor emulation environments for execution of foreign binaries.
+ This is easier than it sounds if the system call interface does not
+ change much.
+
+
+
+
+ Streams to allow the use of commercial streams drivers.
+
+
+
+
+ Kernel multithreading (requires kernel preemption).
+
+
+
+
+ Symmetric Multiprocessing with kernel preemption (requires kernel
+ preemption).
+
+
+
+
+ A concerted effort at support for portable computers. This is
+ somewhat handled by changing PCMCIA bridging rules and power
+ management event handling. But there are things like detecting
+ internal vs. external display and picking a different screen
+ resolution based on that fact, not spinning down the disk if
+ the machine is in dock, and allowing dock-based cards to disappear
+ without affecting the machines ability to boot (same issue for
+ PCMCIA).
+
+
+
+
+ Reorganization of the source tree for multiple platform ports.
+
+
+
+
+ A "make world" that "makes the world" (rename the current one
+ to "make regress" if that is all it is good for).
+
+
+
+
+ A 4M (preferably smaller!) memory footprint.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Smaller tasks
+
+ Most of the tasks listed in the previous sections require either a
+ considerable investment of time or an in-depth knowledge of the FreeBSD
+ kernel (or both). However, there are also many useful tasks which are
+ suitable for "weekend hackers", or people without programming
+ skills.
+
+
+
+
+
+ If you run FreeBSD-current and have a good Internet connection,
+ there is a machine current.freebsd.org which builds a full release
+ once a day - every now and again, try and install the latest release
+ from it and report any failures in the process.
+
+
+
+
+ Read the freebsd-bugs mailing list. There might be a problem
+ you can comment constructively on or with patches you can test. Or
+ you could even try to fix one of the problems yourself.
+
+
+
+
+ Read through the FAQ and Handbook periodically. If anything is
+ badly explained, out of date or even just completely wrong, let us
+ know. Even better, send us a fix (SGML is not difficult to learn, but
+ there is no objection to ASCII submissions).
+
+
+
+
+ Help translate FreeBSD documentation into your native language (if
+ not already available) - just send an email to &a.doc; asking if anyone is
+ working on it. Note that you are not committing yourself to translating
+ every single FreeBSD document by doing this - in fact, the documentation
+ most in need of translation is the installation instructions.
+
+
+
+
+ Read the freebsd-questions mailing list and the newsgroup
+ comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.misc occasionally (or even regularly). It can
+ be very satisfying to share your expertise and help people solve their
+ problems; sometimes you may even learn something new yourself! These
+ forums can also be a source of ideas for things to work on.
+
+
+
+
+ If you know of any bugfixes which have been successfully applied
+ to -current but have not been merged into -stable after a decent
+ interval (normally a couple of weeks), send the committer a polite
+ reminder.
+
+
+
+
+ Move contributed software to src/contrib in the source tree.
+
+
+
+
+ Make sure code in src/contrib is up to date.
+
+
+
+
+ Look for year 2000 bugs (and fix any you find!)
+
+
+
+
+ Build the source tree (or just part of it) with extra warnings
+ enabled and clean up the warnings.
+
+
+
+
+ Fix warnings for ports which do deprecated things like using
+ gets() or including malloc.h.
+
+
+
+
+ If you have contributed any ports, send your patches back to the
+ original author (this will make your life easier when they bring out
+ the next version)
+
+
+
+
+ Suggest further tasks for this list!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ How to Contribute
+
+ Contributions to the system generally fall into one or more of
+ the following 6 categories:
+
+
+
+ Bug reports and general commentary
+
+
+ An idea or suggestion of general technical interest
+ should be mailed to the &a.hackers;. Likewise, people with an
+ interest in such things (and a tolerance for a high
+ volume of mail!) may subscribe to the hackers mailing list by
+ sending mail to &a.majordomo;. See
+
+ for more information about this and other mailing lists.
+
+ If you find a bug or are submitting a specific change, please report
+ it using the send-pr(1) program or its
+ WEB-based equivalent.
+ Try to fill-in each field of the bug report. Unless they exceed
+ 65KB, include any patches directly in the report. Consider compressing
+ them and using uuencode(1) if they exceed 20KB.
+
+ After filing a report, you should receive confirmation along with
+ a tracking number. Keep this tracking number so that you can
+ update us with details about the problem by sending mail to
+ bug-followup@FreeBSD.ORG. Use the number as the
+ message subject, e.g. "Re: kern/3377". Additional
+ information for any bug report should be submitted this way.
+
+ If you do not receive confirmation in a timely fashion (3 days to
+ a week, depending on your email connection) or are, for some
+ reason, unable to use the send-pr(1) command,
+ then you may ask someone to file it for you by sending mail
+ to the &a.bugs;.
+
+
+
+
+ Changes to the documentation
+
+ Changes to the documentation are overseen by the &a.doc;.
+ Send submissions and changes (even small ones are welcome!)
+ using send-pr as described in
+ .
+
+
+
+
+ Changes to existing source code
+
+ An addition or change to the existing source code is a somewhat trickier
+ affair and depends a lot on how far out of date you are with the current
+ state of the core FreeBSD development. There is a special on-going release
+ of FreeBSD known as ``FreeBSD-current'' which is made available in
+ a variety of ways for the convenience of developers working
+ actively on the system. See for more information about getting and using
+ FreeBSD-current.
+
+ Working from older sources unfortunately means that your changes may
+ sometimes be too obsolete or too divergent for easy re-integration into
+ FreeBSD. Chances of this can be minimized somewhat by subscribing to the
+ &a.announce; and the &a.current; lists, where discussions
+ on the current state of the system take place.
+
+ Assuming that you can manage to secure fairly up-to-date sources to base
+ your changes on, the next step is to produce a set of diffs to send to the
+ FreeBSD maintainers. This is done with the diff(1) command,
+ with the `context diff' form being preferred. For example:
+
+ diff -c oldfile newfile
+
+
+ or
+
+ diff -c -r olddir newdir
+
+
+ would generate such a set of context diffs for the given source file
+ or directory hierarchy. See the man page for diff(1) for more
+ details.
+
+ Once you have a set of diffs (which you may test with the
+ patch(1) command), you should submit them for inclusion
+ with FreeBSD. Use the send-pr(1) program as described in
+ .
+ Do not just send the diffs to the &a.hackers; or they will get
+ lost! We greatly appreciate your submission (this is a volunteer
+ project!); because we are busy, we may not be able to address it
+ immediately, but it will remain in the pr database until we do.
+
+ If you feel it appropriate (e.g. you have added, deleted, or
+ renamed files), bundle your changes into a tar file
+ and run the uuencode(1) program on it. Shar archives are
+ also welcome.
+
+ If your change is of a potentially sensitive nature, e.g.
+ you are unsure of copyright issues governing its further distribution
+ or you are simply not ready to release it without a tighter review first,
+ then you should send it to &a.core; directly rather than submitting
+ it with send-pr(1). The core mailing list
+ reaches a much smaller group of people who do much of the
+ day-to-day work on FreeBSD. Note that this group is also
+ very busy and so you should only send mail to them
+ where it is truly necessary.
+
+ Please refer to man 9 intro and man 9 style
+ for some information on coding style. We would appreciate
+ it if you were at least aware of this information before
+ submitting code.
+
+
+
+
+ New code or major value-added packages
+
+ In the rare case of a significant contribution of a large body
+ work, or the addition of an important new feature to FreeBSD,
+ it becomes almost always necessary to either send changes as
+ uuencode'd tar files or upload them to our ftp site ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/incoming.
+
+ When working with large amounts of code, the touchy subject of
+ copyrights also invariably comes up. Acceptable copyrights
+ for code included in FreeBSD are:
+
+
+
+
+
+ The BSD copyright. This copyright is most preferred
+ due to its ``no strings attached'' nature and general
+ attractiveness to commercial enterprises. Far from
+ discouraging such commercial use, the FreeBSD Project
+ actively encourages such participation by commercial interests
+ who might eventually be inclined to invest something of their own
+ into FreeBSD.
+
+
+
+
+ The GNU Public License, or ``GPL''. This license is not quite
+ as popular with us due to the amount of extra effort demanded
+ of anyone using the code for commercial purposes, but given
+ the sheer quantity of GPL'd code we currently require (compiler,
+ assembler, text formatter, etc) it would be silly to refuse
+ additional contributions under this license. Code under the GPL
+ also goes into a different part of the tree, that being
+ /sys/gnu or /usr/src/gnu, and is therefore
+ easily identifiable to anyone for whom the GPL presents a problem.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Contributions coming under any other type of copyright must be
+ carefully reviewed before their inclusion into FreeBSD will
+ be considered. Contributions for which particularly restrictive
+ commercial copyrights apply are generally rejected, though the
+ authors are always encouraged to make such changes available
+ through their own channels.
+
+ To place a ``BSD-style'' copyright on your work, include the following
+ text at the very beginning of every source code file you wish
+ to protect, replacing the text between the `%%' with
+ the appropriate information.
+
+ Copyright (c) %%proper_years_here%%
+ %%your_name_here%%, %%your_state%% %%your_zip%%. All rights reserved.
+
+ Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
+ modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
+ are met:
+ 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
+ notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer as
+ the first lines of this file unmodified.
+ 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
+ notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
+ documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
+
+ THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY %%your_name_here%% ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR
+ IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES
+ OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED.
+ IN NO EVENT SHALL %%your_name_here%% BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT,
+ INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT
+ NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
+ DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
+ THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
+ (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF
+ THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
+
+ $Id$
+
+
+ For your convenience, a copy of this text can be found in
+ /usr/share/examples/etc/bsd-style-copyright.
+
+
+
+
+ Porting an existing piece of free software
+
+ Contributed by &a.jkh;, &a.gpalmer;, &a.asami; and
+ &a.obrien;.28 August 1996.
+
+ The porting of freely available software, while perhaps not as
+ gratifying as developing your own from scratch, is still a vital part
+ of FreeBSD's growth and of great usefulness to those who would not
+ otherwise know where to turn for it. All ported software is organized
+ into a carefully organized hierarchy known as ``the ports collection''.
+ The collection enables a new user to get a quick and complete overview
+ of what is available for FreeBSD in an easy-to-compile form. It also
+ saves considerable space by not actually containing the majority
+ of the sources being ported, but merely those differences required for
+ running under FreeBSD.
+
+ What follows are some guidelines for creating a new port for
+ FreeBSD 3.x. The bulk of the work is done by
+ /usr/share/mk/bsd.port.mk, which all port Makefiles include.
+ Please refer to that file for more details on the inner workings of
+ the ports collection. Even if you don't hack Makefiles daily, it is
+ well commented, and you will still gain much knowledge from it.
+
+
+
+ Before Starting the Port
+
+ Note: Only a fraction of the overridable variables
+ (${..}) are mentioned in this document. Most
+ (if not all) are documented at the start of
+ bsd.port.mk. This file uses a non-standard tab
+ setting. Emacs and Vim should recognize the setting
+ on loading the file. vi or ex can be set to
+ using the correct value by typing `:set tabstop=4'
+ once the file has been loaded.
+
+ You may come across code that needs modifications or
+ conditional compilation based upon what version of UNIX it is
+ running under. If you need to make such changes to the code
+ for conditional compilation, make sure you make the changes as
+ general as possible so that we can back-port code to FreeBSD
+ 1.x systems and cross-port to other BSD systems such as 4.4BSD
+ from CSRG, BSD/386, 386BSD, NetBSD, and OpenBSD.
+
+ The preferred way to tell 4.3BSD/Reno (1990) and newer versions of
+ the BSD code apart is by using the `BSD' macro
+ defined in <sys/param.h>. Hopefully that file
+ is already included; if not, add the code:
+
+
+
+ #ifdef (defined(__unix__) || defined(unix)) && !defined(USG)
+ #include <sys/param.h>
+ #endif
+
+
+
+ to the proper place in the .c file. We believe that every
+ system that defines these to symbols has sys/param.h. If you find
+ a system that doesn't, we would like to know. Please send
+ mail to &a.ports;.
+
+ Another way is to use the GNU Autoconf style of doing this:
+
+
+
+ #ifdef HAVE_SYS_PARAM_H
+ #include <sys/param.h>
+ #endif
+
+
+
+ Don't forget to add -DHAVE_SYS_PARAM_H to the CFLAGS
+ in the Makefile for this method.
+
+ Once you have <sys/param.h> included, you may use:
+
+
+
+ #if (defined(BSD) && (BSD >= 199103))
+
+
+
+ to detect if the code is being compiled on a 4.3 Net2 code
+ base or newer (e.g. FreeBSD 1.x, 4.3/Reno, NetBSD 0.9, 386BSD,
+ BSD/386 1.1 and below).
+
+ Use:
+
+
+
+ #if (defined(BSD) && (BSD >= 199306))
+
+
+
+ to detect if the code is being compiled on a 4.4 code base or
+ newer (e.g. FreeBSD 2.x, 4.4, NetBSD 1.0, BSD/386 2.0 or
+ above).
+
+ The value of the BSD macro is 199506 for the 4.4BSD-Lite2 code
+ base. This is stated for informational purposes only. It should
+ not be used to distinguish between version of FreeBSD based only
+ on 4.4-Lite vs. versions that have merged in changes from 4.4-Lite2.
+ The __FreeBSD__ macro should be used instead.
+
+ Use sparingly:
+
+
+
+
+
+ __FreeBSD__ is defined in all versions of
+ FreeBSD. Use it if the change you are making ONLY affects
+ FreeBSD. Porting gotchas like the use of
+ sys_errlist[] vs strerror() are
+ Berkeleyisms, not FreeBSD changes.
+
+
+
+
+ In FreeBSD 2.x, __FreeBSD__ is defined to be
+ 2. In earlier versions, it is 1. Later
+ versions will bump it to match their major version number.
+
+
+
+
+ If you need to tell the difference between a FreeBSD 1.x
+ system and a FreeBSD 2.x or 3.x system, usually the right answer is
+ to use the BSD macros described above. If there
+ actually is a FreeBSD specific change (such as special
+ shared library options when using `ld') then it is
+ OK to use __FreeBSD__ and `#if __FreeBSD__ >
+ 1' to detect a FreeBSD 2.x and later system.
+
+ If you need more granularity in detecting FreeBSD systems since
+ 2.0-RELEASE you can use the following:
+
+
+ #if __FreeBSD__ >= 2
+ #include <osreldate.h>
+ # if __FreeBSD_version >= 199504
+ /* 2.0.5+ release specific code here */
+ # endif
+ #endif
+
+
+ __FreeBSD_version values:
+
+ 2.0-RELEASE: 199411
+ 2.1-current's: 199501, 199503
+ 2.0.5-RELEASE: 199504
+ 2.2-current before 2.1: 199508
+ 2.1.0-RELEASE: 199511
+ 2.2-current before 2.1.5: 199512
+ 2.1.5-RELEASE: 199607
+ 2.2-current before 2.1.6: 199608
+ 2.1.6-RELEASE: 199612
+ 2.1.7-RELEASE: 199612
+ 2.2-RELEASE: 220000
+ 2.2.1-RELEASE: 220000 (yes, no change)
+ 2.2-STABLE after 2.2.1-RELEASE: 220000 (yes, still no change)
+ 2.2-STABLE after texinfo-3.9: 221001
+ 2.2-STABLE after top: 221002
+ 2.2.2-RELEASE: 222000
+ 2.2-STABLE after 2.2.2-RELEASE: 222001
+ 2.2.5-RELEASE: 225000
+ 2.2-STABLE after 2.2.5-RELEASE: 225001
+ 2.2-STABLE after ldconfig -R merge: 225002
+ 2.2.6-RELEASE: 226000
+ 2.2-STABLE after 2.2.6-RELEASE: 226001
+ 3.0-current before mount(2) change: 300000
+ 3.0-current as of Nov 1997: 300001
+
+
+ (Note that 2.2-STABLE sometimes identifies itself as
+ "2.2.5-STABLE" after the 2.2.5-RELEASE.)
+ The pattern used to be year followed by the month, but we
+ decided to change it to a more straightforward major/minor
+ system starting from 2.2. This is because the parallel
+ development on several branches made it infeasible to
+ classify the releases simply by their real release dates.
+ (Note that if you are making a port now, you don't have to
+ worry about old -current's; they are listed here just for
+ your reference.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ In the hundreds of ports that have been done, there have
+ only been one or two cases where __FreeBSD__
+ should have been used. Just because an earlier port
+ screwed up and used it in the wrong place does not mean
+ you should do so too.
+
+
+
+
+ Quick Porting
+
+ This section tells you how to do a quick port. In many
+ cases, it is not enough, but we will see.
+
+ First, get the original tarball and put it into
+ ${DISTDIR}, which defaults to
+ /usr/ports/distfiles.
+
+ Note: The following assumes that the software compiled
+ out-of-the-box, i.e., there was absolutely no change required
+ for the port to work on your FreeBSD box. If you needed to
+ change something, you will have to refer to the next section
+ too.
+
+
+
+ Writing the Makefile
+
+ The minimal Makefile would look something like this:
+
+
+
+ # New ports collection makefile for: oneko
+ # Version required: 1.1b
+ # Date created: 5 December 1994
+ # Whom: asami
+ #
+ # $Id$
+ #
+
+ DISTNAME= oneko-1.1b
+ CATEGORIES= games
+ MASTER_SITES= ftp://ftp.cs.columbia.edu/archives/X11R5/contrib/
+
+ MAINTAINER= asami@FreeBSD.ORG
+
+ USE_IMAKE= yes
+
+ .include <bsd.port.mk>
+
+
+
+ See if you can figure it out. Do not worry about the contents
+ of the $Id$ line, it will be filled in
+ automatically by CVS when the port is imported to our main
+ ports tree. You can find a more detailed example in the section.
+
+
+
+
+ Writing the description files
+
+ There are three required description files that are
+ required for any port, whether they actually package or not.
+ They are COMMENT, DESCR, and
+ PLIST, and reside in the pkg subdirectory.
+
+
+
+ COMMENT
+
+ This is the one-line description of the port. PLEASE
+ do not include the package name (or version number of the
+ software) in the comment.
+ Here is an example:
+
+ A cat chasing a mouse all over the screen.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ DESCR
+
+ This is a longer description of the port. One to a few
+ paragraphs concisely explaining what the port does is
+ sufficient. Note: This is not a manual nor an
+ in-depth description on how to use or compile the port.
+ In particular, please do not just copy the README
+ file here, unless, of course, it is a concise description
+ of the port.
+
+ It is recommended that you sign the name at the end of
+ this file, as in:
+
+
+
+ This is a port of oneko, in which a cat chases a poor mouse all over
+ the screen.
+ :
+ (etc.)
+
+ - Satoshi
+ asami@cs.berkeley.edu
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ PLIST
+
+ This file lists all the files installed by the port. It
+ is also called the `packing list' because the package is
+ generated by packing the files listed here. The pathnames
+ are relative to the installation prefix (usually
+ /usr/local or /usr/X11R6). Also it is assumed
+ the manpages will be compressed.
+
+ Here is a small example:
+
+
+
+ bin/oneko
+ man/man1/oneko.1.gz
+ lib/X11/app-defaults/Oneko
+ lib/X11/oneko/cat1.xpm
+ lib/X11/oneko/cat2.xpm
+ lib/X11/oneko/mouse.xpm
+
+
+
+ Refer to the pkg_create(1) man page for details
+ on the packing list.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Creating the checksum file
+
+ Just type `make makesum'. The ports make rules
+ will automatically generate the file files/md5.
+
+
+
+
+ Testing the port
+
+ You should make sure that the port rules do exactly what
+ you want it to do, including packaging up the port. Try
+ doing `make install', `make package' and
+ then `make deinstall' and see if all
+ the files and directories are correctly deleted. Then do a
+ `pkg_add `make package-name`.tgz' and see if everything
+ re-appears and works correctly. Then do another
+ `make deinstall' and then `make
+ reinstall; make package' to make sure you haven't
+ included in the packing list any files that are not
+ installed by your port.
+
+
+
+
+ Submitting the port
+
+ Now that you are happy with your port, the only thing
+ remaining is to put it in the main FreeBSD ports tree and
+ make everybody else happy about it too. To accomplish this,
+ pack the necessary files (everything described in this
+ section -- in particular do not include the
+ original source tarball, the `work' subdirectory or
+ the package) into a .tar.gz file, stick it in the
+ directory
+
+ ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/incoming/
+
+
+ and send mail to us using send-pr(1) (please
+ classify it as category `ports' and class `change-request').
+ There is no need to upload the package, we will build it by
+ ourselves.
+ We will take a look, get back to you if necessary, and put
+ it in the tree. Your name will also appear in the list of
+ `Additional FreeBSD contributors' on the FreeBSD Handbook
+ and other files. Isn't that great?!? :)
+
+
+
+
+
+ Slow Porting
+
+ Ok, so it was not that simple, and the port required some
+ modifications to get it to work. In this section, we will
+ explain, step by step, how to modify it to get it to work with
+ the ports paradigm.
+
+
+
+ How things work
+
+ First, this is the sequence of events which occurs when the
+ user first types `make' in your port's directory,
+ and you may find that having bsd.port.mk in another
+ window while you read this really helps to understand it.
+
+ But do not worry if you do not really understand what
+ bsd.port.mk is doing, not many people
+ do... :>
+
+
+
+
+
+ The fetch target is run. The fetch target is
+ responsible for making sure that the tarball exists
+ locally in ${DISTDIR}. If fetch cannot
+ find the required files in ${DISTDIR} it
+ will look up the URL ${MASTER_SITES},
+ which is set in the Makefile, as well as our main ftp
+ site at ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/distfiles/,
+ where we put sanctioned distfiles as backup. It will then
+ attempt to
+ fetch the named distribution file with
+ ${FETCH}, assuming that the requesting
+ site has direct access to the Internet. If that succeeds,
+ it will save the file in ${DISTDIR} for
+ future use and proceed.
+
+
+
+
+ The extract target is run. It looks for your ports'
+ distribution file in ${DISTDIR} (typically
+ a gzip'd tarball) and unpacks it into a temporary
+ subdirectory specified by ${WRKDIR}
+ (defaults to work).
+
+
+
+
+ The patch target is run. First, any patches defined
+ in ${PATCHFILES} are applied. Second, if
+ any patches are found in ${PATCHDIR}
+ (defaults to the patches subdirectory), they are
+ applied at this time in alphabetical order.
+
+
+
+
+ The configure target is run. This can do any one of
+ many different things.
+
+
+
+
+ If it exists, scripts/configure is run.
+
+
+
+
+ If ${HAS_CONFIGURE} or
+ ${GNU_CONFIGURE} is set,
+ ${WRKSRC}/configure is run.
+
+
+
+
+ If ${USE_IMAKE} is set,
+ ${XMKMF} (default: `xmkmf
+ -a') is run.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The build target is run. This is responsible for
+ descending into the ports' private working directory
+ (${WRKSRC}) and building it. If
+ ${USE_GMAKE} is set, GNU make
+ will be used, otherwise the system make will be
+ used.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The above are the default actions. In addition, you can
+ define targets `pre-<something>' or
+ `post-<something>', or put scripts with those
+ names, in the scripts subdirectory, and they will
+ be run before or after the default actions are done.
+
+ For example, if you have a post-extract target
+ defined in your Makefile, and a file pre-build in
+ the scripts subdirectory, the
+ post-extract target will be called after the
+ regular extraction actions, and the pre-build
+ script will be executed before the default build rules are
+ done. It is recommended that you use Makefile targets if
+ the actions are simple enough, because it will be easier for
+ someone to figure out what kind of non-default action the
+ port requires.
+
+ The default actions are done by the bsd.port.mk
+ targets `do-<something>'. For example, the
+ commands to extract a port are in the target
+ `do-extract'. If you are not happy with the
+ default target, you can fix it by redefining the
+ `do-<something>' target in your Makefile.
+
+ Note that the `main' targets (e.g., extract,
+ configure, etc.) do nothing more than make sure all
+ the stages up to that one is completed and call the real
+ targets or scripts, and they are not intended to be
+ changed. If you want to fix the extraction, fix
+ do-extract, but never ever touch extract!
+
+ Now that you understand what goes on when the user types
+ `make', let us go through the recommended steps to
+ create the perfect port.
+
+
+
+
+ Getting the original sources
+
+ Get the original sources (normally) as a compressed tarball
+ (<foo>.tar.gz or <foo>.tar.Z)
+ and copy it into ${DISTDIR}. Always use
+ mainstream sources when and where you can.
+
+ If you cannot find a ftp/http site that is well-connected
+ to the net, or can only find sites that have irritatingly
+ non-standard formats, we can `house' it ourselves by putting
+ it on
+
+ ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/distfiles/LOCAL_PORTS/
+
+
+ as the last resort. Please refer to this location as
+ ${MASTER_SITE_LOCAL}. Send mail to the &a.ports;if you are not sure what to do.
+
+ If your port requires some additional `patches' that are
+ available on the Internet, fetch them too and put them in
+ ${DISTDIR}. Do not worry if they come from
+ site other than where you got the main source tarball,
+ we have a way to handle these situations (see the
+ description of below).
+
+
+
+
+ Modifying the port
+
+ Unpack a copy of the tarball in a private directory and
+ make whatever changes are necessary to get the port to
+ compile properly under the current version of FreeBSD. Keep
+ careful track of everything you do, as you will be
+ automating the process shortly. Everything, including the
+ deletion, addition or modification of files should be doable
+ using an automated script or patch file when your port is
+ finished.
+
+ If your port requires significant user
+ interaction/customization to compile or install, you should
+ take a look at one of Larry Wall's classic Configure scripts
+ and perhaps do something similar yourself. The goal of the
+ new ports collection is to make each port as `plug-and-play'
+ as possible for the end-user while using a minimum of disk
+ space.
+
+ Note: Unless explicitly stated, patch files, scripts, and
+ other files you have created and contributed to the FreeBSD
+ ports collection are assumed to be covered by the standard
+ BSD copyright conditions.
+
+
+
+
+ Patching
+
+ In the preparation of the port, files that have been added
+ or changed can be picked up with a recursive diff for later
+ feeding to patch. Each set of patches you wish to apply
+ should be collected into a file named
+ `patch-<xx>' where <xx>
+ denotes the sequence in which the patches will be applied --
+ these are done in alphabetical order, thus
+ `aa' first, `ab' second and so on. These
+ files should be stored in ${PATCHDIR}, from
+ where they will be automatically applied. All patches
+ should be relative to ${WRKSRC} (generally
+ the directory your port's tarball unpacks itself into, that
+ being where the build is done). To make fixes and upgrades
+ easier you should avoid having more than one patch fix the
+ same file (e.g., patch-aa and patch-ab both changing
+ ${WRKSRC}/foobar.c).
+
+
+
+
+ Configuring
+
+ Include any additional customization commands to your
+ configure script and save it in the
+ `scripts' subdirectory. As mentioned above, you
+ can also do this as Makefile targets and/or scripts with the
+ name pre-configure or post-configure.
+
+
+
+
+ Handling user input
+
+ If your port requires user input to build, configure or
+ install, then set IS_INTERACTIVE in your Makefile.
+ This will allow `overnight builds' to skip your port if the
+ user sets the variable BATCH in his environment
+ (and if the user sets the variable INTERACTIVE,
+ then only those ports requiring interaction are
+ built).
+
+
+
+
+
+ Configuring the Makefile
+
+ Configuring the Makefile is pretty simple, and again we
+ suggest that you look at existing examples before starting.
+ Also, there is a in this handbook, so take a look and please follow
+ the ordering of variables and sections in that template to
+ make your port easier for others to read.
+
+ Now, consider the following problems in sequence as you
+ design your new Makefile:
+
+
+
+ The original source
+
+ Does it live in ${DISTDIR} as a standard
+ gzip'd tarball? If so, you can go on to the next step. If
+ not, you should look at overriding any of the
+ ${EXTRACT_CMD},
+ ${EXTRACT_BEFORE_ARGS},
+ ${EXTRACT_AFTER_ARGS},
+ ${EXTRACT_SUFX}, or
+ ${DISTFILES} variables, depending on how
+ alien a format your port's distribution file is. (The most
+ common case is `EXTRACT_SUFX=.tar.Z', when the
+ tarball is condensed by regular compress, not gzip.)
+
+ In the worst case, you can simply create your own
+ `do-extract' target to override the default, though
+ this should be rarely, if ever, necessary.
+
+
+
+
+ DISTNAME
+
+ You should set ${DISTNAME} to be the base
+ name of your port. The default rules expect the
+ distribution file list (${DISTFILES}) to be
+ named
+ ${DISTNAME}${EXTRACT_SUFX}
+ by default which, if it is a normal tarball, is going to be
+ something like:
+
+
+ foozolix-1.0.tar.gz
+
+
+ for a setting of `DISTNAME=foozolix-1.0'.
+
+ The default rules also expect the tarball(s) to extract into
+ a subdirectory called work/${DISTNAME}, e.g.
+
+
+ work/foozolix-1.0/
+
+
+
+ All this behavior can be overridden, of course, it simply
+ represents the most common time-saving defaults. For a port
+ requiring multiple distribution files, simply set
+ ${DISTFILES} explicitly. If only a subset
+ of ${DISTFILES} are actual extractable
+ archives, then set them up in
+ ${EXTRACT_ONLY}, which will override the
+ ${DISTFILES} list when it comes to
+ extraction, and the rest will be just left in
+ ${DISTDIR} for later use.
+
+
+
+
+ CATEGORIES
+
+ When a package is created, it is put under
+ /usr/ports/packages/All and links are made from one
+ or more subdirectories of /usr/ports/packages. The
+ names of these subdirectories are specified by the variable
+ ${CATEGORIES}. It is intended to make life
+ easier for the user when he is wading through the pile of
+ packages on the ftp site or the CD-ROM. Please take a look
+ at the existing categories (you can find them in the ports page) and pick the ones that are suitable for your port.
+ If your port truly belongs to something that is different
+ from all the existing ones, you can even create a new
+ category name.
+
+
+
+
+ MASTER_SITES
+
+ Record the directory part of the ftp/http-URL pointing at
+ the original tarball in ${MASTER_SITES}.
+ Do not forget the trailing slash (/)!
+
+ The make macros will try to use this specification for
+ grabbing the distribution file with ${FETCH}
+ if they cannot find it already on the system.
+
+ It is recommended that you put multiple sites on this list,
+ preferably from different continents. This will safeguard
+ against wide-area network problems, and we are even planning
+ to add support for automatically determining the closest
+ master site and fetching from there!
+
+ If the original tarball is part of one of the following
+ popular archives: X-contrib, GNU, Perl CPAN, TeX CTAN, or
+ Linux Sunsite, you refer to those sites in an easy compact
+ form using MASTER_SITE_XCONTRIB, MASTER_SITE_GNU,
+ MASTER_SITE_PERL_CPAN, MASTER_SITE_TEX_CTAN, and
+ MASTER_SITE_SUNSITE. Simply set MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR to the path
+ with in the archive. Here is an example:
+
+ MASTER_SITES= ${MASTER_SITE_XCONTRIB}
+ MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR= applications
+
+
+
+ The user can also set the MASTER_SITE_* variables in
+ /etc/make.conf to override our choices, and use their
+ favorite mirrors of these popular archives instead.
+
+
+
+
+ PATCHFILES
+
+ If your port requires some additional patches that are
+ available by ftp or http, set ${PATCHFILES}
+ to the names of the files and ${PATCH_SITES}
+ to the URL of the directory that contains them (the format
+ is the same as ${MASTER_SITES}).
+
+ If the patch is not relative to the top of the source tree
+ (i.e., ${WKRSRC}) because it contains some
+ extra pathnames, set ${PATCH_DIST_STRIP}
+ accordingly. For instance, if all the pathnames in the
+ patch has an extra `foozolix-1.0/' in front of the
+ filenames, then set `PATCH_DIST_STRIP=-p1'.
+
+ Do not worry if the patches are compressed, they will be
+ decompressed automatically if the filenames end with
+ `.gz' or `.Z'.
+
+ If the patch is distributed with some other files, such as
+ documentation, in a gzip'd tarball, you can't just use
+ ${PATCHFILES}. If that is the case, add the
+ name and the location of the patch tarball to
+ ${DISTFILES} and
+ ${MASTER_SITES}. Then, from the
+ pre-patch target, apply the patch either by running
+ the patch command from there, or copying the patch file into
+ the ${PATCHDIR} directory and calling it
+ patch-<xx>. (Note the tarball will have been
+ extracted alongside the regular source by then, so there is
+ no need to explicitly extract it if it is a regular gzip'd
+ or compress'd tarball.) If you do the latter, take extra
+ care not to overwrite something that already exists in that
+ directory. Also do not forget to add a command to remove
+ the copied patch in the pre-clean target.
+
+
+
+
+ MAINTAINER
+
+ Set your mail-address here. Please. :)
+
+ For detailed description of the responsibility of maintainers,
+ refer to section.
+
+
+
+
+ Dependencies
+
+ Many ports depend on other ports. There are five
+ variables that you can use to ensure that all the required
+ bits will be on the user's machine.
+
+
+
+ LIB_DEPENDS
+
+ This variable specifies the shared libraries this port
+ depends on. It is a list of `lib:dir' pairs
+ where lib is the name of the shared library, and
+ dir is the directory in which to find it in case
+ it is not available. For example,
+
+ LIB_DEPENDS= jpeg\\.6\\.:${PORTSDIR}/graphics/jpeg
+
+
+ will check for a shared jpeg library with major version 6,
+ and descend into the graphics/jpeg subdirectory
+ of your ports tree to build and install it if it is not
+ found.
+
+ Note that the lib part is just an argument given
+ to `ldconfig -r | grep', so periods should be
+ escaped by two backslashes like in the example above.
+
+ The dependency is checked from within the extract
+ target. Also, the name of the dependency is put in to the
+ package so that pkg_add will automatically
+ install it if it is not on the user's system.
+
+
+
+
+ RUN_DEPENDS
+
+ This variable specifies executables or files this port
+ depends on during run-time. It is a list of
+ `path:dir' pairs where path is the name
+ of the executable or file, and dir is the
+ directory in which to find it in case it is not
+ available. If path starts with a slash
+ (/), it is treated as a file and its existence is
+ tested with `test -e'; otherwise, it is assumed
+ to be an executable, and `which -s' is used to
+ determine if the program exists in the user's search path.
+
+ For example,
+
+ RUN_DEPENDS= ${PREFIX}/etc/innd:${PORTSDIR}/news/inn \
+ wish:${PORTSDIR}/x11/tk
+
+
+ will check if the file `/usr/local/etc/innd'
+ exists, and build and install it from the
+ news/inn subdirectory of the ports tree if it is
+ not found. It will also see if an executable called
+ `wish' is in your search path, and descend into
+ the x11/tk subdirectory of your ports tree to
+ build and install it if it is not found. (Note that in
+ this case, `innd' is actually an executable; if
+ an executable is in a place that is not expected to be in
+ a normal user's search path, you should use the full
+ pathname.)
+
+ The dependency is checked from within the install
+ target. Also, the name of the dependency is put in to the
+ package so that pkg_add will automatically
+ install it if it is not on the user's system.
+
+
+
+
+ BUILD_DEPENDS
+
+ This variable specifies executables or files this port
+ requires to build. Like RUN_DEPENDS, it is a
+ list of `path:dir' pairs. For example,
+
+ BUILD_DEPENDS= unzip:${PORTSDIR}/archivers/unzip
+
+
+ will check for an executable called `unzip', and
+ descend into the archivers/unzip subdirectory of
+ your ports tree to build and install it if it is not found.
+
+ Note that `build' here means everything from extracting to
+ compilation. The dependency is checked from within the
+ extract target.
+
+
+
+
+ FETCH_DEPENDS
+
+ This variable specifies executables or files this port
+ requires to fetch. Like the previous two, it is a list of
+ `path:dir' pairs. For example,
+
+ FETCH_DEPENDS= ncftp2:${PORTSDIR}/net/ncftp2
+
+
+ will check for an executable called `ncftp2', and
+ descend into the net/ncftp2 subdirectory of
+ your ports tree to build and install it if it is not found.
+
+ The dependency is checked from within the fetch
+ target.
+
+
+
+
+ DEPENDS
+
+ If there is a dependency that does not fall into either of
+ the above four categories, or your port requires to have
+ the source of the other port extracted (i.e., having them
+ installed is not enough), then use this variable. This is
+ just a list of directories, as there is nothing to check,
+ unlike the previous four.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Building mechanisms
+
+ If your package uses GNU make, set
+ `USE_GMAKE=yes'. If your package uses GNU
+ configure, set `GNU_CONFIGURE=yes'. If
+ you want to give some extra arguments to GNU
+ configure (other than the default
+ `--prefix=${PREFIX}'),
+ set those extra arguments in
+ ${CONFIGURE_ARGS}.
+
+ If your package is an X application that creates Makefiles
+ from Imakefiles using imake, then set
+ `USE_IMAKE=yes'. This will cause the configure
+ stage to automatically do an xmkmf -a. If the
+ `' flag is a problem for your port, set
+ `XMKMF=xmkmf'.
+
+ If your port's source Makefile has something else than
+ `all' as the main build target, set
+ ${ALL_TARGET} accordingly. Same goes for
+ `install' and ${INSTALL_TARGET}.
+
+
+
+
+ NO_INSTALL_MANPAGES
+
+ If the port uses imake but does not understand the
+ `install.man' target,
+ `NO_INSTALL_MANPAGES=yes' should be set. In
+ addition, the author of the original port should be
+ shot. :>
+
+
+
+
+
+ Ports that require Motif
+
+ There are many programs that require a Motif library
+ (available from several commercial vendors, while there is (at
+ least) one effort to create a free clone) to compile. Since
+ it is a popular toolkit and their licenses usually permit
+ redistribution of statically linked binaries, we have made
+ special provisions for handling ports that require Motif in a
+ way that we can easily compile binaries linked either
+ dynamically or statically.
+
+
+
+ REQUIRES_MOTIF
+
+ If your port requires Motif, define this variable in the
+ Makefile. This will prevent people who don't own a copy of
+ Motif from even attempting to build it.
+
+
+
+
+ ${MOTIFLIB}
+
+ This variable will be set by bsd.port.mk to be the
+ appropriate reference to the Motif library. Please patch
+ the source to use this wherever the Motif library is
+ referenced in the Makefile or Imakefile.
+
+ There are two common cases:
+
+
+
+ If the port refers to the Motif library as
+ `' in its Makefile or Imakefile, simply
+ substitute `${MOTIFLIB}' for it.
+
+
+
+
+ If the port uses `XmClientLibs' in its
+ Imakefile, change it to `${MOTIFLIB}
+ ${XTOOLLIB} ${XLIB}'.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Note that ${MOTIFLIB} (usually) expands to
+ `' or
+ `/usr/X11R6/lib/libXm.a', so there is no need to
+ add `' or `' in front.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Info files
+
+ The new version of texinfo (included in 2.2.2-RELEASE and
+ onwards) contains a utility called `install-info' to add
+ and delete entries to the `dir' file. If your port
+ installs any info documents, please follow these instructions
+ so your port/package will correctly update the user's
+ ${PREFIX}/info/dir file. (Sorry for the length
+ of this section, but it is imperative to weave all the info
+ files together. If done correctly, it will produce a
+ beautiful listing, so please bear with me! :)
+
+ First, this is what you (as a porter) need to know:
+
+
+
+ % install-info --help
+ install-info [OPTION]... [INFO-FILE [DIR-FILE]]
+ Install INFO-FILE in the Info directory file DIR-FILE.
+
+ Options:
+ --delete Delete existing entries in INFO-FILE;
+ don't insert any new entries.
+ :
+ --entry=TEXT Insert TEXT as an Info directory entry.
+ :
+ --section=SEC Put this file's entries in section SEC of the directory.
+ :
+
+
+
+ Note that this program will not actually install
+ info files; it merely inserts or deletes entries in the
+ dir file.
+
+ Here's a seven-step procedure to convert ports to use
+ install-info. I will use editors/emacs as an
+ example.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Look at the texinfo sources and make a patch to insert
+ @dircategory and @direntry statements to files
+ that don't have them. This is part of my patch:
+
+
+ --- ./man/vip.texi.org Fri Jun 16 15:31:11 1995
+ +++ ./man/vip.texi Tue May 20 01:28:33 1997
+ @@ -2,6 +2,10 @@
+
+ @setfilename ../info/vip
+ @settitle VIP
+ +@dircategory The Emacs editor and associated tools
+ +@direntry
+ +* VIP: (vip). A VI-emulation for Emacs.
+ +@end direntry
+
+ @iftex
+ @finalout
+ :
+
+
+
+
+
+ The format should be self-explanatory. Many authors leave
+ a dir file in the source tree that contains all the
+ entries you need, so look around before you try to write
+ your own. Also, make sure you look into related ports and
+ make the section names and entry indentations consistent (we
+ recommend that all entry text start at the 4th tab stop).
+
+
+
+ Note that you can put only one info entry per file because
+ of a bug in `install-info --delete' that deletes
+ only the first entry if you specify multiple entries in the
+ @direntry section.
+
+
+
+ You can give the dir entries to install-info as
+ arguments ( and ) instead of
+ patching the texinfo sources. I do not think this is a good
+ idea for ports because you need to duplicate the same
+ information in three places (Makefile and
+ @exec/@unexec of PLIST; see below). However,
+ if you have a Japanese (or other multibyte encoding) info
+ files, you will have to use the extra arguments to
+ install-info because makeinfo can't handle those
+ texinfo sources. (See Makefile and PLIST of
+ japanese/skk for examples on how to do this).
+
+
+
+
+
+ Go back to the port directory and do a `make clean;
+ make' and verify that the info files are regenerated
+ from the texinfo sources. Since the texinfo sources are
+ newer than the info files, they should be rebuilt when you
+ type make; but many Makefiles don't include
+ correct dependencies for info files. In emacs' case, I had
+ to patch the main Makefile.in so it will descend into
+ the man subdirectory to rebuild the info pages.
+
+
+ --- ./Makefile.in.org Mon Aug 19 21:12:19 1996
+ +++ ./Makefile.in Tue Apr 15 00:15:28 1997
+ @@ -184,7 +184,7 @@
+ # Subdirectories to make recursively. `lisp' is not included
+ # because the compiled lisp files are part of the distribution
+ # and you cannot remake them without installing Emacs first.
+ -SUBDIR = lib-src src
+ +SUBDIR = lib-src src man
+
+ # The makefiles of the directories in $SUBDIR.
+ SUBDIR_MAKEFILES = lib-src/Makefile man/Makefile src/Makefile oldXMenu/Makefile lwlib/Makefile
+ --- ./man/Makefile.in.org Thu Jun 27 15:27:19 1996
+ +++ ./man/Makefile.in Tue Apr 15 00:29:52 1997
+ @@ -66,6 +66,7 @@
+ ${srcdir}/gnu1.texi \
+ ${srcdir}/glossary.texi
+
+ +all: info
+ info: $(INFO_TARGETS)
+
+ dvi: $(DVI_TARGETS)
+
+
+
+
+
+ The second hunk was necessary because the default target in
+ the man subdir is called info, while the
+ main Makefile wants to call all. I also deleted the
+ installation of the info info file because we already
+ have one with the same name in /usr/share/info
+ (that patch is not shown here).
+
+
+
+
+
+ If there is a place in the Makefile that is
+ installing the dir file, delete it. Your port may not
+ be doing it. Also, remove any commands that are otherwise
+ mucking around with the dir file.
+
+
+ --- ./Makefile.in.org Mon Aug 19 21:12:19 1996
+ +++ ./Makefile.in Mon Apr 14 23:38:07 1997
+ @@ -368,14 +368,8 @@
+ if [ `(cd ${srcdir}/info && /bin/pwd)` != `(cd ${infodir} && /bin/pwd)` ]; \
+ then \
+ (cd ${infodir}; \
+ - if [ -f dir ]; then \
+ - if [ ! -f dir.old ]; then mv -f dir dir.old; \
+ - else mv -f dir dir.bak; fi; \
+ - fi; \
+ cd ${srcdir}/info ; \
+ - (cd $${thisdir}; ${INSTALL_DATA} ${srcdir}/info/dir ${infodir}/dir); \
+ - (cd $${thisdir}; chmod a+r ${infodir}/dir); \
+ for f in ccmode* cl* dired-x* ediff* emacs* forms* gnus* info* message* mh-e* sc* vip*; do \
+ (cd $${thisdir}; \
+ ${INSTALL_DATA} ${srcdir}/info/$$f ${infodir}/$$f; \
+ chmod a+r ${infodir}/$$f); \
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ (This step is only necessary if you are modifying an
+ existing port.) Take a look at pkg/PLIST and
+ delete anything that is trying to patch up
+ info/dir. They may be in pkg/INSTALL or
+ some other file, so search extensively.
+
+
+ Index: pkg/PLIST
+ ===================================================================
+ RCS file: /usr/cvs/ports/editors/emacs/pkg/PLIST,v
+ retrieving revision 1.15
+ diff -u -r1.15 PLIST
+ --- PLIST 1997/03/04 08:04:00 1.15
+ +++ PLIST 1997/04/15 06:32:12
+ @@ -15,9 +15,6 @@
+ man/man1/emacs.1.gz
+ man/man1/etags.1.gz
+ man/man1/ctags.1.gz
+ -@unexec cp %D/info/dir %D/info/dir.bak
+ -info/dir
+ -@unexec cp %D/info/dir.bak %D/info/dir
+ info/cl
+ info/cl-1
+ info/cl-2
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Add a post-install target to the Makefile to create
+ a dir file if it is not there. Also, call
+ install-info with the installed info files.
+
+
+ Index: Makefile
+ ===================================================================
+ RCS file: /usr/cvs/ports/editors/emacs/Makefile,v
+ retrieving revision 1.26
+ diff -u -r1.26 Makefile
+ --- Makefile 1996/11/19 13:14:40 1.26
+ +++ Makefile 1997/05/20 10:25:09 1.28
+ @@ -20,5 +20,11 @@
+ post-install:
+ .for file in emacs-19.34 emacsclient etags ctags b2m
+ strip ${PREFIX}/bin/${file}
+ .endfor
+ + if [ ! -f ${PREFIX}/info/dir ]; then \
+ + ${SED} -ne '1,/Menu:/p' /usr/share/info/dir > ${PREFIX}/info/dir; \
+ + fi
+ +.for info in emacs vip viper forms gnus mh-e cl sc dired-x ediff ccmode
+ + install-info ${PREFIX}/info/${info} ${PREFIX}/info/dir
+ +.endfor
+
+ .include <bsd.port.mk>
+
+
+
+
+
+ Do not use anything other than /usr/share/info/dir
+ and the above command to create a new info file. In fact,
+ I'd add the first three lines of the above patch to
+ bsd.port.mk if you (the porter) wouldn't have to do it
+ in PLIST by yourself anyway.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Edit PLIST and add equivalent @exec statements
+ and also @unexec for pkg_delete. You do not need
+ to delete info/dir with @unexec.
+
+
+ Index: pkg/PLIST
+ ===================================================================
+ RCS file: /usr/cvs/ports/editors/emacs/pkg/PLIST,v
+ retrieving revision 1.15
+ diff -u -r1.15 PLIST
+ --- PLIST 1997/03/04 08:04:00 1.15
+ +++ PLIST 1997/05/20 10:25:12 1.17
+ @@ -16,7 +14,15 @@
+ man/man1/etags.1.gz
+ man/man1/ctags.1.gz
+ +@unexec install-info --delete %D/info/emacs %D/info/dir
+ :
+ +@unexec install-info --delete %D/info/ccmode %D/info/dir
+ info/cl
+ info/cl-1
+ @@ -87,6 +94,18 @@
+ info/viper-3
+ info/viper-4
+ +@exec [ -f %D/info/dir ] || sed -ne '1,/Menu:/p' /usr/share/info/dir > %D/info/dir
+ +@exec install-info %D/info/emacs %D/info/dir
+ :
+ +@exec install-info %D/info/ccmode %D/info/dir
+ libexec/emacs/19.34/i386--freebsd/cvtmail
+ libexec/emacs/19.34/i386--freebsd/digest-doc
+
+
+
+
+
+ Note that the `@unexec install-info --delete'
+ commands have to be listed before the info files themselves
+ so they can read the files. Also, the `@exec
+ install-info' commands have to be after the info files
+ and the @exec command that creates the the dir
+ file.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Test and admire your work. :) The sequence I
+ recommend is: `make package', `pkg_delete', then
+ `pkg_add'. Check the dir file before and after
+ each step.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Licensing Problems
+
+ Some software packages have restrictive licenses or can be in
+ violation to the law (PKP's patent on public key crypto,
+ ITAR (export of crypto software) to name just two of them).
+ What we can do with them vary a lot, depending on the exact
+ wordings of the respective licenses.
+
+ Note that it is your responsibility as a porter to read the
+ licensing terms of the software and make sure that the FreeBSD
+ project will not be held accountable of violating them by
+ redistributing the source or compiled binaries either via ftp
+ or CD-ROM. If in doubt, please contact the &a.ports;.
+
+ There are two variables you can set in the Makefile to handle
+ the situations that arise frequently:
+
+
+
+
+
+ If the port has a `do not sell for profit' type of
+ license, set the variable NO_CDROM. We will make
+ sure such ports won't go into the CD-ROM come release time.
+ The distfile and package will still be available via ftp.
+
+
+
+
+ If the resulting package needs to be built uniquely for
+ each site, or the resulting binary package can't be distributed
+ due to licensing; set the variable NO_PACKAGE.
+ We will make sure such packages won't go on the ftp site, nor
+ into the CD-ROM come release time. The distfile will still be
+ included on both however.
+
+
+
+
+ If the port has legal restrictions on who can use it
+ (e.g., crypto stuff) or has a `no commercial use' license,
+ set the variable RESTRICTED to be the string
+ describing the reason why. For such ports, the
+ distfiles/packages will not be available even from our ftp
+ sites.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Note: The GNU General Public License (GPL), both version 1
+ and 2, should not be a problem for ports.
+
+ Note: If you are a committer, make sure you update the
+ ports/LEGAL file too.
+
+
+
+
+ Upgrading
+
+ When you notice that a port is out of date compared to the
+ latest version from the original authors, first make sure you
+ have the latest port. You can find them in the
+ ports-current directory of the ftp mirror sites.
+
+ The next step is to send a mail to the maintainer, if one is
+ listed in the port's Makefile. That person may already be
+ working on an upgrade, or have a reason to not upgrade the
+ port right now (because of, for example, stability problems
+ of the new version).
+
+ If the maintainer asks you to do the upgrade or there isn't
+ any such person to begin with, please make the upgrade and
+ send the recursive diff (either unified or context diff is
+ fine, but port committers appear to prefer unified diff more)
+ of the new and old ports directories
+ to us (i.e., if your modified ports directory is called
+ `superedit' and the original as in our tree is
+ `superedit.bak', then send us the result of `diff
+ -ruN superedit.bak superedit'). Please examine the output
+ to make sure all the changes make sense. The best way to send
+ us the diff is by including it to send-pr(1) (category
+ `ports'). Please
+ mention any added or deleted files in the message, as they
+ have to be explicitly specified to CVS when doing a commit.
+ If the diff is more than about 20KB, please compress and
+ uuencode it; otherwise, just include it in as is in the PR.
+
+
+
+
+ Do's and Dont's
+
+ Here is a list of common do's and dont's that you encounter
+ during the porting process.
+
+
+
+ WRKDIR
+
+ Do not leave anything valuable lying around in the
+ work subdirectory, `make clean' will
+ nuke it completely! If you need auxiliary files
+ that are not scripts or patches, put them in the
+ ${FILESDIR} subdirectory (files by default)
+ and use the post-extract target to
+ copy them to the work subdirectory.
+
+
+
+
+ Package information
+
+ Do include package information, i.e. COMMENT,
+ DESCR, and PLIST, in
+ pkg. Note that these files are not used only for
+ packaging anymore, and are mandatory now, even if
+ ${NO_PACKAGE} is set.
+
+
+
+
+ Compress manpages, strip binaries
+
+ Do compress manpages and strip binaries. If the original
+ source already strips the binary, fine; otherwise, you can add a
+ post-install rule to do it yourself. Here is an example:
+
+ post-install:
+ strip ${PREFIX}/bin/xdl
+
+
+
+ Use the file command on the installed executable
+ to check whether the binary is stripped or not. If it
+ does not say `not stripped', it is stripped.
+
+ To automagically compress the manpages, use the MAN[1-9LN]
+ variables. They will check the variable
+ NOMANCOMPRESS that the user can set in
+ /etc/make.conf to disable man page compression.
+ Place them last in the section below the
+ MAINTAINER variable. Here is an example:
+
+ MAN1= foo.1 bar.1
+ MAN5= foo.conf.5
+ MAN8= baz.8
+
+
+
+ Note that this is not usually necessary with ports that are X
+ applications and use Imake to build.
+
+ If your port anchors its man tree somewhere other than
+ PREFIX, you can use the MANPREFIX to set it.
+ Also, if only manpages in certain section go in a
+ non-standard place, such as many Perl modules ports, you
+ can set individual man paths using
+ MANsectPREFIX (where sect is one
+ of 1-9, L or N).
+
+
+
+
+ INSTALL_* macros
+
+ Do use the macros provided in bsd.port.mk to
+ ensure correct modes and ownership of files in your own
+ *-install targets. They are:
+
+
+
+
+
+ ${INSTALL_PROGRAM} is a command to install
+ binary executables.
+
+
+
+ ${INSTALL_SCRIPT} is a command to install
+ executable scripts.
+
+
+
+ ${INSTALL_DATA} is a command to install
+ sharable data.
+
+
+
+ ${INSTALL_MAN} is a command to install
+ manpages and other documentation (it doesn't compress anything).
+
+
+
+
+
+ These are basically the install command with all
+ the appropriate flags. See below for an example on how to
+ use them.
+
+
+
+
+ INSTALL package script
+
+ If your port needs execute commands when the binary package
+ is installed with pkg_add you can do with via the pkg/INSTALL
+ script. This script will automatically be added to the
+ package, and will be run twice by pkg_add. The first time
+ will as `INSTALL ${PKGNAME} PRE-INSTALL'
+ and the second time as `INSTALL ${PKGNAME} POST-INSTALL'.
+ `$2' can be tested to determine which mode
+ the script is being run in.
+ The `PKG_PREFIX' environmental variable will be set to
+ the package installation directory. See man pkg_add(1)
+ for additional information.
+ Note, that this script is not run automatically if you install
+ the port with `make install'. If you are depending
+ on it being run, you will have to explicitly call it on your
+ port's Makefile.
+
+
+
+
+ REQ package script
+
+ If your port needs to determine if it should install or not, you
+ can create a pkg/REQ ``requirements'' script. It will be invoked
+ automatically at installation/deinstallation time to determine
+ whether or not installation/deinstallation should proceed.
+ See man pkg_create(1) and man pkg_add(1) for
+ more information.
+
+
+
+
+ Install additional documentation
+
+ If your software has some documentation other than the
+ standard man and info pages that you think is useful for the
+ user, install it under ${PREFIX}/share/doc.
+ This can be done, like the previous item, in the
+ post-install target.
+
+ Create a new directory for your port. The directory name
+ should reflect what the port is. This usually means
+ ${PKGNAME} minus the version part. However,
+ if you think the user might want different versions of the
+ port to be installed at the same time, you
+ can use the whole ${PKGNAME}.
+
+ Make the installation dependent to the variable
+ NOPORTDOCS so that users can disable it in
+ /etc/make.conf, like this:
+
+ post-install:
+ .if !defined(NOPORTDOCS)
+ ${MKDIR} ${PREFIX}/share/doc/xv
+ ${INSTALL_MAN} ${WRKSRC}/docs/xvdocs.ps ${PREFIX}/share/doc/xv
+ .endif
+
+
+
+ Do not forget to add them to pkg/PLIST too! (Do not
+ worry about NOPORTDOCS here; there is currently no
+ way for the packages to read variables from
+ /etc/make.conf.)
+
+ If you need to display a message to the installer, you may
+ place the message in pkg/MESSAGE. This capibility
+ is often useful to display additional installation steps to
+ be taken after a pkg_add, or to display licensing information.
+ (note: the MESSAGE file does not need to be added to pkg/PLIST).
+
+
+
+
+ DIST_SUBDIR
+
+ Do not let your port clutter /usr/ports/distfiles. If
+ your port requires a lot of files to be
+ fetched, or contains a file that has a name that might conflict
+ with other ports (e.g., `Makefile'), set
+ ${DIST_SUBDIR} to the name of the port
+ (${PKGNAME} without the version part should work
+ fine). This will change ${DISTDIR} from the
+ default /usr/ports/distfiles to
+ /usr/ports/distfiles/${DIST_SUBDIR}, and in
+ effect puts everything that is required for your port into that
+ subdirectory.
+
+ It will also look at the subdirectory with the same name on the
+ backup master site at ftp.freebsd.org. (Setting
+ ${DISTDIR} explicitly in your Makefile will not
+ accomplish this, so please use ${DIST_SUBDIR}.)
+
+ Note this does not affect the ${MASTER_SITES}
+ you define in your Makefile.
+
+
+
+
+ Feedback
+
+ Do send applicable changes/patches to the original
+ author/maintainer for inclusion in next release of the code.
+ This will only make your job that much easier for the next
+ release.
+
+
+
+
+ RCS strings
+
+ Do not put RCS strings in patches. CVS will mangle them
+ when we put the files into the ports tree, and when we check
+ them out again, they will come out different and the patch
+ will fail. RCS strings are surrounded by dollar
+ (`$') signs, and typically start with
+ `$Id' or `$RCS'.
+
+
+
+
+ Recursive diff
+
+ Using the recurse (`') option to diff
+ to generate patches is fine, but please take a look at the
+ resulting patches to make sure you don't have any
+ unnecessary junk in there. In particular, diffs between two
+ backup files, Makefiles when the port uses Imake or GNU
+ configure, etc., are unnecessary and should be deleted.
+ Also, if you had to delete a file, then you can do it in the
+ post-extract target rather than as part of the
+ patch. Once you are happy with the resuling diff, please
+ split it up into one source file per patch file.
+
+
+
+
+ PREFIX
+
+ Do try to make your port install relative to
+ ${PREFIX}. (The value of this variable will be
+ set to ${LOCALBASE} (default
+ /usr/local), unless ${USE_IMAKE} or
+ ${USE_X11} is set, in which case it will be
+ ${X11BASE} (default /usr/X11R6).)
+
+ Not hard-coding `/usr/local' or `/usr/X11R6'
+ anywhere in the source will make the port much more flexible and
+ able to cater to the needs of other sites. For X ports that use
+ imake, this is automatic; otherwise, this can often be done by
+ simply replacing the occurrences of `/usr/local' (or
+ `/usr/X11R6' for X ports that do not use imake) in the
+ various scripts/Makefiles in the port to read
+ `${PREFIX}', as this variable is automatically
+ passed down to every stage of the build and install processes.
+
+ The variable ${PREFIX} can be reassigned in your
+ Makefile or in the user's environment. However, it is strongly
+ discouraged for individual ports to set this variable explicitly
+ in the Makefiles. (If your port is an X port but does not use
+ imake, set USE_X11=yes; this is quite different from
+ setting PREFIX=/usr/X11R6.)
+
+ Also, refer to programs/files from other ports with the
+ variables mentioned above, not explicit pathnames. For instance,
+ if your port requires a macro PAGER to be the full
+ pathname of less, use the compiler flag:
+ -DPAGER=\"${PREFIX}/bin/less\"
+ or
+ -DPAGER=\"${LOCALBASE}/bin/less\"
+ if this is an
+ X port, instead of
+ -DPAGER=\"/usr/local/bin/less\".
+
+ This way it will have a better chance of working if the system
+ administrator has moved the whole `/usr/local' tree somewhere
+ else.
+
+
+
+
+ Subdirectories
+
+ Try to let the port put things in the right subdirectories
+ of ${PREFIX}. Some ports lump everything
+ and put it in the subdirectory with the port's name, which is
+ incorrect. Also, many ports put everything except binaries,
+ header files and manual pages in the a subdirectory of
+ `lib', which does not bode well with the BSD
+ paradigm. Many of the files should be moved to one of the
+ following: `etc' (setup/configuration files),
+ `libexec' (executables started internally),
+ `sbin' (executables for superusers/managers),
+ `info' (documentation for info browser) or
+ `share' (architecture independent files). See man
+ hier(7) for details, the rule governing
+ /usr pretty much applies to /usr/local
+ too. The exception are ports dealing with USENET `news'.
+ They may use ${PREFIX}/news as a destination
+ for their files.
+
+
+
+
+ ldconfig
+
+ If your port installs a shared library, add a
+ post-install target to your Makefile that runs
+ `/sbin/ldconfig -m' on the directory where the new
+ library is installed (usually ${PREFIX}/lib)
+ to register it into the shared library cache.
+
+ Also, add an @exec line to your pkg/PLIST
+ file so that a user who installed the package can start
+ using the shared library immediately. This line should
+ immediately follow the line for the shared library itself,
+ as in:
+
+ lib/libtcl80.so.1.0
+ @exec /sbin/ldconfig -m %D/lib
+
+
+
+ Never, ever, ever add a line that says
+ `ldconfig' without any arguments to your Makefile
+ or pkg/PLIST. This will reset the shared library cache to
+ the contents of /usr/lib only, and will royally
+ screw up the user's machine ("Help, xinit does not run
+ anymore after I install this port!"). Anybody who does this
+ will be shot and cut into 65,536 pieces by a rusty knife and
+ have his liver chopped out by a bunch of crows and will
+ eternally rot to death in the deepest bowels of hell (not
+ necessarily in that order)....
+
+
+
+
+ UIDs
+
+ If your port requires a certain user ID to be on the
+ installed system, let the pkg/INSTALL script call
+ pw to create it automatically. Look at
+ japanese/Wnn or net/cvsup-mirror for
+ examples. It is customary to use UIDs in the upper 2-digit
+ range (i.e., from around 50 to 99) for this purpose.
+
+ Make sure you don't use a UID already used by the system or
+ other ports. This is the current list of UIDs between 50
+ and 99.
+
+
+
+ majordom:*:54:1024:Majordomo Pseudo User:/usr/local/majordomo:/nonexistent
+ cyrus:*:60:248:the cyrus mail server:/nonexistent:/nonexistent
+ gnats:*:61:1:GNATS database owner:/usr/local/share/gnats/gnats-db:/bin/sh
+ uucp:*:66:66:UUCP pseudo-user:/var/spool/uucppublic:/usr/libexec/uucp/uucico
+ xten:*:67:67:X-10 daemon:/usr/local/xten:/nonexistent
+ pop:*:68:6:Post Office Owner:/nonexistent:/nonexistent
+ wnn:*:69:7:Wnn:/nonexistent:/nonexistent
+ ifmail:*:70:66:Ifmail user:/nonexistent:/nonexistent
+ pgsql:*:71:246:PostgreSQL pseudo-user:/usr/local/pgsql:/bin/sh
+ msql:*:80:249:mSQL-2 pseudo-user:/var/db/msqldb:/bin/sh
+
+
+
+ Please send a notice to &a.ports; if you submit or commit a
+ port that allocates a new UID in this range so we can keep
+ this list up to date.
+
+
+
+
+ If you are stuck....
+
+ Do look at existing examples and the bsd.port.mk
+ file before asking us questions! ;)
+
+ Do ask us questions if you have any trouble! Do not just
+ beat your head against a wall! :)
+
+
+
+
+
+ A Sample Makefile
+
+ Here is a sample Makefile that you can use to create a new
+ port. Make sure you remove all the extra comments (ones
+ between brackets)!
+
+ It is recommended that you follow this format (ordering of
+ variables, empty lines between sections, etc.). Not all of
+ the existing Makefiles are in this format (mostly old ones),
+ but we are trying to uniformize how they look. This format is
+ designed so that the most important information is easy to
+ locate.
+
+
+
+ [the header...just to make it easier for us to identify the ports.]
+ # New ports collection makefile for: xdvi
+ [the version required header should updated when upgrading a port.]
+ # Version required: pl18 [things like "1.5alpha" are fine here too]
+ [this is the date when the first version of this Makefile was created.
+ Never change this when doing an update of the port.]
+ # Date created: 26 May 1995
+ [this is the person who did the original port to FreeBSD, in particular, the
+ person who wrote the first version of this Makefile. Remember, this should
+ not be changed when upgrading the port later.]
+ # Whom: Satoshi Asami <asami@FreeBSD.ORG>
+ #
+ # $Id$
+ [ ^^^^ This will be automatically replaced with RCS ID string by CVS
+ when it is committed to our repository.]
+ #
+
+ [section to describe the port itself and the master site - DISTNAME
+ is always first, followed by PKGNAME (if necessary), CATEGORIES,
+ and then MASTER_SITES, which can be followed by MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR.
+ After those, one of EXTRACT_SUFX or DISTFILES can be specified too.]
+ DISTNAME= xdvi
+ PKGNAME= xdvi-pl18
+ CATEGORIES= print
+ [do not forget the trailing slash ("/")!
+ if you aren't using MASTER_SITE_* macros]
+ MASTER_SITES= ${MASTER_SITE_XCONTRIB}
+ MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR= applications
+ [set this if the source is not in the standard ".tar.gz" form]
+ EXTRACT_SUFX= .tar.Z
+
+ [section for distributed patches -- can be empty]
+ PATCH_SITES= ftp://ftp.sra.co.jp/pub/X11/japanese/
+ PATCHFILES= xdvi-18.patch1.gz xdvi-18.patch2.gz
+
+ [maintainer; *mandatory*! This is the person (preferably with commit
+ privileges) who a user can contact for questions and bug reports - this
+ person should be the porter or someone who can forward questions to the
+ original porter reasonably promptly. If you really do not want to have
+ your address here, set it to "ports@FreeBSD.ORG".]
+ MAINTAINER= asami@FreeBSD.ORG
+
+ [dependencies -- can be empty]
+ RUN_DEPENDS= gs:${PORTSDIR}/print/ghostscript
+ LIB_DEPENDS= Xpm\\.4\\.:${PORTSDIR}/graphics/xpm
+
+ [this section is for other standard bsd.port.mk variables that do not
+ belong to any of the above]
+ [If it asks questions during configure, build, install...]
+ IS_INTERACTIVE= yes
+ [If it extracts to a directory other than ${DISTNAME}...]
+ WRKSRC= ${WRKDIR}/xdvi-new
+ [If the distributed patches were not made relative to ${WRKSRC}, you
+ may need to tweak this]
+ PATCH_DIST_STRIP= -p1
+ [If it requires a "configure" script generated by GNU autoconf to be run]
+ GNU_CONFIGURE= yes
+ [If it requires GNU make, not /usr/bin/make, to build...]
+ USE_GMAKE= yes
+ [If it is an X application and requires "xmkmf -a" to be run...]
+ USE_IMAKE= yes
+ [et cetera.]
+
+ [non-standard variables to be used in the rules below]
+ MY_FAVORITE_RESPONSE= "yeah, right"
+
+ [then the special rules, in the order they are called]
+ pre-fetch:
+ i go fetch something, yeah
+
+ post-patch:
+ i need to do something after patch, great
+
+ pre-install:
+ and then some more stuff before installing, wow
+
+ [and then the epilogue]
+ .include <bsd.port.mk>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Package Names
+
+ The following are the conventions you should follow in
+ naming your packages. This is to have our package directory
+ easy to scan, as there are already lots and lots of packages
+ and users are going to turn away if they hurt their eyes!
+
+ The package name should look like
+
+
+
+ [<language>-]<name>[[-]<compiled.specifics>]-<version.string.numbers>;
+
+
+
+ If your ${DISTNAME} doesn't look like that,
+ set ${PKGNAME} to something in that format.
+
+
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD strives to support the native language of its
+ users. The `<language>' part should be a two letter
+ abbreviation of the natural language defined by ISO-639 if
+ the port is specific to a certain language. Examples are
+ `ja' for Japanese, `ru' for Russian, `vi' for Vietnamese,
+ `zh' for Chinese, `ko' for Korean and `de' for German.
+
+
+
+
+ The `<name>' part should be all
+ lowercases, except for a really large package (with lots of
+ programs in it). Things like XFree86 (yes there really is a
+ package of it, check it out) and ImageMagick fall into this
+ category. Otherwise, convert the name (or at least the
+ first letter) to lowercase. If the software in question
+ really is called that way, you can have numbers, hyphens and
+ underscores in the name too (like `kinput2').
+
+
+
+
+ If the port can be built with different hardcoded
+ defaults (usually specified as environment variables or on
+ the make command line), the
+ `<compiled.specifics>' part should state the
+ compiled-in defaults (the hyphen is optional). Examples are
+ papersize and font units.
+
+
+
+
+ The version string should be a period-separated list of
+ integers and single lowercase alphabetics. The only exception
+ is the string `pl' (meaning `patchlevel'), which can be used
+ only when there are no major and minor version
+ numbers in the software.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Here are some (real) examples on how to convert a
+ ${DISTNAME} into a suitable
+ ${PKGNAME}:
+
+
+
+ DISTNAME PKGNAME Reason
+ mule-2.2.2 mule-2.2.2 no prob at all
+ XFree86-3.1.2 XFree86-3.1.2 ditto
+ EmiClock-1.0.2 emiclock-1.0.2 no uppercase names for single programs
+ gmod1.4 gmod-1.4 need hyphen after `<name>'
+ xmris.4.02 xmris-4.02 ditto
+ rdist-1.3alpha rdist-1.3a no strings like `alpha' allowed
+ es-0.9-beta1 es-0.9b1 ditto
+ v3.3beta021.src tiff-3.3 what the heck was that anyway? ;)
+ tvtwm tvtwm-pl11 version string always required
+ piewm piewm-1.0 ditto
+ xvgr-2.10pl1 xvgr-2.10.1 `pl' allowed only when no maj/minor numbers
+ gawk-2.15.6 ja-gawk-2.15.6 Japanese language version
+ psutils-1.13 psutils-letter-1.13 papersize hardcoded at package build time
+ pkfonts pkfonts300-1.0 package for 300dpi fonts
+
+
+
+ If there is absolutely no trace of version information in the
+ original source and it is unlikely that the original author
+ will ever release another version, just set the version string
+ to `1.0' (like the piewm example above). Otherwise, ask the
+ original author or use the date string (`yy.mm.dd') as the
+ version.
+
+
+
+
+ That is It, Folks!
+
+ Boy, this sure was a long tutorial, wasn't it? Thanks for
+ following us to here, really.
+
+ Well, now that you know how to do a port, let us go at it and
+ convert everything in the world into ports! That is the
+ easiest way to start contributing to the FreeBSD Project!
+ :)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Money, Hardware or Internet access
+
+ We are always very happy to accept donations to further the cause of
+ the FreeBSD Project and, in a volunteer effort like ours, a little can go
+ a long way! Donations of hardware are also very important to expanding
+ our list of supported peripherals since we generally lack the funds to
+ buy such items ourselves.
+
+
+
+ Donating funds
+
+ While the FreeBSD Project is not a 501(C3) (non-profit) corporation and
+ hence cannot offer special tax incentives for any donations made, any such
+ donations will be gratefully accepted on behalf of the project by
+ FreeBSD, Inc.
+
+ FreeBSD, Inc. was founded in early 1995 by &a.jkh; and &a.davidg; with the
+ goal of furthering the aims of the FreeBSD Project and giving it a minimal
+ corporate presence. Any and all funds donated (as well as any profits
+ that may eventually be realized by FreeBSD, Inc.) will be used exclusively
+ to further the project's goals.
+
+ Please make any checks payable to FreeBSD, Inc., sent in care of the
+ following address:
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD, Inc.
+ c/o Jordan Hubbard
+ 4041 Pike Lane, suite #D.
+ Concord CA, 94520
+
+ [temporarily using the Walnut Creek CDROM address until a PO box can be
+ opened]
+
+
+
+ Wire transfers may also be sent directly to:
+
+
+
+ Bank Of America
+ Concord Main Office
+ P.O. Box 37176
+ San Francisco CA, 94137-5176
+
+ Routing #: 121-000-358
+ Account #: 01411-07441 (FreeBSD, Inc.)
+
+
+
+ Any correspondence related to donations should be sent to
+ Jordan Hubbard, either
+ via email or to the FreeBSD, Inc. postal address given above.
+
+ If you do not wish to be listed in our
+ section, please specify this when making your donation. Thanks!
+
+
+
+
+ Donating hardware
+
+ Donations of hardware in any of the 3 following categories are also gladly
+ accepted by the FreeBSD Project:
+
+
+
+
+
+ General purpose hardware such as disk drives, memory or complete
+ systems should be sent to the FreeBSD, Inc. address listed in the
+ donating funds section.
+
+
+
+
+ Hardware for which ongoing compliance testing is desired.
+ We are currently trying to put together a testing lab of all components
+ that FreeBSD supports so that proper regression testing can be done with
+ each new release. We are still lacking many important pieces (network cards,
+ motherboards, etc) and if you would like to make such a donation, please contact
+ &a.davidg; for information on which items are still required.
+
+
+
+
+ Hardware currently unsupported by FreeBSD for which you would like to
+ see such support added. Please contact the &a.core; before sending
+ such items as we will need to find a developer willing to take on the task
+ before we can accept delivery of new hardware.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Donating Internet access
+
+ We can always use new mirror sites for FTP, WWW or cvsup.
+ If you would like to be such a mirror, please contact
+ the FreeBSD project administrators for more information.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Donors Gallery
+
+ The FreeBSD Project is indebted to the following donors and would
+ like to publically thank them here!
+
+
+
+
+
+ Contributors to the central server project:
+
+
+ The following individuals and businesses made it possible for
+ the FreeBSD Project to build a new central server machine to eventually
+ replace freefall.freebsd.org by donating the following items:
+
+
+
+
+
+ Ade Barkah
+ and his employer, Hemisphere Online, donated a Pentium Pro (P6) 200Mhz CPU
+
+
+
+
+ ASA Computers
+ donated a Tyan 1662 motherboard.
+
+
+
+
+ Joe McGuckin of
+ ViaNet Communications
+ donated a Kingston ethernet controller.
+
+
+
+
+ Jack O'Neill donated an NCR 53C875 SCSI
+ controller card.
+
+
+
+
+ Ulf Zimmermann
+ of Alameda Networks
+ donated 128MB of memory, a 4 Gb disk drive
+ and the case.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Direct funding:
+
+
+ The following individuals and businesses have generously contributed
+ direct funding to the project:
+
+
+
+
+
+ Annelise Anderson
+
+
+
+
+ Matt Dillon
+
+
+
+
+ Epilogue Technology Corporation
+
+
+
+
+ Sean Eric Fagan
+
+
+
+
+ Gianmarco Giovannelli
+
+
+
+
+ Josef C. Grosch
+
+
+
+
+ Chuck Robey
+
+
+
+
+ Kenneth P. Stox of Imaginary Landscape, LLC.
+
+
+
+
+ Dmitry S. Kohmanyuk
+
+
+
+
+ Laser5
+ of Japan (a portion of the profits from sales of their
+ various FreeBSD CD-ROMs.
+
+
+
+
+ Fuki Shuppan Publishing Co. donated a portion of
+ their profits from Hajimete no FreeBSD
+ (FreeBSD, Getting started) to the FreeBSD and XFree86
+ projects.
+
+
+
+ ASCII Corp. donated a portion of
+ their profits from several FreeBSD-related books to the
+ FreeBSD project.
+
+
+
+ Yokogawa Electric Corp has generously donated
+ significant funding to the FreeBSD project.
+
+
+
+ BuffNET
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Hardware contributors:
+
+
+ The following individuals and businesses have generously contributed
+ hardware for testing and device driver development/support:
+
+
+
+
+
+ Walnut Creek CDROM for providing the Pentium P5-90 and
+ 486/DX2-66 EISA/VL systems that are being used for our development
+ work, to say nothing of the network access and other donations of
+ hardware resources.
+
+
+
+
+ TRW Financial Systems, Inc. provided 130 PCs, three 68 GB
+ fileservers, twelve Ethernets, two routers and an ATM
+ switch for debugging the diskless code. They also keep a
+ couple of FreeBSD hackers alive and busy. Thanks!
+
+
+
+
+ Dermot McDonnell donated the Toshiba XM3401B CDROM drive
+ currently used in freefall.
+
+
+
+
+ &a.chuck; contributed his floppy tape streamer for experimental
+ work.
+
+
+
+
+ Larry Altneu <larry@ALR.COM>, and &a.wilko;,
+ provided Wangtek and Archive QIC-02 tape drives in order to
+ improve the wt driver.
+
+
+
+
+ Ernst Winter <ewinter@lobo.muc.de> contributed a 2.88 MB
+ floppy drive to the project. This will hopefully increase the
+ pressure for rewriting the floppy disk driver. ;-)
+
+
+
+
+ Tekram Technologies
+ sent one each of their DC-390, DC-390U and DC-390F FAST and ULTRA
+ SCSI host adapter cards for regression testing of the NCR and AMD
+ drivers with their cards. They are also to be applauded for making
+ driver sources for free operating systems available from their
+ FTP server ftp://ftp.tekram.com/scsi/FreeBSD.
+
+
+
+
+ Larry M. Augustin
+ contributed not only a Symbios Sym8751S SCSI card, but also a set
+ of data books, including one about the forthcoming Sym53c895 chip
+ with Ultra-2 and LVD support, and the latest programming manual with
+ information on how to safely use the advanced features of the latest
+ Symbios SCSI chips. Thanks a lot!
+
+
+
+
+ Christoph Kukulies
+ donated an FX120 12 speed Mitsumi CDROM drive for IDE CDROM driver
+ development.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Special contributors:
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Walnut Creek CDROM
+ has donated almost more than we can say (see the
+ document for more details).
+ In particular, we would like to thank them for the original hardware
+ used for freefall.FreeBSD.ORG, our primary development
+ machine, and for thud.FreeBSD.ORG, a testing and build box.
+ We are also indebted to them for funding various contributors over
+ the years and providing us with unrestricted use of their T1
+ connection to the Internet.
+
+
+
+ The interface business GmbH, Dresden has been patiently
+ supporting &a.joerg; who has often preferred FreeBSD work over
+ paywork, and used to fall back to their (quite expensive) EUnet
+ Internet connection whenever his private connection became too
+ slow or flakey to work with it...
+
+
+
+ Berkeley Software Design, Inc. has contributed their DOS emulator code to the
+ remaining BSD world, which is used in the dosemu
+ command.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Derived Software Contributors
+
+ This software was originally derived from William
+ F. Jolitz's 386BSD release 0.1, though almost none of the
+ original 386BSD specific code remains. This software has
+ been essentially re-implemented from the 4.4BSD-Lite
+ release provided by the Computer Science Research Group
+ (CSRG) at the University of California, Berkeley and
+ associated academic contributors.
+
+ There are also portions of NetBSD that have been integrated
+ into FreeBSD as well, and we would therefore like to thank
+ all the contributors to NetBSD for their work.
+
+
+
+
+ Additional FreeBSD Contributors
+
+ (in alphabetical order by first name):
+
+
+
+
+
+ A JOSEPH KOSHY <koshy@india.hp.com>
+
+
+
+ ABURAYA Ryushirou <rewsirow@ff.iij4u.or.jp>
+
+
+
+ Ada T Lim <ada@bsd.org>
+
+
+
+ Adam Glass <glass@postgres.berkeley.edu>
+
+
+
+ Adrian T. Filipi-Martin <atf3r@agate.cs.virginia.edu>
+
+
+
+ Akito Fujita <fujita@zoo.ncl.omron.co.jp>
+
+
+
+ Alain Kalker <A.C.P.M.Kalker@student.utwente.nl>
+
+
+
+ Alan Cox <alc@cs.rice.edu>
+
+
+
+ Andreas Kohout <shanee@rabbit.augusta.de>
+
+
+
+ Andreas Lohr <andreas@marvin.RoBIN.de>
+
+
+
+ Andrew Gordon <andrew.gordon@net-tel.co.uk>
+
+
+
+ Andrew Herbert <andrew@werple.apana.org.au>
+
+
+
+ Andrew McRae <amcrae@cisco.com>
+
+
+
+ Andrew Moore <alm@FreeBSD.org>
+
+
+
+ Andrew Stevenson <andrew@ugh.net.au>
+
+
+
+ Andrew V. Stesin <stesin@elvisti.kiev.ua>
+
+
+
+ Andrey Zakhvatov <andy@icc.surw.chel.su>
+
+
+
+ Andy Whitcroft <andy@sarc.city.ac.uk>
+
+
+
+ Angelo Turetta <ATuretta@stylo.it>
+
+
+
+ Anthony Yee-Hang Chan <yeehang@netcom.com>
+
+
+
+ Ari Suutari <ari@suutari.iki.fi>
+
+
+
+ Brent J. Nordquist <bjn@visi.com>
+
+
+
+ Bernd Rosauer <br@schiele-ct.de>
+
+
+
+ Bill Kish <kish@osf.org>
+
+
+
+ &a.wlloyd;
+
+
+
+ Bob Wilcox <bob@obiwan.uucp>
+
+
+
+ Boyd Faulkner <faulkner@mpd.tandem.com>
+
+
+
+ Brent J. Nordquist <bjn@visi.com>
+
+
+
+ Brett Taylor <brett@peloton.physics.montana.edu>
+
+
+
+ Brian Clapper <bmc@willscreek.com>
+
+
+
+ Brian Handy <handy@lambic.space.lockheed.com>
+
+
+
+ Brian Tao <taob@risc.org>
+
+
+
+ Brion Moss <brion@queeg.com>
+
+
+
+ Bruce Gingery <bgingery@gtcs.com>
+
+
+
+ Carey Jones <mcj@acquiesce.org>
+
+
+
+ Carl Fongheiser <cmf@netins.net>
+
+
+
+ Charles Hannum <mycroft@ai.mit.edu>
+
+
+
+ Charles Mott <cmott@srv.net>
+
+
+
+ Chet Ramey <chet@odin.INS.CWRU.Edu>
+
+
+
+ Chris Dabrowski < chris@vader.org>
+
+
+
+ Chris G. Demetriou <cgd@postgres.berkeley.edu>
+
+
+
+ Chris Shenton <cshenton@angst.it.hq.nasa.gov>
+
+
+
+ Chris Stenton <jacs@gnome.co.uk>
+
+
+
+ Chris Timmons <skynyrd@opus.cts.cwu.edu>
+
+
+
+ Chris Torek <torek@ee.lbl.gov>
+
+
+
+ Christian Gusenbauer <cg@fimp01.fim.uni-linz.ac.at>
+
+
+
+ Christian Haury <Christian.Haury@sagem.fr>
+
+
+
+ Christoph Robitschko <chmr@edvz.tu-graz.ac.at>
+
+
+
+ Choi Jun Ho <junker@jazz.snu.ac.kr>
+
+
+
+ Chuck Hein <chein@cisco.com>
+
+
+
+ Conrad Sabatier <conrads@neosoft.com>
+
+
+
+ Cornelis van der Laan <nils@guru.ims.uni-stuttgart.de>
+
+
+
+ Craig Struble <cstruble@vt.edu>
+
+
+
+ Cristian Ferretti <cfs@riemann.mat.puc.cl>
+
+
+
+ Curt Mayer <curt@toad.com>
+
+
+
+ Dai Ishijima <ishijima@tri.pref.osaka.jp>
+
+
+
+ Dan Cross <tenser@spitfire.ecsel.psu.edu>
+
+
+
+ Daniel Baker <dbaker@crash.ops.neosoft.com>
+
+
+
+ Daniel M. Eischen <deischen@iworks.InterWorks.org>
+
+
+
+ Daniel O'Connor <doconnor@gsoft.com.au>
+
+
+
+ Danny J. Zerkel <dzerkel@feephi.phofarm.com>
+
+
+
+ Dave Bodenstab <imdave@synet.net>
+
+
+
+ Dave Burgess <burgess@hrd769.brooks.af.mil>
+
+
+
+ Dave Chapeskie <dchapes@zeus.leitch.com>
+
+
+
+ Dave Edmondson <davided@sco.com>
+
+
+
+ Dave Rivers <rivers@ponds.uucp>
+
+
+
+ David A. Bader <dbader@umiacs.umd.edu>
+
+
+
+ David Dawes <dawes@physics.su.OZ.AU>
+
+
+
+ David Holloway <daveh@gwythaint.tamis.com>
+
+
+
+ David Leonard <d@scry.dstc.edu.au>
+
+
+
+ Dean Huxley <dean@fsa.ca>
+
+
+
+ Dirk Froemberg <dirk@hal.in-berlin.de>
+
+
+
+ Dmitrij Tejblum <dima@tejblum.dnttm.rssi.ru>
+
+
+
+ Dmitry Kohmanyuk <dk@farm.org>
+
+
+
+ &a.whiteside;
+
+
+
+ Don Yuniskis <dgy@rtd.com>
+
+
+
+ Donald Burr <d_burr@ix.netcom.com>
+
+
+
+ Doug Ambrisko <ambrisko@ambrisko.roble.com>
+
+
+
+ Douglas Carmichael <dcarmich@mcs.com>
+
+
+
+ Eiji-usagi-MATSUmoto <usagi@ruby.club.or.jp>
+
+
+
+ ELISA Font Project
+
+
+
+ Eric A. Griff <eagriff@global2000.net>
+
+
+
+ Eric Blood <eblood@cs.unr.edu>
+
+
+
+ Eric J. Chet <ejc@bazzle.com>
+
+
+
+ Eric J. Schwertfeger <eric@cybernut.com>
+
+
+
+ Francis M J Hsieh <mjhsieh@life.nthu.edu.tw>
+
+
+
+ Frank Bartels <knarf@camelot.de>
+
+
+
+ Frank Chen Hsiung Chan <frankch@waru.life.nthu.edu.tw>
+
+
+
+ Frank Maclachlan <fpm@crash.cts.com>
+
+
+
+ Frank Nobis <fn@trinity.radio-do.de>
+
+
+
+ FUJIMOTO Kensaku <fujimoto@oscar.elec.waseda.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ FURUSAWA Kazuhisa <furusawa@com.cs.osakafu-u.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Gary A. Browning <gab10@griffcd.amdahl.com>
+
+
+
+ Gary Kline <kline@thought.org>
+
+
+
+ Gerard Roudier <groudier@club-internet.fr>
+
+
+
+ Greg Ungerer <gerg@stallion.oz.au>
+
+
+
+ Harlan Stenn <Harlan.Stenn@pfcs.com>
+
+
+
+ Havard Eidnes <Havard.Eidnes@runit.sintef.no>
+
+
+
+ Hideaki Ohmon <ohmon@tom.sfc.keio.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Hidekazu Kuroki <hidekazu@cs.titech.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Hidetoshi Shimokawa <simokawa@sat.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Hideyuki Suzuki <hideyuki@sat.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Hironori Ikura <hikura@kaisei.org>
+
+
+
+ Holger Veit <Holger.Veit@gmd.de>
+
+
+
+ Hung-Chi Chu <hcchu@r350.ee.ntu.edu.tw>
+
+
+
+ Ian Vaudrey <i.vaudrey@bigfoot.com>
+
+
+
+ Igor Vinokurov <igor@zynaps.ru>
+
+
+
+ Ikuo Nakagawa <ikuo@isl.intec.co.jp>
+
+
+
+ IMAMURA Tomoaki <tomoak-i@is.aist-nara.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Ishii Masahiro
+
+
+
+ Issei Suzuki<issei@t-cnet.or.jp>
+
+
+
+ Itsuro Saito <saito@miv.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ J. David Lowe <lowe@saturn5.com>
+
+
+
+ J.T. Conklin <jtc@cygnus.com>
+
+
+
+ James Clark <jjc@jclark.com>
+
+
+
+ James da Silva <jds@cs.umd.edu> et al
+
+
+
+ Janusz Kokot <janek@gaja.ipan.lublin.pl>
+
+
+
+ Jason Thorpe <thorpej@nas.nasa.gov>
+
+
+
+ Javier Martin Rueda <jmrueda@diatel.upm.es>
+
+
+
+ Jeff Bartig <jeffb@doit.wisc.edu>
+
+
+
+ Jeffrey Wheat <jeff@cetlink.net>
+
+
+
+ Jian-Da Li <jdli@csie.NCTU.edu.tw>
+
+
+
+ Jim Binkley <jrb@cs.pdx.edu>
+
+
+
+ Jim Lowe <james@cs.uwm.edu>
+
+
+
+ Jim Wilson <wilson@moria.cygnus.com>
+
+
+
+ Joao Carlos Mendes Luis <jonny@coppe.ufrj.br>
+
+
+
+ Joel Sutton <sutton@aardvark.apana.org.au>
+
+
+
+ Johann Tonsing <jtonsing@mikom.csir.co.za>
+
+
+
+ John Capo <jc@irbs.com>
+
+
+
+ John Heidemann <johnh@isi.edu>
+
+
+
+ John Perry <perry@vishnu.alias.net>
+
+
+
+ John Polstra <jdp@polstra.com>
+
+
+
+ John Rochester <jr@cs.mun.ca>
+
+
+
+ Josef Karthauser <joe@uk.freebsd.org>
+
+
+
+ Joseph Stein <joes@seaport.net>
+
+
+
+ Josh Gilliam <josh@quick.net>
+
+
+
+ Josh Tiefenbach <josh@ican.net>
+
+
+
+ Juergen Lock <nox@jelal.hb.north.de>
+
+
+
+ Juha Inkari <inkari@cc.hut.fi>
+
+
+
+ Julian Assange <proff@suburbia.net>
+
+
+
+ Julian Jenkins <kaveman@magna.com.au>
+
+
+
+ Julian Stacey <jhs@freebsd.org>
+
+
+
+ Junichi Satoh <junichi@jp.freebsd.org>
+
+
+
+ Kapil Chowksey <kchowksey@hss.hns.com>
+
+
+
+ Kazuhiko Kiriyama <kiri@kiri.toba-cmt.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Keith Bostic <bostic@bostic.com>
+
+
+
+ Keith Moore
+
+
+
+ Kenneth Monville <desmo@bandwidth.org>
+
+
+
+ Kent Vander Velden <graphix@iastate.edu>
+
+
+
+ Kirk McKusick <mckusick@mckusick.com>
+
+
+
+ Kiroh HARADA <kiroh@kh.rim.or.jp>
+
+
+
+ Koichi Sato <copan@ppp.fastnet.or.jp>
+
+
+
+ Kostya Lukin <lukin@okbmei.msk.su>
+
+
+
+ Kurt Olsen <kurto@tiny.mcs.usu.edu>
+
+
+
+ Lars Koeller <Lars.Koeller@Uni-Bielefeld.DE>
+
+
+
+ Lucas James <Lucas.James@ldjpc.apana.org.au>
+
+
+
+ Luigi Rizzo <luigi@iet.unipi.it>
+
+
+
+ Makoto MATSUSHITA <matusita@jp.freebsd.org>
+
+
+
+ Manu Iyengar <iyengar@grunthos.pscwa.psca.com>
+
+
+
+ Marc Frajola <marc@dev.com>
+
+
+
+ Marc Ramirez <mrami@mramirez.sy.yale.edu>
+
+
+
+ Marc Slemko <marcs@znep.com>
+
+
+
+ Marc van Kempen <wmbfmk@urc.tue.nl>
+
+
+
+ Mario Sergio Fujikawa Ferreira <lioux@gns.com.br>
+
+
+
+ Mark Huizer <xaa@stack.nl>
+
+
+
+ Mark J. Taylor <mtaylor@cybernet.com>
+
+
+
+ Mark Krentel <krentel@rice.edu>
+
+
+
+ Mark Tinguely <tinguely@plains.nodak.edu>
+ <tinguely@hookie.cs.ndsu.NoDak.edu>
+
+
+
+ Martin Birgmeier
+
+
+
+ Martti Kuparinen <erakupa@kk.etx.ericsson.se>
+
+
+
+ Masachika ISHIZUKA <ishizuka@isis.min.ntt.jp>
+
+
+
+ Mats Lofkvist <mal@algonet.se>
+
+
+
+ Matt Bartley <mbartley@lear35.cytex.com>
+
+
+
+ Matt Thomas <thomas@lkg.dec.com>
+
+
+
+ Matt White <mwhite+@CMU.EDU>
+
+
+
+ Matthew Hunt <mph@pobox.com>
+
+
+
+ Matthew N. Dodd <winter@jurai.net>
+
+
+
+ Matthew Stein <matt@bdd.net>
+
+
+
+ Maurice Castro <maurice@planet.serc.rmit.edu.au>
+
+
+
+ Michael Butschky <butsch@computi.erols.com>
+
+
+
+ Michael Elbel <me@FreeBSD.ORG>
+
+
+
+ Michael Searle <searle@longacre.demon.co.uk>
+
+
+
+ Miguel Angel Sagreras <msagre@cactus.fi.uba.ar>
+
+
+
+ Mikael Hybsch <micke@dynas.se>
+
+
+
+ Mikhail Teterin <mi@aldan.ziplink.net>
+
+
+
+ Mike McGaughey <mmcg@cs.monash.edu.au>
+
+
+
+ Mike Peck <mike@binghamton.edu>
+
+
+
+ Ming-I Hseh <PA@FreeBSD.ee.Ntu.edu.TW>
+
+
+
+ MITA Yoshio <mita@jp.FreeBSD.ORG>
+
+
+
+ MOROHOSHI Akihiko <moro@race.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Murray Stokely <murray@cdrom.com>
+
+
+
+ NAKAMURA Kazushi <nkazushi@highway.or.jp>
+
+
+
+ Naoki Hamada <nao@tom-yam.or.jp>
+
+
+
+ Narvi <narvi@haldjas.folklore.ee>
+
+
+
+ NIIMI Satoshi <sa2c@and.or.jp>
+
+
+
+ Nick Sayer <nsayer@quack.kfu.com>
+
+
+
+ Nicolas Souchu <Nicolas.Souchu@prism.uvsq.fr>
+
+
+
+ Nisha Talagala <nisha@cs.berkeley.edu>
+
+
+
+ Nobuhiro Yasutomi <nobu@psrc.isac.co.jp>
+
+
+
+ Nobuyuki Koganemaru <kogane@kces.koganemaru.co.jp>
+
+
+
+ Noritaka Ishizumi <graphite@jp.FreeBSD.ORG>
+
+
+
+ Oliver Fromme <oliver.fromme@heim3.tu-clausthal.de>
+
+
+
+ Oliver Laumann <net@informatik.uni-bremen.de>
+
+
+
+ Oliver Oberdorf <oly@world.std.com>
+
+
+
+ Paul Fox <pgf@foxharp.boston.ma.us>
+
+
+
+ Paul Kranenburg <pk@cs.few.eur.nl>
+
+
+
+ Paul Mackerras <paulus@cs.anu.edu.au>
+
+
+
+ Paulo Menezes <paulo@isr.uc.pt>
+
+
+
+ Paul T. Root <proot@horton.iaces.com>
+
+
+
+ Pedro Giffuni <giffunip@asme.org>
+
+
+
+ Pedro A M Vazquez <vazquez@IQM.Unicamp.BR>
+
+
+
+ Peter Cornelius <pc@inr.fzk.de>
+
+
+
+ Peter Haight <peterh@prognet.com>
+
+
+
+ Peter Hawkins <peter@rhiannon.clari.net.au>
+
+
+
+ Peter Stubbs <PETERS@staidan.qld.edu.au>
+
+
+
+ Pierre Beyssac <bp@fasterix.freenix.org>
+
+
+
+ Phil Maker <pjm@cs.ntu.edu.au>
+
+
+
+ R. Kym Horsell
+
+
+
+ Randall Hopper <rhh@stealth.ct.picker.com>
+
+
+
+ Richard Hwang <rhwang@bigpanda.com>
+
+
+
+ Richard Seaman, Jr. <dick@tar.com>
+
+
+
+ Richard Stallman <rms@gnu.ai.mit.edu>
+
+
+
+ Richard Wiwatowski <rjwiwat@adelaide.on.net>
+
+
+
+ Rob Mallory <rmallory@csusb.edu>
+
+
+
+ Rob Shady <rls@id.net>
+
+
+
+ Rob Snow <rsnow@txdirect.net>
+
+
+
+ Robert Sanders <rsanders@mindspring.com>
+
+
+
+ Robert Withrow <witr@rwwa.com>
+
+
+
+ Ronald Kuehn <kuehn@rz.tu-clausthal.de>
+
+
+
+ Roland Jesse <jesse@cs.uni-magdeburg.de>
+
+
+
+ Ruslan Shevchenko <rssh@cki.ipri.kiev.ua>
+
+
+
+ Samuel Lam <skl@ScalableNetwork.com>
+
+
+
+ Sander Vesik <sander@haldjas.folklore.ee>
+
+
+
+ Sandro Sigala <ssigala@globalnet.it>
+
+
+
+ Sascha Blank <blank@fox.uni-trier.de>
+
+
+
+ Sascha Wildner <swildner@channelz.GUN.de>
+
+
+
+ Satoshi Taoka <taoka@infonets.hiroshima-u.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Scott Blachowicz <scott.blachowicz@seaslug.org>
+
+
+
+ Scott A. Kenney <saken@rmta.ml.org>
+
+
+
+ Serge V. Vakulenko <vak@zebub.msk.su>
+
+
+
+ Sheldon Hearn <axl@iafrica.com>
+
+
+
+ Simon Marlow <simonm@dcs.gla.ac.uk>
+
+
+
+ Slaven Rezic (Tomic) <eserte@cs.tu-berlin.de>
+
+
+
+ Soren Dayton <csdayton@midway.uchicago.edu>
+
+
+
+ Soren Dossing <sauber@netcom.com>
+
+
+
+ Stefan Moeding <moeding@bn.DeTeMobil.de>
+
+
+
+ Stephane Legrand <stephane@lituus.fr>
+
+
+
+ Stephen J. Roznowski <sjr@home.net>
+
+
+
+ Steve Gerakines <steve2@genesis.tiac.net>
+
+
+
+ Suzuki Yoshiaki <zensyo@ann.tama.kawasaki.jp>
+
+
+
+ Tadashi Kumano <kumano@strl.nhk.or.jp>
+
+
+
+ Taguchi Takeshi <taguchi@tohoku.iij.ad.jp>
+
+
+
+ Takayuki Ariga <a00821@cc.hc.keio.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Terry Lambert <terry@lambert.org>
+
+
+
+ Terry Lee <terry@uivlsi.csl.uiuc.edu>
+
+
+
+ Tetsuya Furukawa <tetsuya@secom-sis.co.jp>
+
+
+
+ Theo Deraadt <deraadt@fsa.ca>
+
+
+
+ Thomas König <Thomas.Koenig@ciw.uni-karlsruhe.de>
+
+
+
+ Þórður Ívarsson <totii@est.is>
+
+
+
+ Tim Kientzle <kientzle@netcom.com>
+
+
+
+ Tim Wilkinson <tim@sarc.city.ac.uk>
+
+
+
+ Tom Samplonius <tom@misery.sdf.com>
+
+
+
+ Torbjorn Granlund <tege@matematik.su.se>
+
+
+
+ Toshihiro Kanda <candy@fct.kgc.co.jp>
+
+
+
+ Trefor S. <trefor@flevel.co.uk>
+
+
+
+ Ville Eerola <ve@sci.fi>
+
+
+
+ Werner Griessl <werner@btp1da.phy.uni-bayreuth.de>
+
+
+
+ Wes Santee <wsantee@wsantee.oz.net>
+
+
+
+ Wilko Bulte <wilko@yedi.iaf.nl>
+
+
+
+ Wolfgang Stanglmeier <wolf@kintaro.cologne.de>
+
+
+
+ Wu Ching-hong <woju@FreeBSD.ee.Ntu.edu.TW>
+
+
+
+ Yen-Shuo Su <yssu@CCCA.NCTU.edu.tw>
+
+
+
+ Yoshiaki Uchikawa <yoshiaki@kt.rim.or.jp>
+
+
+
+ Yoshiro Mihira <sanpei@yy.cs.keio.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Yukihiro Nakai <nakai@mlab.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Yuval Yarom <yval@cs.huji.ac.il>
+
+
+
+ Yves Fonk <yves@cpcoup5.tn.tudelft.nl>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ 386BSD Patch Kit Patch Contributors
+
+ (in alphabetical order by first name):
+
+
+
+
+
+ Adam Glass <glass@postgres.berkeley.edu>
+
+
+
+ Adrian Hall <adrian@ibmpcug.co.uk>
+
+
+
+ Andrey A. Chernov <ache@astral.msk.su>
+
+
+
+ Andrew Herbert <andrew@werple.apana.org.au>
+
+
+
+ Andrew Moore <alm@netcom.com>
+
+
+
+ Andy Valencia <ajv@csd.mot.com>
+ <jtk@netcom.com>
+
+
+
+ Arne Henrik Juul <arnej@Lise.Unit.NO>
+
+
+
+ Bakul Shah <bvs@bitblocks.com>
+
+
+
+ Barry Lustig <barry@ictv.com>
+
+
+
+ Bob Wilcox <bob@obiwan.uucp>
+
+
+
+ Branko Lankester
+
+
+
+ Brett Lymn <blymn@mulga.awadi.com.AU>
+
+
+
+ Charles Hannum <mycroft@ai.mit.edu>
+
+
+
+ Chris G. Demetriou <cgd@postgres.berkeley.edu>
+
+
+
+ Chris Torek <torek@ee.lbl.gov>
+
+
+
+ Christoph Robitschko <chmr@edvz.tu-graz.ac.at>
+
+
+
+ Daniel Poirot <poirot@aio.jsc.nasa.gov>
+
+
+
+ Dave Burgess <burgess@hrd769.brooks.af.mil>
+
+
+
+ Dave Rivers <rivers@ponds.uucp>
+
+
+
+ David Dawes <dawes@physics.su.OZ.AU>
+
+
+
+ David Greenman <davidg@Root.COM>
+
+
+
+ Eric J. Haug <ejh@slustl.slu.edu>
+
+
+
+ Felix Gaehtgens <felix@escape.vsse.in-berlin.de>
+
+
+
+ Frank Maclachlan <fpm@crash.cts.com>
+
+
+
+ Gary A. Browning <gab10@griffcd.amdahl.com>
+
+
+
+ Gary Howland <gary@hotlava.com>
+
+
+
+ Geoff Rehmet <csgr@alpha.ru.ac.za>
+
+
+
+ Goran Hammarback <goran@astro.uu.se>
+
+
+
+ Guido van Rooij <guido@gvr.win.tue.nl>
+
+
+
+ Guy Harris <guy@auspex.com>
+
+
+
+ Havard Eidnes <Havard.Eidnes@runit.sintef.no>
+
+
+
+ Herb Peyerl <hpeyerl@novatel.cuc.ab.ca>
+
+
+
+ Holger Veit <Holger.Veit@gmd.de>
+
+
+
+ Ishii Masahiro, R. Kym Horsell
+
+
+
+ J.T. Conklin <jtc@cygnus.com>
+
+
+
+ Jagane D Sundar < jagane@netcom.com >
+
+
+
+ James Clark <jjc@jclark.com>
+
+
+
+ James Jegers <jimj@miller.cs.uwm.edu>
+
+
+
+ James W. Dolter
+
+
+
+ James da Silva <jds@cs.umd.edu> et al
+
+
+
+ Jay Fenlason <hack@datacube.com>
+
+
+
+ Jim Wilson <wilson@moria.cygnus.com>
+
+
+
+ Jörg Lohse <lohse@tech7.informatik.uni-hamburg.de>
+
+
+
+ Jörg Wunsch <joerg_wunsch@uriah.heep.sax.de>
+
+
+
+ John Dyson - <formerly dyson@ref.tfs.com>
+
+
+
+ John Woods <jfw@eddie.mit.edu>
+
+
+
+ Jordan K. Hubbard <jkh@whisker.hubbard.ie>
+
+
+
+ Julian Elischer <julian@dialix.oz.au>
+
+
+
+ Julian Stacey <jhs@freebsd.org>
+
+
+
+ Karl Lehenbauer <karl@NeoSoft.com>
+ <karl@one.neosoft.com>
+
+
+
+ Keith Bostic <bostic@toe.CS.Berkeley.EDU>
+
+
+
+ Ken Hughes
+
+
+
+ Kent Talarico <kent@shipwreck.tsoft.net>
+
+
+
+ Kevin Lahey <kml%rokkaku.UUCP@mathcs.emory.edu>
+ <kml@mosquito.cis.ufl.edu>
+
+
+
+ Marc Frajola <marc@dev.com>
+
+
+
+ Mark Tinguely <tinguely@plains.nodak.edu>
+ <tinguely@hookie.cs.ndsu.NoDak.edu>
+
+
+
+ Martin Renters <martin@tdc.on.ca>
+
+
+
+ Michael Clay <mclay@weareb.org>
+
+
+
+ Michael Galassi <nerd@percival.rain.com>
+
+
+
+ Mike Durkin <mdurkin@tsoft.sf-bay.org>
+
+
+
+ Naoki Hamada <nao@tom-yam.or.jp>
+
+
+
+ Nate Williams <nate@bsd.coe.montana.edu>
+
+
+
+ Nick Handel <nhandel@NeoSoft.com>
+ <nick@madhouse.neosoft.com>
+
+
+
+ Pace Willisson <pace@blitz.com>
+
+
+
+ Paul Kranenburg <pk@cs.few.eur.nl>
+
+
+
+ Paul Mackerras <paulus@cs.anu.edu.au>
+
+
+
+ Paul Popelka <paulp@uts.amdahl.com>
+
+
+
+ Peter da Silva <peter@NeoSoft.com>
+
+
+
+ Phil Sutherland <philsuth@mycroft.dialix.oz.au>
+
+
+
+ Poul-Henning Kamp<phk@FreeBSD.ORG>
+
+
+
+ Ralf Friedl <friedl@informatik.uni-kl.de>
+
+
+
+ Rick Macklem <root@snowhite.cis.uoguelph.ca>
+
+
+
+ Robert D. Thrush <rd@phoenix.aii.com>
+
+
+
+ Rodney W. Grimes <rgrimes@cdrom.com>
+
+
+
+ Sascha Wildner <swildner@channelz.GUN.de>
+
+
+
+ Scott Burris <scott@pita.cns.ucla.edu>
+
+
+
+ Scott Reynolds <scott@clmqt.marquette.mi.us>
+
+
+
+ Sean Eric Fagan <sef@kithrup.com>
+
+
+
+ Simon J Gerraty <sjg@melb.bull.oz.au>
+ <sjg@zen.void.oz.au>
+
+
+
+ Stephen McKay <syssgm@devetir.qld.gov.au>
+
+
+
+ Terry Lambert <terry@icarus.weber.edu>
+
+
+
+ Terry Lee <terry@uivlsi.csl.uiuc.edu>
+
+
+
+ Tor Egge <Tor.Egge@idi.ntnu.no>
+
+
+
+ Warren Toomey <wkt@csadfa.cs.adfa.oz.au>
+
+
+
+ Wiljo Heinen <wiljo@freeside.ki.open.de>
+
+
+
+ William Jolitz <withheld>
+
+
+
+ Wolfgang Solfrank <ws@tools.de>
+
+
+
+ Wolfgang Stanglmeier <wolf@dentaro.GUN.de>
+
+
+
+ Yuval Yarom <yval@cs.huji.ac.il>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Source Tree Guidelines and Policies
+
+
+ Contributed by &a.phk;.
+
+ This chapter documents various guidelines and policies in force
+ for the FreeBSD source tree.
+
+
+
+ MAINTAINER on Makefiles
+
+
+ June 1996.
+
+ If a particular portion of the FreeBSD distribution is being maintained by a
+ person or group of persons, they can communicate this fact to the
+ world by adding a
+
+
+ MAINTAINER= email-addresses
+
+
+ line to the makefiles covering this portion of the source tree.
+
+ The semantics of this are as follows:
+
+ The maintainer owns and is responsible for that code. This means
+ that he is responsible for fixing bugs and answer problem reports
+ pertaining to that piece of the code, and in the case of contributed
+ software, for tracking new versions, as appropriate.
+
+ Changes to directories which have a maintainer defined shall be
+ sent to the
+ maintainer for review before being committed. Only if the maintainer does not respond
+ for an unacceptable period of time, to several emails, will it be
+ acceptable to commit changes without review by the maintainer.
+ However, it is suggested that you try and have the changes reviewed
+ by someone else if at all possible.
+
+ It is of course not acceptable to add a person or group as maintainer
+ unless they agree to assume this duty. On the other hand it doesn't
+ have to be a committer and it can easily be a group of people.
+
+
+
+
+ Contributed Software
+
+ June 1996.
+
+ Some parts of the FreeBSD distribution consist of software that
+ is actively being maintained outside the FreeBSD project. For
+ historical reasons, we call this contributed software. Some
+ examples are perl, gcc and patch.
+
+ Over the last couple of years, various methods have been used in
+ dealing with this type of software and all have some number of
+ advantages and drawbacks. No clear winner has emerged.
+
+ Since this is the case, after some debate one of these methods has
+ been selected as the "official" method and will be required for
+ future imports of software of this kind. Furthermore, it is strongly
+ suggested that existing contributed software converge on this model
+ over time, as it has significant advantages over the old method,
+ including the ability to easily obtain diffs relative to the
+ "official" versions of the source by everyone (even without cvs
+ access). This will make it significantly easier to return changes
+ to the primary developers of the contributed software.
+
+ Ultimately, however, it comes down to the people actually doing
+ the work. If using this model is particularly unsuited to the
+ package being dealt with, exceptions to these rules may be granted
+ only with the approval of the core team and with the general
+ consensus of the other developers. The ability to maintain the
+ package in the future will be a key issue in the decisions.
+
+ The Tcl embedded programming language will be used as example
+ of how this model works:
+
+
+ src/contrib/tcl
+ contains the source as distributed by the maintainers
+ of this package. Parts that are entirely not applicable for FreeBSD
+ can be removed. In the case of Tcl, the "mac", "win" and "compat"
+ subdirectories were eliminated before the import
+
+
+ src/lib/libtcl
+ contains only a "bmake style" Makefile that uses
+ the standard bsd.lib.mk makefile rules to produce the library and
+ install the documentation.
+
+
+ src/usr.bin/tclsh
+ contains only a bmake style Makefile which will
+ produce and install the "tclsh" program and its associated man-pages
+ using the standard bsd.prog.mk rules.
+
+
+ src/tools/tools/tcl_bmake
+ contains a couple of shell-scripts that can be of help
+ when the tcl software needs updating. These are not part of the
+ built or installed software.
+
+ The important thing here is that the "src/contrib/tcl" directory
+ is created according to the rules: It is supposed to contain the
+ sources as distributed (on a proper CVS vendor-branch) with as few
+ FreeBSD-specific changes as possible. The 'easy-import' tool on
+ freefall will assist in doing the import, but if there are any
+ doubts on how to go about it, it is imperative that you ask first
+ and not blunder ahead and hope it "works out". CVS is not forgiving
+ of import accidents and a fair amount of effort is required to back
+ out major mistakes.
+
+ Because of some unfortunate design limitations with CVS's vendor
+ branches, it is required that "official" patches from the vendor
+ be applied to the original distributed sources and the result
+ re-imported onto the vendor branch again. Official patches should
+ never be patched into the FreeBSD checked out version and
+ "committed", as this destroys the vendor branch coherency and makes
+ importing future versions rather difficult as there will be conflicts.
+
+ Since many packages contain files that are meant for compatibility
+ with other architectures and environments that FreeBSD, it is
+ permissible to remove parts of the distribution tree that are of no interest
+ to FreeBSD in order to save space. Files containing copyright
+ notices and release-note kind of information applicable to the
+ remaining files shall not be removed.
+
+ If it seems easier, the "bmake" makefiles can be produced from the
+ dist tree automatically by some utility, something which would
+ hopefully make it even easier to upgrade to a new version. If this
+ is done, be sure to check in such utilities (as necessary) in the
+ src/tools directory along with the port itself so that it is available
+ to future maintainers.
+
+ In the src/contrib/tcl level directory, a file called FREEBSD-upgrade
+ should be added and it should states things like:
+
+
+
+
+
+ Which files have been left out
+
+
+
+ Where the original distribution was obtained from and/or the official
+ master site.
+
+
+
+ Where to send patches back to the original authors
+
+
+
+ Perhaps an overview of the FreeBSD-specific changes that have been made.
+
+
+
+
+
+ However, please do not import FREEBSD-upgrade with the contributed source.
+ Rather you should ``cvs add FREEBSD-upgrade ; cvs ci'' after the
+ initial import. Example wording from ``src/contrib/cpio'' is below:
+
+
+ This directory contains virgin sources of the original distribution files
+ on a "vendor" branch. Do not, under any circumstances, attempt to upgrade
+ the files in this directory via patches and a cvs commit. New versions or
+ official-patch versions must be imported.
+
+ For the import of GNU cpio 2.4.2, the following files were removed:
+
+ INSTALL cpio.info mkdir.c
+ Makefile.in cpio.texi mkinstalldirs
+
+ To upgrade to a newer version of cpio, when it is available:
+ 1. Unpack the new version into an empty directory.
+ [Do not make ANY changes to the files.]
+
+ 2. Remove the files listed above and any others that don't apply to
+ FreeBSD.
+
+ 3. Use the command:
+ cvs import -m 'Virgin import of GNU cpio v<version>' \
+ src/contrib/cpio GNU v<version>
+
+ For example, to do the import of version 2.4.2, I typed:
+ cvs import -m 'Virgin import of GNU v2.4.2' \
+ src/contrib/cpio GNU v2.4.2
+
+ 4. Follow the instructions printed out in step 3 to resolve any
+ conflicts between local FreeBSD changes and the newer version.
+
+ Do not, under any circumstances, deviate from this procedure.
+
+ To make local changes to cpio, simply patch and commit to the main
+ branch (aka HEAD). Never make local changes on the GNU branch.
+
+ All local changes should be submitted to "cpio@gnu.ai.mit.edu" for
+ inclusion in the next vendor release.
+
+ obrien@freebsd.org - 30 March 1997
+
+
+
+
+
+ Shared Libraries
+
+
+ Contributed by &a.asami;, &a.peter;, and &a.obrien;.
+ 9 December 1996.
+
+ If you are adding shared library support to a port or other piece
+ of software that doesn't have one, the version numbers should
+ follow these rules. Generally, the resulting numbers will have
+ nothing to do with the release version of the software.
+
+ The three principles of shared library building are:
+
+
+
+
+
+ Start from 1.0
+
+
+
+ If there is a change that is backwards compatible, bump
+ minor number
+
+
+
+ If there is an incompatible change, bump major number
+
+
+
+
+
+ For instance, added functions and bugfixes result in the minor
+ version number being bumped, while deleted functions, changed
+ function call syntax etc. will force the major version number
+ to change.
+
+ Stick to version numbers of the form major.minor (x.y). Our dynamic
+ linker does not handle version numbers of the form x.y.z well. Any
+ version number after the ``y'' (ie. the third digit) is totally ignored
+ when comparing shared lib version numbers to decide which library to
+ link with. Given two shared libraries that differ only in the `micro'
+ revision, ld.so will link with the higher one. Ie: if you link with
+ libfoo.so.3.3.3, the linker only records 3.3 in the headers, and will
+ link with anything starting with libfoo.so.3.(anything >= 3).(highest
+ available).
+
+ Note that ld.so will always use the highest "minor" revision.
+ Ie: it will use libc.so.2.2 in preference to libc.so.2.0, even if the
+ program was initially linked with libc.so.2.0.
+
+ For non-port libraries, it is also our policy to change the
+ shared library version number only once between releases. When
+ you make a change to a system library that requires the version
+ number to be bumped, check the Makefile's commit logs. It is the
+ responsibility of the committer to ensure that the first such
+ change since the release will result in the shared library version
+ number in the Makefile to be updated, and any subsequent changes
+ will not.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Adding New Kernel Configuration Options
+
+ Contributed by &a.joerg;
+
+ Note: You should be familiar with the section about before reading here.
+
+
+
+ What's a Kernel Option, Anyway?
+
+ The use of kernel options is basically described in the section.
+ There's also an explanation of ``historic'' and ``new-style''
+ options. The ultimate goal is to eventually turn all the supported
+ options in the kernel into new-style ones, so for people who
+ correctly did a make depend in their kernel compile directory
+ after running config(8), the build process will automatically
+ pick up modified options, and only recompile those files where it is
+ necessary. Wiping out the old compile directory on each run of
+ config(8) as it is still done now can then be eliminated again.
+
+ Basically, a kernel option is nothing else than the definition of
+ a C preprocessor macro for the kernel compilation process. To make
+ the build truly optional, the corresponding part of the kernel
+ source (or kernel .h file) must be written with the option
+ concept in mind, i. e. the default must have been made overridable
+ by the config option. This is usually done with something like:
+
+
+ #ifndef THIS_OPTION
+ #define THIS_OPTION (some_default_value)
+ #endif /* THIS_OPTION */
+
+
+ This way, an administrator mentioning another value for the
+ option in his config file will take the default out of effect, and
+ replace it with his new value. Clearly, the new value will be
+ substituted into the source code during the preprocessor run, so it
+ must be a valid C expression in whatever context the default value
+ would have been used.
+
+ It is also possible to create value-less options that simply
+ enable or disable a particular piece of code by embracing it in
+
+
+ #ifdef THAT_OPTION
+
+ [your code here]
+
+ #endif
+
+
+ Simply mentioning THAT_OPTION in the config file (with or
+ without any value) will then turn on the corresponding piece of
+ code.
+
+ People familiar with the C language will immediately recognize
+ that everything could be counted as a ``config option'' where
+ there is at least a single #ifdef referencing it... However,
+ it's unlikely that many people would put
+
+
+ options notyet,notdef
+
+
+ in their config file, and then wonder why the kernel compilation
+ falls over. :-)
+
+ Clearly, using arbitrary names for the options makes it very
+ hard to track their usage throughout the kernel source tree. That is
+ the rationale behind the new-style option scheme, where each
+ option goes into a separate .h file in the kernel compile
+ directory, which is by convention named opt_foo.h.
+ This way, the usual Makefile dependencies could be applied, and
+ make can determine what needs to be recompiled once an option
+ has been changed.
+
+ The old-style option mechanism still has one advantage for local
+ options or maybe experimental options that have a short anticipated
+ lifetime: since it is easy to add a new #ifdef to the kernel
+ source, this has already made it a kernel config option.
+ In this case, the administrator using such an
+ option is responsible himself for knowing about its implications
+ (and maybe manually forcing the recompilation of parts of his
+ kernel). Once the transition of all supported options has been
+ done, config(8) will warn whenever an unsupported option
+ appears in the config file, but it will nevertheless include it into
+ the kernel Makefile.
+
+
+
+
+ Now What Do I Have to Do for it?
+
+ First, edit sys/conf/options (or
+ sys/i386/conf/options.<arch>, e. g.
+ sys/i386/conf/options.i386), and select an
+ opt_foo.h file where your new option would best go
+ into.
+
+ If there is already something that comes close to the purpose of
+ the new option, pick this. For example, options modifying the
+ overall behaviour of the SCSI subsystem can go into opt_scsi.h.
+ By default, simply mentioning an option in the appropriate option
+ file, say FOO, implies its value will go into the
+ corresponding file opt_foo.h. This can be overridden on the
+ right-hand side of a rule by specifying another filename.
+
+ If there is no opt_foo.h already available for
+ the intended new option, invent a new name. Make it meaningful, and
+ comment the new section in the
+ options[.<arch>] file. config(8) will
+ automagically pick up the change, and create that file next time it
+ is run. Most options should go in a header file by themselves..
+
+ Packing too many options into a single
+ opt_foo.h will cause too many kernel files to be
+ rebuilt when one of the options has been changed in the config file.
+
+ Finally, find out which kernel files depend on the new option.
+ Unless you have just invented your option, and it does not exist
+ anywhere yet,
+
+
+ find /usr/src/sys -name type f | xargs fgrep NEW_OPTION
+
+
+ is your friend in finding them. Go and edit all those files, and
+ add
+
+
+ #include "opt_foo.h"
+
+
+ on top, before all the #include <xxx.h>
+ stuff. This sequence is most important as the options could
+ override defaults from the regular include files, if the
+ defaults are of the form
+
+
+ #ifndef NEW_OPTION
+ #define NEW_OPTION (something)
+ #endif
+
+
+ in the regular header.
+
+ Adding an option that overrides something in a system header file
+ (i. e., a file sitting in /usr/include/sys/) is almost
+ always a mistake. opt_foo.h cannot be included
+ into those files since it would break the headers more seriously,
+ but if it is not included, then places that include it may get an
+ inconsistent value for the option. Yes, there are precedents for
+ this right now, but that does not make them more correct.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Kernel Debugging
+
+ Contributed by &a.paul; and &a.joerg;
+
+
+
+ Debugging a Kernel Crash Dump with KGDB
+
+ Here are some instructions for getting kernel debugging
+ working on a crash dump. They assume that you have enough swap
+ space for a crash dump. If you have multiple swap
+ partitions and the first one is too small to hold the dump,
+ you can configure your kernel to use an alternate dump device
+ (in the config kernel line), or
+ you can specify an alternate using the dumpon(8) command.
+ Dumps to non-swap devices,
+ tapes for example, are currently not supported. Config your
+ kernel using config -g.
+ See for
+ details on configuring the FreeBSD kernel.
+
+ Use the dumpon(8) command to tell the kernel where to dump
+ to (note that this will have to be done after configuring the
+ partition in question as swap space via swapon(8)). This is
+ normally arranged via /etc/rc.conf and /etc/rc.
+ Alternatively, you can
+ hard-code the dump device via the `dump' clause in the `config' line
+ of your kernel config file. This is deprecated and should be used only if you
+ want a crash dump from a kernel that crashes during booting.
+
+ Note: In the following, the term `kgdb' refers
+ to gdb run in `kernel debug mode'. This can be accomplished by
+ either starting the gdb with the option , or by linking
+ and starting it under the name kgdb. This is not being
+ done by default, however, and the idea is basically deprecated since
+ the GNU folks do not like their tools to behave differently when
+ called by another name. This feature may well be discontinued
+ in further releases.
+
+ When the kernel has been built make a copy of it, say
+ kernel.debug, and then run strip -d on the
+ original. Install the original as normal. You may also install
+ the unstripped kernel, but symbol table lookup time for some
+ programs will drastically increase, and since
+ the whole kernel is loaded entirely at boot time and cannot be
+ swapped out later, several megabytes of
+ physical memory will be wasted.
+
+ If you are testing a new kernel, for example by typing the new
+ kernel's name at the boot prompt, but need to boot a different
+ one in order to get your system up and running again, boot it
+ only into single user state using the flag at the
+ boot prompt, and then perform the following steps:
+
+ fsck -p
+ mount -a -t ufs # so your file system for /var/crash is writable
+ savecore -N /kernel.panicked /var/crash
+ exit # ...to multi-user
+
+
+ This instructs savecore(8) to use another kernel for symbol name
+ extraction. It would otherwise default to the currently running kernel
+ and most likely not do anything at all since the crash dump and the
+ kernel symbols differ.
+
+ Now, after a crash dump, go to /sys/compile/WHATEVER and run
+ kgdb. From kgdb do:
+
+ symbol-file kernel.debug
+ exec-file /var/crash/kernel.0
+ core-file /var/crash/vmcore.0
+
+
+ and voila, you can debug the crash dump using the kernel sources
+ just like you can for any other program.
+
+ Here is a script log of a kgdb session illustrating the
+ procedure. Long
+ lines have been folded to improve readability, and the lines are
+ numbered for reference. Despite this, it is a real-world error
+ trace taken during the development of the pcvt console driver.
+
+ 1:Script started on Fri Dec 30 23:15:22 1994
+ 2:uriah # cd /sys/compile/URIAH
+ 3:uriah # kgdb kernel /var/crash/vmcore.1
+ 4:Reading symbol data from /usr/src/sys/compile/URIAH/kernel...done.
+ 5:IdlePTD 1f3000
+ 6:panic: because you said to!
+ 7:current pcb at 1e3f70
+ 8:Reading in symbols for ../../i386/i386/machdep.c...done.
+ 9:(kgdb) where
+ 10:#0 boot (arghowto=256) (../../i386/i386/machdep.c line 767)
+ 11:#1 0xf0115159 in panic ()
+ 12:#2 0xf01955bd in diediedie () (../../i386/i386/machdep.c line 698)
+ 13:#3 0xf010185e in db_fncall ()
+ 14:#4 0xf0101586 in db_command (-266509132, -266509516, -267381073)
+ 15:#5 0xf0101711 in db_command_loop ()
+ 16:#6 0xf01040a0 in db_trap ()
+ 17:#7 0xf0192976 in kdb_trap (12, 0, -272630436, -266743723)
+ 18:#8 0xf019d2eb in trap_fatal (...)
+ 19:#9 0xf019ce60 in trap_pfault (...)
+ 20:#10 0xf019cb2f in trap (...)
+ 21:#11 0xf01932a1 in exception:calltrap ()
+ 22:#12 0xf0191503 in cnopen (...)
+ 23:#13 0xf0132c34 in spec_open ()
+ 24:#14 0xf012d014 in vn_open ()
+ 25:#15 0xf012a183 in open ()
+ 26:#16 0xf019d4eb in syscall (...)
+ 27:(kgdb) up 10
+ 28:Reading in symbols for ../../i386/i386/trap.c...done.
+ 29:#10 0xf019cb2f in trap (frame={tf_es = -260440048, tf_ds = 16, tf_\
+ 30:edi = 3072, tf_esi = -266445372, tf_ebp = -272630356, tf_isp = -27\
+ 31:2630396, tf_ebx = -266427884, tf_edx = 12, tf_ecx = -266427884, tf\
+ 32:_eax = 64772224, tf_trapno = 12, tf_err = -272695296, tf_eip = -26\
+ 33:6672343, tf_cs = -266469368, tf_eflags = 66066, tf_esp = 3072, tf_\
+ 34:ss = -266427884}) (../../i386/i386/trap.c line 283)
+ 35:283 (void) trap_pfault(&frame, FALSE);
+ 36:(kgdb) frame frame->tf_ebp frame->tf_eip
+ 37:Reading in symbols for ../../i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_drv.c...done.
+ 38:#0 0xf01ae729 in pcopen (dev=3072, flag=3, mode=8192, p=(struct p\
+ 39:roc *) 0xf07c0c00) (../../i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_drv.c line 403)
+ 40:403 return ((*linesw[tp->t_line].l_open)(dev, tp));
+ 41:(kgdb) list
+ 42:398
+ 43:399 tp->t_state |= TS_CARR_ON;
+ 44:400 tp->t_cflag |= CLOCAL; /* cannot be a modem (:-) */
+ 45:401
+ 46:402 #if PCVT_NETBSD || (PCVT_FREEBSD >= 200)
+ 47:403 return ((*linesw[tp->t_line].l_open)(dev, tp));
+ 48:404 #else
+ 49:405 return ((*linesw[tp->t_line].l_open)(dev, tp, flag));
+ 50:406 #endif /* PCVT_NETBSD || (PCVT_FREEBSD >= 200) */
+ 51:407 }
+ 52:(kgdb) print tp
+ 53:Reading in symbols for ../../i386/i386/cons.c...done.
+ 54:$1 = (struct tty *) 0x1bae
+ 55:(kgdb) print tp->t_line
+ 56:$2 = 1767990816
+ 57:(kgdb) up
+ 58:#1 0xf0191503 in cnopen (dev=0x00000000, flag=3, mode=8192, p=(st\
+ 59:ruct proc *) 0xf07c0c00) (../../i386/i386/cons.c line 126)
+ 60: return ((*cdevsw[major(dev)].d_open)(dev, flag, mode, p));
+ 61:(kgdb) up
+ 62:#2 0xf0132c34 in spec_open ()
+ 63:(kgdb) up
+ 64:#3 0xf012d014 in vn_open ()
+ 65:(kgdb) up
+ 66:#4 0xf012a183 in open ()
+ 67:(kgdb) up
+ 68:#5 0xf019d4eb in syscall (frame={tf_es = 39, tf_ds = 39, tf_edi =\
+ 69: 2158592, tf_esi = 0, tf_ebp = -272638436, tf_isp = -272629788, tf\
+ 70:_ebx = 7086, tf_edx = 1, tf_ecx = 0, tf_eax = 5, tf_trapno = 582, \
+ 71:tf_err = 582, tf_eip = 75749, tf_cs = 31, tf_eflags = 582, tf_esp \
+ 72:= -272638456, tf_ss = 39}) (../../i386/i386/trap.c line 673)
+ 73:673 error = (*callp->sy_call)(p, args, rval);
+ 74:(kgdb) up
+ 75:Initial frame selected; you cannot go up.
+ 76:(kgdb) quit
+ 77:uriah # exit
+ 78:exit
+ 79:
+ 80:Script done on Fri Dec 30 23:18:04 1994
+
+
+ Comments to the above script:
+
+
+
+ line 6:
+
+ This is a dump taken from within DDB (see below), hence the
+ panic comment ``because you said to!'', and a rather long
+ stack trace; the initial reason for going into DDB has been
+ a page fault trap though.
+
+
+
+
+ line 20:
+
+
+ This is the location of function trap()
+ in the stack trace.
+
+
+
+
+ line 36:
+
+
+ Force usage of a new stack frame; this is no longer
+ necessary now. The stack frames are supposed to point to
+ the right locations now, even in case of a trap.
+ (I do not have a new core dump handy <g>, my kernel
+ has not panicked for a rather long time.)
+ From looking at the code in source line 403,
+ there is a high probability that either the pointer
+ access for ``tp'' was messed up, or the array access was
+ out of bounds.
+
+
+
+
+ line 52:
+
+
+ The pointer looks suspicious, but happens to be a valid
+ address.
+
+
+
+
+ line 56:
+
+
+ However, it obviously points to garbage, so we have found our
+ error! (For those unfamiliar with that particular piece
+ of code: tp->t_line refers to the line discipline
+ of the console device here, which must be a rather small integer
+ number.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Post-mortem Analysis of a Dump
+
+ What do you do if a kernel dumped core but you did not expect
+ it, and it is therefore not compiled using config -g?
+ Not everything is lost here. Do not panic!
+
+ Of course, you still need to enable crash dumps. See above
+ on the options you have to specify in order to do this.
+
+ Go to your kernel compile directory, and edit the line
+ containing COPTFLAGS?=-O. Add the option
+ there (but do not change anything on the level of
+ optimization). If you do already know roughly the probable
+ location of the failing piece of code (e.g., the pcvt
+ driver in the example above), remove all the object files for
+ this code. Rebuild the kernel. Due to the time stamp change on
+ the Makefile, there will be some other object files rebuild,
+ for example trap.o. With a bit of luck, the added
+ option will not change anything for the generated
+ code, so you will finally get a new kernel with similar code to
+ the faulting one but some debugging symbols. You should at
+ least verify the old and new sizes with the size(1) command. If
+ there is a mismatch, you probably need to give up here.
+
+ Go and examine the dump as described above. The debugging
+ symbols might be incomplete for some places, as can be seen in
+ the stack trace in the example above where some functions are
+ displayed without line numbers and argument lists. If you need
+ more debugging symbols, remove the appropriate object files and
+ repeat the kgdb session until you know enough.
+
+ All this is not guaranteed to work, but it will do it fine in
+ most cases.
+
+
+
+
+ On-line Kernel Debugging Using DDB
+
+ While kgdb as an offline debugger provides a very
+ high level of user interface, there are some things it cannot do.
+ The most important ones being breakpointing and single-stepping
+ kernel code.
+
+ If you need to do low-level debugging on your kernel, there is
+ an on-line debugger available called DDB. It allows to
+ setting breakpoints, single-steping kernel functions, examining
+ and changing kernel variables, etc. However, it cannot
+ access kernel source files, and only has access to the global
+ and static symbols, not to the full debug information like
+ kgdb.
+
+ To configure your kernel to include DDB, add the option line
+
+ options DDB
+
+
+ to your config file, and rebuild. (See for details on configuring the
+ FreeBSD kernel. Note that if you have an older version of the
+ boot blocks, your debugger symbols might not be loaded at all.
+ Update the boot blocks; the recent ones load the DDB symbols
+ automagically.)
+
+ Once your DDB kernel is running, there are several ways to
+ enter DDB. The first, and earliest way is to type the boot
+ flag right at the boot prompt. The kernel will
+ start up in debug mode and enter DDB prior to any device
+ probing. Hence you can even debug the device
+ probe/attach functions.
+
+ The second scenario is a hot-key on the keyboard, usually
+ Ctrl-Alt-ESC. For syscons, this can be remapped; some of
+ the distributed maps do this, so watch out.
+ There is an option
+ available for serial consoles
+ that allows the use of a serial line BREAK on the console line to
+ enter DDB (``options BREAK_TO_DEBUGGER''
+ in the kernel config file). It is not the default since there are a lot of
+ crappy serial adapters around that gratuitously generate a
+ BREAK condition, for example when pulling the cable.
+
+ The third way is that any panic condition will branch to DDB if
+ the kernel is configured to use it.
+ For this reason, it is not wise to
+ configure a kernel with DDB for a machine running unattended.
+
+ The DDB commands roughly resemble some gdb commands. The first
+ thing you probably need to do is to set a breakpoint:
+
+ b function-name
+ b address
+
+
+
+ Numbers are taken hexadecimal by default, but to make them
+ distinct from symbol names; hexadecimal numbers starting with the
+ letters a-f need to be preceded with
+ 0x (this is optional for other numbers). Simple
+ expressions are allowed, for example: function-name + 0x103.
+
+ To continue the operation of an interrupted kernel, simply type
+
+ c
+
+
+ To get a stack trace, use
+
+ trace
+
+
+ Note that when entering DDB via a hot-key, the kernel is currently
+ servicing an interrupt, so the stack trace might be not of much use
+ for you.
+
+ If you want to remove a breakpoint, use
+
+ del
+ del address-expression
+
+
+ The first form will be accepted immediately after a breakpoint hit,
+ and deletes the current breakpoint. The second form can remove any
+ breakpoint, but you need to specify the exact address; this can be
+ obtained from
+
+ show b
+
+
+ To single-step the kernel, try
+
+ s
+
+
+ This will step into functions, but you can make DDB trace them until
+ the matching return statement is reached by
+
+ n
+
+
+ Note: this is different from gdb's `next' statement; it is like
+ gdb's `finish'.
+
+ To examine data from memory, use (for example):
+
+ x/wx 0xf0133fe0,40
+ x/hd db_symtab_space
+ x/bc termbuf,10
+ x/s stringbuf
+
+
+ for word/halfword/byte access, and hexadecimal/decimal/character/
+ string display. The number after the comma is the object count.
+ To display the next 0x10 items, simply use
+
+ x ,10
+
+
+ Similarly, use
+
+ x/ia foofunc,10
+
+
+ to disassemble the first 0x10 instructions of foofunc, and display
+ them along with their offset from the beginning of foofunc.
+
+ To modify memory, use the write command:
+
+ w/b termbuf 0xa 0xb 0
+ w/w 0xf0010030 0 0
+
+
+ The command modifier (b/h/w)
+ specifies the size of the data to be written, the first
+ following expression is the address to write to and the remainder
+ is interpreted as data to write to successive memory locations.
+
+ If you need to know the current registers, use
+
+ show reg
+
+
+ Alternatively, you can display a single register value by e.g.
+
+ p $eax
+
+
+ and modify it by
+
+ set $eax new-value
+
+
+
+ Should you need to call some kernel functions from DDB, simply
+ say
+
+ call func(arg1, arg2, ...)
+
+
+ The return value will be printed.
+
+ For a ps(1) style summary of all running processes, use
+
+ ps
+
+
+
+ Now you have now examined why your kernel failed, and you wish to
+ reboot. Remember that, depending on the severity of previous
+ malfunctioning, not all parts of the kernel might still be working
+ as expected. Perform one of the following actions to shut down and
+ reboot your system:
+
+ call diediedie()
+
+
+
+ This will cause your kernel to dump core and reboot, so you can
+ later analyze the core on a higher level with kgdb. This
+ command usually must be followed by another
+ `continue' statement.
+ There is now an alias for this: `panic'.
+
+
+
+ call boot(0)
+
+
+ might be a good way to cleanly shut down the running system, sync()
+ all disks, and finally reboot. As long as the disk and file system
+ interfaces of the kernel are not damaged, this might be a good way
+ for an almost clean shutdown.
+
+
+
+ call cpu_reset()
+
+
+ is the final way out of disaster and almost the same as hitting
+ the Big Red Button.
+
+ If you need a short command summary, simply type
+
+ help
+
+
+ However, it is highly recommended to have a printed copy of the
+ ddb(4) manual page ready for a debugging session.
+ Remember that it is hard to read the on-line manual while
+ single-stepping the kernel.
+
+
+
+
+ On-line Kernel Debugging Using Remote GDB
+
+ This feature has been supported since FreeBSD 2.2, and it's actually
+ a very neat one.
+
+ GDB has already supported remote debugging for a long time.
+ This is done using a very simple protocol along a
+ serial line. Unlike the other methods
+ described above, you will need two machines for doing this. One is
+ the host providing the debugging environment, including all
+ the sources, and a copy of the kernel binary with all the
+ symbols in it, and the other one is the target machine that
+ simply runs a similar copy of the very same kernel (but stripped
+ of the debugging information).
+
+ You should configure the kernel in question with config -g,
+ include DDB into the configuration, and compile it as usual.
+ This gives a large blurb of a binary, due
+ to the debugging information. Copy this kernel to the target
+ machine, strip the debugging symbols off with strip -x,
+ and boot it using the boot option. Connect the first
+ serial line of the target machine to any serial line of the
+ debugging host. Now, on the debugging machine, go to the compile
+ directory of the target kernel, and start gdb:
+
+ % gdb -k kernel
+ GDB is free software and you are welcome to distribute copies of it
+ under certain conditions; type "show copying" to see the conditions.
+ There is absolutely no warranty for GDB; type "show warranty" for details.
+ GDB 4.16 (i386-unknown-freebsd),
+ Copyright 1996 Free Software Foundation, Inc...
+ (kgdb)
+
+
+
+ Initialize the remote debugging session (assuming the first serial
+ port is being used) by:
+
+ (kgdb) target remote /dev/cuaa0
+
+
+
+ Now, on the target host (the one that entered DDB right before even starting
+ the device probe), type:
+
+ Debugger("Boot flags requested debugger")
+ Stopped at Debugger+0x35: movb $0, edata+0x51bc
+ db> gdb
+
+
+
+ DDB will respond with:
+
+ Next trap will enter GDB remote protocol mode
+
+
+
+ Every time you type ``gdb'', the mode will be toggled between
+ remote GDB and local DDB. In order to force a next trap
+ immediately, simply type ``s'' (step). Your hosting GDB will
+ now gain control over the target kernel:
+
+ Remote debugging using /dev/cuaa0
+ Debugger (msg=0xf01b0383 "Boot flags requested debugger")
+ at ../../i386/i386/db_interface.c:257
+ (kgdb)
+
+
+
+ You can use this session almost as any other GDB session, including
+ full access to the source, running it in gud-mode inside an Emacs
+ window (which gives you an automatic source code display in another
+ Emacs window) etc.
+
+ Remote GDB can also be used to debug LKMs. First build the LKM
+ with debugging symbols:
+
+ # cd /usr/src/lkm/linux
+ # make clean; make COPTS=-g
+
+
+
+ Then install this version of the module on the target machine, load it
+ and use modstat to find out where it was loaded:
+
+ # linux
+ # modstat
+ Type Id Off Loadaddr Size Info Rev Module Name
+ EXEC 0 4 f5109000 001c f510f010 1 linux_mod
+
+
+
+ Take the load address of the module and add 0x20 (probably to account
+ for the a.out header). This is the address that the module code was
+ relocated to. Use the add-symbol-file command in GDB to tell the
+ debugger about the module:
+
+ (kgdb) add-symbol-file /usr/src/lkm/linux/linux_mod.o 0xf5109020
+ add symbol table from file "/usr/src/lkm/linux/linux_mod.o" at
+ text_addr = 0xf5109020?
+ (y or n) y
+ (kgdb)
+
+
+
+ You now have access to all the symbols in the LKM.
+
+
+
+
+ Debugging a Console Driver
+
+ Since you need a console driver to run DDB on, things are more
+ complicated if the console driver itself is failing. You might
+ remember the use of a serial console (either with modified boot
+ blocks, or by specifying at the Boot:
+ prompt), and hook up a standard
+ terminal onto your first serial port. DDB works on any configured
+ console driver, of course also on a serial console.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Linux Emulation
+
+ Contributed by &a.handy; and &a.rich;
+
+
+
+ How to Install the Linux Emulator
+
+ Linux emulation in FreeBSD has reached a point where it is possible
+ to run a large fraction of Linux binaries in both a.out and ELF
+ format. The linux emulation in the 2.1-STABLE branch is capable of
+ running Linux DOOM and Mathematica; the version present in
+ FreeBSD-2.2-RELEASE is vastly more capable and runs all these as well as
+ Quake, Abuse, IDL, netrek for Linux and a whole host of other
+ programs.
+
+ There are some Linux-specific operating system features that are not
+ supported on FreeBSD. Linux binaries will not work on FreeBSD if they
+ use the Linux /proc filesystem (which is different from the optional
+ FreeBSD /proc filesystem) or i386-specific calls, such as enabling
+ virtual 8086 mode.
+
+ To tell whether your kernel is configured for Linux
+ compatibility simply run any Linux binary. If it
+ prints the error message
+
+ linux-executable: Exec format error. Wrong Architecture.
+
+
+ then you do not have linux compatibility support and
+ you need to configure and install a new kernel.
+
+ Depending on which version of FreeBSD you are running, how you get
+ Linux-emulation up will vary slightly:
+
+
+
+ Installing Linux Emulation in 2.1-STABLE
+
+ The GENERIC kernel in 2.1-STABLE is not configured for linux
+ compatibility so you must reconfigure your kernel for it. There
+ are two ways to do this: 1. linking the emulator statically in the
+ kernel itself and 2. configuring your kernel to dynamically load the
+ linux loadable kernel module (LKM).
+
+ To enable the emulator, add the following to your configuration file
+ (c.f. /sys/i386/conf/LINT):
+
+ options COMPAT_LINUX
+
+
+ If you want to run doom or other applications
+ that need shared memory,
+ also add the following.
+
+ options SYSVSHM
+
+
+ The linux system calls require 4.3BSD system call compatibility. So
+ make sure you have the following.
+
+ options "COMPAT_43"
+
+
+
+ If you prefer to statically link the emulator in the kernel rather than
+ use the loadable kernel module (LKM), then add
+
+ options LINUX
+
+
+ Then run config and install the new kernel as described in the
+ section.
+
+ If you decide to use the LKM you must also install the loadable
+ module. A mismatch of versions between the kernel and loadable
+ module can cause the kernel to crash, so the safest thing to do is to
+ reinstall the LKM when you install the kernel.
+
+ % cd /usr/src/lkm/linux
+ % make all install
+
+
+ Once you have installed the kernel and the LKM, you can invoke
+ `linux' as root to load the LKM.
+
+ % linux
+ Linux emulator installed
+ Module loaded as ID 0
+ %
+
+
+ To see whether the LKM is loaded, run `modstat'.
+
+ % modstat
+ Type Id Off Loadaddr Size Info Rev Module Name
+ EXEC 0 3 f0baf000 0018 f0bb4000 1 linux_emulator
+ %
+
+
+ You can cause the LKM to be loaded when the system boots in either of
+ two ways. In FreeBSD 2.2.1-RELEASE and 2.1-STABLE enable it in
+ /etc/sysconfig
+
+ linux=YES
+
+
+ by changing it from NO to YES. FreeBSD 2.1 RELEASE and earlier do not
+ have such a line and on those you will need to edit /etc/rc.local to
+ add the following line.
+
+ linux
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Installing Linux Emulation in 2.2.2-RELEASE and later
+
+ It is no longer necessary to specify ``options LINUX''
+ or ``options COMPAT_LINUX''. Linux emulation is done with an LKM
+ (``Loadable Kernel Module'') so it can be installed on the fly without
+ having to reboot. You will need the following things in your startup files,
+ however:
+
+
+
+ In /etc/rc.conf, you need the following line:
+
+ linux_enable=YES
+
+
+
+
+
+ This, in turn, triggers the following action in /etc/rc.i386:
+
+ # Start the Linux binary emulation if requested.
+ if [ "X${linux_enable}" = X"YES" ]; then
+ echo -n ' linux'; linux > /dev/null 2>&1
+ fi
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ If you want to verify it is running, modstat will do that:
+
+ % modstat
+ Type Id Off Loadaddr Size Info Rev Module Name
+ EXEC 0 4 f09e6000 001c f09ec010 1 linux_mod
+ %
+
+
+ However, there have been reports that this fails on some 2.2-RELEASE and
+ later systems. If for some reason you cannot load the linux
+ LKM, then statically link the emulator in the kernel by adding
+
+ options LINUX
+
+
+ to your kernel config file. Then run config and install the new
+ kernel as described in the section.
+
+
+
+
+ Installing Linux Runtime Libraries
+
+
+
+ Installing using the linux_lib port
+
+ Most linux applications use shared libraries, so you are still not
+ done until you install the shared libraries. It is possible to do
+ this by hand, however, it is vastly simpler to just grab the
+ linux_lib port:
+
+ % cd /usr/ports-current/emulators/linux_lib
+ % make all install
+
+
+
+ and you should have a working linux emulator. Legend (and the mail
+ archives :-) seems to hold that Linux emulation works best with
+ linux binaries linked against the ZMAGIC libraries; QMAGIC libraries
+ (such as those used in Slackware V2.0) may tend to give the
+ Linuxulator heartburn. As of this writing (March 1996) ELF emulation
+ is still in the formulative stages but seems to work pretty well. Also,
+ expect some programs to complain about incorrect minor versions. In
+ general this does not seem to be a problem.
+
+
+
+
+ Installing libraries manually
+
+ If you do not have the ``ports'' distribution, you can install the
+ libraries by hand instead. You will need the Linux shared libraries
+ that the program depends on and the runtime linker. Also, you will
+ need to create a "shadow root" directory, /compat/linux, for Linux
+ libraries on your FreeBSD system. Any shared libraries opened by
+ Linux programs run under FreeBSD will look in this tree first. So, if
+ a Linux program loads, for example, /lib/libc.so, FreeBSD will first
+ try to open /compat/linux/lib/libc.so, and if that does not exist then
+ it will try /lib/libc.so. Shared libraries should be installed in the
+ shadow tree /compat/linux/lib rather than the paths that the Linux
+ ld.so reports.
+
+ FreeBSD-2.2-RELEASE and later works slightly differently with respect to
+ /compat/linux. On -CURRENT, all files, not just libraries, are
+ searched for from the ``shadow root'' /compat/linux.
+
+ Generally, you will need to look for the shared libraries that Linux
+ binaries depend on only the first few times that you install a Linux
+ program on your FreeBSD system. After a while, you will have a sufficient
+ set of Linux shared libraries on your system to be able to run newly
+ imported Linux binaries without any extra work.
+
+
+
+
+ How to install additional shared libraries
+
+ What if you install the linux_lib port and your application still
+ complains about missing shared libraries? How do you know which
+ shared libraries Linux binaries need, and where to get them?
+ Basically, there are 2 possibilities (when following these
+ instructions: you will need to be root on your FreeBSD system to do
+ the necessary installation steps).
+
+ If you have access to a Linux system, see what shared libraries
+ it needs, and copy them to your FreeBSD system. Example: you have
+ just ftp'ed the Linux binary of Doom. Put it on the Linux
+ system you have access to, and check which shared libraries it
+ needs by running `ldd linuxxdoom':
+
+
+
+ % ldd linuxxdoom
+ libXt.so.3 (DLL Jump 3.1) => /usr/X11/lib/libXt.so.3.1.0
+ libX11.so.3 (DLL Jump 3.1) => /usr/X11/lib/libX11.so.3.1.0
+ libc.so.4 (DLL Jump 4.5pl26) => /lib/libc.so.4.6.29
+
+
+
+ You would need to get all the files from the last column, and
+ put them under /compat/linux, with the names in the first column
+ as symbolic links pointing to them. This means you eventually have
+ these files on your FreeBSD system:
+
+ /compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libXt.so.3.1.0
+ /compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libXt.so.3 -> libXt.so.3.1.0
+ /compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libX11.so.3.1.0
+ /compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libX11.so.3 -> libX11.so.3.1.0
+ /compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4.6.29
+ /compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4 -> libc.so.4.6.29
+
+
+
+ Note that if you already have a Linux shared library with a
+ matching major revision number to the first column of the 'ldd'
+ output, you will not need to copy the file named in the last column to
+ your system, the one you already have should work. It is advisable to
+ copy the shared library anyway if it is a newer version, though. You
+ can remove the old one, as long as you make the symbolic link point to
+ the new one. So, if you have these libraries on your system:
+
+ /compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4.6.27
+ /compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4 -> libc.so.4.6.27
+
+
+
+ and you find a new binary that claims to require a later version
+ according to the output of ldd:
+
+ libc.so.4 (DLL Jump 4.5pl26) -> libc.so.4.6.29
+
+
+
+ If it is only one or two versions out of date in the in the trailing
+ digit then do not worry about copying /lib/libc.so.4.6.29 too, because
+ the program should work fine with the slightly older version.
+ However, if you like you can decide to replace the libc.so anyway, and
+ that should leave you with:
+
+ /compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4.6.29
+ /compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4 -> libc.so.4.6.29
+
+
+
+ Please note that the symbolic link mechanism is only
+ needed for Linux binaries. The FreeBSD runtime linker takes care of
+ looking for matching major revision numbers itself and you do not need to
+ worry about it.
+
+
+
+
+ Configuring the ld.so -- for FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE only
+
+ This section applies only to FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE and later. Those running
+ 2.1-STABLE should skip this section.
+
+ Finally, if you run FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE you must make sure that you
+ have the Linux runtime linker and its config files on your system. You
+ should copy these files from the Linux system to their appropriate
+ place on your FreeBSD system (to the /compat/linux tree):
+
+ /compat/linux/lib/ld.so
+ /compat/linux/etc/ld.so.config
+
+
+
+ If you do not have access to a Linux system, you should get the
+ extra files you need from various ftp sites. Information on where to
+ look for the various files is appended below. For now, let us assume
+ you know where to get the files.
+
+ Retrieve the following files (all from the same ftp site to avoid any
+ version mismatches), and install them under /compat/linux
+ (i.e. /foo/bar is installed as /compat/linux/foo/bar):
+
+ /sbin/ldconfig
+ /usr/bin/ldd
+ /lib/libc.so.x.y.z
+ /lib/ld.so
+
+
+
+ ldconfig and ldd do not necessarily need to be under /compat/linux;
+ you can install them elsewhere in the system too. Just make sure they
+ do not conflict with their FreeBSD counterparts. A good idea would be
+ to install them in /usr/local/bin as ldconfig-linux and ldd-linux.
+
+ Create the file /compat/linux/etc/ld.so.conf, containing the
+ directories in which the Linux runtime linker should look
+ for shared libs. It is a plain text file, containing a directory
+ name on each line. /lib and /usr/lib are standard, you could
+ add the following:
+
+ /usr/X11/lib
+ /usr/local/lib
+
+
+
+ When a linux binary opens a library such as /lib/libc.so the
+ emulator maps the name to /compat/linux/lib/libc.so internally. All
+ linux libraries should be installed under /compat/linux (e.g.
+ /compat/linux/lib/libc.so, /compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libX11.so, etc.)
+ in order for the emulator to find them.
+
+ Those running FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE should run the Linux ldconfig program.
+
+ % cd /compat/linux/lib
+ % /compat/linux/sbin/ldconfig
+
+
+
+ Ldconfig is statically linked, so it does not need any shared
+ libraries to run. It creates the file /compat/linux/etc/ld.so.cache
+ which contains the names of all the shared libraries and should be rerun
+ to recreate this file whenever you install additional shared
+ libraries.
+
+ On 2.1-STABLE do not install /compat/linux/etc/ld.so.cache or run
+ ldconfig; in 2.1-STABLE the syscalls are implemented
+ differently and ldconfig is not needed or used.
+
+ You should now be set up for Linux binaries which only need a
+ shared libc. You can test this by running the Linux ldd on
+ itself. Supposing that you have it installed as ldd-linux, it should
+ produce something like:
+
+ % ldd-linux `which ldd-linux`
+ libc.so.4 (DLL Jump 4.5pl26) => /lib/libc.so.4.6.29
+
+
+
+ This being done, you are ready to install new Linux binaries.
+ Whenever you install a new Linux program, you should check if it needs
+ shared libraries, and if so, whether you have them installed in the
+ /compat/linux tree. To do this, you run the Linux version ldd on the
+ new program, and watch its output. ldd (see also the manual page for
+ ldd(1)) will print a list of shared libraries that the program depends
+ on, in the form majorname (jumpversion) => fullname.
+
+ If it prints "not found" instead of fullname it means that you
+ need an extra library. The library needed is shown in majorname
+ and will be of the form libXXXX.so.N. You will need to find a
+ libXXXX.so.N.mm on a Linux ftp site, and install it on your
+ system. The XXXX (name) and N (major revision number) should match;
+ the minor number(s) mm are less important, though it is advised to
+ take the most recent version.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Configuring the host name resolver
+
+ If DNS does not work or you get the messages
+
+ resolv+: "bind" is an invalid keyword
+ resolv+: "hosts" is an invalid keyword
+
+
+
+ then you need to configure a /compat/linux/etc/host.conf file
+ containing:
+
+ order hosts, bind
+ multi on
+
+
+
+ where the order here specifies that /etc/hosts is searched first and
+ DNS is searched second. When /compat/linux/etc/host.conf is not
+ installed linux applications find FreeBSD's /etc/host.conf and
+ complain about the incompatible FreeBSD syntax. You should remove
+ `bind,' if you have not configured a name-server using the
+ /etc/resolv.conf file.
+
+ Lastly, those who run 2.1-STABLE need to set an the
+ RESOLV_HOST_CONF environment variable so that applications will know
+ how to search the host tables. If you run FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE, you can
+ skip this. For the /bin/csh shell use:
+
+ setenv RESOLV_HOST_CONF /compat/linux/etc/host.conf
+
+
+
+ For /bin/sh use:
+
+ RESOLV_HOST_CONF=/compat/linux/etc/host.conf; export RESOLV_HOST_CONF
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Finding the necessary files
+
+ Note: the information below is valid as of the time this document
+ was written, but certain details such as names of ftp sites,
+ directories and distribution names may have changed by the time you
+ read this.
+
+ Linux is distributed by several groups that make their own set
+ of binaries that they distribute. Each distribution has its own
+ name, like ``Slackware'' or ``Yggdrasil''. The distributions are
+ available on a lot of ftp sites. Sometimes the files are unpacked,
+ and you can get the individual files you need, but mostly they
+ are stored in distribution sets, usually consisting of subdirectories
+ with gzipped tar files in them. The primary ftp sites for the
+ distributions are:
+ sunsite.unc.edu:/pub/Linux/distributions
+ tsx-11.mit.edu:/pub/linux/distributions
+
+
+ Some European mirrors:
+ ftp.luth.se:/pub/linux/distributions
+ ftp.demon.co.uk:/pub/linux/distributions
+ src.doc.ic.ac.uk:/packages/linux/distributions
+
+
+ For simplicity, let us concentrate on Slackware here. This
+ distribution consists of a number of subdirectories, containing
+ separate packages. Normally, they are controlled by an install
+ program, but you can retrieve files "by hand" too. First of all, you
+ will need to look in the "contents" subdir of the distribution. You
+ will find a lot of small text files here describing the contents of the
+ separate packages. The fastest way to look something up is to retrieve
+ all the files in the contents subdirectory, and grep through them for
+ the file you need. Here is an example of a list of files that you
+ might need, and in which contents-file you will find it by grepping
+ through them:
+
+
+
+ So, in this case, you will need the packages ldso, shlibs, xf_lib
+ and oldlibs. In each of the contents-files for these packages, look
+ for a line saying ``PACKAGE LOCATION'', it will tell you on which `disk'
+ the package is, in our case it will tell us in which subdirectory we
+ need to look. For our example, we would find the following locations:
+
+ Note: The 8237 does allow two channels to
+ be connected together to allow memory-to-memory DMA
+ operations in a non-``fly-by'' mode, but nobody in the PC
+ industry uses this scarce resource this way since it is
+ faster to move data between memory locations using the
+ CPU.
+
+
+
+ In the PC architecture, each DMA channel is normally
+ activated only when the hardware that uses a given DMA channel
+ requests a transfer by asserting the DRQ line for that
+ channel.
+
+
+
+ A Sample DMA transfer
+
+ Here is an example of the steps that occur to cause and perform
+ a DMA transfer. In this example, the floppy disk
+ controller (FDC) has just read a byte from a diskette and
+ wants the DMA to place it in memory at location
+ 0x00123456. The process begins by the FDC asserting the
+ DRQ2 signal (the DRQ line for DMA channel 2) to alert the DMA
+ controller.
+
+ The DMA controller will note that the DRQ2 signal is asserted.
+ The DMA controller will then make sure that DMA channel 2
+ has been programmed and is unmasked (enabled). The DMA controller
+ also makes sure that none of the other DMA channels are active
+ or want to be active and have a higher priority. Once these checks
+ are complete, the DMA asks the CPU to release the bus so that
+ the DMA may use the bus. The DMA requests the bus by
+ asserting the HRQ signal which goes to the CPU.
+
+ The CPU detects the HRQ signal, and will complete
+ executing the current instruction. Once the processor
+ has reached a state where it can release the bus, it
+ will. Now all of the signals normally generated by the
+ CPU (-MEMR, -MEMW, -IOR, -IOW and a few others) are
+ placed in a tri-stated condition (neither high or low)
+ and then the CPU asserts the HLDA signal which tells the
+ DMA controller that it is now in charge of the bus.
+
+ Depending on the processor, the CPU may be able to
+ execute a few additional instructions now that it no
+ longer has the bus, but the CPU will eventually have to
+ wait when it reaches an instruction that must read
+ something from memory that is not in the internal
+ processor cache or pipeline.
+
+ Now that the DMA ``is in charge'', the DMA activates its
+ -MEMR, -MEMW, -IOR, -IOW output signals, and the address
+ outputs from the DMA are set to 0x3456, which will be
+ used to direct the byte that is about to transferred to a
+ specific memory location.
+
+ The DMA will then let the device that requested the DMA
+ transfer know that the transfer is commencing. This is
+ done by asserting the -DACK signal, or in the case of the
+ floppy disk controller, -DACK2 is asserted.
+
+ The floppy disk controller is now responsible for placing
+ the byte to be transferred on the bus Data lines. Unless
+ the floppy controller needs more time to get the data
+ byte on the bus (and if the peripheral does need more time it
+ alerts the DMA via the READY signal), the DMA will wait
+ one DMA clock, and then de-assert the -MEMW and -IOR
+ signals so that the memory will latch and store the byte
+ that was on the bus, and the FDC will know that the byte
+ has been transferred.
+
+ Since the DMA cycle only transfers a single byte at a
+ time, the FDC now drops the DRQ2 signal, so the DMA knows that
+ it is no longer needed. The DMA will de-assert the
+ -DACK2 signal, so that the FDC knows it must stop placing
+ data on the bus.
+
+ The DMA will now check to see if any of the other DMA
+ channels have any work to do. If none of the channels
+ have their DRQ lines asserted, the DMA controller has
+ completed its work and will now tri-state the -MEMR,
+ -MEMW, -IOR, -IOW and address signals.
+
+ Finally, the DMA will de-assert the HRQ signal. The CPU
+ sees this, and de-asserts the HOLDA signal. Now the CPU
+ activates its -MEMR, -MEMW, -IOR, -IOW and address lines,
+ and it resumes executing instructions and accessing main
+ memory and the peripherals.
+
+ For a typical floppy disk sector, the above process is
+ repeated 512 times, once for each byte. Each time a byte
+ is transferred, the address register in the DMA is
+ incremented and the counter in the DMA that shows how many
+ bytes are to be transferred is decremented.
+
+ When the counter reaches zero, the DMA asserts the EOP
+ signal, which indicates that the counter has reached zero
+ and no more data will be transferred until the DMA
+ controller is reprogrammed by the CPU. This event is
+ also called the Terminal Count (TC). There is only one
+ EOP signal, and since only DMA channel can be active at
+ any instant, the DMA channel that is currently active must
+ be the DMA channel that just completed its task.
+
+ If a peripheral wants to generate an interrupt when the
+ transfer of a buffer is complete, it can test for its
+ -DACKn signal and the EOP signal both being asserted at
+ the same time. When that happens, it means the DMA will not
+ transfer any more information for that peripheral without
+ intervention by the CPU. The peripheral can then assert
+ one of the interrupt signals to get the processors'
+ attention. In the PC architecture, the DMA chip itself is not
+ capable of generating an interrupt. The peripheral and its
+ associated hardware is responsible for generating any
+ interrupt that occurs. Subsequently, it is possible to have
+ a peripheral that uses DMA but does not use interrupts.
+
+ It is important to understand that although the CPU
+ always releases the bus to the DMA when the DMA makes the
+ request, this action is invisible to both applications
+ and the operating systems, except for slight changes in
+ the amount of time the processor takes to execute
+ instructions when the DMA is active. Subsequently, the
+ processor must poll the peripheral, poll the registers in
+ the DMA chip, or receive an interrupt from the peripheral
+ to know for certain when a DMA transfer has completed.
+
+
+
+
+ DMA Page Registers and 16Meg address space limitations
+
+ You may have noticed earlier that instead of the DMA
+ setting the address lines to 0x00123456 as we said
+ earlier, the DMA only set 0x3456. The reason for this
+ takes a bit of explaining.
+
+ When the original IBM PC was designed, IBM elected to use
+ both DMA and interrupt controller chips that were
+ designed for use with the 8085, an 8-bit processor with
+ an address space of 16 bits (64K). Since the IBM PC
+ supported more than 64K of memory, something had to be
+ done to allow the DMA to read or write memory locations
+ above the 64K mark. What IBM did to solve this problem
+ was to add an external data latch for each DMA channel that
+ holds the upper bits of the address to be read to or written from.
+ Whenever a DMA channel is active, the contents of that
+ latch are written to the address bus and kept there until
+ the DMA operation for the channel ends. IBM called these latches
+ ``Page Registers''.
+
+ So for our example above, the DMA would put the 0x3456
+ part of the address on the bus, and the Page Register for
+ DMA channel 2 would put 0x0012xxxx on the bus. Together,
+ these two values form the complete address in memory that
+ is to be accessed.
+
+ Because the Page Register latch is independent of the DMA
+ chip, the area of memory to be read or written must not
+ span a 64K physical boundary. For example, if the DMA accesses
+ memory location 0xffff, after that transfer the DMA will then
+ increment the address register and the DMA will access the next
+ byte at location 0x0000, not 0x10000. The results of letting
+ this happen are probably not intended.
+
+
+
+ Note: ``Physical'' 64K boundaries should
+ not be confused with 8086-mode 64K ``Segments'', which
+ are created by mathematically adding a segment register with an
+ offset register. Page Registers have no address overlap and
+ are mathematically OR-ed together.
+
+
+
+ To further complicate matters, the external DMA address
+ latches on the PC/AT hold only eight bits, so that gives
+ us 8+16=24 bits, which means that the DMA can only point
+ at memory locations between 0 and 16Meg. For newer
+ computers that allow more than 16Meg of memory, the standard
+ PC-compatible DMA cannot access memory locations above 16Meg.
+
+ To get around this restriction, operating systems will
+ reserve a RAM buffer in an area below 16Meg that also does not
+ span a physical 64K boundary. Then the DMA will be
+ programmed to transfer data from the peripheral and into that
+ buffer. Once the DMA has moved the data into this buffer,
+ the operating system will then copy the data from the buffer
+ to the address where the data is really supposed to be stored.
+
+ When writing data from an address above 16Meg to a
+ DMA-based peripheral, the data must be first copied from
+ where it resides into a buffer located below 16Meg, and
+ then the DMA can copy the data from the buffer to the
+ hardware. In FreeBSD, these reserved buffers are called
+ ``Bounce Buffers''. In the MS-DOS world, they are
+ sometimes called ``Smart Buffers''.
+
+
+
+ Note: A new implementation of the 8237, called the
+ 82374, allows 16 bits of page register to be specified, allows
+ access to the entire 32 bit address space, without the use of
+ bounce buffers.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ DMA Operational Modes and Settings
+
+ The 8237 DMA can be operated in several modes. The main
+ ones are:
+
+
+
+ Single
+
+ A single byte (or word) is transferred.
+ The DMA must release and re-acquire the bus for each
+ additional byte. This is commonly-used by devices
+ that cannot transfer the entire block of data
+ immediately. The peripheral will request the DMA
+ each time it is ready for another transfer.
+
+ The standard PC-compatible floppy disk controller (NEC 765)
+ only has a one-byte buffer, so it uses this mode.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Block/Demand
+
+
+ Once the DMA acquires the
+ system bus, an entire block of data is transferred,
+ up to a maximum of 64K. If the peripheral needs
+ additional time, it can assert the READY signal to
+ suspend the transfer briefly. READY should not be
+ used excessively, and for slow peripheral transfers,
+ the Single Transfer Mode should be used instead.
+
+ The difference between Block and Demand is that once a
+ Block transfer is started, it runs until the transfer
+ count reaches zero. DRQ only needs to be asserted
+ until -DACK is asserted. Demand Mode will transfer
+ one more bytes until DRQ is de-asserted, at which point the DMA
+ suspends the transfer and releases the bus back to the CPU.
+ When DRQ is asserted later, the transfer resumes where
+ it was suspended.
+
+ Older hard disk controllers used Demand Mode until
+ CPU speeds increased to the point that it was more
+ efficient to transfer the data using the CPU, particularly
+ if the memory locations used in the transfer were above the
+ 16Meg mark.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Cascade
+
+
+ This mechanism allows a DMA channel
+ to request the bus, but then the attached peripheral
+ device is responsible for placing the addressing
+ information on the bus instead of the DMA. This is also
+ used to implement a technique known as ``Bus Mastering''.
+
+ When a DMA channel in Cascade Mode receives control
+ of the bus, the DMA does not place addresses and I/O
+ control signals on the bus like the DMA normally does
+ when it is active. Instead, the DMA only asserts the
+ -DACK signal for the active DMA channel.
+
+ At this point it is up to the peripheral connected to that
+ DMA channel to provide address and bus control signals.
+ The peripheral has complete control over the system
+ bus, and can do reads and/or writes to any address
+ below 16Meg. When the peripheral is finished with
+ the bus, it de-asserts the DRQ line, and the DMA
+ controller can then return control to the CPU or to some
+ other DMA channel.
+
+ Cascade Mode can be used to chain multiple DMA controllers
+ together, and this is exactly what DMA Channel 4 is used
+ for in the PC architecture. When a peripheral requests
+ the bus on DMA channels 0, 1, 2 or 3, the slave DMA
+ controller asserts HLDREQ, but this wire is actually connected
+ to DRQ4 on the primary DMA controller instead of to the CPU.
+ The primary DMA controller, thinking it has work to do on
+ Channel 4, requests the bus from the CPU using HLDREQ signal.
+ Once the CPU grants the bus to the primary DMA controller,
+ -DACK4 is asserted, and that wire is actually connected to
+ the HLDA signal on the slave DMA controller. The slave DMA
+ controller then transfers data for the DMA channel that
+ requested it (0, 1, 2 or 3), or the slave DMA may grant the bus
+ to a peripheral that wants to perform its own bus-mastering,
+ such as a SCSI controller.
+
+ Because of this wiring arrangement, only DMA channels
+ 0, 1, 2, 3, 5, 6 and 7 are usable with peripherals on PC/AT
+ systems.
+
+
+
+ Note: DMA channel 0 was reserved for
+ refresh operations in early IBM PC computers, but
+ is generally available for use by peripherals in
+ modern systems.
+
+
+
+ When a peripheral is performing Bus Mastering, it is
+ important that the peripheral transmit data to or
+ from memory constantly while it holds the system bus.
+ If the peripheral cannot do this, it must release the
+ bus frequently so that the system can perform refresh
+ operations on main memory.
+
+ The Dynamic RAM used in all PCs for main memory must be
+ accessed frequently to keep the bits stored in the
+ components "charged". Dynamic RAM essentially consists
+ of millions of capacitors with each one holding one bit
+ of data. These capacitors are charged with power to
+ represent a "1" or drained to represent a "0". Because
+ all capacitors leak, power must be added at regular intervals
+ to keep the "1" values intact. The RAM chips actually handle
+ the task of pumping power back into all of the appropriate
+ locations in RAM, but they must be told when to do it by
+ the rest of the computer so that the refresh activity won't
+ interfere with the computer wanting to access RAM normally.
+ If the computer is unable to refresh memory, the contents
+ of memory will become corrupted in just a few milliseconds.
+
+ Since memory read and write cycles ``count'' as refresh
+ cycles (a dynamic RAM refresh cycle is actually an incomplete
+ memory read cycle), as long as the peripheral
+ controller continues reading or writing data to
+ sequential memory locations, that action will refresh
+ all of memory.
+
+ Bus-mastering is found in some SCSI host interfaces and
+ other high-performance peripheral controllers.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Autoinitialize
+
+
+ This mode causes the DMA to
+ perform Byte, Block or Demand transfers, but when the
+ DMA transfer counter reaches zero, the counter and
+ address are set back to where they were when the DMA
+ channel was originally programmed. This means that
+ as long as the peripheral requests transfers, they will
+ be granted. It is up to the CPU to move new data
+ into the fixed buffer ahead of where the DMA is about
+ to transfer it when doing output operations, and read new
+ data out of the buffer behind where the DMA is writing
+ when doing input operations.
+
+ This technique is frequently used on audio devices that
+ have small or no hardware ``sample'' buffers. There is
+ additional CPU overhead to manage this ``circular'' buffer,
+ but in some cases this may be the only way to eliminate the
+ latency that occurs when the DMA counter reaches zero
+ and the DMA stops transfers until it is reprogrammed.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Programming the DMA
+
+ The DMA channel that is to be programmed should always
+ be ``masked'' before loading any settings. This is because
+ the hardware might unexpectedly assert the DRQ for that channel,
+ and the DMA might respond, even though not all of the parameters
+ have been loaded or updated.
+
+ Once masked, the host must specify the direction of the
+ transfer (memory-to-I/O or I/O-to-memory), what mode of
+ DMA operation is to be used for the transfer (Single,
+ Block, Demand, Cascade, etc), and finally the address and
+ length of the transfer are loaded. The length that is
+ loaded is one less than the amount you expect the DMA to
+ transfer. The LSB and MSB of the address and length are
+ written to the same 8-bit I/O port, so another port must
+ be written to first to guarantee that the DMA accepts the
+ first byte as the LSB and the second byte as the MSB of
+ the length and address.
+
+ Then, be sure to update the Page Register, which is
+ external to the DMA and is accessed through a different
+ set of I/O ports.
+
+ Once all the settings are ready, the DMA channel can be
+ un-masked. That DMA channel is now considered to be
+ ``armed'', and will respond when the DRQ line for that channel
+ is asserted.
+
+ Refer to a hardware data book for precise programming
+ details for the 8237. You will also need to refer to the
+ I/O port map for the PC system, which describes where
+ the DMA and Page Register ports are located. A complete
+ port map table is located below.
+
+
+
+
+ DMA Port Map
+
+ All systems based on the IBM-PC and PC/AT have the DMA
+ hardware located at the same I/O ports. The complete
+ list is provided below. Ports assigned to DMA Controller
+ #2 are undefined on non-AT designs.
+
+
+
+ 0x00 - 0x1f DMA Controller #1 (Channels 0, 1, 2 and 3)
+
+ DMA Address and Count Registers
+
+
+ 0x00 write Channel 0 starting address
+ 0x00 read Channel 0 current address
+ 0x01 write Channel 0 starting word count
+ 0x01 read Channel 0 remaining word count
+
+ 0x02 write Channel 1 starting address
+ 0x02 read Channel 1 current address
+ 0x03 write Channel 1 starting word count
+ 0x03 read Channel 1 remaining word count
+
+ 0x04 write Channel 2 starting address
+ 0x04 read Channel 2 current address
+ 0x05 write Channel 2 starting word count
+ 0x05 read Channel 2 remaining word count
+
+ 0x06 write Channel 3 starting address
+ 0x06 read Channel 3 current address
+ 0x07 write Channel 3 starting word count
+ 0x07 read Channel 3 remaining word count
+
+
+ DMA Command Registers
+
+
+ 0x08 write Command Register
+ 0x08 read Status Register
+ 0x09 write Request Register
+ 0x09 read -
+ 0x0a write Single Mask Register Bit
+ 0x0a read -
+ 0x0b write Mode Register
+ 0x0b read -
+ 0x0c write Clear LSB/MSB Flip-Flop
+ 0x0c read -
+ 0x0d write Master Clear/Reset
+ 0x0d read Temporary Register (not available on newer versions)
+ 0x0e write Clear Mask Register
+ 0x0e read -
+ 0x0f write Write All Mask Register Bits
+ 0x0f read Read All Mask Register Bits (only in Intel 82374)
+
+
+
+
+
+ 0xc0 - 0xdf DMA Controller #2 (Channels 4, 5, 6 and 7)
+
+ DMA Address and Count Registers
+
+
+ 0xc0 write Channel 4 starting address
+ 0xc0 read Channel 4 current address
+ 0xc2 write Channel 4 starting word count
+ 0xc2 read Channel 4 remaining word count
+
+ 0xc4 write Channel 5 starting address
+ 0xc4 read Channel 5 current address
+ 0xc6 write Channel 5 starting word count
+ 0xc6 read Channel 5 remaining word count
+
+ 0xc8 write Channel 6 starting address
+ 0xc8 read Channel 6 current address
+ 0xca write Channel 6 starting word count
+ 0xca read Channel 6 remaining word count
+
+ 0xcc write Channel 7 starting address
+ 0xcc read Channel 7 current address
+ 0xce write Channel 7 starting word count
+ 0xce read Channel 7 remaining word count
+
+
+ DMA Command Registers
+
+
+ 0xd0 write Command Register
+ 0xd0 read Status Register
+ 0xd2 write Request Register
+ 0xd2 read -
+ 0xd4 write Single Mask Register Bit
+ 0xd4 read -
+ 0xd6 write Mode Register
+ 0xd6 read -
+ 0xd8 write Clear LSB/MSB Flip-Flop
+ 0xd8 read -
+ 0xda write Master Clear/Reset
+ 0xda read Temporary Register (not present in Intel 82374)
+ 0xdc write Clear Mask Register
+ 0xdc read -
+ 0xde write Write All Mask Register Bits
+ 0xdf read Read All Mask Register Bits (only in Intel 82374)
+
+
+
+
+
+ 0x80 - 0x9f DMA Page Registers
+
+
+ 0x87 r/w Channel 0 Low byte (23-16) page Register
+ 0x83 r/w Channel 1 Low byte (23-16) page Register
+ 0x81 r/w Channel 2 Low byte (23-16) page Register
+ 0x82 r/w Channel 3 Low byte (23-16) page Register
+
+ 0x8b r/w Channel 5 Low byte (23-16) page Register
+ 0x89 r/w Channel 6 Low byte (23-16) page Register
+ 0x8a r/w Channel 7 Low byte (23-16) page Register
+ 0x8f r/w Low byte page Refresh
+
+
+
+
+
+ 0x400 - 0x4ff 82374 Enhanced DMA Registers
+
+ The Intel 82374 EISA System Component (ESC) was introduced in early 1996
+ and includes a DMA controller that provides a superset of 8237 functionality
+ as well as other PC-compatible core peripheral components in a single
+ package. This chip is targeted at both EISA and PCI platforms, and provides
+ modern DMA features like scatter-gather, ring buffers as well as direct
+ access by the system DMA to all 32 bits of address space.
+
+ If these features are used, code should also be included to provide similar
+ functionality in the previous 16 years worth of PC-compatible computers.
+ For compatibility reasons, some of the 82374 registers must be programmed
+ after programming the traditional 8237 registers for each
+ transfer. Writing to a traditional 8237 register forces the contents
+ of some of the 82374 enhanced registers to zero to provide backward
+ software compatibility.
+
+
+ 0x401 r/w Channel 0 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
+ 0x403 r/w Channel 1 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
+ 0x405 r/w Channel 2 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
+ 0x407 r/w Channel 3 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
+ 0x4c6 r/w Channel 5 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
+ 0x4ca r/w Channel 6 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
+ 0x4ce r/w Channel 7 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
+
+ 0x487 r/w Channel 0 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
+ 0x483 r/w Channel 1 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
+ 0x481 r/w Channel 2 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
+ 0x482 r/w Channel 3 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
+ 0x48b r/w Channel 5 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
+ 0x489 r/w Channel 6 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
+ 0x48a r/w Channel 6 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
+ 0x48f r/w High byte page Refresh
+
+ 0x4e0 r/w Channel 0 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
+ 0x4e1 r/w Channel 0 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
+ 0x4e2 r/w Channel 0 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
+ 0x4e4 r/w Channel 1 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
+ 0x4e5 r/w Channel 1 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
+ 0x4e6 r/w Channel 1 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
+ 0x4e8 r/w Channel 2 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
+ 0x4e9 r/w Channel 2 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
+ 0x4ea r/w Channel 2 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
+ 0x4ec r/w Channel 3 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
+ 0x4ed r/w Channel 3 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
+ 0x4ee r/w Channel 3 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
+ 0x4f4 r/w Channel 5 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
+ 0x4f5 r/w Channel 5 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
+ 0x4f6 r/w Channel 5 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
+ 0x4f8 r/w Channel 6 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
+ 0x4f9 r/w Channel 6 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
+ 0x4fa r/w Channel 6 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
+ 0x4fc r/w Channel 7 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
+ 0x4fd r/w Channel 7 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
+ 0x4fe r/w Channel 7 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
+
+ 0x40a write Channels 0-3 Chaining Mode Register
+ 0x40a read Channel Interrupt Status Register
+ 0x4d4 write Channels 4-7 Chaining Mode Register
+ 0x4d4 read Chaining Mode Status
+ 0x40c read Chain Buffer Expiration Control Register
+
+ 0x410 write Channel 0 Scatter-Gather Command Register
+ 0x411 write Channel 1 Scatter-Gather Command Register
+ 0x412 write Channel 2 Scatter-Gather Command Register
+ 0x413 write Channel 3 Scatter-Gather Command Register
+ 0x415 write Channel 5 Scatter-Gather Command Register
+ 0x416 write Channel 6 Scatter-Gather Command Register
+ 0x417 write Channel 7 Scatter-Gather Command Register
+
+ 0x418 read Channel 0 Scatter-Gather Status Register
+ 0x419 read Channel 1 Scatter-Gather Status Register
+ 0x41a read Channel 2 Scatter-Gather Status Register
+ 0x41b read Channel 3 Scatter-Gather Status Register
+ 0x41d read Channel 5 Scatter-Gather Status Register
+ 0x41e read Channel 5 Scatter-Gather Status Register
+ 0x41f read Channel 7 Scatter-Gather Status Register
+
+ 0x420-0x423 r/w Channel 0 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
+ 0x424-0x427 r/w Channel 1 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
+ 0x428-0x42b r/w Channel 2 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
+ 0x42c-0x42f r/w Channel 3 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
+ 0x434-0x437 r/w Channel 5 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
+ 0x438-0x43b r/w Channel 6 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
+ 0x43c-0x43f r/w Channel 7 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Appendices
+
+
+
+ Obtaining FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ CD-ROM Publishers
+
+ FreeBSD is available on CD-ROM from Walnut Creek CDROM:
+
+ Walnut Creek CDROM
+ 4041 Pike Lane, Suite F
+ Concord CA 94520 USA
+ Phone: +1 925 674-0783
+ Fax: +1 925 674-0821
+ Email: info@cdrom.com
+ WWW: http://www.cdrom.com/
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FTP Sites
+
+ The official sources for FreeBSD are available via anonymous FTP from:
+
+ ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD.
+
+
+
+ Additionally, FreeBSD is available via anonymous FTP from the
+ following mirror sites. If you choose to obtain FreeBSD via
+ anonymous FTP, please try to use a site near you.
+
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
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+
+
+ ftp://nic.funet.fi/pub/unix/FreeBSD/eurocrypt
+ Contact: count@nic.funet.fi.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ CTM Sites
+
+ /FreeBSD is available via anonymous FTP from the
+ following mirror sites. If you choose to obtain CTM via
+ anonymous FTP, please try to use a site near you.
+
+ In case of problems, please contact &a.phk;.
+
+
+
+ California, Bay Area, official source
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CTM
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Germany, Trier
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.uni-trier.de/pub/unix/systems/BSD/FreeBSD/CTM
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ South Africa, backup server for old deltas
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.internat.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CTM
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Taiwan/R.O.C, Chiayi
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ctm.tw.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CTM
+
+
+
+ ftp://ctm2.tw.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CTM
+
+
+
+ ftp://ctm3.tw.freebsd.org/pub/freebsd/CTM
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ If you did not find a mirror near to you or the mirror is incomplete,
+ try
+ FTP search at
+ http://ftpsearch.ntnu.no/ftpsearch.
+ FTP search is a great free archie server in Trondheim, Norway.
+
+
+
+
+ CVSup Sites
+
+ servers for FreeBSD are running at
+ the following sites:
+
+
+
+ Argentina
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.ar.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Australia
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.au.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Brazil
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.br.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Canada
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.ca.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Estonia
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.ee.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Finland
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.fi.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Germany
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.de.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+ cvsup2.de.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+ cvsup3.de.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Japan
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.jp.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+ cvsup2.jp.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Netherlands
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.nl.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Norway
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.no.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Russia
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.ru.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ South Africa
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.za.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+ cvsup2.za.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Taiwan
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.tw.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Ukraine
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup2.ua.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ United Kingdom
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.uk.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ USA
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+ cvsup2.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+ cvsup3.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The export-restricted code for FreeBSD (eBones and secure) is
+ available via CVSup at the following international repository.
+ Please use this site to get the export-restricted code, if you are
+ outside the USA or Canada.
+
+
+
+ South Africa
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.internat.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The following CVSup site is especially designed for users. Unlike the other CVSup mirrors, it is kept
+ up-to-date by CTM. That means if you CVSup cvs-all with
+ release=cvs from this site, you get a version of the
+ repository (including the inevitable .ctm_status file)
+ which is suitable for being updated using the CTM cvs-cur
+ deltas. This allows users who track the entire cvs-all
+ tree to go from CVSup to CTM without having to rebuild their
+ repository from scratch using a fresh CTM base delta.
+
+ Please note that this special feature only works for the
+ cvs-all distribution with cvs as the release tag.
+ CVSupping any other distribution and/or release will get you the
+ specified distribution, but it will not be suitable for CTM updating.
+
+ Also please note that, because the current version of CTM does
+ not preserve the timestamps of files, the timestamps at this mirror
+ site are not the same as those at other mirror sites. Switching
+ between this site and other sites is not recommended. It will work
+ correctly, but will be somewhat inefficient.
+
+
+
+ Germany
+
+
+
+
+
+ ctm.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Bibliography
+
+ While the manual pages provide the definitive reference
+ for individual pieces of the FreeBSD operating system,
+ they are notorious for not illustrating how to put the
+ pieces together to make the whole operating system run
+ smoothly. For this, there is no substitute for a good
+ book on UNIX system administration and a good users'
+ manual.
+
+
+
+ Books & Magazines Specific to FreeBSD
+
+ International books & Magazines:
+
+
+
+
+
+ Using FreeBSD (in Chinese).
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD for PC 98'ers (in Japanese), published by SHUWA
+ System Co, LTD. ISBN 4-87966-468-5 C3055 P2900E.
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD (in Japanese), published by CUTT.
+ ISBN 4-906391-22-2 C3055 P2400E.
+
+
+
+ Complete Introduction to FreeBSD (in Japanese),
+ published by Shoeisha Co., Ltd. ISBN 4-88135-473-6 P3600E.
+
+
+
+ Personal UNIX Starter Kit FreeBSD (in Japanese),
+ published by ASCII. ISBN 4-7561-1733-3 P3000E.
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD Handbook (Japanese translation),
+ published by ASCII. ISBN 4-7561-1580-2 P3800E.
+
+
+
+
+
+ English language books & Magazines:
+
+
+
+
+
+ The Complete FreeBSD, published by Walnut Creek CDROM.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Users' Guides
+
+
+
+
+
+ Computer Systems Research Group, UC Berkeley.
+ 4.4BSD User's Reference Manual.
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1994.
+ ISBN 1-56592-075-9
+
+
+
+ Computer Systems Research Group, UC Berkeley.
+ 4.4BSD User's Supplementary Documents.
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1994.
+ ISBN 1-56592-076-7
+
+
+
+ UNIX in a Nutshell.
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1990.
+ ISBN 093717520X
+
+
+
+ Mui, Linda.
+ What You Need To Know When You Can't Find Your UNIX
+ System Administrator.
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1995.
+ ISBN 1-56592-104-6
+
+
+
+ Ohio State University has written
+ a UNIX Introductory Course which is available online
+ in HTML and postscript format.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Administrators' Guides
+
+
+
+
+
+ Albitz, Paul and Liu, Cricket. DNS and
+ BIND, 2nd Ed.
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1997.
+ ISBN 1-56592-236-0
+
+
+
+ Computer Systems Research Group, UC Berkeley.
+ 4.4BSD System Manager's Manual.
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1994.
+ ISBN 1-56592-080-5
+
+
+
+ Costales, Brian, et al.
+ Sendmail, 2nd Ed. O'Reilly &
+ Associates, Inc., 1997.
+ ISBN 1-56592-222-0
+
+
+
+ Frisch, Æleen. Essential System
+ Administration, 2nd Ed. O'Reilly &
+ Associates, Inc., 1995. ISBN 1-56592-127-5
+
+
+
+ Hunt, Craig. TCP/IP Network Administration.
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1992.
+ ISBN 0-937175-82-X
+
+
+
+ Nemeth, Evi. UNIX System Administration
+ Handbook. 2nd ed. Prentice Hall, 1995.
+ ISBN 0131510517
+
+
+
+ Stern, Hal Managing NFS and NIS
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1991.
+ ISBN 0-937175-75-7
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Programmers' Guides
+
+
+
+
+
+ Asente, Paul. X Window System
+ Toolkit. Digital Press.
+ ISBN 1-55558-051-3
+
+
+
+ Computer Systems Research Group, UC Berkeley.
+ 4.4BSD Programmer's Reference Manual.
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1994.
+ ISBN 1-56592-078-3
+
+
+
+ Computer Systems Research Group, UC Berkeley.
+ 4.4BSD Programmer's Supplementary Documents.
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1994.
+ ISBN 1-56592-079-1
+
+
+
+ Ellis, Margaret A. and Stroustrup,
+ Bjarne. The Annotated C++ Reference
+ Manual. Addison-Wesley, 1990.
+ ISBN 0-201-51459-1
+
+
+
+ Harbison, Samuel P. and Steele, Guy
+ L. Jr. C: A Reference Manual. 4rd ed. Prentice
+ Hall, 1995. ISBN 0-13-326224-3
+
+
+
+ Kernighan, Brian and Dennis M. Ritchie.
+ The C Programming Language..
+ PTR Prentice Hall, 1988.
+ ISBN 0-13-110362-9
+
+
+
+ Lehey, Greg.
+ Port UNIX Software.
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1995.
+ ISBN 1-56592-126-7
+
+
+
+ Plauger, P. J. The Standard C
+ Library. Prentice Hall, 1992.
+ ISBN 0-13-131509-9
+
+
+
+ Stevens, W. Richard. Advanced
+ Programming in the UNIX Environment.
+ Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1992
+ ISBN 0-201-56317-7
+
+
+
+ Stevens, W. Richard. UNIX Network
+ Programming. PTR Prentice Hall, 1990.
+ ISBN 0-13-949876-1
+
+
+
+ Wells, Bill. "Writing Serial Drivers for UNIX".
+ Dr. Dobb's Journal. 19(15), December
+ 1994. pp68-71, 97-99.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Operating System Internals
+
+
+
+
+
+ Andleigh, Prabhat K. UNIX System Architecture.
+ Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1990.
+ ISBN 0-13-949843-5
+
+
+
+ Jolitz, William. "Porting UNIX to the
+ 386". Dr. Dobb's Journal. January
+ 1991-July 1992.
+
+
+
+ Leffler, Samuel J., Marshall Kirk McKusick,
+ Michael J Karels and John Quarterman The Design and
+ Implementation of the 4.3BSD UNIX Operating
+ System. Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1989.
+ ISBN 0-201-06196-1
+
+
+
+ Leffler, Samuel J., Marshall Kirk McKusick,
+ The Design and Implementation of the 4.3BSD
+ UNIX Operating System: Answer Book.
+ Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1991.
+ ISBN 0-201-54629-9
+
+
+
+ McKusick, Marshall Kirk, Keith Bostic, Michael J Karels,
+ and John Quarterman. The Design and
+ Implementation of the 4.4BSD Operating
+ System. Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1996.
+ ISBN 0-201-54979-4
+
+
+
+ Stevens, W. Richard. TCP/IP Illustrated,
+ Volume 1: The Protocols.
+ Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1996.
+ ISBN 0-201-63346-9
+
+
+
+ Stevens, W. Richard. TCP/IP Illustrated,
+ Volume 3: TCP for Transactions, HTTP, NNTP
+ and the UNIX Domain Protocols.
+ Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1996.
+ ISBN 0-201-63495-3
+
+
+
+ Vahalia, Uresh. UNIX Internals -- The New Frontiers.
+ Prentice Hall, 1996.
+ ISBN 0-13-101908-2
+
+
+
+ Wright, Gary R. and W. Richard Stevens.
+ TCP/IP Illustrated, Volume 2:
+ The Implementation.
+ Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1995.
+ ISBN 0-201-63354-X
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Security Reference
+
+
+
+
+
+ Cheswick, William R. and Steven M. Bellovin.
+ Firewalls and Internal Security:
+ Repelling the Wily Hacker.
+ Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1995.
+ ISBN 0-201-63357-4
+
+
+
+ Garfinkel, Simson and Gene Spafford.
+ Practical UNIX Security. 2nd Ed.
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1996.
+ ISBN 1-56592-148-8
+
+
+
+ Garfinkel, Simson.
+ PGP Pretty Good Privacy
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1995.
+ ISBN 1-56592-098-8
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Hardware Reference
+
+
+
+
+
+ Anderson, Don and Tom Shanley.
+ Pentium Processor System Architecture.
+ 2nd ed. Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1995.
+ ISBN 0-201-40992-5
+
+
+
+ Ferraro, Richard F. Programmer's Guide
+ to the EGA, VGA, and Super VGA Cards.
+ 3rd ed. Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1995.
+ ISBN 0-201-62490-7
+
+
+
+ Shanley, Tom. 80486 System
+ Architecture. 3rd ed. Reading, Mass. :
+ Addison-Wesley, 1995. ISBN
+ 0-201-40994-1
+
+
+
+ Shanley, Tom. ISA System
+ Architecture. 3rd ed. Reading, Mass. :
+ Addison-Wesley, 1995.
+ ISBN 0-201-40996-8
+
+
+
+ Shanley, Tom. PCI System
+ Architecture. 3rd ed. Reading, Mass. :
+ Addison-Wesley, 1995. ISBN
+ 0-201-40993-3
+
+
+
+ Van Gilluwe, Frank. The Undocumented PC.
+ Reading, Mass: Addison-Wesley Pub. Co., 1994.
+ ISBN 0-201-62277-7
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ UNIX History
+
+
+
+
+
+ Lion, John Lion's Commentary on UNIX, 6th Ed.
+ With Source Code.
+ ITP Media Group, 1996.
+ ISBN 1573980137
+
+
+
+ Raymond, Eric s. The New Hacker's Dictonary,
+ 3rd edition. MIT Press, 1996.
+ ISBN 0-262-68092-0
+ Also known as the
+ Jargon File
+
+
+
+ Salus, Peter H. A quarter century of UNIX.
+ Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, Inc., 1994.
+ ISBN 0-201-54777-5
+
+
+
+ Simon Garfinkel, Daniel Weise, Steven Strassmann.
+ The UNIX-HATERS Handbook.
+ IDG Books Worldwide, Inc., 1994.
+ ISBN 1-56884-203-1
+
+
+
+ Don Libes, Sandy Ressler Life with UNIX - special
+ edition. Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1989.
+ ISBN 0-13-536657-7
+
+
+
+ The BSD family tree. 1997.
+ http://www.de.freebsd.org/de/ftp/unix-stammbaum
+ or local on a FreeBSD-current machine.
+
+
+
+ The BSD Release Announcements collection. 1997.
+ http://www.de.FreeBSD.ORG/de/ftp/releases/
+
+
+
+ Networked Computer Science Technical Reports Library.
+ http://www.ncstrl.org/
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Magazines and Journals
+
+
+
+
+
+ The C/C++ Users Journal. R&D Publications
+ Inc. ISSN 1075-2838
+
+
+
+ Sys Admin - The Journal for UNIX System
+ Administrators Miller Freeman, Inc., ISSN 1061-2688
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Resources on the Internet
+
+ Contributed by &a.jkh;.
+
+ The rapid pace of FreeBSD progress makes print media impractical as a
+ means of following the latest developments. Electronic resources are
+ the best, if not often the only, way stay informed of the latest advances.
+ Since FreeBSD is a volunteer effort, the user community itself also
+ generally serves as a `technical support department' of sorts, with
+ electronic mail and USENET news being the most effective way of reaching
+ that community.
+
+ The most important points of contact with the FreeBSD
+ user community are outlined below. If you are aware of other
+ resources not mentioned here, please send them to the &a.doc;so that they may also be included.
+
+
+
+ Mailing lists
+
+ Though many of the FreeBSD development members read USENET, we cannot
+ always guarantee that we will get to your questions in a timely fashion
+ (or at all) if you post them only to one of the comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.*
+ groups. By addressing your questions to the appropriate mailing list
+ you will reach both us and a concentrated FreeBSD audience, invariably
+ assuring a better (or at least faster) response.
+
+ The charters for the various lists are given at the bottom of this
+ document. Please read the charter before joining or sending
+ mail to any list. Most of our list subscribers now receive many hundreds
+ of FreeBSD related messages every day, and by setting down charters
+ and rules for proper use we are striving to keep the signal-to-noise ratio
+ of the lists high. To do less would see the mailing lists ultimately fail
+ as an effective communications medium for the project.
+
+ Archives are kept for all of the mailing lists and can be searched
+ using the FreeBSD World Wide Web server. The keyword searchable archive
+ offers an excellent way of finding answers to frequently asked
+ questions and should be consulted before posting a question.
+
+
+
+ List summary
+
+ General lists: The following are general lists which
+ anyone is free to join:
+ List Purpose
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------------
+ freebsd-announce Important events and project milestones
+ freebsd-bugs Bug reports
+ freebsd-chat Non-technical items related to the FreeBSD community
+ freebsd-current Discussion concerning the use of FreeBSD-current
+ freebsd-stable Discussion concerning the use of FreeBSD-stable
+ freebsd-isp Issues for Internet Service Providers using FreeBSD
+ freebsd-jobs FreeBSD employment and consulting opportunities
+ freebsd-questions User questions
+
+
+ Technical lists: The following lists are for technical discussion.
+ You should read the charter for each list carefully before joining or
+ sending mail to one as there are firm guidelines for their use and content.
+ List Purpose
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------------
+ freebsd-afs Porting AFS to FreeBSD
+ freebsd-alpha Porting FreeBSD to the Alpha
+ freebsd-doc The FreeBSD Documentation project
+ freebsd-emulation Emulation of other systems such as Linux/DOS/Windows
+ freebsd-fs Filesystems
+ freebsd-hackers General technical discussion
+ freebsd-hardware General discussion of hardware for running FreeBSD
+ freebsd-isdn ISDN developers
+ freebsd-java Java developers and people porting JDKs to FreeBSD
+ freebsd-mobile Discussions about mobile computing
+ freebsd-multimedia Multimedia discussion
+ freebsd-platforms Concerning ports to non-Intel architecture platforms
+ freebsd-ports Discussion of the ports collection
+ freebsd-scsi The SCSI subsystem
+ freebsd-security Security issues
+ freebsd-smp Design discussions for [A]Symmetric MultiProcessing
+ freebsd-sparc Porting FreeBSD to Sparc systems.
+
+
+ Limited lists: The following lists require approval from
+ core@FreeBSD.ORG to join,
+ though anyone is free to send messages to them which fall within the
+ scope of their charters. It is also a good idea establish a presence
+ in the technical lists before asking to join one of these limited lists.
+ List Purpose
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------------
+ freebsd-admin Administrative issues
+ freebsd-arch Architecture and design discussions
+ freebsd-core FreeBSD core team
+ freebsd-hubs People running mirror sites (infrastructural support)
+ freebsd-install Installation development
+ freebsd-security-notifications Security notifications
+ freebsd-user-groups User group coordination
+
+
+ CVS lists: The following lists are for people interested in
+ seeing the log messages for changes to various areas of the source tree.
+ They are Read-Only lists and should not have mail sent to them.
+
+
+ List name Source area Area Description (source for)
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------------
+ cvs-CVSROOT /usr/src/[A-Z]* Top level /usr/src file changes
+ cvs-all /usr/src All changes to the tree (superset)
+ cvs-bin /usr/src/bin System binaries
+ cvs-etc /usr/src/etc System files
+ cvs-games /usr/src/games Games
+ cvs-gnu /usr/src/gnu GPL'd utilities
+ cvs-include /usr/src/include Include files
+ cvs-kerberosIV /usr/src/kerberosIV Kerberos encryption code
+ cvs-lib /usr/src/lib System libraries
+ cvs-libexec /usr/src/libexec System binaries
+ cvs-ports /usr/ports Ported software
+ cvs-sbin /usr/src/sbin System binaries
+ cvs-share /usr/src/share System shared files
+ cvs-sys /usr/src/sys Kernel
+ cvs-usrbin /usr/src/usr.bin Use binaries
+ cvs-usrsbin /usr/src/usr.sbin System binaries
+
+
+
+
+
+ How to subscribe
+
+ All mailing lists live on FreeBSD.ORG, so to post to a
+ given list you simply mail to listname@FreeBSD.ORG. It
+ will then be redistributed to mailing list members world-wide.
+
+ To subscribe to a list, send mail to &a.majordomo; and include
+
+ subscribe <listname> [<optional address>]
+
+
+ In the body of your message. For example, to subscribe yourself to
+ freebsd-announce, you'd do:
+
+ % mail majordomo@FreeBSD.ORG
+ subscribe freebsd-announce
+ ^D
+
+
+ If you want to subscribe yourself under a different name, or submit a
+ subscription request for a local mailing list (note: this is more efficient
+ if you have several interested parties at one site, and highly appreciated by
+ us!), you would do something like:
+
+ % mail majordomo@FreeBSD.ORG
+ subscribe freebsd-announce local-announce@somesite.com
+ ^D
+
+
+ Finally, it is also possible to unsubscribe yourself from a list, get a
+ list of other list members or see the list of mailing lists again by
+ sending other types of control messages to majordomo. For a complete
+ list of available commands, do this:
+
+ % mail majordomo@FreeBSD.ORG
+ help
+ ^D
+
+
+ Again, we would like to request that you keep discussion in the technical mailing
+ lists on a technical track. If you are only interested in the "high points"
+ then it is suggested that you join freebsd-announce, which is intended only
+ for infrequent traffic.
+
+
+
+
+ List charters
+
+ AllFreeBSD mailing lists have certain basic rules
+ which must be adhered to by anyone using them. Failure to comply
+ with these guidelines will result in two (2) written warnings from the
+ FreeBSD Postmaster,
+ after which, on a third offense, the poster will removed from all
+ FreeBSD mailing lists and filtered from further posting to them.
+ We regret that such rules and measures are necessary at all, but
+ today's Internet is a pretty harsh environment, it would seem, and
+ many fail to appreciate just how fragile some of its mechanisms are.
+
+ Rules of the road:
+
+
+
+ The topic of any posting should adhere to the basic charter of the list
+ it is posted to, e.g. if the list is about technical issues then your
+ posting should contain technical discussion. Ongoing irrelevant chatter
+ or flaming only detracts from the value of the mailing list for everyone
+ on it and will not be tolerated. For free-form discussion on no
+ particular topic, the freebsd-chat mailing list is freely available and should
+ be used instead.
+
+
+
+ No posting should be made to more than 2 mailing lists, and only
+ to 2 when a clear and obvious need to post to both lists exists.
+ For most lists, there is already a great deal of subscriber overlap
+ and except for the most esoteric mixes (say "-stable & -scsi"), there
+ really is no reason to post to more than one list at a time.
+ If a message is sent to you in such a way that multiple mailing lists
+ appear on the Cc line then the cc line should also be trimmed before
+ sending it out again.
+ You are still responsible for your own cross-postings, no
+ matter who the originator might have been.
+
+
+
+ Personal attacks and profanity (in the context of an argument) are
+ not allowed, and that includes users and developers alike. Gross
+ breaches of netiquette, like excerpting or reposting private mail
+ when permission to do so was not and would not be forthcoming,
+ are frowned upon but not specifically enforced. However,
+ there are also very few cases where such content would fit within the
+ charter of a list and it would therefore probably rate a warning
+ (or ban) on that basis alone.
+
+
+
+ Advertising of non-FreeBSD related products or services is
+ strictly prohibited and will result in an immediate ban if it
+ is clear that the offender is advertising by spam.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Individual list charters:
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-AFS
+
+ Andrew File System
+ This list is for discussion on porting and using AFS from CMU/Transarc
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-ADMIN
+
+
+ Administrative issues
+ This list is purely for discussion of freebsd.org related issues
+ and to report problems or abuse of project resources. It is a closed
+ list, though anyone may report a problem (with our systems!) to it.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-ANNOUNCE
+
+
+ Important events / milestones
+ This is the mailing list for people interested only in occasional
+ announcements of significant freebsd events. This includes
+ announcements about snapshots and other releases. It contains
+ announcements of new FreeBSD capabilities. It may contain calls
+ for volunteers etc. This is a low volume, strictly moderated mailing list.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-ARCH
+
+
+ Architecture and design discussions
+ This is the mailing list for people discussing FreeBSD architectural
+ issues. It is a closed list, and not for general subscription.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-BUGS
+
+
+ Bug reports
+ This is the mailing list for reporting bugs in FreeBSD
+ Whenever possible, bugs should be submitted using the "send-pr(1)"
+ command or the WEB interface to it.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-CHAT
+
+
+ Non technical items related to the
+ FreeBSD community
+ This list contains the overflow from the other lists about
+ non-technical, social information. It includes discussion about
+ whether Jordan looks like a toon ferret or not, whether or not to
+ type in capitals, who is drinking too much coffee, where the best
+ beer is brewed, who is brewing beer in their basement, and so on.
+ Occasional announcements of important events (such as upcoming
+ parties, weddings, births, new jobs, etc) can be made to the
+ technical lists, but the follow ups should be directed to this
+ -chat list.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-CORE
+
+
+ FreeBSD core team
+ This is an internal mailing list for use by the core members.
+ Messages can be sent to it when a serious FreeBSD-related matter
+ requires arbitration or high-level scrutiny.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-CURRENT
+
+
+ Discussions about the use of
+ FreeBSD-current This is the mailing list for users
+ of freebsd-current. It includes warnings about new features
+ coming out in -current that will affect the users, and
+ instructions on steps that must be taken to remain -current.
+ Anyone running "current" must subscribe to this list.
+ This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
+ content is expected.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-CURRENT-DIGEST
+
+
+ Discussions about the use of
+ FreeBSD-current This is the digest version of the
+ freebsd-current mailing list. The digest consists of all
+ messages sent to freebsd-current bundled together and mailed out
+ as a single message. The average digest size is about 40kB.
+ This list is Read-Only and should not be posted to.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-STABLE
+
+
+ Discussions about the use of
+ FreeBSD-stable This is the mailing list for users
+ of freebsd-stable. It includes warnings about new features
+ coming out in -stable that will affect the users, and
+ instructions on steps that must be taken to remain -stable.
+ Anyone running ``stable'' should subscribe to this list.
+ This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
+ content is expected.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-DOC
+
+
+ Documentation project
+ This mailing list belongs to the FreeBSD Doc Project and is for
+ the discussion of documentation related issues and projects.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-FS
+
+
+ Filesystems
+ Discussions concerning FreeBSD filesystems.
+ This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
+ content is expected.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-ISDN
+
+
+ ISDN Communications
+ This is the mailing list for people discussing the development
+ of ISDN support for FreeBSD.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-JAVA
+
+
+ Java Development
+ This is the mailing list for people discussing the development of
+ significant Java applications for FreeBSD and the porting and maintenance
+ of JDKs.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-HACKERS
+
+
+ Technical discussions
+ This is a forum for technical discussions related to FreeBSD. This
+ is the primary technical mailing list. It
+ is for individuals actively working on FreeBSD, to bring up problems
+ or discuss alternative solutions. Individuals interested in
+ following the technical discussion are also welcome.
+ This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
+ content is expected.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-HACKERS-DIGEST
+
+
+ Technical
+ discussions This is the digest version of the
+ freebsd-hackers mailing list. The digest consists of all
+ messages sent to freebsd-hackers bundled together and mailed out
+ as a single message. The average digest size is about 40kB.
+ This list is Read-Only and should not be posted to.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-HARDWARE
+
+
+ General discussion of FreeBSD
+ hardware General discussion about the types of
+ hardware that FreeBSD runs on, various problems and suggestions
+ concerning what to buy or avoid.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-INSTALL
+
+
+ Installation discussion
+ This mailing list is for discussing FreeBSD installation
+ development for the future releases and is closed.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-ISP
+
+
+ Issues for Internet Service Providers
+ This mailing list is for discussing topics relevant to Internet
+ Service Providers (ISPs) using FreeBSD.
+ This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
+ content is expected.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-MULTIMEDIA
+
+
+ Multimedia discussions
+ This is a forum about multimedia applications using FreeBSD.
+ Discussion center around multimedia applications, their installation, their
+ development and their support within FreeBSD
+ This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
+ content is expected.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-PLATFORMS
+
+
+ Porting to Non-Intel
+ platforms Cross-platform freebsd issues, general
+ discussion and proposals for non-Intel FreeBSD ports.
+ This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
+ content is expected.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-PORTS
+
+
+ Discussion of "ports"
+ Discussions concerning FreeBSD's "ports collection" (/usr/ports), proposed
+ ports, modifications to ports collection infrastructure and general
+ coordination efforts.
+ This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
+ content is expected.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-QUESTIONS
+
+
+ User questions
+ This is the mailing list for questions about FreeBSD. You should not
+ send "how to" questions to the technical lists unless you consider the
+ question to be pretty technical.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-QUESTIONS-DIGEST
+
+
+ User questions
+ This is the digest version of the freebsd-questions mailing list.
+ The digest consists of all messages sent to freebsd-questions
+ bundled together and mailed out as a single message. The average
+ digest size is about 40kB.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-SCSI
+
+
+ SCSI subsystem
+ This is the mailing list for people working on the scsi subsystem
+ for FreeBSD.
+ This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
+ content is expected.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-SECURITY
+
+
+ Security issues
+ FreeBSD computer security issues (DES, Kerberos, known security holes and
+ fixes, etc).
+ This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
+ content is expected.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-SECURITY-NOTIFICATIONS
+
+
+ Security Notifications
+ Notifications of FreeBSD security problems and fixes. This is not
+ a discussion list. The discussion list is FreeBSD-security.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-USER-GROUPS
+
+
+ User Group Coordination List
+ This is the mailing list for the coordinators from each of the
+ local area Users Groups to discuss matters with each other and a
+ designated individual from the Core Team. This mail list should
+ be limited to meeting synopsis and coordination of projects that span
+ User Groups. It is a closed list.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Usenet newsgroups
+
+ In addition to two FreeBSD specific newsgroups, there
+ are many others in which FreeBSD is discussed or are
+ otherwise relevant to FreeBSD users. Keyword searchable archives are available for
+ some of these newsgroups from courtesy of Warren Toomey
+ <wkt@cs.adfa.oz.au>.
+
+
+
+ BSD specific newsgroups
+
+
+
+
+
+ comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.announce
+
+
+
+ comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.misc
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Other Unix newsgroups of interest
+
+
+
+
+
+ comp.unix
+
+
+
+ comp.unix.questions
+
+
+
+ comp.unix.admin
+
+
+
+ comp.unix.programmer
+
+
+
+ comp.unix.shell
+
+
+
+ comp.unix.user-friendly
+
+
+
+ comp.security.unix
+
+
+
+ comp.sources.unix
+
+
+
+ comp.unix.advocacy
+
+
+
+ comp.unix.misc
+
+
+
+ comp.os.386bsd.announc
+
+
+
+ comp.os.386bsd.app
+
+
+
+ comp.os.386bsd.bugs
+
+
+
+ comp.os.386bsd.development
+
+
+
+ comp.os.386bsd.misc
+
+
+
+ comp.os.386bsd.questions
+
+
+
+ comp.bugs.4bsd
+
+
+
+ comp.bugs.4bsd.ucb-fixes
+
+
+
+ comp.unix.bsd
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ X Window System
+
+
+
+
+
+ comp.windows.x.i386unix
+
+
+
+ comp.windows.x
+
+
+
+ comp.windows.x.apps
+
+
+
+ comp.windows.x.announce
+
+
+
+ comp.windows.x.intrinsics
+
+
+
+ comp.windows.x.motif
+
+
+
+ comp.windows.x.pex
+
+
+
+ comp.emulators.ms-windows.wine
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ World Wide Web servers
+
+
+
+
+
+ http://www.FreeBSD.ORG/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.au.freebsd.org/FreeBSD/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.br.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.ca.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://sunsite.mff.cuni.cz/www.freebsd.org/.
+
+
+
+ http://sunsite.auc.dk/www.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.ee.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.fi.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.de.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.ie.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.jp.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.kr.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.nl.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.pt.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.se.freebsd.org/www.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.tw.freebsd.org/freebsd.html .
+
+
+
+ http://www2.ua.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD Project Staff
+
+ The FreeBSD Project is managed and operated by the following
+ groups of people:
+
+
+
+ The FreeBSD Core Team
+
+ The FreeBSD core team constitutes the project's ``Board of Directors'',
+ responsible for deciding the project's overall goals and direction
+ as well as managing of
+ the FreeBSD project landscape.
+
+ (in alphabetical order by last name):
+
+
+
+
+
+ &a.asami;
+
+
+
+ &a.jmb;
+
+
+
+ &a.ache;
+
+
+
+ &a.dyson;
+
+
+
+ &a.bde;
+
+
+
+ &a.gibbs;
+
+
+
+ &a.davidg;
+
+
+
+ &a.jkh;
+
+
+
+ &a.phk;
+
+
+
+ &a.rich;
+
+
+
+ &a.gpalmer;
+
+
+
+ &a.jdp;
+
+
+
+ &a.guido;
+
+
+
+ &a.sos;
+
+
+
+ &a.peter;
+
+
+
+ &a.wollman;
+
+
+
+ &a.joerg;
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The FreeBSD Developers
+
+ These are the people who have commit privileges and do the engineering
+ work on the FreeBSD source tree. All core team members and most
+ FreeBSD Documentation project personnel are also developers.
+
+
+
+
+
+ &a.mbarkah;
+
+
+
+ &a.stb;
+
+
+
+ &a.jb;
+
+
+
+ &a.torstenb;
+
+
+
+ &a.danny;
+
+
+
+ &a.charnier;
+
+
+
+ &a.kjc;
+
+
+
+ &a.gclarkii;
+
+
+
+ &a.cracauer;
+
+
+
+ &a.adam;
+
+
+
+ &a.dufault;
+
+
+
+ &a.uhclem;
+
+
+
+ &a.tegge;
+
+
+
+ &a.eivind;
+
+
+
+ &a.julian;
+
+
+
+ &a.rse;
+
+
+
+ &a.se;
+
+
+
+ &a.sef;
+
+
+
+ &a.fenner;
+
+
+
+ &a.jfieber;
+
+
+
+ &a.jfitz;
+
+
+
+ &a.lars;
+
+
+
+ &a.scrappy;
+
+
+
+ &a.tg;
+
+
+
+ &a.brandon;
+
+
+
+ &a.graichen;
+
+
+
+ &a.jgreco;
+
+
+
+ &a.rgrimes;
+
+
+
+ &a.jmg;
+
+
+
+ &a.hanai;
+
+
+
+ &a.ahasty;
+
+
+
+ &a.jhay;
+
+
+
+ &a.helbig;
+
+
+
+ &a.erich;
+
+
+
+ &a.hsu;
+
+
+
+ &a.itojun;
+
+
+
+ &a.ugen;
+
+
+
+ &a.gj;
+
+
+
+ &a.nsj;
+
+
+
+ &a.ljo;
+
+
+
+ &a.kato;
+
+
+
+ &a.andreas;
+
+
+
+ &a.imp;
+
+
+
+ &a.smace;
+
+
+
+ &a.mckay;
+
+
+
+ &a.jlemon;
+
+
+
+ &a.tedm;
+
+
+
+ &a.amurai;
+
+
+
+ &a.markm;
+
+
+
+ &a.max;
+
+
+
+ &a.alex;
+
+
+
+ &a.davidn;
+
+
+
+ &a.obrien;
+
+
+
+ &a.fsmp;
+
+
+
+ &a.smpatel;
+
+
+
+ &a.wpaul;
+
+
+
+ &a.jmacd;
+
+
+
+ &a.steve;
+
+
+
+ &a.mpp;
+
+
+
+ &a.dfr;
+
+
+
+ &a.jraynard;
+
+
+
+ &a.darrenr;
+
+
+
+ &a.csgr;
+
+
+
+ &a.martin;
+
+
+
+ &a.paul;
+
+
+
+ &a.roberto;
+
+
+
+ &a.chuckr;
+
+
+
+ &a.dima;
+
+
+
+ &a.wosch;
+
+
+
+ &a.ats;
+
+
+
+ &a.jseger;
+
+
+
+ &a.vanilla;
+
+
+
+ &a.msmith;
+
+
+
+ &a.brian;
+
+
+
+ &a.stark;
+
+
+
+ &a.karl;
+
+
+
+ &a.cwt;
+
+
+
+ &a.pst;
+
+
+
+ &a.hoek;
+
+
+
+ &a.swallace;
+
+
+
+ &a.nate;
+
+
+
+ &a.yokota;
+
+
+
+ &a.jmz;
+
+
+
+ &a.hosokawa;
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The FreeBSD Documentation Project
+
+
+ The FreeBSD Documentation Project is responsible for a
+ number of different services, each service being run by an
+ individual and his deputies (if any):
+
+
+
+ Documentation Project Manager
+
+ &a.jfieber;
+
+
+
+
+ Webmaster
+
+
+ &a.mbarkah;
+
+ Deputy: &a.paul;
+
+
+
+
+ Handbook & FAQ Editor
+
+
+ &a.faq;
+
+
+
+
+ Build Engineer
+
+
+ &a.paul;
+
+ Deputy: &a.dave;
+
+
+
+
+ Mirror Manager
+
+
+ &a.ulf;
+
+ Deputy: &a.john;
+
+
+
+
+ News Editor
+
+
+ &a.nsj;
+
+ Deputy: &a.john;
+
+
+
+
+ Gallery and Commercial Editor
+
+
+ &a.nsj;
+
+ Deputy: &a.cawimm;
+
+
+
+
+ Style Police & Art Director
+
+
+ &a.dave;
+
+ Deputy: &a.opsys;
+
+
+
+
+ Database Engineer
+
+
+ &a.mayo;
+
+ Deputy: &a.cracauer;
+
+
+
+
+ CGI Engineer
+
+
+ &a.cracauer;
+
+ Deputy: &a.stb;
+
+
+
+
+ Bottle Washing
+
+
+ &a.nsj;
+
+ Drying plates: &a.nik;
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Who Is Responsible for What
+
+
+
+ Principal Architect
+
+ &a.davidg;
+
+
+
+
+ Documentation Project Manager
+
+
+ &a.jfieber;
+
+
+
+
+ Internationalization
+
+
+ &a.ache;
+
+
+
+
+ Networking
+
+
+ &a.wollman;
+
+
+
+
+ Postmaster
+
+
+ &a.jmb;
+
+
+
+
+ Release Coordinator
+
+
+ &a.jkh;
+
+
+
+
+ Public Relations & Corporate Liaison
+
+
+ &a.jkh;
+
+
+
+
+ Security Officer
+
+
+ &a.guido;
+
+
+
+
+ Source Repository Managers
+
+
+ Principal: &a.peter;
+ Assistant: &a.jdp;
+ International (Crypto): &a.markm;
+
+
+
+
+ Ports Manager
+
+
+ &a.asami;
+
+
+
+
+ XFree86 Project, Inc. Liaison
+
+
+ &a.rich;
+
+
+
+
+ Usenet Support
+
+
+ &a.joerg;
+
+
+
+
+ GNATS Administrator
+
+
+ &a.steve;
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ PGP keys
+
+ In case you need to verify a signature or send encrypted
+ email to one of the officers or core team members a
+ number of keys are provided here for your convenience.
+
+
+
+ Officers
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD Security Officer <security-officer@freebsd.org>
+
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD Security Officer <security-officer@freebsd.org>
+ Fingerprint = 41 08 4E BB DB 41 60 71 F9 E5 0E 98 73 AF 3F 11
+
+ -----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
+ Version: 2.6.3i
+
+ mQCNAzF7MY4AAAEEAK7qBgPuBejER5HQbQlsOldk3ZVWXlRj54raz3IbuAUrDrQL
+ h3g57T9QY++f3Mot2LAf5lDJbsMfWrtwPrPwCCFRYQd6XH778a+l4ju5axyjrt/L
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+ Satoshi Asami <asami@cs.berkeley.edu>
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+ Jordan K. Hubbard <jkh@FreeBSD.org>
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diff --git a/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/book.sgml b/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/book.sgml
index 0a18f35821..b3bbc389a5 100644
--- a/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/book.sgml
+++ b/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/book.sgml
@@ -1,37488 +1,37488 @@
-
-
-
-FreeBSD Handbook
-
-
-
-The FreeBSD Documentation Project
-
-
-
-March 1998
-
-Welcome to FreeBSD! This handbook covers the
-installation and day to day use of FreeBSD Release
-&rel.current;. This manual is a work in progress and is the
-work of many individuals. Many sections do not yet exist
-and some of those that do exist need to be updated. If
-you are interested in helping with this project, send
-email to the &a.doc; The latest version of this
-document is always available from
-the FreeBSD World Wide Web server. It may also be downloaded in plain text, postscript or HTML from the FreeBSD FTP server or one of the numerous
-. You may also want to
-Search the Handbook.
-
-
-
-
-
-Getting Started
-
-
-
-Introduction
-
-FreeBSD is a 4.4BSD-Lite based operating system for Intel
-architecture (x86) based PCs. For an overview of FreeBSD, see
-. For a
-history of the project, read . To see a description of the
-latest release, read . If you're interested
-in contributing something to the FreeBSD project (code, equipment,
-sacks of unmarked bills), please see about .
-
-
-FreeBSD in a Nutshell
-
-FreeBSD is a state of the art operating system for
-personal computers based on the Intel CPU architecture, which
-includes the 386, 486 and Pentium processors (both SX and DX versions).
-Intel compatible CPUs from AMD and Cyrix are supported as well.
-FreeBSD provides you with many advanced features previously available
-only on much more expensive computers. These features include:
-
-
-
-
-
-Preemptive multitasking with dynamic priority
-adjustment to ensure smooth and fair sharing of the
-computer between applications and users.
-
-
-
-Multiuser access means that many people can use a
-FreeBSD system simultaneously for a variety of things. System
-peripherals such as printers and tape drives are also properly
-SHARED BETWEEN ALL users on the system.
-
-
-
-Complete TCP/IP networking including SLIP, PPP, NFS
-and NIS support. This means that your FreeBSD machine can
-inter-operate easily with other systems as well act as an enterprise
-server, providing vital functions such as NFS (remote file access) and
-e-mail services or putting your organization on the Internet
-with WWW, ftp, routing and firewall (security) services.
-
-
-
-Memory protection ensures that applications (or
-users) cannot interfere with each other. One application
-crashing will not affect others in any way.
-
-
-
-FreeBSD is a 32-bit operating system and was designed
-as such from the ground up.
-
-
-
-The industry standard X Window System (X11R6)
-provides a graphical user interface (GUI) for the cost of a
-common VGA card and monitor and comes with full sources.
-
-
-
-Binary compatibility with many programs built for SCO,
-BSDI, NetBSD, Linux and 386BSD.
-
-
-
-Hundreds of ready-to-run applications are
-available from the
-FreeBSD ports and packages
-collection. Why search the net when you can find it all
-right here?
-
-
-
-Thousands of additional and easy-to-port applications
-available on the Internet. FreeBSD is source code compatible
-with most popular commercial Unix systems and thus most
-applications require few, if any, changes to compile.
-
-
-
-Demand paged virtual memory and `merged VM/buffer cache'
-design efficiently satisfies applications with large appetites
-for memory while still maintaining interactive response to other
-users.
-
-
-
-Shared libraries (the Unix equivalent of
-MS-Windows DLLs) provide for efficient use of disk space
-and memory.
-
-
-
-A full compliment of C, C++ and
-Fortran development tools. Many additional
-languages for advanced research and development are
-also available in the ports and packages collection.
-
-
-
-Source code for the entire system means you have
-the greatest degree of control over your environment. Why be
-locked into a proprietary solution and at the mercy of your vendor
-when you can have a truly Open System?
-
-
-
-Extensive on-line documentation.
-
-
-
-And many more!
-
-
-
-
-
-FreeBSD is based on the 4.4BSD-Lite release from Computer
-Systems Research Group (CSRG) at the University of
-California at Berkeley, and carries on the distinguished
-tradition of BSD systems development. In addition to the
-fine work provided by CSRG, the FreeBSD Project has put in
-many thousands of hours in fine tuning the system for
-maximum performance and reliability in real-life load
-situations. As many of the commercial giants struggle to
-field PC operating systems with such features, performance
-and reliability, FreeBSD can offer them now!
-
-The applications to which FreeBSD can be put are truly
-limited only by your own imagination. From software
-development to factory automation, inventory control to
-azimuth correction of remote satellite antennae; if it can
-be done with a commercial UNIX product then it is more than
-likely that you can do it with FreeBSD, too! FreeBSD also
-benefits significantly from the literally thousands of high
-quality applications developed by research centers and
-universities around the world, often available at little
-to no cost. Commercial applications are also available
-and appearing in greater numbers every day.
-
-Because the source code for FreeBSD itself is generally
-available, the system can also be customized to an almost
-unheard of degree for special applications or projects, and
-in ways not generally possible with operating systems from
-most major commercial vendors. Here is just a sampling of
-some of the applications in which people are currently
-using FreeBSD:
-
-
-
-
-
-Internet Services: The robust TCP/IP networking
-built into FreeBSD makes it an ideal platform for a
-variety of Internet services such as:
-
-
-
-FTP servers
-
-
-
-World Wide Web servers
-
-
-
-Gopher servers
-
-
-
-Electronic Mail servers
-
-
-
-USENET News
-
-
-
-Bulletin Board Systems
-
-
-
-And more...
-
-
-
-
-You can easily start out small with an inexpensive 386
-class PC and upgrade as your enterprise grows.
-
-
-
-Education: Are you a student of computer science
-or a related engineering field? There is no better way
-of learning about operating systems, computer
-architecture and networking than the hands on, under the
-hood experience that FreeBSD can provide. A number of
-freely available CAD, mathematical and graphic design
-packages also make it highly useful to those whose
-primary interest in a computer is to get other
-work done!
-
-
-
-Research: With source code for the entire system
-available, FreeBSD is an excellent platform for research
-in operating systems as well as other branches of
-computer science. FreeBSD's freely available nature also
-makes it possible for remote groups to collaborate on
-ideas or shared development without having to worry about
-special licensing agreements or limitations on what
-may be discussed in open forums.
-
-
-
-Networking: Need a new router? A name server
-(DNS)? A firewall to keep people out of your internal
-network? FreeBSD can easily turn that unused 386 or 486 PC
-sitting in the corner into an advanced router with
-sophisticated packet filtering capabilities.
-
-
-
-X Window workstation: FreeBSD is a fine
-choice for an inexpensive X terminal solution, either
-using the freely available XFree86 server or one
-of the excellent commercial servers provided by X Inside.
-Unlike an X
-terminal, FreeBSD allows many applications to be run
-locally, if desired, thus relieving the burden on a
-central server. FreeBSD can even boot
-"diskless", making individual workstations even cheaper
-and easier to administer.
-
-
-
-Software Development: The basic FreeBSD system
-comes with a full compliment of development tools
-including the renowned GNU C/C++ compiler and
-debugger.
-
-
-
-
-
-FreeBSD is available in both source and binary form on CDROM and
-via anonymous ftp. See
-for more details.
-
-
-
-
-
-A Brief History of FreeBSD
-
-Contributed by &a.jkh;.
-
-The FreeBSD project had its genesis in the early part of 1993,
-partially as an outgrowth of the "Unofficial 386BSD Patchkit" by the
-patchkit's last 3 coordinators: Nate Williams, Rod Grimes and myself.
-
-Our original goal was to produce an intermediate snapshot of 386BSD in
-order to fix a number of problems with it that the patchkit mechanism
-just was not capable of solving. Some of you may remember the early
-working title for the project being "386BSD 0.5" or "386BSD Interim"
-in reference to that fact.
-
-386BSD was Bill Jolitz's operating system, which had been up to that
-point suffering rather severely from almost a year's worth of neglect.
-As the patchkit swelled ever more uncomfortably with each passing day,
-we were in unanimous agreement that something had to be done and
-decided to try and assist Bill by providing this interim "cleanup"
-snapshot. Those plans came to a rude halt when Bill Jolitz suddenly
-decided to withdraw his sanction from the project and without any
-clear indication of what would be done instead.
-
-It did not take us long to decide that the goal remained worthwhile,
-even without Bill's support, and so we adopted the name "FreeBSD",
-coined by David Greenman. Our initial objectives were set after
-consulting with the system's current users and, once it became clear
-that the project was on the road to perhaps even becoming a reality,
-I contacted Walnut Creek CDROM with an eye towards improving
-FreeBSD's distribution channels for those many unfortunates without
-easy access to the Internet. Walnut Creek CDROM not only supported
-the idea of distributing FreeBSD on CD but went so far as to provide
-the project with a machine to work on and a fast Internet connection.
-Without Walnut Creek CDROM's almost unprecedented degree of faith in
-what was, at the time, a completely unknown project, it is quite
-unlikely that FreeBSD would have gotten as far, as fast, as it
-has today.
-
-The first CDROM (and general net-wide) distribution was FreeBSD 1.0,
-released in December of 1993. This was based on the 4.3BSD-Lite
-("Net/2") tape from U.C. Berkeley, with many components also provided by
-386BSD and the Free Software Foundation. It was a fairly reasonable
-success for a first offering, and we followed it with the highly successful
-FreeBSD 1.1 release in May of 1994.
-
-Around this time, some rather unexpected storm clouds formed on the
-horizon as Novell and U.C. Berkeley settled their long-running lawsuit
-over the legal status of the Berkeley Net/2 tape. A condition of that
-settlement was U.C. Berkeley's concession that large parts of Net/2
-were "encumbered" code and the property of Novell, who had in turn acquired
-it from AT&T some time previously. What Berkeley got in return was
-Novell's "blessing" that the 4.4BSD-Lite release, when it was finally
-released, would be declared unencumbered and all existing Net/2 users
-would be strongly encouraged to switch. This included FreeBSD, and the
-project was given until the end of July 1994 to stop shipping its own
-Net/2 based product. Under the terms of that agreement, the project
-was allowed one last release before the deadline, that release being
-FreeBSD 1.1.5.1.
-
-FreeBSD then set about the arduous task of literally re-inventing itself
-from a completely new and rather incomplete set of 4.4BSD-Lite bits. The
-"Lite" releases were light in part because Berkeley's CSRG had removed
-large chunks of code required for actually constructing a bootable running
-system (due to various legal requirements) and the fact that the Intel
-port of 4.4 was highly incomplete. It took the project until December of 1994
-to make this transition, and in January of 1995 it released FreeBSD 2.0 to
-the net and on CDROM. Despite being still more than a little rough around
-the edges, the release was a significant success and was followed by the more
-robust and easier to install FreeBSD 2.0.5 release in June of 1995.
-
-We released FreeBSD 2.1.5 in August of 1996, and it appeared to be
-popular enough among the ISP and commercial communities that another
-release along the 2.1-stable branch was merited. This was FreeBSD 2.1.7.1,
-released in February 1997 and capping the end of mainstream development
-on 2.1-stable. Now in maintenance mode, only security enhancements and other
-critical bug fixes will be done on this branch (RELENG_2_1_0).
-
-FreeBSD 2.2 was branched from the development mainline ("-current") in
-November 1996 as the RELENG_2_2 branch, and the first full release
-(2.2.1) was released in April, 1997. Further releases along the 2.2 branch
-were done in the Summer and Fall of '97, the latest being 2.2.6 which
-appeared in late March of '98. The first official 3.0 release will appear
-later in 1998.
-
-Long term development projects for everything from SMP to DEC ALPHA support
-will continue to take place in the 3.0-current branch and SNAPshot releases
-of 3.0 on CDROM (and, of course, on the net).
-
-
-
-
-
-FreeBSD Project Goals
-
-Contributed by &a.jkh;.
-
-The goals of the FreeBSD Project are to provide software that may
-be used for any purpose and without strings attached. Many of us
-have a significant investment in the code (and project) and would
-certainly not mind a little financial compensation now and then,
-but we're definitely not prepared to insist on it. We believe
-that our first and foremost "mission" is to provide code to any
-and all comers, and for whatever purpose, so that the code gets
-the widest possible use and provides the widest possible benefit.
-This is, I believe, one of the most fundamental goals of Free
-Software and one that we enthusiastically support.
-
-That code in our source tree which falls under the GNU Public License
-(GPL) or GNU Library Public License (GLPL) comes with slightly more
-strings attached, though at least on the side of enforced
-access rather than the usual opposite. Due to the additional
-complexities that can evolve in the commercial use of GPL software,
-we do, however, endeavor to replace such software with submissions
-under the more relaxed BSD copyright whenever possible.
-
-
-
-
-
-The FreeBSD Development Model
-
-Contributed by &a.asami;.
-
-The development of FreeBSD is a very open and flexible process,
-FreeBSD being literally built from the contributions of hundreds of
-people around the world, as can be seen from our . We are constantly on the lookout for
-new developers and ideas, and those interested in becoming more
-closely involved with the project need simply contact us at the
-&a.hackers;. Those who prefer to work more independently are also
-accommodated, and they are free to use our FTP facilities at ftp.freebsd.org to distribute their own patches or work-in-progress
-sources. The &a.announce; is also available to those wishing
-to make other FreeBSD users aware of major areas of work.
-
-Useful things to know about the FreeBSD project and its development process,
-whether working independently or in close cooperation:
-
-
-
-The CVS repository
-
-
-
-The central source tree for FreeBSD is maintained by CVS
-(Concurrent Version System), a freely available source code control
-tool which comes bundled with FreeBSD. The primary CVS repository
-resides on a machine in Concord CA, USA from where it is replicated
-to numerous mirror machines throughout the world. The CVS tree, as well
-as the and trees which are checked out of it, can be easily
-replicated to your own machine as well. Please refer to the
-
-section for more information on doing this.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The committers list
-
-
-
-
-The are the people
-who have write access to the CVS tree, and are thus
-authorized to make modifications to the FreeBSD source (the term
-``committer'' comes from the cvs(1) ``commit''
-command, which is used to bring new changes into the CVS repository).
-The best way of making submissions for review by the committers list
-is to use the send-pr(1) command, though if something appears to be jammed
-in the system then you may also reach them by sending mail to committers@freebsd.org.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The FreeBSD core team
-
-
-
-
-The would be
-equivalent to the board of directors if the FreeBSD Project were a
-company. The primary task of the core team is to make sure the
-project, as a whole, is in good shape and is heading in the right
-directions. Inviting dedicated and responsible developers to join our
-group of committers is one of the functions of the core team, as is
-the recruitment of new core team members as others move on. Most
-current members of the core team started as committers who's addiction
-to the project got the better of them.
-
-
-
-Some core team members also have specific , meaning that they are committed to
-ensuring that some large portion of the system works as advertised.
-Note that most members of the core team are volunteers when it comes
-to FreeBSD development and do not benefit from the project
-financially, so "commitment" should also not be misconstrued as
-meaning "guaranteed support." The ``board of directors'' analogy
-above is not actually very accurate, and it may be more suitable to
-say that these are the people who gave up their lives in favor of
-FreeBSD against their better judgement! ;)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Outside contributors
-
-
-
-
-Last, but definitely not least, the largest group of developers are
-the users themselves who provide feedback and bug-fixes to us on an
-almost constant basis. The primary way of keeping in touch with FreeBSD's
-more non-centralized development is to subscribe to the &a.hackers;
-(see ) where such
-things are discussed.
-
-
-
- of those who have
-contributed something which made its way into our source tree is
-a long and growing one, so why not join it by contributing something
-back to FreeBSD today? :-)
-
-
-
-Providing code is not the only way of contributing to the project;
-for a more complete list of things that need doing, please refer to the section in this handbook.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-In summary, our development model is organized as a loose set of
-concentric circles. The centralized model is designed for the
-convenience of the users of FreeBSD, who are thereby provided
-with an easy way of tracking one central code base, not to keep
-potential contributors out! Our desire is to present a stable
-operating system with a large set of coherent that the users can easily install and
-use, and this model works very well in accomplishing that.
-
-All we ask of those who would join us as FreeBSD developers is some of
-the same dedication its current people have to its continued success!
-
-
-
-
-
-About the Current Release
-
-FreeBSD is a freely available, full source 4.4BSD-Lite
-based release for Intel i386/i486/Pentium/PentiumPro/Pentium II
-(or compatible) based PC's. It is based primarily on
-software from U.C. Berkeley's CSRG group, with some
-enhancements from NetBSD, OpenBSD, 386BSD, and the Free
-Software Foundation.
-
-Since our release of FreeBSD 2.0 in January of 95, the
-performance, feature set, and stability of FreeBSD has
-improved dramatically. The largest change is a
-revamped virtual memory system with a merged VM/file buffer
-cache that not only increases performance, but reduces
-FreeBSD's memory footprint, making a 5MB configuration
-a more acceptable minimum. Other enhancements include
-full NIS client and server support, transaction TCP
-support, dial-on-demand PPP, an improved SCSI
-subsystem, early ISDN support, support for FDDI and
-Fast Ethernet (100Mbit) adapters, improved support for
-the Adaptec 2940 (WIDE and narrow) and many hundreds of
-bug fixes.
-
-We have also taken the comments and suggestions of many
-of our users to heart and have attempted to provide
-what we hope is a more sane and easily understood
-installation process. Your feedback on this
-(constantly evolving) process is especially welcome!
-
-In addition to the base distributions, FreeBSD offers a
-new ported software collection with hundreds of commonly
-sought-after programs. At the end of March 1998 there were
-more than 1300 ports! The list of ports ranges from
-http (WWW) servers, to games, languages, editors and
-almost everything in between. The entire ports collection
-requires approximately 26MB of storage, all ports being
-expressed as ``deltas'' to their original sources. This makes
-it much easier for us to update ports, and greatly reduces
-the disk space demands made by the older 1.0 ports
-collection. To compile a port, you simply change to the
-directory of the program you wish to install, type ``make
-all'' followed by ``make install'' after successful
-compilation and let the system do the rest. The full
-original distribution for each port you build is retrieved
-dynamically off the CDROM or a local ftp site, so you need
-only enough disk space to build the ports you want.
-(Almost) every port is also provided as a pre-compiled
-"package" which can be installed with a simple command
-(pkg_add) by those who do not wish to compile their own
-ports from source.
-
-A number of additional documents which you may find
-very helpful in the process of installing and using
-FreeBSD may now also be found in the
-/usr/share/doc directory on any machine running
-FreeBSD 2.1 or later. You may view the locally installed
-manuals with any HTML capable browser using the
-following URLs:
-
-
-
-The FreeBSD handbook
-
-file:/usr/share/doc/handbook/handbook.html
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The FreeBSD FAQ
-
-
-file:/usr/share/doc/FAQ/FAQ.html
-
-
-
-
-
-
-You can also visit the master (and most frequently
-updated) copies at http://www.freebsd.org.
-
-The core of FreeBSD does not contain DES code which
-would inhibit its being exported outside the United
-States. There is an add-on package to the core
-distribution, for use only in the United States, that
-contains the programs that normally use DES. The
-auxiliary packages provided separately can be used by
-anyone. A freely (from outside the U.S.) exportable
-European distribution of DES for our non-U.S. users
-also exists and is described in the FreeBSD FAQ.
-
-If password security for FreeBSD is all you need, and
-you have no requirement for copying encrypted passwords
-from different hosts (Suns, DEC machines, etc) into
-FreeBSD password entries, then FreeBSD's MD5 based
-security may be all you require! We feel that our
-default security model is more than a match for DES,
-and without any messy export issues to deal with. If
-you are outside (or even inside) the U.S., give it a
-try!
-
-
-
-
-
-Installing FreeBSD
-
-So, you would like to try out FreeBSD on your system?
-This section is a quick-start guide for what you need to
-do. FreeBSD can be installed from a variety of media
-including CD-ROM, floppy disk, magnetic tape, an MS-DOS
-partition and, if you have a network connection, via
-anonymous ftp or NFS.
-
-Regardless of the installation media you choose, you can
-get started by creating the installation disk
-as described below. Booting your computer into the FreeBSD installer,
-even if you aren't planning on installing FreeBSD right away, will
-provide important information about compatibility between
-FreeBSD and your hardware which may, in turn, dictate which
-installation options are even possible. It can also provide
-early clues to any compatibility problems which could prevent
-FreeBSD running on your system at all. If you plan on
-installing via anonymous FTP then this installation disk
-is all you need to download (the installation will handle any
-further required downloading itself).
-
-For more information on obtaining the latest FreeBSD distributions,
-please see in the Appendix.
-
-So, to get the show on the road, follow these steps:
-
-
-
-
-
-Review the section of this installation guide to
-be sure that your hardware is supported by FreeBSD. It
-may be helpful to make a list of any special cards you
-have installed, such as SCSI controllers, Ethernet
-adapters or sound cards. This list should include
-relevant configuration parameters such as interrupts
-(IRQ) and IO port addresses.
-
-
-
-
-
-If you're installing FreeBSD from CDROM media then you have
-several different installation options:
-
-
-
-
-
-If the CD has been mastered with El Torrito boot support and
-your system supports direct booting from CDROM (and many older systems
-do not), simply insert the CD into the drive and boot
-directly from it.
-
-
-
-
-
-If you're running DOS and have the proper drivers to access
-your CD, run the install.bat script provided on the CD. This will
-attempt to boot into the FreeBSD installation straight from DOS
-(note: You must do this from actual DOS and not a Windows DOS box). If you also want to install FreeBSD from your DOS partition
-(perhaps because your CDROM drive is completely unsupported by
-FreeBSD) then run the setup program first to copy the
-appropriate files from the CD to your DOS partition, afterwards
-running install.
-
-
-
-
-
-If either of the two proceeding methods work then you can
-simply skip the rest of this section, otherwise your final option
-is to create a boot floppy from the floppies\boot.flp
-image - proceed to step 4 for instructions on how to do
-this.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-If you don't have a CDROM distribution then simply download the installation boot disk image file to your hard
-drive, being sure to tell your browser to
-save rather than display the file.
-Note: This disk image can only be used with
-1.44 megabyte 3.5 inch floppy disks.
-
-
-
-
-
-Make the installation boot disk from the image file:
-
-
-
-
-
-If you are using MS-DOS then download
-fdimage.exe or get it from tools\fdimage.exe
-on the CDROM and then run it like so:
-
-E:\> tools\fdimage floppies\boot.flp a:
-
- The fdimage
-program will format the A: drive and then copy the
-boot.flp image onto it (assuming that you're at the top
-level of a FreeBSD distribution and the floppy images
-live in the floppies subdirectory, as is typically the case).
-
-
-
-
-
-If you are using a UNIX system to create the floppy image:
-
-% dd if=boot.flp of=disk_device
-
-
-where disk_device is the /dev
-entry for the floppy drive. On FreeBSD systems, this
-is /dev/rfd0 for the A: drive and
-/dev/rfd1 for the B: drive.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-With the installation disk in the A: drive, reboot your
-computer. You should get a boot prompt something like this:
-
->> FreeBSD BOOT ...
-Usage: [[[0:][wd](0,a)]/kernel][-abcCdhrsv]
-Use 1:sd(0,a)kernel to boot sd0 if it is BIOS drive 1
-Use ? for file list or press Enter for defaults
-Boot:
-
-
-If you do not type anything, FreeBSD will automatically boot
-with its default configuration after a delay of about
-five seconds. As FreeBSD boots, it probes your computer
-to determine what hardware is installed. The results of
-this probing is displayed on the screen.
-
-
-
-
-
-When the booting process is finished, The main FreeBSD
-installation menu will be displayed.
-
-
-
-
-
-If something goes wrong...
-
-Due to limitations of the PC architecture, it is
-impossible for probing to be 100 percent reliable. In the event
-that your hardware is incorrectly identified, or that the
-probing causes your computer to lock up, first check the
- section of this installation guide to be
-sure that your hardware is indeed supported by FreeBSD.
-
-If your hardware is supported, reset the computer and when
-the Boot: prompt comes up, type . This puts
-FreeBSD into a configuration mode where you can supply
-hints about your hardware. The FreeBSD kernel on the
-installation disk is configured assuming that most hardware
-devices are in their factory default configuration in terms
-of IRQs, IO addresses and DMA channels. If your hardware
-has been reconfigured, you will most likely need to use the
- option at boot to tell FreeBSD where things are.
-
-It is also possible that a probe for a device not present
-will cause a later probe for another device that is present
-to fail. In that case, the probes for the conflicting
-driver(s) should be disabled.
-
-In the configuration mode, you can:
-
-
-
-
-
-List the device drivers installed in the kernel.
-
-
-
-Disable device drivers for hardware not present in your
-system.
-
-
-
-Change the IRQ, DRQ, and IO port addresses used by a
-device driver.
-
-
-
-
-
-While at the config> prompt, type
-help for more information on the available
-commands. After adjusting the kernel to match how you have
-your hardware configured, type quit at the
-config> prompt to continue booting with the new
-settings.
-
-After FreeBSD has been installed, changes made in the
-configuration mode will be permanent so you do not have
-to reconfigure every time you boot. Even so, it is likely
-that you will want to build a custom kernel to optimize the
-performance of your system. See for more information on
-creating custom kernels.
-
-
-
-Supported Configurations
-
-FreeBSD currently runs on a wide variety of ISA, VLB,
-EISA and PCI bus based PC's, ranging from 386sx to
-Pentium class machines (though the 386sx is not
-recommended). Support for generic IDE or ESDI drive
-configurations, various SCSI controller, network and
-serial cards is also provided.
-
-A minimum of four megabytes of RAM is required to run FreeBSD.
-To run the X Window System, eight megabytes of RAM is the
-recommended minimum.
-
-Following is a list of all disk controllers and Ethernet
-cards currently known to work with FreeBSD. Other
-configurations may very well work, and we have simply not
-received any indication of this.
-
-
-
-Disk Controllers
-
-
-
-
-
-WD1003 (any generic MFM/RLL)
-
-
-
-WD1007 (any generic IDE/ESDI)
-
-
-
-IDE
-
-
-
-ATA
-
-
-
-
-Adaptec 1505 ISA SCSI controller
-
-
-
-Adaptec 152x series ISA SCSI controllers
-
-
-
-Adaptec 1535 ISA SCSI controllers
-
-
-
-Adaptec 154x series ISA SCSI controllers
-
-
-
-Adaptec 174x series EISA SCSI controller in
-standard and enhanced mode.
-
-
-
-Adaptec 274x/284x/2940/2940U/3940
-(Narrow/Wide/Twin)
-series EISA/VLB/PCI SCSI controllers
-
-
-
-Adaptec AIC7850 on-board SCSI controllers
-
-
-
-Adaptec
-AIC-6360 based boards,
-which includes the AHA-152x and SoundBlaster SCSI
-cards.
-
-Note: You cannot boot from the
-SoundBlaster cards as they have no on-board BIOS,
-which is necessary for mapping the boot device into
-the system BIOS I/O vectors. They are perfectly
-usable for external tapes, CDROMs, etc, however.
-The same goes for any other AIC-6x60 based card
-without a boot ROM. Some systems DO have a boot
-ROM, which is generally indicated by some sort of
-message when the system is first powered up or
-reset. Check your system/board documentation for
-more details.
-
-
-
-
-Buslogic 545S & 545c
-Note: that Buslogic was formerly known as "Bustek".
-
-
-
-Buslogic 445S/445c VLB SCSI controller
-
-
-
-Buslogic 742A/747S/747c EISA SCSI controller.
-
-
-
-Buslogic 946c PCI SCSI controller
-
-
-
-Buslogic 956c PCI SCSI controller
-
-
-
-
-NCR 53C810/53C815/53C825/53C860/53C875 PCI SCSI controller.
-
-
-
-NCR5380/NCR53400 (``ProAudio Spectrum'') SCSI controller.
-
-
-
-
-DTC 3290 EISA SCSI controller in 1542 emulation mode.
-
-
-
-
-UltraStor 14F/24F/34F SCSI controllers.
-
-
-
-
-Seagate ST01/02 SCSI controllers.
-
-
-
-
-Future Domain 8xx/950 series SCSI controllers.
-
-
-
-
-WD7000 SCSI controllers.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-With all supported SCSI controllers, full support is
-provided for SCSI-I & SCSI-II peripherals,
-including Disks, tape drives (including DAT) and CD ROM
-drives.
-
-The following CD-ROM type systems are supported at this
-time:
-
-
-
-
-
-SoundBlaster SCSI and ProAudio Spectrum SCSI (cd)
-
-
-
-Mitsumi (all models) proprietary interface (mcd)
-
-
-
-Matsushita/Panasonic (Creative)
-CR-562/CR-563 proprietary interface (matcd)
-
-
-
-Sony proprietary interface (scd)
-
-
-
-ATAPI IDE interface
-(experimental and should be considered ALPHA quality!)
-(wcd)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Ethernet cards
-
-
-
-
-
-Allied-Telesis AT1700 and RE2000 cards
-
-
-
-
-SMC Elite 16 WD8013 Ethernet interface, and
-most other WD8003E, WD8003EBT, WD8003W, WD8013W,
-WD8003S, WD8003SBT and WD8013EBT based clones. SMC
-Elite Ultra and 9432TX based cards are also supported.
-
-
-
-
-DEC EtherWORKS III NICs (DE203, DE204, and DE205)
-
-
-
-DEC EtherWORKS II NICs (DE200, DE201, DE202, and DE422)
-
-
-
-DEC DC21040/DC21041/DC21140 based NICs:
-
-
-
-ASUS PCI-L101-TB
-
-
-
-Accton ENI1203
-
-
-
-Cogent EM960PCI
-
-
-
-Compex CPXPCI/32C
-
-
-
-D-Link DE-530
-
-
-
-DEC DE435
-
-
-
-Danpex EN-9400P3
-
-
-
-JCIS Condor JC1260
-
-
-
-Kingston KNE100TX
-
-
-
-Linksys EtherPCI
-
-
-
-Mylex LNP101
-
-
-
-SMC EtherPower 10/100 (Model 9332)
-
-
-
-SMC EtherPower (Model 8432)
-
-
-
-SMC EtherPower (2)
-
-
-
-Zynx ZX314
-
-
-
-Zynx ZX342
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-DEC FDDI (DEFPA/DEFEA) NICs
-
-
-
-
-Fujitsu FMV-181 and FMV-182
-
-
-
-
-Fujitsu MB86960A/MB86965A
-
-
-
-
-Intel EtherExpress
-
-
-
-
-Intel EtherExpress Pro/100B 100Mbit.
-
-
-
-
-Isolan AT 4141-0 (16 bit)
-
-
-
-Isolink 4110 (8 bit)
-
-
-
-
-Lucent WaveLAN wireless networking interface.
-
-
-
-
-Novell NE1000, NE2000, and NE2100 ethernet interface.
-
-
-
-
-3Com 3C501 cards
-
-
-
-
-3Com 3C503 Etherlink II
-
-
-
-
-3Com 3c505 Etherlink/+
-
-
-
-
-3Com 3C507 Etherlink 16/TP
-
-
-
-
-3Com 3C509, 3C579, 3C589 (PCMCIA) Etherlink III
-
-
-
-
-3Com 3C590, 3C595 Etherlink III
-
-
-
-
-3Com 3C90x cards.
-
-
-
-
-HP PC Lan Plus (27247B and 27252A)
-
-
-
-
-Toshiba ethernet cards
-
-
-
-
-PCMCIA ethernet cards from IBM and National
-Semiconductor are also supported.
-
-
-
-
-
-Note: FreeBSD does not currently support
-PnP (plug-n-play) features present on some ethernet
-cards. If your card has PnP and is giving you problems,
-try disabling its PnP features.
-
-
-
-
-Miscellaneous devices
-
-
-
-
-
-AST 4 port serial card using shared IRQ.
-
-
-
-
-ARNET 8 port serial card using shared IRQ.
-
-
-
-
-BOCA IOAT66 6 port serial card using shared IRQ.
-
-
-
-
-BOCA 2016 16 port serial card using shared IRQ.
-
-
-
-
-Cyclades Cyclom-y Serial Board.
-
-
-
-
-STB 4 port card using shared IRQ.
-
-
-
-
-SDL Communications Riscom/8 Serial Board.
-
-
-
-
-SDL Communications RISCom/N2 and N2pci sync serial cards.
-
-
-
-
-Digiboard Sync/570i high-speed sync serial card.
+
+
+ FreeBSD Handbook
+
+
+
+ The FreeBSD Documentation Project
+
+
+
+ March 1998
+
+ Welcome to FreeBSD! This handbook covers the
+ installation and day to day use of FreeBSD Release
+ &rel.current;. This manual is a work in progress and is the
+ work of many individuals. Many sections do not yet exist
+ and some of those that do exist need to be updated. If
+ you are interested in helping with this project, send
+ email to the &a.doc; The latest version of this
+ document is always available from
+ the FreeBSD World Wide Web server. It may also be downloaded in plain text, postscript or HTML from the FreeBSD FTP server or one of the numerous
+ . You may also want to
+ Search the Handbook.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Getting Started
+
+
+
+ Introduction
+
+ FreeBSD is a 4.4BSD-Lite based operating system for Intel
+ architecture (x86) based PCs. For an overview of FreeBSD, see
+ . For a
+ history of the project, read . To see a description of the
+ latest release, read . If you're interested
+ in contributing something to the FreeBSD project (code, equipment,
+ sacks of unmarked bills), please see about .
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD in a Nutshell
+
+ FreeBSD is a state of the art operating system for
+ personal computers based on the Intel CPU architecture, which
+ includes the 386, 486 and Pentium processors (both SX and DX versions).
+ Intel compatible CPUs from AMD and Cyrix are supported as well.
+ FreeBSD provides you with many advanced features previously available
+ only on much more expensive computers. These features include:
+
+
+
+
+
+ Preemptive multitasking with dynamic priority
+ adjustment to ensure smooth and fair sharing of the
+ computer between applications and users.
+
+
+
+ Multiuser access means that many people can use a
+ FreeBSD system simultaneously for a variety of things. System
+ peripherals such as printers and tape drives are also properly
+ SHARED BETWEEN ALL users on the system.
+
+
+
+ Complete TCP/IP networking including SLIP, PPP, NFS
+ and NIS support. This means that your FreeBSD machine can
+ inter-operate easily with other systems as well act as an enterprise
+ server, providing vital functions such as NFS (remote file access) and
+ e-mail services or putting your organization on the Internet
+ with WWW, ftp, routing and firewall (security) services.
+
+
+
+ Memory protection ensures that applications (or
+ users) cannot interfere with each other. One application
+ crashing will not affect others in any way.
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD is a 32-bit operating system and was designed
+ as such from the ground up.
+
+
+
+ The industry standard X Window System (X11R6)
+ provides a graphical user interface (GUI) for the cost of a
+ common VGA card and monitor and comes with full sources.
+
+
+
+ Binary compatibility with many programs built for SCO,
+ BSDI, NetBSD, Linux and 386BSD.
+
+
+
+ Hundreds of ready-to-run applications are
+ available from the
+ FreeBSD ports and packages
+ collection. Why search the net when you can find it all
+ right here?
+
+
+
+ Thousands of additional and easy-to-port applications
+ available on the Internet. FreeBSD is source code compatible
+ with most popular commercial Unix systems and thus most
+ applications require few, if any, changes to compile.
+
+
+
+ Demand paged virtual memory and `merged VM/buffer cache'
+ design efficiently satisfies applications with large appetites
+ for memory while still maintaining interactive response to other
+ users.
+
+
+
+ Shared libraries (the Unix equivalent of
+ MS-Windows DLLs) provide for efficient use of disk space
+ and memory.
+
+
+
+ A full compliment of C, C++ and
+ Fortran development tools. Many additional
+ languages for advanced research and development are
+ also available in the ports and packages collection.
+
+
+
+ Source code for the entire system means you have
+ the greatest degree of control over your environment. Why be
+ locked into a proprietary solution and at the mercy of your vendor
+ when you can have a truly Open System?
+
+
+
+ Extensive on-line documentation.
+
+
+
+ And many more!
+
+
+
-
-
-
-Decision-Computer Intl. "Eight-Serial" 8 port serial cards
-using shared IRQ.
-
-
-
-
-Adlib, SoundBlaster, SoundBlaster Pro,
-ProAudioSpectrum, Gravis UltraSound, Gravis UltraSound MAX
-and Roland MPU-401 sound cards.
-
-
-
-
-Matrox Meteor video frame grabber.
-
-
-
-
-Creative Labs Video spigot frame grabber.
-
-
-
-
-Omnimedia Talisman frame grabber.
-
-
-
-
-Brooktree BT848 chip based frame grabbers.
-
-
-
-
-X-10 power controllers.
-
-
-
-
-PC joystick and speaker.
-
-
-
-
-
-FreeBSD does not currently support IBM's microchannel (MCA) bus.
-
-
-
-
-
-Preparing for the Installation
-
-There are a number of different methods by which FreeBSD
-can be installed. The following describes what
-preparation needs to be done for each type.
-
-
-
-Before installing from CDROM
-
-If your CDROM is of an unsupported type, then please
-skip to .
-
-There is not a lot of preparatory work that needs to be done to
-successfully install from one of Walnut Creek's FreeBSD CDROMs (other
-CDROM distributions may work as well, though we cannot say for certain
-as we have no hand or say in how they are created). You can either
-boot into the CD installation directly from DOS using Walnut Creek's
-supplied ``install.bat'' batch file or you can make a boot floppy with
-the ``makeflp.bat'' command. [NOTE: If you are running
-FreeBSD 2.1-RELEASE and have an IDE CDROM, use the
-inst_ide.bat or atapiflp.bat batch files instead].
-
-For the easiest interface of all (from DOS), type
-``view''. This will bring up a DOS menu utility that
-leads you through all the available options.
-
-If you are creating the boot floppy from a UNIX machine,
-see for examples. of how to create the boot floppy.
-
-Once you have booted from DOS or floppy, you should then
-be able to select CDROM as the media type in the Media
-menu and load the entire distribution from CDROM. No
-other types of installation media should be required.
-
-After your system is fully installed and you have rebooted
-from the hard disk, you can mount the CDROM at any time by
-typing: mount /cdrom
-
-Before removing the CD again, also note that it is necessary to first
-type: umount /cdrom. Do not just remove it from the drive!
-
-
-
-Special note: Before invoking the
-installation, be sure that the CDROM is in the drive
-so that the install probe can find it. This is also
-true if you wish the CDROM to be added to the default
-system configuration automatically during the install
-(whether or not you actually use it as the
-installation media).
-
-
-
-Finally, if you would like people to be able to FTP
-install FreeBSD directly from the CDROM in your
-machine, you will find it quite easy. After the machine
-is fully installed, you simply need to add the
-following line to the password file (using the vipw
-command):
-
-
-
-ftp:*:99:99::0:0:FTP:/cdrom:/nonexistent
-
-
-
-Anyone with network connectivity to your machine (and permission
-to log into it) can now chose a Media type of FTP and type
-in: ftp://your machine after picking ``Other''
-in the ftp sites menu.
-
-
-
-
-Before installing from Floppy
-
-If you must install from floppy disks, either due to
-unsupported hardware or simply because you enjoy doing
-things the hard way, you must first prepare some
-floppies for the install.
-
-You will need, at minimum, as many 1.44MB or 1.2MB floppies as
-it takes to hold all files in the bin (binary distribution)
-directory. If you are preparing these floppies under DOS, then
-THESE floppies *must* be formatted using the MS-DOS FORMAT
-command. If you are using Windows, use the Windows File
-Manager format command.
-
-Do not trust Factory Preformatted floppies! Format
-them again yourself, just to make sure. Many problems
-reported by our users in the past have resulted from the use
-of improperly formatted media, which is why I am taking such
-special care to mention it here!
-
-If you are creating the floppies from another FreeBSD machine,
-a format is still not a bad idea though you do not need to put
-a DOS filesystem on each floppy. You can use the `disklabel'
-and `newfs' commands to put a UFS filesystem on them instead,
-as the following sequence of commands (for a 3.5" 1.44MB floppy
-disk) illustrates:
-
-
-
- fdformat -f 1440 fd0.1440
- disklabel -w -r fd0.1440 floppy3
- newfs -t 2 -u 18 -l 1 -i 65536 /dev/rfd0
-
-(Use "fd0.1200" and "floppy5" for 5.25" 1.2MB disks).
-
-
-
-Then you can mount and write to them like any other file
-system.
-
-After you have formatted the floppies, you will need to copy
-the files onto them. The distribution files are split into
-chunks conveniently sized so that 5 of them will fit on a
-conventional 1.44MB floppy. Go through all your floppies,
-packing as many files as will fit on each one, until you have
-got all the distributions you want packed up in this fashion.
-Each distribution should go into a subdirectory on the
-floppy, e.g.: a:\bin\bin.aa,
-a:\bin\bin.ab, and so on.
-
-Once you come to the Media screen of the install,
-select ``Floppy'' and you will be prompted for the rest.
-
-
-
-
-Before installing from a MS-DOS partition
-
-To prepare for installation from an MS-DOS partition,
-copy the files from the distribution into a directory
-called C:\FREEBSD. The directory tree structure
-of the CDROM must be partially reproduced within this directory
-so we suggest using the DOS xcopy
-command. For example, to prepare for a minimal installation of
-FreeBSD:
-
-C> MD C:\FREEBSD
-C> XCOPY /S E:\BIN C:\FREEBSD\BIN\
-C> XCOPY /S E:\MANPAGES C:\FREEBSD\MANPAGES\
-
-
-assuming that C: is where you have free space
-and E: is where your CDROM is mounted.
-
-For as many `DISTS' you wish to install from MS-DOS
-(and you have free space for), install each one under
-C:\FREEBSD - the BIN dist is only the
-minimal requirement.
-
-
-
-
-Before installing from QIC/SCSI Tape
-
-Installing from tape is probably the easiest method,
-short of an on-line install using FTP or a CDROM
-install. The installation program expects the files to
-be simply tar'ed onto the tape, so after getting all of
-the files for distribution you are interested in, simply
-tar them onto the tape with a command like:
-
-cd /freebsd/distdir
-tar cvf /dev/rwt0 (or /dev/rst0) dist1 .. dist2
-
-
-
-When you go to do the installation, you should also
-make sure that you leave enough room in some temporary
-directory (which you will be allowed to choose) to
-accommodate the full contents of the tape you have
-created. Due to the non-random access nature of tapes,
-this method of installation requires quite a bit of
-temporary storage. You should expect to require as
-much temporary storage as you have stuff written on
-tape.
-
-
-
-Note: When going to do the
-installation, the tape must be in the drive
-before booting from the boot floppy. The
-installation probe may otherwise fail to find it.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Before installing over a network
-
-You can do network installations over 3 types of
-communications links:
-
-Serial port
-
-SLIP or PPP
-
-
-
-
-Parallel port
-
-
-PLIP (laplink cable)
-
-
-
-
-Ethernet
-
-
-A
-standard ethernet controller (includes some PCMCIA).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-SLIP support is rather primitive, and limited primarily
-to hard-wired links, such as a serial cable running
-between a laptop computer and another computer. The
-link should be hard-wired as the SLIP installation
-does not currently offer a dialing capability; that
-facility is provided with the PPP utility, which should
-be used in preference to SLIP whenever possible.
-
-If you are using a modem, then PPP is almost certainly
-your only choice. Make sure that you have your service
-provider's information handy as you will need to know it
-fairly soon in the installation process. You will need
-to know how to dial your ISP using the ``AT commands''
-specific to your modem, as the PPP dialer provides only a
-very simple terminal emulator. If you're using PAP or
-CHAP, you'll need to type the necessary ``set authname''
-and ``set authkey'' commands before typing ``term''.
-Refer to the user-ppp
-and FAQ entries
-for further information. If you have problems, logging can
-be directed to the screen using the command set log
-local ....
-
-If a hard-wired connection to another FreeBSD (2.0R or
-later) machine is available, you might also consider
-installing over a ``laplink'' parallel port cable. The
-data rate over the parallel port is much higher than
-what is typically possible over a serial line (up to
-50k/sec), thus resulting in a quicker installation.
-
-Finally, for the fastest possible network installation,
-an ethernet adaptor is always a good choice! FreeBSD
-supports most common PC ethernet cards, a table of
-supported cards (and their required settings) is
-provided in . If you are using one of the supported
-PCMCIA ethernet cards, also be sure that it is plugged
-in before the laptop is powered on! FreeBSD
-does not, unfortunately, currently support hot
-insertion of PCMCIA cards during installation.
-
-You will also need to know your IP address on the
-network, the netmask value for your address class,
-and the name of your machine. Your system
-administrator can tell you which values to use for your
-particular network setup. If you will be referring to
-other hosts by name rather than IP address, you will also
-need a name server and possibly the address of a
-gateway (if you are using PPP, it is your provider's IP
-address) to use in talking to it. If you do not know
-the answers to all or most of these questions, then you
-should really probably talk to your system
-administrator first before trying this type of
-installation.
-
-Once you have a network link of some sort working, the
-installation can continue over NFS or FTP.
-
-
-
-Preparing for NFS installation
-
-NFS installation is fairly straight-forward: Simply
-copy the FreeBSD distribution files you want onto a
-server somewhere and then point the NFS media
-selection at it.
-
-If this server supports only ``privileged port'' access
-(as is generally the default for Sun workstations),
-you will need to set this option in the Options menu
-before installation can proceed.
-
-If you have a poor quality ethernet card which
-suffers from very slow transfer rates, you may also
-wish to toggle the appropriate Options flag.
-
-In order for NFS installation to work, the server
-must support subdir mounts, e.g., if your FreeBSD
-&rel.current; distribution directory lives on:
-ziggy:/usr/archive/stuff/FreeBSD Then ziggy will have
-to allow the direct mounting of
-/usr/archive/stuff/FreeBSD, not just /usr or
-/usr/archive/stuff.
-
-In FreeBSD's /etc/exports file, this is controlled by
-the ``'' option. Other NFS servers may have
-different conventions. If you are getting
-`Permission Denied' messages from the server then
-it is likely that you do not have this enabled
-properly.
-
-
-
-
-Preparing for FTP Installation
-
-FTP installation may be done from any mirror site
-containing a reasonably up-to-date version of FreeBSD
-&rel.current;. A full menu of reasonable choices from almost
-anywhere in the world is provided by the FTP site
-menu.
-
-If you are installing from some other FTP site not
-listed in this menu, or you are having troubles
-getting your name server configured properly, you can
-also specify your own URL by selecting the ``Other''
-choice in that menu. A URL can also be a direct IP
-address, so the following would work in the absence
-of a name server:
-
-
-
-ftp://165.113.121.81/pub/FreeBSD/&rel.current;-RELEASE
-
-
-
-There are two FTP installation modes you can use:
-
-
-
-FTP Active
-
-For all FTP transfers, use ``Active'' mode. This
-will not work through firewalls, but will often
-work with older ftp servers that do not support
-passive mode. If your connection hangs with
-passive mode (the default), try active!
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FTP Passive
-
-
-For all FTP transfers, use ``Passive'' mode. This
-allows the user to pass through firewalls that do
-not allow incoming connections on random port
-addresses.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Note: Active and passive modes are
-not the same as a `proxy' connection, where a proxy
-FTP server is listening and forwarding FTP requests!
-
-
-
-For a proxy FTP server, you should usually give name of
-the server you really want as a part of the username,
-after an @-sign. The proxy server then 'fakes' the real
-server. An example: Say you want to install from
-ftp.freebsd.org, using the proxy FTP server foo.bar.com,
-listening on port 1234.
-
-In this case, you go to the options menu, set the FTP
-username to ftp@ftp.freebsd.org, and the password to your
-e-mail address. As your installation media, you specify
-FTP (or passive FTP, if the proxy support it), and the URL
-
-ftp://foo.bar.com:1234/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-/pub/FreeBSD from ftp.freebsd.org is proxied under
-foo.bar.com, allowing you to install from _that_ machine
-(which fetch the files from ftp.freebsd.org as your
-installation requests them).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Installing FreeBSD
-
-Once you have taken note of the appropriate
-preinstallation steps, you should be able to install
-FreeBSD without any further trouble.
-
-Should this not be true, then you may wish to go back and
-re-read the relevant preparation section above
-for the installation media type you are trying to use,
-perhaps there is a helpful hint there that you missed the
-first time? If you are having hardware trouble, or
-FreeBSD refuses to boot at all, read the Hardware Guide
-provided on the boot floppy for a list of possible
-solutions.
-
-The FreeBSD boot floppy contains all the on-line
-documentation you should need to be able to navigate
-through an installation and if it does not then we would
-like to know what you found most confusing. Send your
-comments to the &a.doc;.
-It is the objective of the
-FreeBSD installation program (sysinstall) to be
-self-documenting enough that painful ``step-by-step''
-guides are no longer necessary. It may take us a little
-while to reach that objective, but that is the objective!
-
-Meanwhile, you may also find the following ``typical
-installation sequence'' to be helpful:
-
-
-
-
-
-Boot the boot floppy. After a boot sequence
-which can take anywhere from 30 seconds to 3
-minutes, depending on your hardware, you should be
-presented with a menu of initial choices. If the
-floppy does not boot at all, or the boot hangs at some
-stage, go read the Q&A section of the Hardware Guide
-for possible causes.
-
-
-
-
-Press F1. You should see some basic usage
-instructions on the menu system and general
-navigation. If you have not used this menu system
-before then PLEASE read this thoroughly!
-
-
-
-
-Select the Options item and set any special
-preferences you may have.
-
-
-
-
-Select a Novice, Custom or Express install, depending on
-whether or not you would like the installation to help
-you through a typical installation, give you a high degree of
-control over each step of the installation or simply whizz
-through it (using reasonable defaults when possible) as fast
-as possible. If you have never used FreeBSD before then the
-Novice installation method is most recommended.
-
-
-
-
-The final configuration menu choice allows you to
-further configure your FreeBSD installation by giving you
-menu-driven access to various system defaults. Some
-items, like networking, may be especially important
-if you did a CDROM/Tape/Floppy installation and have
-not yet configured your network interfaces (assuming
-you have any). Properly configuring such interfaces
-here will allow FreeBSD to come up on the network
-when you first reboot from the hard disk.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-MS-DOS User's Questions and Answers
-
-Many FreeBSD users wish to install FreeBSD on PCs inhabited
-by MS-DOS. Here are some commonly asked questions about
-installing FreeBSD on such systems.
-
-Help! I have no space! Do I need to delete
-everything first?
-
-If your machine is already running MS-DOS and has little
-or no free space available for FreeBSD's installation,
-all is not lost! You may find the FIPS utility, provided
-in the tools directory on the FreeBSD CDROM or
-on the various FreeBSD ftp sites, to be quite useful.
-
-FIPS allows you to split an existing MS-DOS partition
-into two pieces, preserving the original partition and
-allowing you to install onto the second free piece. You
-first defragment your MS-DOS partition, using the DOS
-6.xx DEFRAG utility or the Norton Disk tools, then run
-FIPS. It will prompt you for the rest of the information
-it needs. Afterwards, you can reboot and install FreeBSD
-on the new free slice. See the Distributions
-menu for an estimation of how much free space you will need
-for the kind of installation you want.
-
-Can I use compressed MS-DOS filesystems from
-FreeBSD?
-
-No. If you are using a utility such as Stacker(tm) or
-DoubleSpace(tm), FreeBSD will only be able to use
-whatever portion of the filesystem you leave
-uncompressed. The rest of the filesystem will show up as
-one large file (the stacked/dblspaced file!). Do not
-remove that file! You will probably regret it
-greatly!
-
-It is probably better to create another uncompressed
-MS-DOS primary partition and use this for communications
-between MS-DOS and FreeBSD.
-
-Can I mount my MS-DOS extended partitions?
-
-Yes. DOS extended partitions are mapped in at the end of the other
-``slices'' in FreeBSD, e.g. your D: drive might be /dev/sd0s5,
-your E: drive /dev/sd0s6, and so on. This example assumes, of
-course, that your extended partition is on SCSI drive 0. For IDE drives,
-substitute ``wd'' for ``sd'' appropriately. You otherwise mount extended
-partitions exactly like you would mount any other DOS drive, e.g.:
-
-
-
-mount -t msdos /dev/sd0s5 /dos_d
-
-
-
-Can I run MS-DOS binaries under FreeBSD?
-
-BSDI has donated their DOS emulator to the BSD world and
-this has been ported to FreeBSD.
-
-There is also a (technically) nice application available in the
- called pcemu
-which allows you to run many basic MS-DOS text-mode binaries
-by entirely emulating an 8088 CPU.
-
-
-
-
-
-Unix Basics
-
-
-
-The Online Manual
-
-The most comprehensive documentation on FreeBSD is in
-the form of man pages. Nearly every program
-on the system comes with a short reference manual
-explaining the basic operation and various arguments.
-These manuals can be view with the
-man command. Use of the
-man command is simple:
-
-mancommand
-
-
-where command is the name of the command
-you wish to learn about. For example, to learn more about
-ls command type:
-
-% man ls
-
-
-
-The online manual is divided up into numbered
-sections:
-
-
-
-User commands
-
-
-
-System calls and error numbers
-
-
-
-Functions in the C libraries
-
-
-
-Device drivers
-
-
-
-File formats
-
-
-
-Games and other diversions
-
-
-
-Miscellaneous information
-
-
-
-System maintenance and operation commands
-
-
-
-
-in some cases, the same topic may appear in more than
-one section of the on-line manual. For example, there
-is a chmod user command and a
-chmod() system call. In this case,
-you can tell the man command which
-one you want by specifying the section:
-
-% man 1 chmod
-
-
-which will display the manual page for the user command
-chmod. References to a particular
-section of the on-line manual are traditionally placed
-in parenthesis in written documentation, so
-chmod(1) refers to the chmod user command and chmod(2)
-refers to the system call.
-
-This is fine if you know the name of the command and
-simply wish to know how to use it, but what if you cannot recall the
-command name? You can use man to
-search for keywords in the command descriptions by
-using the switch:
-
-% man -k mail
-
-
-With this command you will be presented with a list of
-commands that have the keyword `mail' in their
-descriptions. This is actually functionally equivalent to
-using the apropos command.
-
-So, you are looking at all those fancy commands in /usr/bin but do not even have the faintest idea
-what most of them actually do? Simply do a
-
-% cd /usr/bin; man -f *
-
-
-or
-
-% cd /usr/bin; whatis *
-
-
-which does the same thing.
-
-
-
-
-GNU Info Files
-
-FreeBSD includes many applications and utilities
-produced by the Free Software Foundation (FSF). In
-addition to man pages, these programs come with more
-extensive hypertext documents called info
-files which can be viewed with the info
-command or, if you installed emacs, the info
-mode of emacs.
-
-To use the info(1) command, simply type:
-
-% info
-
- For a brief
-introduction, type h. For a quick
-command reference, type ?.
-
-
-
-
-
-Installing Applications: The Ports collection
-
-Contributed by &a.jraynard;.
-
-The FreeBSD Ports collection allows you to compile and install a very
-wide range of applications with a minimum of effort.
-
- For all the hype about open standards, getting a program to work
-on different versions of Unix in the real world can be a tedious and
-tricky business, as anyone who has tried it will know. You may be lucky
-enough to find that the program you want will compile cleanly on your
-system, install itself in all the right places and run flawlessly
-``out of the box'', but this is unfortunately rather rare. With most
-programs, you will find yourself doing a fair bit of head-scratching,
-and there are quite a few programs that will result in premature
-greying, or even chronic alopecia...
-
- Some software distributions have attacked this problem by
-providing configuration scripts. Some of these are very clever, but
-they have an unfortunate tendency to triumphantly announce that your
-system is something you have never heard of and then ask you lots of
-questions that sound like a final exam in system-level Unix
-programming (``Does your system's gethitlist function return a const
-pointer to a fromboz or a pointer to a const fromboz? Do you have
-Foonix style unacceptable exception handling? And if not, why not?'').
-
- Fortunately, with the Ports collection, all the hard work involved
-has already been done, and you can just type 'make install' and get a
-working program.
-
-
-
-Why Have a Ports Collection?
-
-The base FreeBSD system comes with a very wide range of tools and
-system utilities, but a lot of popular programs are not in the base
-system, for good reasons:-
-
-
-
-
-
-Programs that some people cannot live without and other people
-cannot stand, such as a certain Lisp-based editor.
-
-
-
-
-Programs which are too specialised to put in the base system
-(CAD, databases).
-
-
-
-
-Programs which fall into the ``I must have a look at
-that when I get a spare minute'' category, rather than system-critical
-ones (some languages, perhaps).
-
-
-
-
-Programs that are far too much fun to be supplied with a serious
-operating system like FreeBSD ;-)
-
-
-
-
-However many programs you put in the base system, people will
-always want more, and a line has to be drawn somewhere (otherwise
-FreeBSD distributions would become absolutely enormous).
-
-
-
-
-
- Obviously it would be unreasonable to expect everyone to port their
-favourite programs by hand (not to mention a tremendous amount of
-duplicated work), so the FreeBSD Project came up with an ingenious
-way of using standard tools that would automate the process.
-
- Incidentally, this is an excellent illustration of how ``the Unix way''
-works in practice by combining a set of simple but very flexible tools
-into something very powerful.
-
-
-
-
-How Does the Ports Collection Work?
-
-Programs are typically distributed on the Internet as a
- consisting of
-a Makefile and the source code for the program and usually
-some instructions (which are unfortunately not always as instructive
-as they could be), with perhaps a configuration script.
-
-The standard scenario is that you FTP down the tarball, extract it
-somewhere, glance through the instructions, make any changes that seem
-necessary, run the configure script to set things up and use the standard
-`make' program to compile and install the program from the source.
-
-FreeBSD ports still use the tarball mechanism, but use a
- to hold the "knowledge"
-of how to get the program working on FreeBSD, rather than expecting the
-user to be able to work it out. They also supply their own customised
-, so that almost every port
-can be built in the same way.
-
-If you look at a port skeleton (either on your FreeBSD system or the FTP site) and expect to find all sorts of pointy-headed rocket
-science lurking there, you may be disappointed by the one or two
-rather unexciting-looking files and directories you find there.
-(We will discuss in a minute how to go about ).
-
-``How on earth can this do anything?'' I hear you cry. ``There
-is no source code there!''
-
- Fear not, gentle reader, all will become clear (hopefully). Let's
-see what happens if we try and install a port. I have chosen `ElectricFence',
-a useful tool for developers, as the skeleton is more straightforward than
-most.
-
-Note if you are trying this at home, you will need to be root.
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports/devel/ElectricFence
-# make install
->> Checksum OK for ElectricFence-2.0.5.tar.gz.
-===> Extracting for ElectricFence-2.0.5
-===> Patching for ElectricFence-2.0.5
-===> Applying FreeBSD patches for ElectricFence-2.0.5
-===> Configuring for ElectricFence-2.0.5
-===> Building for ElectricFence-2.0.5
-[lots of compiler output...]
-===> Installing for ElectricFence-2.0.5
-===> Warning: your umask is "0002".
- If this is not desired, set it to an appropriate value
- and install this port again by ``make reinstall''.
-install -c -o bin -g bin -m 444 /usr/ports/devel/ElectricFence/work/ElectricFence-2.0.5/libefence.a /usr/local/lib
-install -c -o bin -g bin -m 444 /usr/ports/devel/ElectricFence/work/ElectricFence-2.0.5/libefence.3 /usr/local/man/man3
-===> Compressing manual pages for ElectricFence-2.0.5
-===> Registering installation for ElectricFence-2.0.5
-
-
- To avoid confusing the issue, I have completely removed the build output.
-
-If you tried this yourself, you may well have got something like this at
-the start:-
-
-
-# make install
->> ElectricFence-2.0.5.tar.gz doesn't seem to exist on this system.
->> Attempting to fetch from ftp://ftp.doc.ic.ac.uk/Mirrors/sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/devel/lang/c/.
-
-
- The `make' program has noticed that you did not have a local copy
-of the source code and tried to FTP it down so it could get the job
-done. I already had the
-source handy in my example, so it did not need to fetch it.
-
- Let's go through this and see what the `make' program was doing.
-
-
-
-
-
- Locate the source code If it is not available locally, try to grab it from an
-FTP site.
-
-
-
-
- Run a test on the
-tarball to make sure it has not been tampered with, accidentally
-truncated, downloaded in ASCII mode, struck by neutrinos while in transit, etc.
-
-
-
-
- Extract the tarball into a temporary work directory.
-
-
-
-
- Apply any needed to get
-the source to compile and run under FreeBSD.
-
-
-
-
- Run any configuration script required by the build process and
-correctly answer any questions it asks.
-
-
-
-
- (Finally!) Compile the code.
-
-
-
-
- Install the program executable and other supporting files, man
-pages, etc. under the /usr/local hierarchy, where they will not get mixed
-up with system programs. This also makes sure that all the ports you
-install will go in the same place, instead of being flung all over
-your system.
-
-
-
-
- Register the installation in a database. This means
-that, if you do not like the program, you can cleanly all traces of it from your system.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Scroll up to the make output and see if you can match these steps to it.
-And if you were not impressed before, you should be by now!
-
-
-
-
-Getting a FreeBSD Port
-
-There are two ways of getting hold of the FreeBSD port for a
-program. One requires a , the other involves using an
-
-
-
-Compiling ports from CDROM
-
-If you answered yes to the question ``Do you want to link the ports
-collection to your CDROM'' during the FreeBSD installation, the initial
-setting up will already have been done for you.
-
-If not, make sure the FreeBSD CDROM is in the drive and mounted on,
-say, /cdrom. Then do
-
-
- # mkdir /usr/ports
- # cd /usr/ports
- # ln -s /cdrom/ports/distfiles distfiles
-
-
-to enable the ports make mechanism to find the tarballs (it expects to
-find them in /usr/ports/distfiles, which is why we sym-linked the
-CDROM's tarball directory to that directory).
-
-Now, suppose you want to install the gnats program from the databases
-directory. Here is how to do it:-
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports
- # mkdir databases
- # cp -R /cdrom/ports/databases/gnats databases
- # cd databases/gnats
- # make install
-
-
-Or if you are a serious database user and you want to compare all the
-ones available in the Ports collection, do
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports
- # cp -R /cdrom/ports/databases .
- # cd databases
- # make install
-
-
-(yes, that really is a dot on its own after the cp command and not a
-mistake. It is Unix-ese for ``the current directory'')
-
-and the ports make mechanism will automatically compile and install
-all the ports in the databases directory for you!
-
-If you do not like this method, here is a completely different way of
-doing it:-
-
-Create a "link tree" to it using the lndir(1) command that
-comes with the XFree86 distribution. Find a location with
-some free space, create a directory there and then cd to it. Then
-invoke the lndir(1) command with the full pathname of the ``ports''
-directory on the CDROM as the first argument and . (the current directory)
-as the second. This might be, for example, something like:
- lndir /cdrom/ports .
-
-
-Then you can build ports directly off the CDROM by building them in the
-link tree you have created.
-
-Note that there are some ports for which we cannot provide the original
-source in the CDROM due to licensing limitations. In that case,
-you will need to look at the section on
-
-
-
-
-Compiling ports from the Internet
-
-If you do not have a CDROM, or you want to make sure you get the very
-latest version of the port you want, you will need to download the
- for the port. Now this
-might sound like rather a fiddly job
-full of pitfalls, but it is actually very easy.
-
-The key to it is that the FreeBSD FTP server can create on-the-fly
- for you. Here is how it works,
-with the gnats program in the databases directory as an example (the
-bits in square brackets are comments. Do not type them in if you are
-trying this yourself!):-
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports
- # mkdir databases
- # cd databases
- # ftp ftp.freebsd.org
- [log in as `ftp' and give your email address when asked for a
- password. Remember to use binary (also known as image) mode!]
- > cd /pub/FreeBSD/ports/databases
- > get gnats.tar [tars up the gnats skeleton for us]
- > quit
- # tar xf gnats.tar [extract the gnats skeleton]
- # cd gnats
- # make install [build and install gnats]
-
-
-What happened here? We connected to the FTP server in the usual way
-and went to its databases sub-directory. When we gave it the command
-`get gnats.tar', the FTP server up the gnats directory for us.
-
-We then extracted the gnats skeleton and went into the gnats directory
-to build the port. As we explained , the make process noticed we did not have a copy of the
-source locally, so it fetched one before extracting, patching and
-building it.
-
-Let's try something more ambitious now. Instead of getting a single
-port skeleton, let's get a whole sub-directory, for example all the
-database skeletons in the ports collection. It looks almost the same:-
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports
- # ftp ftp.freebsd.org
- [log in as `ftp' and give your email address when asked for a
- password. Remember to use binary (also known as image) mode!]
- > cd /pub/FreeBSD/ports
- > get databases.tar [tars up the databases directory for us]
- > quit
- # tar xf databases.tar [extract all the database skeletons]
- # cd databases
- # make install [build and install all the database ports]
-
-
-With half a dozen straightforward commands, we have now got a set of
-database programs on our FreeBSD machine! All we did that was
-different from getting a single port skeleton and building it was that
-we got a whole directory at once, and compiled everything in it at
-once. Pretty impressive, no?
-
-If you expect to be installing many ports, it is
-probably worth downloading all the ports directories.
-
-
-
-
-
-Skeletons
-
-A team of compulsive hackers who have forgotten to eat in a frantic
-attempt to make a deadline? Something unpleasant lurking in the FreeBSD
-attic? No, a skeleton here is a minimal framework that supplies everything
-needed to make the ports magic work.
-
-
-
-Makefile
-
-The most important component of a skeleton is the Makefile. This contains
-various statements that specify how the port should be compiled and
-installed. Here is the Makefile for ElectricFence:-
-
-
-# New ports collection makefile for: Electric Fence
-# Version required: 2.0.5
-# Date created: 13 November 1997
-# Whom: jraynard
-#
-# $Id: book.sgml,v 1.1 1998-04-01 18:25:32 nik Exp $
-#
-
-DISTNAME= ElectricFence-2.0.5
-CATEGORIES= devel
-MASTER_SITES= ${MASTER_SITE_SUNSITE}
-MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR= devel/lang/c
-
-MAINTAINER= jraynard@freebsd.org
-
-MAN3= libefence.3
-
-do-install:
- ${INSTALL_DATA} ${WRKSRC}/libefence.a ${PREFIX}/lib
- ${INSTALL_MAN} ${WRKSRC}/libefence.3 ${PREFIX}/man/man3
-
-.include <bsd.port.mk>
-
-
-The lines beginning with a "#" sign are comments for the benefit
-of human readers (as in most Unix script files).
-
-`DISTNAME" specifies the name of the , but without the extension.
-
-`CATEGORIES" states what kind of program this is. In this case, a
-utility for developers.
-
-`MASTER_SITES" is the URL(s) of the master FTP site, which is
-used to retrieve the if it is not
-available on the local system. This is a site which is regarded as
-reputable, and is normally the one from which the program is officially
-distributed (in so far as any software is "officially" distributed
-on the Internet).
-
-`MAINTAINER" is the email address of the person who is
-responsible for updating the skeleton if, for example a new version
-of the program comes out.
-
-Skipping over the next few lines for a minute, the line
- .include <bsd.port.mk>
-
-says that the other statements and commands
-needed for this port are in a standard file called
-`bsd.port.mk". As these are the same for all ports, there is
-no point in duplicating them all over the place, so they are kept in a
-single standard file.
-
-This is probably not the place to go into a detailed examination of
-how Makefiles work; suffice it to say that the line starting with ``MAN3''
-ensures that the ElectricFence man page is compressed after installation,
-to help conserve your precious disk space. The original port did not
-provide an ``install'' target, so the three lines from ``do-install''
-ensure that the files produced by this port are placed in the correct
-destination.
-
-
-
-
-The files directory
-
-The file containing the for
-the port is called "md5", after the MD5 algorithm
-used for ports checksums. It lives in a directory with the slightly
-confusing name of "files".
-
-This directory can also contain other miscellaneous files that are required
-by the port and do not belong anywhere else.
-
-
-
-
-The patches directory
-
-This directory contains the needed
-to make everything work properly under FreeBSD.
-
-
-
-
-The pkg directory
-
-This program contains three quite useful files:-
-
-
-
-
-
-COMMENT - a one-line description of the program.
-
-
-
-
-DESCR - a more detailed description.
-
-
-
-
-PLIST - a list of all the files that will be created when the program is installed.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-What to do when a port does not work.
-
-Oh. You can do one of four (4) things :
-
-
-
-
-
- Fix it yourself. Technical details on how ports work can be found in
-
-
-
-
- Gripe. This is done by e-mail *ONLY*! Send such e-mail to the &a.ports;
-and please include the name/version of the port, where you got both the port
-source & distfile(s) from, and what the text of the error was.
-
-
-
-
- Forget it. This is the easiest for most - very few of the programs in
-ports can be classified as `essential'!
-
-
-
-
- Grab the pre-compiled package from a ftp server. The ``master'' package
-collection is on FreeBSD's FTP server in the packages directory, though check your local mirror first, please!
-
-These are more likely to work (on the whole) than trying to compile from
-source and a lot faster besides! Use the pkg_add(1)
-program to install a package file on your system.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-I Want to Make a Port!
-
-Great! Please see the
-for detailed instructions on how to do this.
-
-
-
-
-Some Questions and Answers
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I thought this was going to be a discussion about modems??!
-
-
-A. Ah. You must be thinking of the serial ports on the back of your
-computer. We are using `port' here to mean the result of `porting' a
-program from one version of Unix to another. (It is an unfortunate bad
-habit of computer people to use the same word to refer to several
-completely different things).
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I thought you were supposed to use packages to install extra
-programs?
-
-
-A. Yes, that is usually the quickest and easiest way of doing it.
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. So why bother with ports then?
-
-
-A. Several reasons:-
-
-
-
-
-
- The licensing conditions on some software distributions
-require that they be distributed as source code, not binaries.
-
-
-
-
- Some people do not trust binary distributions. At least with
-source code you can (in theory) read through it and look for potential
-problems yourself.
-
-
-
-
- If you have some local patches, you will need the source to add
-them yourself.
-
-
-
-
- You might have opinions on how a program should be compiled
-that differ from the person who did the package - some people have
-strong views on what optimisation setting should be used, whether to
-build debug versions and then strip them or not, etc. etc.
-
-
-
-
- Some people like having code around, so they can read it if
-they get bored, hack around with it, borrow from it (licence terms
-permitting, of course!) and so on.
-
-
-
-
- If you ain't got the source, it ain't software! ;-)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. What is a patch?
-
-
-A. A patch is a small (usually) file that specifies how to go from one
-version of a file to another. It contains text that says, in effect,
-things like ``delete line 23'', ``add these two lines after line 468''
-or ``change line 197 to this''. Also known as a `diff', since it is
-generated by a program of that name.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. What is all this about tarballs?
-
-
-A. It is a file ending in .tar or .tar.gz (with variations like .tar.Z, or
-even .tgz if you are trying to squeeze the names into a DOS filesystem).
-
-Basically, it is a directory tree that has been archived into a single
-file (.tar) and optionally compressed (.gz). This technique was originally
-used for Tape ARchives (hence the name `tar'), but it is a
-widely used way of distributing program source code around the
-Internet.
-
-You can see what files are in them, or even extract them yourself, by
-using the standard Unix tar program, which comes with the base FreeBSD
-system, like this:-
-
-
- tar tvzf foobar.tar.gz # View contents of foobar.tar.gz
- tar xzvf foobar.tar.gz # Extract contents into the current directory
- tar tvf foobar.tar # View contents of foobar.tar
- tar xvf foobar.tar # Extract contents into the current directory
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. And a checksum?
-
-
-A. It is a number generated by adding up all the data in the file you
-want to check. If any of the characters change, the checksum will no
-longer be equal to the total, so a simple comparison will allow you to
-spot the difference. (In practice, it is done in a more complicated way
-to spot problems like position-swapping, which will not show up with a
-simplistic addition).
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I did what you said for and it worked great until I tried to install the kermit
-port:-
-
- # make install
- >> cku190.tar.gz doesn't seem to exist on this system.
- >> Attempting to fetch from ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/archives/.
-
-
-Why can it not be found? Have I got a dud CDROM?
-
-
-A. The licensing terms for kermit do not allow us to put the tarball
-for it on the CDROM, so you will have to fetch it by hand - sorry!
-The reason why you got all those error messages was because you
-were not connected to the Internet at the time. Once you have downloaded
-it from any of the sites above, you can re-start the process (try and
-choose the nearest site to you, though, to save your time and the
-Internet's bandwidth).
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I did that, but when I tried to put it into /usr/ports/distfiles I
-got some error about not having permission.
-
-
-A. The ports mechanism looks for the tarball in /usr/ports/distfiles,
-but you will not be able to copy anything there because it is sym-linked
-to the CDROM, which is read-only. You can tell it to look somewhere
-else by doing
-
-
- DISTDIR=/where/you/put/it make install
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. Does the ports scheme only work if you have everything in
-/usr/ports? My system administrator says I must put everything under
-/u/people/guests/wurzburger, but it does not seem to work.
-
-
-A. You can use the PORTSDIR and PREFIX variables to tell the ports
-mechanism to use different directories. For instance,
-
-
- make PORTSDIR=/u/people/guests/wurzburger/ports install
-
-
-will compile the port in /u/people/guests/wurzburger/ports and install
-everything under /usr/local.
-
-
-
- make PREFIX=/u/people/guests/wurzburger/local install
-
-
-will compile it in /usr/ports and install it in
-/u/people/guests/wurzburger/local.
-
-And of course
-
-
- make PORTSDIR=.../ports PREFIX=.../local install
-
-
-will combine the two (it is too long to fit on the page if I write it
-in full, but I am sure you get the idea).
-
-If you do not fancy typing all that in every time you install a port
-(and to be honest, who would?), it is a good idea to put these variables
-into your environment.
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I do not have a FreeBSD CDROM, but I would like to have all the tarballs
-handy on my system so I do not have to wait for a download every time I
-install a port. Is there an easy way to get them all at once?
-
-
-A. To get every single tarball for the ports collection, do
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports
- # make fetch
-
-
-For all the tarballs for a single ports directory, do
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports/directory
- # make fetch
-
-
-and for just one port - well, I think you have guessed already.
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I know it is probably faster to fetch the tarballs from one of the
-FreeBSD mirror sites close by. Is there any way to tell the port to
-fetch them from servers other than ones listed in the MASTER_SITES?
-
-
-A. Yes. If you know, for example, ftp.FreeBSD.ORG is much closer than
-sites listed in MASTER_SITES, do as following example.
- # cd /usr/ports/directory
- # make MASTER_SITE_OVERRIDE=ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/distfiles/ fetch
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I want to know what files make is going to need before it tries to
-pull them down.
-
-
-A. 'make fetch-list' will display a list of the files needed for a port.
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. Is there any way to stop the port from compiling? I want to do some
-hacking on the source before I install it, but it is a bit tiresome having
-to watch it and hit control-C every time.
-
-
-A. Doing 'make extract' will stop it after it has fetched and
-extracted the source code.
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I am trying to make my own port and I want to be able to stop it
-compiling until I have had a chance to see if my patches worked properly.
-Is there something like 'make extract', but for patches?
-
-
-A. Yep, 'make patch' is what you want. You will probably find the
-PATCH_DEBUG option useful as well. And by the way, thank you for
-your efforts!
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I have heard that some compiler options can cause bugs. Is this true?
-How can I make sure that I compile ports with the right settings?
-
-
-A. Yes, with version 2.6.3 of gcc (the version shipped with FreeBSD
-2.1.0 and 2.1.5), the -O2 option could result in buggy code unless you
-used the -fno-strength-reduce option as well. (Most of the ports don't
-use -O2). You should be able to specify the compiler options
-used by something like
-
-
- make CFLAGS='-O2 -fno-strength-reduce' install
-
-
-or by editing /etc/make.conf, but unfortunately not all ports respect
-this. The surest way is to do 'make configure', then go into the
-source directory and inspect the Makefiles by hand, but this can get
-tedious if the source has lots of sub-directories, each with their own
-Makefiles.
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. There are so many ports it is hard to find the one I want. Is there a
-list anywhere of what ports are available?
-
-
-A. Look in the INDEX file in /usr/ports.
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I went to install the 'foo' port but the system suddenly stopped
-compiling it and starting compiling the 'bar' port. What's going on?
-
-
-A. The 'foo' port needs something that is supplied with 'bar' - for
-instance, if 'foo' uses graphics, 'bar' might have a library with
-useful graphics processing routines. Or 'bar' might be a tool that is
-needed to compile the 'foo' port.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I installed the grizzle program from the ports and frankly it is a
-complete waste of disk space. I want to delete it but I do not know
-where it put all the files. Any clues?
-
-
-A. No problem, just do
-
-
- pkg_delete grizzle-6.5
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. Hang on a minute, you have to know the version number to use that
-command. You do not seriously expect me to remember that, do you??
-
-
-A. Not at all, you can find it out by doing
-
-
- pkg_info -a | grep grizzle
-
-
-And it will tell you:-
-
-
- Information for grizzle-6.5:
- grizzle-6.5 - the combined piano tutorial, LOGO interpreter and shoot 'em up arcade game.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. Talking of disk space, the ports directory seems to be taking up
-an awful lot of room. Is it safe to go in there and delete things?
-
-
-A. Yes, if you have installed the program and are fairly certain you
-will not need the source again, there is no point in keeping it hanging
-around. The best way to do this is
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports
- # make clean
-
-
-which will go through all the ports subdirectories and delete
-everything except the skeletons for each port.
-
-
-
-Q. I tried that and it still left all those tarballs or whatever you
-called them in the distfiles directory. Can I delete those as well?
-
-
-A. Yes, if you are sure you have finished with them, those can go as
-well.
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I like having lots and lots of programs to play with. Is there any
-way of installing all the ports in one go?
-
-
-A. Just do
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports
- # make install
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. OK, I tried that, but I thought it would take a very long time so I
-went to bed and left it to get on with it. When I looked at the
-computer this morning, it had only done three and a half ports. Did
-something go wrong?
-
-
-A. No, the problem is that some of the ports need to ask you questions
-that we cannot answer for you (eg ``Do you want to print on A4 or US
-letter sized paper?'') and they need to have someone on hand to answer
-them.
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I really do not want to spend all day staring at the monitor. Any
-better ideas?
-
-
-A. OK, do this before you go to bed/work/the local park:-
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports
- # make -DBATCH install
-
-
-This will install every port that does not require user
-input. Then, when you come back, do
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports
- # make -DIS_INTERACTIVE install
-
-
-to finish the job.
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. At work, we are using frobble, which is in your ports collection,
-but we have altered it quite a bit to get it to do what we need. Is
-there any way of making our own packages, so we can distribute it more
-easily around our sites?
-
-
-A. No problem, assuming you know how to make patches for your changes:-
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports/somewhere/frobble
- # make extract
- # cd work/frobble-2.8
- [Apply your patches]
- # cd ../..
- # make package
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. This ports stuff is really clever. I am desperate to find out how
-you did it. What is the secret?
-
-
-A. Nothing secret about it at all, just look at the bsd.ports.mk and
-bsd.ports.subdir.mk files in your makefiles directory.
-(Note: readers with an aversion to intricate shell-scripts are advised
-not to follow this link...)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-System Administration
-
-
-
-Configuring the FreeBSD Kernel
-
-Contributed by &a.jehamby;.6 October 1995.
-
-This large section of the handbook discusses the basics of
-building your own custom kernel for FreeBSD. This section
-is appropriate for both novice system administrators and
-those with advanced Unix experience.
-
-
-
-Why Build a Custom Kernel?
-
-Building a custom kernel is one of the most important
-rites of passage every Unix system administrator must
-endure. This process, while time-consuming, will provide
-many benefits to your FreeBSD system. Unlike the GENERIC
-kernel, which must support every possible SCSI and
-network card, along with tons of other rarely used
-hardware support, a custom kernel only contains support
-for your PC's hardware. This has a number of
-benefits:
-
-
-
-
-
-It will take less time to boot because it does not
-have to spend time probing for hardware which you
-do not have.
-
-
-
-
-A custom kernel often uses less memory, which is
-important because the kernel is the one process which
-must always be present in memory, and so all of that
-unused code ties up pages of RAM that your programs
-would otherwise be able to use. Therefore, on a
-system with limited RAM, building a custom kernel is
-of critical importance.
-
-
-
-
-Finally, there are several kernel options which
-you can tune to fit your needs, and device driver
-support for things like sound cards which you can
-include in your kernel but are not present
-in the GENERIC kernel.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Building and Installing a Custom Kernel
-
-First, let us take a quick tour of the kernel build
-directory. All directories mentioned will be relative to
-the main /usr/src/sys directory, which is also
-accessible through /sys. There are a number of
-subdirectories here representing different parts of the
-kernel, but the most important, for our purposes, are
-i386/conf, where you will edit your custom
-kernel configuration, and compile, which is the
-staging area where your kernel will be built. Notice the
-logical organization of the directory tree, with each
-supported device, filesystem, and option in its own
-subdirectory. Also, anything inside the i386
-directory deals with PC hardware only, while everything
-outside the i386 directory is common to all
-platforms which FreeBSD could potentially be ported to.
-
-
-
-Note: If there is not a
-/usr/src/sys directory on your system, then the
-kernel source has not been been installed. Follow the
-instructions for installing packages to add this package
-to your system.
-
-
-
-Next, move to the i386/conf directory and copy
-the GENERIC configuration file to the name you want to
-give your kernel. For example:
-
-# cd /usr/src/sys/i386/conf
-# cp GENERIC MYKERNEL
-
-
-Traditionally, this name is in all capital letters and,
-if you are maintaining multiple FreeBSD machines with
-different hardware, it is a good idea to name it after
-your machine's hostname. We will call it MYKERNEL for
-the purpose of this example.
-
-
-
-Note: You must execute these and all of the
-following commands under the root account or you will get
-``permission denied'' errors.
-
-
-
-Now, edit MYKERNEL with your favorite text editor. If
-you are just starting out, the only editor available will
-probably be vi, which is too complex to explain
-here, but is covered well in many books in the . Feel free to change the
-comment lines at the top to reflect your configuration or the
-changes you have made to differentiate it from GENERIC.
-
-If you have build a kernel under SunOS or some other BSD
-operating system, much of this file will be very familiar
-to you. If you are coming from some other operating
-system such as DOS, on the other hand, the GENERIC
-configuration file might seem overwhelming to you, so
-follow the descriptions in the
-section slowly and carefully.
-
-
-
-Note: If you are trying to upgrade your kernel from an
-older version of FreeBSD, you will probably have to get a new
-version of config(8) from the same place you got the new
-kernel sources. It is located in /usr/src/usr.sbin, so
-you will need to download those sources as well. Re-build and install
-it before running the next commands.
-
-
-
-When you are finished, type the following to compile and
-install your kernel:
-
-# /usr/sbin/config MYKERNEL
-# cd ../../compile/MYKERNEL
-# make depend
-# make
-# make install
-
-
-The new kernel will be copied to the root directory as
-/kernel and the old kernel will be moved to
-/kernel.old. Now, shutdown the system and
-reboot to use your kernel. In case something goes wrong,
-there are some instructions at the end of this
-document. Be sure to read the section which explains how
-to recover in case your new kernel .
-
-
-
-Note: If you have added any new devices (such
-as sound cards) you may have to add some to your
-/dev directory before you can use them.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The Configuration File
-
-The general format of a configuration file is quite simple.
-Each line contains a keyword and one or more arguments. For
-simplicity, most lines only contain one argument. Anything
-following a # is considered a comment and ignored.
-The following sections describe each keyword, generally in the
-order they are listed in GENERIC, although some related
-keywords have been grouped together in a single section (such
-as Networking) even though they are actually scattered
-throughout the GENERIC file.
-An exhaustive list of options and more detailed explanations
-of the device lines is present in the LINT configuration file,
-located in the same directory as GENERIC. If you are in doubt
-as to the purpose or necessity of a line, check first in LINT.
-
-The kernel is currently being moved to a better organization
-of the option handling. Traditionally, each option in the
-config file was simply converted into a switch
-for the CFLAGS line of the kernel Makefile. Naturally,
-this caused a creeping optionism, with nobody really knowing
-which option has been referenced in what files.
-
-In the new scheme, every #ifdef that is intended to
-be dependent upon an option gets this option out of an
-opt_foo.h declaration file created in the
-compile directory by config. The list of valid options
-for config lives in two files: options that do not
-depend on the architecture are listed in
-/sys/conf/options, architecture-dependent ones
-in /sys/arch/conf/options.arch,
-with arch being for example i386.
-
-
-
-Mandatory Keywords
-
-These keywords are required in every kernel you build.
-
-
-
-machine ``i386''
-
-
-
-The first keyword is machine, which,
-since FreeBSD only runs on Intel 386 and compatible
-chips, is i386.
-
-
-
-Note: that any keyword which
-contains numbers used as text must be enclosed in
-quotation marks, otherwise config gets
-confused and thinks you mean the actual number
-386.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cpu ``cpu_type''
-
-
-
-
-The next keyword is cpu, which includes
-support for each CPU supported by FreeBSD. The
-possible values of cpu_type
-include:
-
-
-
-I386_CPU
-
-
-
-I486_CPU
-
-
-
-I586_CPU
-
-
-
-I686_CPU
-
-
-
-
-and multiple instances of the cpu line may
-be present with different values of
-cpu_type as are present in the
-GENERIC kernel. For a custom kernel, it is best to
-specify only the cpu you have. If, for example,
-you have an Intel Pentium, use I586_CPU
-for cpu_type.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-ident machine_name
-
-
-
-
-Next, we have ident, which is the
-identification of the kernel. You should change
-this from GENERIC to whatever you named your
-kernel, in this example, MYKERNEL. The value you
-put in ident will print when you boot up
-the kernel, so it is useful to give a kernel a
-different name if you want to keep it separate from
-your usual kernel (if you want to build an
-experimental kernel, for example). Note that, as
-with machine and cpu, enclose
-your kernel's name in quotation marks if it
-contains any numbers.
-
-Since this name is passed to the C compiler as a
- switch, do not use names like DEBUG, or something that could be confused
-with another machine or CPU name, like vax.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-maxusers number
-
-
-
-
-This file sets the size of a number of important
-system tables. This number is supposed to be
-roughly equal to the number of simultaneous users
-you expect to have on your machine. However, under
-normal circumstances, you will want to set
-maxusers to at least four, especially if
-you are using the X Window System or compiling software. The
-reason is that the most important table set by
-maxusers is the maximum number of
-processes, which is set to 20 + 16 *
-maxusers, so if you set maxusers
-to one, then you can only have 36 simultaneous
-processes, including the 18 or so that the system
-starts up at boot time, and the 15 or so you will
-probably create when you start the X Window System. Even a
-simple task like reading a man page will
-start up nine processes to filter, decompress, and
-view it. Setting maxusers to 4 will allow
-you to have up to 84 simultaneous processes, which
-should be enough for anyone. If, however, you see
-the dreaded ``proc table full'' error when trying
-to start another program, or are running a server
-with a large number of simultaneous users (like
-Walnut Creek CDROM's FTP site), you can always
-increase this number and rebuild.
-
-
-
-Note:maxuser does
-not limit the number of users which can
-log into your machine. It simply sets various
-table sizes to reasonable values considering the
-maximum number of users you will likely have on
-your system and how many processes each of them
-will be running. One keyword which
-does limit the number of simultaneous
-remote logins is .
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-config kernel_name root on root_device
-
-
-
-
-This line specifies the location and name of the
-kernel. Traditionally the kernel is called
-vmunix but in FreeBSD, it is aptly named
-kernel. You should always use
-kernel for kernel_name because
-changing it will render numerous system utilities
-inoperative. The second part of the line specifies
-the disk and partition where the root filesystem
-and kernel can be found. Typically this will be
-wd0 for systems with non-SCSI drives, or
-sd0 for systems with SCSI drives.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-General Options
-
-These lines provide kernel support for various
-filesystems and other options.
-
-
-
-options MATH_EMULATE
-
-
-
-This line allows the kernel to simulate a math
-co-processor if your computer does not have one (386
-or 486SX). If you have a Pentium, a 486DX, or a
-386 or 486SX with a separate 387 or 487 chip, you
-can comment this line out.
-
-
-
-Note: The normal math co-processor
-emulation routines that come with FreeBSD are
-not very accurate. If you do not have a
-math co-processor, and you need the best accuracy,
-I recommend that you change this option to
-GPL_MATH_EMULATE to use the superior GNU
-math support, which is not included by default
-for licensing reasons.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options ``COMPAT_43''
-
-
-
-
-Compatibility with 4.3BSD. Leave this in; some
-programs will act strangely if you comment this
-out.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options BOUNCE_BUFFERS
-
-
-
-
-ISA devices and EISA devices operating in an ISA
-compatibility mode can only perform DMA (Direct
-Memory Access) to memory below 16 megabytes. This
-option enables such devices to work in systems with
-more than 16 megabytes of memory.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options UCONSOLE
-
-
-
-
-Allow users to grab the console, useful for X
-Windows. For example, you can create a console
-xterm by typing xterm -C, which will
-display any `write', `talk', and other messages you
-receive, as well as any console messages sent by the
-kernel.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options SYSVSHM
-
-
-
-
-This option
-provides for System V shared memory. The most
-common use of this is the XSHM extension in X
-Windows, which many graphics-intensive programs
-(such as the movie player XAnim, and Linux DOOM)
-will automatically take advantage of for extra
-speed. If you use the X Window System, you will definitely
-want to include this.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options SYSVSEM
-
-
-
-
-Support for System V
-semaphores. Less commonly used but only adds a few
-hundred bytes to the kernel.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options SYSVMSG
-
-
-
-
-Support for System V
-messages. Again, only adds a few hundred bytes to
-the kernel.
-
-
-
-Note: The ipcs(1) command will
-tell will list any processes using each of
-these System V facilities.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Filesystem Options
-
-These options add support for various filesystems.
-You must include at least one of these to support the
-device you boot from; typically this will be
-FFS if you boot from a hard drive, or
-NFS if you are booting a diskless workstation
-from Ethernet. You can include other commonly-used
-filesystems in the kernel, but feel free to comment out
-support for filesystems you use less often (perhaps the
-MS-DOS filesystem?), since they will be dynamically
-loaded from the Loadable Kernel Module directory
-/lkm the first time you mount a partition of
-that type.
-
-
-
-options FFS
-
-
-
-The basic hard drive
-filesystem; leave it in if you boot from the hard
-disk.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options NFS
-
-
-
-
-Network Filesystem. Unless
-you plan to mount partitions from a Unix file
-server over Ethernet, you can comment this out.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options MSDOSFS
-
-
-
-
-MS-DOS Filesystem. Unless
-you plan to mount a DOS formatted hard drive
-partition at boot time, you can safely comment this
-out. It will be automatically loaded the first
-time you mount a DOS partition, as described above.
-Also, the excellent mtools software (in
-the ports collection) allows you to access DOS
-floppies without having to mount and unmount them
-(and does not require MSDOSFS at all).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options ``CD9660''
-
-
-
-
-ISO 9660 filesystem for
-CD-ROMs. Comment it out if you do not have a
-CD-ROM drive or only mount data CD's occasionally
-(since it will be dynamically loaded the first time
-you mount a data CD). Audio CD's do not need this
-filesystem.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options PROCFS
-
-
-
-
-Process filesystem. This
-is a pretend filesystem mounted on /proc which
-allows programs like ps(1) to give you
-more information on what processes are running.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options MFS
-
-
-
-
-Memory-mapped file system.
-This is basically a RAM disk for fast storage of
-temporary files, useful if you have a lot of swap
-space that you want to take advantage of. A
-perfect place to mount an MFS partition is on the
-/tmp directory, since many programs store
-temporary data here. To mount an MFS RAM disk on
-/tmp, add the following line to
-/etc/fstab and then reboot or type
-mount /tmp:
-
-/dev/wd1s2b /tmp mfs rw 0 0
-
-
-
-
-
-Note: Replace the /dev/wd1s2b
-with the name of your swap partition, which will
-be listed in your /etc/fstab as follows:
-
-/dev/wd1s2b none swap sw 0 0
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Note: Also, the MFS filesystem
-can not be dynamically loaded, so you
-must compile it into your kernel if you
-want to experiment with it.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options "EXT2FS"
-
-
-
-
-Linux's native file system.
-With ext2fs support you are able to read and write to Linux
-partitions. This is useful if you dual-boot FreeBSD and Linux
-and want to share data between the two systems.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options QUOTA
-
-
-
-
-Enable disk quotas. If you
-have a public access system, and do not want users
-to be able to overflow the /home
-partition, you can establish disk quotas for each
-user. Refer to the
-
-section for more information.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Basic Controllers and Devices
-
-These sections describe the basic disk, tape, and
-CD-ROM controllers supported by FreeBSD. There are
-separate sections for controllers and cards.
-
-
-
-controller isa0
-
-
-
-All PC's supported by
-FreeBSD have one of these. If you have an IBM PS/2
-(Micro Channel Architecture), then you cannot run
-FreeBSD at this time.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller pci0
-
-
-
-
-Include this if you have a
-PCI motherboard. This enables auto-detection of
-PCI cards and gatewaying from the PCI to the ISA
-bus.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller fdc0
-
-
-
-
-Floppy drive controller:
-fd0 is the ``A:'' floppy drive, and
-fd1 is the ``B:'' drive. ft0 is
-a QIC-80 tape drive attached to the floppy
-controller. Comment out any lines corresponding to
-devices you do not have.
-
-
-
-Note: QIC-80 tape support requires a
-separate filter program called ft(8), see
-the manual page for details.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller wdc0
-
-
-
-
-This is the primary IDE
-controller. wd0 and wd1 are the
-master and slave hard drive, respectively.
-wdc1 is a secondary IDE controller where
-you might have a third or fourth hard drive, or an
-IDE CD-ROM. Comment out the lines which do not
-apply (if you have a SCSI hard drive, you will
-probably want to comment out all six lines, for
-example).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device wcd0
-
-
-
-
-This device
-provides IDE CD-ROM support. Be sure to leave
-wdc0 uncommented, and wdc1 if you have
-more than one IDE controller and your CD-ROM is on
-the second one card. To use this, you must
-also include the line options ATAPI.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device npx0 at isa? port ``IO_NPX'' irq 13 vector npxintr
-
-
-
-
-npx0 is the interface to the floating point math
-unit in FreeBSD, either the hardware co-processor or the
-software math emulator. It is NOT optional.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device wt0 at isa? port 0x300 bio irq 5 drq 1 vector wtintr
-
-
-
-
-Wangtek and Archive
-QIC-02/QIC-36 tape drive support
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Proprietary CD-ROM support
-
-
-
-
-The following
-drivers are for the so-called proprietary
-CD-ROM drives. These drives have their own
-controller card or might plug into a sound card
-such as the SoundBlaster 16. They are not
-IDE or SCSI. Most older single-speed and
-double-speed CD-ROMs use these interfaces, while
-newer quad-speeds are likely to be or .
-
-
-
-device mcd0 at isa? port 0x300 bio irq 10 vector mcdintr
-
-
-
-Mitsumi CD-ROM (LU002,
-LU005, FX001D).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device scd0 at isa? port 0x230 bio
-
-
-
-
-Sony CD-ROM (CDU31, CDU33A).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller matcd0 at isa? port ? bio
-
-
-
-
-Matsushita/Panasonic CD-ROM (sold by Creative
-Labs for SoundBlaster).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-SCSI Device Support
-
-This section describes the various SCSI controllers
-and devices supported by FreeBSD.
-
-
-
-SCSI Controllers
-
-
-
-The next ten or so lines include support for
-different kinds of SCSI controllers. Comment out
-all except for the one(s) you have:
-
-
-
-controller bt0 at isa? port ``IO_BT0'' bio irq ? vector btintr
-
-
-
-Most Buslogic controllers
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller uha0 at isa? port ``IO_UHA0'' bio irq ? drq 5 vector uhaintr
-
-
-
-
-UltraStor 14F and 34F
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller ahc0
-
-
-
-
-Adaptec 274x/284x/294x
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller ahb0 at isa? bio irq ? vector ahbintr
-
-
-
-
-Adaptec 174x
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller aha0 at isa? port ``IO_AHA0'' bio irq ? drq 5 vector ahaintr
-
-
-
-
-Adaptec 154x
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller aic0 at isa? port 0x340 bio irq 11 vector aicintr
-
-
-
-
-Adaptec 152x and sound cards using Adaptec AIC-6360 (slow!)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller nca0 at isa? port 0x1f88 bio irq 10 vector ncaintr
-
-
-
-
-ProAudioSpectrum cards using NCR 5380 or Trantor T130
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller sea0 at isa? bio irq 5 iomem 0xc8000 iosiz 0x2000 vector seaintr
-
-
-
-
-Seagate ST01/02 8 bit controller (slow!)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller wds0 at isa? port 0x350 bio irq 15 drq 6 vector wdsintr
-
-
-
-
-Western Digital WD7000 controller
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller ncr0
-
-
-
-
-NCR 53C810, 53C815, 53C825, 53C860, 53C875 PCI SCSI controller
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options ``SCSI_DELAY=15''
-
-
-
-
-This causes the
-kernel to pause 15 seconds before probing each SCSI
-device in your system. If you only have IDE hard
-drives, you can ignore this, otherwise you will
-probably want to lower this number, perhaps to 5
-seconds, to speed up booting. Of course if you do
-this, and FreeBSD has trouble recognizing your SCSI
-devices, you will have to raise it back up.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller scbus0
-
-
-
-
-If you have any SCSI
-controllers, this line provides generic SCSI
-support. If you do not have SCSI, you can comment
-this, and the following three lines, out.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device sd0
-
-
-
-
-Support for SCSI hard
-drives.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device st0
-
-
-
-
-Support for SCSI tape
-drives.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device cd0
-
-
-
-
-Support for SCSI CD-ROM
-drives.
-
-
-
-Note that the number 0 in the above entries
-is slightly misleading: all these devices are
-automatically configured as they are found, regardless
-of how many of them are hooked up to the SCSI bus(es),
-and which target IDs they have.
-
-If you want to ``wire down'' specific target IDs to
-particular devices, refer to the appropriate section
-of the LINT kernel config file.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Console, Bus Mouse, and X Server Support
-
-You must choose one of these two console types, and, if you plan
-to use the X Window System with the vt220 console, enable the
-XSERVER option and optionally, a bus mouse or PS/2 mouse device.
-
-
-
-device sc0 at isa? port ``IO_KBD' tty irq 1 vector scintr
-
-
-
-sc0 is the default
-console driver, which resembles an SCO console.
-Since most full-screen programs access the console
-through a terminal database library like
-termcap, it should not matter much whether
-you use this or vt0, the VT220 compatible
-console driver. When you log in, set your TERM
-variable to ``scoansi'' if full-screen programs
-have trouble running under this console.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device vt0 at isa? port ``IO_KBD'' tty irq 1 vector pcrint
-
-
-
-
-This is a VT220-compatible
-console driver, backwards compatible to VT100/102.
-It works well on some laptops which have hardware
-incompatibilities with sc0. Also, set
-your TERM variable to ``vt100'' or ``vt220'' when
-you log in. This driver might also prove useful
-when connecting to a large number of different
-machines over the network, where the termcap
-or terminfo entries for the sc0
-device are often not available -- ``vt100'' should be
-available on virtually any platform.
-
-
-
-options ``PCVT_FREEBSD=210''
-
-
-
-Required
-with the vt0 console driver.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options XSERVER
-
-
-
-
-Only applicable with the vt0 console driver.
-This includes code
-required to run the XFree86 X Window
-Server under the vt0 console driver.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device mse0 at isa? port 0x23c tty irq 5 vector ms
-
-
-
-
-Use this device if you have a Logitech or
-ATI InPort bus mouse card.
-
-
-
-Note: If you have a serial mouse,
-ignore these two lines, and instead, make sure
-the appropriate port is enabled (probably
-COM1).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device psm0 at isa? port ``IO_KBD'' conflicts tty irq 12 vector psmintr
-
-
-
-
-Use this device if your
-mouse plugs into the PS/2 mouse port.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Serial and Parallel Ports
-
-Nearly all systems have these. If you are attaching a
-printer to one of these ports, the section of the handbook is very
-useful. If you are using modem, provides extensive detail on
-serial port configuration for use with such devices.
-
-
-
-device sio0 at isa? port ``IO_COM1'' tty irq 4 vector siointr
-
-
-
-sio0
-through sio3 are the four serial ports
-referred to as COM1 through COM4 in the MS-DOS
-world. Note that if you have an internal modem on
-COM4 and a serial port at COM2 you will have to
-change the IRQ of the modem to 2 (for obscure
-technical reasons IRQ 2 = IRQ 9) in order to access
-it from FreeBSD. If you have a multiport serial
-card, check the manual page for sio(4) for
-more information on the proper values for these
-lines. Some video cards (notably
-those based on S3 chips) use IO addresses of the
-form 0x*2e8, and since many cheap serial
-cards do not fully decode the 16-bit IO address
-space, they clash with these cards, making the
-COM4 port practically unavailable.
-
-Each serial port is required to have a unique
-IRQ (unless you are using one of the multiport cards
-where shared interrupts are supported), so the default
-IRQs for COM3 and COM4 cannot be used.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device lpt0 at isa? port? tty irq 7 vector lptintr
-
-
-
-
-lpt0 through lpt2
-are the three printer ports you could conceivably
-have. Most people just have one, though, so feel
-free to comment out the other two lines if you do
-not have them.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Networking
-
-FreeBSD, as with Unix in general, places a
-big emphasis on networking. Therefore, even
-if you do not have an Ethernet card, pay attention to
-the mandatory options and the dial-up networking
-support.
-
-
-
-options INET
-
-Networking support. Leave it in even if you do not plan
-to be connected to a network. Most programs require at least
-loopback networking (i.e. making network connections within your
-PC) so this is essentially mandatory.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Ethernet cards
-
-
-
-
-The next lines enable support for various Ethernet
-cards. If you do not have a network card, you can
-comment out all of these lines. Otherwise, you will
-want to leave in support for your particular
-Ethernet card(s):
-
-
-
-device de0
-
-
-
-Ethernet adapters based on Digital Equipment DC21040,
-DC21041 or DC21140 chips
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device fxp0
-
-
-
-
-Intel EtherExpress Pro/100B
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device vx0
-
-
-
-
-3Com 3C590 and 3C595 (buggy)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device cx0 at isa? port 0x240 net irq 15 drq 7 vector cxintr
-
-
-
-
-Cronyx/Sigma multiport
-sync/async (with Cisco or PPP framing)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device ed0 at isa? port 0x280 net irq 5 iomem 0xd8000 vector edintr
-
-
-
-
-Western Digital and SMC 80xx and 8216; Novell NE1000
-and NE2000; 3Com 3C503; HP PC Lan Plus (HP27247B and HP27252A)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device el0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 9 vector elintr
-
-
-
-
-3Com 3C501 (slow!)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device eg0 at isa? port 0x310 net irq 5 vector egintr
-
-
-
-
-3Com 3C505
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device ep0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 10 vector epintr
-
-
-
-
-3Com 3C509 (buggy)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device fe0 at isa? port 0x240 net irq ? vector feintr
-
-
-
-
-Fujitsu MB86960A/MB86965A Ethernet
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device fea0 at isa? net irq ? vector feaintr
-
-
-
-
-DEC DEFEA EISA FDDI adapter
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device ie0 at isa? port 0x360 net irq 7 iomem 0xd0000 vector ieintr
-
-
-
-
-AT&T StarLAN 10 and EN100; 3Com 3C507;
-unknown NI5210
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device ix0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 10 iomem 0xd0000 iosiz 32768 vector ixintr
-
-
-
-
-Intel EtherExpress 16
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device le0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 5 iomem 0xd0000 vector le_intr
-
-
-
-
-Digital Equipment EtherWorks 2 and EtherWorks
-3 (DEPCA, DE100, DE101, DE200, DE201, DE202,
-DE203, DE204, DE205, DE422)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device lnc0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 10 drq 0 vector lncintr
-
-
-
-
-Lance/PCnet cards (Isolan, Novell NE2100,
-NE32-VL)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device ze0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 5 iomem 0xd8000 vector zeintr
-
-
-
-
-IBM/National Semiconductor PCMCIA ethernet
-controller.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device zp0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 10 iomem 0xd8000 vector zpintr
-
-
-
-
-3Com PCMCIA Etherlink III
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Note: With certain cards (notably the
-NE2000) you will have to change the port and/or IRQ
-since there is no ``standard'' location for these
-cards.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device loop
-
-
-
-
-loop is the
-generic loopback device for TCP/IP. If you telnet
-or FTP to localhost
-(a.k.a. 127.0.0.1) it will come back at
-you through this pseudo-device. Mandatory.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device ether
-
-
-
-
-ether is only
-needed if you have an Ethernet card and includes
-generic Ethernet protocol code.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device sl number
-
-
-
-
-sl is for SLIP (Serial Line Internet
-Protocol) support. This has been almost entirely
-supplanted by PPP, which is easier to set up,
-better suited for modem-to-modem connections, as
-well as more powerful. The number after
-sl specifies how many simultaneous SLIP
-sessions to support. This handbook has more
-information on setting up a SLIP or .
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device ppp number
-
-
-
-
-ppp is for kernel-mode PPP (Point-to-Point
-Protocol) support for dial-up Internet connections.
-There is also version of PPP implemented as a user
-application that uses the tun and offers
-more flexibility and features such as demand
-dialing. If you still want to use this PPP driver,
-read the
-section of the handbook. As with the sl
-device, number specifies how many
-simultaneous PPP connections to support.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device tun number
-
-
-
-
-tun is used by the user-mode PPP software.
-This program is easy to set up and very fast. It
-also has special features such as automatic
-dial-on-demand. The number after tun
-specifies the number of simultaneous PPP sessions
-to support. See the section of the handbook for
-more information.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device bpfilter number
-
-
-
-
-Berkeley packet filter. This pseudo-device allows
-network interfaces to be placed in promiscuous
-mode, capturing every packet on a broadcast network
-(e.g. an ethernet). These packets can be captured
-to disk and/or examined with the
-tcpdump(1) program. Note that
-implementation of this capability can seriously
-compromise your overall network security.
-The number after bpfilter is the number of
-interfaces that can be examined
-simultaneously. Optional, not recommended except
-for those who are fully aware of the potential
-pitfalls. Not all network cards support this
-capability.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Sound cards
-
-This is the first section containing lines that are
-not in the GENERIC kernel. To include sound card
-support, you will have to copy the appropriate lines from
-the LINT kernel (which contains support for
-every device) as follows:
-
-
-
-controller snd0
-
-
-
-Generic sound driver code.
-Required for all of the following sound cards
-except pca.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device pas0 at isa? port 0x388 irq 10 drq 6 vector pasintr
-
-
-
-
-ProAudioSpectrum digital audio and MIDI.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device sb0 at isa? port 0x220 irq 7 conflicts drq 1 vector sbintr
-
-
-
-
-SoundBlaster digital audio.
-
-
-
-Note: If your SoundBlaster is on a
-different IRQ (such as 5), change irq 7
-to, for example, irq 5 and remove the
-conflicts keyword. Also, you must add
-the line: options ``SBC_IRQ=5''
-
-Note: If your SB16 is on a different
-16-bit DMA channel (such as 6 or 7), change the
-drq 5 keyword appropriately, and then
-add the line: options
-"SB16_DMA=6"
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device sbmidi0 at isa? port 0x330
-
-
-
-
-SoundBlaster 16 MIDI interface. If you have a
-SoundBlaster 16, you must include this line, or the
-kernel will not compile.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device gus0 at isa? port 0x220 irq 10 drq 1 vector gusintr
-
-
-
-
-Gravis Ultrasound.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device mss0 at isa? port 0x530 irq 10 drq 1 vector adintr
-
-
-
-
-Microsoft Sound System.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device opl0 at isa? port 0x388 conflicts
-
-
-
-
-AdLib FM-synthesis audio. Include this line for
-AdLib, SoundBlaster, and ProAudioSpectrum users, if
-you want to play MIDI songs with a program such as
-playmidi (in the ports collection).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device mpu0 at isa? port 0x330 irq 6 drq 0
-
-
-
-
-Roland MPU-401 stand-alone card.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device uart0 at isa? port 0x330 irq 5 vector ``m6850intr''
-
-
-
-
-Stand-alone 6850 UART for MIDI.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device pca0 at isa? port ``IO_TIMER1'' tty
-
-
-
-
-Digital audio through PC speaker. This is going to
-be very poor sound quality and quite CPU-intensive,
-so you have been warned (but it does not require a
-sound card).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Note: There is some additional
-documentation in
-/usr/src/sys/i386/isa/sound/sound.doc.
-Also, if you add any of these devices, be sure to
-create the sound .
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Pseudo-devices
-
-Pseudo-device drivers are parts of the kernel that act
-like device drivers but do not correspond to any actual
-hardware in the machine. The
-pseudo-devices are in that section, while the remainder
-are here.
-
-
-
-pseudo-device gzip
-
-
-
-gzip allows you to run FreeBSD programs
-that have been compressed with gzip. The
-programs in /stand are compressed so it
-is a good idea to have this option in your kernel.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device log
-
-
-
-
-log is used for logging of kernel error
-messages. Mandatory.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device pty number
-
-
-
-
-pty is a ``pseudo-terminal'' or simulated
-login port. It is used by incoming telnet
-and rlogin sessions, xterm, and some other
-applications such as emacs. The number
-indicates the number of ptys to create.
-If you need more than GENERIC default of 16
-simultaneous xterm windows and/or remote logins, be
-sure to increase this number accordingly, up to a
-maximum of 64.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device snp number
-
-
-
-
-Snoop device. This pseudo-device allows one
-terminal session to watch another using the
-watch(8) command. Note that
-implementation of this capability has important
-security and privacy implications. The
-number after snp is the total number of
-simultaneous snoop sessions. Optional.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device vn
-
-
-
-
-Vnode driver. Allows a file to be treated as a
-device after being set up with the
-vnconfig(8) command. This driver can be
-useful for manipulating floppy disk images and
-using a file as a swap device (e.g. an MS Windows
-swap file). Optional.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device ccd number
-
-
-
-
-Concatenated disks. This pseudo-device allows you to
-concatenate multiple disk partitions into one large
-``meta''-disk. The number after ccd is the
-total number of concatenated disks (not total number of
-disks that can be concatenated) that can be created.
-(See ccd(4) and ccdconfig(8) man pages
-for more details.) Optional.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Joystick, PC Speaker, Miscellaneous
-
-This section describes some miscellaneous hardware
-devices supported by FreeBSD. Note that none of these
-lines are included in the GENERIC kernel, you will have
-to copy them from this handbook or the LINT kernel
-(which contains support for every device):
-
-
-
-device joy0 at isa? port ``IO_GAME''
-
-
-
-PC joystick device.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device speaker
-
-
-
-
-Supports IBM BASIC-style noises through the PC
-speaker. Some fun programs which use this are
-/usr/sbin/spkrtest, which is a shell
-script that plays some simple songs, and
-/usr/games/piano which lets you play songs
-using the keyboard as a simple piano (this file
-only exists if you have installed the games
-package). Also, the excellent text role-playing
-game NetHack (in the ports collection) can be
-configured to use this device to play songs when
-you play musical instruments in the game.
-
-
-
-See also the device.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Making Device Nodes
-
-Almost every device in the kernel has a corresponding
-``node'' entry in the /dev directory. These
-nodes look like regular files, but are actually special
-entries into the kernel which programs use to access the
-device. The shell script /dev/MAKEDEV, which is
-executed when you first install the operating system,
-creates nearly all of the device nodes supported.
-However, it does not create all of them, so when
-you add support for a new device, it pays to make sure
-that the appropriate entries are in this directory, and
-if not, add them. Here is a simple example:
-
-Suppose you add the IDE CD-ROM support to the kernel.
-The line to add is:
-
-controller wcd0
-
-
-This means that you should look for some entries that
-start with wcd0 in the /dev directory,
-possibly followed by a letter, such as `c', or preceded
-by the letter 'r', which means a `raw' device. It turns
-out that those files are not there, so I must change to
-the /dev directory and type:
-
-# sh MAKEDEV wcd0
-
-
-When this script finishes, you will find that there are
-now wcd0c and rwcd0c entries in
-/dev so you know that it executed correctly.
-
-For sound cards, the command:
-
-# sh MAKEDEV snd0
-
-
-creates the appropriate entries. Note: when creating device
-nodes for devices such as sound cards, if other people have
-access to your machine, it may be desirable to
-protect the devices from outside access by adding them to the
-/etc/fbtab file. See man fbtab for
-more information.
-
-Follow this simple procedure for any other non-GENERIC
-devices which do not have entries.
-
-
-
-Note: All SCSI controllers use the same set
-of /dev entries, so you do not need to create
-these. Also, network cards and SLIP/PPP pseudo-devices
-do not have entries in /dev at all, so you do
-not have to worry about these either.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-If Something Goes Wrong
-
-There are four categories of trouble that can occur when
-building a custom kernel. They are:
-
-
-
-Config command fails
-
-
-
-If the config
-command fails when you give it your kernel
-description, you have probably made a simple error
-somewhere. Fortunately, config will print
-the line number that it had trouble with, so you can
-quickly skip to it with vi. For example, if
-you see:
-
-config: line 17: syntax error
-
-
-you can skip to the problem in vi by typing
-``17G'' in command mode. Make sure the keyword is
-typed correctly, by comparing it to the GENERIC
-kernel or another reference.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Make command fails
-
-
-
-
-If the make
-command fails, it usually signals an error in your
-kernel description, but not severe enough for
-config to catch it. Again, look over your
-configuration, and if you still cannot resolve the
-problem, send mail to the &a.questions; with your kernel
-configuration, and it should be diagnosed very
-quickly.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Kernel will not boot
-
-
-
-
-If your new kernel
-does not boot, or fails to recognize your devices,
-do not panic! Fortunately, BSD has an excellent
-mechanism for recovering from incompatible kernels.
-Simply type the name of the kernel you want to boot
-from (i.e. ``kernel.old'') at the FreeBSD boot
-prompt instead of pressing return. When
-reconfiguring a kernel, it is always a good idea to
-keep a kernel that is known to work on hand.
-
-After booting with a good kernel you can check over
-your configuration file and try to build it again.
-One helpful resource is the
-/var/log/messages file which records, among
-other things, all of the kernel messages from every
-successful boot. Also, the dmesg(8) command
-will print the kernel messages from the current boot.
-
-
-
-Note: If you are having trouble building
-a kernel, make sure to keep a GENERIC, or some
-other kernel that is known to work on hand as a
-different name that will not get erased on the next
-build. You cannot rely on kernel.old
-because when installing a new kernel,
-kernel.old is overwritten with the last
-installed kernel which may be non-functional.
-Also, as soon as possible, move the working kernel
-to the proper ``kernel'' location or commands such
-as ps(1) will not work properly. The
-proper command to ``unlock'' the kernel file that
-make installs (in order to move another
-kernel back permanently) is:
-
-# chflags noschg /kernel
-
-
-And, if you want to ``lock'' your new kernel into place, or any file
-for that matter, so that it cannot be moved or tampered with:
-
-# chflags schg /kernel
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Kernel works, but ps does not work any more!
-
-
-
-
-If you have installed a different version
-of the kernel from the one that the system utilities
-have been built with, for example, an experimental
-``2.2.0'' kernel on a 2.1.0-RELEASE system, many
-system-status commands like ps(1) and
-vmstat(8) will not work any more. You must
-recompile the libkvm library as well as
-these utilities. This is one reason it is not
-normally a good idea to use a different version of
-the kernel from the rest of the operating system.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Security
-
-
-
-DES, MD5, and Crypt
-
-Contributed by &a.wollman;24 September 1995.
-
-In order to protect the security of passwords on UN*X systems from
-being easily exposed, passwords have traditionally been scrambled in
-some way. Starting with Bell Labs' Seventh Edition Unix, passwords
-were encrypted using what the security people call a ``one-way hash
-function''. That is to say, the password is transformed in such a way
-that the original password cannot be regained except by brute-force
-searching the space of possible passwords. Unfortunately, the only
-secure method that was available to the AT&T researchers at the
-time was based on DES, the Data Encryption Standard. This causes only
-minimal difficulty for commercial vendors, but is a serious problem
-for an operating system like FreeBSD where all the source code is
-freely available, because national governments in many places like to
-place restrictions on cross-border transport of DES and other
-encryption software.
-
-So, the FreeBSD team was faced with a dilemma: how could we provide
-compatibility with all those UNIX systems out there while still not
-running afoul of the law? We decided to take a dual-track approach:
-we would make distributions which contained only a non-regulated
-password scrambler, and then provide as a separate add-on library the
-DES-based password hash. The password-scrambling function was moved
-out of the C library to a separate library, called `libcrypt'
-because the name of the C function to implement it is
-`crypt'. In FreeBSD 1.x and some pre-release 2.0 snapshots,
-the non-regulated scrambler uses an insecure function written by Nate
-Williams; in subsequent releases this was replaced by a mechanism
-using the RSA Data Security, Inc., MD5 one-way hash function. Because
-neither of these functions involve encryption, they are believed to be
-exportable from the US and importable into many other countries.
-
-Meanwhile, work was also underway on the DES-based password hash
-function. First, a version of the `crypt' function which was
-written outside the US was imported, thus synchronizing the US and
-non-US code. Then, the library was modified and split into two; the
-DES `libcrypt' contains only the code involved in performing
-the one-way password hash, and a separate `libcipher' was
-created with the entry points to actually perform encryption. The
-code was partitioned in this way to make it easier to get an export
-license for the compiled library.
-
-
-
-Recognizing your `crypt' mechanism
-
-It is fairly easy to recognize whether a particular password
-string was created using the DES- or MD5-based hash function.
-MD5 password strings always begin with the characters
-`$1$'. DES password strings do not have
-any particular identifying characteristics, but they are shorter
-than MD5 passwords, and are coded in a 64-character alphabet
-which does not include the `$' character, so a
-relatively short string which doesn't begin with a dollar sign is
-very likely a DES password.
-
-Determining which library is being used on your system is fairly
-easy for most programs, except for those like `init' which
-are statically linked. (For those programs, the only way is to try
-them on a known password and see if it works.) Programs which use
-`crypt' are linked against `libcrypt', which for
-each type of library is a symbolic link to the appropriate
-implementation. For example, on a system using the DES versions:
-
-
-
-$ cd /usr/lib
-$ ls -l /usr/lib/libcrypt*
-lrwxr-xr-x 1 bin bin 13 Sep 5 12:50 libcrypt.a -> libdescrypt.a
-lrwxr-xr-x 1 bin bin 18 Sep 5 12:50 libcrypt.so.2.0 -> libdescrypt.so.2.0
-lrwxr-xr-x 1 bin bin 15 Sep 5 12:50 libcrypt_p.a -> libdescrypt_p.a
-
-
-
-On a system using the MD5-based libraries, the same links will be
-present, but the target will be `libscrypt' rather than
-`libdescrypt'.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-S/Key
-
-Contributed by &a.wollman;25 September 1995.
-
-S/Key is a one-time password scheme based on a one-way hash function
-(in our version, this is MD4 for compatibility; other versions have
-used MD5 and DES-MAC). S/Key has been a standard part of all FreeBSD
-distributions since version 1.1.5, and is also implemented on a large
-and growing number of other systems. S/Key is a registered trademark
-of Bell Communications Research, Inc.
-
-There are three different sorts of passwords which we will talk about
-in the discussion below. The first is your usual UNIX-style or Kerberos
-password; we will call this a ``UNIX password''. The second sort is the
-one-time password which is generated by the S/Key `key' program and
-accepted by the `keyinit' program and the login prompt; we will call
-this a ``one-time password''. The final sort of password is the
-secret password which you give to the `key' program (and sometimes the
-`keyinit' program) which it uses to generate one-time passwords; we will
-call it a ``secret password'' or just unqualified ``password''.
-
-The secret password does not necessarily have anything to do with your
-UNIX password (while they can be the same, this is not recommended).
-While UNIX passwords are limited to eight characters in length, your
-S/Key secret password can be as long as you like; I use seven-word
-phrases. In general, the S/Key system operates completely
-independently of the UNIX password system.
-
-There are in addition two other sorts of data involved in the S/Key
-system; one is called the ``seed'' or (confusingly) ``key'', and
-consists of two letters and five digits, and the other is the
-``iteration count'' and is a number between 100 and 1. S/Key
-constructs a one-time password from these components by concatenating
-the seed and the secret password, then applying a one-way hash (the
-RSA Data Security, Inc., MD4 secure hash function) iteration-count
-times, and turning the result into six short English words. The
-`login' and `su' programs keep track of the last one-time
-password used, and the user is authenticated if the hash of the
-user-provided password is equal to the previous password. Because a
-one-way hash function is used, it is not possible to generate future
-one-time passwords having overheard one which was successfully used;
-the iteration count is decremented after each successful login to keep
-the user and login program in sync. (When you get the iteration count
-down to 1, it is time to reinitialize S/Key.)
-
-There are four programs involved in the S/Key system which we will
-discuss below. The `key' program accepts an iteration count, a
-seed, and a secret password, and generates a one-time password. The
-`keyinit' program is used to initialized S/Key, and to change
-passwords, iteration counts, or seeds; it takes either a secret
-password, or an iteration count, seed, and one-time password. The
-`keyinfo' program examines the /etc/skeykeys file and
-prints out the invoking user's current iteration count and seed.
-Finally, the `login' and `su' programs contain the necessary
-logic to accept S/Key one-time passwords for authentication. The
-`login' program is also capable of disallowing the use of UNIX
-passwords on connections coming from specified addresses.
-
-There are four different sorts of operations we will cover. The first
-is using the `keyinit' program over a secure connection to set up
-S/Key for the first time, or to change your password or seed. The
-second operation is using the `keyinit' program over an insecure
-connection, in conjunction with the `key' program over a secure
-connection, to do the same. The third is using the `key' program to
-log in over an insecure connection. The fourth is using the `key'
-program to generate a number of keys which can be written down or
-printed out to carry with you when going to some location without
-secure connections to anywhere (like at a conference).
-
-
-
-Secure connection initialization
-
-To initialize S/Key, change your password, or change your seed while
-logged in over a secure connection (e.g., on the console of a machine),
-use the `keyinit' command without any parameters while logged in as
-yourself:
-
-
-
-$ keyinit
-Updating wollman: ) these will not appear if you
-Old key: ha73895 ) have not used S/Key before
-Reminder - Only use this method if you are directly connected.
-If you are using telnet or rlogin exit with no password and use keyinit -s.
-Enter secret password: ) I typed my pass phrase here
-Again secret password: ) I typed it again
-
-ID wollman s/key is 99 ha73896 ) discussed below
-SAG HAS FONT GOUT FATE BOOM )
-
-
-
-There is a lot of information here. At the `Enter secret password:'
-prompt, you should enter some password or phrase (I use phrases of
-minimum seven words) which will be needed to generate login keys. The
-line starting `ID' gives the parameters of your particular S/Key
-instance: your login name, the iteration count, and seed. When
-logging in with S/Key, the system will remember these parameters and
-present them back to you so you do not have to remember them. The last
-line gives the particular one-time password which corresponds to those
-parameters and your secret password; if you were to re-login
-immediately, this one-time password is the one you would use.
-
-
-
-
-Insecure connection initialization
-
-To initialize S/Key or change your password or seed over an insecure
-connection, you will need to already have a secure connection to some
-place where you can run the `key' program; this might be in the form
-of a desk accessory on a Macintosh, or a shell prompt on a machine you
-trust (we will show the latter). You will also need to make up an
-iteration count (100 is probably a good value), and you may make up
-your own seed or use a randomly-generated one. Over on the insecure
-connection (to the machine you are initializing), use the `keyinit -s'
-command:
-
-
-
-$ keyinit -s
-Updating wollman:
-Old key: kh94741
-Reminder you need the 6 English words from the skey command.
-Enter sequence count from 1 to 9999: 100 ) I typed this
-Enter new key [default kh94742]:
-s/key 100 kh94742
-
-
-
-To accept the default seed (which the `keyinit' program confusingly
-calls a `key'), press return. Then move over to your secure
-connection or S/Key desk accessory, and give it the same parameters:
-
-
-
-$ key 100 kh94742
-Reminder - Do not use this program while logged in via telnet or rlogin.
-Enter secret password: ) I typed my secret password
-HULL NAY YANG TREE TOUT VETO
-
-
-
-Now switch back over to the insecure connection, and copy the one-time
-password generated by `key' over to the `keyinit' program:
-
-
-
-s/key access password: HULL NAY YANG TREE TOUT VETO
-
-ID wollman s/key is 100 kh94742
-HULL NAY YANG TREE TOUT VETO
-
-
-
-The rest of the description from the previous section applies here as
-well.
-
-
-
-
-Diversion: a login prompt
-
-Before explaining how to generate one-time passwords, we should go
-over an S/Key login prompt:
-
-
-
-$ telnet himalia
-Trying 18.26.0.186...
-Connected to himalia.lcs.mit.edu.
-Escape character is '^]'.
-s/key 92 hi52030
-Password:
-
-
-
-Note that, before prompting for a password, the login program
-prints out the iteration number and seed which you will need in order
-to generate the appropriate key. You will also find a useful feature
-(not shown here): if you press return at the password prompt, the
-login program will turn echo on, so you can see what you are typing.
-This can be extremely useful if you are attempting to type in an S/Key
-by hand, such as from a printout.
-
-If this machine were configured to disallow UNIX passwords over a
-connection from my machine, the prompt would have also included the
-annotation `(s/key required)', indicating that only S/Key one-time
-passwords will be accepted.
-
-
-
-
-Generating a single one-time password
-
-Now, to generate the one-time password needed to answer this login
-prompt, we use a trusted machine and the `key' program. (There are
-versions of the `key' program from DOS and Windows machines, and there
-is an S/Key desk accessory for Macintosh computers as well.) The
-command-line `key' program takes as its parameters the iteration count
-and seed; you can cut-and-paste right from the login prompt starting
-at ``key'' to the end of the line. Thus:
-
-
-
-$ key 92 hi52030 ) pasted from previous section
-Reminder - Do not use this program while logged in via telnet or rlogin.
-Enter secret password: ) I typed my secret password
-ADEN BED WOLF HAW HOT STUN
-
-
-
-And in the other window:
-
-
-
-s/key 92 hi52030 ) from previous section
-Password:
- (turning echo on)
-Password:ADEN BED WOLF HAW HOT STUN
-Last login: Wed Jun 28 15:31:00 from halloran-eldar.l
-[etc.]
-
-
-
-This is the easiest mechanism if you have a trusted machine.
-There is a Java S/Key key applet,
-The Java OTP Calculator,
-that you can download and run locally on any Java supporting brower.
-
-
-
-
-Generating multiple one-time passwords
-
-Sometimes we have to go places where no trusted machines or
-connections are available. In this case, it is possible to use the
-`key' command to generate a number of one-time passwords in the same
-command; these can then be printed out. For example:
-
-
-
-$ key -n 25 57 zz99999
-Reminder - Do not use this program while logged in via telnet or rlogin.
-Enter secret password:
-33: WALT THY MALI DARN NIT HEAD
-34: ASK RICE BEAU GINA DOUR STAG
-[...]
-56: AMOS BOWL LUG FAT CAIN INCH
-57: GROW HAYS TUN DISH CAR BALM
-
-
-
-The `' requests twenty-five keys in sequence; the `57' indicates
-the ending iteration number; and the rest is as before. Note that
-these are printed out in reverse order of eventual use. If you are
-really paranoid, you might want to write the results down by hand;
-otherwise you can cut-and-paste into `lpr'. Note that each line shows
-both the iteration count and the one-time password; you may still find
-it handy to scratch off passwords as you use them.
-
-
-
-
-Restricting use of UNIX passwords
-
-The configuration file /etc/skey.access can be used to
-configure restrictions on the use of UNIX passwords based on the host
-name, user name, terminal port, or IP address of a login session. The
-complete format of the file is documented in the skey.access(5)
-manual page; there are also some security cautions there which should
-be read before depending on this file for security.
-
-If there is no /etc/skey.access file (which is the default
-state as FreeBSD is shipped), then all users will be allowed to use
-UNIX passwords. If the file exists, however, then all users will be
-required to use S/Key unless explicitly permitted to do otherwise by
-configuration statements in the skey.access file. In all cases,
-UNIX passwords are permitted on the console.
-
-Here is a sample configuration file which illustrates the three most
-common sorts of configuration statements:
-
-
-
-permit internet 18.26.0.0 255.255.0.0
-permit user jrl
-permit port ttyd0
-
-
-
-The first line (`permit internet') allows users whose IP source
-address (which is vulnerable to spoofing) matches the specified value
-and mask, to use UNIX passwords. This should not be considered a
-security mechanism, but rather, a means to remind authorized users
-that they are using an insecure network and need to use S/Key for
-authentication.
-
-The second line (`permit user') allows the specified user to
-use UNIX passwords at any time. Generally speaking, this should only
-be used for people who are either unable to use the `key'
-program, like those with dumb terminals, or those who are uneducable.
-
-The third line (`permit port') allows all users logging in on
-the specified terminal line to use UNIX passwords; this would be used
-for dial-ups.
-
-
-
-
-
-Kerberos
-
-Contributed by &a.markm; (based on contribution by &a.md;).
-
-Kerberos is a network add-on system/protocol that allows users to
-authenticate themselves through the services of a secure server.
-Services such as remote login, remote copy, secure inter-system
-file copying and other high-risk tasks are made considerably safer
-and more controllable.
-
-The following instructions can be used as a guide on how to
-set up Kerberos as distributed for FreeBSD. However, you should refer
-to the relevant manual pages for a complete description.
-
-In FreeBSD, the Kerberos is not that from the original 4.4BSD-Lite,
-distribution, but eBones, which had been previously ported to
-FreeBSD 1.1.5.1, and was sourced from outside the USA/Canada,
-and is thus available to system owners outside those countries.
-
-For those needing to get a legal foreign distribution of this
-software, please DO NOT get it from a USA or Canada site.
-You will get that site in big trouble! A legal copy of this is
-available from skeleton.mikom.csir.co.za, which is in South
-Africa.
-
-
-
-Creating the initial database
-
-This is done on the Kerberos server only. First make sure that you
-do not have any old Kerberos databases around. You should change to the
-directory /etc/kerberosIV and check that only the following
-files are present:
-
-
-
-grunt# cd /etc/kerberosIV
-grunt# ls
-README krb.conf krb.realms
-
-
-
-If any additional files (such as principal.* or
-master_key) exist, then use the kdb_destroy
-command to destroy the old Kerberos database, of if Kerberos
-is not running, simply delete the extra files with rm.
-
-You should now edit the krb.conf and krb.realms
-files to define your Kerberos realm. In this case the realm will
-be GRONDAR.ZA and the server is grunt.grondar.za.
-We edit or create the krb.conf file:
-
-
-
-grunt# cat krb.conf
-GRONDAR.ZA
-GRONDAR.ZA grunt.grondar.za admin server
-CS.BERKELEY.EDU okeeffe.berkeley.edu
-ATHENA.MIT.EDU kerberos.mit.edu
-ATHENA.MIT.EDU kerberos-1.mit.edu
-ATHENA.MIT.EDU kerberos-2.mit.edu
-ATHENA.MIT.EDU kerberos-3.mit.edu
-LCS.MIT.EDU kerberos.lcs.mit.edu
-TELECOM.MIT.EDU bitsy.mit.edu
-ARC.NASA.GOV trident.arc.nasa.gov
-
-
-
-In this case, the other realms do not need to be there.
-They are here as an example of how a machine may be made aware
-of multiple realms. You may wish to not include them for simplicity.
-
-The first line names the realm in which this system works. The other
-lines contain realm/host entries. The first item on a line is a realm,
-and the second is a host in that realm that is acting as a ``key
-distribution centre''. The words ``admin server'' following a hosts
-name means that host also provides an administrative database server.
-For further explanation of these terms, please consult the Kerberos
-man pages.
-
-Now we have to add grunt.grondar.za to the GRONDAR.ZA
-realm and also add an entry to put all hosts in the .grondar.za
-domain in the GRONDAR.ZA realm. The krb.realms file
-would be updated as follows:
-
-
-
- grunt# cat krb.realms
- grunt.grondar.za GRONDAR.ZA
- .grondar.za GRONDAR.ZA
- .berkeley.edu CS.BERKELEY.EDU
- .MIT.EDU ATHENA.MIT.EDU
- .mit.edu ATHENA.MIT.EDU
-
-
-
-Again, the other realms do not need to be there.
-They are here as an example of how a machine may be made aware
-of multiple realms. You may wish to remove them to simplify things.
-
-The first line puts the specific system into the named
-realm. The rest of the lines show how to default systems of a
-particular subdomain to a named realm.
-
-Now we are ready to create the database. This only needs to run on
-the Kerberos server (or Key Distribution Centre). Issue the
-kdb_init command to do this:
-
-
-
-grunt# kdb_init
-Realm name [default ATHENA.MIT.EDU ]: GRONDAR.ZA
-You will be prompted for the database Master Password.
-It is important that you NOT FORGET this password.
-
-Enter Kerberos master key:
-
-
-
-Now we have to save the key so that servers on the local
-machine can pick it up. Use the kstash command to
-do this.
-
-
-
-grunt# kstash
-
-Enter Kerberos master key:
-
-Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
-
-Master key entered. BEWARE!
-
-
-
-This saves the encrypted master password in
-/etc/kerberosIV/master_key.
-
-
-
-
-Making it all run
-
-Two principals need to be added to the database for each
-system that will be secured with Kerberos. Their names are
-kpasswd and rcmd These two principals are
-made for each system, with the instance being the name of the
-individual system.
-
-These daemons, kpasswd and rcmd allow other systems
-to change Kerberos passwords and run commands like rcp,
-rlogin and rsh.
-
-Now let's add these entries:
-
-
-
-grunt# kdb_edit
-Opening database...
-
-Enter Kerberos master key:
-
-Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
-
-Master key entered. BEWARE!
-Previous or default values are in [brackets] ,
-enter return to leave the same, or new value.
-
-Principal name: passwd
-Instance: grunt
-
-<Not found>, Create [y] ? y
-
-Principal: passwd, Instance: grunt, kdc_key_ver: 1
-New Password: <---- enter RANDOM here
-Verifying password
-
-New Password: <---- enter RANDOM here
-
-Random password [y] ? y
-
-Principal's new key version = 1
-Expiration date (enter yyyy-mm-dd) [ 2000-01-01 ] ?
-Max ticket lifetime (*5 minutes) [ 255 ] ?
-Attributes [ 0 ] ?
-Edit O.K.
-Principal name: rcmd
-Instance: grunt
-
-<Not found>, Create [y] ?
-
-Principal: rcmd, Instance: grunt, kdc_key_ver: 1
-New Password: <---- enter RANDOM here
-Verifying password
-
-New Password: <---- enter RANDOM here
-
-Random password [y] ?
-
-Principal's new key version = 1
-Expiration date (enter yyyy-mm-dd) [ 2000-01-01 ] ?
-Max ticket lifetime (*5 minutes) [ 255 ] ?
-Attributes [ 0 ] ?
-Edit O.K.
-Principal name: <---- null entry here will cause an exit
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Creating the server file
-
-We now have to extract all the instances which define the services
-on each machine. For this we use the ext_srvtab command.
-This will create a file which must be copied or moved by secure
-means to each Kerberos client's /etc/kerberosIV directory. This
-file must be present on each server and client, and is crucial to the
-operation of Kerberos.
-
-
-
-grunt# ext_srvtab grunt
-
-Enter Kerberos master key:
-
-Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
-
-Master key entered. BEWARE!
-Generating 'grunt-new-srvtab'....
-
-
-
-Now, this command only generates a temporary file
-which must be renamed to srvtab so that all the
-server can pick it up. Use the mv command to move it
-into place on the original system:
-
-
-
-grunt# mv grunt-new-srvtab srvtab
-
-
-
-If the file is for a client system, and the network is not
-deemed safe, then copy the <client>-new-srvtab to
-removable media and transport it by secure physical means. Be
-sure to rename it to srvtab in the client's
-/etc/kerberosIV directory, and make sure it is mode 600:
-
-
-
-grumble# mv grumble-new-srvtab srvtab
-grumble# chmod 600 srvtab
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Populating the database
-
-We now have to add some user entries into the database.
-First let's create an entry for the user jane. Use
-the kdb_edit command to do this:
-
-
-
-grunt# kdb_edit
-Opening database...
-
-Enter Kerberos master key:
-
-Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
-
-Master key entered. BEWARE!
-Previous or default values are in [brackets] ,
-enter return to leave the same, or new value.
-
-Principal name: jane
-Instance:
-
-<Not found>, Create [y] ? y
-
-Principal: jane, Instance: , kdc_key_ver: 1
-New Password: <---- enter a secure password here
-Verifying password
-
-New Password: <---- re-enter the password here
-
-Principal's new key version = 1
-Expiration date (enter yyyy-mm-dd) [ 2000-01-01 ] ?
-Max ticket lifetime (*5 minutes) [ 255 ] ?
-Attributes [ 0 ] ?
-Edit O.K.
-Principal name: <---- null entry here will cause an exit
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Testing it all out
-
-First we have to start the Kerberos daemons. NOTE that if you have
-correctly edited your /etc/rc.conf then this will happen
-automatically when you reboot. This is only necessary on the Kerberos
-server. Kerberos clients will automagically get what they need from
-the /etc/kerberosIV directory.
-
-
-
-grunt# kerberos &
-grunt# Kerberos server starting
- Sleep forever on error
- Log file is /var/log/kerberos.log
-Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
-
-Master key entered. BEWARE!
-
-Current Kerberos master key version is 1
-Local realm: GRONDAR.ZA
-grunt# kadmind -n &
-grunt# KADM Server KADM0.0A initializing
-Please do not use 'kill -9' to kill this job, use a
-regular kill instead
-
-Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
-
-Master key entered. BEWARE!
-
-
-
-Now we can try using the kinit command to get a ticket for
-the id jane that we created above:
-
-
-
-grunt$ kinit jane
-MIT Project Athena (grunt.grondar.za)
-Kerberos Initialization for "jane"
-Password:
-
-
-
-Try listing the tokens using klist to see if we really have them:
-
-
-
-grunt$ klist
-Ticket file: /tmp/tkt245
-Principal: jane@GRONDAR.ZA
-
- Issued Expires Principal
-Apr 30 11:23:22 Apr 30 19:23:22 krbtgt.GRONDAR.ZA@GRONDAR.ZA
-
-
-
-Now try changing the password using passwd to check if the
-kpasswd daemon can get authorization to the Kerberos database:
-
-
-
-grunt$ passwd
-realm GRONDAR.ZA
-Old password for jane:
-New Password for jane:
-Verifying password
-New Password for jane:
-Password changed.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Adding su privileges
-
-Kerberos allows us to give each user who needs root
-privileges their own separatesupassword. We
-could now add an id which is authorized to su to root.
-This is controlled by having an instance of root associated
-with a principal. Using kdb_edit we can create the entry
-jane.root in the Kerberos database:
-
-
-
-grunt# kdb_edit
-Opening database...
-
-Enter Kerberos master key:
-
-Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
-
-Master key entered. BEWARE!
-Previous or default values are in [brackets] ,
-enter return to leave the same, or new value.
-
-Principal name: jane
-Instance: root
-
-<Not found>, Create [y] ? y
-
-Principal: jane, Instance: root, kdc_key_ver: 1
-New Password: <---- enter a SECURE password here
-Verifying password
-
-New Password: <---- re-enter the password here
-
-Principal's new key version = 1
-Expiration date (enter yyyy-mm-dd) [ 2000-01-01 ] ?
-Max ticket lifetime (*5 minutes) [ 255 ] ? 12 <--- Keep this short!
-Attributes [ 0 ] ?
-Edit O.K.
-Principal name: <---- null entry here will cause an exit
-
-
-
-Now try getting tokens for it to make sure it works:
-
-
-
-grunt# kinit jane.root
-MIT Project Athena (grunt.grondar.za)
-Kerberos Initialization for "jane.root"
-Password:
-
-
-
-
-Now we need to add the user to root's .klogin file:
-
-
-
-grunt# cat /root/.klogin
-jane.root@GRONDAR.ZA
-
-
-
-Now try doing the su:
-
-
-
-[jane@grunt 10407] su
-Password:
-grunt#
-
-
-
-
-and take a look at what tokens we have:
-
-
-
-grunt# klist
-Ticket file: /tmp/tkt_root_245
-Principal: jane.root@GRONDAR.ZA
-
- Issued Expires Principal
-May 2 20:43:12 May 3 04:43:12 krbtgt.GRONDAR.ZA@GRONDAR.ZA
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Using other commands
-
-In an earlier example, we created a principal called jane
-with an instance root. This was based on a user with the
-same name as the principal, and this is a Kerberos default; that a
-<principal>.<instance> of the form
-<username>.root will allow that
-<username> to su to root if the necessary
-entries are in the .klogin file in root's home
-directory:
-
-
-
-grunt# cat /root/.klogin
-jane.root@GRONDAR.ZA
-
-
-
-Likewise, if a user has in their own home directory lines of the
-form:
-
-
-
-[jane@grunt 10543] cat ~/.klogin
-jane@GRONDAR.ZA
-jack@GRONDAR.ZA
-
-
-
-This allows anyone in the GRONDAR.ZA realm who has
-authenticated themselves to jane or jack (via
-kinit, see above) access to rlogin to jane's
-account or files on this system (grunt) via rlogin,
-rsh or rcp.
-
-For example, Jane now logs into another system, using Kerberos:
-
-
-
-[jane@grumble 573] kinit
-MIT Project Athena (grunt.grondar.za)
-Password:
-[jane@grumble 574] rlogin grunt
-Last login: Mon May 1 21:14:47 from grumble
-Copyright (c) 1980, 1983, 1986, 1988, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994
- The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
-
-FreeBSD BUILT-19950429 (GR386) #0: Sat Apr 29 17:50:09 SAT 1995
-
-[jane@grunt 10567]
-
-
-
-Or Jack logs into Jane's account on the same machine (Jane having set up
-the .klogin file as above, and the person in charge of Kerberos
-having set up principal jack with a null instance:
-
-
-
-[jack@grumble 573] kinit
-[jack@grumble 574] rlogin grunt -l jane
-MIT Project Athena (grunt.grondar.za)
-Password:
-Last login: Mon May 1 21:16:55 from grumble
-Copyright (c) 1980, 1983, 1986, 1988, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994
- The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
-
-FreeBSD BUILT-19950429 (GR386) #0: Sat Apr 29 17:50:09 SAT 1995
-
-[jane@grunt 10578]
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Firewalls
-
-Contributed by &a.gpalmer; and &a.alex;.
-
-Firewalls are an area of increasing interest for people who are
-connected to the Internet, and are even finding applications on
-private networks to provide enhanced security. This section will
-hopefully explain what firewalls are, how to use them, and how to use
-the facilities provided in the FreeBSD kernel to implement them.
-
-
-
-Note: People often think that having a firewall between
-your companies internal network and the ``Big Bad Internet'' will
-solve all your security problems. It may help, but a poorly setup
-firewall system is more of a security risk than not having one at all.
-A firewall can only add another layer of security to your systems, but
-they will not be able to stop a really determined hacker from
-penetrating your internal network. If you let internal security lapse
-because you believe your firewall to be impenetrable, you have just
-made the hackers job that bit easier.
-
-
-
-
-
-What is a firewall?
-
-There are currently two distinct types of firewalls in common
-use on the Internet today. The first type is more properly called
-a packet filtering router, where the kernel on a
-multi-homed machine chooses whether to forward or block packets
-based on a set of rules. The second type, known as proxy
-servers, rely on daemons to provide authentication and to
-forward packets, possibly on a multi-homed machine which has
-kernel packet forwarding disabled.
-
-Sometimes sites combine the two types of firewalls, so that only a
-certain machine (known as a bastion host) is allowed to send
-packets through a packet filtering router onto an internal
-network. Proxy services are run on the bastion host, which are
-generally more secure than normal authentication mechanisms.
-
-FreeBSD comes with a kernel packet filter (known as IPFW),
-which is what the rest of this section will concentrate on. Proxy
-servers can be built on FreeBSD from third party software, but there
-is such a variety of proxy servers available that it would be
-impossible to cover them in this document.
-
-
-
-Packet filtering routers
-
-A router is a machine which forwards packets between two or more
-networks. A packet filtering router has an extra piece of code in its
-kernel, which compares each packet to a list of rules before deciding
-if it should be forwarded or not. Most modern IP routing software has
-packet filtering code in it, which defaults to forwarding all
-packets. To enable the filters, you need to define a set of rules for
-the filtering code, so that it can decide if the packet should be
-allowed to pass or not.
-
-To decide if a packet should be passed on or not, the code looks
-through its set of rules for a rule which matches the contents of
-this packets headers. Once a match is found, the rule action is
-obeyed. The rule action could be to drop the packet, to forward the
-packet, or even to send an ICMP message back to the originator. Only
-the first match counts, as the rules are searched in order. Hence, the
-list of rules can be referred to as a ``rule chain''.
-
-The packet matching criteria varies depending on the software used,
-but typically you can specify rules which depend on the source IP
-address of the packet, the destination IP address, the source port
-number, the destination port number (for protocols which support
-ports), or even the packet type (UDP, TCP, ICMP, etc).
-
-
-
-
-Proxy servers
-
-Proxy servers are machines which have had the normal system daemons
-(telnetd, ftpd, etc) replaced with special servers. These servers are
-called proxy servers as they normally only allow onward
-connections to be made. This enables you to run (for example) a proxy
-telnet server on your firewall host, and people can telnet in to your
-firewall from the outside, go through some authentication mechanism,
-and then gain access to the internal network (alternatively, proxy
-servers can be used for signals coming from the internal network and
-heading out).
-
-Proxy servers are normally more secure than normal servers, and
-often have a wider variety of authentication mechanisms available,
-including ``one-shot'' password systems so that even if someone
-manages to discover what password you used, they will not be able to use
-it to gain access to your systems as the password instantly
-expires. As they do not actually give users access to the host machine,
-it becomes a lot more difficult for someone to install backdoors
-around your security system.
-
-Proxy servers often have ways of restricting access further, so
-that only certain hosts can gain access to the servers, and often they
-can be set up so that you can limit which users can talk to which
-destination machine. Again, what facilities are available depends
-largely on what proxy software you choose.
-
-
-
-
-
-What does IPFW allow me to do?
-
-IPFW, the software supplied with FreeBSD, is a packet
-filtering and accounting system which resides in the kernel, and has a
-user-land control utility, ipfw(8). Together, they
-allow you to define and query the rules currently used by the kernel
-in its routing decisions.
-
-There are two related parts to IPFW. The firewall section
-allows you to perform packet filtering. There is also an IP accounting
-section which allows you to track usage of your router, based on
-similar rules to the firewall section. This allows you to see (for
-example) how much traffic your router is getting from a certain
-machine, or how much WWW (World Wide Web) traffic it is forwarding.
-
-As a result of the way that IPFW is designed, you can use
-IPFW on non-router machines to perform packet filtering on
-incoming and outgoing connections. This is a special case of the more
-general use of IPFW, and the same commands and techniques
-should be used in this situation.
-
-
-
-
-Enabling IPFW on FreeBSD
-
-As the main part of the IPFW system lives in the kernel, you will
-need to add one or more options to your kernel configuration
-file, depending on what facilities you want, and recompile your kernel. See
- for more
-details on how to recompile your kernel.
-
-There are currently three kernel configuration options
-relevant to IPFW:
-
-
-
-options IPFIREWALL
-
-Compiles into the kernel the code for packet
-filtering.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options IPFIREWALL_VERBOSE
-
-
-Enables code to allow logging of
-packets through syslogd(8). Without this option, even if you
-specify that packets should be logged in the filter rules, nothing
-will happen.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options IPFIREWALL_VERBOSE_LIMIT=10
-
-
-Limits the number of
-packets logged through syslogd(8) on a per entry basis.
-You may wish to use this option in hostile environments in which
-you want to log firewall activity, but do not want to be open to
-a denial of service attack via syslog flooding.
-
-
-
-When a chain entry reaches the packet limit specified, logging
-is turned off for that particular entry. To resume logging, you
-will need to reset the associated counter using the ipfw(8)
-utility:
-
-
-
-ipfw zero 4500
-
-
-
-Where 4500 is the chain entry you wish to continue logging.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Previous versions of FreeBSD contained an IPFIREWALL_ACCT
-option. This is now obsolete as the firewall code automatically
-includes accounting facilities.
-
-
-
-
-Configuring IPFW
-
-The configuration of the IPFW software is done through the
-ipfw(8) utility. The syntax for this command looks
-quite complicated, but it is relatively simple once you understand
-its structure.
-
-There are currently four different command categories used by the
-utility: addition/deletion, listing, flushing, and clearing.
-Addition/deletion is used to build the rules that control how packets
-are accepted, rejected, and logged. Listing is used to examine the
-contents of your rule set (otherwise known as the chain) and packet
-counters (accounting). Flushing is used to remove all entries from
-the chain. Clearing is used to zero out one or more accounting
-entries.
-
-
-
-Altering the IPFW rules
-
-The syntax for this form of the command is:
-
-ipfw [-N] command [index]
-action [log] protocoladdresses
-[options]
-
-
-
-There is one valid flag when using this form of the command:
-
-
-
--N
-
-Resolve addresses and service names in output.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The command given can be shortened to the shortest unique
-form. The valid commands are:
-
-
-
-add
-
-Add an entry to the firewall/accounting rule list
-
-
-
-
-
-
-delete
-
-
-Delete an entry from the firewall/accounting rule list
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Previous versions of IPFW used separate firewall and
-accounting entries. The present version provides packet accounting
-with each firewall entry.
-
-If an index value is supplied, it used to place the entry
-at a specific point in the chain. Otherwise, the entry is placed at
-the end of the chain at an index 100 greater than the last chain
-entry (this does not include the default policy, rule 65535, deny).
-
-The log option causes matching rules to be output to the
-system console if the kernel was compiled with IPFIREWALL_VERBOSE.
-
-Valid actions are:
-
-
-
-reject
-
-Drop the packet, and send an ICMP host or port
-unreachable (as appropriate) packet to the source.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-allow
-
-
-Pass the packet on as normal. (aliases: pass and
-accept)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-deny
-
-
-Drop the packet. The source is not notified via an ICMP
-message (thus it appears that the packet never arrived at the
-destination).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-count
-
-
-Update packet counters but do not allow/deny the packet
-based on this rule. The search continues with the next chain entry.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Each action will be recognized by the shortest unambiguous
-prefix.
-
-The protocols which can be specified are:
-
-
-
-all
-
-Matches any IP packet
-
-
-
-
-
-
-icmp
-
-
-Matches ICMP packets
-
-
-
-
-
-
-tcp
-
-
-Matches TCP packets
-
-
-
-
-
-
-udp
-
-
-Matches UDP packets
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The address specification is:
-
-from <address/mask>[port] to
-<address/mask>[port] [via <interface>]
-
-
-
-You can only specify port in conjunction with
-protocols which support ports (UDP and TCP).
-
-The via is optional and may specify the IP address or
-domain name of a local IP interface, or an interface name (e.g.
-ed0) to match only packets coming through this interface.
-Interface unit numbers can be specified with an optional wildcard.
-For example, ppp* would match all kernel PPP interfaces.
-
-The syntax used to specify an <address/mask> is:
-
-<address>
-
-
-or
-
-<address>/mask-bits
-
-
-or
-
-<address>:mask-pattern
-
-
-
-A valid hostname may be specified in place of the IP
-address. mask-bits is a decimal number representing how many
-bits in the address mask should be set. e.g. specifying
-
-192.216.222.1/24
-
-
-will create a mask which will allow any address in a class C subnet
-(in this case, 192.216.222) to be matched. mask-pattern is an IP
-address which will be logically AND'ed with the address given. The
-keyword any may be used to specify ``any IP address''.
-
-The port numbers to be blocked are specified as:
-
-port[,port[,port[...]]]
-
-
-to specify either a single port or a list of ports, or
-
-port-port
-
-
-to specify a range of ports. You may also combine a single range with a
-list, but the range must always be specified first.
-
-The options available are:
-
-
-
-frag
-
-Matches if the packet is not the first fragment of the datagram.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-in
-
-
-Matches if the packet is on the way in.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-out
-
-
-Matches if the packet is on the way out.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-ipoptions spec
-
-
-Matches if the IP header contains the
-comma separated list of options specified in spec. The
-supported list of IP options are: ssrr (strict source route),
-lsrr (loose source route), rr (record packet route),
-and ts (timestamp). The absence of a particular option may
-be denoted with a leading '!'.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-established
-
-
-Matches if the packet is part of an already established
-TCP connection (i.e. it has the RST or ACK bits set). You can optimize
-the performance of the firewall by placing established rules
-early in the chain.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-setup
-
-
-Matches if the packet is an attempt to establish a TCP connection
-(the SYN bit set is set but the ACK bit is not).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-tcpflags flags
-
-
-Matches if the TCP header contains
-the comma separated list of flags. The supported flags
-are fin, syn, rst, psh, ack,
-and urg. The absence of a particular flag may be indicated
-by a leading '!'.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-icmptypes types
-
-
-Matches if the ICMP type is present in
-the list types. The list may be specified as any combination
-of ranges and/or individual types separated by commas. Commonly used
-ICMP types are: 0 echo reply (ping reply), 5
-redirect, 8 echo request (ping request), and 11
-time exceeded (used to indicate TTL expiration as with
-traceroute(8)).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Listing the IPFW rules
-
-The syntax for this form of the command is:
-
-ipfw [-atN] l
-
-
-
-There are three valid flags when using this form of the command:
-
-
-
--a
-
-While listing, show counter values. This option is the only
-way to see accounting counters.
-
-
-
-
-
-
--t
-
-
-Display the last match times for each chain entry. The time
-listing is incompatible with the input syntax used by the
-ipfw(8) utility.
-
-
-
-
-
-
--N
-
-
-Attempt to resolve given addresses and service names.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Flushing the IPFW rules
-
-The syntax for flushing the chain is:
-
-ipfw flush
-
-
-
-This causes all entries in the firewall chain to be removed except
-the fixed default policy enforced by the kernel (index 65535). Use
-caution when flushing rules, the default deny policy will leave your
-system cut off from the network until allow entries are added to the
-chain.
-
-
-
-
-Clearing the IPFW packet counters
-
-The syntax for clearing one or more packet counters is:
-
-ipfw zero [index]
-
-
-
-When used without an index argument, all packet counters
-are cleared. If an index is supplied, the clearing operation
-only affects a specific chain entry.
-
-
-
-
-
-Example commands for ipfw
-
-This command will deny all packets from the host
-evil.hacker.org to the telnet port of the host
-nice.people.org by being forwarded by the router:
-
-
-
-ipfw add deny tcp from evil.hacker.org to nice.people.org 23
-
-
-
-The next example denies and logs any TCP traffic from the entire
-hacker.org network (a class C) to the nice.people.org
-machine (any port).
-
-
-
-ipfw add deny log tcp from evil.hacker.org/24 to nice.people.org
-
-
-
-If you do not want people sending X sessions to your internal network
-(a subnet of a class C), the following command will do the necessary
-filtering:
-
-
-
-ipfw add deny tcp from any to my.org/28 6000 setup
-
-
-
-To see the accounting records:
-
-ipfw -a list
-
-
-or in the short form
-
-ipfw -a l
-
-
-You can also see the last time a chain entry was matched with
-
-ipfw -at l
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Building a packet filtering firewall
-
-
-
-Note: The following suggestions are just that:
-suggestions. The requirements of each firewall are different and I
-cannot tell you how to build a firewall to meet your particular
-requirements.
-
-
-
-When initially setting up your firewall, unless you have a test
-bench setup where you can configure your firewall host in a controlled
-environment, I strongly recommend you use the logging version of the
-commands and enable logging in the kernel. This will allow you to
-quickly identify problem areas and cure them without too much
-disruption. Even after the initial setup phase is complete, I
-recommend using the logging for of `deny' as it allows tracing of
-possible attacks and also modification of the firewall rules if your
-requirements alter.
-
-
-
-Note: If you use the logging versions of the
-accept command, it can generate large amounts
-of log data as one log line will be generated for every packet
-that passes through the firewall, so large ftp/http transfers,
-etc, will really slow the system down. It also increases the
-latencies on those packets as it requires more work to be done by
-the kernel before the packet can be passed on. syslogd with also
-start using up a lot more processor time as it logs all the extra
-data to disk, and it could quite easily fill the partition
-/var/log is located on.
-
-
-
-
-
-Synchronous Serial Transmission
-
-Synchronous serial transmission requires that the sender and
-receiver share a clock with one another, or that the sender provide
-a strobe or other timing signal so that the receiver knows when to
-"read" the next bit of the data. In most forms of serial
-Synchronous communication, if there is no data available at a given
-instant to transmit, a fill character must be sent instead so that
-data is always being transmitted. Synchronous communication is
-usually more efficient because only data bits are transmitted
-between sender and receiver, and synchronous communication can be
-more more costly if extra wiring and circuits are required to
-share a clock signal between the sender and receiver.
-
-A form of Synchronous transmission is used with printers and
-fixed disk devices in that the data is sent on one set of wires
-while a clock or strobe is sent on a different wire. Printers and
-fixed disk devices are not normally serial devices because most
-fixed disk interface standards send an entire word of data for each
-clock or strobe signal by using a separate wire for each bit of the
-word. In the PC industry, these are known as Parallel devices.
-
-The standard serial communications hardware in the PC does not
-support Synchronous operations. This mode is described here for
-comparison purposes only.
-
-
-
-
-Asynchronous Serial Transmission
-
-Asynchronous transmission allows data to be transmitted without
-the sender having to send a clock signal to the receiver. Instead,
-the sender and receiver must agree on timing parameters in advance
-and special bits are added to each word which are used to
-synchronize the sending and receiving units.
-
-When a word is given to the UART for Asynchronous transmissions,
-a bit called the "Start Bit" is added to the beginning of each word
-that is to be transmitted. The Start Bit is used to alert the
-receiver that a word of data is about to be sent, and to force the
-clock in the receiver into synchronization with the clock in the
-transmitter. These two clocks must be accurate enough to not
-have the frequency drift by more than 10% during the transmission
-of the remaining bits in the word. (This requirement was set in
-the days of mechanical teleprinters and is easily met by modern
-electronic equipment.)
-
-After the Start Bit, the individual bits of the word of data are
-sent, with the Least Significant Bit (LSB) being sent first. Each
-bit in the transmission is transmitted for exactly the same
-amount of time as all of the other bits, and the receiver "looks"
-at the wire at approximately halfway through the period assigned
-to each bit to determine if the bit is a "1" or a "0". For example,
-if it takes two seconds to send each bit, the receiver will examine
-the signal to determine if it is a "1" or a "0" after one second
-has passed, then it will wait two seconds and then examine the value
-of the next bit, and so on.
-
-The sender does not know when the receiver has "looked" at the
-value of the bit. The sender only knows when the clock says to
-begin transmitting the next bit of the word.
-
-When the entire data word has been sent, the transmitter may add
-a Parity Bit that the transmitter generates. The Parity Bit may
-be used by the receiver to perform simple error checking. Then at
-least one Stop Bit is sent by the transmitter.
-
-When the receiver has received all of the bits in the data word,
-it may check for the Parity Bits (both sender and receiver must
-agree on whether a Parity Bit is to be used), and then the receiver
-looks for a Stop Bit. If the Stop Bit does not appear when it is
-supposed to, the UART considers the entire word to be garbled and
-will report a Framing Error to the host processor when the data
-word is read. The usual cause of a Framing Error is that the sender
-and receiver clocks were not running at the same speed, or that
-the signal was interrupted.
-
-Regardless of whether the data was received correctly or not, the
-UART automatically discards the Start, Parity and Stop bits. If the
-sender and receiver are configured identically, these bits are not
-passed to the host.
-
-If another word is ready for transmission, the Start Bit for the new
-word can be sent as soon as the Stop Bit for the previous
-word has been sent.
-
-Because asynchronous data is "self synchronizing", if there is no
-data to transmit, the transmission line can be idle.
-
-
-
-
-Other UART Functions
-
-In addition to the basic job of converting data from parallel to
-serial for transmission and from serial to parallel on reception,
-a UART will usually provide additional circuits for signals that
-can be used to indicate the state of the transmission media, and
-to regulate the flow of data in the event that the remote device
-is not prepared to accept more data. For example, when the
-device connected to the UART is a modem, the modem may report the
-presence of a carrier on the phone line while the computer may be
-able to instruct the modem to reset itself or to not take calls
-by asserting or deasserting one more more of these extra signals.
-The function of each of these additional signals is defined in
-the EIA RS232-C standard.
-
-
-
-
-The RS232-C and V.24 Standards
-
-In most computer systems, the UART is connected to circuitry that
-generates signals that comply with the EIA RS232-C specification.
-There is also a CCITT standard named V.24 that mirrors the
-specifications included in RS232-C.
-
-
-
-RS232-C Bit Assignments (Marks and Spaces)
-
-In RS232-C, a value of "1" is called a "Mark" and a value of "0"
-is called a "Space". When a communication line is idle, the line
-is said to be "Marking", or transmitting continuous "1" values.
-
-The Start bit always has a value of "0" (a Space). The Stop Bit
-always has a value of "1" (a Mark). This means that there will
-always be a Mark (1) to Space (0) transition on the line at the
-start of every word, even when multiple word are
-transmitted back to back. This guarantees that sender and
-receiver can resynchronize their clocks regardless of the content
-of the data bits that are being transmitted.
-
-The idle time between Stop and Start bits does not have
-to be an exact multiple (including zero) of the bit rate of the
-communication link, but most UARTs are designed this way for
-simplicity.
-
-In RS232-C, the "Marking" signal (a "1") is represented by a voltage
-between -2 VDC and -12 VDC, and a "Spacing" signal (a "0") is
-represented by a voltage between 0 and +12 VDC. The transmitter
-is supposed to send +12 VDC or -12 VDC, and the receiver is supposed
-to allow for some voltage loss in long cables. Some transmitters
-in low power devices (like portable computers) sometimes use only
-+5 VDC and -5 VDC, but these values are still acceptable to a
-RS232-C receiver, provided that the cable lengths are short.
-
-
-
-
-RS232-C Break Signal
-
-RS232-C also specifies a signal called a "Break", which is caused
-by sending continuous Spacing values (no Start or Stop bits). When
-there is no electricity present on the data circuit, the line is
-considered to be sending "Break".
-
-The "Break" signal must be of a duration longer than the time
-it takes to send a complete byte plus Start, Stop and Parity bits.
-Most UARTs can distinguish between a Framing Error and a
-Break, but if the UART cannot do this, the Framing Error detection
-can be used to identify Breaks.
-
-In the days of teleprinters, when numerous printers around the
-country were wired in series (such as news services), any unit
-could cause a "Break" by temporarily opening the entire circuit
-so that no current flowed. This was used to allow a location with
-urgent news to interrupt some other location that was currently
-sending information.
-
-In modern systems there are two types of Break signals. If the
-Break is longer than 1.6 seconds, it is considered a "Modem Break",
-and some modems can be programmed to terminate the conversation and
-go on-hook or enter the modems' command mode when the modem detects
-this signal. If the Break is smaller than 1.6 seconds, it signifies
-a Data Break and it is up to the remote computer to respond to
-this signal. Sometimes this form of Break is used as an Attention
-or Interrupt signal and sometimes is accepted as a substitute for
-the ASCII CONTROL-C character.
-
-Marks and Spaces are also equivalent to "Holes" and "No Holes"
-in paper tape systems.
-
-Note that Breaks cannot be generated from paper tape or from any
-other byte value, since bytes are always sent with Start and Stop
-bit. The UART is usually capable of generating the continuous
-Spacing signal in response to a special command from the host
-processor.
-
-
-
-
-RS232-C DTE and DCE Devices
-
-The RS232-C specification defines two types of equipment: the Data
-Terminal Equipment (DTE) and the Data Carrier Equipment (DCE).
-Usually, the DTE device is the terminal (or computer), and the DCE
-is a modem. Across the phone line at the other end of a
-conversation, the receiving modem is also a DCE device and the
-computer that is connected to that modem is a DTE device. The DCE
-device receives signals on the pins that the DTE device transmits on,
-and vice versa.
-
-When two devices that are both DTE or both DCE must be connected
-together without a modem or a similar media translater between them,
-a NULL modem must be used. The NULL modem electrically re-arranges
-the cabling so that the transmitter output is connected to the
-receiver input on the other device, and vice versa. Similar
-translations are performed on all of the control signals so that
-each device will see what it thinks are DCE (or DTE) signals from
-the other device.
-
-The number of signals generated by the DTE and DCE devices are
-not symmetrical. The DTE device generates fewer signals for
-the DCE device than the DTE device receives from the DCE.
-
-
-
-
-RS232-C Pin Assignments
-
-The EIA RS232-C specification (and the ITU equivalent, V.24) calls
-for a twenty-five pin connector (usually a DB25) and defines the
-purpose of most of the pins in that connector.
-
-In the IBM Personal Computer and similar systems, a subset of
-RS232-C signals are provided via nine pin connectors (DB9).
-The signals that are not included on the PC connector deal mainly
-with synchronous operation, and this transmission mode is not
-supported by the UART that IBM selected for use in the IBM PC.
-
-Depending on the computer manufacturer, a DB25, a DB9, or
-both types of connector may be used for RS232-C communications.
-(The IBM PC also uses a DB25 connector for the parallel printer
-interface which causes some confusion.)
-
-Below is a table of the RS232-C signal assignments in the DB25
-and DB9 connectors.
-
-
-DB25 DB9 EIA CCITT Common Signal Description
-RS232-C IBM PC Circuit Circuit Name Source
-Pin Pin Symbol Symbol
-
-1 - AA 101 PG/FG --- Frame/Protective Ground
-2 3 BA 103 TD DTE Transmit Data
-3 2 BB 104 RD DCE Receive Data
-4 7 CA 105 RTS DTE Request to Send
-5 8 CB 106 CTS DCE Clear to Send
-6 6 CC 107 DSR DCE Data Set Ready
-7 5 AV 102 SG/GND --- Signal Ground
-8 1 CF 109 DCD/CD DCE Data Carrier Detect
-9 - - - - - Reserved for Test
-10 - - - - - Reserved for Test
-11 - - - - - Unassigned
-12 - CI 122 SRLSD DCE Sec. Recv. Line Signal Detector
-13 - SCB 121 SCTS DCE Secondary Clear To Send
-14 - SBA 118 STD DTE Secondary Transmit Data
-15 - DB 114 TSET DCE Trans. Sig. Element Timing
-16 - SBB 119 SRD DCE Secondary Received Data
-17 - DD 115 RSET DCE Receiver Signal Element Timing
-18 - - 141 LOOP DTE Local Loopback
-19 - SCA 120 SRS DTE Secondary Request to Send
-20 4 CD 108.2 DTR DTE Data Terminal Ready
-21 - - - RDL DTE Remote Digital Loopback
-22 9 CE 125 RI DCE Ring Indicator
-23 - CH 111 DSRS DTE Data Signal Rate Selector
-24 - DA 113 TSET DTE Trans. Sig. Element Timing
-25 - - 142 - DCE Test Mode
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Bits, Baud and Symbols
-
-Baud is a measurement of transmission speed in asynchronous
-communication. Because of advances in modem communication
-technology, this term is frequently misused when describing
-the data rates in newer devices.
-
-Traditionally, a Baud Rate represents the number of bits that are
-actually being sent over the media, not the amount of data
-that is actually moved from one DTE device to the other. The
-Baud count includes the overhead bits Start, Stop and Parity
-that are generated by the sending UART and removed by the
-receiving UART. This means that seven-bit words of data
-actually take 10 bits to be completely transmitted.
-Therefore, a modem capable of moving 300 bits per second from one
-place to another can normally only move 30 7-bit words if
-Parity is used and one Start and Stop bit are present.
-
-If 8-bit data words are used and Parity bits are also used, the
-data rate falls to 27.27 words per second, because it now
-takes 11 bits to send the eight-bit words, and the modem still
-only sends 300 bits per second.
-
-The formula for converting bytes per second into a baud rate
-and vice versa was simple until error-correcting modems
-came along. These modems receive the serial stream of bits
-from the UART in the host computer (even when internal modems
-are used the data is still frequently serialized) and converts
-the bits back into bytes. These bytes are then combined into
-packets and sent over the phone line using a Synchronous
-transmission method. This means that the Stop, Start, and Parity
-bits added by the UART in the DTE (the computer) were removed by
-the modem before transmission by the sending modem. When these
-bytes are received by the remote modem, the remote modem adds
-Start, Stop and Parity bits to the words, converts them to a
-serial format and then sends them to the receiving UART in the remote
-computer, who then strips the Start, Stop and Parity bits.
-
-The reason all these extra conversions are done is so that the
-two modems can perform error correction, which means that the
-receiving modem is able to ask the sending modem to resend a
-block of data that was not received with the correct checksum.
-This checking is handled by the modems, and the DTE devices are
-usually unaware that the process is occurring.
-
-By striping the Start, Stop and Parity bits, the additional bits of
-data that the two modems must share between themselves to perform
-error-correction are mostly concealed from the effective
-transmission rate seen by the sending and receiving DTE equipment.
-For example, if a modem sends ten 7-bit words to another modem
-without including the Start, Stop and Parity bits, the sending
-modem will be able to add 30 bits of its own information that
-the receiving modem can use to do error-correction without
-impacting the transmission speed of the real data.
-
-The use of the term Baud is further confused by modems that perform
-compression. A single 8-bit word passed over the telephone
-line might represent a dozen words that were transmitted to
-the sending modem. The receiving modem will expand the data back
-to its original content and pass that data to the receiving DTE.
-
-Modern modems also include buffers that allow the rate that
-bits move across the phone line (DCE to DCE) to be a different speed
-than the speed that the bits move between the DTE and DCE on both
-ends of the conversation. Normally the speed between the DTE and
-DCE is higher than the DCE to DCE speed because of the use of
-compression by the modems.
-
-Because the number of bits needed to describe a byte varied
-during the trip between the two machines plus the differing
-bits-per-seconds speeds that are used present on the DTE-DCE and
-DCE-DCE links, the usage of the term Baud to describe the
-overall communication speed causes problems and can misrepresent
-the true transmission speed. So Bits Per Second (bps) is the correct
-term to use to describe the transmission rate seen at the
-DCE to DCE interface and Baud or Bits Per Second are acceptable
-terms to use when a connection is made between two systems with a
-wired connection, or if a modem is in use that is not performing
-error-correction or compression.
-
-Modern high speed modems (2400, 9600, 14,400, and 19,200bps) in
-reality still operate at or below 2400 baud, or more accurately,
-2400 Symbols per second. High speed modem are able to encode more
-bits of data into each Symbol using a technique called Constellation
-Stuffing, which is why the effective bits per second rate of the
-modem is higher, but the modem continues to operate within the
-limited audio bandwidth that the telephone system provides.
-Modems operating at 28,800 and higher speeds have variable Symbol
-rates, but the technique is the same.
-
-
-
-
-The IBM Personal Computer UART
-
-Starting with the original IBM Personal Computer, IBM selected
-the National Semiconductor INS8250 UART for use in the IBM PC
-Parallel/Serial Adapter. Subsequent generations of compatible
-computers from IBM and other vendors continued to use the INS8250
-or improved versions of the National Semiconductor UART family.
-
-
-
-National Semiconductor UART Family Tree
-
-There have been several versions and subsequent generations of
-the INS8250 UART. Each major version is described below.
-
-
- INS8250 -> INS8250B
- \
- \
- \-> INS8250A -> INS82C50A
- \
- \
- \-> NS16450 -> NS16C450
- \
- \
- \-> NS16550 -> NS16550A -> PC16550D
-
-
-
-
-INS8250
-
-This part was used in the original IBM PC and
-IBM PC/XT. The original name for this part was the INS8250 ACE
-(Asynchronous Communications Element) and it is made from NMOS
-technology.
-
-The 8250 uses eight I/O ports and has a one-byte send and
-a one-byte receive buffer. This original UART has several
-race conditions and other flaws. The original IBM BIOS
-includes code to work around these flaws, but this made
-the BIOS dependent on the flaws being present, so subsequent
-parts like the 8250A, 16450 or 16550 could not be used in
-the original IBM PC or IBM PC/XT.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-INS8250-B
-
-
-This is the slower speed of the INS8250 made
-from NMOS technology. It contains the same problems as the original
-INS8250.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-INS8250A
-
-
-An improved version of the INS8250 using XMOS
-technology with various functional flaws corrected. The INS8250A
-was used initially in PC clone computers by vendors who used
-"clean" BIOS designs. Because of the corrections in the chip, this
-part could not be used with a BIOS compatible with the INS8250
-or INS8250B.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-INS82C50A
-
-
-This is a CMOS version (low power consumption)
-of the INS8250A and has similar functional characteristics.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-NS16450
-
-
-Same as NS8250A with improvements so it can be
-used with faster CPU bus designs. IBM used this part in the IBM AT
-and updated the IBM BIOS to no longer rely on the bugs in the
-INS8250.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-NS16C450
-
-
-This is a CMOS version (low power consumption)
-of the NS16450.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-NS16550
-
-
-Same as NS16450 with a 16-byte send and receive
-buffer but the buffer design was flawed and could not be reliably
-be used.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-NS16550A
-
-
-Same as NS16550 with the buffer flaws corrected.
-The 16550A and its successors have become the most popular UART
-design in the PC industry, mainly due it its ability to reliably
-handle higher data rates on operating systems with sluggish interrupt
-response times.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-NS16C552
-
-
-This component consists of two NS16C550A CMOS
-UARTs in a single package.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-PC16550D
-
-
-Same as NS16550A with subtle flaws corrected. This
-is revision D of the 16550 family and is the latest design available
-from National Semiconductor.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The NS16550AF and the PC16550D are the same thing
-
-National reorganized their part numbering system a few years ago,
-and the NS16550AFN no longer exists by that name. (If you
-have a NS16550AFN, look at the date code on the part, which is a
-four digit number that usually starts with a nine. The first two
-digits of the number are the year, and the last two digits are the
-week in that year when the part was packaged. If you have a
-NS16550AFN, it is probably a few years old.)
-
-The new numbers are like PC16550DV, with minor differences in the
-suffix letters depending on the package material and its shape.
-(A description of the numbering system can be found below.)
-
-It is important to understand that in some stores, you may pay
-$15(US) for a NS16550AFN made in 1990 and in the next bin are the
-new PC16550DN parts with minor fixes that National has made since the
-AFN part was in production, the PC16550DN was probably made in the
-past six months and it costs half (as low as $5(US) in volume) as
-much as the NS16550AFN because they are readily available.
-
-As the supply of NS16550AFN chips continues to shrink, the price will
-probably continue to increase until more people discover and accept
-that the PC16550DN really has the same function as the old part
-number.
-
-
-
-
-National Semiconductor Part Numbering System
-
-The older NSnnnnnrqp part numbers are now of the
-format PCnnnnnrgp.
-
-The "r" is the revision field. The current revision of
-the 16550 from National Semiconductor is "D".
-
-The "p" is the package-type field. The types are:
- "F" QFP (quad flat pack) L lead type
- "N" DIP (dual inline package) through hole straight lead type
- "V" LPCC (lead plastic chip carrier) J lead type
-
-
-The "g" is the product grade field. If an "I" precedes
-the package-type letter, it indicates an "industrial" grade part,
-which has higher specs than a standard part but not as high as
-Military Specification (Milspec) component. This is an optional field.
-
-So what we used to call a NS16550AFN (DIP Package) is now called a
-PC16550DN or PC16550DIN.
-
-
-
-
-
-Other Vendors and Similar UARTs
-
-Over the years, the 8250, 8250A, 16450 and 16550 have been licensed
-or copied by other chip vendors. In the case of the 8250, 8250A
-and 16450, the exact circuit (the "megacell") was licensed to many
-vendors, including Western Digital and Intel. Other vendors
-reverse-engineered the part or produced emulations that had similar
-behavior.
-
-In internal modems, the modem designer will frequently emulate the
-8250A/16450 with the modem microprocessor, and the emulated UART will
-frequently have a hidden buffer consisting of several hundred bytes.
-Because of the size of the buffer, these emulations can be as
-reliable as a 16550A in their ability to handle high speed data.
-However, most operating systems will still report that
-the UART is only a 8250A or 16450, and may not make effective use
-of the extra buffering present in the emulated UART unless special
-drivers are used.
-
-Some modem makers are driven by market forces to abandon a design
-that has hundreds of bytes of buffer and instead use a 16550A UART
-so that the product will compare favorably in market comparisons
-even though the effective performance may be lowered by this action.
-
-A common misconception is that all parts with "16550A" written on
-them are identical in performance. There are differences, and in
-some cases, outright flaws in most of these 16550A clones.
-
-When the NS16550 was developed, the National Semiconductor obtained
-several patents on the design and they also limited licensing, making
-it harder for other vendors to provide a chip with similar features.
-Because of the patents, reverse-engineered designs and emulations
-had to avoid infringing the claims covered by the patents.
-Subsequently, these copies almost never perform exactly the same as
-the NS16550A or PC16550D, which are the parts most computer and
-modem makers want to buy but are sometimes unwilling to pay the
-price required to get the genuine part.
-
-Some of the differences in the clone 16550A parts are unimportant,
-while others can prevent the device from being used at all with a
-given operating system or driver. These differences may show up
-when using other drivers, or when particular combinations of events
-occur that were not well tested or considered in the Windows driver.
-This is because most modem vendors and 16550-clone makers use the
-Microsoft drivers from Windows for Workgroups 3.11 and the Microsoft
-MSD utility as the primary tests for compatibility with the
-NS16550A. This over-simplistic criteria means that if a different
-operating system is used, problems could appear due to subtle
-differences between the clones and genuine components.
-
-National Semiconductor has made available a program named COMTEST
-that performs compatibility tests independent of any OS drivers.
-It should be remembered that the purpose of this type of program is
-to demonstrate the flaws in the products of the competition, so the
-program will report major as well as extremely subtle differences in
-behavior in the part being tested.
-
-In a series of tests performed by the author of this document in
-1994, components made by National Semiconductor, TI, StarTech, and
-CMD as well as megacells and emulations embedded in internal modems
-were tested with COMTEST. A difference count for some of these
-components is listed below. Because these tests were performed in
-1994, they may not reflect the current performance of the given
-product from a vendor.
-
-It should be noted that COMTEST normally aborts when an excessive
-number or certain types of problems have been detected. As part of
-this testing, COMTEST was modified so that it would not abort no
-matter how many differences were encountered.
-
-
-Vendor Part number Errors aka "differences" reported
-National (PC16550DV) 0 *
-
-National (NS16550AFN) 0
-
-National (NS16C552V) 0 *
-
-TI (TL16550AFN) 3
-
-CMD (16C550PE) 19
-
-StarTech (ST16C550J) 23
-
-Rockwell reference modem
- with internal 16550 or an
- emulation (RC144DPi/C3000-25) 117
-
-Sierra modem with an internal
- 16550 (SC11951/SC11351) 91
-
-
-It is important to understand that a simple count of differences
-from COMTEST does not reveal a lot about what differences are
-important and which are not. For example, about half of the
-differences reported in the two modems listed above that have
-internal UARTs were caused by the clone UARTs not supporting
-five- and six-bit character modes. The real 16550, 16450, and
-8250 UARTs all support these modes and COMTEST checks the
-functionality of these modes so over fifty differences are
-reported. However, almost no modern modem supports five- or
-six-bit characters, particularly those with error-correction
-and compression capabilities. This means that the differences
-related to five- and six-bit character modes can be discounted.
-
-Many of the differences COMTEST reports have to do with timing. In
-many of the clone designs, when the host reads from one port, the
-status bits in some other port may not update in the same amount
-of time (some faster, some slower) as a real NS16550AFN
-and COMTEST looks for these differences. This means that the number
-of differences can be misleading in that one device may only have
-one or two differences but they are extremely serious, and some
-other device that updates the status registers faster or slower
-than the reference part (that would probably never affect the
-operation of a properly written driver) could have dozens of
-differences reported.
-
-* To date, the author of this document has not found any non-National
-parts that report zero differences using the COMTEST program. It
-should also be noted that National has had five versions of the
-16550 over the years and the newest parts behave a bit differently
-than the classic NS16550AFN that is considered the benchmark for
-functionality. COMTEST appears to turn a blind eye to the
-differences within the National product line and reports no errors
-on the National parts (except for the original 16550) even when
-there are official erratas that describe bugs in the A, B and C
-revisions of the parts, so this bias in COMTEST must be taken into
-account.
-
-COMTEST can be used as a screening tool to alert the administrator
-to the presence of potentially incompatible components
-that might cause problems or have to be handled as a special case.
-
-If you run COMTEST on a 16550 that is in a modem or a modem is
-attached to the serial port, you need to first issue a ATE0&W
-command to the modem so that the modem will not echo any of the test
-characters. If you forget to do this, COMTEST will report at least
-this one difference:
-
-This is a user process PPP software package. Normally, PPP is
-implemented as a part of the kernel (e.g. as managed by pppd) and
-it is thus somewhat hard to debug and/or modify its behavior. However,
-in this implementation PPP is done as a user process with the help of
-the tunnel device driver (tun).
-
-
-
-In essence, this means that rather than running a PPP daemon, the ppp
-program can be run as and when desired. No PPP interface needs to be
-compiled into the kernel, as the program can use the generic tunnel
-device to get data into and out of the kernel.
-
-From here on out, user ppp will be referred to simply as ppp unless a
-distinction needs to be made between it and any other PPP client/server
-software such as pppd. Unless otherwise stated, all commands in this
-section should be executed as root.
-
-
-
-Before you start
-
-This document assumes you are in roughly this position:
-
-You have an account with an Internet Service Provider (ISP) which lets you
-use PPP. Further, you have a modem (or other device) connected and
-configured correctly which allows you to connect to your ISP.
-
-You are going to need the following information to hand:
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Your ISPs phone number(s).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Your login name and password. This can be either a regular
-unix style login/password pair, or a PPP PAP or CHAP
-login/password pair.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The IP address of your ISP's gateway. The gateway is the
-machine to which you will connect and will
-be set up as your default route. If your ISP hasn't
-given you this number, don't worry. We can make one up and
-your ISP's PPP server will tell us when we connect.
-
-This number is known from now on as HISADDR.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Your ISP's netmask setting. Again, if your ISP hasn't given
-you this information, you can safely use a netmask of
-255.255.255.0.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The IP addresses of one or more nameservers. Normally, you
-will be given two IP numbers. You MUST have this
-information unless you run your own nameserver.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-If your ISP allocates you a static IP address and hostname
-then you will need this information too. If not, you will need
-to know from what range of IP addresses your allocated IP address
-will belong. If you haven't been given this range, don't worry.
-You can configure PPP to accept any IP number (as explained later).
-
-
-
-
-
-If you do not have any of the required information, contact your ISP
-and make sure they provide it to you.
-
-
-
-
-Building a ppp ready kernel
-
-As the description states, ``ppp'' uses the kernel ``tun'' device.
-It is necessary to make sure that your kernel has support for this
-device compiled in.
-
-To check this, go to your kernel compile directory (/sys/i386/conf
-or /sys/pc98/conf) and examine your kernel configuration file.
-It needs to have the line
-
-
-
- pseudo-device tun 1
-
-
-
-in it somewhere. The stock GENERIC kernel has this as standard, so
-if you have not installed a custom kernel or you do not have a /sys
-directory, you do not have to change anything.
-
-If your kernel configuration file does not have this line in it, or
-you need to configure more than one tun device (for example, if
-you are setting up a server and could have 16 dialup ppp connections
-at any one time then you will need to use ``16'' instead of ``1''),
-then you should add the line, re-compile, re-install and boot the new
-kernel. Please refer to the
-
-section for more information on kernel configuration.
-
-You can check how many tunnel devices your current kernel has by
-typing the following:
-
-
-
- # ifconfig -a
- tun0: flags=8051<UP,POINTOPOINT,RUNNING,MULTICAST> mtu 1500
- inet 200.10.100.1 --> 203.10.100.24 netmask 0xffffffff
- tun1: flags=8050<POINTOPOINT,RUNNING,MULTICAST> mtu 576
- tun2: flags=8051<UP,POINTOPOINT,RUNNING,MULTICAST> mtu 1500
- inet 203.10.100.1 --> 203.10.100.20 netmask 0xffffffff
- tun3: flags=8050<POINTOPOINT,RUNNING,MULTICAST> mtu 1500
-
-
-
-which in this case shows four tunnel devices, two of which are
-currently configured and being used.
-
-If you have a kernel without the tun device, and you can not
-rebuild it for some reason, all is not lost. You should be
-able to dynamically load the code. Refer to the appropriate
-modload(8) and lkm(4) pages for further details.
-
-You may also wish to take this opportunity to configure a firewall.
-Details can be found in the
-section.
-
-
-
-
-Check the tun device
-
-Most users will only require one ``tun'' device (tun0). If you have
-used more (i.e., a number other than `1' in the pseudo-device line
-in the kernel configuration file) then alter all references to ``tun0''
-below to reflect whichever device number you are using.
-
-The easiest way to make sure that the tun0 device is configured correctly
-is to re-make it. To do this, execute the following commands:
-
-
-
- # cd /dev
- # ./MAKEDEV tun0
-
-
-
-If you require 16 tunnel devices in your kernel, you will need to
-create more than just tun0:
-
-
-
- # cd /dev
- # ./MAKEDEV tun15
-
-
-
-Also, to confirm that the kernel is configured correctly,
-the following command should give the indicated output:
-
-
-
- $ ifconfig tun0
- tun0: flags=8050<POINTOPOINT,RUNNING,MULTICAST> mtu 1500
- $
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Name Resolution Configuration
-
-The resolver is the part of the system that turns IP addresses
-into hostnames and vice versa. It can be configured to look for
-maps that describe IP to hostname mappings in one of two places.
-The first is a file called /etc/hosts (man 5 hosts).
-The second is the Internet Domain Name Service (DNS), a distributed
-data base, the discussion of which is beyond the scope of this document.
-
-This section describes briefly how to configure your resolver.
-
-The resolver is a set of system calls that do the name mappings, but
-you have to tell them where to find their information. You do
-this by first editing the file /etc/host.conf. Do
-not call this file /etc/hosts.conf (note the extra
-``s'') as the results can be confusing.
-
-
-
-Edit the /etc/host.conf file
-
-This file should contain the following two lines:
-
-
-
- hosts
- bind
-
-
-which instructs the resolver to first look in the file
-/etc/hosts, and then to consult the DNS if the
-name was not found.
-
-
-
-
-Edit the /etc/hosts(5) file
-
-This file should contain the IP addresses and names of machines on your
-network. At a bare minimum it should contain entries for the machine
-which will be running ppp. Assuming that your machine is called
-foo.bar.com with the IP address 10.0.0.1, /etc/hosts should
-contain:
-
-
-
- 127.0.0.1 localhost
- 10.0.0.1 foo.bar.com foo
-
-
-
-The first line defines the alias ``localhost'' as a synonym for the
-current machine. Regardless of your own IP address, the IP address for
-this line should always be 127.0.0.1. The second line maps the name
-``foo.bar.com'' (and the shorthand ``foo'') to the IP address 10.0.0.1.
-
-If your provider allocates you a static IP address and name, then use
-these in place of the 10.0.0.1 entry.
-
-
-
-
-Edit the /etc/resolv.conf file
-
-/etc/resolv.conf tells the resolver how to behave. If you are
-running your own DNS, you may leave this file empty. Normally, you will
-need to enter the following line(s):
-
-
-
- nameserver x.x.x.x
- nameserver y.y.y.y
- domain bar.com
-
-
-
-The x.x.x.x and y.y.y.y addresses are those given
-to you by your ISP. Add as many ``nameserver'' lines as your ISP
-provides. The ``domain'' line defaults to your hostname's domain, and
-is probably unnecessary. Refer to the resolv.conf manual page for details
-of other possible entries in this file.
-
-
-
-
-
-PPP Configuration
-
-Both user ppp and pppd (the kernel level implementation of PPP)
-use configuration files located in the /etc/ppp directory.
-The sample configuration files provided are a good reference for
-user ppp, so don't delete them.
-
-Configuring ppp requires that you edit a number of files, depending
-on your requirements. What you put in them depends to some extent
-on whether your ISP allocates IP addresses statically (i.e., you get
-given one IP address, and always use that one) or dynamically (i.e.,
-your IP address can be different for each PPP session).
-
-
-
-PPP and Static IP addresses
-
-
-You will need to create a configuration file called
-/etc/ppp/ppp.conf. It should look similar to the example
-below. Note that lines that end in a ``:'' start in the first column,
-all other lines should be indented as shown using spaces or tabs.
-
-
-
-1 default:
-2 set device /dev/cuaa0
-3 set speed 115200
-4 set dial "ABORT BUSY ABORT NO\\sCARRIER TIMEOUT 5 \"\" ATE1Q0 OK-AT-OK
-\\dATDT\\T TIMEOUT 40 CONNECT"
-5 provider:
-6 set phone "(0123) 456 7890"
-7 set login "TIMEOUT 10 gin:-BREAK-gin: foo word: bar col: ppp"
-8 set timeout 300
-9 deny lqr
-10 set ifaddr x.x.x.x y.y.y.y
-11 delete ALL
-12 add 0 0 HISADDR
-
-
-Do not include the line numbers, they are just for reference in
-this discussion.
-
-
-
-Line 1:
-
-Identifies the default entry. Commands in this entry are
-executed automatically when ppp is run.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 2:
-
-
-Identifies the device to which the modem is connected.
-COM1: is /dev/cuaa0 and COM2: is /dev/cuaa1.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 3:
-
-
-Sets the speed you want to connect at. If 115200 doesn't
-work (it should with any reasonably new modem), try 38400
-instead.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 4:
-
-
-The dial string. User ppp uses an expect-send syntax similar
-to the chat(8) program. Refer to the manual page
-for information on the features of this language.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 5:
-
-
-Identifies an entry for a provider called ``provider''.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 6:
-
-
-Sets the phone number for this provider. Multiple phone
-numbers may be specified using the ``:'' or ``|'' character as
-a separator. The difference between these spearators is
-described in the ppp manual page. To summarize, if you want
-to rotate through the numbers, use the ``:''. If you want to
-always attempt to dial the first number first and only use
-the other numbers if the first number fails, use the ``|''.
-Always quote the entire set of phone numbers as shown.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 7:
-
-
-The login string is of the same chat-like syntax as the dial
-string. In this example, the string works for a service whose
-login session looks like this:
-
-
-
- J. Random Provider
- login: foo
- password: bar
- protocol: ppp
-
-
-
-You will need to alter this script to suit your own needs.
-If you're using PAP or CHAP, there will be no login at this
-point, so your login string can be left blank. See
-
-for further details.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 8:
-
-
-Sets the default timeout (in seconds) for the connection.
-Here, the connection will be closed automatically after
-300 seconds of inactivity. If you never want to timeout,
-set this value to zero.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 9:
-
-
-Ppp can be configured to exchange Link Quality Report (LQR)
-packets. These packets describe how good the physical link
-is. Ppp's LQR strategy is to close the connection when a
-number of these packets are missed. This is useful when
-you have a direct serial link to another machine and the
-DSR modem signal is not available to indicate that the line
-is up. When data saturates the line, LQR packets are
-sometimes ``missed'', causing ppp to close the connection
-prematurely. Refusing to negotiate lqr is sometimes prudent
-(if you are going through a modem) as it avoids this whole
-mess. By default, ppp will not attempt to negotiate LQR,
-but will accept LQR negotiation from the peer.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 10:
-
-
-Sets the interface addresses. The string x.x.x.x should be
-replaced by the IP address that your provider has allocated
-to you. The string y.y.y.y should be replaced by the IP
-address that your ISP indicated for their gateway (the
-machine to which you connect). If your ISP hasn't given you
-a gateway address, use 10.0.0.2/0. If you need to
-use a ``guessed'' address, make sure that you create an entry
-in /etc/ppp/ppp.linkup as per the instructions for
-.
-If this line is omitted, ppp cannot run in or
- mode.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 11:
-
-
-Deletes all existing routing table entries for the acquired
-tun device. This should not normally be necessary, but will
-make sure that PPP is starting with a clean bill of health.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 12:
-
-
-Adds a default route to your ISPs gateway. The special
-word HISADDR is replaced with the gateway address
-specified on line 9. It is important that this line appears
-after line 9, otherwise HISADDR will not yet be
-initialized.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-It is not necessary to add an entry to ppp.linkup when you have
-a static IP address as your routing table entries are already correct
-before you connect. You may however wish to create an entry to invoke
-programs after connection. This is explained later with the sendmail
-example.
-
-Example configuration files can be found in the /etc/ppp
-directory.
-
-
-
-
-PPP and Dynamic IP addresses
-
-
-If your service provider does not assign static IP numbers,
-ppp can be configured to negotiate the local and
-remote addresses. This is done by "guessing" an IP number
-and allowing ppp to set it up correctly using the IP Configuration
-Protocol (IPCP) after connecting. The ppp.conf configuration
-is the same as , with the following change:
-
-
-
-10 set ifaddr 10.0.0.1/0 10.0.0.2/0 255.255.255.0
-
-
-
-Again, do not include the line numbers, they are just for reference in
-this discussion. Indentation of at least one space is required.
-
-
-
-Line 10:
-
-The number after the ``/'' character is the number of bits of
-the address that ppp will insist on. You may wish to use
-IP numbers more appropriate to your circumstances, but the
-above example will almost always work. If it fails, you may
-be able to defeat some broken ppp implementations by
-supplying an additional 0.0.0.0 argument:
-
-
-
- set ifaddr 10.0.0.1/0 10.0.0.2/0 255.255.255.0 0.0.0.0
-
-
-
-This tells ppp to negotiate using address 0.0.0.0
-rather than 10.0.0.1. Do not use 0.0.0.0/0
-as the first argument to set ifaddr as it prevents
-ppp from setting up an initial route in and
- mode.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-You will also need to create an entry in /etc/ppp/ppp.linkup.
-Ppp.linkup is used after a connection has been established. At
-this point, ppp will know what IP addresses should really be
-used. The following entry will delete the existing bogus routes, and
-create correct ones:
-
-
-
-1 provider:
-2 delete ALL
-3 add 0 0 HISADDR
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 1:
-
-On establishing a connection, ppp will look for an entry in
-ppp.linkup according to the following rules: First,
-try to match the same label as we used in ppp.conf.
-If that fails, look for an entry for the IP number of our
-gateway. This entry is a four-octet IP style label. If
-we still haven't found an entry, look for the MYADDR
-entry.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 2:
-
-
-This line tells ppp to delete all existing routes for the
-acquired tun interface (except the direct route entry).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 3:
-
-
-This line tells ppp to add a default route that points to
-HISADDR. HISADDR will be replaced with
-the IP number of the gateway as negotiated in the IPCP.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-See the pmdemand entry in the files /etc/ppp/ppp.conf.sample and
-/etc/ppp/ppp.linkup.sample for a detailed example.
-
-
-
-
-Receiving incoming calls with PPP
-
-This section describes setting up ppp in a server role.
-
-When you configure ppp to receive incoming calls, you
-must decide whether you wish to forward packets for just
-ppp connections, for all interfaces, or not at all.
-To forward for just ppp connections, include the line
-
-
-
- enable proxy
-
-
-
-in your ppp.conf file. If you wish to forward packets on all
-interfaces, use the
-
-
-
- gateway=YES
-
-
-
-option in /etc/rc.conf (this file used to be called
-/etc/sysconfig).
-
-
-
-Which getty?
-
-
-provides a good description on enabling dialup services using getty.
-
-An alternative to getty is
-mgetty,
-a smarter version of getty designed with dialup lines in mind.
-
-The advantages of using mgetty is that it actively talks to
-modems, meaning if port is turned off in /etc/ttys then
-your modem won't answer the phone.
-
-Later versions of mgetty (from 0.99beta onwards) also support the
-automatic detection of PPP streams, allowing your clients script-less
-access to your server.
-
-Refer to for more
-information on mgetty.
-
-
-
-
-PPP permissions
-
-PPP must normally be run as user id 0. If however you wish to allow
-ppp to run in server mode as a normal user by executing ppp as described
-below, that user must be given permission to run ppp by adding them to
-the network group in /etc/group.
-
-
-
-
-Setting up a PPP shell for dynamic-IP users
-
-Create a file called /etc/ppp/ppp-shell containing the
-following:
-
-
-
- #!/bin/sh
- IDENT=`echo $0 | sed -e 's/^.*-\(.*\)$/\1/'`
- CALLEDAS="$IDENT"
- TTY=`tty`
-
- if [ x$IDENT = xdialup ]; then
- IDENT=`basename $TTY`
- fi
-
- echo "PPP for $CALLEDAS on $TTY"
- echo "Starting PPP for $IDENT"
-
- exec /usr/sbin/ppp -direct $IDENT
-
-
-
-This script should be executable. Now make a symbolic link called
-ppp-dialup to this script using the following commands:
-
-
-
- # ln -s /etc/ppp/ppp-shell /etc/ppp/ppp-dialup
-
-
-
-You should use this script as the shell for all your dialup
-ppp users. This is an example from /etc/password
-for a dialup PPP user with username pchilds. (remember don't directly
-edit the password file, use vipw)
-
-
-
- pchilds:*:1011:300:Peter Childs PPP:/home/ppp:/etc/ppp/ppp-dialup
-
-
-
-Create a /home/ppp directory that is world readable
-containing the following 0 byte files
-
-
-
- -r--r--r-- 1 root wheel 0 May 27 02:23 .hushlogin
- -r--r--r-- 1 root wheel 0 May 27 02:22 .rhosts
-
-
-
-which prevents /etc/motd from being displayed.
-
-
-
-
-Setting up a PPP shell for static-IP users
-
-Create the ppp-shell file as above and for each account with
-statically assigned IPs create a symbolic link to ppp-shell.
-
-For example, if you have three dialup customers fred, sam, and mary,
-that you route class C networks for, you would type the following:
-
-
-
- # ln -s /etc/ppp/ppp-shell /etc/ppp/ppp-fred
- # ln -s /etc/ppp/ppp-shell /etc/ppp/ppp-sam
- # ln -s /etc/ppp/ppp-shell /etc/ppp/ppp-mary
-
-
-
-Each of these users dialup accounts should have their shell set
-to the symbolic link created above. (ie. mary's shell should be
-/etc/ppp/ppp-mary).
-
-
-
-
-Setting up ppp.conf for dynamic-IP users
-
-The /etc/ppp/ppp.conf file should contain something along
-the lines of
-
-
-
- default:
- set debug phase lcp chat
- set timeout 0
-
- ttyd0:
- set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.100.20 255.255.255.255
- enable proxy
-
- ttyd1:
- set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.100.21 255.255.255.255
- enable proxy
-
-
-
-Note the indenting is important.
-
-The default: section is loaded for each session. For each
-dialup line enabled in /etc/ttys create an entry similar
-to the one for ttyd0: above. Each line should get a unique
-IP from your pool of ip address for dynamic users.
-
-
-
-
-Setting up ppp.conf for static-IP users
-
-Along with the contents of the sample /etc/ppp/ppp.conf
-above you should add a section for each of the statically assigned
-dialup users. We will continue with our fred, sam, and mary example.
-
-
-
- fred:
- set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.101.1 255.255.255.255
-
- sam:
- set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.102.1 255.255.255.255
-
- mary:
- set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.103.1 255.255.255.255
-
-
-
-The file /etc/ppp/ppp.linkup should also contain routing
-information for each static IP user if required. The line below
-would add a route for the 203.14.101.0 class C via
-the client's ppp link.
-
-
-
- fred:
- add 203.14.101.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 HISADDR
-
- sam:
- add 203.14.102.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 HISADDR
-
- mary:
- add 203.14.103.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 HISADDR
-
-
-
-
-
-
-More on mgetty, AutoPPP, and MS extensions
-
-
-
-Mgetty and AutoPPP
-
-
-Configuring and compiling mgetty with the AUTO_PPP option enabled
-allows mgetty to detect the LCP phase of PPP connections and automatically
-spawn off a ppp shell. However, since the default login/password sequence
-does not occur it is necessary to authenticate users using either PAP
-or CHAP.
-
-This section assumes the user has successfully configured, compiled, and
-installed a version of mgetty with the AUTO_PPP option (v0.99beta or later)
-
-Make sure your /usr/local/etc/mgetty+sendfax/login.config file
-has the following in it:
-
-
-
- /AutoPPP/ - - /etc/ppp/ppp-pap-dialup
-
-
-
-This will tell mgetty to run the ppp-pap-dialup script for
-detected PPP connections.
-
-Create a file called /etc/ppp/ppp-pap-dialup containing the
-following (the file should be executable):
-
-
-
- #!/bin/sh
- TTY=`tty`
- IDENT=`basename $TTY`
- exec /usr/sbin/ppp -direct pap$IDENT
-
-
-
-For each dialup line enabled in /etc/ttys create a corresponding
-entry in /etc/ppp/ppp.conf. This will happily co-exist with
-the definitions we created above.
-
-
-
- papttyd0:
- enable pap
- set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.100.20 255.255.255.255
- enable proxy
-
- papttyd1:
- enable pap
- set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.100.21 255.255.255.255
- enable proxy
-
-
-
-Each user logging in with this method will need to have a username/password
-in /etc/ppp/ppp.secret file, or alternatively add the
-
-
-
- enable passwdauth
-
-
-
-option to authenticate users via pap from the /etc/passwordd
-file. (*)
-
-(*) Note this option only available in 2.2-961014-SNAP or later, or by
-getting the updated ppp code for 2.1.x. (see MS extensions below for details)
-
-
-
-
-MS extentions
-
-From 2.2-961014-SNAP onwards it is possible to allow the automatic
-negotiation of DNS and NetBIOS name servers with clients supporting
-this feature (namely Win95/NT clients). See RFC1877 for more details
-on the protocol.
-
-An example of enabling these extensions in your
-/etc/ppp/ppp.conf file is illustrated below.
-
-
-
- default:
- set debug phase lcp chat
- set timeout 0
- enable msext
- set ns 203.14.100.1 203.14.100.2
- set nbns 203.14.100.5
-
-
-
-This will tell the clients the primary and secondary
-name server addresses, and a netbios nameserver host.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-PAP and CHAP authentication
-
-
-Some ISPs set their system up so that the authentication part of
-your connection is done using either of the PAP or CHAP authentication
-mechanisms. If this is the case, your ISP will not give a login:
-prompt when you connect, but will start talking PPP immediately.
-
-PAP is less secure than CHAP, but security is not normally an issue
-here as passwords, although being sent as plain text with PAP, are being
-transmitted down a serial line only. There's not much room for hackers
-to "eavesdrop".
-
-Referring back to the or sections, the following alterations
-must be made:
-
-
-
-7 set login
-.....
-13 set authname MyUserName
-14 set authkey MyPassword
-
-
-
-As always, do not include the line numbers, they are just for reference
-in this discussion. Indentation of at least one space is required.
-
-
-
-Line 7:
-
-Your ISP will not normally require that you log into the
-server if you're using PAP or CHAP. You must therefore
-disable your "set login" string.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 13:
-
-
-This line specifies your PAP/CHAP user name. You will need
-to insert the correct value for MyUserName.
-
-
-
-
-Line 14:
-
-
-This line specifies your PAP/CHAP password. You will need
-to insert the correct value for MyPassword.
-You may want to add an additional line
-
-15 accept PAP
-
-
-or
-
-15 accept CHAP
-
-
-to make it obvious that this is the intention, but PAP
-and CHAP are accepted by default.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-NOTE: Your authkey will be logged if you have
-command logging turned on (set log +command). Care should be
-taken when deciding the ppp log file permissions.
-
-
-
-
-Changing your ppp configuration on the fly
-
-It is possible to talk to the ppp program while it is running in
-the background, but only if a suitable password has been set up.
-
-By default, ppp will listen to a TCP port of 3000 + tunno,
-where tunno is the number of the tun device acquired, however,
-if a password for the local machine is not set up in
-/etc/ppp/ppp.secret, no server connection will be created.
-To set your password, put the following line in
-/etc/ppp/ppp.secret:
-
-
-
-foo MyPassword
-
-
-
-where foo is your local hostname (run hostname -s to
-determine the correct name), and MyPassword is the unencrypted
-password that you wish to use. /etc/ppp/ppp.secret should
-NOT be accessable by anyone without user id 0. This means that
-/, /etc and /etc/ppp should not be writable,
-and ppp.secret should be owned by user id 0 and have permissions
-0600.
-
-It is also possible to select a specific port number or to have ppp listen
-to a local unix domain socket rather than to a TCP socket. Refer to the
-set socket command in manual page for further details.
-
-Once a socket has been set up, the pppctl(8) program may be used
-in scripts that wish to manipulate the running program.
-
-
-
-
-
-Final system configuration
-
-
-You now have PPP configured, but there are a few more things to
-do before it is ready to work. They all involve editing the
-/etc/rc.conf file (was /etc/sysconfig).
-
-Working from the top down in this file, make sure the ``hostname='' line
-is set, e.g.:
-
-
-
- hostname=foo.bar.com
-
-
-
-If your ISP has supplied you with a static IP address and name, it's
-probably best that you use this name as your host name.
-
-Look for the network_interfaces variable. If you want to configure
-your system to dial your ISP on demand, make sure the tun0 device is
-added to the list, otherwise remove it.
-
-
-
- network_interfaces="lo0 tun0"
- ifconfig_tun0=
-
-
-
-Note, the ifconfig_tun0 variable should be empty, and
-a file called /etc/start_if.tun0 should be created. This file
-should contain the line
-
-
-
- ppp -auto mysystem
-
-
-
-This script is executed at network configuration time, starting
-your ppp daemon in automatic mode. If you have a LAN for which
-this machine is a gateway, you may also wish to use the
- switch. Refer to the manual page for further
-details.
-
-Set the router program to ``NO'' with the line
-
-
-
- router_enable=NO (/etc/rc.conf)
- router=NO (/etc/sysconfig)
-
-
-
-It is important that the routed daemon is not started
-(it's started by default) as routed tends to delete the default
-routing table entries created by ppp.
-
-It is probably worth your while ensuring that the ``sendmail_flags'' line
-does not include the ``-q'' option, otherwise sendmail will attempt to do
-a network lookup every now and then, possibly causing your machine to dial
-out. You may try:
-
-
-
- sendmail_flags="-bd"
-
-
-
-The upshot of this is that you must force sendmail to re-examine the
-mail queue whenever the ppp link is up by typing:
-
-
-
- # /usr/sbin/sendmail -q
-
-
-
-You may wish to use the !bg command in ppp.linkup to do this
-automatically:
-
-
-
-1 provider:
-2 delete ALL
-3 add 0 0 HISADDR
-4 !bg sendmail -bd -q30m
-
-
-
-If you don't like this, it is possible to set up a "dfilter" to block
-SMTP traffic. Refer to the sample files for further details.
-
-All that is left is to reboot the machine.
-
-After rebooting, you can now either type
-
-
-
- # ppp
-
-
-
-and then ``dial provider'' to start the PPP session, or, if you
-want ppp to establish sessions automatically when there is outbound
-traffic (and you haven't created the start_if.tun0 script), type
-
-
-
- # ppp -auto provider
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Summary
-
-To recap, the following steps are necessary when setting up ppp
-for the first time:
-
-Client side:
-
-
-
-
-
-Ensure that the tun device is built into your kernel.
-
-
-
-Ensure that the tunX device file is available in the
-/dev directory.
-
-
-
-Create an entry in /etc/ppp/ppp.conf. The
-pmdemand example should suffice for most
-ISPs.
-
-
-
-If you have a dynamic IP address, create an entry in
-/etc/ppp/ppp.linkup.
-
-
-
-Update your /etc/rc.conf (or sysconfig) file.
-
-
-
-Create a start_if.tun0 script if you require demand
-dialing.
-
-
-
-
-
-Server side:
-
-
-
-Ensure that the tun device is built into your kernel.
-
-
-
-Ensure that the tunX device file is available in the
-/dev directory.
-
-
-
-Create an entry in /etc/passwd (using the vipw(8)
-program).
-
-
-
-Create a profile in this users home directory that
-runs ``ppp -direct direct-server'' or similar.
-
-
-
-Create an entry in /etc/ppp/ppp.conf. The
-direct-server example should suffice.
-
-
-
-Create an entry in /etc/ppp/ppp.linkup.
-
-
-
-Update your /etc/rc.conf (or sysconfig) file.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Acknowledgments
-
-This section of the handbook was last updated on Sun Sep 7, 1997
-by &a.brian;
-
-Thanks to the following for their input, comments & suggestions:
-
-&a.nik;
-
-&a.dirkvangulik;
-
-&a.pjc;
-
-
-
-
-
-Setting up Kernel PPP
-
-Contributed by &a.gena;.
-
-Before you start setting up PPP on your machine make
-sure that pppd is located in /usr/sbin and directory /etc/ppp
-exists.
-
-pppd can work in two modes:
-
-
-
- as a "client" , i.e. you want to connect your machine to outside
-world via PPP serial connection or modem line.
-
-
-
-
- as a "server" , i.e. your machine is located on the network and
-used to connect other computers using PPP.
-
-
-
-
-In both cases you will need to set up an options file (/etc/ppp/options
-or ~/.ppprc if you have more then one user on your machine that uses
-PPP).
-
-You also will need some modem/serial software ( preferably kermit )
-so you can dial and establish connection with remote host.
-
-
-
-Working as a PPP client
-
-I used the following /etc/ppp/options to connect to CISCO terminal
-server PPP line.
-crtscts # enable hardware flow control
-modem # modem control line
-noipdefault # remote PPP server must supply your IP address.
- # if the remote host doesn't send your IP during IPCP
- # negotiation , remove this option
-passive # wait for LCP packets
-domain ppp.foo.com # put your domain name here
-
-:<remote_ip> # put the IP of remote PPP host here
- # it will be used to route packets via PPP link
- # if you didn't specified the noipdefault option
- # change this line to <local_ip>:<remote_ip>
-
-defaultroute # put this if you want that PPP server will be your
- # default router
-
-
-To connect:
-
-
-
- Dial to the remote host using kermit ( or other modem program )
-enter your user name and password ( or whatever is needed to enable PPP
-on the remote host )
-
-
-
-
- Exit kermit. ( without hanging up the line )
-
-
-
-
- enter:
-/usr/src/usr.sbin/pppd.new/pppd /dev/tty01 19200
-
-( put the appropriate speed and device name )
-
-
-
-
-
-Now your computer is connected with PPP. If the connection fails for some
-reasons you can add the "debug" option to the /etc/ppp/options file
-and check messages on the console to track the problem
-
-Following /etc/ppp/pppup script will make all 3 stages automatically:
-#!/bin/sh
-ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep
-pid=`ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
-if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
- echo 'killing pppd, PID=' ${pid}
- kill ${pid}
-fi
-ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep
-pid=`ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
-if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
- echo 'killing kermit, PID=' ${pid}
- kill -9 ${pid}
-fi
-
-ifconfig ppp0 down
-ifconfig ppp0 delete
-
-kermit -y /etc/ppp/kermit.dial
-pppd /dev/tty01 19200
-
-
-/etc/ppp/kermit.dial is kermit script that dials and makes all
-necessary authorization on the remote host.
-( Example of such script is attached to the end of this document )
-
-Use the following /etc/ppp/pppdown script to disconnect the PPP line:
-#!/bin/sh
-pid=`ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
-if [ X${pid} != "X" ] ; then
- echo 'killing pppd, PID=' ${pid}
- kill -TERM ${pid}
-fi
-
-ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep
-pid=`ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
-if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
- echo 'killing kermit, PID=' ${pid}
- kill -9 ${pid}
-fi
-
-/sbin/ifconfig ppp0 down
-/sbin/ifconfig ppp0 delete
-kermit -y /etc/ppp/kermit.hup
-/etc/ppp/ppptest
-
-
-Check if PPP is still running (/usr/etc/ppp/ppptest):
-#!/bin/sh
-pid=`ps ax| grep pppd |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
-if [ X${pid} != "X" ] ; then
- echo 'pppd running: PID=' ${pid-NONE}
-else
- echo 'No pppd running.'
-fi
-set -x
-netstat -n -I ppp0
-ifconfig ppp0
-
-
-Hangs up modem line (/etc/ppp/kermit.hup):
-set line /dev/tty01 ; put your modem device here
-set speed 19200
-set file type binary
-set file names literal
-set win 8
-set rec pack 1024
-set send pack 1024
-set block 3
-set term bytesize 8
-set command bytesize 8
-set flow none
-
-pau 1
-out +++
-inp 5 OK
-out ATH0\13
-echo \13
-exit
-
-
-Here is an alternate method using chat instead of
-kermit.
-
-Contributed by &a.rhuff;.
-
-The following two files are sufficient to accomplish a pppd
-connection.
-
-/etc/ppp/options:
- /dev/cuaa1 115200
-
-crtscts # enable hardware flow control
-modem # modem control line
-connect "/usr/bin/chat -f /etc/ppp/login.chat.script"
-noipdefault # remote PPP server must supply your IP address.
- # if the remote host doesn't send your IP during
- # IPCP negotiation, remove this option
-passive # wait for LCP packets
-domain <your.domain> # put your domain name here
-
-: # put the IP of remote PPP host here
- # it will be used to route packets via PPP link
- # if you didn't specified the noipdefault option
- # change this line to <local_ip>:<remote_ip>
-
-defaultroute # put this if you want that PPP server will be
- # your default router
-
-
-/etc/ppp/login.chat.script:
-
-(This should actually go into a single line.)
-
-
-ABORT BUSY ABORT 'NO CARRIER' "" AT OK ATDT<phone.number>
- CONNECT "" TIMEOUT 10 ogin:-\\r-ogin: <login-id>
- TIMEOUT 5 sword: <password>
-
-
-Once these are installed and modified correctly, all you need to
-do is
-
-pppd.
-
- This sample based primarily on information provided by: Trev Roydhouse
-<Trev.Roydhouse@f401.n711.z3.fidonet.org> and used by
-permission.
-
-
-
-
-Working as a PPP server
-
-/etc/ppp/options:
-crtscts # Hardware flow control
-netmask 255.255.255.0 # netmask ( not required )
-192.114.208.20:192.114.208.165 # ip's of local and remote hosts
- # local ip must be different from one
- # you assigned to the ethernet ( or other )
- # interface on your machine.
- # remote IP is ip address that will be
- # assigned to the remote machine
-domain ppp.foo.com # your domain
-passive # wait for LCP
-modem # modem line
-
-
-Following /etc/ppp/pppserv script will enable ppp server on your
-machine
-#!/bin/sh
-ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep
-pid=`ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
-if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
- echo 'killing pppd, PID=' ${pid}
- kill ${pid}
-fi
-ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep
-pid=`ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
-if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
- echo 'killing kermit, PID=' ${pid}
- kill -9 ${pid}
-fi
-
-# reset ppp interface
-ifconfig ppp0 down
-ifconfig ppp0 delete
-
-# enable autoanswer mode
-kermit -y /etc/ppp/kermit.ans
-
-# run ppp
-pppd /dev/tty01 19200
-
-
-Use this /etc/ppp/pppservdown script to stop ppp server:
-#!/bin/sh
-ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep
-pid=`ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
-if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
- echo 'killing pppd, PID=' ${pid}
- kill ${pid}
-fi
-ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep
-pid=`ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
-if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
- echo 'killing kermit, PID=' ${pid}
- kill -9 ${pid}
-fi
-ifconfig ppp0 down
-ifconfig ppp0 delete
-
-kermit -y /etc/ppp/kermit.noans
-
-
-Following kermit script will enable/disable autoanswer mode
-on your modem (/etc/ppp/kermit.ans):
-set line /dev/tty01
-set speed 19200
-set file type binary
-set file names literal
-set win 8
-set rec pack 1024
-set send pack 1024
-set block 3
-set term bytesize 8
-set command bytesize 8
-set flow none
-
-pau 1
-out +++
-inp 5 OK
-out ATH0\13
-inp 5 OK
-echo \13
-out ATS0=1\13 ; change this to out ATS0=0\13 if you want to disable
- ; autoanswer mod
-inp 5 OK
-echo \13
-exit
-
-
-This /etc/ppp/kermit.dial script is used for dialing and authorizing
-on remote host. You will need to customize it for your needs.
-Put your login and password in this script , also you will need
-to change input statement depending on responses from your modem
-and remote host.
-;
-; put the com line attached to the modem here:
-;
-set line /dev/tty01
-;
-; put the modem speed here:
-;
-set speed 19200
-set file type binary ; full 8 bit file xfer
-set file names literal
-set win 8
-set rec pack 1024
-set send pack 1024
-set block 3
-set term bytesize 8
-set command bytesize 8
-set flow none
-set modem hayes
-set dial hangup off
-set carrier auto ; Then SET CARRIER if necessary,
-set dial display on ; Then SET DIAL if necessary,
-set input echo on
-set input timeout proceed
-set input case ignore
-def \%x 0 ; login prompt counter
-goto slhup
-
-:slcmd ; put the modem in command mode
-echo Put the modem in command mode.
-clear ; Clear unread characters from input buffer
-pause 1
-output +++ ; hayes escape sequence
-input 1 OK\13\10 ; wait for OK
-if success goto slhup
-output \13
-pause 1
-output at\13
-input 1 OK\13\10
-if fail goto slcmd ; if modem doesn't answer OK, try again
-
-:slhup ; hang up the phone
-clear ; Clear unread characters from input buffer
-pause 1
-echo Hanging up the phone.
-output ath0\13 ; hayes command for on hook
-input 2 OK\13\10
-if fail goto slcmd ; if no OK answer, put modem in command mode
-
-:sldial ; dial the number
-pause 1
-echo Dialing.
-output atdt9,550311\13\10 ; put phone number here
-assign \%x 0 ; zero the time counter
-
-:look
-clear ; Clear unread characters from input buffer
-increment \%x ; Count the seconds
-input 1 {CONNECT }
-if success goto sllogin
-reinput 1 {NO CARRIER\13\10}
-if success goto sldial
-reinput 1 {NO DIALTONE\13\10}
-if success goto slnodial
-reinput 1 {\255}
-if success goto slhup
-reinput 1 {\127}
-if success goto slhup
-if < \%x 60 goto look
-else goto slhup
-
-:sllogin ; login
-assign \%x 0 ; zero the time counter
-pause 1
-echo Looking for login prompt.
-
-:slloop
-increment \%x ; Count the seconds
-clear ; Clear unread characters from input buffer
-output \13
-;
-; put your expected login prompt here:
-;
-input 1 {Username: }
-if success goto sluid
-reinput 1 {\255}
-if success goto slhup
-reinput 1 {\127}
-if success goto slhup
-if < \%x 10 goto slloop ; try 10 times to get a login prompt
-else goto slhup ; hang up and start again if 10 failures
-
-:sluid
-;
-; put your userid here:
-;
-output ppp-login\13
-input 1 {Password: }
-;
-; put your password here:
-;
-output ppp-password\13
-input 1 {Entering SLIP mode.}
-echo
-quit
-
-:slnodial
-echo \7No dialtone. Check the telephone line!\7
-exit 1
-
-; local variables:
-; mode: csh
-; comment-start: "; "
-; comment-start-skip: "; "
-; end:
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Setting up a SLIP Client
-
-Contributed by &a.asami;8 Aug 1995.
-
-The following is one way to set up a FreeBSD machine for SLIP on a
-static host network. For dynamic hostname assignments (i.e., your
-address changes each time you dial up), you probably need to do
-something much fancier.
-
-First, determine which serial port your modem is connected to. I have
-a symbolic link /dev/modem -> cuaa1, and only use the modem name in my
-configuration files. It can become quite cumbersome when you need to
-fix a bunch of files in /etc and .kermrc's all over the system! (Note
-that /dev/cuaa0 is COM1, cuaa1 is COM2, etc.)
-
-Make sure you have
-pseudo-device sl 1
-
-in your kernel's config file. It is included in the GENERIC kernel,
-so this will not be a problem unless you deleted it.
-
-
-
-Things you have to do only once
-
-
-
-
-
-Add your home machine, the gateway and nameservers to your
-/etc/hosts file. Mine looks like this:
-127.0.0.1 localhost loghost
-136.152.64.181 silvia.HIP.Berkeley.EDU silvia.HIP silvia
-
-136.152.64.1 inr-3.Berkeley.EDU inr-3 slip-gateway
-128.32.136.9 ns1.Berkeley.edu ns1
-128.32.136.12 ns2.Berkeley.edu ns2
-
-By the way, silvia is the name of the car that I had when I was
-back in Japan (it is called 2?0SX here in U.S.).
-
-
-
-
-Make sure you have "hosts" before "bind" in your /etc/host.conf.
-Otherwise, funny things may happen.
-
-
-
-
-Edit the file /etc/rc.conf. Note that you should edit
-the file /etc/sysconfig instead if you are running FreeBSD
-previous to version 2.2.2.
-
-
-
-Set your hostname by editing the line that says:
-hostname=myname.my.domain
-
-You should give it your full Internet hostname.
-
-
-
-
-Add sl0 to the list of network interfaces by changing the line
-that says:
-network_interfaces="lo0"
-
-to:
-network_interfaces="lo0 sl0"
-
-
-
-
-
-Set the startup flags of sl0 by adding a line:
-ifconfig_sl0="inet ${hostname} slip-gateway netmask 0xffffff00 up"
-
-
-
-
-
-Designate the default router by changing the line:
-defaultrouter=NO
-
-to:
-defaultrouter=slip-gateway
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Make a file /etc/resolv.conf which contains:
-domain HIP.Berkeley.EDU
-nameserver 128.32.136.9
-nameserver 128.32.136.12
-
-As you can see, these set up the nameserver hosts. Of course, the
-actual domain names and addresses depend on your environment.
-
-
-
-
-Set the password for root and toor (and any other accounts that
-does not have a password). Use passwd, do not edit the /etc/passwd
-or /etc/master.passwd files!
-
-
-
-
-Reboot your machine and make sure it comes up with the correct
-hostname.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Making a SLIP connection
-
-
-
-
-
-Dial up, type "slip" at the prompt, enter your machine name and
-password. The things you need to enter depends on your
-environment. I use kermit, with a script like this:
-# kermit setup
-set modem hayes
-set line /dev/modem
-set speed 115200
-set parity none
-set flow rts/cts
-set terminal bytesize 8
-set file type binary
-# The next macro will dial up and login
-define slip dial 643-9600, input 10 =>, if failure stop, -
-output slip\x0d, input 10 Username:, if failure stop, -
-output silvia\x0d, input 10 Password:, if failure stop, -
-output ***\x0d, echo \x0aCONNECTED\x0a
-
-(of course, you have to change the hostname and password to fit
-yours). Then you can just type "slip" from the kermit prompt to
-get connected.
-
-Note: leaving your password in plain text anywhere in the
-filesystem is generally a BAD idea. Do it at your own risk. I am
-just too lazy.
-
-
-
-
-Leave the kermit there (you can suspend it by "z") and as root,
-type
-slattach -h -c -s 115200 /dev/modem
-
-if you are able to "ping" hosts on the other side of the router,
-you are connected! If it does not work, you might want to try "-a"
-instead of "-c" as an argument to slattach.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-How to shutdown the connection
-
-Type "kill -INT `cat /var/run/slattach.modem.pid`" (as root) to
-kill slattach. Then go back to kermit ("fg" if you suspended it)
-and exit from it ("q").
-
-The slattach man page says you have to use "ifconfig sl0 down" to
-mark the interface down, but this does not seem to make any
-difference for me. ("ifconfig sl0" reports the same thing.)
-
-Some times, your modem might refuse to drop the carrier (mine
-often does). In that case, simply start kermit and quit it again.
-It usually goes out on the second try.
-
-
-
-
-Troubleshooting
-
-If it does not work, feel free to ask me. The things that people
-tripped over so far:
-
-
-
-Not using "-c" or "-a" in slattach (I have no idea why this can be
-fatal, but adding this flag solved the problem for at least one
-person)
-
-
-
-
-Using "s10" instead of "sl0" (might be hard to see the difference on
-some fonts).
-
-
-
-
-Try "ifconfig sl0" to see your interface status. I get:
-silvia# ifconfig sl0
-sl0: flags=10<POINTOPOINT>
- inet 136.152.64.181 --> 136.152.64.1 netmask ffffff00
-
-
-
-
-
-Also, netstat -r will give the routing table, in case you get
-the "no route to host" messages from ping. Mine looks like:
-silvia# netstat -r
-Routing tables
-Destination Gateway Flags Refs Use IfaceMTU Rtt
-Netmasks:
-(root node)
-(root node)
-
-Route Tree for Protocol Family inet:
-(root node) =>
-default inr-3.Berkeley.EDU UG 8 224515 sl0 - -
-localhost.Berkel localhost.Berkeley UH 5 42127 lo0 - 0.438
-inr-3.Berkeley.E silvia.HIP.Berkele UH 1 0 sl0 - -
-silvia.HIP.Berke localhost.Berkeley UGH 34 47641234 lo0 - 0.438
-(root node)
-
-(this is after transferring a bunch of files, your numbers should be
-smaller).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Setting up a SLIP Server
-
-Contributed by &a.ghelmer;.
-v1.0, 15 May 1995.
-
-This document provides suggestions for setting up SLIP Server services
-on a FreeBSD system, which typically means configuring your system to
-automatically startup connections upon login for remote SLIP clients.
-The author has written this document based on his experience;
-however, as your system and needs may be different, this document may
-not answer all of your questions, and the author cannot be responsible
-if you damage your system or lose data due to attempting to follow the
-suggestions here.
-
-This guide was originally written for SLIP Server services on a
-FreeBSD 1.x system. It has been modified to reflect changes in the
-pathnames and the removal of the SLIP interface compression flags in
-early versions of FreeBSD 2.X, which appear to be the only major
-changes between FreeBSD versions. If you do encounter mistakes in
-this document, please email the author with enough information to
-help correct the problem.
-
-
-
-Prerequisites
-
-This document is very technical in nature, so background knowledge is
-required. It is assumed that you are familiar with the TCP/IP network
-protocol, and in particular, network and node addressing, network
-address masks, subnetting, routing, and routing protocols, such as
-RIP. Configuring SLIP services on a dial-up server requires a
-knowledge of these concepts, and if you are not familiar with them,
-please read a copy of either Craig Hunt's TCP/IP Network
-Administration published by O'Reilly & Associates, Inc. (ISBN
-Number 0-937175-82-X), or Douglas Comer's books on the TCP/IP
-protocol.
-
-It is further assumed that you have already setup your modem(s) and
-configured the appropriate system files to allow logins through your
-modems. If you have not prepared your system for this yet, please see
-the tutorial for configuring dialup services; if you have a World-Wide
-Web browser available, browse the list of tutorials at
-http://www.freebsd.org/; otherwise, check the place
-where you found this document for a document named dialup.txt or
-something similar. You may also want to check the manual pages for
-sio(4) for information on the serial port device driver and
-ttys(5), gettytab(5), getty(8), & init(8) for
-information relevant to configuring the system to accept logins on
-modems, and perhaps stty(1) for information on setting serial
-port parameters [such as clocal for directly-connected
-serial interfaces].
-
-
-
-
-Quick Overview
-
-In its typical configuration, using FreeBSD as a SLIP server works as
-follows: a SLIP user dials up your FreeBSD SLIP Server system and logs
-in with a special SLIP login ID that uses /usr/sbin/sliplogin
-as the special user's shell. The sliplogin program browses the
-file /etc/sliphome/slip.hosts to find a matching line for
-the special user, and if it finds a match, connects the serial line to
-an available SLIP interface and then runs the shell script
-/etc/sliphome/slip.login to configure the SLIP interface.
-
-
-
-An Example of a SLIP Server Login
-
-For example, if a SLIP user ID were Shelmerg, Shelmerg's
-entry in /etc/master.passwd would look something like this
-(except it would be all on one line):
-
-
-
-Shelmerg:password:1964:89::0:0:Guy Helmer - SLIP:
- /usr/users/Shelmerg:/usr/sbin/sliplogin
-
-
-
-and, when Shelmerg logs in, sliplogin will search
-/etc/sliphome/slip.hosts for a line that had a matching user
-ID; for example, there may be a line in
-/etc/sliphome/slip.hosts that reads:
-
-
-
-Shelmerg dc-slip sl-helmer 0xfffffc00 autocomp
-
-
-
-sliplogin will find that matching line, hook the serial line into
-the next available SLIP interface, and then execute
-/etc/sliphome/slip.login like this:
-
-
-
-/etc/sliphome/slip.login 0 19200 Shelmerg dc-slip sl-helmer 0xfffffc00 autocomp
-
-
-
-If all goes well, /etc/sliphome/slip.login will issue an
-ifconfig for the SLIP interface to which sliplogin
-attached itself (slip interface 0, in the above example, which was the
-first parameter in the list given to slip.login) to set the
-local IP address (dc-slip), remote IP address
-(sl-helmer), network mask for the SLIP interface
-(0xfffffc00), and any additional flags (autocomp).
-If something goes wrong, sliplogin usually logs good
-informational messages via the daemon syslog facility, which usually
-goes into /var/log/messages (see the manual pages for
-syslogd(8) and syslog.conf(5), and perhaps check
-/etc/syslog.conf to see to which files syslogd is
-logging).
-
-OK, enough of the examples -- let us dive into setting up the system.
-
-
-
-
-
-Kernel Configuration
-
-FreeBSD's default kernels usually come with two SLIP interfaces
-defined (sl0 and sl1); you can use netstat
--i to see whether these interfaces are defined in your kernel.
-
-Sample output from netstat -i:
-
-
-
-Name Mtu Network Address Ipkts Ierrs Opkts Oerrs Coll
-ed0 1500 <Link>0.0.c0.2c.5f.4a 291311 0 174209 0 133
-ed0 1500 138.247.224 ivory 291311 0 174209 0 133
-lo0 65535 <Link> 79 0 79 0 0
-lo0 65535 loop localhost 79 0 79 0 0
-sl0* 296 <Link> 0 0 0 0 0
-sl1* 296 <Link> 0 0 0 0 0
-
-
-
-The sl0 and sl1 interfaces shown in netstat
--i's output indicate that there are two SLIP interfaces built
-into the kernel. (The asterisks after the sl0 and
-sl1 indicate that the interfaces are ``down''.)
-
-However, FreeBSD's default kernels do not come configured to forward
-packets (ie, your FreeBSD machine will not act as a router) due to
-Internet RFC requirements for Internet hosts (see RFC's 1009
-[Requirements for Internet Gateways], 1122
-[Requirements for Internet Hosts -- Communication Layers],
-and perhaps 1127 [A Perspective on the Host Requirements
-RFCs]), so if you want your FreeBSD SLIP Server to act as a
-router, you will have to edit the /etc/rc.conf file (called
-/etc/sysconfig in FreeBSD releases prior to 2.2.2) and change
-the setting of the gateway variable to YES. If you
-have an older system which predates even the /etc/sysconfig
-file, then add the following command:
-sysctl -w net.inet.ip.forwarding = 1
-
-to your /etc/rc.local file.
-
-You will then need to reboot for the new settings to take effect.
-
-You will notice that near the end of the default kernel configuration
-file (/sys/i386/conf/GENERIC) is a line that reads:
-
-
-
-pseudo-device sl 2
-
-
-
-which is the line that defines the number of SLIP devices available in
-the kernel; the number at the end of the line is the maximum number of
-SLIP connections that may be operating simultaneously.
-
-Please refer to
-for help in reconfiguring your kernel.
-
-
-
-
-Sliplogin Configuration
-
-As mentioned earlier, there are three files in the
-/etc/sliphome directory that are part of the configuration
-for /usr/sbin/sliplogin (see sliplogin(8) for the
-actual manual page for sliplogin): slip.hosts, which
-defines the SLIP users & their associated IP addresses;
-slip.login, which usually just configures the SLIP interface;
-and (optionally) slip.logout, which undoes
-slip.login's effects when the serial connection is
-terminated.
-
-
-
-slip.hosts Configuration
-
-/etc/sliphome/slip.hosts contains lines which have at least
-four items, separated by whitespace:
-
-
-
-
-
- SLIP user's login ID
-
-
-
- Local address (local to the SLIP server) of the SLIP link
-
-
-
- Remote address of the SLIP link
-
-
-
- Network mask
-
-
-
-
-
-The local and remote addresses may be host names (resolved to IP
-addresses by /etc/hosts or by the domain name service,
-depending on your specifications in /etc/host.conf), and I
-believe the network mask may be a name that can be resolved by a
-lookup into /etc/networks. On a sample system,
-/etc/sliphome/slip.hosts looks like this:
-
-
-
------ begin /etc/sliphome/slip.hosts -----
-#
-# login local-addr remote-addr mask opt1 opt2
-# (normal,compress,noicmp)
-#
-Shelmerg dc-slip sl-helmerg 0xfffffc00 autocomp
------ end /etc/sliphome/slip.hosts ------
-
-
-
-At the end of the line is one or more of the options.
-
-
-
-
-
-normal - no header compression
-
-
-
-compress - compress headers
-
-
-
-autocomp - compress headers if the remote end allows it
-
-
-
-noicmp - disable ICMP packets (so any ``ping'' packets will be
-dropped instead of using up your bandwidth)
-
-
-
-
-
-Note that sliplogin under early releases of FreeBSD 2 ignored
-the options that FreeBSD 1.x recognized, so the options
-normal, compress, autocomp, and noicmp had no effect
-until support was added in FreeBSD 2.2 (unless your slip.login script
-included code to make use of the flags).
-
-Your choice of local and remote addresses for your SLIP links depends
-on whether you are going to dedicate a TCP/IP subnet or if you are
-going to use ``proxy ARP'' on your SLIP server (it is not ``true''
-proxy ARP, but that is the terminology used in this document to
-describe it). If you are not sure which method to select or how to
-assign IP addresses, please refer to the TCP/IP books referenced in
-the section and/or consult your IP network manager.
-
-If you are going to use a separate subnet for your SLIP clients, you
-will need to allocate the subnet number out of your assigned IP
-network number and assign each of your SLIP client's IP numbers out of
-that subnet. Then, you will probably either need to configure a
-static route to the SLIP subnet via your SLIP server on your nearest
-IP router, or install gated on your FreeBSD SLIP server and
-configure it to talk the appropriate routing protocols to your other
-routers to inform them about your SLIP server's route to the SLIP
-subnet.
-
-Otherwise, if you will use the ``proxy ARP'' method, you will need to
-assign your SLIP client's IP addresses out of your SLIP server's
-Ethernet subnet, and you will also need to adjust your
-/etc/sliphome/slip.login and
-/etc/sliphome/slip.logout scripts to use arp(8) to
-manage the proxy-ARP entries in the SLIP server's ARP table.
-
-
-
-
-slip.login Configuration
-
-The typical /etc/sliphome/slip.login file looks like this:
-
-
-
------ begin /etc/sliphome/slip.login -----
-#!/bin/sh -
-#
-# @(#)slip.login 5.1 (Berkeley) 7/1/90
-
-#
-# generic login file for a slip line. sliplogin invokes this with
-# the parameters:
-# 1 2 3 4 5 6 7-n
-# slipunit ttyspeed loginname local-addr remote-addr mask opt-args
-#
-/sbin/ifconfig sl$1 inet $4 $5 netmask $6
------ end /etc/sliphome/slip.login -----
-
-
-
-This slip.login file merely ifconfig's the appropriate SLIP
-interface with the local and remote addresses and network mask of the
-SLIP interface.
-
-If you have decided to use the ``proxy ARP'' method (instead of using
-a separate subnet for your SLIP clients), your
-/etc/sliphome/slip.login file will need to look something
-like this:
-
-
-
------ begin /etc/sliphome/slip.login for "proxy ARP" -----
-#!/bin/sh -
-#
-# @(#)slip.login 5.1 (Berkeley) 7/1/90
-
-#
-# generic login file for a slip line. sliplogin invokes this with
-# the parameters:
-# 1 2 3 4 5 6 7-n
-# slipunit ttyspeed loginname local-addr remote-addr mask opt-args
-#
-/sbin/ifconfig sl$1 inet $4 $5 netmask $6
-# Answer ARP requests for the SLIP client with our Ethernet addr
-/usr/sbin/arp -s $5 00:11:22:33:44:55 pub
------ end /etc/sliphome/slip.login for "proxy ARP" -----
-
-
-
-The additional line in this slip.login, arp -s $5
-00:11:22:33:44:55 pub, creates an ARP entry in the SLIP server's
-ARP table. This ARP entry causes the SLIP server to respond with the
-SLIP server's Ethernet MAC address whenever a another IP node on the
-Ethernet asks to speak to the SLIP client's IP address.
-
-When using the example above, be sure to replace the Ethernet MAC
-address (00:11:22:33:44:55) with the MAC address of your
-system's Ethernet card, or your ``proxy ARP'' will definitely not work!
-You can discover your SLIP server's Ethernet MAC address by looking at
-the results of running netstat -i; the second line of the output
-should look something like:
-
-
-
-ed0 1500 <Link>0.2.c1.28.5f.4a 191923 0 129457 0 116
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-
-
-
-
-which indicates that this particular system's Ethernet MAC address is
-00:02:c1:28:5f:4a -- the periods in the Ethernet MAC address
-given by netstat -i must be changed to colons and leading zeros
-should be added to each single-digit hexadecimal number to convert the
-address into the form that arp(8) desires; see the manual page on
-arp(8) for complete information on usage.
-
-Note that when you create /etc/sliphome/slip.login and
-/etc/sliphome/slip.logout, the ``execute'' bit (ie,
-chmod 755 /etc/sliphome/slip.login
-/etc/sliphome/slip.logout) must be set, or sliplogin
-will be unable to execute it.
-
-
-
-
-slip.logout Configuration
-
-/etc/sliphome/slip.logout is not strictly needed (unless you
-are implementing ``proxy ARP''), but if you decide to create it, this
-is an example of a basic slip.logout script:
-
-
-
------ begin /etc/sliphome/slip.logout -----
-#!/bin/sh -
-#
-# slip.logout
-
-#
-# logout file for a slip line. sliplogin invokes this with
-# the parameters:
-# 1 2 3 4 5 6 7-n
-# slipunit ttyspeed loginname local-addr remote-addr mask opt-args
-#
-/sbin/ifconfig sl$1 down
------ end /etc/sliphome/slip.logout -----
-
-
-
-If you are using ``proxy ARP'', you will want to have
-/etc/sliphome/slip.logout remove the ARP entry for the SLIP
-client:
-
-
-
------ begin /etc/sliphome/slip.logout for "proxy ARP" -----
-#!/bin/sh -
-#
-# @(#)slip.logout
-
-#
-# logout file for a slip line. sliplogin invokes this with
-# the parameters:
-# 1 2 3 4 5 6 7-n
-# slipunit ttyspeed loginname local-addr remote-addr mask opt-args
-#
-/sbin/ifconfig sl$1 down
-# Quit answering ARP requests for the SLIP client
-/usr/sbin/arp -d $5
------ end /etc/sliphome/slip.logout for "proxy ARP" -----
-
-
-
-The arp -d $5 removes the ARP entry that the ``proxy ARP''
-slip.login added when the SLIP client logged in.
-
-It bears repeating: make sure /etc/sliphome/slip.logout has
-the execute bit set for after you create it (ie, chmod 755
-/etc/sliphome/slip.logout).
-
-
-
-
-
-Routing Considerations
-
-If you are not using the ``proxy ARP'' method for routing packets
-between your SLIP clients and the rest of your network (and perhaps
-the Internet), you will probably either have to add static routes to
-your closest default router(s) to route your SLIP client subnet via
-your SLIP server, or you will probably need to install and configure
-gated on your FreeBSD SLIP server so that it will tell your
-routers via appropriate routing protocols about your SLIP subnet.
-
-
-
-Static Routes
-
-Adding static routes to your nearest default routers can be
-troublesome (or impossible, if you do not have authority to do so...).
-If you have a multiple-router network in your organization, some
-routers, such as Cisco and Proteon, may not only need to be configured
-with the static route to the SLIP subnet, but also need to be told
-which static routes to tell other routers about, so some expertise and
-troubleshooting/tweaking may be necessary to get static-route-based
-routing to work.
-
-
-
-
-Running gated
-
-An alternative to the headaches of static routes is to install
-gated on your FreeBSD SLIP server and configure it to use the
-appropriate routing protocols (RIP/OSPF/BGP/EGP) to tell other routers
-about your SLIP subnet. You can use gated from the
- or retrieve and build it yourself
-from the GateD anonymous ftp site;
-I believe the current version as of this writing
-is gated-R3_5Alpha_8.tar.Z, which includes support for
-FreeBSD ``out-of-the-box''. Complete information and documentation on
-gated is available on the Web starting at
-the Merit GateD Consortium.
-Compile and install it, and
-then write a /etc/gated.conf file to configure your gated;
-here is a sample, similar to what the author used on a FreeBSD SLIP
-server:
-
-
-
------ begin sample /etc/gated.conf for gated version 3.5Alpha5 -----
-#
-# gated configuration file for dc.dsu.edu; for gated version 3.5alpha5
-# Only broadcast RIP information for xxx.xxx.yy out the ed Ethernet interface
-#
-#
-# tracing options
-#
-traceoptions "/var/tmp/gated.output" replace size 100k files 2 general ;
-
-rip yes {
- interface sl noripout noripin ;
- interface ed ripin ripout version 1 ;
- traceoptions route ;
-} ;
-
-#
-# Turn on a bunch of tracing info for the interface to the kernel:
-kernel {
- traceoptions remnants request routes info interface ;
-} ;
-
-#
-# Propagate the route to xxx.xxx.yy out the Ethernet interface via RIP
-#
-
-export proto rip interface ed {
- proto direct {
- xxx.xxx.yy mask 255.255.252.0 metric 1; # SLIP connections
- } ;
-} ;
-
-#
-# Accept routes from RIP via ed Ethernet interfaces
-
-import proto rip interface ed {
- all ;
-} ;
-
------ end sample /etc/gated.conf -----
-
-
-
-The above sample gated.conf file broadcasts routing
-information regarding the SLIP subnet xxx.xxx.yy via RIP onto
-the Ethernet; if you are using a different Ethernet driver than the
-ed driver, you will need to change the references to the ed
-interface appropriately. This sample file also sets up tracing to
-/var/tmp/gated.output for debugging gated's
-activity; you can certainly turn off the tracing options if
-gated works OK for you. You will need to change the
-xxx.xxx.yy's into the network address of your own SLIP subnet
-(be sure to change the net mask in the proto direct clause as
-well).
-
-When you get gated built and installed and create a
-configuration file for it, you will need to run gated in place
-of routed on your FreeBSD system; change the
-routed/gated startup parameters in /etc/netstart as
-appropriate for your system. Please see the manual page for
-gated for information on gated's command-line
-parameters.
-
-
-
-
-
-Acknowledgments
-
-Thanks to these people for comments and advice regarding this tutorial:
-
-
-
-&a.wilko;
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Piero Serini
-
-
-<Piero@Strider.Inet.IT>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Advanced Networking
-
-
-
-Gateways and Routes
-
-Contributed by &a.gryphon;.6 October 1995.
-
-For one machine to be able to find another, there must be a
-mechanism in place to describe how to get from one to the
-other. This is called Routing. A ``route'' is a defined
-pair of addresses: a destination and a
-gateway. The pair indicates that if you are
-trying to get to this destination, send along
-through this gateway. There are three types of
-destinations: individual hosts, subnets, and ``default''. The
-``default route'' is used if none of the other routes
-apply. We will talk a little bit more about default routes
-later on. There are also three types of gateways:
-individual hosts, interfaces (also called ``links''), and
-ethernet hardware addresses.
-
-
-
-An example
-
-To illustrate different aspects of routing, we will use
-the following example which is the output of the command
-netstat -r:
-
-
-
-Destination Gateway Flags Refs Use Netif Expire
-
-default outside-gw UGSc 37 418 ppp0
-localhost localhost UH 0 181 lo0
-test0 0:e0:b5:36:cf:4f UHLW 5 63288 ed0 77
-10.20.30.255 link#1 UHLW 1 2421
-foobar.com link#1 UC 0 0
-host1 0:e0:a8:37:8:1e UHLW 3 4601 lo0
-host2 0:e0:a8:37:8:1e UHLW 0 5 lo0 =>
-host2.foobar.com link#1 UC 0 0
-224 link#1 UC 0 0
-
-
-
-The first two lines specify the default route (which we
-will cover in the next section) and the localhost route.
-
-The interface (Netif column) that it specifies to use
-for localhost is lo0, also known as the
-loopback device. This says to keep all traffic for this
-destination internal, rather than sending it out over the
-LAN, since it will only end up back where it started
-anyway.
-
-The next thing that stands out are the
-``0:e0:...'' addresses. These are ethernet
-hardware addresses. FreeBSD will automatically identify any
-hosts (test0 in the example) on the local ethernet and
-add a route for that host, directly to it over the ethernet
-interface, ed0. There is also a timeout
-(Expire column) associated with this type of route,
-which is used if we fail to hear from the host in a
-specific amount of time. In this case the route will be
-automatically deleted. These hosts are identified using a
-mechanism known as RIP (Routing Information Protocol),
-which figures out routes to local hosts based upon a
-shortest path determination.
-
-FreeBSD will also add subnet routes for the local subnet
-(10.20.30.255 is the broadcast address for the subnet
-10.20.30, and foobar.com is the domain name
-associated with that subnet). The designation link#1
-refers to the first ethernet card in the machine. You will
-notice no additional interface is specified for those.
-
-Both of these groups (local network hosts and local
-subnets) have their routes automatically configured by a
-daemon called routed. If this is not run, then only
-routes which are statically defined (ie. entered
-explicitly) will exist.
-
-The host1 line refers to our host, which it knows by
-ethernet address. Since we are the sending host, FreeBSD
-knows to use the loopback interface (lo0) rather than
-sending it out over the ethernet interface.
-
-The two host2 lines are an example of what happens
-when we use an ifconfig alias (see the section of ethernet
-for reasons why we would do this). The =>
-symbol after the lo0 interface says that not only are
-we using the loopback (since this is address also refers to
-the local host), but specifically it is an alias. Such
-routes only show up on the host that supports the alias;
-all other hosts on the local network will simply have a
-link#1 line for such.
-
-The final line (destination subnet 224) deals with
-MultiCasting, which will be covered in a another section.
-
-The other column that we should talk about are the
-Flags. Each route has different attributes that are
-described in the column. Below is a short table of some of
-these flags and their meanings:
-
-
-
-U
-
-Up: The route is active.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-H
-
-
-Host: The route destination is a single host.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-G
-
-
-Gateway: Send anything for this destination
-on to this remote system, which will figure out from
-there where to send it.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-S
-
-
-Static: This route was configured manually,
-not automatically generated by the system.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-C
-
-
-Clone: Generates a new route based upon this
-route for machines we connect to. This type of route is
-normally used for local networks.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-W
-
-
-WasCloned Indicated a route that was
-auto-configured based upon a local area network (Clone)
-route.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-L
-
-
-Link: Route involves references to ethernet
-hardware.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Default routes
-
-When the local system needs to make a connection to
-remote host, it checks the routing table to determine if
-a known path exists. If the remote host falls into a
-subnet that we know how to reach (Cloned routes), then
-the system checks to see if it can connect along that
-interface.
-
-If all known paths fail, the system has one last option:
-the default route. This route is a special type
-of gateway route (usually the only one present in the
-system), and is always marked with a ``c'' in
-the flags field. For hosts on a local area network, this
-gateway is set to whatever machine has a direct
-connection to the outside world (whether via PPP link, or
-your hardware device attached to a dedicated data line).
-
-If you are configuring the default route for a machine
-which itself is functioning as the gateway to the outside
-world, then the default route will be the gateway machine
-at your Internet Service Provider's (ISP) site.
-
-Let us look at an example of default routes. This is a
-common configuration:
-
-[Local2] <--ether--> [Local1] <--PPP--> [ISP-Serv] <--ether--> [T1-GW]
-
-
-
-The hosts Local1 and Local2 are at your
-site, with the formed being your PPP connection to your
-ISP's Terminal Server. Your ISP has a local network at
-their site, which has, among other things, the server
-where you connect and a hardware device (T1-GW) attached
-to the ISP's Internet feed.
-
-The default routes for each of your machines will be:
-
-
-
-host default gateway interface
----- --------------- ---------
-Local2 Local1 ethernet
-Local1 T1-GW PPP
-
-
-
-A common question is ``Why (or how) would we set the
-T1-GW to be the default gateway for Local1, rather than
-the ISP server it is connected to?''.
-
-Remember, since the PPP interface is using an address on
-the ISP's local network for your side of the connection,
-routes for any other machines on the ISP's local network
-will be automatically generated. Hence, you will already
-know how to reach the T1-GW machine, so there is no need
-for the intermediate step of sending traffic to the ISP
-server.
-
-As a final note, it is common to use the address ``...1''
-as the gateway address for your local network. So (using
-the same example), if your local class-C address space
-was 10.20.30 and your ISP was using 10.9.9 then the
-default routes would be:
-
-
-
-Local2 (10.20.30.2) --> Local1 (10.20.30.1)
-Local1 (10.20.30.1, 10.9.9.30) --> T1-GW (10.9.9.1)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Dual homed hosts
-
-There is one other type of configuration that we should
-cover, and that is a host that sits on two different
-networks. Technically, any machine functioning as a
-gateway (in the example above, using a PPP connection)
-counts as a dual-homed host. But the term is really only
-used to refer to a machine that sits on two local-area
-networks.
-
-In one case, the machine as two ethernet cards, each
-having an address on the separate subnets. Alternately,
-the machine may only have one ethernet card, and be using
-ifconfig aliasing. The former is used if two physically
-separate ethernet networks are in use, the latter if
-there is one physical network segment, but two logically
-separate subnets.
-
-Either way, routing tables are set up so that each subnet
-knows that this machine is the defined gateway (inbound
-route) to the other subnet. This configuration, with the
-machine acting as a Bridge between the two subnets, is
-often used when we need to implement packet filtering or
-firewall security in either or both directions.
-
-
-
-
-Routing propagation
-
-We have already talked about how we define our routes to
-the outside world, but not about how the outside world
-finds us.
-
-We already know that routing tables can be set up so that
-all traffic for a particular address space (in our
-examples, a class-C subnet) can be sent to a particular
-host on that network, which will forward the packets
-inbound.
-
-When you get an address space assigned to your site, your
-service provider will set up their routing tables so that
-all traffic for your subnet will be sent down your PPP
-link to your site. But how do sites across the country
-know to send to your ISP?
-
-There is a system (much like the distributed DNS
-information) that keeps track of all assigned
-address-spaces, and defines their point of connection to
-the Internet Backbone. The ``Backbone'' are the main
-trunk lines that carry Internet traffic across the
-country, and around the world. Each backbone machine has
-a copy of a master set of tables, which direct traffic
-for a particular network to a specific backbone carrier,
-and from there down the chain of service providers until
-it reaches your network.
-
-It is the task of your service provider to advertise to
-the backbone sites that they are the point of connection
-(and thus the path inward) for your site. This is known
-as route propagation.
-
-
-
-
-Troubleshooting
-
-Sometimes, there is a problem with routing propagation,
-and some sites are unable to connect to you. Perhaps the
-most useful command for trying to figure out where a
-routing is breaking down is the traceroute(8)
-command. It is equally useful if you cannot seem to make
-a connection to a remote machine (ie. ping(8)
-fails).
-
-The traceroute(8) command is run with the name
-of the remote host you are trying to connect to. It will
-show the gateway hosts along the path of the attempt,
-eventually either reaching the target host, or
-terminating because of a lack of connection.
-
-For more information, see the manual page for
-traceroute(8).
-
-
-
-
-
-NFS
-
-Contributed by &a.jlind;.
-
-Certain Ethernet adapters for ISA PC systems have limitations which
-can lead to serious network problems, particularly with NFS. This
-difficulty is not specific to FreeBSD, but FreeBSD systems are affected
-by it.
-
-The problem nearly always occurs when (FreeBSD) PC systems are networked
-with high-performance workstations, such as those made by Silicon Graphics,
-Inc., and Sun Microsystems, Inc. The NFS mount will work fine, and some
-operations may succeed, but suddenly the server will seem to become
-unresponsive to the client, even though requests to and from other systems
-continue to be processed. This happens to the client system, whether the
-client is the FreeBSD system or the workstation. On many systems, there is
-no way to shut down the client gracefully once this problem has manifested
-itself. The only solution is often to reset the client, because the NFS
-situation cannot be resolved.
-
-Though the "correct" solution is to get a higher performance and capacity
-Ethernet adapter for the FreeBSD system, there is a simple workaround that
-will allow satisfactory operation. If the FreeBSD system is the SERVER,
-include the option "-w=1024" on the mount from the client. If the
-FreeBSD system is the CLIENT, then mount the NFS file system with the
-option "-r=1024". These options may be specified using the fourth
-field of the fstab entry on the client for automatic mounts, or by using
-the "-o" parameter of the mount command for manual mounts.
-
-It should be noted that there is a different problem,
-sometimes mistaken for this one,
-when the NFS servers and clients are on different networks.
-If that is the case, make CERTAIN that your routers are routing the
-necessary UDP information, or you will not get anywhere, no matter
-what else you are doing.
-
-In the following examples, "fastws" is the host (interface) name of a
-high-performance workstation, and "freebox" is the host (interface) name of
-a FreeBSD system with a lower-performance Ethernet adapter. Also,
-"/sharedfs" will be the exported NFS filesystem (see "man exports"), and
-"/project" will be the mount point on the client for the exported file
-system. In all cases, note that additional options, such as "hard" or
-"soft" and "bg" may be desirable in your application.
-
-Examples for the FreeBSD system ("freebox") as the client:
-in /etc/fstab on freebox:
-fastws:/sharedfs /project nfs rw,-r=1024 0 0
-as a manual mount command on freebox:
-mount -t nfs -o -r=1024 fastws:/sharedfs /project
-
-Examples for the FreeBSD system as the server:
-in /etc/fstab on fastws:
-freebox:/sharedfs /project nfs rw,-w=1024 0 0
-as a manual mount command on fastws:
-mount -t nfs -o -w=1024 freebox:/sharedfs /project
-
-Nearly any 16-bit Ethernet adapter will allow operation without the above
-restrictions on the read or write size.
-
-For anyone who cares, here is what happens when the failure occurs, which
-also explains why it is unrecoverable. NFS typically works with a "block"
-size of 8k (though it may do fragments of smaller sizes). Since the maximum
-Ethernet packet is around 1500 bytes, the NFS "block" gets split into
-multiple Ethernet packets, even though it is still a single unit to the
-upper-level code, and must be received, assembled, and ACKNOWLEDGED as a
-unit. The high-performance workstations can pump out the packets which
-comprise the NFS unit one right after the other, just as close together as
-the standard allows. On the smaller, lower capacity cards, the later
-packets overrun the earlier packets of the same unit before they can be
-transferred to the host and the unit as a whole cannot be reconstructed or
-acknowledged. As a result, the workstation will time out and try again,
-but it will try again with the entire 8K unit, and the process will be
-repeated, ad infinitum.
-
-By keeping the unit size below the Ethernet packet size limitation, we
-ensure that any complete Ethernet packet received can be acknowledged
-individually, avoiding the deadlock situation.
-
-Overruns may still occur when a high-performance workstations is slamming
-data out to a PC system, but with the better cards, such overruns are
-not guaranteed on NFS "units". When an overrun occurs, the units affected
-will be retransmitted, and there will be a fair chance that they will be
-received, assembled, and acknowledged.
-
-
-
-
-
-Diskless Operation
-
-Contributed by &a.martin;.
-
-netboot.com/netboot.rom allow you to boot your
-FreeBSD machine over the network and run FreeBSD without
-having a disk on your client. Under 2.0 it is now
-possible to have local swap. Swapping over NFS is also
-still supported.
-
-Supported Ethernet cards include: Western Digital/SMC
-8003, 8013, 8216 and compatibles; NE1000/NE2000 and
-compatibles (requires recompile)
-
-
-
-Setup Instructions
-
-
-
-
-
- Find a machine that will be your server. This
-machine will require enough disk space to hold the
-FreeBSD 2.0 binaries and have bootp, tftp and NFS
-services available.
-
-Tested machines:
-
-
-
-HP9000/8xx running HP-UX 9.04 or later (pre
-9.04 doesn't work)
-
-
-
-Sun/Solaris 2.3. (you may need to get
-bootp)
-
-
-
-
+ You can easily start out small with an inexpensive 386
+ class PC and upgrade as your enterprise grows.
+
+
+
+ Education: Are you a student of computer science
+ or a related engineering field? There is no better way
+ of learning about operating systems, computer
+ architecture and networking than the hands on, under the
+ hood experience that FreeBSD can provide. A number of
+ freely available CAD, mathematical and graphic design
+ packages also make it highly useful to those whose
+ primary interest in a computer is to get other
+ work done!
+
+
+
+ Research: With source code for the entire system
+ available, FreeBSD is an excellent platform for research
+ in operating systems as well as other branches of
+ computer science. FreeBSD's freely available nature also
+ makes it possible for remote groups to collaborate on
+ ideas or shared development without having to worry about
+ special licensing agreements or limitations on what
+ may be discussed in open forums.
+
+
+
+ Networking: Need a new router? A name server
+ (DNS)? A firewall to keep people out of your internal
+ network? FreeBSD can easily turn that unused 386 or 486 PC
+ sitting in the corner into an advanced router with
+ sophisticated packet filtering capabilities.
+
+
+
+ X Window workstation: FreeBSD is a fine
+ choice for an inexpensive X terminal solution, either
+ using the freely available XFree86 server or one
+ of the excellent commercial servers provided by X Inside.
+ Unlike an X
+ terminal, FreeBSD allows many applications to be run
+ locally, if desired, thus relieving the burden on a
+ central server. FreeBSD can even boot
+ "diskless", making individual workstations even cheaper
+ and easier to administer.
+
+
+
+ Software Development: The basic FreeBSD system
+ comes with a full compliment of development tools
+ including the renowned GNU C/C++ compiler and
+ debugger.
+
+
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD is available in both source and binary form on CDROM and
+ via anonymous ftp. See
+ for more details.
+
+
+
+
+
+ A Brief History of FreeBSD
+
+ Contributed by &a.jkh;.
+
+ The FreeBSD project had its genesis in the early part of 1993,
+ partially as an outgrowth of the "Unofficial 386BSD Patchkit" by the
+ patchkit's last 3 coordinators: Nate Williams, Rod Grimes and myself.
+
+ Our original goal was to produce an intermediate snapshot of 386BSD in
+ order to fix a number of problems with it that the patchkit mechanism
+ just was not capable of solving. Some of you may remember the early
+ working title for the project being "386BSD 0.5" or "386BSD Interim"
+ in reference to that fact.
+
+ 386BSD was Bill Jolitz's operating system, which had been up to that
+ point suffering rather severely from almost a year's worth of neglect.
+ As the patchkit swelled ever more uncomfortably with each passing day,
+ we were in unanimous agreement that something had to be done and
+ decided to try and assist Bill by providing this interim "cleanup"
+ snapshot. Those plans came to a rude halt when Bill Jolitz suddenly
+ decided to withdraw his sanction from the project and without any
+ clear indication of what would be done instead.
+
+ It did not take us long to decide that the goal remained worthwhile,
+ even without Bill's support, and so we adopted the name "FreeBSD",
+ coined by David Greenman. Our initial objectives were set after
+ consulting with the system's current users and, once it became clear
+ that the project was on the road to perhaps even becoming a reality,
+ I contacted Walnut Creek CDROM with an eye towards improving
+ FreeBSD's distribution channels for those many unfortunates without
+ easy access to the Internet. Walnut Creek CDROM not only supported
+ the idea of distributing FreeBSD on CD but went so far as to provide
+ the project with a machine to work on and a fast Internet connection.
+ Without Walnut Creek CDROM's almost unprecedented degree of faith in
+ what was, at the time, a completely unknown project, it is quite
+ unlikely that FreeBSD would have gotten as far, as fast, as it
+ has today.
+
+ The first CDROM (and general net-wide) distribution was FreeBSD 1.0,
+ released in December of 1993. This was based on the 4.3BSD-Lite
+ ("Net/2") tape from U.C. Berkeley, with many components also provided by
+ 386BSD and the Free Software Foundation. It was a fairly reasonable
+ success for a first offering, and we followed it with the highly successful
+ FreeBSD 1.1 release in May of 1994.
+
+ Around this time, some rather unexpected storm clouds formed on the
+ horizon as Novell and U.C. Berkeley settled their long-running lawsuit
+ over the legal status of the Berkeley Net/2 tape. A condition of that
+ settlement was U.C. Berkeley's concession that large parts of Net/2
+ were "encumbered" code and the property of Novell, who had in turn acquired
+ it from AT&T some time previously. What Berkeley got in return was
+ Novell's "blessing" that the 4.4BSD-Lite release, when it was finally
+ released, would be declared unencumbered and all existing Net/2 users
+ would be strongly encouraged to switch. This included FreeBSD, and the
+ project was given until the end of July 1994 to stop shipping its own
+ Net/2 based product. Under the terms of that agreement, the project
+ was allowed one last release before the deadline, that release being
+ FreeBSD 1.1.5.1.
+
+ FreeBSD then set about the arduous task of literally re-inventing itself
+ from a completely new and rather incomplete set of 4.4BSD-Lite bits. The
+ "Lite" releases were light in part because Berkeley's CSRG had removed
+ large chunks of code required for actually constructing a bootable running
+ system (due to various legal requirements) and the fact that the Intel
+ port of 4.4 was highly incomplete. It took the project until December of 1994
+ to make this transition, and in January of 1995 it released FreeBSD 2.0 to
+ the net and on CDROM. Despite being still more than a little rough around
+ the edges, the release was a significant success and was followed by the more
+ robust and easier to install FreeBSD 2.0.5 release in June of 1995.
+
+ We released FreeBSD 2.1.5 in August of 1996, and it appeared to be
+ popular enough among the ISP and commercial communities that another
+ release along the 2.1-stable branch was merited. This was FreeBSD 2.1.7.1,
+ released in February 1997 and capping the end of mainstream development
+ on 2.1-stable. Now in maintenance mode, only security enhancements and other
+ critical bug fixes will be done on this branch (RELENG_2_1_0).
+
+ FreeBSD 2.2 was branched from the development mainline ("-current") in
+ November 1996 as the RELENG_2_2 branch, and the first full release
+ (2.2.1) was released in April, 1997. Further releases along the 2.2 branch
+ were done in the Summer and Fall of '97, the latest being 2.2.6 which
+ appeared in late March of '98. The first official 3.0 release will appear
+ later in 1998.
+
+ Long term development projects for everything from SMP to DEC ALPHA support
+ will continue to take place in the 3.0-current branch and SNAPshot releases
+ of 3.0 on CDROM (and, of course, on the net).
+
+
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD Project Goals
+
+ Contributed by &a.jkh;.
+
+ The goals of the FreeBSD Project are to provide software that may
+ be used for any purpose and without strings attached. Many of us
+ have a significant investment in the code (and project) and would
+ certainly not mind a little financial compensation now and then,
+ but we're definitely not prepared to insist on it. We believe
+ that our first and foremost "mission" is to provide code to any
+ and all comers, and for whatever purpose, so that the code gets
+ the widest possible use and provides the widest possible benefit.
+ This is, I believe, one of the most fundamental goals of Free
+ Software and one that we enthusiastically support.
+
+ That code in our source tree which falls under the GNU Public License
+ (GPL) or GNU Library Public License (GLPL) comes with slightly more
+ strings attached, though at least on the side of enforced
+ access rather than the usual opposite. Due to the additional
+ complexities that can evolve in the commercial use of GPL software,
+ we do, however, endeavor to replace such software with submissions
+ under the more relaxed BSD copyright whenever possible.
+
+
+
+
+
+ The FreeBSD Development Model
+
+ Contributed by &a.asami;.
+
+ The development of FreeBSD is a very open and flexible process,
+ FreeBSD being literally built from the contributions of hundreds of
+ people around the world, as can be seen from our . We are constantly on the lookout for
+ new developers and ideas, and those interested in becoming more
+ closely involved with the project need simply contact us at the
+ &a.hackers;. Those who prefer to work more independently are also
+ accommodated, and they are free to use our FTP facilities at ftp.freebsd.org to distribute their own patches or work-in-progress
+ sources. The &a.announce; is also available to those wishing
+ to make other FreeBSD users aware of major areas of work.
+
+ Useful things to know about the FreeBSD project and its development process,
+ whether working independently or in close cooperation:
+
+
+
+ The CVS repository
+
+
+
+ The central source tree for FreeBSD is maintained by CVS
+ (Concurrent Version System), a freely available source code control
+ tool which comes bundled with FreeBSD. The primary CVS repository
+ resides on a machine in Concord CA, USA from where it is replicated
+ to numerous mirror machines throughout the world. The CVS tree, as well
+ as the and trees which are checked out of it, can be easily
+ replicated to your own machine as well. Please refer to the
+
+ section for more information on doing this.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The committers list
+
+
+
+
+ The are the people
+ who have write access to the CVS tree, and are thus
+ authorized to make modifications to the FreeBSD source (the term
+ ``committer'' comes from the cvs(1) ``commit''
+ command, which is used to bring new changes into the CVS repository).
+ The best way of making submissions for review by the committers list
+ is to use the send-pr(1) command, though if something appears to be jammed
+ in the system then you may also reach them by sending mail to committers@freebsd.org.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The FreeBSD core team
+
+
+
+
+ The would be
+ equivalent to the board of directors if the FreeBSD Project were a
+ company. The primary task of the core team is to make sure the
+ project, as a whole, is in good shape and is heading in the right
+ directions. Inviting dedicated and responsible developers to join our
+ group of committers is one of the functions of the core team, as is
+ the recruitment of new core team members as others move on. Most
+ current members of the core team started as committers who's addiction
+ to the project got the better of them.
+
+
+
+ Some core team members also have specific , meaning that they are committed to
+ ensuring that some large portion of the system works as advertised.
+ Note that most members of the core team are volunteers when it comes
+ to FreeBSD development and do not benefit from the project
+ financially, so "commitment" should also not be misconstrued as
+ meaning "guaranteed support." The ``board of directors'' analogy
+ above is not actually very accurate, and it may be more suitable to
+ say that these are the people who gave up their lives in favor of
+ FreeBSD against their better judgement! ;)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Outside contributors
+
+
+
+
+ Last, but definitely not least, the largest group of developers are
+ the users themselves who provide feedback and bug-fixes to us on an
+ almost constant basis. The primary way of keeping in touch with FreeBSD's
+ more non-centralized development is to subscribe to the &a.hackers;
+ (see ) where such
+ things are discussed.
+
+
+
+ of those who have
+ contributed something which made its way into our source tree is
+ a long and growing one, so why not join it by contributing something
+ back to FreeBSD today? :-)
+
+
+
+ Providing code is not the only way of contributing to the project;
+ for a more complete list of things that need doing, please refer to the section in this handbook.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ In summary, our development model is organized as a loose set of
+ concentric circles. The centralized model is designed for the
+ convenience of the users of FreeBSD, who are thereby provided
+ with an easy way of tracking one central code base, not to keep
+ potential contributors out! Our desire is to present a stable
+ operating system with a large set of coherent that the users can easily install and
+ use, and this model works very well in accomplishing that.
+
+ All we ask of those who would join us as FreeBSD developers is some of
+ the same dedication its current people have to its continued success!
+
+
+
+
+
+ About the Current Release
+
+ FreeBSD is a freely available, full source 4.4BSD-Lite
+ based release for Intel i386/i486/Pentium/PentiumPro/Pentium II
+ (or compatible) based PC's. It is based primarily on
+ software from U.C. Berkeley's CSRG group, with some
+ enhancements from NetBSD, OpenBSD, 386BSD, and the Free
+ Software Foundation.
+
+ Since our release of FreeBSD 2.0 in January of 95, the
+ performance, feature set, and stability of FreeBSD has
+ improved dramatically. The largest change is a
+ revamped virtual memory system with a merged VM/file buffer
+ cache that not only increases performance, but reduces
+ FreeBSD's memory footprint, making a 5MB configuration
+ a more acceptable minimum. Other enhancements include
+ full NIS client and server support, transaction TCP
+ support, dial-on-demand PPP, an improved SCSI
+ subsystem, early ISDN support, support for FDDI and
+ Fast Ethernet (100Mbit) adapters, improved support for
+ the Adaptec 2940 (WIDE and narrow) and many hundreds of
+ bug fixes.
+
+ We have also taken the comments and suggestions of many
+ of our users to heart and have attempted to provide
+ what we hope is a more sane and easily understood
+ installation process. Your feedback on this
+ (constantly evolving) process is especially welcome!
+
+ In addition to the base distributions, FreeBSD offers a
+ new ported software collection with hundreds of commonly
+ sought-after programs. At the end of March 1998 there were
+ more than 1300 ports! The list of ports ranges from
+ http (WWW) servers, to games, languages, editors and
+ almost everything in between. The entire ports collection
+ requires approximately 26MB of storage, all ports being
+ expressed as ``deltas'' to their original sources. This makes
+ it much easier for us to update ports, and greatly reduces
+ the disk space demands made by the older 1.0 ports
+ collection. To compile a port, you simply change to the
+ directory of the program you wish to install, type ``make
+ all'' followed by ``make install'' after successful
+ compilation and let the system do the rest. The full
+ original distribution for each port you build is retrieved
+ dynamically off the CDROM or a local ftp site, so you need
+ only enough disk space to build the ports you want.
+ (Almost) every port is also provided as a pre-compiled
+ "package" which can be installed with a simple command
+ (pkg_add) by those who do not wish to compile their own
+ ports from source.
+
+ A number of additional documents which you may find
+ very helpful in the process of installing and using
+ FreeBSD may now also be found in the
+ /usr/share/doc directory on any machine running
+ FreeBSD 2.1 or later. You may view the locally installed
+ manuals with any HTML capable browser using the
+ following URLs:
+
+
+
+ The FreeBSD handbook
+
+ file:/usr/share/doc/handbook/handbook.html
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The FreeBSD FAQ
+
+
+ file:/usr/share/doc/FAQ/FAQ.html
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ You can also visit the master (and most frequently
+ updated) copies at http://www.freebsd.org.
+
+ The core of FreeBSD does not contain DES code which
+ would inhibit its being exported outside the United
+ States. There is an add-on package to the core
+ distribution, for use only in the United States, that
+ contains the programs that normally use DES. The
+ auxiliary packages provided separately can be used by
+ anyone. A freely (from outside the U.S.) exportable
+ European distribution of DES for our non-U.S. users
+ also exists and is described in the FreeBSD FAQ.
+
+ If password security for FreeBSD is all you need, and
+ you have no requirement for copying encrypted passwords
+ from different hosts (Suns, DEC machines, etc) into
+ FreeBSD password entries, then FreeBSD's MD5 based
+ security may be all you require! We feel that our
+ default security model is more than a match for DES,
+ and without any messy export issues to deal with. If
+ you are outside (or even inside) the U.S., give it a
+ try!
+
+
+
+
+
+ Installing FreeBSD
+
+ So, you would like to try out FreeBSD on your system?
+ This section is a quick-start guide for what you need to
+ do. FreeBSD can be installed from a variety of media
+ including CD-ROM, floppy disk, magnetic tape, an MS-DOS
+ partition and, if you have a network connection, via
+ anonymous ftp or NFS.
+
+ Regardless of the installation media you choose, you can
+ get started by creating the installation disk
+ as described below. Booting your computer into the FreeBSD installer,
+ even if you aren't planning on installing FreeBSD right away, will
+ provide important information about compatibility between
+ FreeBSD and your hardware which may, in turn, dictate which
+ installation options are even possible. It can also provide
+ early clues to any compatibility problems which could prevent
+ FreeBSD running on your system at all. If you plan on
+ installing via anonymous FTP then this installation disk
+ is all you need to download (the installation will handle any
+ further required downloading itself).
+
+ For more information on obtaining the latest FreeBSD distributions,
+ please see in the Appendix.
+
+ So, to get the show on the road, follow these steps:
+
+
+
+
+
+ Review the section of this installation guide to
+ be sure that your hardware is supported by FreeBSD. It
+ may be helpful to make a list of any special cards you
+ have installed, such as SCSI controllers, Ethernet
+ adapters or sound cards. This list should include
+ relevant configuration parameters such as interrupts
+ (IRQ) and IO port addresses.
+
+
+
+
+
+ If you're installing FreeBSD from CDROM media then you have
+ several different installation options:
+
+
+
+
+
+ If the CD has been mastered with El Torrito boot support and
+ your system supports direct booting from CDROM (and many older systems
+ do not), simply insert the CD into the drive and boot
+ directly from it.
+
+
+
+
+
+ If you're running DOS and have the proper drivers to access
+ your CD, run the install.bat script provided on the CD. This will
+ attempt to boot into the FreeBSD installation straight from DOS
+ (note: You must do this from actual DOS and not a Windows DOS box). If you also want to install FreeBSD from your DOS partition
+ (perhaps because your CDROM drive is completely unsupported by
+ FreeBSD) then run the setup program first to copy the
+ appropriate files from the CD to your DOS partition, afterwards
+ running install.
+
+
+
+
+
+ If either of the two proceeding methods work then you can
+ simply skip the rest of this section, otherwise your final option
+ is to create a boot floppy from the floppies\boot.flp
+ image - proceed to step 4 for instructions on how to do
+ this.
+
+
+
-
-
-
-Set up a bootp server to provide the client with
-IP, gateway, netmask.
-
-diskless:\
- :ht=ether:\
- :ha=0000c01f848a:\
- :sm=255.255.255.0:\
- :hn:\
- :ds=192.1.2.3:\
- :ip=192.1.2.4:\
- :gw=192.1.2.5:\
- :vm=rfc1048:
-
-
-
-
-
-Set up a TFTP server (on same machine as bootp
-server) to provide booting information to client.
-The name of this file is cfg.X.X.X.X (or
-/tftpboot/cfg.X.X.X.X, it will try both)
-where X.X.X.X is the IP address of the
-client. The contents of this file can be any valid
-netboot commands. Under 2.0, netboot has the
-following commands:
-
-help - print help list
-ip <X.X.X.X> - print/set client's IP address
-server <X.X.X.X> - print/set bootp/tftp server address
-netmask <X.X.X.X> - print/set netmask
-hostname <name> - print/set hostname
-kernel <name> - print/set kernel name
-rootfs <ip:/fs> - print/set root filesystem
-swapfs <ip:/fs> - print/set swap filesystem
-swapsize <size> - set diskless swapsize in Kbytes
-diskboot - boot from disk
-autoboot - continue boot process
-trans <on|off> - turn transceiver on|off
-flags [bcdhsv] - set boot flags
-
-
-A typical completely diskless cfg file might contain:
-
-rootfs 192.1.2.3:/rootfs/myclient
-swapfs 192.1.2.3:/swapfs
-swapsize 20000
-hostname myclient.mydomain
-
-
-A cfg file for a machine with local swap might contain:
-
-rootfs 192.1.2.3:/rootfs/myclient
-hostname myclient.mydomain
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Ensure that your NFS server has exported the root
-(and swap if applicable) filesystems to your client,
-and that the client has root access to these
-filesystems
-
-A typical /etc/exports file on FreeBSD might
-look like:
-
-/rootfs/myclient -maproot=0:0 myclient.mydomain
-/swapfs -maproot=0:0 myclient.mydomain
-
-
-
-And on HP-UX:
-
-/rootfs/myclient -root=myclient.mydomain
-/swapfs -root=myclient.mydomain
-
-
-
-
-
-
-If you are swapping over NFS (completely diskless
-configuration) create a swap file for your client
-using dd. If your swapfs command has the
-arguments /swapfs and the size 20000 as in the
-example above, the swapfile for myclient will be called
-/swapfs/swap.X.X.X.X where X.X.X.X
-is the client's IP addr, eg:
-
-# dd if=/dev/zero of=/swapfs/swap.192.1.2.4 bs=1k count=20000
-
-
-
-Also, the client's swap space might contain sensitive
-information once swapping starts, so make sure to
-restrict read and write access to this file to prevent
-unauthorized access:
-
-# chmod 0600 /swapfs/swap.192.1.2.4
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Unpack the root filesystem in the directory the
-client will use for its root filesystem
-(/rootfs/myclient in the example above).
-
-
-
-
- On HP-UX systems: The server should be
-running HP-UX 9.04 or later for HP9000/800 series
-machines. Prior versions do not allow the
-creation of device files over NFS.
-
-
-
-
- When extracting /dev in
-/rootfs/myclient, beware that some
-systems (HPUX) will not create device files that
-FreeBSD is happy with. You may have to go to
-single user mode on the first bootup (press
-control-c during the bootup phase), cd
-/dev and do a "sh ./MAKEDEV
-all" from the client to fix this.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Run netboot.com on the client or make an EPROM
-from the netboot.rom file
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Using Shared / and /usr filesystems
-
-At present there isn't an officially sanctioned way of
-doing this, although I have been using a shared /usr
-filesystem and individual / filesystems for each client.
-If anyone has any suggestions on how to do this cleanly,
-please let me and/or the &a.core; know.
-
-
-
-
-Compiling netboot for specific setups
-
-Netboot can be compiled to support NE1000/2000 cards by
-changing the configuration in
-/sys/i386/boot/netboot/Makefile. See the
-comments at the top of this file.
-
-
-
-
-
-ISDN
-
-Last modified by &a.wlloyd;.
-
-A good resource for information on ISDN technology and hardware is
-Dan Kegel's ISDN Page.
-
-A quick simple roadmap to ISDN follows:
-
-
-
-If you live in Europe I suggest you investigate the ISDN card
-section.
-
-
-
-
-If you are planning to use ISDN primarily to connect to the
-Internet with an Internet Provider on a dialup non-dedicated basis, I
-suggest you look into Terminal Adapters. This will give you the most
-flexibility, with the fewest problems, if you change providers.
-
-
-
-
-If you are connecting two lans together, or connecting to the
-Internet with a dedicated ISDN connection, I suggest you consider the
-stand alone router/bridge option.
-
-
-
-
-
-Cost is a significant factor in determining what solution you will
-choose. The following options are listed from least expensive to most
-expensive.
-
-
-
-ISDN Cards
-
-Original Contribution by &a.hm;.
-
-This section is really only relevant to European ISDN users. The
-cards supported are not yet(?) available for North American ISDN
-standards.
-
-You should be aware that this code is largely under development.
-Specifically, drivers have only been written for two manufacturers
-cards.
-
-PC ISDN cards support the full bandwidth of ISDN, 128Kbs. These
-cards are often the least expensive type of ISDN equipment.
-
-Under FreeBSD 2.1.0 and 2.1.5, there is early unfinished ISDN code
-under /usr/src/gnu/isdn. This code is out of date and should not be
-used. If you want to go this route, get the bisdn stuff. This code
-has been removed from the main source tree starting with FreeBSD 2.2.
-
-There is the bisdn ISDN package available from
-hub.freebsd.org
-supporting FreeBSD 2.1R, FreeBSD-current and NetBSD.
-The latest source can be found on the above mentioned ftp server under
-directory isdn as file bisdn-097.tar.gz.
-
-There are drivers for the following cards:
-
-
-
-Currently all (passive) Teles cards and their clones are supported
-for the EuroISDN (DSS1) and 1TR6 protocols.
-
-
-
-Dr. Neuhaus - Niccy 1016
-
-
-
-
-
-There are several limitations with the bisdn stuff. Specifically the
-following features usually associated with ISDN are not supported.
-
-
-
-
-
-No PPP support, only raw hdlc. This means you cannot connect to most
-standalone routers.
-
-
-
-Bridging Control Protocol not supported.
-
-
-
-Multiple cards are not supported.
-
-
-
-No bandwidth on demand.
-
-
-
-No channel bundling.
-
-
-
-
-
-A majordomo maintained mailing list is available.
-To join the list, send mail to &a.majordomo; and specify:
-subscribe freebsd-isdn
-
-In the body of your message.
-
-
-
-
-ISDN Terminal Adapters
-
-Terminal adapters(TA), are to ISDN what modems are to regular phone
-lines.
-
-Most TA's use the standard hayes modem AT command set, and can be
-used as a drop in replacement for a modem.
-
-A TA will operate basically the same as a modem except connection and
-throughput speeds will be much faster than your old modem. You will
-need to configure exactly the same as for a
-modem setup. Make sure you set your serial speed as high as possible.
-
-The main advantage of using a TA to connect to an Internet Provider is
-that you can do Dynamic PPP. As IP address space becomes more and more
-scarce, most providers are not willing to provide you with a static IP
-anymore. Most standalone routers are not able to accommodate dynamic IP
-allocation.
-
-TA's completely rely on the PPP daemon that you are running for their
-features and stability of connection. This allows you to upgrade easily
-from using a modem to ISDN on a FreeBSD machine, if you already have PPP
-setup. However, at the same time any problems you experienced with the
-PPP program and are going to persist.
-
-If you want maximum stability, use the kernel
-option, not the user-land .
-
-The following TA's are know to work with FreeBSD.
-
-
-
-
-
-Motorola BitSurfer and Bitsurfer Pro
-
-
-
-Adtran
-
-
-
-
-
-Most other TA's will probably work as well, TA vendors try to make sure
-their product can accept most of the standard modem AT command set.
-
-The real problem with external TA's is like modems you need a good
-serial card in your computer.
-
-You should read the section in the
-handbook for a detailed understanding of serial devices, and the
-differences between asynchronous and synchronous serial ports.
-
-A TA running off a standard PC serial port (asynchronous) limits you to
-115.2Kbs, even though you have a 128Kbs connection. To fully utilize
-the 128Kbs that ISDN is capable of, you must move the TA to a
-synchronous serial card.
-
-Do not be fooled into buying an internal TA and thinking you have
-avoided the synchronous/asynchronous issue. Internal TA's simply have a
-standard PC serial port chip built into them. All this will do, is save
-you having to buy another serial cable, and find another empty
-electrical socket.
-
-A synchronous card with a TA is at least as fast as a standalone router,
-and with a simple 386 FreeBSD box driving it, probably more flexible.
-
-The choice of sync/TA vs standalone router is largely a religious
-issue. There has been some discussion of this in the mailing lists. I
-suggest you search the archives for the complete discussion.
-
-
-
-
-Standalone ISDN Bridges/Routers
-
-ISDN bridges or routers are not at all specific to FreeBSD or any
-other operating system. For a more complete description of routing and
-bridging technology, please refer to a Networking reference book.
-
-In the context of this page, I will use router and bridge
-interchangeably.
-
-As the cost of low end ISDN routers/bridges comes down, it will
-likely become a more and more popular choice. An ISDN router is a small
-box that plugs directly into your local Ethernet network(or card), and
-manages its own connection to the other bridge/router. It has all the
-software to do PPP and other protocols built in.
-
-A router will allow you much faster throughput that a standard TA, since
-it will be using a full synchronous ISDN connection.
-
-The main problem with ISDN routers and bridges is that interoperability
-between manufacturers can still be a problem. If you are planning to
-connect to an Internet provider, I recommend that you discuss your needs
-with them.
-
-If you are planning to connect two lan segments together, ie: home
-lan to the office lan, this is the simplest lowest maintenance
-solution. Since you are buying the equipment for both sides of the
-connection you can be assured that the link will work.
-
-For example to connect a home computer or branch office network to a
-head office network the following setup could be used.
-
-Branch office or Home network
-
-Network is 10 Base T Ethernet. Connect router to network cable with
-AUI/10BT transceiver, if necessary.
-
-
----Sun workstation
-|
----FreeBSD box
-|
----Windows 95 (Do not admit to owning it)
-|
-Standalone router
- |
-ISDN BRI line
-
-If your home/branch office is only one computer you can use a twisted
-pair crossover cable to connect to the standalone router directly.
-
-Head office or other lan
-
-Network is Twisted Pair Ethernet.
- -------Novell Server
- | H |
- | ---Sun
- | |
- | U ---FreeBSD
- | |
- | ---Windows 95
- | B |
- |___---Standalone router
- |
- ISDN BRI line
-
-
-One large advantage of most routers/bridges is that they allow you to
-have 2 SEPARATE INDEPENDENT PPP connections to 2 separate sites at the
-SAME time. This is not supported on most TA's, except for
-specific(expensive) models that have two serial ports. Do not confuse
-this with channel bonding, MPP etc.
-
-This can be very useful feature, for example if you have an dedicated
-internet ISDN connection at your office and would like to tap into it,
-but don't want to get another ISDN line at work. A router at the office
-location can manage a dedicated B channel connection (64Kbs) to the
-internet, as well as a use the other B channel for a separate data connection.
-The second B channel can be used for dialin, dialout or dynamically
-bond(MPP etc.) with the first B channel for more bandwidth.
-
-An Ethernet bridge will also allow you to transmit more than just
-IP traffic, you can also send IPX/SPX or whatever other protocols you
-use.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Electronic Mail
-
-Contributed by &a.wlloyd;.
-
- Electronic Mail configuration is the subject of many books. If you plan on doing anything beyond setting up one mailhost for your network, you need industrial strength help.
-
-Some parts of E-Mail configuration are controlled in the Domain Name System (DNS). If you are going to run your own own DNS server check out /etc/namedb and ' man -k named ' for more information.
-
-
-
-Basic Information
-
-These are the major programs involved in an E-Mail exchange.
-A mailhost is a server that is responsible for delivering and receiving all email for your host, and possibly your network.
-
-
-
-User program
-
- This is a program like elm, pine, mail , or something more sophisticated like a WWW browser. This program will simply pass off all e-mail transactions to the local mailhost , either by calling sendmail or delivering it over TCP.
-
-
-
-
-Mailhost Server Daemon
-
- Usually this program is sendmail or smail running in the background. Turn it off or change the command line options in /etc/rc.conf
-(or, prior to FreeBSD 2.2.2, /etc/sysconfig). It is best to leave it on, unless you have a specific reason to want it off. Example: You are building a .
-
-You should be aware that sendmail is a potential weak link in a secure site. Some versions of sendmail have known security problems.
-
- sendmail does two jobs. It looks after delivering and receiving mail.
-
-If sendmail needs to deliver mail off your site it will look up in the DNS to determine the actual host that will receive mail for the destination.
-
- If it is acting as a delivery agent sendmail will take the message from the local queue and deliver it across the Internet to another sendmail on the receivers computer.
-
-
-
-
-DNS - Name Service
-
-The Domain Name System and its daemon named , contain the database mapping hostname to IP address, and hostname to mailhost. The IP address is specified in an "A" record. The "MX" record specifies the mailhost that will receive mail for you. If you do not have a "MX" record mail for your hostname, the mail will be delivered to your host directly.
-
-Unless you are running your own DNS server, you will not be able to change any information in the DNS yourself. If you are using an Internet Provider, speak to them.
-
-
-
-
-POP Servers
-
- This program gets the mail from your mailbox and gives it to your browser. If you want to run a POP server on your computer, you will need to do 2 things.
-
-
-
-Get pop software from the Ports collection that can be found in /usr/ports
-or packages collection. This handbook section has a complete reference on the system.
-
-
-
-Modify /etc/inetd.conf to load the POP server.
-
-
-
-
-
-The pop program will have instructions with it. Read them.
-
-
-
-
-
-Configuration
-
-
-
-Basic
-
-As your FreeBSD system comes "out of the box"[TM], you should be able to send E-mail to external hosts as long as you have /etc/resolv.conf setup or are running a name server.
-If you want to have mail for your host delivered to your specific host,there are two methods:
-
-- Run a name server ( man -k named ) and have your own domain smallminingco.com
-
-- Get mail delivered to the current DNS name for your host. Ie: dorm6.ahouse.school.edu
-
-No matter what option you choose, to have mail delivered directly to your host, you must be a full Internet host. You must have a permanent IP address. IE: NO dynamic PPP. If you are behind a firewall, the firewall must be passing on smtp traffic to you. From /etc/services
-smtp 25/tcp mail #Simple Mail Transfer
-
-If you want to receive mail at your host itself, you must make sure that the DNS MX entry points to your host address, or there is no MX entry for your DNS name.
-
-Try this
-newbsdbox# hostname
-newbsdbox.freebsd.org
-newbsdbox# host newbsdbox.freebsd.org
-newbsdbox.freebsd.org has address 204.216.27.xx
-
-
-If that is all that comes out for your machine, mail directory to root@newbsdbox.freebsd.org will work no problems.
-
-If instead, you have this
-newbsdbox# host newbsdbox.freebsd.org
-newbsdbox.FreeBSD.org has address 204.216.27.xx
-newbsdbox.FreeBSD.org mail is handled (pri=10) by freefall.FreeBSD.org
-
-All mail sent to your host directly will end up on freefall, under the same username.
-
-This information is setup in your domain name server. This should be the same host that is listed as your primary nameserver in /etc/resolv.conf
-
-The DNS record that carries mail routing information is the Mail eXchange entry. If no MX entry exists, mail will be delivered directly to the host by way of the Address record.
-
-The MX entry for freefall.freebsd.org at one time.
- freefall MX 30 mail.crl.net
- freefall MX 40 agora.rdrop.com
- freefall HINFO Pentium FreeBSD
- freefall MX 10 freefall.FreeBSD.org
- freefall MX 20 who.cdrom.com
- freefall A 204.216.27.xx
- freefall CNAME www.FreeBSD.org
-
-
-Freefall has many MX entries. The lowest MX number gets the mail in the end. The others will queue mail temporarily, if freefall is busy or down.
-
-Alternate MX sites should have separate connections to the Internet, to be most useful. An Internet Provider or other friendly site can provide this service.
-
-dig, nslookup, and host are your friends.
-
-
-
-
-Mail for your Domain (Network).
-
-To setup up a network mailhost, you need to direct the mail from arriving at all the workstations. In other words, you want to hijack all mail for *.smallminingco.com and divert it to one machine, your mailhost.
-
-The network users on their workstations will most likely pick up their mail over POP or telnet.
-
-A user account with the SAME USERNAME should exist on both machines. Please use adduser to do this as required. If you set the shell to /nonexistent the user will not be allowed to login.
-
-The mailhost that you will be using must be designated the Mail eXchange for each workstation. This must be arranged in DNS (ie BIND, named). Please refer to a Networking book for in-depth information.
-
-You basically need to add these lines in your DNS server.
-pc24.smallminingco.com A xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx ; Workstation ip
- MX 10 smtp.smallminingco.com ; Your mailhost
-
-
-You cannot do this yourself unless you are running a DNS server. If you do not want to run a DNS server, get somebody else like your Internet Provider to do it.
-
-This will redirect mail for the workstation to the Mail eXchange host. It does not matter what machine the A record points to, the mail will be sent to the MX host.
-
-This feature is used to implement Virtual E-Mail Hosting.
-
-Example
-
-I have a customer with domain foo.bar and I want all mail for foo.bar to be sent to my machine smtp.smalliap.com. You must make an entry in your DNS server like:
-
-foo.bar MX 10 smtp.smalliap.com ; your mailhost
-
-The A record is not needed if you only want E-Mail for the domain. IE: Don't expect ping foo.bar to work unless an Address record for foo.bar exists as well.
-
-On the mailhost that actually accepts mail for final delivery to a mailbox, sendmail must be told what hosts it will be accepting mail for.
-
-Add pc24.smallminingco.com to /etc/sendmail.cw (if you are using FEATURE(use_cw_file)), or add a "Cw myhost.smalliap.com" line to /etc/sendmail.cf
-
-If you plan on doing anything serious with sendmail you should install the sendmail source. The source has plenty of documentation with it. You will find information on getting sendmail source from .
-
-
-
-
- Setting up UUCP.
-
-Stolen from the FAQ.
-
-The sendmail configuration that ships with FreeBSD is
-suited for sites that connect directly to the Internet.
-Sites that wish to exchange their mail via UUCP must install
-another sendmail configuration file.
-
-Tweaking /etc/sendmail.cf manually is considered
-something for purists. Sendmail version 8 comes with a
-new approach of generating config files via some m4
-preprocessing, where the actual hand-crafted configuration
-is on a higher abstraction level. You should use the
-configuration files under
-
-
- /usr/src/usr.sbin/sendmail/cf
-
-
-If you did not install your system with full sources,
-the sendmail config stuff has been
-broken out into a separate source distribution tarball just
-for you. Assuming you have your CD-ROM mounted, do:
-
-
- cd /usr/src
- tar -xvzf /cdrom/dists/src/ssmailcf.aa
-
-
-Do not panic, this is only a few hundred kilobytes in size.
-The file README in the cf directory can
-serve as a basic introduction to m4 configuration.
-
-For UUCP delivery, you are best advised to use the
-mailertable feature. This constitutes a database
-that sendmail can use to base its routing decision upon.
-
-First, you have to create your .mc file. The
-directory /usr/src/usr.sbin/sendmail/cf/cf is the
-home of these files. Look around, there are already a few
-examples. Assuming you have named your file foo.mc,
-all you need to do in order to convert it into a valid
-sendmail.cf is:
-
-
- cd /usr/src/usr.sbin/sendmail/cf/cf
- make foo.cf
-
-
-If you don't have a /usr/obj hiearchy, then:
-
-
- cp foo.cf /etc/sendmail.cf
-
-
-Otherwise:
-
-
- cp /usr/obj/`pwd`/foo.cf /etc/sendmail.cf
-
-
-A typical .mc file might look like:
-
-
- include(`../m4/cf.m4')
- VERSIONID(`Your version number')
- OSTYPE(bsd4.4)
-
- FEATURE(nodns)
- FEATURE(nocanonify)
- FEATURE(mailertable)
-
- define(`UUCP_RELAY', your.uucp.relay)
- define(`UUCP_MAX_SIZE', 200000)
-
- MAILER(local)
- MAILER(smtp)
- MAILER(uucp)
-
- Cw your.alias.host.name
- Cw youruucpnodename.UUCP
-
-
-The nodns and nocanonify features will
-prevent any usage of the DNS during mail delivery. The
-UUCP_RELAY clause is needed for bizarre reasons,
-do not ask. Simply put an Internet hostname there that
-is able to handle .UUCP pseudo-domain addresses; most likely,
-you will enter the mail relay of your ISP there.
-
-Once you have this, you need this file called
-/etc/mailertable. A typical example of this
-gender again:
-
-
- #
- # makemap hash /etc/mailertable.db < /etc/mailertable
- #
- horus.interface-business.de uucp-dom:horus
- .interface-business.de uucp-dom:if-bus
- interface-business.de uucp-dom:if-bus
- .heep.sax.de smtp8:%1
- horus.UUCP uucp-dom:horus
- if-bus.UUCP uucp-dom:if-bus
- . uucp-dom:sax
-
-
-As you can see, this is part of a real-life file. The first
-three lines handle special cases where domain-addressed mail
-should not be sent out to the default route, but instead to
-some UUCP neighbor in order to ``shortcut'' the delivery
-path. The next line handles mail to the local Ethernet
-domain that can be delivered using SMTP. Finally, the UUCP
-neighbors are mentioned in the .UUCP pseudo-domain notation,
-to allow for a ``uucp-neighbor!recipient'' override of the
-default rules. The last line is always a single dot, matching
-everything else, with UUCP delivery to a UUCP neighbor that
-serves as your universal mail gateway to the world. All of
-the node names behind the uucp-dom: keyword must
-be valid UUCP neighbors, as you can verify using the
-command uuname.
-
-As a reminder that this file needs to be converted into a
-DBM database file before being usable, the command line to
-accomplish this is best placed as a comment at the top of
-the mailertable. You always have to execute this command
-each time you change your mailertable.
-
-Final hint: if you are uncertain whether some particular
-mail routing would work, remember the option to
-sendmail. It starts sendmail in address test mode;
-simply enter ``0 '', followed by the address you wish to
-test for the mail routing. The last line tells you the used
-internal mail agent, the destination host this agent will be
-called with, and the (possibly translated) address. Leave
-this mode by typing Control-D.
-
-
- j@uriah 191% sendmail -bt
- ADDRESS TEST MODE (ruleset 3 NOT automatically invoked)
- Enter <ruleset> <address>
- > 0 foo@interface-business.de
- rewrite: ruleset 0 input: foo @ interface-business . de
- ...
- rewrite: ruleset 0 returns: $# uucp-dom $@ if-bus $: foo \
- < @ interface-business . de >
- > ^D
- j@uriah 192%
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FAQ
-
-Migration from FAQ.
-
-
-
-Why do I have to use the FQDN for hosts on my site?
-
-You will probably find that the host is actually in a different
-domain; for example, if you are in foo.bar.edu and you wish to reach
-a host called ``mumble'' in the bar.edu domain, you will have to
-refer to it by the fully-qualified domain name, ``mumble.bar.edu'',
-instead of just ``mumble''.
-
-Traditionally, this was allowed by BSD BIND resolvers. However
-the current version of BIND that ships with FreeBSD
-no longer provides default abbreviations for non-fully
-qualified domain names other than the domain you are in.
-So an unqualified host mumble must either be found
-as mumble.foo.bar.edu, or it will be searched for
-in the root domain.
-
-This is different from the previous behavior, where the
-search continued across mumble.bar.edu, and
-mumble.edu. Have a look at RFC 1535 for why this
-was considered bad practice, or even a security hole.
-
-As a good workaround, you can place the line
-
-search foo.bar.edu bar.edu
-
-instead of the previous
-
-domain foo.bar.edu
-
-into your /etc/resolv.conf. However, make sure
-that the search order does not go beyond the ``boundary
-between local and public administration'', as RFC 1535
-calls it.
-
-
-
-
-Sendmail says ``mail loops back to myself''
-
-This is answered in the sendmail FAQ as follows:-
- * I am getting "Local configuration error" messages, such as:
-
- 553 relay.domain.net config error: mail loops back to myself
- 554 <user@domain.net>... Local configuration error
-
- How can I solve this problem?
-
- You have asked mail to the domain (e.g., domain.net) to be
- forwarded to a specific host (in this case, relay.domain.net)
- by using an MX record, but the relay machine does not recognize
- itself as domain.net. Add domain.net to /etc/sendmail.cw
- (if you are using FEATURE(use_cw_file)) or add "Cw domain.net"
- to /etc/sendmail.cf.
-
-
-
-The sendmail FAQ is in /usr/src/usr.sbin/sendmail
-and is recommended reading if you want to do any
-``tweaking'' of your mail setup.
-
-
-
-
-How can I do E-Mail with a dialup PPP host?
-
-You want to connect a FreeBSD box on a lan, to the Internet. The FreeBSD box will be a mail gateway for the lan. The PPP connection is non-dedicated.
-
-There are at least two way to do this.
-
-The other is to use UUCP.
-
-The key is to get a Internet site to provide secondary MX services for your domain.
-For example:
-bigco.com. MX 10 bigco.com.
- MX 20 smalliap.com.
-
-
-Only one host should be specified as the final recipient ( add ``Cw bigco.com'' in /etc/sendmail.cf on bigco.com).
-
-When the senders sendmail is trying to deliver the mail it will try to connect to you over the modem link. It will most likely time out because you are not online. Sendmail will automatically deliver it to the secondary MX site, ie your Internet provider. The secondary MX site will try every (sendmail_flags = "-bd -q15m" in /etc/rc.conf ) 15 minutes to connect to your host to deliver the mail to the primary MX site.
-
-You might wat to use something like this as a login script.
-#!/bin/sh
-# Put me in /usr/local/bin/pppbigco
-( sleep 60 ; /usr/sbin/sendmail -q ) &
-/usr/sbin/ppp -direct pppbigco
-
-If you are going to create a separate login script for a user you could use sendmail -qRbigco.com instead in the script above. This will force all mail in your queue for bigco.com to be processed immediately.
-
-A further refinement of the situation is as follows.
-
-Message stolen from the freebsd-isp mailing list.
-> we provide the secondary mx for a customer. The customer connects to
-> our services several times a day automatically to get the mails to
-> his primary mx (We do not call his site when a mail for his domains
-> arrived). Our sendmail sends the mailqueue every 30 minutes. At the
-> moment he has to stay 30 minutes online to be sure that all mail is
-> gone to the primary mx.
->
-> Is there a command that would initiate sendmail to send all the mails
-> now? The user has not root-privileges on our machine of course.
-
-In the 'privacy flags' section of sendmail.cf, there is a definition
-Opgoaway,restrictqrun
-
-Remove restrictqrun to allow non-root users to start the queue processing.
-You might also like to rearrange the MXs. We are the 1st MX for our
-customers like this, and we have defined:
-
-# If we are the best MX for a host, try directly instead of generating
-# local config error.
-OwTrue
-
-That way a remote site will deliver straight to you, without trying
-the customer connection. You then send to your customer. Only works for
-"hosts", so you need to get your customer to name their mail machine
-"customer.com" as well as "hostname.customer.com" in the DNS. Just put
-an A record in the DNS for "customer.com".
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Advanced topics
-
-
-
-The Cutting Edge: FreeBSD-current and FreeBSD-stable
-
-FreeBSD is under constant development between releases. For
-people who want to be on the cutting edge, there are several
-easy mechanisms for keeping your system in sync with the latest
-developments. Be warned: the cutting edge is not for everyone!
-This chapter will help you decide if you want to track the development
-system, or stick with one of the released versions.
-
-
-
-Staying Current with FreeBSD
-
-Contributed by &a.jkh;.
-
-
-
-What is FreeBSD-current?
-
-FreeBSD-current is, quite literally, nothing more than a daily
-snapshot of the working sources for FreeBSD. These include work in
-progress, experimental changes and transitional mechanisms that may or
-may not be present in the next official release of the software.
-While many of us compile almost daily from FreeBSD-current sources,
-there are periods of time when the sources are literally un-compilable.
-These problems are generally resolved as expeditiously as possible,
-but whether or not FreeBSD-current sources bring disaster or greatly
-desired functionality can literally be a matter of which part of any
-given 24 hour period you grabbed them in!
-
-
-
-
-Who needs FreeBSD-current?
-
-FreeBSD-current is made generally available for 3 primary interest groups:
-
-
-
- Members of the FreeBSD group who are actively working on some
-part of the source tree and for whom keeping `current' is an
-absolute requirement.
-
-
-
-
- Members of the FreeBSD group who are active testers,
-willing to spend time working through problems in order to
-ensure that FreeBSD-current remains as sane as possible. These
-are also people who wish to make topical suggestions on changes
-and the general direction of FreeBSD.
-
-
-
-
- Peripheral members of the FreeBSD (or some other) group who merely
-wish to keep an eye on things and use the current sources for
-reference purposes (e.g. for reading, not running). These
-people also make the occasional comment or contribute code.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-What is FreeBSD-current NOT?
-
-
-
-
-
- A fast-track to getting pre-release bits because you heard there is
-some cool new feature in there and you want to be the first on
-your block to have it.
-
-
-
-
- A quick way of getting bug fixes.
-
-
-
-
- In any way ``officially supported'' by us.
-
-We do our best to help people genuinely in one of the 3
-``legitimate'' FreeBSD-current categories, but we simply do not
-have the time to provide tech support for it.
-This is not because we are mean and nasty people who do not like
-helping people out (we would not even be doing FreeBSD if we were),
-it is literally because we cannot answer 400 messages a day
-and actually work on FreeBSD! I am sure that, if given
-the choice between having us answer lots of questions or continuing to
-improve FreeBSD, most of you would vote for us improving it.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Using FreeBSD-current
-
-
-
-
-
- Join the &a.current; and the &a.cvsall; .
-This is not just a good idea, it is essential.
-If you are not on the FreeBSD-current mailing list you
-will not see the comments that people are making about the
-current state of the system and thus will probably end up stumbling
-over a lot of problems that others have already found and
-solved. Even more importantly, you will miss out on
-potentially critical information (e.g. ``Yo, Everybody!
-Before you rebuild /usr/src, you must
-rebuild the kernel or your system will crash horribly!").
-
-The cvs-all mailing list will allow you to see the commit log
-entry for each change as it is made along with any pertinent
-information on possible side-effects.
-
-To join these lists, send mail to &a.majordomo; and specify:
-subscribe freebsd-current
-subscribe cvs-all
-
-In the body of your message. Optionally, you can also say `help'
-and Majordomo will send you full help on how to subscribe and
-unsubscribe to the various other mailing lists we support.
-
-
-
-
- Grab the sources from ftp.FreeBSD.ORG. You can do this in
-three ways:
-
-
-
-
- Use the facility. Unless you
-have a good TCP/IP connection at a flat rate, this is
-the way to do it.
-
-
-
-
- Use the program with
-this supfile.
-This is the second most recommended method, since it allows
-you to grab the entire collection once and then only what has
-changed from then on. Many people run cvsup from cron
-and keep their sources up-to-date automatically.
-
-
-
-
- Use ftp. The source tree for FreeBSD-current is always
-"exported" on:
-ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/FreeBSD-current
-We also use `wu-ftpd' which allows compressed/tar'd grabbing
-of whole trees. e.g. you see:
- usr.bin/lex
-
-You can do:
- ftp> cd usr.bin
- ftp> get lex.tar.Z
-
-And it will get the whole directory for you as a compressed
-tar file.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Essentially, if you need rapid on-demand access to the source and
-communications bandwidth is not a consideration, use cvsup or ftp.
-Otherwise, use CTM.
-
-
-
-
- If you are grabbing the sources to run, and not just look at,
-then grab all of current, not just selected portions. The
-reason for this is that various parts of the source depend on
-updates elsewhere, and trying to compile just a subset is almost
-guaranteed to get you into trouble.
-
-
-
-
- Before compiling current, read the Makefile in /usr/src
-carefully. You should at least run a `' the first time through as part of the upgrading
-process. Reading the &a.current; will keep you up-to-date on other
-bootstrapping procedures that sometimes become necessary as we move
-towards the next release.
-
-
-
-
- Be active! If you are running FreeBSD-current, we want to know
-what you have to say about it, especially if you have suggestions
-for enhancements or bug fixes. Suggestions with accompanying code
-are received most enthusiastically!
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Staying Stable with FreeBSD
-
-Contributed by &a.jkh;.
-
-
-
-What is FreeBSD-stable?
-
-FreeBSD-stable is our development branch for a more low-key and
-conservative set of changes intended for our next mainstream release.
-Changes of an experimental or untested nature do not go into this
-branch (see ).
-
-
-
-
-Who needs FreeBSD-stable?
-
-If you are a commercial user or someone who puts maximum stability of
-their FreeBSD system before all other concerns, you should consider tracking
-stable. This is especially true if you have installed the most
-recent release (&rel.current;-RELEASE at the time of this writing) since the stable
-branch is effectively a bug-fix stream relative to the previous release.
-
-Please note that the stable tree endeavors, above all, to
-be fully compilable and stable at all times, but we do occasionally
-make mistakes (these are still active sources with quickly-transmitted
-updates, after all). We also do our best to thoroughly test fixes in
-current before bringing them into stable, but sometimes
-our tests fail to catch every case. If something breaks for you in
-stable, please let us know immediately! (see
-next section).
-
-
-
-
-Using FreeBSD-stable
-
-
-
-
-
- Join the &a.stable; . This will
-keep you informed of build-dependencies that may appear in
-stable or any other issues requiring special attention.
-Developers will also make announcements in this mailing list when
-they are contemplating some controversial fix or update, giving
-the users a chance to respond if they have any issues to raise concerning
-the proposed change.
-
-To join this list, send mail to &a.majordomo; and say:
- subscribe freebsd-stable
-
-In the body of your message. Optionally, you can also say `help'
-and Majordomo will send you full help on how to subscribe and
-unsubscribe to the various other mailing lists we support.
-
-
-
-
- Grab the sources from ftp.FreeBSD.ORG. You can do this in
-three ways:
-
-
-
-
- Use the facility. Unless you
-have a good TCP/IP connection at a flat rate, this is
-the way to do it.
-
-
-
-
- Use the program with
-this supfile.
-This is the second most recommended method, since it allows
-you to grab the entire collection once and then only what has
-changed from then on. Many people run cvsup from cron
-to keep their sources up-to-date automatically.
-
-
-
-
- Use ftp. The source tree for FreeBSD-stable is always
-"exported" on:
-ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/FreeBSD-stable
-
-
-
-We also use `wu-ftpd' which allows compressed/tar'd grabbing
-of whole trees. e.g. you see:
- usr.bin/lex
-
-You can do:
- ftp> cd usr.bin
- ftp> get lex.tar.Z
-
-And it will get the whole directory for you as a compressed
-tar file.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Essentially, if you need rapid on-demand access to the source and
-communications bandwidth is not a consideration, use cvsup or ftp.
-Otherwise, use CTM.
-
-
-
-
- Before compiling stable, read the Makefile in /usr/src
-carefully. You should at least run a `' the first time through as part of the upgrading
-process. Reading the &a.stable; will keep you up-to-date on other
-bootstrapping procedures that sometimes become necessary as we move
-towards the next release.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Synchronizing Source Trees over the Internet
-
-Contributed by &a.jkh;.
-
-There are various ways of using an Internet (or email) connection
-to stay up-to-date with any given area of the FreeBSD project sources,
-or all areas, depending on what interests you. The primary
-services we offer are CVSup and CTM.
-
-CVSup uses the pull model of updating. The
-user (or a cron script) invokes the cvsup program, and it
-interacts with a cvsupd server somewhere to bring your files
-up to date. The updates you receive are up-to-the-minute and you get
-them when, and only when, you want them. You can easily restrict your
-updates to the specific files or directories that are of interest to
-you. Updates are generated on the fly by the server, according to
-what you have and what you want to have.
-
-CTM, on the other hand, does not interactively compare
-the sources you have with those on the master archive. Instead, a script
-which identifies changes in files since its previous run is executed several
-times a day on the master archive, any detected changes being compressed,
-stamped with a sequence-number and encoded for transmission over email
-(printable ASCII only). Once received, these "CTM deltas" can then be
-handed to the ctm_rmail(1) utility which will automatically decode, verify
-and apply the changes to the user's copy of the sources. This process is
-far more efficient than CVSup, and places less strain on our server resources
-since it is a push rather than a pull model.
-
-There are other trade-offs, of course. If you
-inadvertently wipe out portions of your archive, CVSup will detect
-and rebuild the damaged portions for you. CTM won't do this, and if
-you wipe some portion of your source tree out (and don't have it backed
-up) then you will have to start from scratch (from the most recent CVS
-"base delta") and rebuild it all.
-
-For more information on CTM and CVSup, please
-see one of the following sections:
-
-
-
-CTM
-
-Contributed by &a.phk;. Updated 19-October-1997.
-
-CTM is a method for keeping a remote directory tree in sync with a
-central one. It has been developed for usage with FreeBSD's source
-trees, though other people may find it useful for other purposes as
-time goes by. Little, if any, documentation currently exists at
-this time on the process of creating deltas, so talk to &a.phk;
-for more information should you wish to use CTM for other things.
-
-
-
-Why should I use CTM?
-
-CTM will give you a local copy of the FreeBSD source trees.
-There are a number of ``flavors'' of the tree available. Whether
-you wish to track the entire cvs tree or just one of the branches,
-CTM can provide you the information.
-If you are an active developer on FreeBSD, but have lousy
-or non-existent TCP/IP connectivity, or simply wish to have the
-changes automatically sent to you, CTM was made for you.
-You will need to obtain up to three deltas per day for the most
-active branches. However, you should consider having them sent
-by automatic email. The sizes of the updates are
-always kept as small as possible. This is typically less than 5K,
-with an occasional (one in ten) being 10-50K and every now and
-then a biggie of 100K+ or more coming around.
-
-You will also need to make yourself aware of the various caveats
-related to working directly from the development sources rather
-than a pre-packaged release. This is particularly true if you
-choose the ``current'' sources. It is recommended that
-you read .
-
-
-
-
-What do I need to use CTM?
-
-You will need two things: The ``CTM'' program and the initial
-deltas to feed it (to get up to ``current'' levels).
-
-The CTM program has been part of FreeBSD ever since version 2.0
-was released, and lives in /usr/src/usr.sbin/CTM if you
-have a copy of the source online.
-
-If you are running a pre-2.0 version of FreeBSD, you can fetch the
-current CTM sources directly from:
-
-ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/FreeBSD-current/src/usr.sbin/ctm
-
-The ``deltas'' you feed CTM can be had two ways, FTP or e-mail.
-If you have general FTP access to the Internet then the following
-FTP sites support access to CTM:
-
-ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/CTM
-
-or see section .
-
-FTP the relevant directory and fetch the README file,
-starting from there.
-
-If you may wish to get your deltas via email:
-
-Send email to &a.majordomo; to subscribe to one of the CTM
-distribution lists. ``ctm-cvs-cur'' supports the entire cvs tree.
-``ctm-src-cur'' supports the head of the development branch.
-``ctm-src-2_2'' supports the 2.2 release branch, etc.
-(If you do not know how to subscribe
-yourself using majordomo, send a message first containing the
-word ``help'' - it will send you back usage instructions.)
-
-When you begin receiving your CTM updates in the mail, you may
-use the ctm_rmail program to unpack and apply them. You
-can actually use the ctm_rmail program directly from a entry
-in /etc/aliases if you want to have the process run in a
-fully automated fashion. Check the ctm_rmail man page for more
-details.
-
-NOTE: No matter what method you use to get the CTM
-deltas, you should subscribe to the ctm-announce@FreeBSD.ORG
-mailing list. In the future, this will be the only place where
-announcements concerning the operations of the CTM system will be
-posted. Send an email to &a.majordomo; with a single
-line of ``subscribe ctm-announce'' to get added to the list.
-
-
-
-
-Starting off with CTM for the first time
-
-Before you can start using CTM deltas, you will need to get a
-to a starting point for the deltas produced subsequently to it.
-
-First you should determine what you already have. Everyone can
-start from an ``Empty'' directory. However, since the trees are
-many tens of megabytes, you should prefer to start from something
-already at hand. If you have a RELEASE CD, you can copy or extract
-an initial source from it. This will save a significant transfer
-of data.
-
-Once you identify a suitable starting point, you must use an initial
-``transition'' delta to transform your starting point into a
-CTM supported tree.
-
-You can recognize these transition deltas by the ``X'' appended
-to the number (src-cur.3210XEmpty.gz for instance).
-The designation following the ``X'' corresponds to the origin
-of your initial ``seed''. ``Empty'' is an empty directory, ``R225''
-would designate the 2.2.5 release, etc.
-As a rule a base transition from ``Empty'' is producted
-every 100 deltas. By the way, they are large! 25 to 30
-Megabytes of gzip'ed data is common for the ``XEmpty'' deltas.
-
-Once you've picked a base delta to start from, you will also need
-all deltas with higher numbers following it.
-
-
-
-
-Using CTM in your daily life
-
-To apply the deltas, simply say:
-
-cd /where/ever/you/want/the/stuff
-ctm -v -v /where/you/store/your/deltas/src-xxx.*
-
-
-
-
-CTM understands deltas which have been put through gzip,
-so you do not need to gunzip them first, this saves disk space.
-
-Unless it feels very secure about the entire process, CTM will
-not touch your tree. To verify a delta you can also use the
-``'' flag and CTM will not actually touch your tree; it will
-merely verify the integrity of the delta and see if it would apply
-cleanly to your current tree.
-
-There are other options to CTM as well, see the manual pages
-or look in the sources for more information.
-
-I would also be very happy if somebody could help with the ``user
-interface'' portions, as I have realized that I cannot make up my
-mind on what options should do what, how and when...
-
-That's really all there is to it. Every time you get a new delta,
-just run it through CTM to keep your sources up to date.
-
-Do not remove the deltas if they are hard to download again. You
-just might want to keep them around in case something bad happens.
-Even if you only have floppy disks, consider using fdwrite to
-make a copy.
-
-
-
-
-Keeping your local changes
-
-As a developer one would like to experiment with and change
-files in the source tree. CTM supports local modifications in a
-limited way: before checking for the presence of a file
-foo, it first looks for foo.ctm. If this
-file exists, CTM will operate on it instead of foo.
-
-This behaviour gives us a simple way to maintain local changes:
-simply copy the files you plan to modify to the corresponding
-file names with a .ctm suffix. Then you can freely hack
-the code, while CTM keeps the .ctm file up-to-date.
-
-
-
-
-Other interesting CTM options
-
-
-
-Finding out exactly what would be touched by an update
-
-You can determine the list of changes that CTM will make on your
-source repository using the ``'' option to CTM.
-
-This is useful if you would like to keep logs of the changes,
-pre- or post- process the modified files in any manner, or just
-are feeling a tad paranoid :-).
-
-
-
-
-Making backups before updating
-
-Sometimes you may want to backup all the files that would be changed
-by a CTM update.
-
-Specifying the ``'' option causes
-CTM to backup all files that would be touched by a given CTM
-delta to backup-file.
-
-
-
-
-Restricting the files touched by an update
-
-Sometimes you would be interested in restricting the scope of a
-given CTM update, or may be interested in extracting just a few
-files from a sequence of deltas.
-
-You can control the list of files that CTM would operate on by
-specifying filtering regular expressions using the
-``'' and ``'' options.
-
-For example, to extract an up-to-date copy of
-lib/libc/Makefile from your collection of saved CTM deltas,
-run the commands:
-
-cd /where/ever/you/want/to/extract/it/
-ctm -e '^lib/libc/Makefile' ~ctm/src-xxx.*
-
-
-
-
-For every file specified in a CTM delta, the ``'' and
-``'' options are applied in the order given on the
-command line. The file is processed by CTM only if it is
-marked as eligible after all the ``'' and
-``'' options are applied to it.
-
-
-
-
-
-Future plans for CTM
-
-Tons of them:
-
-
-
-Use some kind of authentication into the CTM system, so as to
-allow detection of spoofed CTM updates.
-
-
-
-Clean up the options to CTM, they became confusing and
-counter intuitive.
-
-
-
-
-
-The bad news is that I am very busy, so any help in doing this will
-be most welcome. And do not forget to tell me what you want also...
-
-
-
-
-Miscellaneous stuff
-
-All the ``DES infected'' (e.g. export controlled) source is not
-included. You will get the ``international'' version only. If
-sufficient interest appears, we will set up a ``sec-cur''
-sequence too.
-There is a sequence of deltas for the ports collection too,
-but interest has not been all that high yet. Tell me if you want
-an email list for that too and we will consider setting it up.
-
-
-
-
-Thanks!
-
-
-
-&a.bde;
-
-for his pointed pen and invaluable comments.
-
-
-
-
-&a.sos;
-
-
-for patience.
-
-
-
-
-Stephen McKay
-
-
-wrote ctm_[rs]mail, much appreciated.
-
-
-
-
-&a.jkh;
-
-
-for being so stubborn that I had to make it better.
-
-
-
-
-All the users
-
-
-I hope you like it...
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CVSup
-
-Contributed by &a.jdp;.
-
-
-
-Introduction
-
-CVSup is a software package for distributing and updating source
-trees from a master CVS repository on a remote server host. The
-FreeBSD sources are maintained in a CVS repository on a central
-development machine in California. With CVSup, FreeBSD users can
-easily keep their own source trees up to date.
-
-CVSup uses the so-called pull model of updating. Under the pull
-model, each client asks the server for updates, if and when they are
-wanted. The server waits passively for update requests from its
-clients. Thus all updates are instigated by the client. The server
-never sends unsolicited updates. Users must either run the CVSup client
-manually to get an update, or they must set up a cron job to run it
-automatically on a regular basis.
-
-The term "CVSup", capitalized just so, refers to the entire software
-package. Its main components are the client "cvsup" which runs on each
-user's machine, and the server "cvsupd" which runs at each of the
-FreeBSD mirror sites.
-
-As you read the FreeBSD documentation and mailing lists, you may
-see references to sup. Sup was the predecessor of CVSup,
-and it served a similar purpose. CVSup is in used in much the same
-way as sup and, in fact, uses configuration files which are
-backward-compatible with sup's. Sup is no longer used in the FreeBSD
-project, because CVSup is both faster and more flexible.
-
-
-
-
-Installation
-
-The easiest way to install CVSup if you are running FreeBSD 2.2 or
-later is to use either the port from the FreeBSD or the corresponding binary package, depending on whether you prefer to roll your
-own or not.
-
-If you are running FreeBSD-2.1.6 or 2.1.7, you unfortunately cannot use the
-binary package versions due to the fact that it requires a version of
-the C library that does not yet exist in FreeBSD-2.1.{6,7}. You can easily
-use the port, however, just as with FreeBSD 2.2. Simply unpack
-the tar file, cd to the cvsup subdirectory and type "make install".
-
-Because CVSup is written in Modula-3, both the package and the port require that the
-Modula-3 runtime libraries be installed. These are available as the
-lang/modula-3-lib port and the lang/modula-3-lib-3.6 package. If you follow the same
-directions as for cvsup, these libraries will be compiled and/or
-installed automatically when you install the CVSup port or package.
-
-The Modula-3 libraries are rather large, and fetching and compiling
-them is not an instantaneous process. For that reason, a third option
-is provided. You can get statically linked FreeBSD
-executables for CVSup from either the USA distribution site:
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsup-bin-15.3.tar.gz
-(client including GUI).
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsup.nogui-bin-15.3.tar.gz
-(client without GUI).
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsupd-bin-15.3.tar.gz
-(server).
-
-
-
-
-
-or the German mirror:
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.cs.tu-berlin.de/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsup-bin-15.3.tar.gz
-(client including GUI).
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.cs.tu-berlin.de/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsup.nogui-bin-15.3.tar.gz
-(client without GUI).
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.cs.tu-berlin.de/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsupd-bin-15.3.tar.gz
-(server).
-
-
-
-
-
-Most users will need only the client. These executables are entirely
-self-contained, and they will run on any version of FreeBSD from
-FreeBSD-2.1.0 to FreeBSD-current.
-
-In summary, your options for installing CVSup are:
-
-
-
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.2 or later: static binary, port, or package
-
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.1.6, 2.1.7: static binary or port
-
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.1.5 or earlier: static binary
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Configuration
-
-CVSup's operation is controlled by a configuration file called the
-"supfile". Beginning with FreeBSD-2.2, there are some sample supfiles
-in the directory /usr/share/examples/cvsup. These examples are also available
-from ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/FreeBSD-current/src/share/examples/cvsup/ if you are on a pre-2.2 system.
-
-The information in a supfile answers the following questions for cvsup:
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-In the following sections, we will construct a typical supfile by
-answering each of these questions in turn. First, we describe the
-overall structure of a supfile.
-
-A supfile is a text file. Comments begin with "#" and extend to
-the end of the line. Lines that are blank and lines that contain only
-comments are ignored.
-
-Each remaining line describes a set of files that the user wishes
-to receive. The line begins with the name of a "collection", a
-logical grouping of files defined by the server. The name of the
-collection tells the server which files you want. After the
-collection name come zero or more fields, separated by white space.
-These fields answer the questions listed above. There are two types
-of fields: flag fields and value fields. A flag field consists of a
-keyword standing alone, e.g., "delete" or "compress". A value field
-also begins with a keyword, but the keyword is followed without
-intervening white space by "=" and a second word. For example,
-"release=cvs" is a value field.
-
-A supfile typically specifies more than one collection to receive.
-One way to structure a supfile is to specify all of the relevant
-fields explicitly for each collection. However, that tends to make
-the supfile lines quite long, and it is inconvenient because most
-fields are the same for all of the collections in a supfile. CVSup
-provides a defaulting mechanism to avoid these problems. Lines
-beginning with the special pseudo-collection name "*default" can be
-used to set flags and values which will be used as defaults for the
-subsequent collections in the supfile. A default value can be
-overridden for an individual collection, by specifying a different
-value with the collection itself. Defaults can also be changed or
-augmented in mid-supfile by additional "*default" lines.
-
-With this background, we will now proceed to construct a supfile
-for receiving and updating the main source tree of .
-
-
-
-
-
-Which files do you want to receive?
-
-
-
-The files available via CVSup are organized into named
-groups called "collections". The collections that are available are
-described .
-In this example, we wish to receive the
-entire main source tree for the FreeBSD system. There is a single
-large collection "src-all" which will give us all of that, except the
-export-controlled cryptography support. Let us assume for this
-example that we are in the USA or Canada. Then we can get the
-cryptography code with one additional collection, "cvs-crypto".
-As a first step toward constructing our supfile, we
-simply list these collections, one per line:
-
-
- src-all
- cvs-crypto
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Which version(s) of them do you want?
-
-
-
-With CVSup, you can receive virtually any version of the sources
-that ever existed. That is possible because the cvsupd server works
-directly from the CVS repository, which contains all of the versions.
-You specify which one of them you want using the "tag=" and "date="
-value fields.
-
-
-
-WARNING: Be very careful to specify any "tag=" fields
-correctly. Some tags are valid only for certain collections of
-files. If you specify an incorrect or misspelled tag, CVSup will
-delete files which you probably do not want deleted.
-In particular, use only "tag=." for the "ports-*"
-collections.
-
-
-
-The "tag=" field names a symbolic tag in the repository. There are
-two kinds of tags, revision tags and branch tags. A revision tag
-refers to a specific revision. Its meaning stays the same from day to
-day. A branch tag, on the other hand, refers to the latest revision
-on a given line of development, at any given time. Because a branch
-tag does not refer to a specific revision, it may mean something
-different tomorrow than it means today.
-
-
-
-Here are the branch tags that users might be interested in:
-
-
-
-tag=.
-
-The main line of development, also known as FreeBSD-current.
-Note: the "." is not punctuation; it is the name of the tag.
-Valid for all collections.
-
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_2
-
-
-The line of development for FreeBSD-2.2.x, also known as
-FreeBSD-stable.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_1_0
-
-
-The line of development for FreeBSD-2.1.x - this branch
-is largely obsolete.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Here are the revision tags that users might be interested in:
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_2_6_RELEASE
-
-FreeBSD-2.2.6.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_2_5_RELEASE
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.2.5.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_2_2_RELEASE
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.2.2.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_2_1_RELEASE
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.2.1.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_2_0_RELEASE
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.2.0.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_1_7_RELEASE
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.1.7.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_1_6_1_RELEASE
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.1.6.1.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_1_6_RELEASE
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.1.6.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_1_5_RELEASE
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.1.5.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_1_0_RELEASE
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.1.0.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-WARNING: Be very careful to type the tag name exactly as
-shown. CVSup cannot distinguish between valid and invalid tags.
-If you misspell the tag, CVSup will behave as though you had
-specified a valid tag which happens to refer to no files at all.
-It will delete your existing sources in that case.
-
-
-
-When you specify a branch tag, you normally receive the latest versions
-of the files on that line of development. If you wish to receive some
-past version, you can do so by specifying a date with the "date=" value
-field. The cvsup(1) manual page explains how to do that.
-
-
-
-For our example, we wish to receive FreeBSD-current. We add this line
-at the beginning of our supfile:
-
-
- *default tag=.
-
-
-
-
-There is an important special case that comes into play if you specify
-neither a "tag=" field nor a "date=" field. In that case, you receive
-the actual RCS files directly from the server's CVS repository, rather
-than receiving a particular version. Developers generally prefer this
-mode of operation. By maintaining a copy of the repository itself on
-their systems, they gain the ability to browse the revision histories
-and examine past versions of files. This gain is achieved at a large
-cost in terms of disk space, however.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Where do you want to get them from?
-
-
-
-We use the "host=" field to tell cvsup where to obtain its updates.
-Any of the will do,
-though you should try to select one that's near to you.
-In this example, we'll use the primary FreeBSD distribution site,
-"cvsup.FreeBSD.org":
-
-
- *default host=cvsup.FreeBSD.org
-
-
-
-
-On any particular run of cvsup, you can override this setting on the
-command line, with "-h hostname".
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Where do you want to put them on your own machine?
-
-
-
-The "prefix=" field tells cvsup where to put the files it receives.
-In this example, we will put the source files directly into our main
-source tree, "/usr/src". The "src" directory is already implicit in the
-collections we have chosen to receive, so this is the correct
-specification:
-
-
- *default prefix=/usr
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Where should cvsup maintain its status files?
-
-
-
-The cvsup client maintains certain status files in what is called
-the "base" directory. These files help CVSup to work more
-efficiently, by keeping track of which updates you have already
-received. We will use the standard base directory,
-"/usr/local/etc/cvsup":
-
-
- *default base=/usr/local/etc/cvsup
-
-
-
-
-This setting is used by default if it is not specified in the
-supfile, so we actually do not need the above line.
-
-
-
-If your base directory does not already exist, now would be a good
-time to create it. The cvsup client will refuse to run if the base
-directory does not exist.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Miscellaneous supfile settings:
-
-
-
-There is one more line of boiler plate that normally needs to be
-present in the supfile:
-
-
- *default release=cvs delete use-rel-suffix compress
-
-
-
-
-"release=cvs" indicates that the server should get its information
-out of the main FreeBSD CVS repository. This is virtually always the
-case, but there are other possibilities which are beyond the scope of
-this discussion.
-
-
-
-"delete" gives CVSup permission to delete files. You should always
-specify this, so that CVSup can keep your source tree fully up to
-date. CVSup is careful to delete only those files for which it is
-responsible. Any extra files you happen to have will be left strictly
-alone.
-
-
-
-"use-rel-suffix" is ... arcane. If you really want to know about
-it, see the cvsup(1) manual page. Otherwise, just specify it and
-do not worry about it.
-
-
-
-"compress" enables the use of gzip-style compression on the
-communication channel. If your network link is T1 speed or faster,
-you probably should not use compression. Otherwise, it helps
-substantially.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Putting it all together:
-
-
-
-Here is the entire supfile for our example:
-
-
- *default tag=.
- *default host=cvsup.FreeBSD.org
- *default prefix=/usr
- *default base=/usr/local/etc/cvsup
- *default release=cvs delete use-rel-suffix compress
- src-all
- cvs-crypto
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Running CVSup
-
-You are now ready to try an update. The command line for doing this is
-quite simple:
-
-
- cvsup supfile
-
-
-where "supfile" is of course the name of the supfile you have just created.
-Assuming you are running under X11, cvsup will display a GUI window with
-some buttons to do the usual things. Press the "go" button, and watch
-it run.
-
-Since you are updating your actual "/usr/src" tree in this example, you
-will need to run the program as root so that cvsup has the permissions
-it needs to update your files. Having just created your configuration
-file, and having never used this program before, that might
-understandably make you nervous. There is an easy way to do a trial run
-without touching your precious files. Just create an empty directory
-somewhere convenient, and name it as an extra argument on the command
-line:
-
-
- mkdir /var/tmp/dest
- cvsup supfile /var/tmp/dest
-
-
-The directory you specify will be used as the destination directory
-for all file updates. CVSup will examine your usual files in
-"/usr/src", but it will not modify or delete any of them. Any file
-updates will instead land in "/var/tmp/dest/usr/src". CVSup will also
-leave its base directory status files untouched when run this way.
-The new versions of those files will be written into the specified
-directory. As long as you have read access to "/usr/src", you do not
-even need to be root to perform this kind of trial run.
-
-If you are not running X11 or if you just do not like GUIs, you
-should add a couple of options to the command line when you run cvsup:
-
-
- cvsup -g -L 2 supfile
-
-
-The "-g" tells cvsup not to use its GUI. This is automatic if you are
-not running X11, but otherwise you have to specify it.
-
-The "-L 2" tells cvsup to print out the details of all the file updates
-it is doing. There are three levels of verbosity, from "-L 0" to "-L 2".
-The default is 0, which means total silence except for error messages.
-
-There are plenty of other options available. For a brief list of them,
-type "cvsup -H". For more detailed descriptions, see the manual page.
-
-Once you are satisfied with the way updates are working, you can arrange
-for regular runs of cvsup using cron(8). Obviously, you should not let
-cvsup use its GUI when running it from cron.
-
-
-
-
-CVSup File Collections
-
-The file collections available via CVSup are organized
-hierarchically. There are a few large collections, and they are
-divided into smaller sub-collections. Receiving a large collection
-is equivalent to receiving each of its sub-collections.
-The hierarchical relationships among collections are reflected by
-the use of indentation in the list below.
-
- The most commonly used collections are src-all,
-cvs-crypto, and ports-all. The other collections are used
-only by small groups of people for specialized purposes, and some mirror
-sites may not carry all of them.
-
-
-
-cvs-all release=cvs
-
-The main FreeBSD CVS repository, excluding the export-restricted
-cryptography code.
-
-
-
-distrib release=cvs
-
-Files related to the distribution and mirroring of FreeBSD.
-
-
-
-
-doc-all release=cvs
-
-
-Sources for the FreeBSD handbook and other documentation.
-
-
-
-
-ports-all release=cvs
-
-
-The FreeBSD ports collection.
-
-
-
-ports-archivers release=cvs
-
-Archiving tools.
-
-
-
-
-ports-astro release=cvs
-
-
-Astronomical ports.
-
-
-
-
-ports-audio release=cvs
-
-
-Sound support.
-
-
-
-
-ports-base release=cvs
-
-
-Miscellaneous files at the top of /usr/ports.
-
-
-
-
-ports-benchmarks release=cvs
-
-
-Benchmarks.
-
-
-
-
-ports-biology release=cvs
-
-
-Biology.
-
-
-
-
-ports-cad release=cvs
-
-
-Computer aided design tools.
-
-
-
-
-ports-chinese release=cvs
-
-
-Chinese language support.
-
-
-
-
-ports-comms release=cvs
-
-
-Communication software.
-
-
-
-
-ports-converters release=cvs
-
-
-character code converters.
-
-
-
-
-ports-databases release=cvs
-
-
-Databases.
-
-
-
-
-ports-devel release=cvs
-
-
-Development utilities.
-
-
-
-
-ports-editors release=cvs
-
-
-Editors.
-
-
-
-
-ports-emulators release=cvs
-
-
-Emulators for other operating systems.
-
-
-
-
-ports-games release=cvs
-
-
-Games.
-
-
-
-
-ports-german release=cvs
-
-
-German language support.
-
-
-
-
-ports-graphics release=cvs
-
-
-Graphics utilities.
-
-
-
-
-ports-japanese release=cvs
-
-
-Japanese language support.
-
-
-
-
-ports-korean release=cvs
-
-
-Korean language support.
-
-
-
-
-ports-lang release=cvs
-
-
-Programming languages.
-
-
-
-
-ports-mail release=cvs
-
-
-Mail software.
-
-
-
-
-ports-math release=cvs
-
-
-Numerical computation software.
-
-
-
-
-ports-mbone release=cvs
-
-
-MBone applications.
-
-
-
-
-ports-misc release=cvs
-
-
-Miscellaneous utilities.
-
-
-
-
-ports-net release=cvs
-
-
-Networking software.
-
-
-
-
-ports-news release=cvs
-
-
-USENET news software.
-
-
-
-
-ports-plan9 release=cvs
-
-
-Various programs from Plan9.
-
-
-
-
-ports-print release=cvs
-
-
-Printing software.
-
-
-
-
-ports-russian release=cvs
-
-
-Russian language support.
-
-
-
-
-ports-security release=cvs
-
-
-Security utilities.
-
-
-
-
-ports-shells release=cvs
-
-
-Command line shells.
-
-
-
-
-ports-sysutils release=cvs
-
-
-System utilities.
-
-
-
-
-ports-textproc release=cvs
-
-
-text processing utilities (does not include desktop publishing).
-
-
-
-
-ports-vietnamese release=cvs
-
-
-Vietnamese language support.
-
-
-
-
-ports-www release=cvs
-
-
-Software related to the World Wide Web.
-
-
-
-
-ports-x11 release=cvs
-
-
-X11 software.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-src-all release=cvs
-
-
-The main FreeBSD sources, excluding the export-restricted cryptography
-code.
-
-
-
-src-base release=cvs
-
-Miscellaneous files at the top of /usr/src.
-
-
-
-
-src-bin release=cvs
-
-
-User utilities that may be needed in single-user mode
-(/usr/src/bin).
-
-
-
-
-src-contrib release=cvs
-
-
-Utilities and libraries from outside the FreeBSD project, used
-relatively unmodified (/usr/src/contrib).
-
-
-
-
-src-etc release=cvs
-
-
-System configuration files (/usr/src/etc).
-
-
-
-
-src-games release=cvs
-
-
-Games (/usr/src/games).
-
-
-
-
-src-gnu release=cvs
-
-
-Utilities covered by the GNU Public License (/usr/src/gnu).
-
-
-
-
-src-include release=cvs
-
-
-Header files (/usr/src/include).
-
-
-
-
-src-kerberosIV release=cvs
-
-
-KerberosIV security package (/usr/src/kerberosIV).
-
-
-
-
-src-lib release=cvs
-
-
-Libraries (/usr/src/lib).
-
-
-
-
-src-libexec release=cvs
-
-
-System programs normally executed by other programs
-(/usr/src/libexec).
-
-
-
-
-src-release release=cvs
-
-
-Files required to produce a FreeBSD release (/usr/src/release).
-
-
-
-
-src-sbin release=cvs
-
-
-System utilities for single-user mode (/usr/src/sbin).
-
-
-
-
-src-share release=cvs
-
-
-Files that can be shared across multiple systems (/usr/src/share).
-
-
-
-
-src-sys release=cvs
-
-
-The kernel (/usr/src/sys).
-
-
-
-
-src-tools release=cvs
-
-
-Various tools for the maintenance of FreeBSD (/usr/src/tools).
-
-
-
-
-src-usrbin release=cvs
-
-
-User utilities (/usr/src/usr.bin).
-
-
-
-
-src-usrsbin release=cvs
-
-
-System utilities (/usr/src/usr.sbin).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-www release=cvs
-
-
-The sources for the World Wide Web data.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvs-crypto release=cvs
-
-
-The export-restricted cryptography code.
-
-
-
-src-crypto release=cvs
-
-Export-restricted utilities and libraries from outside the FreeBSD
-project, used relatively unmodified (/usr/src/crypto).
-
-
-
-
-src-eBones release=cvs
-
-
-Kerberos and DES (/usr/src/eBones).
-
-
-
-
-src-secure release=cvs
-
-
-DES (/usr/src/secure).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-distrib release=self
-
-
-The CVSup server's own configuration files. Used by CVSup mirror sites.
-
-
-
-
-gnats release=current
-
-
-The GNATS bug-tracking database.
-
-
-
-
-mail-archive release=current
-
-
-FreeBSD mailing list archive.
-
-
-
-
-www release=current
-
-
-The installed World Wide Web data. Used by WWW mirror sites.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Announcements, Questions, and Bug Reports
-
-Most FreeBSD-related discussion of CVSup takes place on the
-&a.hackers;. New versions of the software are announced there, as
-well as on the &a.announce;.
-
-Questions and bug reports should be addressed to the author of the
-program at cvsup-bugs@polstra.com.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Using make world to rebuild your system
-
-Contributed by &a.nik;.
-
-Once you have synchronised your local source tree against a particular
-version of FreeBSD (stable, current and so on) you
-must then use the source tree to rebuild the system.
-
-Currently, the best source of information on how to do that is a
-tutorial available from http://www.nothing-going-on.demon.co.uk/FreeBSD/make-world/make-world.html.
-
-A successor to this tutorial will be integrated into the handbook.
-
-
-
-
-
-Contributing to FreeBSD
-
-Contributed by &a.jkh;.
-
-So you want to contribute something to FreeBSD? That is great!
-We can always use the help, and FreeBSD is one of those systems
-that relies on the contributions of its user base in order
-to survive. Your contributions are not only appreciated, they are
-vital to FreeBSD's continued growth!
-
-Contrary to what some people might also have you believe, you do not
-need to be a hot-shot programmer or a close personal friend of the
-FreeBSD core team in order to have your contributions accepted. The
-FreeBSD Project's development is done by a large and growing number of
-international contributors whose ages and areas of technical expertise
-vary greatly, and there is always more work to be done than there are
-people available to do it.
-
-Since the FreeBSD project is responsible for an entire operating
-system environment (and its installation) rather than just a kernel or
-a few scattered utilities, our "TODO" list also spans a very wide
-range of tasks, from documentation, beta testing and presentation to
-highly specialized types of kernel development. No matter what your
-skill level, there is almost certainly something you can do to help the
-project!
-
-Commercial entities engaged in FreeBSD-related enterprises are
-also encouraged to contact us. Need a special extension to make your
-product work? You will find us receptive to your requests, given that
-they are not too outlandish. Working on a value-added product? Please
-let us know! We may be able to work cooperatively on some aspect of
-it. The free software world is challenging a lot of existing
-assumptions about how software is developed, sold, and maintained
-throughout its life cycle, and we urge you to at least give it a
-second look.
-
-
-
-What Is Needed
-
-The following list of tasks and sub-projects represents something
-of an amalgam of the various core team TODO lists and user requests
-we have collected over the last couple of months. Where possible, tasks
-have been ranked by degree of urgency. If you are interested in
-working on one of the tasks you see here, send mail to the coordinator
-listed by clicking on their names. If no coordinator has been
-appointed, maybe you would like to volunteer?
-
-
-
-High priority tasks
-
-The following tasks are considered to be urgent, usually because
-they represent something that is badly broken or sorely needed:
-
-
-
-3-stage boot issues. Overall coordination:
-&a.hackers;
-
-
-
-
-
-Autodetect memory over 64MB properly.
-
-
-
-Move userconfig (-c) into 3rd stage boot.
-
-
-
-Do WinNT compatible drive tagging so that the 3rd stage can
-provide an accurate mapping of BIOS geometries for disks.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Filesystem problems. Overall coordination:
-&a.fs;
-
-
-
-Fix the MSDOS file system.
-
-
-
-Clean up and document the nullfs filesystem code. Coordinator: &a.gibbs;
-
-
-
-Fix the union file system. Coordinator: &a.dyson;
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Implement kernel and user vm86 support. Coordinator: &a.hackers;
-
-
-
-Implement Int13 vm86 disk driver. Coordinator: &a.hackers;
-
-
-
-SCSI driver issues. Overall coordination: &a.hackers;
-
-
-
-
-
-Support tagged queuing generically. Requires a rewrite of how we do
-our command queuing, but we need this anyway to for prioritized I/O
-(CD-R writers/scanners).
-
-
-
-Better error handling (Busy status and retries).
-
-
-
-Merged Scatter-Gather list creation code.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Kernel issues. Overall coordination:
-&a.hackers;
-
-
-
-
-
-Complete the eisaconf conversion of all existing drivers.
-
-
-
-Change all interrupt routines to take a (void *) instead of
-using unit numbers.
-
-
-
-Merge EISA/PCI/ISA interrupt registration code.
-
-
-
-Split PCI/EISA/ISA probes out from drivers like bt742a.c (WIP)
-
-
-
-Fix the syscons ALT-Fn/vt switching hangs. Coordinator: &a.sos;
-
-
-
-Rewrite the Intel Etherexpress 16 driver.
-
-
-
-Merge the 3c509 and 3c590 drivers (essentially provide a PCI probe for
-ep.c).
-
-
-
-Support Adaptec 3985 (first as a simple 3 channel SCSI card)
-Coordinator: &a.gibbs;
-
-
-
-Support Advansys SCSI controller products. Coordinator: &a.gibbs;
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Medium priority tasks
-
-The following tasks need to be done, but not with any particular
-urgency:
-
-
-
-Port AFS (Andrew File System) to FreeBSD Coordinator: Alexander Seth Jones
-
-
-
-
-MCA support? This should be finalized one way or the other.
-
-
-
-Full LKM based driver support/Configuration Manager.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Devise a way to do all LKM registration without ld. This means
-some kind of symbol table in the kernel.
-
-
-
-Write a configuration manager (in the 3rd stage boot?) that probes
-your hardware in a sane manner, keeps only the LKMs required for
-your hardware, etc.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-PCMCIA/PCCARD. Coordinators: &a.nate; and &a.phk;
-
-
-
-Documentation!
-
-
-
-Reliable operation of the pcic driver (needs testing).
-
-
-
-Recognizer and handler for sio.c (mostly done).
-
-
-
-Recognizer and handler for ed.c (mostly done).
-
-
-
-Recognizer and handler for ep.c (mostly done).
-
-
-
-User-mode recognizer and handler (partially done).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Advanced Power Management. Coordinators: &a.nate; and &a.phk;
-
-
-
-APM sub-driver (mostly done).
-
-
-
-IDE/ATA disk sub-driver (partially done).
-
-
-
-syscons/pcvt sub-driver.
-
-
-
-Integration with the PCMCIA/PCCARD drivers (suspend/resume).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Low priority tasks
-
-The following tasks are purely cosmetic or represent such an
-investment of work that it is not likely that anyone will get them done
-anytime soon:
-
-The first 20 items are from Terry Lambert <terry@lambert.org>
-
-
-
-Ability to make BIOS calls from protected mode using V86 mode
-on the processor and return the results via a mapped interrupt
-IPC mechanism to the protected mode caller.
-
-
-
-
-Drivers built into the kernel that use the BIOS call mechanism
-to allow them to be independent of the actual underlying hardware
-the same way that DOS is independent of the underlying hardware.
-This includes NetWork and ASPI drivers loaded in DOS prior to
-BSD being loaded by a DOS-based loader program, which means
-potential polling, which means DOS-not-busy interrupt generation
-for V86 machines by the protected mode kernel.
-
-
-
-
-An image format that allows tagging of such drivers data and
-text areas in the default kernel executable so that that portion
-of the kernel address space may be recovered at a later time,
-after hardware specific protected mode drivers have been loaded
-and activated. This includes separation of BIOS based drivers
-from each other, since it is better to run with a BIOS based
-driver in all cases than to not run at all.
-
-
-
-
-Abstraction of the bus interface mechanism. Currently, PCMCIA,
-EISA, and PCI busses are assumed to be bridged from ISA. This
-is not something which should be assumed.
-
-
-
-
-A configuration manager that knows about PNP events, including
-power management events, insertion, extraction, and bus (PNP ISA
-and PCMCIA bridging chips) vs. card level event management.
-
-
-
-
-A topological sort mechanism for assigning reassignable addresses
-that do not collide with other reassignable and non-reassignable
-device space resource usage by fixed devices.
-
-
-
-
-A registration based mechanism for hardware services registration.
-Specifically, a device centric registration mechanism for timer
-and sound and other system critical service providers. Consider
-Timer2 and Timer0 and speaker services as one example of a single
-monolithic service provider.
-
-
-
-
-A kernel exported symbol space in the kernel data space accessible
-by an LKM loader mechanism that does relocation and symbol space
-manipulation. The intent of this interface is to support the
-ability to demand load and unload kernel modules.
-
-
-
-
-NetWare Server (protected mode ODI driver) loader and subservices
-to allow the use of ODI card drivers supplied with network cards.
-The same thing for NDIS drivers and NetWare SCSI drivers.
-
-
-
-
-An "upgrade system" option that works on Linux boxes instead
-of just previous rev FreeBSD boxes.
-
-
-
-
-Splitting of the console driver into abstraction layers, both to
-make it easier to port and to kill the X and ThinkPad and PS/2
-mouse and LED and console switching and bouncing NumLock problems
-once and for all.
-
-
-
-
-Other kernel emulation environments for other foreign drivers
-as opportunity permits. SCO and Solaris are good candidates,
-followed by UnixWare, etc.
-
-
-
-
-Processor emulation environments for execution of foreign binaries.
-This is easier than it sounds if the system call interface does not
-change much.
-
-
-
-
-Streams to allow the use of commercial streams drivers.
-
-
-
-
-Kernel multithreading (requires kernel preemption).
-
-
-
-
-Symmetric Multiprocessing with kernel preemption (requires kernel
-preemption).
-
-
-
-
-A concerted effort at support for portable computers. This is
-somewhat handled by changing PCMCIA bridging rules and power
-management event handling. But there are things like detecting
-internal vs. external display and picking a different screen
-resolution based on that fact, not spinning down the disk if
-the machine is in dock, and allowing dock-based cards to disappear
-without affecting the machines ability to boot (same issue for
-PCMCIA).
-
-
-
-
-Reorganization of the source tree for multiple platform ports.
-
-
-
-
-A "make world" that "makes the world" (rename the current one
-to "make regress" if that is all it is good for).
-
-
-
-
-A 4M (preferably smaller!) memory footprint.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Smaller tasks
-
-Most of the tasks listed in the previous sections require either a
-considerable investment of time or an in-depth knowledge of the FreeBSD
-kernel (or both). However, there are also many useful tasks which are
-suitable for "weekend hackers", or people without programming
-skills.
-
-
-
-
-
-If you run FreeBSD-current and have a good Internet connection,
-there is a machine current.freebsd.org which builds a full release
-once a day - every now and again, try and install the latest release
-from it and report any failures in the process.
-
-
-
-
-Read the freebsd-bugs mailing list. There might be a problem
-you can comment constructively on or with patches you can test. Or
-you could even try to fix one of the problems yourself.
-
-
-
-
-Read through the FAQ and Handbook periodically. If anything is
-badly explained, out of date or even just completely wrong, let us
-know. Even better, send us a fix (SGML is not difficult to learn, but
-there is no objection to ASCII submissions).
-
-
-
-
-Help translate FreeBSD documentation into your native language (if
-not already available) - just send an email to &a.doc; asking if anyone is
-working on it. Note that you are not committing yourself to translating
-every single FreeBSD document by doing this - in fact, the documentation
-most in need of translation is the installation instructions.
-
-
-
-
-Read the freebsd-questions mailing list and the newsgroup
-comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.misc occasionally (or even regularly). It can
-be very satisfying to share your expertise and help people solve their
-problems; sometimes you may even learn something new yourself! These
-forums can also be a source of ideas for things to work on.
-
-
-
-
-If you know of any bugfixes which have been successfully applied
-to -current but have not been merged into -stable after a decent
-interval (normally a couple of weeks), send the committer a polite
-reminder.
-
-
-
-
-Move contributed software to src/contrib in the source tree.
-
-
-
-
-Make sure code in src/contrib is up to date.
-
-
-
-
-Look for year 2000 bugs (and fix any you find!)
-
-
-
-
-Build the source tree (or just part of it) with extra warnings
-enabled and clean up the warnings.
-
-
-
-
-Fix warnings for ports which do deprecated things like using
-gets() or including malloc.h.
-
-
-
-
-If you have contributed any ports, send your patches back to the
-original author (this will make your life easier when they bring out
-the next version)
-
-
-
-
-Suggest further tasks for this list!
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-How to Contribute
-
-Contributions to the system generally fall into one or more of
-the following 6 categories:
-
-
-
-Bug reports and general commentary
-
-
-An idea or suggestion of general technical interest
-should be mailed to the &a.hackers;. Likewise, people with an
-interest in such things (and a tolerance for a high
-volume of mail!) may subscribe to the hackers mailing list by
-sending mail to &a.majordomo;. See
-
-for more information about this and other mailing lists.
-
-If you find a bug or are submitting a specific change, please report
-it using the send-pr(1) program or its
-WEB-based equivalent.
-Try to fill-in each field of the bug report. Unless they exceed
-65KB, include any patches directly in the report. Consider compressing
-them and using uuencode(1) if they exceed 20KB.
-
-After filing a report, you should receive confirmation along with
-a tracking number. Keep this tracking number so that you can
-update us with details about the problem by sending mail to
-bug-followup@FreeBSD.ORG. Use the number as the
-message subject, e.g. "Re: kern/3377". Additional
-information for any bug report should be submitted this way.
-
-If you do not receive confirmation in a timely fashion (3 days to
-a week, depending on your email connection) or are, for some
-reason, unable to use the send-pr(1) command,
-then you may ask someone to file it for you by sending mail
-to the &a.bugs;.
-
-
-
-
-Changes to the documentation
-
-Changes to the documentation are overseen by the &a.doc;.
-Send submissions and changes (even small ones are welcome!)
-using send-pr as described in
-.
-
-
-
-
-Changes to existing source code
-
-An addition or change to the existing source code is a somewhat trickier
-affair and depends a lot on how far out of date you are with the current
-state of the core FreeBSD development. There is a special on-going release
-of FreeBSD known as ``FreeBSD-current'' which is made available in
-a variety of ways for the convenience of developers working
-actively on the system. See for more information about getting and using
-FreeBSD-current.
-
-Working from older sources unfortunately means that your changes may
-sometimes be too obsolete or too divergent for easy re-integration into
-FreeBSD. Chances of this can be minimized somewhat by subscribing to the
-&a.announce; and the &a.current; lists, where discussions
-on the current state of the system take place.
-
-Assuming that you can manage to secure fairly up-to-date sources to base
-your changes on, the next step is to produce a set of diffs to send to the
-FreeBSD maintainers. This is done with the diff(1) command,
-with the `context diff' form being preferred. For example:
-
-diff -c oldfile newfile
-
-
-or
-
-diff -c -r olddir newdir
-
-
-would generate such a set of context diffs for the given source file
-or directory hierarchy. See the man page for diff(1) for more
-details.
-
-Once you have a set of diffs (which you may test with the
-patch(1) command), you should submit them for inclusion
-with FreeBSD. Use the send-pr(1) program as described in
-.
-Do not just send the diffs to the &a.hackers; or they will get
-lost! We greatly appreciate your submission (this is a volunteer
-project!); because we are busy, we may not be able to address it
-immediately, but it will remain in the pr database until we do.
-
-If you feel it appropriate (e.g. you have added, deleted, or
-renamed files), bundle your changes into a tar file
-and run the uuencode(1) program on it. Shar archives are
-also welcome.
-
-If your change is of a potentially sensitive nature, e.g.
-you are unsure of copyright issues governing its further distribution
-or you are simply not ready to release it without a tighter review first,
-then you should send it to &a.core; directly rather than submitting
-it with send-pr(1). The core mailing list
-reaches a much smaller group of people who do much of the
-day-to-day work on FreeBSD. Note that this group is also
-very busy and so you should only send mail to them
-where it is truly necessary.
-
-Please refer to man 9 intro and man 9 style
-for some information on coding style. We would appreciate
-it if you were at least aware of this information before
-submitting code.
-
-
-
-
-New code or major value-added packages
-
-In the rare case of a significant contribution of a large body
-work, or the addition of an important new feature to FreeBSD,
-it becomes almost always necessary to either send changes as
-uuencode'd tar files or upload them to our ftp site ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/incoming.
-
-When working with large amounts of code, the touchy subject of
-copyrights also invariably comes up. Acceptable copyrights
-for code included in FreeBSD are:
-
-
-
-
-
-The BSD copyright. This copyright is most preferred
-due to its ``no strings attached'' nature and general
-attractiveness to commercial enterprises. Far from
-discouraging such commercial use, the FreeBSD Project
-actively encourages such participation by commercial interests
-who might eventually be inclined to invest something of their own
-into FreeBSD.
-
-
-
-
-The GNU Public License, or ``GPL''. This license is not quite
-as popular with us due to the amount of extra effort demanded
-of anyone using the code for commercial purposes, but given
-the sheer quantity of GPL'd code we currently require (compiler,
-assembler, text formatter, etc) it would be silly to refuse
-additional contributions under this license. Code under the GPL
-also goes into a different part of the tree, that being
-/sys/gnu or /usr/src/gnu, and is therefore
-easily identifiable to anyone for whom the GPL presents a problem.
-
-
-
-
-
-Contributions coming under any other type of copyright must be
-carefully reviewed before their inclusion into FreeBSD will
-be considered. Contributions for which particularly restrictive
-commercial copyrights apply are generally rejected, though the
-authors are always encouraged to make such changes available
-through their own channels.
-
-To place a ``BSD-style'' copyright on your work, include the following
-text at the very beginning of every source code file you wish
-to protect, replacing the text between the `%%' with
-the appropriate information.
-
-Copyright (c) %%proper_years_here%%
- %%your_name_here%%, %%your_state%% %%your_zip%%. All rights reserved.
-
-Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
-modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
-are met:
-1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
- notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer as
- the first lines of this file unmodified.
-2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
- notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
- documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
-
-THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY %%your_name_here%% ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR
-IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES
-OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED.
-IN NO EVENT SHALL %%your_name_here%% BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT,
-INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT
-NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
-DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
-THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
-(INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF
-THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
-
- $Id$
-
-
-For your convenience, a copy of this text can be found in
-/usr/share/examples/etc/bsd-style-copyright.
-
-
-
-
-Porting an existing piece of free software
-
-Contributed by &a.jkh;, &a.gpalmer;, &a.asami; and
-&a.obrien;.28 August 1996.
-
-The porting of freely available software, while perhaps not as
-gratifying as developing your own from scratch, is still a vital part
-of FreeBSD's growth and of great usefulness to those who would not
-otherwise know where to turn for it. All ported software is organized
-into a carefully organized hierarchy known as ``the ports collection''.
-The collection enables a new user to get a quick and complete overview
-of what is available for FreeBSD in an easy-to-compile form. It also
-saves considerable space by not actually containing the majority
-of the sources being ported, but merely those differences required for
-running under FreeBSD.
-
-What follows are some guidelines for creating a new port for
-FreeBSD 3.x. The bulk of the work is done by
-/usr/share/mk/bsd.port.mk, which all port Makefiles include.
-Please refer to that file for more details on the inner workings of
-the ports collection. Even if you don't hack Makefiles daily, it is
-well commented, and you will still gain much knowledge from it.
-
-
-
-Before Starting the Port
-
-Note: Only a fraction of the overridable variables
-(${..}) are mentioned in this document. Most
-(if not all) are documented at the start of
-bsd.port.mk. This file uses a non-standard tab
-setting. Emacs and Vim should recognize the setting
-on loading the file. vi or ex can be set to
-using the correct value by typing `:set tabstop=4'
-once the file has been loaded.
-
-You may come across code that needs modifications or
-conditional compilation based upon what version of UNIX it is
-running under. If you need to make such changes to the code
-for conditional compilation, make sure you make the changes as
-general as possible so that we can back-port code to FreeBSD
-1.x systems and cross-port to other BSD systems such as 4.4BSD
-from CSRG, BSD/386, 386BSD, NetBSD, and OpenBSD.
-
-The preferred way to tell 4.3BSD/Reno (1990) and newer versions of
-the BSD code apart is by using the `BSD' macro
-defined in <sys/param.h>. Hopefully that file
-is already included; if not, add the code:
-
-
-
-#ifdef (defined(__unix__) || defined(unix)) && !defined(USG)
-#include <sys/param.h>
-#endif
-
-
-
-to the proper place in the .c file. We believe that every
-system that defines these to symbols has sys/param.h. If you find
-a system that doesn't, we would like to know. Please send
-mail to &a.ports;.
-
-Another way is to use the GNU Autoconf style of doing this:
-
-
-
-#ifdef HAVE_SYS_PARAM_H
-#include <sys/param.h>
-#endif
-
-
-
-Don't forget to add -DHAVE_SYS_PARAM_H to the CFLAGS
-in the Makefile for this method.
-
-Once you have <sys/param.h> included, you may use:
-
-
-
-#if (defined(BSD) && (BSD >= 199103))
-
-
-
-to detect if the code is being compiled on a 4.3 Net2 code
-base or newer (e.g. FreeBSD 1.x, 4.3/Reno, NetBSD 0.9, 386BSD,
-BSD/386 1.1 and below).
-
-Use:
-
-
-
-#if (defined(BSD) && (BSD >= 199306))
-
-
-
-to detect if the code is being compiled on a 4.4 code base or
-newer (e.g. FreeBSD 2.x, 4.4, NetBSD 1.0, BSD/386 2.0 or
-above).
-
-The value of the BSD macro is 199506 for the 4.4BSD-Lite2 code
-base. This is stated for informational purposes only. It should
-not be used to distinguish between version of FreeBSD based only
-on 4.4-Lite vs. versions that have merged in changes from 4.4-Lite2.
-The __FreeBSD__ macro should be used instead.
-
-Use sparingly:
-
-
-
-
-
-__FreeBSD__ is defined in all versions of
-FreeBSD. Use it if the change you are making ONLY affects
-FreeBSD. Porting gotchas like the use of
-sys_errlist[] vs strerror() are
-Berkeleyisms, not FreeBSD changes.
-
-
-
-
-In FreeBSD 2.x, __FreeBSD__ is defined to be
-2. In earlier versions, it is 1. Later
-versions will bump it to match their major version number.
-
-
-
-
-If you need to tell the difference between a FreeBSD 1.x
-system and a FreeBSD 2.x or 3.x system, usually the right answer is
-to use the BSD macros described above. If there
-actually is a FreeBSD specific change (such as special
-shared library options when using `ld') then it is
-OK to use __FreeBSD__ and `#if __FreeBSD__ >
-1' to detect a FreeBSD 2.x and later system.
-
-If you need more granularity in detecting FreeBSD systems since
-2.0-RELEASE you can use the following:
-
-
-#if __FreeBSD__ >= 2
-#include <osreldate.h>
-# if __FreeBSD_version >= 199504
- /* 2.0.5+ release specific code here */
-# endif
-#endif
-
-
-__FreeBSD_version values:
-
-2.0-RELEASE: 199411
-2.1-current's: 199501, 199503
-2.0.5-RELEASE: 199504
-2.2-current before 2.1: 199508
-2.1.0-RELEASE: 199511
-2.2-current before 2.1.5: 199512
-2.1.5-RELEASE: 199607
-2.2-current before 2.1.6: 199608
-2.1.6-RELEASE: 199612
-2.1.7-RELEASE: 199612
-2.2-RELEASE: 220000
-2.2.1-RELEASE: 220000 (yes, no change)
-2.2-STABLE after 2.2.1-RELEASE: 220000 (yes, still no change)
-2.2-STABLE after texinfo-3.9: 221001
-2.2-STABLE after top: 221002
-2.2.2-RELEASE: 222000
-2.2-STABLE after 2.2.2-RELEASE: 222001
-2.2.5-RELEASE: 225000
-2.2-STABLE after 2.2.5-RELEASE: 225001
-2.2-STABLE after ldconfig -R merge: 225002
-2.2.6-RELEASE: 226000
-2.2-STABLE after 2.2.6-RELEASE: 226001
-3.0-current before mount(2) change: 300000
-3.0-current as of Nov 1997: 300001
-
-
-(Note that 2.2-STABLE sometimes identifies itself as
-"2.2.5-STABLE" after the 2.2.5-RELEASE.)
-The pattern used to be year followed by the month, but we
-decided to change it to a more straightforward major/minor
-system starting from 2.2. This is because the parallel
-development on several branches made it infeasible to
-classify the releases simply by their real release dates.
-(Note that if you are making a port now, you don't have to
-worry about old -current's; they are listed here just for
-your reference.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-In the hundreds of ports that have been done, there have
-only been one or two cases where __FreeBSD__
-should have been used. Just because an earlier port
-screwed up and used it in the wrong place does not mean
-you should do so too.
-
-
-
-
-Quick Porting
-
-This section tells you how to do a quick port. In many
-cases, it is not enough, but we will see.
-
-First, get the original tarball and put it into
-${DISTDIR}, which defaults to
-/usr/ports/distfiles.
-
-Note: The following assumes that the software compiled
-out-of-the-box, i.e., there was absolutely no change required
-for the port to work on your FreeBSD box. If you needed to
-change something, you will have to refer to the next section
-too.
-
-
-
-Writing the Makefile
-
-The minimal Makefile would look something like this:
-
-
-
- # New ports collection makefile for: oneko
- # Version required: 1.1b
- # Date created: 5 December 1994
- # Whom: asami
- #
- # $Id$
- #
-
- DISTNAME= oneko-1.1b
- CATEGORIES= games
- MASTER_SITES= ftp://ftp.cs.columbia.edu/archives/X11R5/contrib/
-
- MAINTAINER= asami@FreeBSD.ORG
-
- USE_IMAKE= yes
-
- .include <bsd.port.mk>
-
-
-
-See if you can figure it out. Do not worry about the contents
-of the $Id$ line, it will be filled in
-automatically by CVS when the port is imported to our main
-ports tree. You can find a more detailed example in the section.
-
-
-
-
-Writing the description files
-
-There are three required description files that are
-required for any port, whether they actually package or not.
-They are COMMENT, DESCR, and
-PLIST, and reside in the pkg subdirectory.
-
-
-
-COMMENT
-
-This is the one-line description of the port. PLEASE
-do not include the package name (or version number of the
-software) in the comment.
-Here is an example:
-
-A cat chasing a mouse all over the screen.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-DESCR
-
-This is a longer description of the port. One to a few
-paragraphs concisely explaining what the port does is
-sufficient. Note: This is not a manual nor an
-in-depth description on how to use or compile the port.
-In particular, please do not just copy the README
-file here, unless, of course, it is a concise description
-of the port.
-
-It is recommended that you sign the name at the end of
-this file, as in:
-
-
-
-This is a port of oneko, in which a cat chases a poor mouse all over
-the screen.
- :
-(etc.)
-
-- Satoshi
-asami@cs.berkeley.edu
-
-
-
-
-
-
-PLIST
-
-This file lists all the files installed by the port. It
-is also called the `packing list' because the package is
-generated by packing the files listed here. The pathnames
-are relative to the installation prefix (usually
-/usr/local or /usr/X11R6). Also it is assumed
-the manpages will be compressed.
-
-Here is a small example:
-
-
-
-bin/oneko
-man/man1/oneko.1.gz
-lib/X11/app-defaults/Oneko
-lib/X11/oneko/cat1.xpm
-lib/X11/oneko/cat2.xpm
-lib/X11/oneko/mouse.xpm
-
-
-
-Refer to the pkg_create(1) man page for details
-on the packing list.
-
-
-
-
-
-Creating the checksum file
-
-Just type `make makesum'. The ports make rules
-will automatically generate the file files/md5.
-
-
-
-
-Testing the port
-
-You should make sure that the port rules do exactly what
-you want it to do, including packaging up the port. Try
-doing `make install', `make package' and
-then `make deinstall' and see if all
-the files and directories are correctly deleted. Then do a
-`pkg_add `make package-name`.tgz' and see if everything
-re-appears and works correctly. Then do another
-`make deinstall' and then `make
-reinstall; make package' to make sure you haven't
-included in the packing list any files that are not
-installed by your port.
-
-
-
-
-Submitting the port
-
-Now that you are happy with your port, the only thing
-remaining is to put it in the main FreeBSD ports tree and
-make everybody else happy about it too. To accomplish this,
-pack the necessary files (everything described in this
-section -- in particular do not include the
-original source tarball, the `work' subdirectory or
-the package) into a .tar.gz file, stick it in the
-directory
-
-ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/incoming/
-
-
-and send mail to us using send-pr(1) (please
-classify it as category `ports' and class `change-request').
-There is no need to upload the package, we will build it by
-ourselves.
-We will take a look, get back to you if necessary, and put
-it in the tree. Your name will also appear in the list of
-`Additional FreeBSD contributors' on the FreeBSD Handbook
-and other files. Isn't that great?!? :)
-
-
-
-
-
-Slow Porting
-
-Ok, so it was not that simple, and the port required some
-modifications to get it to work. In this section, we will
-explain, step by step, how to modify it to get it to work with
-the ports paradigm.
-
-
-
-How things work
-
-First, this is the sequence of events which occurs when the
-user first types `make' in your port's directory,
-and you may find that having bsd.port.mk in another
-window while you read this really helps to understand it.
-
-But do not worry if you do not really understand what
-bsd.port.mk is doing, not many people
-do... :>
-
-
-
-
-
-The fetch target is run. The fetch target is
-responsible for making sure that the tarball exists
-locally in ${DISTDIR}. If fetch cannot
-find the required files in ${DISTDIR} it
-will look up the URL ${MASTER_SITES},
-which is set in the Makefile, as well as our main ftp
-site at ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/distfiles/,
-where we put sanctioned distfiles as backup. It will then
-attempt to
-fetch the named distribution file with
-${FETCH}, assuming that the requesting
-site has direct access to the Internet. If that succeeds,
-it will save the file in ${DISTDIR} for
-future use and proceed.
-
-
-
-
-The extract target is run. It looks for your ports'
-distribution file in ${DISTDIR} (typically
-a gzip'd tarball) and unpacks it into a temporary
-subdirectory specified by ${WRKDIR}
-(defaults to work).
-
-
-
-
-The patch target is run. First, any patches defined
-in ${PATCHFILES} are applied. Second, if
-any patches are found in ${PATCHDIR}
-(defaults to the patches subdirectory), they are
-applied at this time in alphabetical order.
-
-
-
-
-The configure target is run. This can do any one of
-many different things.
-
-
-
-
-If it exists, scripts/configure is run.
-
-
-
-
-If ${HAS_CONFIGURE} or
-${GNU_CONFIGURE} is set,
-${WRKSRC}/configure is run.
-
-
-
-
-If ${USE_IMAKE} is set,
-${XMKMF} (default: `xmkmf
--a') is run.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The build target is run. This is responsible for
-descending into the ports' private working directory
-(${WRKSRC}) and building it. If
-${USE_GMAKE} is set, GNU make
-will be used, otherwise the system make will be
-used.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The above are the default actions. In addition, you can
-define targets `pre-<something>' or
-`post-<something>', or put scripts with those
-names, in the scripts subdirectory, and they will
-be run before or after the default actions are done.
-
-For example, if you have a post-extract target
-defined in your Makefile, and a file pre-build in
-the scripts subdirectory, the
-post-extract target will be called after the
-regular extraction actions, and the pre-build
-script will be executed before the default build rules are
-done. It is recommended that you use Makefile targets if
-the actions are simple enough, because it will be easier for
-someone to figure out what kind of non-default action the
-port requires.
-
-The default actions are done by the bsd.port.mk
-targets `do-<something>'. For example, the
-commands to extract a port are in the target
-`do-extract'. If you are not happy with the
-default target, you can fix it by redefining the
-`do-<something>' target in your Makefile.
-
-Note that the `main' targets (e.g., extract,
-configure, etc.) do nothing more than make sure all
-the stages up to that one is completed and call the real
-targets or scripts, and they are not intended to be
-changed. If you want to fix the extraction, fix
-do-extract, but never ever touch extract!
-
-Now that you understand what goes on when the user types
-`make', let us go through the recommended steps to
-create the perfect port.
-
-
-
-
-Getting the original sources
-
-Get the original sources (normally) as a compressed tarball
-(<foo>.tar.gz or <foo>.tar.Z)
-and copy it into ${DISTDIR}. Always use
-mainstream sources when and where you can.
-
-If you cannot find a ftp/http site that is well-connected
-to the net, or can only find sites that have irritatingly
-non-standard formats, we can `house' it ourselves by putting
-it on
-
-ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/distfiles/LOCAL_PORTS/
-
-
-as the last resort. Please refer to this location as
-${MASTER_SITE_LOCAL}. Send mail to the &a.ports;if you are not sure what to do.
-
-If your port requires some additional `patches' that are
-available on the Internet, fetch them too and put them in
-${DISTDIR}. Do not worry if they come from
-site other than where you got the main source tarball,
-we have a way to handle these situations (see the
-description of below).
-
-
-
-
-Modifying the port
-
-Unpack a copy of the tarball in a private directory and
-make whatever changes are necessary to get the port to
-compile properly under the current version of FreeBSD. Keep
-careful track of everything you do, as you will be
-automating the process shortly. Everything, including the
-deletion, addition or modification of files should be doable
-using an automated script or patch file when your port is
-finished.
-
-If your port requires significant user
-interaction/customization to compile or install, you should
-take a look at one of Larry Wall's classic Configure scripts
-and perhaps do something similar yourself. The goal of the
-new ports collection is to make each port as `plug-and-play'
-as possible for the end-user while using a minimum of disk
-space.
-
-Note: Unless explicitly stated, patch files, scripts, and
-other files you have created and contributed to the FreeBSD
-ports collection are assumed to be covered by the standard
-BSD copyright conditions.
-
-
-
-
-Patching
-
-In the preparation of the port, files that have been added
-or changed can be picked up with a recursive diff for later
-feeding to patch. Each set of patches you wish to apply
-should be collected into a file named
-`patch-<xx>' where <xx>
-denotes the sequence in which the patches will be applied --
-these are done in alphabetical order, thus
-`aa' first, `ab' second and so on. These
-files should be stored in ${PATCHDIR}, from
-where they will be automatically applied. All patches
-should be relative to ${WRKSRC} (generally
-the directory your port's tarball unpacks itself into, that
-being where the build is done). To make fixes and upgrades
-easier you should avoid having more than one patch fix the
-same file (e.g., patch-aa and patch-ab both changing
-${WRKSRC}/foobar.c).
-
-
-
-
-Configuring
-
-Include any additional customization commands to your
-configure script and save it in the
-`scripts' subdirectory. As mentioned above, you
-can also do this as Makefile targets and/or scripts with the
-name pre-configure or post-configure.
-
-
-
-
-Handling user input
-
-If your port requires user input to build, configure or
-install, then set IS_INTERACTIVE in your Makefile.
-This will allow `overnight builds' to skip your port if the
-user sets the variable BATCH in his environment
-(and if the user sets the variable INTERACTIVE,
-then only those ports requiring interaction are
-built).
-
-
-
-
-
-Configuring the Makefile
-
-Configuring the Makefile is pretty simple, and again we
-suggest that you look at existing examples before starting.
-Also, there is a in this handbook, so take a look and please follow
-the ordering of variables and sections in that template to
-make your port easier for others to read.
-
-Now, consider the following problems in sequence as you
-design your new Makefile:
-
-
-
-The original source
-
-Does it live in ${DISTDIR} as a standard
-gzip'd tarball? If so, you can go on to the next step. If
-not, you should look at overriding any of the
-${EXTRACT_CMD},
-${EXTRACT_BEFORE_ARGS},
-${EXTRACT_AFTER_ARGS},
-${EXTRACT_SUFX}, or
-${DISTFILES} variables, depending on how
-alien a format your port's distribution file is. (The most
-common case is `EXTRACT_SUFX=.tar.Z', when the
-tarball is condensed by regular compress, not gzip.)
-
-In the worst case, you can simply create your own
-`do-extract' target to override the default, though
-this should be rarely, if ever, necessary.
-
-
-
-
-DISTNAME
-
-You should set ${DISTNAME} to be the base
-name of your port. The default rules expect the
-distribution file list (${DISTFILES}) to be
-named
-${DISTNAME}${EXTRACT_SUFX}
-by default which, if it is a normal tarball, is going to be
-something like:
-
-
-foozolix-1.0.tar.gz
-
-
-for a setting of `DISTNAME=foozolix-1.0'.
-
-The default rules also expect the tarball(s) to extract into
-a subdirectory called work/${DISTNAME}, e.g.
-
-
-work/foozolix-1.0/
-
-
-
-All this behavior can be overridden, of course, it simply
-represents the most common time-saving defaults. For a port
-requiring multiple distribution files, simply set
-${DISTFILES} explicitly. If only a subset
-of ${DISTFILES} are actual extractable
-archives, then set them up in
-${EXTRACT_ONLY}, which will override the
-${DISTFILES} list when it comes to
-extraction, and the rest will be just left in
-${DISTDIR} for later use.
-
-
-
-
-CATEGORIES
-
-When a package is created, it is put under
-/usr/ports/packages/All and links are made from one
-or more subdirectories of /usr/ports/packages. The
-names of these subdirectories are specified by the variable
-${CATEGORIES}. It is intended to make life
-easier for the user when he is wading through the pile of
-packages on the ftp site or the CD-ROM. Please take a look
-at the existing categories (you can find them in the ports page) and pick the ones that are suitable for your port.
-If your port truly belongs to something that is different
-from all the existing ones, you can even create a new
-category name.
-
-
-
-
-MASTER_SITES
-
-Record the directory part of the ftp/http-URL pointing at
-the original tarball in ${MASTER_SITES}.
-Do not forget the trailing slash (/)!
-
-The make macros will try to use this specification for
-grabbing the distribution file with ${FETCH}
-if they cannot find it already on the system.
-
-It is recommended that you put multiple sites on this list,
-preferably from different continents. This will safeguard
-against wide-area network problems, and we are even planning
-to add support for automatically determining the closest
-master site and fetching from there!
-
-If the original tarball is part of one of the following
-popular archives: X-contrib, GNU, Perl CPAN, TeX CTAN, or
-Linux Sunsite, you refer to those sites in an easy compact
-form using MASTER_SITE_XCONTRIB, MASTER_SITE_GNU,
-MASTER_SITE_PERL_CPAN, MASTER_SITE_TEX_CTAN, and
-MASTER_SITE_SUNSITE. Simply set MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR to the path
-with in the archive. Here is an example:
-
-MASTER_SITES= ${MASTER_SITE_XCONTRIB}
-MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR= applications
-
-
-
-The user can also set the MASTER_SITE_* variables in
-/etc/make.conf to override our choices, and use their
-favorite mirrors of these popular archives instead.
-
-
-
-
-PATCHFILES
-
-If your port requires some additional patches that are
-available by ftp or http, set ${PATCHFILES}
-to the names of the files and ${PATCH_SITES}
-to the URL of the directory that contains them (the format
-is the same as ${MASTER_SITES}).
-
-If the patch is not relative to the top of the source tree
-(i.e., ${WKRSRC}) because it contains some
-extra pathnames, set ${PATCH_DIST_STRIP}
-accordingly. For instance, if all the pathnames in the
-patch has an extra `foozolix-1.0/' in front of the
-filenames, then set `PATCH_DIST_STRIP=-p1'.
-
-Do not worry if the patches are compressed, they will be
-decompressed automatically if the filenames end with
-`.gz' or `.Z'.
-
-If the patch is distributed with some other files, such as
-documentation, in a gzip'd tarball, you can't just use
-${PATCHFILES}. If that is the case, add the
-name and the location of the patch tarball to
-${DISTFILES} and
-${MASTER_SITES}. Then, from the
-pre-patch target, apply the patch either by running
-the patch command from there, or copying the patch file into
-the ${PATCHDIR} directory and calling it
-patch-<xx>. (Note the tarball will have been
-extracted alongside the regular source by then, so there is
-no need to explicitly extract it if it is a regular gzip'd
-or compress'd tarball.) If you do the latter, take extra
-care not to overwrite something that already exists in that
-directory. Also do not forget to add a command to remove
-the copied patch in the pre-clean target.
-
-
-
-
-MAINTAINER
-
-Set your mail-address here. Please. :)
-
-For detailed description of the responsibility of maintainers,
-refer to section.
-
-
-
-
-Dependencies
-
-Many ports depend on other ports. There are five
-variables that you can use to ensure that all the required
-bits will be on the user's machine.
-
-
-
-LIB_DEPENDS
-
-This variable specifies the shared libraries this port
-depends on. It is a list of `lib:dir' pairs
-where lib is the name of the shared library, and
-dir is the directory in which to find it in case
-it is not available. For example,
-
-LIB_DEPENDS= jpeg\\.6\\.:${PORTSDIR}/graphics/jpeg
-
-
-will check for a shared jpeg library with major version 6,
-and descend into the graphics/jpeg subdirectory
-of your ports tree to build and install it if it is not
-found.
-
-Note that the lib part is just an argument given
-to `ldconfig -r | grep', so periods should be
-escaped by two backslashes like in the example above.
-
-The dependency is checked from within the extract
-target. Also, the name of the dependency is put in to the
-package so that pkg_add will automatically
-install it if it is not on the user's system.
-
-
-
-
-RUN_DEPENDS
-
-This variable specifies executables or files this port
-depends on during run-time. It is a list of
-`path:dir' pairs where path is the name
-of the executable or file, and dir is the
-directory in which to find it in case it is not
-available. If path starts with a slash
-(/), it is treated as a file and its existence is
-tested with `test -e'; otherwise, it is assumed
-to be an executable, and `which -s' is used to
-determine if the program exists in the user's search path.
-
-For example,
-
-RUN_DEPENDS= ${PREFIX}/etc/innd:${PORTSDIR}/news/inn \
- wish:${PORTSDIR}/x11/tk
-
-
-will check if the file `/usr/local/etc/innd'
-exists, and build and install it from the
-news/inn subdirectory of the ports tree if it is
-not found. It will also see if an executable called
-`wish' is in your search path, and descend into
-the x11/tk subdirectory of your ports tree to
-build and install it if it is not found. (Note that in
-this case, `innd' is actually an executable; if
-an executable is in a place that is not expected to be in
-a normal user's search path, you should use the full
-pathname.)
-
-The dependency is checked from within the install
-target. Also, the name of the dependency is put in to the
-package so that pkg_add will automatically
-install it if it is not on the user's system.
-
-
-
-
-BUILD_DEPENDS
-
-This variable specifies executables or files this port
-requires to build. Like RUN_DEPENDS, it is a
-list of `path:dir' pairs. For example,
-
-BUILD_DEPENDS= unzip:${PORTSDIR}/archivers/unzip
-
-
-will check for an executable called `unzip', and
-descend into the archivers/unzip subdirectory of
-your ports tree to build and install it if it is not found.
-
-Note that `build' here means everything from extracting to
-compilation. The dependency is checked from within the
-extract target.
-
-
-
-
-FETCH_DEPENDS
-
-This variable specifies executables or files this port
-requires to fetch. Like the previous two, it is a list of
-`path:dir' pairs. For example,
-
-FETCH_DEPENDS= ncftp2:${PORTSDIR}/net/ncftp2
-
-
-will check for an executable called `ncftp2', and
-descend into the net/ncftp2 subdirectory of
-your ports tree to build and install it if it is not found.
-
-The dependency is checked from within the fetch
-target.
-
-
-
-
-DEPENDS
-
-If there is a dependency that does not fall into either of
-the above four categories, or your port requires to have
-the source of the other port extracted (i.e., having them
-installed is not enough), then use this variable. This is
-just a list of directories, as there is nothing to check,
-unlike the previous four.
-
-
-
-
-
-Building mechanisms
-
-If your package uses GNU make, set
-`USE_GMAKE=yes'. If your package uses GNU
-configure, set `GNU_CONFIGURE=yes'. If
-you want to give some extra arguments to GNU
-configure (other than the default
-`--prefix=${PREFIX}'),
-set those extra arguments in
-${CONFIGURE_ARGS}.
-
-If your package is an X application that creates Makefiles
-from Imakefiles using imake, then set
-`USE_IMAKE=yes'. This will cause the configure
-stage to automatically do an xmkmf -a. If the
-`' flag is a problem for your port, set
-`XMKMF=xmkmf'.
-
-If your port's source Makefile has something else than
-`all' as the main build target, set
-${ALL_TARGET} accordingly. Same goes for
-`install' and ${INSTALL_TARGET}.
-
-
-
-
-NO_INSTALL_MANPAGES
-
-If the port uses imake but does not understand the
-`install.man' target,
-`NO_INSTALL_MANPAGES=yes' should be set. In
-addition, the author of the original port should be
-shot. :>
-
-
-
-
-
-Ports that require Motif
-
-There are many programs that require a Motif library
-(available from several commercial vendors, while there is (at
-least) one effort to create a free clone) to compile. Since
-it is a popular toolkit and their licenses usually permit
-redistribution of statically linked binaries, we have made
-special provisions for handling ports that require Motif in a
-way that we can easily compile binaries linked either
-dynamically or statically.
-
-
-
-REQUIRES_MOTIF
-
-If your port requires Motif, define this variable in the
-Makefile. This will prevent people who don't own a copy of
-Motif from even attempting to build it.
-
-
-
-
-${MOTIFLIB}
-
-This variable will be set by bsd.port.mk to be the
-appropriate reference to the Motif library. Please patch
-the source to use this wherever the Motif library is
-referenced in the Makefile or Imakefile.
-
-There are two common cases:
-
-
-
-If the port refers to the Motif library as
-`' in its Makefile or Imakefile, simply
-substitute `${MOTIFLIB}' for it.
-
-
-
-
-If the port uses `XmClientLibs' in its
-Imakefile, change it to `${MOTIFLIB}
-${XTOOLLIB} ${XLIB}'.
-
-
-
-
-
-Note that ${MOTIFLIB} (usually) expands to
-`' or
-`/usr/X11R6/lib/libXm.a', so there is no need to
-add `' or `' in front.
-
-
-
-
-
-Info files
-
-The new version of texinfo (included in 2.2.2-RELEASE and
-onwards) contains a utility called `install-info' to add
-and delete entries to the `dir' file. If your port
-installs any info documents, please follow these instructions
-so your port/package will correctly update the user's
-${PREFIX}/info/dir file. (Sorry for the length
-of this section, but it is imperative to weave all the info
-files together. If done correctly, it will produce a
-beautiful listing, so please bear with me! :)
-
-First, this is what you (as a porter) need to know:
-
-
-
-% install-info --help
-install-info [OPTION]... [INFO-FILE [DIR-FILE]]
- Install INFO-FILE in the Info directory file DIR-FILE.
-
-Options:
---delete Delete existing entries in INFO-FILE;
- don't insert any new entries.
- :
---entry=TEXT Insert TEXT as an Info directory entry.
- :
---section=SEC Put this file's entries in section SEC of the directory.
- :
-
-
-
-Note that this program will not actually install
-info files; it merely inserts or deletes entries in the
-dir file.
-
-Here's a seven-step procedure to convert ports to use
-install-info. I will use editors/emacs as an
-example.
-
-
-
-
-
-Look at the texinfo sources and make a patch to insert
-@dircategory and @direntry statements to files
-that don't have them. This is part of my patch:
-
-
---- ./man/vip.texi.org Fri Jun 16 15:31:11 1995
-+++ ./man/vip.texi Tue May 20 01:28:33 1997
-@@ -2,6 +2,10 @@
-
- @setfilename ../info/vip
- @settitle VIP
-+@dircategory The Emacs editor and associated tools
-+@direntry
-+* VIP: (vip). A VI-emulation for Emacs.
-+@end direntry
-
- @iftex
- @finalout
- :
-
-
-
-
-
-The format should be self-explanatory. Many authors leave
-a dir file in the source tree that contains all the
-entries you need, so look around before you try to write
-your own. Also, make sure you look into related ports and
-make the section names and entry indentations consistent (we
-recommend that all entry text start at the 4th tab stop).
-
-
-
-Note that you can put only one info entry per file because
-of a bug in `install-info --delete' that deletes
-only the first entry if you specify multiple entries in the
-@direntry section.
-
-
-
-You can give the dir entries to install-info as
-arguments ( and ) instead of
-patching the texinfo sources. I do not think this is a good
-idea for ports because you need to duplicate the same
-information in three places (Makefile and
-@exec/@unexec of PLIST; see below). However,
-if you have a Japanese (or other multibyte encoding) info
-files, you will have to use the extra arguments to
-install-info because makeinfo can't handle those
-texinfo sources. (See Makefile and PLIST of
-japanese/skk for examples on how to do this).
-
-
-
-
-
-Go back to the port directory and do a `make clean;
-make' and verify that the info files are regenerated
-from the texinfo sources. Since the texinfo sources are
-newer than the info files, they should be rebuilt when you
-type make; but many Makefiles don't include
-correct dependencies for info files. In emacs' case, I had
-to patch the main Makefile.in so it will descend into
-the man subdirectory to rebuild the info pages.
-
-
---- ./Makefile.in.org Mon Aug 19 21:12:19 1996
-+++ ./Makefile.in Tue Apr 15 00:15:28 1997
-@@ -184,7 +184,7 @@
- # Subdirectories to make recursively. `lisp' is not included
- # because the compiled lisp files are part of the distribution
- # and you cannot remake them without installing Emacs first.
--SUBDIR = lib-src src
-+SUBDIR = lib-src src man
-
- # The makefiles of the directories in $SUBDIR.
- SUBDIR_MAKEFILES = lib-src/Makefile man/Makefile src/Makefile oldXMenu/Makefile lwlib/Makefile
---- ./man/Makefile.in.org Thu Jun 27 15:27:19 1996
-+++ ./man/Makefile.in Tue Apr 15 00:29:52 1997
-@@ -66,6 +66,7 @@
- ${srcdir}/gnu1.texi \
- ${srcdir}/glossary.texi
-
-+all: info
- info: $(INFO_TARGETS)
-
- dvi: $(DVI_TARGETS)
-
-
-
-
-
-The second hunk was necessary because the default target in
-the man subdir is called info, while the
-main Makefile wants to call all. I also deleted the
-installation of the info info file because we already
-have one with the same name in /usr/share/info
-(that patch is not shown here).
-
-
-
-
-
-If there is a place in the Makefile that is
-installing the dir file, delete it. Your port may not
-be doing it. Also, remove any commands that are otherwise
-mucking around with the dir file.
-
-
---- ./Makefile.in.org Mon Aug 19 21:12:19 1996
-+++ ./Makefile.in Mon Apr 14 23:38:07 1997
-@@ -368,14 +368,8 @@
- if [ `(cd ${srcdir}/info && /bin/pwd)` != `(cd ${infodir} && /bin/pwd)` ]; \
- then \
- (cd ${infodir}; \
-- if [ -f dir ]; then \
-- if [ ! -f dir.old ]; then mv -f dir dir.old; \
-- else mv -f dir dir.bak; fi; \
-- fi; \
- cd ${srcdir}/info ; \
-- (cd $${thisdir}; ${INSTALL_DATA} ${srcdir}/info/dir ${infodir}/dir); \
-- (cd $${thisdir}; chmod a+r ${infodir}/dir); \
- for f in ccmode* cl* dired-x* ediff* emacs* forms* gnus* info* message* mh-e* sc* vip*; do \
- (cd $${thisdir}; \
- ${INSTALL_DATA} ${srcdir}/info/$$f ${infodir}/$$f; \
- chmod a+r ${infodir}/$$f); \
-
-
-
-
-
-
-(This step is only necessary if you are modifying an
-existing port.) Take a look at pkg/PLIST and
-delete anything that is trying to patch up
-info/dir. They may be in pkg/INSTALL or
-some other file, so search extensively.
-
-
-Index: pkg/PLIST
-===================================================================
-RCS file: /usr/cvs/ports/editors/emacs/pkg/PLIST,v
-retrieving revision 1.15
-diff -u -r1.15 PLIST
---- PLIST 1997/03/04 08:04:00 1.15
-+++ PLIST 1997/04/15 06:32:12
-@@ -15,9 +15,6 @@
- man/man1/emacs.1.gz
- man/man1/etags.1.gz
- man/man1/ctags.1.gz
--@unexec cp %D/info/dir %D/info/dir.bak
--info/dir
--@unexec cp %D/info/dir.bak %D/info/dir
- info/cl
- info/cl-1
- info/cl-2
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Add a post-install target to the Makefile to create
-a dir file if it is not there. Also, call
-install-info with the installed info files.
-
-
-Index: Makefile
-===================================================================
-RCS file: /usr/cvs/ports/editors/emacs/Makefile,v
-retrieving revision 1.26
-diff -u -r1.26 Makefile
---- Makefile 1996/11/19 13:14:40 1.26
-+++ Makefile 1997/05/20 10:25:09 1.28
-@@ -20,5 +20,11 @@
- post-install:
- .for file in emacs-19.34 emacsclient etags ctags b2m
- strip ${PREFIX}/bin/${file}
- .endfor
-+ if [ ! -f ${PREFIX}/info/dir ]; then \
-+ ${SED} -ne '1,/Menu:/p' /usr/share/info/dir > ${PREFIX}/info/dir; \
-+ fi
-+.for info in emacs vip viper forms gnus mh-e cl sc dired-x ediff ccmode
-+ install-info ${PREFIX}/info/${info} ${PREFIX}/info/dir
-+.endfor
-
- .include <bsd.port.mk>
-
-
-
-
-
-Do not use anything other than /usr/share/info/dir
-and the above command to create a new info file. In fact,
-I'd add the first three lines of the above patch to
-bsd.port.mk if you (the porter) wouldn't have to do it
-in PLIST by yourself anyway.
-
-
-
-
-
-Edit PLIST and add equivalent @exec statements
-and also @unexec for pkg_delete. You do not need
-to delete info/dir with @unexec.
-
-
-Index: pkg/PLIST
-===================================================================
-RCS file: /usr/cvs/ports/editors/emacs/pkg/PLIST,v
-retrieving revision 1.15
-diff -u -r1.15 PLIST
---- PLIST 1997/03/04 08:04:00 1.15
-+++ PLIST 1997/05/20 10:25:12 1.17
-@@ -16,7 +14,15 @@
- man/man1/etags.1.gz
- man/man1/ctags.1.gz
-+@unexec install-info --delete %D/info/emacs %D/info/dir
- :
-+@unexec install-info --delete %D/info/ccmode %D/info/dir
- info/cl
- info/cl-1
-@@ -87,6 +94,18 @@
- info/viper-3
- info/viper-4
-+@exec [ -f %D/info/dir ] || sed -ne '1,/Menu:/p' /usr/share/info/dir > %D/info/dir
-+@exec install-info %D/info/emacs %D/info/dir
- :
-+@exec install-info %D/info/ccmode %D/info/dir
- libexec/emacs/19.34/i386--freebsd/cvtmail
- libexec/emacs/19.34/i386--freebsd/digest-doc
-
-
-
-
-
-Note that the `@unexec install-info --delete'
-commands have to be listed before the info files themselves
-so they can read the files. Also, the `@exec
-install-info' commands have to be after the info files
-and the @exec command that creates the the dir
-file.
-
-
-
-
-
-Test and admire your work. :) The sequence I
-recommend is: `make package', `pkg_delete', then
-`pkg_add'. Check the dir file before and after
-each step.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Licensing Problems
-
-Some software packages have restrictive licenses or can be in
-violation to the law (PKP's patent on public key crypto,
-ITAR (export of crypto software) to name just two of them).
-What we can do with them vary a lot, depending on the exact
-wordings of the respective licenses.
-
-Note that it is your responsibility as a porter to read the
-licensing terms of the software and make sure that the FreeBSD
-project will not be held accountable of violating them by
-redistributing the source or compiled binaries either via ftp
-or CD-ROM. If in doubt, please contact the &a.ports;.
-
-There are two variables you can set in the Makefile to handle
-the situations that arise frequently:
-
-
-
-
-
-If the port has a `do not sell for profit' type of
-license, set the variable NO_CDROM. We will make
-sure such ports won't go into the CD-ROM come release time.
-The distfile and package will still be available via ftp.
-
-
-
-
-If the resulting package needs to be built uniquely for
-each site, or the resulting binary package can't be distributed
-due to licensing; set the variable NO_PACKAGE.
-We will make sure such packages won't go on the ftp site, nor
-into the CD-ROM come release time. The distfile will still be
-included on both however.
-
-
-
-
-If the port has legal restrictions on who can use it
-(e.g., crypto stuff) or has a `no commercial use' license,
-set the variable RESTRICTED to be the string
-describing the reason why. For such ports, the
-distfiles/packages will not be available even from our ftp
-sites.
-
-
-
-
-
-Note: The GNU General Public License (GPL), both version 1
-and 2, should not be a problem for ports.
-
-Note: If you are a committer, make sure you update the
-ports/LEGAL file too.
-
-
-
-
-Upgrading
-
-When you notice that a port is out of date compared to the
-latest version from the original authors, first make sure you
-have the latest port. You can find them in the
-ports-current directory of the ftp mirror sites.
-
-The next step is to send a mail to the maintainer, if one is
-listed in the port's Makefile. That person may already be
-working on an upgrade, or have a reason to not upgrade the
-port right now (because of, for example, stability problems
-of the new version).
-
-If the maintainer asks you to do the upgrade or there isn't
-any such person to begin with, please make the upgrade and
-send the recursive diff (either unified or context diff is
-fine, but port committers appear to prefer unified diff more)
-of the new and old ports directories
-to us (i.e., if your modified ports directory is called
-`superedit' and the original as in our tree is
-`superedit.bak', then send us the result of `diff
--ruN superedit.bak superedit'). Please examine the output
-to make sure all the changes make sense. The best way to send
-us the diff is by including it to send-pr(1) (category
-`ports'). Please
-mention any added or deleted files in the message, as they
-have to be explicitly specified to CVS when doing a commit.
-If the diff is more than about 20KB, please compress and
-uuencode it; otherwise, just include it in as is in the PR.
-
-
-
-
-Do's and Dont's
-
-Here is a list of common do's and dont's that you encounter
-during the porting process.
-
-
-
-WRKDIR
-
-Do not leave anything valuable lying around in the
-work subdirectory, `make clean' will
-nuke it completely! If you need auxiliary files
-that are not scripts or patches, put them in the
-${FILESDIR} subdirectory (files by default)
-and use the post-extract target to
-copy them to the work subdirectory.
-
-
-
-
-Package information
-
-Do include package information, i.e. COMMENT,
-DESCR, and PLIST, in
-pkg. Note that these files are not used only for
-packaging anymore, and are mandatory now, even if
-${NO_PACKAGE} is set.
-
-
-
-
-Compress manpages, strip binaries
-
-Do compress manpages and strip binaries. If the original
-source already strips the binary, fine; otherwise, you can add a
-post-install rule to do it yourself. Here is an example:
-
- post-install:
- strip ${PREFIX}/bin/xdl
-
-
-
-Use the file command on the installed executable
-to check whether the binary is stripped or not. If it
-does not say `not stripped', it is stripped.
-
-To automagically compress the manpages, use the MAN[1-9LN]
-variables. They will check the variable
-NOMANCOMPRESS that the user can set in
-/etc/make.conf to disable man page compression.
-Place them last in the section below the
-MAINTAINER variable. Here is an example:
-
-MAN1= foo.1 bar.1
-MAN5= foo.conf.5
-MAN8= baz.8
-
-
-
-Note that this is not usually necessary with ports that are X
-applications and use Imake to build.
-
-If your port anchors its man tree somewhere other than
-PREFIX, you can use the MANPREFIX to set it.
-Also, if only manpages in certain section go in a
-non-standard place, such as many Perl modules ports, you
-can set individual man paths using
-MANsectPREFIX (where sect is one
-of 1-9, L or N).
-
-
-
-
-INSTALL_* macros
-
-Do use the macros provided in bsd.port.mk to
-ensure correct modes and ownership of files in your own
-*-install targets. They are:
-
-
-
-
-
-${INSTALL_PROGRAM} is a command to install
-binary executables.
-
-
-
-${INSTALL_SCRIPT} is a command to install
-executable scripts.
-
-
-
-${INSTALL_DATA} is a command to install
-sharable data.
-
-
-
-${INSTALL_MAN} is a command to install
-manpages and other documentation (it doesn't compress anything).
-
-
-
-
-
-These are basically the install command with all
-the appropriate flags. See below for an example on how to
-use them.
-
-
-
-
-INSTALL package script
-
-If your port needs execute commands when the binary package
-is installed with pkg_add you can do with via the pkg/INSTALL
-script. This script will automatically be added to the
-package, and will be run twice by pkg_add. The first time
-will as `INSTALL ${PKGNAME} PRE-INSTALL'
-and the second time as `INSTALL ${PKGNAME} POST-INSTALL'.
-`$2' can be tested to determine which mode
-the script is being run in.
-The `PKG_PREFIX' environmental variable will be set to
-the package installation directory. See man pkg_add(1)
-for additional information.
-Note, that this script is not run automatically if you install
-the port with `make install'. If you are depending
-on it being run, you will have to explicitly call it on your
-port's Makefile.
-
-
-
-
-REQ package script
-
-If your port needs to determine if it should install or not, you
-can create a pkg/REQ ``requirements'' script. It will be invoked
-automatically at installation/deinstallation time to determine
-whether or not installation/deinstallation should proceed.
-See man pkg_create(1) and man pkg_add(1) for
-more information.
-
-
-
-
-Install additional documentation
-
-If your software has some documentation other than the
-standard man and info pages that you think is useful for the
-user, install it under ${PREFIX}/share/doc.
-This can be done, like the previous item, in the
-post-install target.
-
-Create a new directory for your port. The directory name
-should reflect what the port is. This usually means
-${PKGNAME} minus the version part. However,
-if you think the user might want different versions of the
-port to be installed at the same time, you
-can use the whole ${PKGNAME}.
-
-Make the installation dependent to the variable
-NOPORTDOCS so that users can disable it in
-/etc/make.conf, like this:
-
- post-install:
- .if !defined(NOPORTDOCS)
- ${MKDIR} ${PREFIX}/share/doc/xv
- ${INSTALL_MAN} ${WRKSRC}/docs/xvdocs.ps ${PREFIX}/share/doc/xv
- .endif
-
-
-
-Do not forget to add them to pkg/PLIST too! (Do not
-worry about NOPORTDOCS here; there is currently no
-way for the packages to read variables from
-/etc/make.conf.)
-
-If you need to display a message to the installer, you may
-place the message in pkg/MESSAGE. This capibility
-is often useful to display additional installation steps to
-be taken after a pkg_add, or to display licensing information.
-(note: the MESSAGE file does not need to be added to pkg/PLIST).
-
-
-
-
-DIST_SUBDIR
-
-Do not let your port clutter /usr/ports/distfiles. If
-your port requires a lot of files to be
-fetched, or contains a file that has a name that might conflict
-with other ports (e.g., `Makefile'), set
-${DIST_SUBDIR} to the name of the port
-(${PKGNAME} without the version part should work
-fine). This will change ${DISTDIR} from the
-default /usr/ports/distfiles to
-/usr/ports/distfiles/${DIST_SUBDIR}, and in
-effect puts everything that is required for your port into that
-subdirectory.
-
-It will also look at the subdirectory with the same name on the
-backup master site at ftp.freebsd.org. (Setting
-${DISTDIR} explicitly in your Makefile will not
-accomplish this, so please use ${DIST_SUBDIR}.)
-
-Note this does not affect the ${MASTER_SITES}
-you define in your Makefile.
-
-
-
-
-Feedback
-
-Do send applicable changes/patches to the original
-author/maintainer for inclusion in next release of the code.
-This will only make your job that much easier for the next
-release.
-
-
-
-
-RCS strings
-
-Do not put RCS strings in patches. CVS will mangle them
-when we put the files into the ports tree, and when we check
-them out again, they will come out different and the patch
-will fail. RCS strings are surrounded by dollar
-(`$') signs, and typically start with
-`$Id' or `$RCS'.
-
-
-
-
-Recursive diff
-
-Using the recurse (`') option to diff
-to generate patches is fine, but please take a look at the
-resulting patches to make sure you don't have any
-unnecessary junk in there. In particular, diffs between two
-backup files, Makefiles when the port uses Imake or GNU
-configure, etc., are unnecessary and should be deleted.
-Also, if you had to delete a file, then you can do it in the
-post-extract target rather than as part of the
-patch. Once you are happy with the resuling diff, please
-split it up into one source file per patch file.
-
-
-
-
-PREFIX
-
-Do try to make your port install relative to
-${PREFIX}. (The value of this variable will be
-set to ${LOCALBASE} (default
-/usr/local), unless ${USE_IMAKE} or
-${USE_X11} is set, in which case it will be
-${X11BASE} (default /usr/X11R6).)
-
-Not hard-coding `/usr/local' or `/usr/X11R6'
-anywhere in the source will make the port much more flexible and
-able to cater to the needs of other sites. For X ports that use
-imake, this is automatic; otherwise, this can often be done by
-simply replacing the occurrences of `/usr/local' (or
-`/usr/X11R6' for X ports that do not use imake) in the
-various scripts/Makefiles in the port to read
-`${PREFIX}', as this variable is automatically
-passed down to every stage of the build and install processes.
-
-The variable ${PREFIX} can be reassigned in your
-Makefile or in the user's environment. However, it is strongly
-discouraged for individual ports to set this variable explicitly
-in the Makefiles. (If your port is an X port but does not use
-imake, set USE_X11=yes; this is quite different from
-setting PREFIX=/usr/X11R6.)
-
-Also, refer to programs/files from other ports with the
-variables mentioned above, not explicit pathnames. For instance,
-if your port requires a macro PAGER to be the full
-pathname of less, use the compiler flag:
--DPAGER=\"${PREFIX}/bin/less\"
- or
--DPAGER=\"${LOCALBASE}/bin/less\"
- if this is an
-X port, instead of
--DPAGER=\"/usr/local/bin/less\".
-
-This way it will have a better chance of working if the system
-administrator has moved the whole `/usr/local' tree somewhere
-else.
-
-
-
-
-Subdirectories
-
-Try to let the port put things in the right subdirectories
-of ${PREFIX}. Some ports lump everything
-and put it in the subdirectory with the port's name, which is
-incorrect. Also, many ports put everything except binaries,
-header files and manual pages in the a subdirectory of
-`lib', which does not bode well with the BSD
-paradigm. Many of the files should be moved to one of the
-following: `etc' (setup/configuration files),
-`libexec' (executables started internally),
-`sbin' (executables for superusers/managers),
-`info' (documentation for info browser) or
-`share' (architecture independent files). See man
-hier(7) for details, the rule governing
-/usr pretty much applies to /usr/local
-too. The exception are ports dealing with USENET `news'.
-They may use ${PREFIX}/news as a destination
-for their files.
-
-
-
-
-ldconfig
-
-If your port installs a shared library, add a
-post-install target to your Makefile that runs
-`/sbin/ldconfig -m' on the directory where the new
-library is installed (usually ${PREFIX}/lib)
-to register it into the shared library cache.
-
-Also, add an @exec line to your pkg/PLIST
-file so that a user who installed the package can start
-using the shared library immediately. This line should
-immediately follow the line for the shared library itself,
-as in:
-
-lib/libtcl80.so.1.0
-@exec /sbin/ldconfig -m %D/lib
-
-
-
-Never, ever, ever add a line that says
-`ldconfig' without any arguments to your Makefile
-or pkg/PLIST. This will reset the shared library cache to
-the contents of /usr/lib only, and will royally
-screw up the user's machine ("Help, xinit does not run
-anymore after I install this port!"). Anybody who does this
-will be shot and cut into 65,536 pieces by a rusty knife and
-have his liver chopped out by a bunch of crows and will
-eternally rot to death in the deepest bowels of hell (not
-necessarily in that order)....
-
-
-
-
-UIDs
-
-If your port requires a certain user ID to be on the
-installed system, let the pkg/INSTALL script call
-pw to create it automatically. Look at
-japanese/Wnn or net/cvsup-mirror for
-examples. It is customary to use UIDs in the upper 2-digit
-range (i.e., from around 50 to 99) for this purpose.
-
-Make sure you don't use a UID already used by the system or
-other ports. This is the current list of UIDs between 50
-and 99.
-
-
-
-majordom:*:54:1024:Majordomo Pseudo User:/usr/local/majordomo:/nonexistent
-cyrus:*:60:248:the cyrus mail server:/nonexistent:/nonexistent
-gnats:*:61:1:GNATS database owner:/usr/local/share/gnats/gnats-db:/bin/sh
-uucp:*:66:66:UUCP pseudo-user:/var/spool/uucppublic:/usr/libexec/uucp/uucico
-xten:*:67:67:X-10 daemon:/usr/local/xten:/nonexistent
-pop:*:68:6:Post Office Owner:/nonexistent:/nonexistent
-wnn:*:69:7:Wnn:/nonexistent:/nonexistent
-ifmail:*:70:66:Ifmail user:/nonexistent:/nonexistent
-pgsql:*:71:246:PostgreSQL pseudo-user:/usr/local/pgsql:/bin/sh
-msql:*:80:249:mSQL-2 pseudo-user:/var/db/msqldb:/bin/sh
-
-
-
-Please send a notice to &a.ports; if you submit or commit a
-port that allocates a new UID in this range so we can keep
-this list up to date.
-
-
-
-
-If you are stuck....
-
-Do look at existing examples and the bsd.port.mk
-file before asking us questions! ;)
-
-Do ask us questions if you have any trouble! Do not just
-beat your head against a wall! :)
-
-
-
-
-
-A Sample Makefile
-
-Here is a sample Makefile that you can use to create a new
-port. Make sure you remove all the extra comments (ones
-between brackets)!
-
-It is recommended that you follow this format (ordering of
-variables, empty lines between sections, etc.). Not all of
-the existing Makefiles are in this format (mostly old ones),
-but we are trying to uniformize how they look. This format is
-designed so that the most important information is easy to
-locate.
-
-
-
- [the header...just to make it easier for us to identify the ports.]
- # New ports collection makefile for: xdvi
- [the version required header should updated when upgrading a port.]
- # Version required: pl18 [things like "1.5alpha" are fine here too]
- [this is the date when the first version of this Makefile was created.
- Never change this when doing an update of the port.]
- # Date created: 26 May 1995
- [this is the person who did the original port to FreeBSD, in particular, the
- person who wrote the first version of this Makefile. Remember, this should
- not be changed when upgrading the port later.]
- # Whom: Satoshi Asami <asami@FreeBSD.ORG>
- #
- # $Id$
- [ ^^^^ This will be automatically replaced with RCS ID string by CVS
- when it is committed to our repository.]
- #
-
- [section to describe the port itself and the master site - DISTNAME
- is always first, followed by PKGNAME (if necessary), CATEGORIES,
- and then MASTER_SITES, which can be followed by MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR.
- After those, one of EXTRACT_SUFX or DISTFILES can be specified too.]
- DISTNAME= xdvi
- PKGNAME= xdvi-pl18
- CATEGORIES= print
- [do not forget the trailing slash ("/")!
- if you aren't using MASTER_SITE_* macros]
- MASTER_SITES= ${MASTER_SITE_XCONTRIB}
- MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR= applications
- [set this if the source is not in the standard ".tar.gz" form]
- EXTRACT_SUFX= .tar.Z
-
- [section for distributed patches -- can be empty]
- PATCH_SITES= ftp://ftp.sra.co.jp/pub/X11/japanese/
- PATCHFILES= xdvi-18.patch1.gz xdvi-18.patch2.gz
-
- [maintainer; *mandatory*! This is the person (preferably with commit
- privileges) who a user can contact for questions and bug reports - this
- person should be the porter or someone who can forward questions to the
- original porter reasonably promptly. If you really do not want to have
- your address here, set it to "ports@FreeBSD.ORG".]
- MAINTAINER= asami@FreeBSD.ORG
-
- [dependencies -- can be empty]
- RUN_DEPENDS= gs:${PORTSDIR}/print/ghostscript
- LIB_DEPENDS= Xpm\\.4\\.:${PORTSDIR}/graphics/xpm
-
- [this section is for other standard bsd.port.mk variables that do not
- belong to any of the above]
- [If it asks questions during configure, build, install...]
- IS_INTERACTIVE= yes
- [If it extracts to a directory other than ${DISTNAME}...]
- WRKSRC= ${WRKDIR}/xdvi-new
- [If the distributed patches were not made relative to ${WRKSRC}, you
- may need to tweak this]
- PATCH_DIST_STRIP= -p1
- [If it requires a "configure" script generated by GNU autoconf to be run]
- GNU_CONFIGURE= yes
- [If it requires GNU make, not /usr/bin/make, to build...]
- USE_GMAKE= yes
- [If it is an X application and requires "xmkmf -a" to be run...]
- USE_IMAKE= yes
- [et cetera.]
-
- [non-standard variables to be used in the rules below]
- MY_FAVORITE_RESPONSE= "yeah, right"
-
- [then the special rules, in the order they are called]
- pre-fetch:
- i go fetch something, yeah
-
- post-patch:
- i need to do something after patch, great
-
- pre-install:
- and then some more stuff before installing, wow
-
- [and then the epilogue]
- .include <bsd.port.mk>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Package Names
-
-The following are the conventions you should follow in
-naming your packages. This is to have our package directory
-easy to scan, as there are already lots and lots of packages
-and users are going to turn away if they hurt their eyes!
-
-The package name should look like
-
-
-
-[<language>-]<name>[[-]<compiled.specifics>]-<version.string.numbers>;
-
-
-
-If your ${DISTNAME} doesn't look like that,
-set ${PKGNAME} to something in that format.
-
-
-
-
-
-FreeBSD strives to support the native language of its
-users. The `<language>' part should be a two letter
-abbreviation of the natural language defined by ISO-639 if
-the port is specific to a certain language. Examples are
-`ja' for Japanese, `ru' for Russian, `vi' for Vietnamese,
-`zh' for Chinese, `ko' for Korean and `de' for German.
-
-
-
-
-The `<name>' part should be all
-lowercases, except for a really large package (with lots of
-programs in it). Things like XFree86 (yes there really is a
-package of it, check it out) and ImageMagick fall into this
-category. Otherwise, convert the name (or at least the
-first letter) to lowercase. If the software in question
-really is called that way, you can have numbers, hyphens and
-underscores in the name too (like `kinput2').
-
-
-
-
-If the port can be built with different hardcoded
-defaults (usually specified as environment variables or on
-the make command line), the
-`<compiled.specifics>' part should state the
-compiled-in defaults (the hyphen is optional). Examples are
-papersize and font units.
-
-
-
-
-The version string should be a period-separated list of
-integers and single lowercase alphabetics. The only exception
-is the string `pl' (meaning `patchlevel'), which can be used
-only when there are no major and minor version
-numbers in the software.
-
-
-
-
-
-Here are some (real) examples on how to convert a
-${DISTNAME} into a suitable
-${PKGNAME}:
-
-
-
-DISTNAME PKGNAME Reason
-mule-2.2.2 mule-2.2.2 no prob at all
-XFree86-3.1.2 XFree86-3.1.2 ditto
-EmiClock-1.0.2 emiclock-1.0.2 no uppercase names for single programs
-gmod1.4 gmod-1.4 need hyphen after `<name>'
-xmris.4.02 xmris-4.02 ditto
-rdist-1.3alpha rdist-1.3a no strings like `alpha' allowed
-es-0.9-beta1 es-0.9b1 ditto
-v3.3beta021.src tiff-3.3 what the heck was that anyway? ;)
-tvtwm tvtwm-pl11 version string always required
-piewm piewm-1.0 ditto
-xvgr-2.10pl1 xvgr-2.10.1 `pl' allowed only when no maj/minor numbers
-gawk-2.15.6 ja-gawk-2.15.6 Japanese language version
-psutils-1.13 psutils-letter-1.13 papersize hardcoded at package build time
-pkfonts pkfonts300-1.0 package for 300dpi fonts
-
-
-
-If there is absolutely no trace of version information in the
-original source and it is unlikely that the original author
-will ever release another version, just set the version string
-to `1.0' (like the piewm example above). Otherwise, ask the
-original author or use the date string (`yy.mm.dd') as the
-version.
-
-
-
-
-That is It, Folks!
-
-Boy, this sure was a long tutorial, wasn't it? Thanks for
-following us to here, really.
-
-Well, now that you know how to do a port, let us go at it and
-convert everything in the world into ports! That is the
-easiest way to start contributing to the FreeBSD Project!
-:)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Money, Hardware or Internet access
-
-We are always very happy to accept donations to further the cause of
-the FreeBSD Project and, in a volunteer effort like ours, a little can go
-a long way! Donations of hardware are also very important to expanding
-our list of supported peripherals since we generally lack the funds to
-buy such items ourselves.
-
-
-
-Donating funds
-
-While the FreeBSD Project is not a 501(C3) (non-profit) corporation and
-hence cannot offer special tax incentives for any donations made, any such
-donations will be gratefully accepted on behalf of the project by
-FreeBSD, Inc.
-
-FreeBSD, Inc. was founded in early 1995 by &a.jkh; and &a.davidg; with the
-goal of furthering the aims of the FreeBSD Project and giving it a minimal
-corporate presence. Any and all funds donated (as well as any profits
-that may eventually be realized by FreeBSD, Inc.) will be used exclusively
-to further the project's goals.
-
-Please make any checks payable to FreeBSD, Inc., sent in care of the
-following address:
-
-
-
-FreeBSD, Inc.
-c/o Jordan Hubbard
-4041 Pike Lane, suite #D.
-Concord CA, 94520
-
-[temporarily using the Walnut Creek CDROM address until a PO box can be
-opened]
-
-
-
-Wire transfers may also be sent directly to:
-
-
-
-Bank Of America
-Concord Main Office
-P.O. Box 37176
-San Francisco CA, 94137-5176
-
-Routing #: 121-000-358
-Account #: 01411-07441 (FreeBSD, Inc.)
-
-
-
-Any correspondence related to donations should be sent to
-Jordan Hubbard, either
-via email or to the FreeBSD, Inc. postal address given above.
-
-If you do not wish to be listed in our
-section, please specify this when making your donation. Thanks!
-
-
-
-
-Donating hardware
-
-Donations of hardware in any of the 3 following categories are also gladly
-accepted by the FreeBSD Project:
-
-
-
-
-
-General purpose hardware such as disk drives, memory or complete
-systems should be sent to the FreeBSD, Inc. address listed in the
-donating funds section.
-
-
-
-
-Hardware for which ongoing compliance testing is desired.
-We are currently trying to put together a testing lab of all components
-that FreeBSD supports so that proper regression testing can be done with
-each new release. We are still lacking many important pieces (network cards,
-motherboards, etc) and if you would like to make such a donation, please contact
-&a.davidg; for information on which items are still required.
-
-
-
-
-Hardware currently unsupported by FreeBSD for which you would like to
-see such support added. Please contact the &a.core; before sending
-such items as we will need to find a developer willing to take on the task
-before we can accept delivery of new hardware.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Donating Internet access
-
-We can always use new mirror sites for FTP, WWW or cvsup.
-If you would like to be such a mirror, please contact
-the FreeBSD project administrators for more information.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Donors Gallery
-
-The FreeBSD Project is indebted to the following donors and would
-like to publically thank them here!
-
-
-
-
-
-Contributors to the central server project:
-
-
-The following individuals and businesses made it possible for
-the FreeBSD Project to build a new central server machine to eventually
-replace freefall.freebsd.org by donating the following items:
-
-
-
-
-
-Ade Barkah
-and his employer, Hemisphere Online, donated a Pentium Pro (P6) 200Mhz CPU
-
-
-
-
-ASA Computers
-donated a Tyan 1662 motherboard.
-
-
-
-
-Joe McGuckin of
-ViaNet Communications
-donated a Kingston ethernet controller.
-
-
-
-
-Jack O'Neill donated an NCR 53C875 SCSI
-controller card.
-
-
-
-
-Ulf Zimmermann
-of Alameda Networks
-donated 128MB of memory, a 4 Gb disk drive
-and the case.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Direct funding:
-
-
-The following individuals and businesses have generously contributed
-direct funding to the project:
-
-
-
-
-
-Annelise Anderson
-
-
-
-
-Matt Dillon
-
-
-
-
-Epilogue Technology Corporation
-
-
-
-
-Sean Eric Fagan
-
-
-
-
-Gianmarco Giovannelli
-
-
-
-
-Josef C. Grosch
-
-
-
-
-Chuck Robey
-
-
-
-
-Kenneth P. Stox of Imaginary Landscape, LLC.
-
-
-
-
-Dmitry S. Kohmanyuk
-
-
-
-
-Laser5
-of Japan (a portion of the profits from sales of their
-various FreeBSD CD-ROMs.
-
-
-
-
-Fuki Shuppan Publishing Co. donated a portion of
-their profits from Hajimete no FreeBSD
-(FreeBSD, Getting started) to the FreeBSD and XFree86
-projects.
-
-
-
-ASCII Corp. donated a portion of
-their profits from several FreeBSD-related books to the
-FreeBSD project.
-
-
-
-Yokogawa Electric Corp has generously donated
-significant funding to the FreeBSD project.
-
-
-
-BuffNET
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Hardware contributors:
-
-
-The following individuals and businesses have generously contributed
-hardware for testing and device driver development/support:
-
-
-
-
-
-Walnut Creek CDROM for providing the Pentium P5-90 and
-486/DX2-66 EISA/VL systems that are being used for our development
-work, to say nothing of the network access and other donations of
-hardware resources.
-
-
-
-
-TRW Financial Systems, Inc. provided 130 PCs, three 68 GB
-fileservers, twelve Ethernets, two routers and an ATM
-switch for debugging the diskless code. They also keep a
-couple of FreeBSD hackers alive and busy. Thanks!
-
-
-
-
-Dermot McDonnell donated the Toshiba XM3401B CDROM drive
-currently used in freefall.
-
-
-
-
-&a.chuck; contributed his floppy tape streamer for experimental
-work.
-
-
-
-
-Larry Altneu <larry@ALR.COM>, and &a.wilko;,
-provided Wangtek and Archive QIC-02 tape drives in order to
-improve the wt driver.
-
-
-
-
-Ernst Winter <ewinter@lobo.muc.de> contributed a 2.88 MB
-floppy drive to the project. This will hopefully increase the
-pressure for rewriting the floppy disk driver. ;-)
-
-
-
-
-Tekram Technologies
-sent one each of their DC-390, DC-390U and DC-390F FAST and ULTRA
-SCSI host adapter cards for regression testing of the NCR and AMD
-drivers with their cards. They are also to be applauded for making
-driver sources for free operating systems available from their
-FTP server ftp://ftp.tekram.com/scsi/FreeBSD.
-
-
-
-
-Larry M. Augustin
-contributed not only a Symbios Sym8751S SCSI card, but also a set
-of data books, including one about the forthcoming Sym53c895 chip
-with Ultra-2 and LVD support, and the latest programming manual with
-information on how to safely use the advanced features of the latest
-Symbios SCSI chips. Thanks a lot!
-
-
-
-
-Christoph Kukulies
-donated an FX120 12 speed Mitsumi CDROM drive for IDE CDROM driver
-development.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Special contributors:
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Walnut Creek CDROM
-has donated almost more than we can say (see the
- document for more details).
-In particular, we would like to thank them for the original hardware
-used for freefall.FreeBSD.ORG, our primary development
-machine, and for thud.FreeBSD.ORG, a testing and build box.
-We are also indebted to them for funding various contributors over
-the years and providing us with unrestricted use of their T1
-connection to the Internet.
-
-
-
-The interface business GmbH, Dresden has been patiently
-supporting &a.joerg; who has often preferred FreeBSD work over
-paywork, and used to fall back to their (quite expensive) EUnet
-Internet connection whenever his private connection became too
-slow or flakey to work with it...
-
-
-
-Berkeley Software Design, Inc. has contributed their DOS emulator code to the
-remaining BSD world, which is used in the dosemu
-command.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Derived Software Contributors
-
-This software was originally derived from William
-F. Jolitz's 386BSD release 0.1, though almost none of the
-original 386BSD specific code remains. This software has
-been essentially re-implemented from the 4.4BSD-Lite
-release provided by the Computer Science Research Group
-(CSRG) at the University of California, Berkeley and
-associated academic contributors.
-
-There are also portions of NetBSD that have been integrated
-into FreeBSD as well, and we would therefore like to thank
-all the contributors to NetBSD for their work.
-
-
-
-
-Additional FreeBSD Contributors
-
-(in alphabetical order by first name):
-
-
-
-
-
-A JOSEPH KOSHY <koshy@india.hp.com>
-
-
-
-ABURAYA Ryushirou <rewsirow@ff.iij4u.or.jp>
-
-
-
-Ada T Lim <ada@bsd.org>
-
-
-
-Adam Glass <glass@postgres.berkeley.edu>
-
-
-
-Adrian T. Filipi-Martin <atf3r@agate.cs.virginia.edu>
-
-
-
-Akito Fujita <fujita@zoo.ncl.omron.co.jp>
-
-
-
-Alain Kalker <A.C.P.M.Kalker@student.utwente.nl>
-
-
-
-Alan Cox <alc@cs.rice.edu>
-
-
-
-Andreas Kohout <shanee@rabbit.augusta.de>
-
-
-
-Andreas Lohr <andreas@marvin.RoBIN.de>
-
-
-
-Andrew Gordon <andrew.gordon@net-tel.co.uk>
-
-
-
-Andrew Herbert <andrew@werple.apana.org.au>
-
-
-
-Andrew McRae <amcrae@cisco.com>
-
-
-
-Andrew Moore <alm@FreeBSD.org>
-
-
-
-Andrew Stevenson <andrew@ugh.net.au>
-
-
-
-Andrew V. Stesin <stesin@elvisti.kiev.ua>
-
-
-
-Andrey Zakhvatov <andy@icc.surw.chel.su>
-
-
-
-Andy Whitcroft <andy@sarc.city.ac.uk>
-
-
-
-Angelo Turetta <ATuretta@stylo.it>
-
-
-
-Anthony Yee-Hang Chan <yeehang@netcom.com>
-
-
-
-Ari Suutari <ari@suutari.iki.fi>
-
-
-
-Brent J. Nordquist <bjn@visi.com>
-
-
-
-Bernd Rosauer <br@schiele-ct.de>
-
-
-
-Bill Kish <kish@osf.org>
-
-
-
-&a.wlloyd;
-
-
-
-Bob Wilcox <bob@obiwan.uucp>
-
-
-
-Boyd Faulkner <faulkner@mpd.tandem.com>
-
-
-
-Brent J. Nordquist <bjn@visi.com>
-
-
-
-Brett Taylor <brett@peloton.physics.montana.edu>
-
-
-
-Brian Clapper <bmc@willscreek.com>
-
-
-
-Brian Handy <handy@lambic.space.lockheed.com>
-
-
-
-Brian Tao <taob@risc.org>
-
-
-
-Brion Moss <brion@queeg.com>
-
-
-
-Bruce Gingery <bgingery@gtcs.com>
-
-
-
-Carey Jones <mcj@acquiesce.org>
-
-
-
-Carl Fongheiser <cmf@netins.net>
-
-
-
-Charles Hannum <mycroft@ai.mit.edu>
-
-
-
-Charles Mott <cmott@srv.net>
-
-
-
-Chet Ramey <chet@odin.INS.CWRU.Edu>
-
-
-
-Chris Dabrowski < chris@vader.org>
-
-
-
-Chris G. Demetriou <cgd@postgres.berkeley.edu>
-
-
-
-Chris Shenton <cshenton@angst.it.hq.nasa.gov>
-
-
-
-Chris Stenton <jacs@gnome.co.uk>
-
-
-
-Chris Timmons <skynyrd@opus.cts.cwu.edu>
-
-
-
-Chris Torek <torek@ee.lbl.gov>
-
-
-
-Christian Gusenbauer <cg@fimp01.fim.uni-linz.ac.at>
-
-
-
-Christian Haury <Christian.Haury@sagem.fr>
-
-
-
-Christoph Robitschko <chmr@edvz.tu-graz.ac.at>
-
-
-
-Choi Jun Ho <junker@jazz.snu.ac.kr>
-
-
-
-Chuck Hein <chein@cisco.com>
-
-
-
-Conrad Sabatier <conrads@neosoft.com>
-
-
-
-Cornelis van der Laan <nils@guru.ims.uni-stuttgart.de>
-
-
-
-Craig Struble <cstruble@vt.edu>
-
-
-
-Cristian Ferretti <cfs@riemann.mat.puc.cl>
-
-
-
-Curt Mayer <curt@toad.com>
-
-
-
-Dai Ishijima <ishijima@tri.pref.osaka.jp>
-
-
-
-Dan Cross <tenser@spitfire.ecsel.psu.edu>
-
-
-
-Daniel Baker <dbaker@crash.ops.neosoft.com>
-
-
-
-Daniel M. Eischen <deischen@iworks.InterWorks.org>
-
-
-
-Daniel O'Connor <doconnor@gsoft.com.au>
-
-
-
-Danny J. Zerkel <dzerkel@feephi.phofarm.com>
-
-
-
-Dave Bodenstab <imdave@synet.net>
-
-
-
-Dave Burgess <burgess@hrd769.brooks.af.mil>
-
-
-
-Dave Chapeskie <dchapes@zeus.leitch.com>
-
-
-
-Dave Edmondson <davided@sco.com>
-
-
-
-Dave Rivers <rivers@ponds.uucp>
-
-
-
-David A. Bader <dbader@umiacs.umd.edu>
-
-
-
-David Dawes <dawes@physics.su.OZ.AU>
-
-
-
-David Holloway <daveh@gwythaint.tamis.com>
-
-
-
-David Leonard <d@scry.dstc.edu.au>
-
-
-
-Dean Huxley <dean@fsa.ca>
-
-
-
-Dirk Froemberg <dirk@hal.in-berlin.de>
-
-
-
-Dmitrij Tejblum <dima@tejblum.dnttm.rssi.ru>
-
-
-
-Dmitry Kohmanyuk <dk@farm.org>
-
-
-
-&a.whiteside;
-
-
-
-Don Yuniskis <dgy@rtd.com>
-
-
-
-Donald Burr <d_burr@ix.netcom.com>
-
-
-
-Doug Ambrisko <ambrisko@ambrisko.roble.com>
-
-
-
-Douglas Carmichael <dcarmich@mcs.com>
-
-
-
-Eiji-usagi-MATSUmoto <usagi@ruby.club.or.jp>
-
-
-
-ELISA Font Project
-
-
-
-Eric A. Griff <eagriff@global2000.net>
-
-
-
-Eric Blood <eblood@cs.unr.edu>
-
-
-
-Eric J. Chet <ejc@bazzle.com>
-
-
-
-Eric J. Schwertfeger <eric@cybernut.com>
-
-
-
-Francis M J Hsieh <mjhsieh@life.nthu.edu.tw>
-
-
-
-Frank Bartels <knarf@camelot.de>
-
-
-
-Frank Chen Hsiung Chan <frankch@waru.life.nthu.edu.tw>
-
-
-
-Frank Maclachlan <fpm@crash.cts.com>
-
-
-
-Frank Nobis <fn@trinity.radio-do.de>
-
-
-
-FUJIMOTO Kensaku <fujimoto@oscar.elec.waseda.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-FURUSAWA Kazuhisa <furusawa@com.cs.osakafu-u.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Gary A. Browning <gab10@griffcd.amdahl.com>
-
-
-
-Gary Kline <kline@thought.org>
-
-
-
-Gerard Roudier <groudier@club-internet.fr>
-
-
-
-Greg Ungerer <gerg@stallion.oz.au>
-
-
-
-Harlan Stenn <Harlan.Stenn@pfcs.com>
-
-
-
-Havard Eidnes <Havard.Eidnes@runit.sintef.no>
-
-
-
-Hideaki Ohmon <ohmon@tom.sfc.keio.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Hidekazu Kuroki <hidekazu@cs.titech.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Hidetoshi Shimokawa <simokawa@sat.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Hideyuki Suzuki <hideyuki@sat.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Hironori Ikura <hikura@kaisei.org>
-
-
-
-Holger Veit <Holger.Veit@gmd.de>
-
-
-
-Hung-Chi Chu <hcchu@r350.ee.ntu.edu.tw>
-
-
-
-Ian Vaudrey <i.vaudrey@bigfoot.com>
-
-
-
-Igor Vinokurov <igor@zynaps.ru>
-
-
-
-Ikuo Nakagawa <ikuo@isl.intec.co.jp>
-
-
-
-IMAMURA Tomoaki <tomoak-i@is.aist-nara.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Ishii Masahiro
-
-
-
- Issei Suzuki<issei@t-cnet.or.jp>
-
-
-
-Itsuro Saito <saito@miv.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-J. David Lowe <lowe@saturn5.com>
-
-
-
-J.T. Conklin <jtc@cygnus.com>
-
-
-
-James Clark <jjc@jclark.com>
-
-
-
-James da Silva <jds@cs.umd.edu> et al
-
-
-
-Janusz Kokot <janek@gaja.ipan.lublin.pl>
-
-
-
-Jason Thorpe <thorpej@nas.nasa.gov>
-
-
-
-Javier Martin Rueda <jmrueda@diatel.upm.es>
-
-
-
-Jeff Bartig <jeffb@doit.wisc.edu>
-
-
-
-Jeffrey Wheat <jeff@cetlink.net>
-
-
-
-Jian-Da Li <jdli@csie.NCTU.edu.tw>
-
-
-
-Jim Binkley <jrb@cs.pdx.edu>
-
-
-
-Jim Lowe <james@cs.uwm.edu>
-
-
-
-Jim Wilson <wilson@moria.cygnus.com>
-
-
-
-Joao Carlos Mendes Luis <jonny@coppe.ufrj.br>
-
-
-
-Joel Sutton <sutton@aardvark.apana.org.au>
-
-
-
-Johann Tonsing <jtonsing@mikom.csir.co.za>
-
-
-
-John Capo <jc@irbs.com>
-
-
-
-John Heidemann <johnh@isi.edu>
-
-
-
-John Perry <perry@vishnu.alias.net>
-
-
-
-John Polstra <jdp@polstra.com>
-
-
-
-John Rochester <jr@cs.mun.ca>
-
-
-
-Josef Karthauser <joe@uk.freebsd.org>
-
-
-
-Joseph Stein <joes@seaport.net>
-
-
-
-Josh Gilliam <josh@quick.net>
-
-
-
-Josh Tiefenbach <josh@ican.net>
-
-
-
-Juergen Lock <nox@jelal.hb.north.de>
-
-
-
-Juha Inkari <inkari@cc.hut.fi>
-
-
-
-Julian Assange <proff@suburbia.net>
-
-
-
-Julian Jenkins <kaveman@magna.com.au>
-
-
-
-Julian Stacey <jhs@freebsd.org>
-
-
-
-Junichi Satoh <junichi@jp.freebsd.org>
-
-
-
-Kapil Chowksey <kchowksey@hss.hns.com>
-
-
-
-Kazuhiko Kiriyama <kiri@kiri.toba-cmt.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Keith Bostic <bostic@bostic.com>
-
-
-
-Keith Moore
-
-
-
-Kenneth Monville <desmo@bandwidth.org>
-
-
-
-Kent Vander Velden <graphix@iastate.edu>
-
-
-
-Kirk McKusick <mckusick@mckusick.com>
-
-
-
-Kiroh HARADA <kiroh@kh.rim.or.jp>
-
-
-
-Koichi Sato <copan@ppp.fastnet.or.jp>
-
-
-
-Kostya Lukin <lukin@okbmei.msk.su>
-
-
-
-Kurt Olsen <kurto@tiny.mcs.usu.edu>
-
-
-
-Lars Koeller <Lars.Koeller@Uni-Bielefeld.DE>
-
-
-
-Lucas James <Lucas.James@ldjpc.apana.org.au>
-
-
-
-Luigi Rizzo <luigi@iet.unipi.it>
-
-
-
-Makoto MATSUSHITA <matusita@jp.freebsd.org>
-
-
-
-Manu Iyengar <iyengar@grunthos.pscwa.psca.com>
-
-
-
-Marc Frajola <marc@dev.com>
-
-
-
-Marc Ramirez <mrami@mramirez.sy.yale.edu>
-
-
-
-Marc Slemko <marcs@znep.com>
-
-
-
-Marc van Kempen <wmbfmk@urc.tue.nl>
-
-
-
-Mario Sergio Fujikawa Ferreira <lioux@gns.com.br>
-
-
-
-Mark Huizer <xaa@stack.nl>
-
-
-
-Mark J. Taylor <mtaylor@cybernet.com>
-
-
-
-Mark Krentel <krentel@rice.edu>
-
-
-
-Mark Tinguely <tinguely@plains.nodak.edu>
-<tinguely@hookie.cs.ndsu.NoDak.edu>
-
-
-
-Martin Birgmeier
-
-
-
-Martti Kuparinen <erakupa@kk.etx.ericsson.se>
-
-
-
-Masachika ISHIZUKA <ishizuka@isis.min.ntt.jp>
-
-
-
-Mats Lofkvist <mal@algonet.se>
-
-
-
-Matt Bartley <mbartley@lear35.cytex.com>
-
-
-
-Matt Thomas <thomas@lkg.dec.com>
-
-
-
-Matt White <mwhite+@CMU.EDU>
-
-
-
-Matthew Hunt <mph@pobox.com>
-
-
-
-Matthew N. Dodd <winter@jurai.net>
-
-
-
-Matthew Stein <matt@bdd.net>
-
-
-
-Maurice Castro <maurice@planet.serc.rmit.edu.au>
-
-
-
-Michael Butschky <butsch@computi.erols.com>
-
-
-
-Michael Elbel <me@FreeBSD.ORG>
-
-
-
-Michael Searle <searle@longacre.demon.co.uk>
-
-
-
-Miguel Angel Sagreras <msagre@cactus.fi.uba.ar>
-
-
-
-Mikael Hybsch <micke@dynas.se>
-
-
-
-Mikhail Teterin <mi@aldan.ziplink.net>
-
-
-
-Mike McGaughey <mmcg@cs.monash.edu.au>
-
-
-
-Mike Peck <mike@binghamton.edu>
-
-
-
-Ming-I Hseh <PA@FreeBSD.ee.Ntu.edu.TW>
-
-
-
-MITA Yoshio <mita@jp.FreeBSD.ORG>
-
-
-
-MOROHOSHI Akihiko <moro@race.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Murray Stokely <murray@cdrom.com>
-
-
-
-NAKAMURA Kazushi <nkazushi@highway.or.jp>
-
-
-
-Naoki Hamada <nao@tom-yam.or.jp>
-
-
-
-Narvi <narvi@haldjas.folklore.ee>
-
-
-
-NIIMI Satoshi <sa2c@and.or.jp>
-
-
-
-Nick Sayer <nsayer@quack.kfu.com>
-
-
-
-Nicolas Souchu <Nicolas.Souchu@prism.uvsq.fr>
-
-
-
-Nisha Talagala <nisha@cs.berkeley.edu>
-
-
-
-Nobuhiro Yasutomi <nobu@psrc.isac.co.jp>
-
-
-
-Nobuyuki Koganemaru <kogane@kces.koganemaru.co.jp>
-
-
-
-Noritaka Ishizumi <graphite@jp.FreeBSD.ORG>
-
-
-
-Oliver Fromme <oliver.fromme@heim3.tu-clausthal.de>
-
-
-
-Oliver Laumann <net@informatik.uni-bremen.de>
-
-
-
-Oliver Oberdorf <oly@world.std.com>
-
-
-
-Paul Fox <pgf@foxharp.boston.ma.us>
-
-
-
-Paul Kranenburg <pk@cs.few.eur.nl>
-
-
-
-Paul Mackerras <paulus@cs.anu.edu.au>
-
-
-
-Paulo Menezes <paulo@isr.uc.pt>
-
-
-
-Paul T. Root <proot@horton.iaces.com>
-
-
-
-Pedro Giffuni <giffunip@asme.org>
-
-
-
-Pedro A M Vazquez <vazquez@IQM.Unicamp.BR>
-
-
-
-Peter Cornelius <pc@inr.fzk.de>
-
-
-
-Peter Haight <peterh@prognet.com>
-
-
-
-Peter Hawkins <peter@rhiannon.clari.net.au>
-
-
-
-Peter Stubbs <PETERS@staidan.qld.edu.au>
-
-
-
-Pierre Beyssac <bp@fasterix.freenix.org>
-
-
-
-Phil Maker <pjm@cs.ntu.edu.au>
-
-
-
-R. Kym Horsell
-
-
-
-Randall Hopper <rhh@stealth.ct.picker.com>
-
-
-
-Richard Hwang <rhwang@bigpanda.com>
-
-
-
-Richard Seaman, Jr. <dick@tar.com>
-
-
-
-Richard Stallman <rms@gnu.ai.mit.edu>
-
-
-
-Richard Wiwatowski <rjwiwat@adelaide.on.net>
-
-
-
-Rob Mallory <rmallory@csusb.edu>
-
-
-
-Rob Shady <rls@id.net>
-
-
-
-Rob Snow <rsnow@txdirect.net>
-
-
-
-Robert Sanders <rsanders@mindspring.com>
-
-
-
-Robert Withrow <witr@rwwa.com>
-
-
-
-Ronald Kuehn <kuehn@rz.tu-clausthal.de>
-
-
-
-Roland Jesse <jesse@cs.uni-magdeburg.de>
-
-
-
-Ruslan Shevchenko <rssh@cki.ipri.kiev.ua>
-
-
-
-Samuel Lam <skl@ScalableNetwork.com>
-
-
-
-Sander Vesik <sander@haldjas.folklore.ee>
-
-
-
-Sandro Sigala <ssigala@globalnet.it>
-
-
-
-Sascha Blank <blank@fox.uni-trier.de>
-
-
-
-Sascha Wildner <swildner@channelz.GUN.de>
-
-
-
-Satoshi Taoka <taoka@infonets.hiroshima-u.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Scott Blachowicz <scott.blachowicz@seaslug.org>
-
-
-
-Scott A. Kenney <saken@rmta.ml.org>
-
-
-
-Serge V. Vakulenko <vak@zebub.msk.su>
-
-
-
-Sheldon Hearn <axl@iafrica.com>
-
-
-
-Simon Marlow <simonm@dcs.gla.ac.uk>
-
-
-
-Slaven Rezic (Tomic) <eserte@cs.tu-berlin.de>
-
-
-
-Soren Dayton <csdayton@midway.uchicago.edu>
-
-
-
-Soren Dossing <sauber@netcom.com>
-
-
-
-Stefan Moeding <moeding@bn.DeTeMobil.de>
-
-
-
-Stephane Legrand <stephane@lituus.fr>
-
-
-
-Stephen J. Roznowski <sjr@home.net>
-
-
-
-Steve Gerakines <steve2@genesis.tiac.net>
-
-
-
-Suzuki Yoshiaki <zensyo@ann.tama.kawasaki.jp>
-
-
-
-Tadashi Kumano <kumano@strl.nhk.or.jp>
-
-
-
-Taguchi Takeshi <taguchi@tohoku.iij.ad.jp>
-
-
-
-Takayuki Ariga <a00821@cc.hc.keio.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Terry Lambert <terry@lambert.org>
-
-
-
-Terry Lee <terry@uivlsi.csl.uiuc.edu>
-
-
-
-Tetsuya Furukawa <tetsuya@secom-sis.co.jp>
-
-
-
-Theo Deraadt <deraadt@fsa.ca>
-
-
-
-Thomas König <Thomas.Koenig@ciw.uni-karlsruhe.de>
-
-
-
-Þórður Ívarsson <totii@est.is>
-
-
-
-Tim Kientzle <kientzle@netcom.com>
-
-
-
-Tim Wilkinson <tim@sarc.city.ac.uk>
-
-
-
-Tom Samplonius <tom@misery.sdf.com>
-
-
-
-Torbjorn Granlund <tege@matematik.su.se>
-
-
-
-Toshihiro Kanda <candy@fct.kgc.co.jp>
-
-
-
-Trefor S. <trefor@flevel.co.uk>
-
-
-
-Ville Eerola <ve@sci.fi>
-
-
-
-Werner Griessl <werner@btp1da.phy.uni-bayreuth.de>
-
-
-
-Wes Santee <wsantee@wsantee.oz.net>
-
-
-
-Wilko Bulte <wilko@yedi.iaf.nl>
-
-
-
-Wolfgang Stanglmeier <wolf@kintaro.cologne.de>
-
-
-
-Wu Ching-hong <woju@FreeBSD.ee.Ntu.edu.TW>
-
-
-
-Yen-Shuo Su <yssu@CCCA.NCTU.edu.tw>
-
-
-
-Yoshiaki Uchikawa <yoshiaki@kt.rim.or.jp>
-
-
-
-Yoshiro Mihira <sanpei@yy.cs.keio.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Yukihiro Nakai <nakai@mlab.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Yuval Yarom <yval@cs.huji.ac.il>
-
-
-
-Yves Fonk <yves@cpcoup5.tn.tudelft.nl>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-386BSD Patch Kit Patch Contributors
-
-(in alphabetical order by first name):
-
-
-
-
-
-Adam Glass <glass@postgres.berkeley.edu>
-
-
-
-Adrian Hall <adrian@ibmpcug.co.uk>
-
-
-
-Andrey A. Chernov <ache@astral.msk.su>
-
-
-
-Andrew Herbert <andrew@werple.apana.org.au>
-
-
-
-Andrew Moore <alm@netcom.com>
-
-
-
-Andy Valencia <ajv@csd.mot.com>
-<jtk@netcom.com>
-
-
-
-Arne Henrik Juul <arnej@Lise.Unit.NO>
-
-
-
-Bakul Shah <bvs@bitblocks.com>
-
-
-
-Barry Lustig <barry@ictv.com>
-
-
-
-Bob Wilcox <bob@obiwan.uucp>
-
-
-
-Branko Lankester
-
-
-
-Brett Lymn <blymn@mulga.awadi.com.AU>
-
-
-
-Charles Hannum <mycroft@ai.mit.edu>
-
-
-
-Chris G. Demetriou <cgd@postgres.berkeley.edu>
-
-
-
-Chris Torek <torek@ee.lbl.gov>
-
-
-
-Christoph Robitschko <chmr@edvz.tu-graz.ac.at>
-
-
-
-Daniel Poirot <poirot@aio.jsc.nasa.gov>
-
-
-
-Dave Burgess <burgess@hrd769.brooks.af.mil>
-
-
-
-Dave Rivers <rivers@ponds.uucp>
-
-
-
-David Dawes <dawes@physics.su.OZ.AU>
-
-
-
-David Greenman <davidg@Root.COM>
-
-
-
-Eric J. Haug <ejh@slustl.slu.edu>
-
-
-
-Felix Gaehtgens <felix@escape.vsse.in-berlin.de>
-
-
-
-Frank Maclachlan <fpm@crash.cts.com>
-
-
-
-Gary A. Browning <gab10@griffcd.amdahl.com>
-
-
-
-Gary Howland <gary@hotlava.com>
-
-
-
-Geoff Rehmet <csgr@alpha.ru.ac.za>
-
-
-
-Goran Hammarback <goran@astro.uu.se>
-
-
-
-Guido van Rooij <guido@gvr.win.tue.nl>
-
-
-
-Guy Harris <guy@auspex.com>
-
-
-
-Havard Eidnes <Havard.Eidnes@runit.sintef.no>
-
-
-
-Herb Peyerl <hpeyerl@novatel.cuc.ab.ca>
-
-
-
-Holger Veit <Holger.Veit@gmd.de>
-
-
-
-Ishii Masahiro, R. Kym Horsell
-
-
-
-J.T. Conklin <jtc@cygnus.com>
-
-
-
-Jagane D Sundar < jagane@netcom.com >
-
-
-
-James Clark <jjc@jclark.com>
-
-
-
-James Jegers <jimj@miller.cs.uwm.edu>
-
-
-
-James W. Dolter
-
-
-
-James da Silva <jds@cs.umd.edu> et al
-
-
-
-Jay Fenlason <hack@datacube.com>
-
-
-
-Jim Wilson <wilson@moria.cygnus.com>
-
-
-
-Jörg Lohse <lohse@tech7.informatik.uni-hamburg.de>
-
-
-
-Jörg Wunsch <joerg_wunsch@uriah.heep.sax.de>
-
-
-
-John Dyson - <formerly dyson@ref.tfs.com>
-
-
-
-John Woods <jfw@eddie.mit.edu>
-
-
-
-Jordan K. Hubbard <jkh@whisker.hubbard.ie>
-
-
-
-Julian Elischer <julian@dialix.oz.au>
-
-
-
-Julian Stacey <jhs@freebsd.org>
-
-
-
-Karl Lehenbauer <karl@NeoSoft.com>
-<karl@one.neosoft.com>
-
-
-
-Keith Bostic <bostic@toe.CS.Berkeley.EDU>
-
-
-
-Ken Hughes
-
-
-
-Kent Talarico <kent@shipwreck.tsoft.net>
-
-
-
-Kevin Lahey <kml%rokkaku.UUCP@mathcs.emory.edu>
-<kml@mosquito.cis.ufl.edu>
-
-
-
-Marc Frajola <marc@dev.com>
-
-
-
-Mark Tinguely <tinguely@plains.nodak.edu>
-<tinguely@hookie.cs.ndsu.NoDak.edu>
-
-
-
-Martin Renters <martin@tdc.on.ca>
-
-
-
-Michael Clay <mclay@weareb.org>
-
-
-
-Michael Galassi <nerd@percival.rain.com>
-
-
-
-Mike Durkin <mdurkin@tsoft.sf-bay.org>
-
-
-
-Naoki Hamada <nao@tom-yam.or.jp>
-
-
-
-Nate Williams <nate@bsd.coe.montana.edu>
-
-
-
-Nick Handel <nhandel@NeoSoft.com>
-<nick@madhouse.neosoft.com>
-
-
-
-Pace Willisson <pace@blitz.com>
-
-
-
-Paul Kranenburg <pk@cs.few.eur.nl>
-
-
-
-Paul Mackerras <paulus@cs.anu.edu.au>
-
-
-
-Paul Popelka <paulp@uts.amdahl.com>
-
-
-
-Peter da Silva <peter@NeoSoft.com>
-
-
-
-Phil Sutherland <philsuth@mycroft.dialix.oz.au>
-
-
-
-Poul-Henning Kamp<phk@FreeBSD.ORG>
-
-
-
-Ralf Friedl <friedl@informatik.uni-kl.de>
-
-
-
-Rick Macklem <root@snowhite.cis.uoguelph.ca>
-
-
-
-Robert D. Thrush <rd@phoenix.aii.com>
-
-
-
-Rodney W. Grimes <rgrimes@cdrom.com>
-
-
-
-Sascha Wildner <swildner@channelz.GUN.de>
-
-
-
-Scott Burris <scott@pita.cns.ucla.edu>
-
-
-
-Scott Reynolds <scott@clmqt.marquette.mi.us>
-
-
-
-Sean Eric Fagan <sef@kithrup.com>
-
-
-
-Simon J Gerraty <sjg@melb.bull.oz.au>
-<sjg@zen.void.oz.au>
-
-
-
-Stephen McKay <syssgm@devetir.qld.gov.au>
-
-
-
-Terry Lambert <terry@icarus.weber.edu>
-
-
-
-Terry Lee <terry@uivlsi.csl.uiuc.edu>
-
-
-
-Tor Egge <Tor.Egge@idi.ntnu.no>
-
-
-
-Warren Toomey <wkt@csadfa.cs.adfa.oz.au>
-
-
-
-Wiljo Heinen <wiljo@freeside.ki.open.de>
-
-
-
-William Jolitz <withheld>
-
-
-
-Wolfgang Solfrank <ws@tools.de>
-
-
-
-Wolfgang Stanglmeier <wolf@dentaro.GUN.de>
-
-
-
-Yuval Yarom <yval@cs.huji.ac.il>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Source Tree Guidelines and Policies
-
-
-Contributed by &a.phk;.
-
-This chapter documents various guidelines and policies in force
-for the FreeBSD source tree.
-
-
-
-MAINTAINER on Makefiles
-
-
-June 1996.
-
-If a particular portion of the FreeBSD distribution is being maintained by a
-person or group of persons, they can communicate this fact to the
-world by adding a
-
-
- MAINTAINER= email-addresses
-
-
-line to the makefiles covering this portion of the source tree.
-
-The semantics of this are as follows:
-
-The maintainer owns and is responsible for that code. This means
-that he is responsible for fixing bugs and answer problem reports
-pertaining to that piece of the code, and in the case of contributed
-software, for tracking new versions, as appropriate.
-
-Changes to directories which have a maintainer defined shall be
-sent to the
-maintainer for review before being committed. Only if the maintainer does not respond
-for an unacceptable period of time, to several emails, will it be
-acceptable to commit changes without review by the maintainer.
-However, it is suggested that you try and have the changes reviewed
-by someone else if at all possible.
-
-It is of course not acceptable to add a person or group as maintainer
-unless they agree to assume this duty. On the other hand it doesn't
-have to be a committer and it can easily be a group of people.
-
-
-
-
-Contributed Software
-
-June 1996.
-
-Some parts of the FreeBSD distribution consist of software that
-is actively being maintained outside the FreeBSD project. For
-historical reasons, we call this contributed software. Some
-examples are perl, gcc and patch.
-
-Over the last couple of years, various methods have been used in
-dealing with this type of software and all have some number of
-advantages and drawbacks. No clear winner has emerged.
-
-Since this is the case, after some debate one of these methods has
-been selected as the "official" method and will be required for
-future imports of software of this kind. Furthermore, it is strongly
-suggested that existing contributed software converge on this model
-over time, as it has significant advantages over the old method,
-including the ability to easily obtain diffs relative to the
-"official" versions of the source by everyone (even without cvs
-access). This will make it significantly easier to return changes
-to the primary developers of the contributed software.
-
-Ultimately, however, it comes down to the people actually doing
-the work. If using this model is particularly unsuited to the
-package being dealt with, exceptions to these rules may be granted
-only with the approval of the core team and with the general
-consensus of the other developers. The ability to maintain the
-package in the future will be a key issue in the decisions.
-
-The Tcl embedded programming language will be used as example
-of how this model works:
-
-
-src/contrib/tcl
- contains the source as distributed by the maintainers
-of this package. Parts that are entirely not applicable for FreeBSD
-can be removed. In the case of Tcl, the "mac", "win" and "compat"
-subdirectories were eliminated before the import
-
-
-src/lib/libtcl
- contains only a "bmake style" Makefile that uses
-the standard bsd.lib.mk makefile rules to produce the library and
-install the documentation.
-
-
-src/usr.bin/tclsh
- contains only a bmake style Makefile which will
-produce and install the "tclsh" program and its associated man-pages
-using the standard bsd.prog.mk rules.
-
-
-src/tools/tools/tcl_bmake
- contains a couple of shell-scripts that can be of help
-when the tcl software needs updating. These are not part of the
-built or installed software.
-
-The important thing here is that the "src/contrib/tcl" directory
-is created according to the rules: It is supposed to contain the
-sources as distributed (on a proper CVS vendor-branch) with as few
-FreeBSD-specific changes as possible. The 'easy-import' tool on
-freefall will assist in doing the import, but if there are any
-doubts on how to go about it, it is imperative that you ask first
-and not blunder ahead and hope it "works out". CVS is not forgiving
-of import accidents and a fair amount of effort is required to back
-out major mistakes.
-
-Because of some unfortunate design limitations with CVS's vendor
-branches, it is required that "official" patches from the vendor
-be applied to the original distributed sources and the result
-re-imported onto the vendor branch again. Official patches should
-never be patched into the FreeBSD checked out version and
-"committed", as this destroys the vendor branch coherency and makes
-importing future versions rather difficult as there will be conflicts.
-
-Since many packages contain files that are meant for compatibility
-with other architectures and environments that FreeBSD, it is
-permissible to remove parts of the distribution tree that are of no interest
-to FreeBSD in order to save space. Files containing copyright
-notices and release-note kind of information applicable to the
-remaining files shall not be removed.
-
-If it seems easier, the "bmake" makefiles can be produced from the
-dist tree automatically by some utility, something which would
-hopefully make it even easier to upgrade to a new version. If this
-is done, be sure to check in such utilities (as necessary) in the
-src/tools directory along with the port itself so that it is available
-to future maintainers.
-
-In the src/contrib/tcl level directory, a file called FREEBSD-upgrade
-should be added and it should states things like:
-
-
-
-
-
- Which files have been left out
-
-
-
- Where the original distribution was obtained from and/or the official
-master site.
-
-
-
- Where to send patches back to the original authors
-
-
-
- Perhaps an overview of the FreeBSD-specific changes that have been made.
-
-
-
-
-
-However, please do not import FREEBSD-upgrade with the contributed source.
-Rather you should ``cvs add FREEBSD-upgrade ; cvs ci'' after the
-initial import. Example wording from ``src/contrib/cpio'' is below:
-
-
-This directory contains virgin sources of the original distribution files
-on a "vendor" branch. Do not, under any circumstances, attempt to upgrade
-the files in this directory via patches and a cvs commit. New versions or
-official-patch versions must be imported.
-
-For the import of GNU cpio 2.4.2, the following files were removed:
-
- INSTALL cpio.info mkdir.c
- Makefile.in cpio.texi mkinstalldirs
-
-To upgrade to a newer version of cpio, when it is available:
- 1. Unpack the new version into an empty directory.
- [Do not make ANY changes to the files.]
-
- 2. Remove the files listed above and any others that don't apply to
- FreeBSD.
-
- 3. Use the command:
- cvs import -m 'Virgin import of GNU cpio v<version>' \
- src/contrib/cpio GNU v<version>
-
- For example, to do the import of version 2.4.2, I typed:
- cvs import -m 'Virgin import of GNU v2.4.2' \
- src/contrib/cpio GNU v2.4.2
-
- 4. Follow the instructions printed out in step 3 to resolve any
- conflicts between local FreeBSD changes and the newer version.
-
-Do not, under any circumstances, deviate from this procedure.
-
-To make local changes to cpio, simply patch and commit to the main
-branch (aka HEAD). Never make local changes on the GNU branch.
-
-All local changes should be submitted to "cpio@gnu.ai.mit.edu" for
-inclusion in the next vendor release.
-
-obrien@freebsd.org - 30 March 1997
-
-
-
-
-
-Shared Libraries
-
-
-Contributed by &a.asami;, &a.peter;, and &a.obrien;.
-9 December 1996.
-
-If you are adding shared library support to a port or other piece
-of software that doesn't have one, the version numbers should
-follow these rules. Generally, the resulting numbers will have
-nothing to do with the release version of the software.
-
-The three principles of shared library building are:
-
-
-
-
-
-Start from 1.0
-
-
-
-If there is a change that is backwards compatible, bump
-minor number
-
-
-
-If there is an incompatible change, bump major number
-
-
-
-
-
-For instance, added functions and bugfixes result in the minor
-version number being bumped, while deleted functions, changed
-function call syntax etc. will force the major version number
-to change.
-
-Stick to version numbers of the form major.minor (x.y). Our dynamic
-linker does not handle version numbers of the form x.y.z well. Any
-version number after the ``y'' (ie. the third digit) is totally ignored
-when comparing shared lib version numbers to decide which library to
-link with. Given two shared libraries that differ only in the `micro'
-revision, ld.so will link with the higher one. Ie: if you link with
-libfoo.so.3.3.3, the linker only records 3.3 in the headers, and will
-link with anything starting with libfoo.so.3.(anything >= 3).(highest
-available).
-
-Note that ld.so will always use the highest "minor" revision.
-Ie: it will use libc.so.2.2 in preference to libc.so.2.0, even if the
-program was initially linked with libc.so.2.0.
-
-For non-port libraries, it is also our policy to change the
-shared library version number only once between releases. When
-you make a change to a system library that requires the version
-number to be bumped, check the Makefile's commit logs. It is the
-responsibility of the committer to ensure that the first such
-change since the release will result in the shared library version
-number in the Makefile to be updated, and any subsequent changes
-will not.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Adding New Kernel Configuration Options
-
-Contributed by &a.joerg;
-
-Note: You should be familiar with the section about before reading here.
-
-
-
-What's a Kernel Option, Anyway?
-
-The use of kernel options is basically described in the section.
-There's also an explanation of ``historic'' and ``new-style''
-options. The ultimate goal is to eventually turn all the supported
-options in the kernel into new-style ones, so for people who
-correctly did a make depend in their kernel compile directory
-after running config(8), the build process will automatically
-pick up modified options, and only recompile those files where it is
-necessary. Wiping out the old compile directory on each run of
-config(8) as it is still done now can then be eliminated again.
-
-Basically, a kernel option is nothing else than the definition of
-a C preprocessor macro for the kernel compilation process. To make
-the build truly optional, the corresponding part of the kernel
-source (or kernel .h file) must be written with the option
-concept in mind, i. e. the default must have been made overridable
-by the config option. This is usually done with something like:
-
-
-#ifndef THIS_OPTION
-#define THIS_OPTION (some_default_value)
-#endif /* THIS_OPTION */
-
-
-This way, an administrator mentioning another value for the
-option in his config file will take the default out of effect, and
-replace it with his new value. Clearly, the new value will be
-substituted into the source code during the preprocessor run, so it
-must be a valid C expression in whatever context the default value
-would have been used.
-
-It is also possible to create value-less options that simply
-enable or disable a particular piece of code by embracing it in
-
-
-#ifdef THAT_OPTION
-
-[your code here]
-
-#endif
-
-
-Simply mentioning THAT_OPTION in the config file (with or
-without any value) will then turn on the corresponding piece of
-code.
-
-People familiar with the C language will immediately recognize
-that everything could be counted as a ``config option'' where
-there is at least a single #ifdef referencing it... However,
-it's unlikely that many people would put
-
-
- options notyet,notdef
-
-
-in their config file, and then wonder why the kernel compilation
-falls over. :-)
-
-Clearly, using arbitrary names for the options makes it very
-hard to track their usage throughout the kernel source tree. That is
-the rationale behind the new-style option scheme, where each
-option goes into a separate .h file in the kernel compile
-directory, which is by convention named opt_foo.h.
-This way, the usual Makefile dependencies could be applied, and
-make can determine what needs to be recompiled once an option
-has been changed.
-
-The old-style option mechanism still has one advantage for local
-options or maybe experimental options that have a short anticipated
-lifetime: since it is easy to add a new #ifdef to the kernel
-source, this has already made it a kernel config option.
-In this case, the administrator using such an
-option is responsible himself for knowing about its implications
-(and maybe manually forcing the recompilation of parts of his
-kernel). Once the transition of all supported options has been
-done, config(8) will warn whenever an unsupported option
-appears in the config file, but it will nevertheless include it into
-the kernel Makefile.
-
-
-
-
-Now What Do I Have to Do for it?
-
-First, edit sys/conf/options (or
-sys/i386/conf/options.<arch>, e. g.
-sys/i386/conf/options.i386), and select an
-opt_foo.h file where your new option would best go
-into.
-
-If there is already something that comes close to the purpose of
-the new option, pick this. For example, options modifying the
-overall behaviour of the SCSI subsystem can go into opt_scsi.h.
-By default, simply mentioning an option in the appropriate option
-file, say FOO, implies its value will go into the
-corresponding file opt_foo.h. This can be overridden on the
-right-hand side of a rule by specifying another filename.
-
-If there is no opt_foo.h already available for
-the intended new option, invent a new name. Make it meaningful, and
-comment the new section in the
-options[.<arch>] file. config(8) will
-automagically pick up the change, and create that file next time it
-is run. Most options should go in a header file by themselves..
-
-Packing too many options into a single
-opt_foo.h will cause too many kernel files to be
-rebuilt when one of the options has been changed in the config file.
-
-Finally, find out which kernel files depend on the new option.
-Unless you have just invented your option, and it does not exist
-anywhere yet,
-
-
- find /usr/src/sys -name type f | xargs fgrep NEW_OPTION
-
-
-is your friend in finding them. Go and edit all those files, and
-add
-
-
-#include "opt_foo.h"
-
-
-on top, before all the #include <xxx.h>
-stuff. This sequence is most important as the options could
-override defaults from the regular include files, if the
-defaults are of the form
-
-
-#ifndef NEW_OPTION
-#define NEW_OPTION (something)
-#endif
-
-
-in the regular header.
-
-Adding an option that overrides something in a system header file
-(i. e., a file sitting in /usr/include/sys/) is almost
-always a mistake. opt_foo.h cannot be included
-into those files since it would break the headers more seriously,
-but if it is not included, then places that include it may get an
-inconsistent value for the option. Yes, there are precedents for
-this right now, but that does not make them more correct.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Kernel Debugging
-
-Contributed by &a.paul; and &a.joerg;
-
-
-
-Debugging a Kernel Crash Dump with KGDB
-
-Here are some instructions for getting kernel debugging
-working on a crash dump. They assume that you have enough swap
-space for a crash dump. If you have multiple swap
-partitions and the first one is too small to hold the dump,
-you can configure your kernel to use an alternate dump device
-(in the config kernel line), or
-you can specify an alternate using the dumpon(8) command.
-Dumps to non-swap devices,
-tapes for example, are currently not supported. Config your
-kernel using config -g.
-See for
-details on configuring the FreeBSD kernel.
-
-Use the dumpon(8) command to tell the kernel where to dump
-to (note that this will have to be done after configuring the
-partition in question as swap space via swapon(8)). This is
-normally arranged via /etc/rc.conf and /etc/rc.
-Alternatively, you can
-hard-code the dump device via the `dump' clause in the `config' line
-of your kernel config file. This is deprecated and should be used only if you
-want a crash dump from a kernel that crashes during booting.
-
-Note: In the following, the term `kgdb' refers
-to gdb run in `kernel debug mode'. This can be accomplished by
-either starting the gdb with the option , or by linking
-and starting it under the name kgdb. This is not being
-done by default, however, and the idea is basically deprecated since
-the GNU folks do not like their tools to behave differently when
-called by another name. This feature may well be discontinued
-in further releases.
-
-When the kernel has been built make a copy of it, say
-kernel.debug, and then run strip -d on the
-original. Install the original as normal. You may also install
-the unstripped kernel, but symbol table lookup time for some
-programs will drastically increase, and since
-the whole kernel is loaded entirely at boot time and cannot be
-swapped out later, several megabytes of
-physical memory will be wasted.
-
-If you are testing a new kernel, for example by typing the new
-kernel's name at the boot prompt, but need to boot a different
-one in order to get your system up and running again, boot it
-only into single user state using the flag at the
-boot prompt, and then perform the following steps:
-
- fsck -p
- mount -a -t ufs # so your file system for /var/crash is writable
- savecore -N /kernel.panicked /var/crash
- exit # ...to multi-user
-
-
-This instructs savecore(8) to use another kernel for symbol name
-extraction. It would otherwise default to the currently running kernel
-and most likely not do anything at all since the crash dump and the
-kernel symbols differ.
-
-Now, after a crash dump, go to /sys/compile/WHATEVER and run
-kgdb. From kgdb do:
-
- symbol-file kernel.debug
- exec-file /var/crash/kernel.0
- core-file /var/crash/vmcore.0
-
-
-and voila, you can debug the crash dump using the kernel sources
-just like you can for any other program.
-
-Here is a script log of a kgdb session illustrating the
-procedure. Long
-lines have been folded to improve readability, and the lines are
-numbered for reference. Despite this, it is a real-world error
-trace taken during the development of the pcvt console driver.
-
- 1:Script started on Fri Dec 30 23:15:22 1994
- 2:uriah # cd /sys/compile/URIAH
- 3:uriah # kgdb kernel /var/crash/vmcore.1
- 4:Reading symbol data from /usr/src/sys/compile/URIAH/kernel...done.
- 5:IdlePTD 1f3000
- 6:panic: because you said to!
- 7:current pcb at 1e3f70
- 8:Reading in symbols for ../../i386/i386/machdep.c...done.
- 9:(kgdb) where
- 10:#0 boot (arghowto=256) (../../i386/i386/machdep.c line 767)
- 11:#1 0xf0115159 in panic ()
- 12:#2 0xf01955bd in diediedie () (../../i386/i386/machdep.c line 698)
- 13:#3 0xf010185e in db_fncall ()
- 14:#4 0xf0101586 in db_command (-266509132, -266509516, -267381073)
- 15:#5 0xf0101711 in db_command_loop ()
- 16:#6 0xf01040a0 in db_trap ()
- 17:#7 0xf0192976 in kdb_trap (12, 0, -272630436, -266743723)
- 18:#8 0xf019d2eb in trap_fatal (...)
- 19:#9 0xf019ce60 in trap_pfault (...)
- 20:#10 0xf019cb2f in trap (...)
- 21:#11 0xf01932a1 in exception:calltrap ()
- 22:#12 0xf0191503 in cnopen (...)
- 23:#13 0xf0132c34 in spec_open ()
- 24:#14 0xf012d014 in vn_open ()
- 25:#15 0xf012a183 in open ()
- 26:#16 0xf019d4eb in syscall (...)
- 27:(kgdb) up 10
- 28:Reading in symbols for ../../i386/i386/trap.c...done.
- 29:#10 0xf019cb2f in trap (frame={tf_es = -260440048, tf_ds = 16, tf_\
- 30:edi = 3072, tf_esi = -266445372, tf_ebp = -272630356, tf_isp = -27\
- 31:2630396, tf_ebx = -266427884, tf_edx = 12, tf_ecx = -266427884, tf\
- 32:_eax = 64772224, tf_trapno = 12, tf_err = -272695296, tf_eip = -26\
- 33:6672343, tf_cs = -266469368, tf_eflags = 66066, tf_esp = 3072, tf_\
- 34:ss = -266427884}) (../../i386/i386/trap.c line 283)
- 35:283 (void) trap_pfault(&frame, FALSE);
- 36:(kgdb) frame frame->tf_ebp frame->tf_eip
- 37:Reading in symbols for ../../i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_drv.c...done.
- 38:#0 0xf01ae729 in pcopen (dev=3072, flag=3, mode=8192, p=(struct p\
- 39:roc *) 0xf07c0c00) (../../i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_drv.c line 403)
- 40:403 return ((*linesw[tp->t_line].l_open)(dev, tp));
- 41:(kgdb) list
- 42:398
- 43:399 tp->t_state |= TS_CARR_ON;
- 44:400 tp->t_cflag |= CLOCAL; /* cannot be a modem (:-) */
- 45:401
- 46:402 #if PCVT_NETBSD || (PCVT_FREEBSD >= 200)
- 47:403 return ((*linesw[tp->t_line].l_open)(dev, tp));
- 48:404 #else
- 49:405 return ((*linesw[tp->t_line].l_open)(dev, tp, flag));
- 50:406 #endif /* PCVT_NETBSD || (PCVT_FREEBSD >= 200) */
- 51:407 }
- 52:(kgdb) print tp
- 53:Reading in symbols for ../../i386/i386/cons.c...done.
- 54:$1 = (struct tty *) 0x1bae
- 55:(kgdb) print tp->t_line
- 56:$2 = 1767990816
- 57:(kgdb) up
- 58:#1 0xf0191503 in cnopen (dev=0x00000000, flag=3, mode=8192, p=(st\
- 59:ruct proc *) 0xf07c0c00) (../../i386/i386/cons.c line 126)
- 60: return ((*cdevsw[major(dev)].d_open)(dev, flag, mode, p));
- 61:(kgdb) up
- 62:#2 0xf0132c34 in spec_open ()
- 63:(kgdb) up
- 64:#3 0xf012d014 in vn_open ()
- 65:(kgdb) up
- 66:#4 0xf012a183 in open ()
- 67:(kgdb) up
- 68:#5 0xf019d4eb in syscall (frame={tf_es = 39, tf_ds = 39, tf_edi =\
- 69: 2158592, tf_esi = 0, tf_ebp = -272638436, tf_isp = -272629788, tf\
- 70:_ebx = 7086, tf_edx = 1, tf_ecx = 0, tf_eax = 5, tf_trapno = 582, \
- 71:tf_err = 582, tf_eip = 75749, tf_cs = 31, tf_eflags = 582, tf_esp \
- 72:= -272638456, tf_ss = 39}) (../../i386/i386/trap.c line 673)
- 73:673 error = (*callp->sy_call)(p, args, rval);
- 74:(kgdb) up
- 75:Initial frame selected; you cannot go up.
- 76:(kgdb) quit
- 77:uriah # exit
- 78:exit
- 79:
- 80:Script done on Fri Dec 30 23:18:04 1994
-
-
-Comments to the above script:
-
-
-
-line 6:
-
-This is a dump taken from within DDB (see below), hence the
-panic comment ``because you said to!'', and a rather long
-stack trace; the initial reason for going into DDB has been
-a page fault trap though.
-
-
-
-
-line 20:
-
-
-This is the location of function trap()
-in the stack trace.
-
-
-
-
-line 36:
-
-
-Force usage of a new stack frame; this is no longer
-necessary now. The stack frames are supposed to point to
-the right locations now, even in case of a trap.
-(I do not have a new core dump handy <g>, my kernel
-has not panicked for a rather long time.)
-From looking at the code in source line 403,
-there is a high probability that either the pointer
-access for ``tp'' was messed up, or the array access was
-out of bounds.
-
-
-
-
-line 52:
-
-
-The pointer looks suspicious, but happens to be a valid
-address.
-
-
-
-
-line 56:
-
-
-However, it obviously points to garbage, so we have found our
-error! (For those unfamiliar with that particular piece
-of code: tp->t_line refers to the line discipline
-of the console device here, which must be a rather small integer
-number.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Post-mortem Analysis of a Dump
-
-What do you do if a kernel dumped core but you did not expect
-it, and it is therefore not compiled using config -g?
-Not everything is lost here. Do not panic!
-
-Of course, you still need to enable crash dumps. See above
-on the options you have to specify in order to do this.
-
-Go to your kernel compile directory, and edit the line
-containing COPTFLAGS?=-O. Add the option
-there (but do not change anything on the level of
-optimization). If you do already know roughly the probable
-location of the failing piece of code (e.g., the pcvt
-driver in the example above), remove all the object files for
-this code. Rebuild the kernel. Due to the time stamp change on
-the Makefile, there will be some other object files rebuild,
-for example trap.o. With a bit of luck, the added
- option will not change anything for the generated
-code, so you will finally get a new kernel with similar code to
-the faulting one but some debugging symbols. You should at
-least verify the old and new sizes with the size(1) command. If
-there is a mismatch, you probably need to give up here.
-
-Go and examine the dump as described above. The debugging
-symbols might be incomplete for some places, as can be seen in
-the stack trace in the example above where some functions are
-displayed without line numbers and argument lists. If you need
-more debugging symbols, remove the appropriate object files and
-repeat the kgdb session until you know enough.
-
-All this is not guaranteed to work, but it will do it fine in
-most cases.
-
-
-
-
-On-line Kernel Debugging Using DDB
-
-While kgdb as an offline debugger provides a very
-high level of user interface, there are some things it cannot do.
-The most important ones being breakpointing and single-stepping
-kernel code.
-
-If you need to do low-level debugging on your kernel, there is
-an on-line debugger available called DDB. It allows to
-setting breakpoints, single-steping kernel functions, examining
-and changing kernel variables, etc. However, it cannot
-access kernel source files, and only has access to the global
-and static symbols, not to the full debug information like
-kgdb.
-
-To configure your kernel to include DDB, add the option line
-
- options DDB
-
-
-to your config file, and rebuild. (See for details on configuring the
-FreeBSD kernel. Note that if you have an older version of the
-boot blocks, your debugger symbols might not be loaded at all.
-Update the boot blocks; the recent ones load the DDB symbols
-automagically.)
-
-Once your DDB kernel is running, there are several ways to
-enter DDB. The first, and earliest way is to type the boot
-flag right at the boot prompt. The kernel will
-start up in debug mode and enter DDB prior to any device
-probing. Hence you can even debug the device
-probe/attach functions.
-
-The second scenario is a hot-key on the keyboard, usually
-Ctrl-Alt-ESC. For syscons, this can be remapped; some of
-the distributed maps do this, so watch out.
-There is an option
-available for serial consoles
-that allows the use of a serial line BREAK on the console line to
-enter DDB (``options BREAK_TO_DEBUGGER''
-in the kernel config file). It is not the default since there are a lot of
-crappy serial adapters around that gratuitously generate a
-BREAK condition, for example when pulling the cable.
-
-The third way is that any panic condition will branch to DDB if
-the kernel is configured to use it.
-For this reason, it is not wise to
-configure a kernel with DDB for a machine running unattended.
-
-The DDB commands roughly resemble some gdb commands. The first
-thing you probably need to do is to set a breakpoint:
-
- b function-name
- b address
-
-
-
-Numbers are taken hexadecimal by default, but to make them
-distinct from symbol names; hexadecimal numbers starting with the
-letters a-f need to be preceded with
-0x (this is optional for other numbers). Simple
-expressions are allowed, for example: function-name + 0x103.
-
-To continue the operation of an interrupted kernel, simply type
-
- c
-
-
-To get a stack trace, use
-
- trace
-
-
-Note that when entering DDB via a hot-key, the kernel is currently
-servicing an interrupt, so the stack trace might be not of much use
-for you.
-
-If you want to remove a breakpoint, use
-
- del
- del address-expression
-
-
-The first form will be accepted immediately after a breakpoint hit,
-and deletes the current breakpoint. The second form can remove any
-breakpoint, but you need to specify the exact address; this can be
-obtained from
-
- show b
-
-
-To single-step the kernel, try
-
- s
-
-
-This will step into functions, but you can make DDB trace them until
-the matching return statement is reached by
-
- n
-
-
-Note: this is different from gdb's `next' statement; it is like
-gdb's `finish'.
-
-To examine data from memory, use (for example):
-
- x/wx 0xf0133fe0,40
- x/hd db_symtab_space
- x/bc termbuf,10
- x/s stringbuf
-
-
-for word/halfword/byte access, and hexadecimal/decimal/character/
-string display. The number after the comma is the object count.
-To display the next 0x10 items, simply use
-
- x ,10
-
-
-Similarly, use
-
- x/ia foofunc,10
-
-
-to disassemble the first 0x10 instructions of foofunc, and display
-them along with their offset from the beginning of foofunc.
-
-To modify memory, use the write command:
-
- w/b termbuf 0xa 0xb 0
- w/w 0xf0010030 0 0
-
-
-The command modifier (b/h/w)
-specifies the size of the data to be written, the first
-following expression is the address to write to and the remainder
-is interpreted as data to write to successive memory locations.
-
-If you need to know the current registers, use
-
- show reg
-
-
-Alternatively, you can display a single register value by e.g.
-
- p $eax
-
-
-and modify it by
-
- set $eax new-value
-
-
-
-Should you need to call some kernel functions from DDB, simply
-say
-
- call func(arg1, arg2, ...)
-
-
-The return value will be printed.
-
-For a ps(1) style summary of all running processes, use
-
- ps
-
-
-
-Now you have now examined why your kernel failed, and you wish to
-reboot. Remember that, depending on the severity of previous
-malfunctioning, not all parts of the kernel might still be working
-as expected. Perform one of the following actions to shut down and
-reboot your system:
-
- call diediedie()
-
-
-
-This will cause your kernel to dump core and reboot, so you can
-later analyze the core on a higher level with kgdb. This
-command usually must be followed by another
-`continue' statement.
-There is now an alias for this: `panic'.
-
-
-
- call boot(0)
-
-
-might be a good way to cleanly shut down the running system, sync()
-all disks, and finally reboot. As long as the disk and file system
-interfaces of the kernel are not damaged, this might be a good way
-for an almost clean shutdown.
-
-
-
- call cpu_reset()
-
-
-is the final way out of disaster and almost the same as hitting
-the Big Red Button.
-
-If you need a short command summary, simply type
-
- help
-
-
-However, it is highly recommended to have a printed copy of the
-ddb(4) manual page ready for a debugging session.
-Remember that it is hard to read the on-line manual while
-single-stepping the kernel.
-
-
-
-
-On-line Kernel Debugging Using Remote GDB
-
-This feature has been supported since FreeBSD 2.2, and it's actually
-a very neat one.
-
-GDB has already supported remote debugging for a long time.
-This is done using a very simple protocol along a
-serial line. Unlike the other methods
-described above, you will need two machines for doing this. One is
-the host providing the debugging environment, including all
-the sources, and a copy of the kernel binary with all the
-symbols in it, and the other one is the target machine that
-simply runs a similar copy of the very same kernel (but stripped
-of the debugging information).
-
-You should configure the kernel in question with config -g,
-include DDB into the configuration, and compile it as usual.
-This gives a large blurb of a binary, due
-to the debugging information. Copy this kernel to the target
-machine, strip the debugging symbols off with strip -x,
-and boot it using the boot option. Connect the first
-serial line of the target machine to any serial line of the
-debugging host. Now, on the debugging machine, go to the compile
-directory of the target kernel, and start gdb:
-
-% gdb -k kernel
-GDB is free software and you are welcome to distribute copies of it
- under certain conditions; type "show copying" to see the conditions.
-There is absolutely no warranty for GDB; type "show warranty" for details.
-GDB 4.16 (i386-unknown-freebsd),
-Copyright 1996 Free Software Foundation, Inc...
-(kgdb)
-
-
-
-Initialize the remote debugging session (assuming the first serial
-port is being used) by:
-
-(kgdb) target remote /dev/cuaa0
-
-
-
-Now, on the target host (the one that entered DDB right before even starting
-the device probe), type:
-
-Debugger("Boot flags requested debugger")
-Stopped at Debugger+0x35: movb $0, edata+0x51bc
-db> gdb
-
-
-
-DDB will respond with:
-
-Next trap will enter GDB remote protocol mode
-
-
-
-Every time you type ``gdb'', the mode will be toggled between
-remote GDB and local DDB. In order to force a next trap
-immediately, simply type ``s'' (step). Your hosting GDB will
-now gain control over the target kernel:
-
-Remote debugging using /dev/cuaa0
-Debugger (msg=0xf01b0383 "Boot flags requested debugger")
- at ../../i386/i386/db_interface.c:257
-(kgdb)
-
-
-
-You can use this session almost as any other GDB session, including
-full access to the source, running it in gud-mode inside an Emacs
-window (which gives you an automatic source code display in another
-Emacs window) etc.
-
-Remote GDB can also be used to debug LKMs. First build the LKM
-with debugging symbols:
-
-# cd /usr/src/lkm/linux
-# make clean; make COPTS=-g
-
-
-
-Then install this version of the module on the target machine, load it
-and use modstat to find out where it was loaded:
-
-# linux
-# modstat
-Type Id Off Loadaddr Size Info Rev Module Name
-EXEC 0 4 f5109000 001c f510f010 1 linux_mod
-
-
-
-Take the load address of the module and add 0x20 (probably to account
-for the a.out header). This is the address that the module code was
-relocated to. Use the add-symbol-file command in GDB to tell the
-debugger about the module:
-
-(kgdb) add-symbol-file /usr/src/lkm/linux/linux_mod.o 0xf5109020
-add symbol table from file "/usr/src/lkm/linux/linux_mod.o" at
-text_addr = 0xf5109020?
-(y or n) y
-(kgdb)
-
-
-
-You now have access to all the symbols in the LKM.
-
-
-
-
-Debugging a Console Driver
-
-Since you need a console driver to run DDB on, things are more
-complicated if the console driver itself is failing. You might
-remember the use of a serial console (either with modified boot
-blocks, or by specifying at the Boot:
-prompt), and hook up a standard
-terminal onto your first serial port. DDB works on any configured
-console driver, of course also on a serial console.
-
-
-
-
-
-Linux Emulation
-
-Contributed by &a.handy; and &a.rich;
-
-
-
-How to Install the Linux Emulator
-
-Linux emulation in FreeBSD has reached a point where it is possible
-to run a large fraction of Linux binaries in both a.out and ELF
-format. The linux emulation in the 2.1-STABLE branch is capable of
-running Linux DOOM and Mathematica; the version present in
-FreeBSD-2.2-RELEASE is vastly more capable and runs all these as well as
-Quake, Abuse, IDL, netrek for Linux and a whole host of other
-programs.
-
-There are some Linux-specific operating system features that are not
-supported on FreeBSD. Linux binaries will not work on FreeBSD if they
-use the Linux /proc filesystem (which is different from the optional
-FreeBSD /proc filesystem) or i386-specific calls, such as enabling
-virtual 8086 mode.
-
-To tell whether your kernel is configured for Linux
-compatibility simply run any Linux binary. If it
-prints the error message
-
-linux-executable: Exec format error. Wrong Architecture.
-
-
-then you do not have linux compatibility support and
-you need to configure and install a new kernel.
-
-Depending on which version of FreeBSD you are running, how you get
-Linux-emulation up will vary slightly:
-
-
-
-Installing Linux Emulation in 2.1-STABLE
-
-The GENERIC kernel in 2.1-STABLE is not configured for linux
-compatibility so you must reconfigure your kernel for it. There
-are two ways to do this: 1. linking the emulator statically in the
-kernel itself and 2. configuring your kernel to dynamically load the
-linux loadable kernel module (LKM).
-
-To enable the emulator, add the following to your configuration file
-(c.f. /sys/i386/conf/LINT):
-
-options COMPAT_LINUX
-
-
-If you want to run doom or other applications
-that need shared memory,
-also add the following.
-
-options SYSVSHM
-
-
-The linux system calls require 4.3BSD system call compatibility. So
-make sure you have the following.
-
-options "COMPAT_43"
-
-
-
-If you prefer to statically link the emulator in the kernel rather than
-use the loadable kernel module (LKM), then add
-
-options LINUX
-
-
-Then run config and install the new kernel as described in the
- section.
-
-If you decide to use the LKM you must also install the loadable
-module. A mismatch of versions between the kernel and loadable
-module can cause the kernel to crash, so the safest thing to do is to
-reinstall the LKM when you install the kernel.
-
-% cd /usr/src/lkm/linux
-% make all install
-
-
-Once you have installed the kernel and the LKM, you can invoke
-`linux' as root to load the LKM.
-
-% linux
-Linux emulator installed
-Module loaded as ID 0
-%
-
-
-To see whether the LKM is loaded, run `modstat'.
-
-% modstat
-Type Id Off Loadaddr Size Info Rev Module Name
-EXEC 0 3 f0baf000 0018 f0bb4000 1 linux_emulator
-%
-
-
-You can cause the LKM to be loaded when the system boots in either of
-two ways. In FreeBSD 2.2.1-RELEASE and 2.1-STABLE enable it in
-/etc/sysconfig
-
-linux=YES
-
-
-by changing it from NO to YES. FreeBSD 2.1 RELEASE and earlier do not
-have such a line and on those you will need to edit /etc/rc.local to
-add the following line.
-
-linux
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Installing Linux Emulation in 2.2.2-RELEASE and later
-
-It is no longer necessary to specify ``options LINUX''
-or ``options COMPAT_LINUX''. Linux emulation is done with an LKM
-(``Loadable Kernel Module'') so it can be installed on the fly without
-having to reboot. You will need the following things in your startup files,
-however:
-
-
-
- In /etc/rc.conf, you need the following line:
-
-linux_enable=YES
-
-
-
-
-
- This, in turn, triggers the following action in /etc/rc.i386:
-
-# Start the Linux binary emulation if requested.
-if [ "X${linux_enable}" = X"YES" ]; then
- echo -n ' linux'; linux > /dev/null 2>&1
-fi
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-If you want to verify it is running, modstat will do that:
-
-% modstat
-Type Id Off Loadaddr Size Info Rev Module Name
-EXEC 0 4 f09e6000 001c f09ec010 1 linux_mod
-%
-
-
-However, there have been reports that this fails on some 2.2-RELEASE and
-later systems. If for some reason you cannot load the linux
-LKM, then statically link the emulator in the kernel by adding
-
-options LINUX
-
-
-to your kernel config file. Then run config and install the new
-kernel as described in the section.
-
-
-
-
-Installing Linux Runtime Libraries
-
-
-
-Installing using the linux_lib port
-
-Most linux applications use shared libraries, so you are still not
-done until you install the shared libraries. It is possible to do
-this by hand, however, it is vastly simpler to just grab the
-linux_lib port:
-
-% cd /usr/ports-current/emulators/linux_lib
-% make all install
-
-
-
-and you should have a working linux emulator. Legend (and the mail
-archives :-) seems to hold that Linux emulation works best with
-linux binaries linked against the ZMAGIC libraries; QMAGIC libraries
-(such as those used in Slackware V2.0) may tend to give the
-Linuxulator heartburn. As of this writing (March 1996) ELF emulation
-is still in the formulative stages but seems to work pretty well. Also,
-expect some programs to complain about incorrect minor versions. In
-general this does not seem to be a problem.
-
-
-
-
-Installing libraries manually
-
-If you do not have the ``ports'' distribution, you can install the
-libraries by hand instead. You will need the Linux shared libraries
-that the program depends on and the runtime linker. Also, you will
-need to create a "shadow root" directory, /compat/linux, for Linux
-libraries on your FreeBSD system. Any shared libraries opened by
-Linux programs run under FreeBSD will look in this tree first. So, if
-a Linux program loads, for example, /lib/libc.so, FreeBSD will first
-try to open /compat/linux/lib/libc.so, and if that does not exist then
-it will try /lib/libc.so. Shared libraries should be installed in the
-shadow tree /compat/linux/lib rather than the paths that the Linux
-ld.so reports.
-
-FreeBSD-2.2-RELEASE and later works slightly differently with respect to
-/compat/linux. On -CURRENT, all files, not just libraries, are
-searched for from the ``shadow root'' /compat/linux.
-
-Generally, you will need to look for the shared libraries that Linux
-binaries depend on only the first few times that you install a Linux
-program on your FreeBSD system. After a while, you will have a sufficient
-set of Linux shared libraries on your system to be able to run newly
-imported Linux binaries without any extra work.
-
-
-
-
-How to install additional shared libraries
-
-What if you install the linux_lib port and your application still
-complains about missing shared libraries? How do you know which
-shared libraries Linux binaries need, and where to get them?
-Basically, there are 2 possibilities (when following these
-instructions: you will need to be root on your FreeBSD system to do
-the necessary installation steps).
-
-If you have access to a Linux system, see what shared libraries
-it needs, and copy them to your FreeBSD system. Example: you have
-just ftp'ed the Linux binary of Doom. Put it on the Linux
-system you have access to, and check which shared libraries it
-needs by running `ldd linuxxdoom':
-
-
-
-% ldd linuxxdoom
-libXt.so.3 (DLL Jump 3.1) => /usr/X11/lib/libXt.so.3.1.0
-libX11.so.3 (DLL Jump 3.1) => /usr/X11/lib/libX11.so.3.1.0
-libc.so.4 (DLL Jump 4.5pl26) => /lib/libc.so.4.6.29
-
-
-
-You would need to get all the files from the last column, and
-put them under /compat/linux, with the names in the first column
-as symbolic links pointing to them. This means you eventually have
-these files on your FreeBSD system:
-
-/compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libXt.so.3.1.0
-/compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libXt.so.3 -> libXt.so.3.1.0
-/compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libX11.so.3.1.0
-/compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libX11.so.3 -> libX11.so.3.1.0
-/compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4.6.29
-/compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4 -> libc.so.4.6.29
-
-
-
-Note that if you already have a Linux shared library with a
-matching major revision number to the first column of the 'ldd'
-output, you will not need to copy the file named in the last column to
-your system, the one you already have should work. It is advisable to
-copy the shared library anyway if it is a newer version, though. You
-can remove the old one, as long as you make the symbolic link point to
-the new one. So, if you have these libraries on your system:
-
-/compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4.6.27
-/compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4 -> libc.so.4.6.27
-
-
-
-and you find a new binary that claims to require a later version
-according to the output of ldd:
-
-libc.so.4 (DLL Jump 4.5pl26) -> libc.so.4.6.29
-
-
-
-If it is only one or two versions out of date in the in the trailing
-digit then do not worry about copying /lib/libc.so.4.6.29 too, because
-the program should work fine with the slightly older version.
-However, if you like you can decide to replace the libc.so anyway, and
-that should leave you with:
-
-/compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4.6.29
-/compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4 -> libc.so.4.6.29
-
-
-
-Please note that the symbolic link mechanism is only
-needed for Linux binaries. The FreeBSD runtime linker takes care of
-looking for matching major revision numbers itself and you do not need to
-worry about it.
-
-
-
-
-Configuring the ld.so -- for FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE only
-
-This section applies only to FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE and later. Those running
-2.1-STABLE should skip this section.
-
-Finally, if you run FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE you must make sure that you
-have the Linux runtime linker and its config files on your system. You
-should copy these files from the Linux system to their appropriate
-place on your FreeBSD system (to the /compat/linux tree):
-
-/compat/linux/lib/ld.so
-/compat/linux/etc/ld.so.config
-
-
-
-If you do not have access to a Linux system, you should get the
-extra files you need from various ftp sites. Information on where to
-look for the various files is appended below. For now, let us assume
-you know where to get the files.
-
-Retrieve the following files (all from the same ftp site to avoid any
-version mismatches), and install them under /compat/linux
-(i.e. /foo/bar is installed as /compat/linux/foo/bar):
-
-/sbin/ldconfig
-/usr/bin/ldd
-/lib/libc.so.x.y.z
-/lib/ld.so
-
-
-
-ldconfig and ldd do not necessarily need to be under /compat/linux;
-you can install them elsewhere in the system too. Just make sure they
-do not conflict with their FreeBSD counterparts. A good idea would be
-to install them in /usr/local/bin as ldconfig-linux and ldd-linux.
-
-Create the file /compat/linux/etc/ld.so.conf, containing the
-directories in which the Linux runtime linker should look
-for shared libs. It is a plain text file, containing a directory
-name on each line. /lib and /usr/lib are standard, you could
-add the following:
-
-/usr/X11/lib
-/usr/local/lib
-
-
-
-When a linux binary opens a library such as /lib/libc.so the
-emulator maps the name to /compat/linux/lib/libc.so internally. All
-linux libraries should be installed under /compat/linux (e.g.
-/compat/linux/lib/libc.so, /compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libX11.so, etc.)
-in order for the emulator to find them.
-
-Those running FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE should run the Linux ldconfig program.
-
-% cd /compat/linux/lib
-% /compat/linux/sbin/ldconfig
-
-
-
-Ldconfig is statically linked, so it does not need any shared
-libraries to run. It creates the file /compat/linux/etc/ld.so.cache
-which contains the names of all the shared libraries and should be rerun
-to recreate this file whenever you install additional shared
-libraries.
-
-On 2.1-STABLE do not install /compat/linux/etc/ld.so.cache or run
-ldconfig; in 2.1-STABLE the syscalls are implemented
-differently and ldconfig is not needed or used.
-
-You should now be set up for Linux binaries which only need a
-shared libc. You can test this by running the Linux ldd on
-itself. Supposing that you have it installed as ldd-linux, it should
-produce something like:
-
-% ldd-linux `which ldd-linux`
-libc.so.4 (DLL Jump 4.5pl26) => /lib/libc.so.4.6.29
-
-
-
-This being done, you are ready to install new Linux binaries.
-Whenever you install a new Linux program, you should check if it needs
-shared libraries, and if so, whether you have them installed in the
-/compat/linux tree. To do this, you run the Linux version ldd on the
-new program, and watch its output. ldd (see also the manual page for
-ldd(1)) will print a list of shared libraries that the program depends
-on, in the form majorname (jumpversion) => fullname.
-
-If it prints "not found" instead of fullname it means that you
-need an extra library. The library needed is shown in majorname
-and will be of the form libXXXX.so.N. You will need to find a
-libXXXX.so.N.mm on a Linux ftp site, and install it on your
-system. The XXXX (name) and N (major revision number) should match;
-the minor number(s) mm are less important, though it is advised to
-take the most recent version.
-
-
-
-
-
-Configuring the host name resolver
-
-If DNS does not work or you get the messages
-
-resolv+: "bind" is an invalid keyword
-resolv+: "hosts" is an invalid keyword
-
-
-
-then you need to configure a /compat/linux/etc/host.conf file
-containing:
-
-order hosts, bind
-multi on
-
-
-
-where the order here specifies that /etc/hosts is searched first and
-DNS is searched second. When /compat/linux/etc/host.conf is not
-installed linux applications find FreeBSD's /etc/host.conf and
-complain about the incompatible FreeBSD syntax. You should remove
-`bind,' if you have not configured a name-server using the
-/etc/resolv.conf file.
-
-Lastly, those who run 2.1-STABLE need to set an the
-RESOLV_HOST_CONF environment variable so that applications will know
-how to search the host tables. If you run FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE, you can
-skip this. For the /bin/csh shell use:
-
-setenv RESOLV_HOST_CONF /compat/linux/etc/host.conf
-
-
-
-For /bin/sh use:
-
-RESOLV_HOST_CONF=/compat/linux/etc/host.conf; export RESOLV_HOST_CONF
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Finding the necessary files
-
-Note: the information below is valid as of the time this document
-was written, but certain details such as names of ftp sites,
-directories and distribution names may have changed by the time you
-read this.
-
-Linux is distributed by several groups that make their own set
-of binaries that they distribute. Each distribution has its own
-name, like ``Slackware'' or ``Yggdrasil''. The distributions are
-available on a lot of ftp sites. Sometimes the files are unpacked,
-and you can get the individual files you need, but mostly they
-are stored in distribution sets, usually consisting of subdirectories
-with gzipped tar files in them. The primary ftp sites for the
-distributions are:
-sunsite.unc.edu:/pub/Linux/distributions
-tsx-11.mit.edu:/pub/linux/distributions
-
-
-Some European mirrors:
-ftp.luth.se:/pub/linux/distributions
-ftp.demon.co.uk:/pub/linux/distributions
-src.doc.ic.ac.uk:/packages/linux/distributions
-
-
-For simplicity, let us concentrate on Slackware here. This
-distribution consists of a number of subdirectories, containing
-separate packages. Normally, they are controlled by an install
-program, but you can retrieve files "by hand" too. First of all, you
-will need to look in the "contents" subdir of the distribution. You
-will find a lot of small text files here describing the contents of the
-separate packages. The fastest way to look something up is to retrieve
-all the files in the contents subdirectory, and grep through them for
-the file you need. Here is an example of a list of files that you
-might need, and in which contents-file you will find it by grepping
-through them:
-
-
-
-So, in this case, you will need the packages ldso, shlibs, xf_lib
-and oldlibs. In each of the contents-files for these packages, look
-for a line saying ``PACKAGE LOCATION'', it will tell you on which `disk'
-the package is, in our case it will tell us in which subdirectory we
-need to look. For our example, we would find the following locations:
-
-Note: The 8237 does allow two channels to
-be connected together to allow memory-to-memory DMA
-operations in a non-``fly-by'' mode, but nobody in the PC
-industry uses this scarce resource this way since it is
-faster to move data between memory locations using the
-CPU.
-
-
-
-In the PC architecture, each DMA channel is normally
-activated only when the hardware that uses a given DMA channel
-requests a transfer by asserting the DRQ line for that
-channel.
-
-
-
-A Sample DMA transfer
-
-Here is an example of the steps that occur to cause and perform
-a DMA transfer. In this example, the floppy disk
-controller (FDC) has just read a byte from a diskette and
-wants the DMA to place it in memory at location
-0x00123456. The process begins by the FDC asserting the
-DRQ2 signal (the DRQ line for DMA channel 2) to alert the DMA
-controller.
-
-The DMA controller will note that the DRQ2 signal is asserted.
-The DMA controller will then make sure that DMA channel 2
-has been programmed and is unmasked (enabled). The DMA controller
-also makes sure that none of the other DMA channels are active
-or want to be active and have a higher priority. Once these checks
-are complete, the DMA asks the CPU to release the bus so that
-the DMA may use the bus. The DMA requests the bus by
-asserting the HRQ signal which goes to the CPU.
-
-The CPU detects the HRQ signal, and will complete
-executing the current instruction. Once the processor
-has reached a state where it can release the bus, it
-will. Now all of the signals normally generated by the
-CPU (-MEMR, -MEMW, -IOR, -IOW and a few others) are
-placed in a tri-stated condition (neither high or low)
-and then the CPU asserts the HLDA signal which tells the
-DMA controller that it is now in charge of the bus.
-
-Depending on the processor, the CPU may be able to
-execute a few additional instructions now that it no
-longer has the bus, but the CPU will eventually have to
-wait when it reaches an instruction that must read
-something from memory that is not in the internal
-processor cache or pipeline.
-
-Now that the DMA ``is in charge'', the DMA activates its
--MEMR, -MEMW, -IOR, -IOW output signals, and the address
-outputs from the DMA are set to 0x3456, which will be
-used to direct the byte that is about to transferred to a
-specific memory location.
-
-The DMA will then let the device that requested the DMA
-transfer know that the transfer is commencing. This is
-done by asserting the -DACK signal, or in the case of the
-floppy disk controller, -DACK2 is asserted.
-
-The floppy disk controller is now responsible for placing
-the byte to be transferred on the bus Data lines. Unless
-the floppy controller needs more time to get the data
-byte on the bus (and if the peripheral does need more time it
-alerts the DMA via the READY signal), the DMA will wait
-one DMA clock, and then de-assert the -MEMW and -IOR
-signals so that the memory will latch and store the byte
-that was on the bus, and the FDC will know that the byte
-has been transferred.
-
-Since the DMA cycle only transfers a single byte at a
-time, the FDC now drops the DRQ2 signal, so the DMA knows that
-it is no longer needed. The DMA will de-assert the
--DACK2 signal, so that the FDC knows it must stop placing
-data on the bus.
-
-The DMA will now check to see if any of the other DMA
-channels have any work to do. If none of the channels
-have their DRQ lines asserted, the DMA controller has
-completed its work and will now tri-state the -MEMR,
--MEMW, -IOR, -IOW and address signals.
-
-Finally, the DMA will de-assert the HRQ signal. The CPU
-sees this, and de-asserts the HOLDA signal. Now the CPU
-activates its -MEMR, -MEMW, -IOR, -IOW and address lines,
-and it resumes executing instructions and accessing main
-memory and the peripherals.
-
-For a typical floppy disk sector, the above process is
-repeated 512 times, once for each byte. Each time a byte
-is transferred, the address register in the DMA is
-incremented and the counter in the DMA that shows how many
-bytes are to be transferred is decremented.
-
-When the counter reaches zero, the DMA asserts the EOP
-signal, which indicates that the counter has reached zero
-and no more data will be transferred until the DMA
-controller is reprogrammed by the CPU. This event is
-also called the Terminal Count (TC). There is only one
-EOP signal, and since only DMA channel can be active at
-any instant, the DMA channel that is currently active must
-be the DMA channel that just completed its task.
-
-If a peripheral wants to generate an interrupt when the
-transfer of a buffer is complete, it can test for its
--DACKn signal and the EOP signal both being asserted at
-the same time. When that happens, it means the DMA will not
-transfer any more information for that peripheral without
-intervention by the CPU. The peripheral can then assert
-one of the interrupt signals to get the processors'
-attention. In the PC architecture, the DMA chip itself is not
-capable of generating an interrupt. The peripheral and its
-associated hardware is responsible for generating any
-interrupt that occurs. Subsequently, it is possible to have
-a peripheral that uses DMA but does not use interrupts.
-
-It is important to understand that although the CPU
-always releases the bus to the DMA when the DMA makes the
-request, this action is invisible to both applications
-and the operating systems, except for slight changes in
-the amount of time the processor takes to execute
-instructions when the DMA is active. Subsequently, the
-processor must poll the peripheral, poll the registers in
-the DMA chip, or receive an interrupt from the peripheral
-to know for certain when a DMA transfer has completed.
-
-
-
-
-DMA Page Registers and 16Meg address space limitations
-
-You may have noticed earlier that instead of the DMA
-setting the address lines to 0x00123456 as we said
-earlier, the DMA only set 0x3456. The reason for this
-takes a bit of explaining.
-
-When the original IBM PC was designed, IBM elected to use
-both DMA and interrupt controller chips that were
-designed for use with the 8085, an 8-bit processor with
-an address space of 16 bits (64K). Since the IBM PC
-supported more than 64K of memory, something had to be
-done to allow the DMA to read or write memory locations
-above the 64K mark. What IBM did to solve this problem
-was to add an external data latch for each DMA channel that
-holds the upper bits of the address to be read to or written from.
-Whenever a DMA channel is active, the contents of that
-latch are written to the address bus and kept there until
-the DMA operation for the channel ends. IBM called these latches
-``Page Registers''.
-
-So for our example above, the DMA would put the 0x3456
-part of the address on the bus, and the Page Register for
-DMA channel 2 would put 0x0012xxxx on the bus. Together,
-these two values form the complete address in memory that
-is to be accessed.
-
-Because the Page Register latch is independent of the DMA
-chip, the area of memory to be read or written must not
-span a 64K physical boundary. For example, if the DMA accesses
-memory location 0xffff, after that transfer the DMA will then
-increment the address register and the DMA will access the next
-byte at location 0x0000, not 0x10000. The results of letting
-this happen are probably not intended.
-
-
-
-Note: ``Physical'' 64K boundaries should
-not be confused with 8086-mode 64K ``Segments'', which
-are created by mathematically adding a segment register with an
-offset register. Page Registers have no address overlap and
-are mathematically OR-ed together.
-
-
-
-To further complicate matters, the external DMA address
-latches on the PC/AT hold only eight bits, so that gives
-us 8+16=24 bits, which means that the DMA can only point
-at memory locations between 0 and 16Meg. For newer
-computers that allow more than 16Meg of memory, the standard
-PC-compatible DMA cannot access memory locations above 16Meg.
-
-To get around this restriction, operating systems will
-reserve a RAM buffer in an area below 16Meg that also does not
-span a physical 64K boundary. Then the DMA will be
-programmed to transfer data from the peripheral and into that
-buffer. Once the DMA has moved the data into this buffer,
-the operating system will then copy the data from the buffer
-to the address where the data is really supposed to be stored.
-
-When writing data from an address above 16Meg to a
-DMA-based peripheral, the data must be first copied from
-where it resides into a buffer located below 16Meg, and
-then the DMA can copy the data from the buffer to the
-hardware. In FreeBSD, these reserved buffers are called
-``Bounce Buffers''. In the MS-DOS world, they are
-sometimes called ``Smart Buffers''.
-
-
-
-Note: A new implementation of the 8237, called the
-82374, allows 16 bits of page register to be specified, allows
-access to the entire 32 bit address space, without the use of
-bounce buffers.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-DMA Operational Modes and Settings
-
-The 8237 DMA can be operated in several modes. The main
-ones are:
-
-
-
-Single
-
-A single byte (or word) is transferred.
-The DMA must release and re-acquire the bus for each
-additional byte. This is commonly-used by devices
-that cannot transfer the entire block of data
-immediately. The peripheral will request the DMA
-each time it is ready for another transfer.
-
-The standard PC-compatible floppy disk controller (NEC 765)
-only has a one-byte buffer, so it uses this mode.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Block/Demand
-
-
-Once the DMA acquires the
-system bus, an entire block of data is transferred,
-up to a maximum of 64K. If the peripheral needs
-additional time, it can assert the READY signal to
-suspend the transfer briefly. READY should not be
-used excessively, and for slow peripheral transfers,
-the Single Transfer Mode should be used instead.
-
-The difference between Block and Demand is that once a
-Block transfer is started, it runs until the transfer
-count reaches zero. DRQ only needs to be asserted
-until -DACK is asserted. Demand Mode will transfer
-one more bytes until DRQ is de-asserted, at which point the DMA
-suspends the transfer and releases the bus back to the CPU.
-When DRQ is asserted later, the transfer resumes where
-it was suspended.
-
-Older hard disk controllers used Demand Mode until
-CPU speeds increased to the point that it was more
-efficient to transfer the data using the CPU, particularly
-if the memory locations used in the transfer were above the
-16Meg mark.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Cascade
-
-
-This mechanism allows a DMA channel
-to request the bus, but then the attached peripheral
-device is responsible for placing the addressing
-information on the bus instead of the DMA. This is also
-used to implement a technique known as ``Bus Mastering''.
-
-When a DMA channel in Cascade Mode receives control
-of the bus, the DMA does not place addresses and I/O
-control signals on the bus like the DMA normally does
-when it is active. Instead, the DMA only asserts the
--DACK signal for the active DMA channel.
-
-At this point it is up to the peripheral connected to that
-DMA channel to provide address and bus control signals.
-The peripheral has complete control over the system
-bus, and can do reads and/or writes to any address
-below 16Meg. When the peripheral is finished with
-the bus, it de-asserts the DRQ line, and the DMA
-controller can then return control to the CPU or to some
-other DMA channel.
-
-Cascade Mode can be used to chain multiple DMA controllers
-together, and this is exactly what DMA Channel 4 is used
-for in the PC architecture. When a peripheral requests
-the bus on DMA channels 0, 1, 2 or 3, the slave DMA
-controller asserts HLDREQ, but this wire is actually connected
-to DRQ4 on the primary DMA controller instead of to the CPU.
-The primary DMA controller, thinking it has work to do on
-Channel 4, requests the bus from the CPU using HLDREQ signal.
-Once the CPU grants the bus to the primary DMA controller,
--DACK4 is asserted, and that wire is actually connected to
-the HLDA signal on the slave DMA controller. The slave DMA
-controller then transfers data for the DMA channel that
-requested it (0, 1, 2 or 3), or the slave DMA may grant the bus
-to a peripheral that wants to perform its own bus-mastering,
-such as a SCSI controller.
-
-Because of this wiring arrangement, only DMA channels
-0, 1, 2, 3, 5, 6 and 7 are usable with peripherals on PC/AT
-systems.
-
-
-
-Note: DMA channel 0 was reserved for
-refresh operations in early IBM PC computers, but
-is generally available for use by peripherals in
-modern systems.
-
-
-
-When a peripheral is performing Bus Mastering, it is
-important that the peripheral transmit data to or
-from memory constantly while it holds the system bus.
-If the peripheral cannot do this, it must release the
-bus frequently so that the system can perform refresh
-operations on main memory.
-
-The Dynamic RAM used in all PCs for main memory must be
-accessed frequently to keep the bits stored in the
-components "charged". Dynamic RAM essentially consists
-of millions of capacitors with each one holding one bit
-of data. These capacitors are charged with power to
-represent a "1" or drained to represent a "0". Because
-all capacitors leak, power must be added at regular intervals
-to keep the "1" values intact. The RAM chips actually handle
-the task of pumping power back into all of the appropriate
-locations in RAM, but they must be told when to do it by
-the rest of the computer so that the refresh activity won't
-interfere with the computer wanting to access RAM normally.
-If the computer is unable to refresh memory, the contents
-of memory will become corrupted in just a few milliseconds.
-
-Since memory read and write cycles ``count'' as refresh
-cycles (a dynamic RAM refresh cycle is actually an incomplete
-memory read cycle), as long as the peripheral
-controller continues reading or writing data to
-sequential memory locations, that action will refresh
-all of memory.
-
-Bus-mastering is found in some SCSI host interfaces and
-other high-performance peripheral controllers.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Autoinitialize
-
-
-This mode causes the DMA to
-perform Byte, Block or Demand transfers, but when the
-DMA transfer counter reaches zero, the counter and
-address are set back to where they were when the DMA
-channel was originally programmed. This means that
-as long as the peripheral requests transfers, they will
-be granted. It is up to the CPU to move new data
-into the fixed buffer ahead of where the DMA is about
-to transfer it when doing output operations, and read new
-data out of the buffer behind where the DMA is writing
-when doing input operations.
-
-This technique is frequently used on audio devices that
-have small or no hardware ``sample'' buffers. There is
-additional CPU overhead to manage this ``circular'' buffer,
-but in some cases this may be the only way to eliminate the
-latency that occurs when the DMA counter reaches zero
-and the DMA stops transfers until it is reprogrammed.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Programming the DMA
-
-The DMA channel that is to be programmed should always
-be ``masked'' before loading any settings. This is because
-the hardware might unexpectedly assert the DRQ for that channel,
-and the DMA might respond, even though not all of the parameters
-have been loaded or updated.
-
-Once masked, the host must specify the direction of the
-transfer (memory-to-I/O or I/O-to-memory), what mode of
-DMA operation is to be used for the transfer (Single,
-Block, Demand, Cascade, etc), and finally the address and
-length of the transfer are loaded. The length that is
-loaded is one less than the amount you expect the DMA to
-transfer. The LSB and MSB of the address and length are
-written to the same 8-bit I/O port, so another port must
-be written to first to guarantee that the DMA accepts the
-first byte as the LSB and the second byte as the MSB of
-the length and address.
-
-Then, be sure to update the Page Register, which is
-external to the DMA and is accessed through a different
-set of I/O ports.
-
-Once all the settings are ready, the DMA channel can be
-un-masked. That DMA channel is now considered to be
-``armed'', and will respond when the DRQ line for that channel
-is asserted.
-
-Refer to a hardware data book for precise programming
-details for the 8237. You will also need to refer to the
-I/O port map for the PC system, which describes where
-the DMA and Page Register ports are located. A complete
-port map table is located below.
-
-
-
-
-DMA Port Map
-
-All systems based on the IBM-PC and PC/AT have the DMA
-hardware located at the same I/O ports. The complete
-list is provided below. Ports assigned to DMA Controller
-#2 are undefined on non-AT designs.
-
-
-
-0x00 - 0x1f DMA Controller #1 (Channels 0, 1, 2 and 3)
-
-DMA Address and Count Registers
-
-
-0x00 write Channel 0 starting address
-0x00 read Channel 0 current address
-0x01 write Channel 0 starting word count
-0x01 read Channel 0 remaining word count
-
-0x02 write Channel 1 starting address
-0x02 read Channel 1 current address
-0x03 write Channel 1 starting word count
-0x03 read Channel 1 remaining word count
-
-0x04 write Channel 2 starting address
-0x04 read Channel 2 current address
-0x05 write Channel 2 starting word count
-0x05 read Channel 2 remaining word count
-
-0x06 write Channel 3 starting address
-0x06 read Channel 3 current address
-0x07 write Channel 3 starting word count
-0x07 read Channel 3 remaining word count
-
-
-DMA Command Registers
-
-
-0x08 write Command Register
-0x08 read Status Register
-0x09 write Request Register
-0x09 read -
-0x0a write Single Mask Register Bit
-0x0a read -
-0x0b write Mode Register
-0x0b read -
-0x0c write Clear LSB/MSB Flip-Flop
-0x0c read -
-0x0d write Master Clear/Reset
-0x0d read Temporary Register (not available on newer versions)
-0x0e write Clear Mask Register
-0x0e read -
-0x0f write Write All Mask Register Bits
-0x0f read Read All Mask Register Bits (only in Intel 82374)
-
-
-
-
-
-0xc0 - 0xdf DMA Controller #2 (Channels 4, 5, 6 and 7)
-
-DMA Address and Count Registers
-
-
-0xc0 write Channel 4 starting address
-0xc0 read Channel 4 current address
-0xc2 write Channel 4 starting word count
-0xc2 read Channel 4 remaining word count
-
-0xc4 write Channel 5 starting address
-0xc4 read Channel 5 current address
-0xc6 write Channel 5 starting word count
-0xc6 read Channel 5 remaining word count
-
-0xc8 write Channel 6 starting address
-0xc8 read Channel 6 current address
-0xca write Channel 6 starting word count
-0xca read Channel 6 remaining word count
-
-0xcc write Channel 7 starting address
-0xcc read Channel 7 current address
-0xce write Channel 7 starting word count
-0xce read Channel 7 remaining word count
-
-
-DMA Command Registers
-
-
-0xd0 write Command Register
-0xd0 read Status Register
-0xd2 write Request Register
-0xd2 read -
-0xd4 write Single Mask Register Bit
-0xd4 read -
-0xd6 write Mode Register
-0xd6 read -
-0xd8 write Clear LSB/MSB Flip-Flop
-0xd8 read -
-0xda write Master Clear/Reset
-0xda read Temporary Register (not present in Intel 82374)
-0xdc write Clear Mask Register
-0xdc read -
-0xde write Write All Mask Register Bits
-0xdf read Read All Mask Register Bits (only in Intel 82374)
-
-
-
-
-
-0x80 - 0x9f DMA Page Registers
-
-
-0x87 r/w Channel 0 Low byte (23-16) page Register
-0x83 r/w Channel 1 Low byte (23-16) page Register
-0x81 r/w Channel 2 Low byte (23-16) page Register
-0x82 r/w Channel 3 Low byte (23-16) page Register
-
-0x8b r/w Channel 5 Low byte (23-16) page Register
-0x89 r/w Channel 6 Low byte (23-16) page Register
-0x8a r/w Channel 7 Low byte (23-16) page Register
-0x8f r/w Low byte page Refresh
-
-
-
-
-
-0x400 - 0x4ff 82374 Enhanced DMA Registers
-
-The Intel 82374 EISA System Component (ESC) was introduced in early 1996
-and includes a DMA controller that provides a superset of 8237 functionality
-as well as other PC-compatible core peripheral components in a single
-package. This chip is targeted at both EISA and PCI platforms, and provides
-modern DMA features like scatter-gather, ring buffers as well as direct
-access by the system DMA to all 32 bits of address space.
-
-If these features are used, code should also be included to provide similar
-functionality in the previous 16 years worth of PC-compatible computers.
-For compatibility reasons, some of the 82374 registers must be programmed
-after programming the traditional 8237 registers for each
-transfer. Writing to a traditional 8237 register forces the contents
-of some of the 82374 enhanced registers to zero to provide backward
-software compatibility.
-
-
-0x401 r/w Channel 0 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
-0x403 r/w Channel 1 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
-0x405 r/w Channel 2 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
-0x407 r/w Channel 3 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
-0x4c6 r/w Channel 5 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
-0x4ca r/w Channel 6 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
-0x4ce r/w Channel 7 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
-
-0x487 r/w Channel 0 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
-0x483 r/w Channel 1 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
-0x481 r/w Channel 2 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
-0x482 r/w Channel 3 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
-0x48b r/w Channel 5 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
-0x489 r/w Channel 6 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
-0x48a r/w Channel 6 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
-0x48f r/w High byte page Refresh
-
-0x4e0 r/w Channel 0 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
-0x4e1 r/w Channel 0 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
-0x4e2 r/w Channel 0 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
-0x4e4 r/w Channel 1 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
-0x4e5 r/w Channel 1 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
-0x4e6 r/w Channel 1 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
-0x4e8 r/w Channel 2 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
-0x4e9 r/w Channel 2 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
-0x4ea r/w Channel 2 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
-0x4ec r/w Channel 3 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
-0x4ed r/w Channel 3 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
-0x4ee r/w Channel 3 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
-0x4f4 r/w Channel 5 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
-0x4f5 r/w Channel 5 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
-0x4f6 r/w Channel 5 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
-0x4f8 r/w Channel 6 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
-0x4f9 r/w Channel 6 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
-0x4fa r/w Channel 6 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
-0x4fc r/w Channel 7 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
-0x4fd r/w Channel 7 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
-0x4fe r/w Channel 7 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
-
-0x40a write Channels 0-3 Chaining Mode Register
-0x40a read Channel Interrupt Status Register
-0x4d4 write Channels 4-7 Chaining Mode Register
-0x4d4 read Chaining Mode Status
-0x40c read Chain Buffer Expiration Control Register
-
-0x410 write Channel 0 Scatter-Gather Command Register
-0x411 write Channel 1 Scatter-Gather Command Register
-0x412 write Channel 2 Scatter-Gather Command Register
-0x413 write Channel 3 Scatter-Gather Command Register
-0x415 write Channel 5 Scatter-Gather Command Register
-0x416 write Channel 6 Scatter-Gather Command Register
-0x417 write Channel 7 Scatter-Gather Command Register
-
-0x418 read Channel 0 Scatter-Gather Status Register
-0x419 read Channel 1 Scatter-Gather Status Register
-0x41a read Channel 2 Scatter-Gather Status Register
-0x41b read Channel 3 Scatter-Gather Status Register
-0x41d read Channel 5 Scatter-Gather Status Register
-0x41e read Channel 5 Scatter-Gather Status Register
-0x41f read Channel 7 Scatter-Gather Status Register
-
-0x420-0x423 r/w Channel 0 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
-0x424-0x427 r/w Channel 1 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
-0x428-0x42b r/w Channel 2 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
-0x42c-0x42f r/w Channel 3 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
-0x434-0x437 r/w Channel 5 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
-0x438-0x43b r/w Channel 6 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
-0x43c-0x43f r/w Channel 7 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Appendices
-
-
-
-Obtaining FreeBSD
-
-
-
-CD-ROM Publishers
-
-FreeBSD is available on CD-ROM from Walnut Creek CDROM:
-
-Walnut Creek CDROM
-4041 Pike Lane, Suite F
-Concord CA 94520 USA
-Phone: +1 925 674-0783
-Fax: +1 925 674-0821
-Email: info@cdrom.com
-WWW: http://www.cdrom.com/
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FTP Sites
-
-The official sources for FreeBSD are available via anonymous FTP from:
-
-ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD.
-
-
-
-Additionally, FreeBSD is available via anonymous FTP from the
-following mirror sites. If you choose to obtain FreeBSD via
-anonymous FTP, please try to use a site near you.
-
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-.
-
-
-
-Argentina
-
-In case of problems, please contact the
-hostmaster
-for this domain.
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.ar.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
-
-
-Australia
-
-
-In case of problems, please contact the
-hostmaster
-for this domain.
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.au.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp2.au.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp3.au.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
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-
-ftp://ftp4.au.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
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-
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-
-
-Brazil
-
-
-In case of problems, please contact the
-hostmaster
-for this domain.
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
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-ftp://ftp2.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
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-ftp://ftp3.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
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-ftp://ftp4.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
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-
-ftp://ftp5.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
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-ftp://ftp6.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
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-
-ftp://ftp7.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
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-
-Canada
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-
-In case of problems, please contact the
-hostmaster
-for this domain.
-
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-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.ca.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
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-
-Czech Republic
-
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://sunsite.mff.cuni.cz/OS/FreeBSD
-Contact: jj@sunsite.mff.cuni.cz.
-
-
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-
-Denmark
-
-
-In case of problems, please contact the
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-for this domain.
-
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-ftp://ftp.dk.freeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
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-Estonia
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-In case of problems, please contact the
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-for this domain.
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-ftp://ftp.ee.freebsd.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
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-Finland
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-In case of problems, please contact the
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-France
-
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-
-ftp://ftp.ibp.fr/pub/FreeBSD
-Contact: Remy.Card@ibp.fr.
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-Germany
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-In case of problems, please contact the
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-for this domain.
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-ftp://ftp7.de.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
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-Hong Kong
-
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-ftp://ftp.hk.super.net/pub/FreeBSD
-Contact: ftp-admin@HK.Super.NET.
-
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-Ireland
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-In case of problems, please contact the
-hostmaster
-for this domain.
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-ftp://ftp.ie.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
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-Israel
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-In case of problems, please contact the
-hostmaster
-for this domain.
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-ftp://ftp.il.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
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-ftp://ftp2.il.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
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-Japan
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-In case of problems, please contact the
-hostmaster
-for this domain.
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-
-ftp://ftp.jp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
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-ftp://ftp2.jp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
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-ftp://ftp3.jp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
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-ftp://ftp4.jp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
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-ftp://ftp5.jp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
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-ftp://ftp6.jp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
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-In case of problems, please contact the
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-for this domain.
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-for this domain.
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-In case of problems, please contact the
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-for this domain.
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-In case of problems, please contact the
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-Contact: ftpadmin@ftp.nectec.or.th.
-
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-
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-
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-Ukraine
-
-
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-
-ftp://ftp.ua.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-Contact: archer@lucky.net.
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-In case of problems, please contact the
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-for this domain.
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-
-
-The latest versions of export-restricted code for FreeBSD (2.0C or later)
-(eBones and secure) are 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
-
-Hostmaster
-for this domain.
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.internat.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
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-
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-
-ftp://ftp2.internat.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-
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-
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-
-
-
-Brazil
-
-
-Hostmaster
-for this domain.
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Finland
-
-
-
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-ftp://nic.funet.fi/pub/unix/FreeBSD/eurocrypt
-Contact: count@nic.funet.fi.
-
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-
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-
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-
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-
-
-CTM Sites
-
-/FreeBSD is available via anonymous FTP from the
-following mirror sites. If you choose to obtain CTM via
-anonymous FTP, please try to use a site near you.
-
-In case of problems, please contact &a.phk;.
-
-
-
-California, Bay Area, official source
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CTM
-
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-
-Germany, Trier
-
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-ftp://ftp.uni-trier.de/pub/unix/systems/BSD/FreeBSD/CTM
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-
-
-South Africa, backup server for old deltas
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-
-ftp://ftp.internat.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CTM
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-
-
-
-
-
-
-Taiwan/R.O.C, Chiayi
-
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-
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-
-ftp://ctm.tw.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CTM
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-ftp://ctm2.tw.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CTM
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-
-
-ftp://ctm3.tw.freebsd.org/pub/freebsd/CTM
-
-
-
-
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-
-
-
-
-If you did not find a mirror near to you or the mirror is incomplete,
-try
-FTP search at
-http://ftpsearch.ntnu.no/ftpsearch.
-FTP search is a great free archie server in Trondheim, Norway.
-
-
-
-
-CVSup Sites
-
- servers for FreeBSD are running at
-the following sites:
-
-
-
-Argentina
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.ar.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Australia
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.au.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
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-
-
-Brazil
-
-
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-
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-cvsup.br.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
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-
-Canada
-
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-
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-cvsup.ca.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
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-
-
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-
-Estonia
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.ee.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
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-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
-
-Finland
-
-
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-
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-cvsup.fi.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
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-
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-
-Germany
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.de.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
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-(maintainer)
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-cvsup3.de.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
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-
-Japan
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.jp.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
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-
-cvsup2.jp.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Netherlands
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.nl.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Norway
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.no.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Russia
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.ru.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-South Africa
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.za.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-cvsup2.za.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Taiwan
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.tw.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Ukraine
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup2.ua.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-United Kingdom
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.uk.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-USA
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-cvsup2.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-cvsup3.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The export-restricted code for FreeBSD (eBones and secure) is
-available via CVSup at the following international repository.
-Please use this site to get the export-restricted code, if you are
-outside the USA or Canada.
-
-
-
-South Africa
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.internat.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The following CVSup site is especially designed for users. Unlike the other CVSup mirrors, it is kept
-up-to-date by CTM. That means if you CVSup cvs-all with
-release=cvs from this site, you get a version of the
-repository (including the inevitable .ctm_status file)
-which is suitable for being updated using the CTM cvs-cur
-deltas. This allows users who track the entire cvs-all
-tree to go from CVSup to CTM without having to rebuild their
-repository from scratch using a fresh CTM base delta.
-
-Please note that this special feature only works for the
-cvs-all distribution with cvs as the release tag.
-CVSupping any other distribution and/or release will get you the
-specified distribution, but it will not be suitable for CTM updating.
-
-Also please note that, because the current version of CTM does
-not preserve the timestamps of files, the timestamps at this mirror
-site are not the same as those at other mirror sites. Switching
-between this site and other sites is not recommended. It will work
-correctly, but will be somewhat inefficient.
-
-
-
-Germany
-
-
-
-
-
-ctm.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Bibliography
-
-While the manual pages provide the definitive reference
-for individual pieces of the FreeBSD operating system,
-they are notorious for not illustrating how to put the
-pieces together to make the whole operating system run
-smoothly. For this, there is no substitute for a good
-book on UNIX system administration and a good users'
-manual.
-
-
-
-Books & Magazines Specific to FreeBSD
-
-International books & Magazines:
-
-
-
-
-
-Using FreeBSD (in Chinese).
-
-
-
-FreeBSD for PC 98'ers (in Japanese), published by SHUWA
-System Co, LTD. ISBN 4-87966-468-5 C3055 P2900E.
-
-
-
-FreeBSD (in Japanese), published by CUTT.
-ISBN 4-906391-22-2 C3055 P2400E.
-
-
-
-Complete Introduction to FreeBSD (in Japanese),
-published by Shoeisha Co., Ltd. ISBN 4-88135-473-6 P3600E.
-
-
-
-Personal UNIX Starter Kit FreeBSD (in Japanese),
-published by ASCII. ISBN 4-7561-1733-3 P3000E.
-
-
-
-FreeBSD Handbook (Japanese translation),
-published by ASCII. ISBN 4-7561-1580-2 P3800E.
-
-
-
-
-
-English language books & Magazines:
-
-
-
-
-
-The Complete FreeBSD, published by Walnut Creek CDROM.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Users' Guides
-
-
-
-
-
-Computer Systems Research Group, UC Berkeley.
-4.4BSD User's Reference Manual.
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1994.
-ISBN 1-56592-075-9
-
-
-
-Computer Systems Research Group, UC Berkeley.
-4.4BSD User's Supplementary Documents.
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1994.
-ISBN 1-56592-076-7
-
-
-
-UNIX in a Nutshell.
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1990.
-ISBN 093717520X
-
-
-
-Mui, Linda.
-What You Need To Know When You Can't Find Your UNIX
-System Administrator.
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1995.
-ISBN 1-56592-104-6
-
-
-
-Ohio State University has written
-a UNIX Introductory Course which is available online
-in HTML and postscript format.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Administrators' Guides
-
-
-
-
-
-Albitz, Paul and Liu, Cricket. DNS and
-BIND, 2nd Ed.
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1997.
-ISBN 1-56592-236-0
-
-
-
-Computer Systems Research Group, UC Berkeley.
-4.4BSD System Manager's Manual.
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1994.
-ISBN 1-56592-080-5
-
-
-
-Costales, Brian, et al.
-Sendmail, 2nd Ed. O'Reilly &
-Associates, Inc., 1997.
-ISBN 1-56592-222-0
-
-
-
-Frisch, Æleen. Essential System
-Administration, 2nd Ed. O'Reilly &
-Associates, Inc., 1995. ISBN 1-56592-127-5
-
-
-
-Hunt, Craig. TCP/IP Network Administration.
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1992.
-ISBN 0-937175-82-X
-
-
-
-Nemeth, Evi. UNIX System Administration
-Handbook. 2nd ed. Prentice Hall, 1995.
-ISBN 0131510517
-
-
-
-Stern, Hal Managing NFS and NIS
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1991.
-ISBN 0-937175-75-7
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Programmers' Guides
-
-
-
-
-
-Asente, Paul. X Window System
-Toolkit. Digital Press.
-ISBN 1-55558-051-3
-
-
-
-Computer Systems Research Group, UC Berkeley.
-4.4BSD Programmer's Reference Manual.
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1994.
-ISBN 1-56592-078-3
-
-
-
-Computer Systems Research Group, UC Berkeley.
-4.4BSD Programmer's Supplementary Documents.
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1994.
-ISBN 1-56592-079-1
-
-
-
-Ellis, Margaret A. and Stroustrup,
-Bjarne. The Annotated C++ Reference
-Manual. Addison-Wesley, 1990.
-ISBN 0-201-51459-1
-
-
-
-Harbison, Samuel P. and Steele, Guy
-L. Jr. C: A Reference Manual. 4rd ed. Prentice
-Hall, 1995. ISBN 0-13-326224-3
-
-
-
-Kernighan, Brian and Dennis M. Ritchie.
-The C Programming Language..
-PTR Prentice Hall, 1988.
-ISBN 0-13-110362-9
-
-
-
-Lehey, Greg.
-Port UNIX Software.
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1995.
-ISBN 1-56592-126-7
-
-
-
-Plauger, P. J. The Standard C
-Library. Prentice Hall, 1992.
-ISBN 0-13-131509-9
-
-
-
-Stevens, W. Richard. Advanced
-Programming in the UNIX Environment.
-Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1992
-ISBN 0-201-56317-7
-
-
-
-Stevens, W. Richard. UNIX Network
-Programming. PTR Prentice Hall, 1990.
-ISBN 0-13-949876-1
-
-
-
-Wells, Bill. "Writing Serial Drivers for UNIX".
-Dr. Dobb's Journal. 19(15), December
-1994. pp68-71, 97-99.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Operating System Internals
-
-
-
-
-
-Andleigh, Prabhat K. UNIX System Architecture.
-Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1990.
-ISBN 0-13-949843-5
-
-
-
-Jolitz, William. "Porting UNIX to the
-386". Dr. Dobb's Journal. January
-1991-July 1992.
-
-
-
-Leffler, Samuel J., Marshall Kirk McKusick,
-Michael J Karels and John Quarterman The Design and
-Implementation of the 4.3BSD UNIX Operating
-System. Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1989.
-ISBN 0-201-06196-1
-
-
-
-Leffler, Samuel J., Marshall Kirk McKusick,
-The Design and Implementation of the 4.3BSD
-UNIX Operating System: Answer Book.
-Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1991.
-ISBN 0-201-54629-9
-
-
-
-McKusick, Marshall Kirk, Keith Bostic, Michael J Karels,
-and John Quarterman. The Design and
-Implementation of the 4.4BSD Operating
-System. Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1996.
-ISBN 0-201-54979-4
-
-
-
-Stevens, W. Richard. TCP/IP Illustrated,
-Volume 1: The Protocols.
-Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1996.
-ISBN 0-201-63346-9
-
-
-
-Stevens, W. Richard. TCP/IP Illustrated,
-Volume 3: TCP for Transactions, HTTP, NNTP
-and the UNIX Domain Protocols.
-Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1996.
-ISBN 0-201-63495-3
-
-
-
-Vahalia, Uresh. UNIX Internals -- The New Frontiers.
-Prentice Hall, 1996.
-ISBN 0-13-101908-2
-
-
-
-Wright, Gary R. and W. Richard Stevens.
-TCP/IP Illustrated, Volume 2:
-The Implementation.
-Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1995.
-ISBN 0-201-63354-X
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Security Reference
-
-
-
-
-
-Cheswick, William R. and Steven M. Bellovin.
-Firewalls and Internal Security:
-Repelling the Wily Hacker.
-Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1995.
-ISBN 0-201-63357-4
-
-
-
-Garfinkel, Simson and Gene Spafford.
-Practical UNIX Security. 2nd Ed.
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1996.
-ISBN 1-56592-148-8
-
-
-
-Garfinkel, Simson.
-PGP Pretty Good Privacy
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1995.
-ISBN 1-56592-098-8
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Hardware Reference
-
-
-
-
-
-Anderson, Don and Tom Shanley.
-Pentium Processor System Architecture.
-2nd ed. Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1995.
-ISBN 0-201-40992-5
-
-
-
-Ferraro, Richard F. Programmer's Guide
-to the EGA, VGA, and Super VGA Cards.
-3rd ed. Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1995.
-ISBN 0-201-62490-7
-
-
-
-Shanley, Tom. 80486 System
-Architecture. 3rd ed. Reading, Mass. :
-Addison-Wesley, 1995. ISBN
-0-201-40994-1
-
-
-
-Shanley, Tom. ISA System
-Architecture. 3rd ed. Reading, Mass. :
-Addison-Wesley, 1995.
-ISBN 0-201-40996-8
-
-
-
-Shanley, Tom. PCI System
-Architecture. 3rd ed. Reading, Mass. :
-Addison-Wesley, 1995. ISBN
-0-201-40993-3
-
-
-
-Van Gilluwe, Frank. The Undocumented PC.
-Reading, Mass: Addison-Wesley Pub. Co., 1994.
-ISBN 0-201-62277-7
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-UNIX History
-
-
-
-
-
-Lion, John Lion's Commentary on UNIX, 6th Ed.
-With Source Code.
-ITP Media Group, 1996.
-ISBN 1573980137
-
-
-
-Raymond, Eric s. The New Hacker's Dictonary,
-3rd edition. MIT Press, 1996.
-ISBN 0-262-68092-0
-Also known as the
-Jargon File
-
-
-
-Salus, Peter H. A quarter century of UNIX.
-Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, Inc., 1994.
-ISBN 0-201-54777-5
-
-
-
-Simon Garfinkel, Daniel Weise, Steven Strassmann.
-The UNIX-HATERS Handbook.
-IDG Books Worldwide, Inc., 1994.
-ISBN 1-56884-203-1
-
-
-
-Don Libes, Sandy Ressler Life with UNIX - special
-edition. Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1989.
-ISBN 0-13-536657-7
-
-
-
-The BSD family tree. 1997.
-http://www.de.freebsd.org/de/ftp/unix-stammbaum
-or local on a FreeBSD-current machine.
-
-
-
-The BSD Release Announcements collection. 1997.
-http://www.de.FreeBSD.ORG/de/ftp/releases/
-
-
-
-Networked Computer Science Technical Reports Library.
-http://www.ncstrl.org/
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Magazines and Journals
-
-
-
-
-
-The C/C++ Users Journal. R&D Publications
-Inc. ISSN 1075-2838
-
-
-
-Sys Admin - The Journal for UNIX System
-Administrators Miller Freeman, Inc., ISSN 1061-2688
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Resources on the Internet
-
-Contributed by &a.jkh;.
-
-The rapid pace of FreeBSD progress makes print media impractical as a
-means of following the latest developments. Electronic resources are
-the best, if not often the only, way stay informed of the latest advances.
-Since FreeBSD is a volunteer effort, the user community itself also
-generally serves as a `technical support department' of sorts, with
-electronic mail and USENET news being the most effective way of reaching
-that community.
-
-The most important points of contact with the FreeBSD
-user community are outlined below. If you are aware of other
-resources not mentioned here, please send them to the &a.doc;so that they may also be included.
-
-
-
-Mailing lists
-
-Though many of the FreeBSD development members read USENET, we cannot
-always guarantee that we will get to your questions in a timely fashion
-(or at all) if you post them only to one of the comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.*
-groups. By addressing your questions to the appropriate mailing list
-you will reach both us and a concentrated FreeBSD audience, invariably
-assuring a better (or at least faster) response.
-
-The charters for the various lists are given at the bottom of this
-document. Please read the charter before joining or sending
-mail to any list. Most of our list subscribers now receive many hundreds
-of FreeBSD related messages every day, and by setting down charters
-and rules for proper use we are striving to keep the signal-to-noise ratio
-of the lists high. To do less would see the mailing lists ultimately fail
-as an effective communications medium for the project.
-
-Archives are kept for all of the mailing lists and can be searched
-using the FreeBSD World Wide Web server. The keyword searchable archive
-offers an excellent way of finding answers to frequently asked
-questions and should be consulted before posting a question.
-
-
-
-List summary
-
-General lists: The following are general lists which
-anyone is free to join:
-List Purpose
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-freebsd-announce Important events and project milestones
-freebsd-bugs Bug reports
-freebsd-chat Non-technical items related to the FreeBSD community
-freebsd-current Discussion concerning the use of FreeBSD-current
-freebsd-stable Discussion concerning the use of FreeBSD-stable
-freebsd-isp Issues for Internet Service Providers using FreeBSD
-freebsd-jobs FreeBSD employment and consulting opportunities
-freebsd-questions User questions
-
-
-Technical lists: The following lists are for technical discussion.
-You should read the charter for each list carefully before joining or
-sending mail to one as there are firm guidelines for their use and content.
-List Purpose
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-freebsd-afs Porting AFS to FreeBSD
-freebsd-alpha Porting FreeBSD to the Alpha
-freebsd-doc The FreeBSD Documentation project
-freebsd-emulation Emulation of other systems such as Linux/DOS/Windows
-freebsd-fs Filesystems
-freebsd-hackers General technical discussion
-freebsd-hardware General discussion of hardware for running FreeBSD
-freebsd-isdn ISDN developers
-freebsd-java Java developers and people porting JDKs to FreeBSD
-freebsd-mobile Discussions about mobile computing
-freebsd-multimedia Multimedia discussion
-freebsd-platforms Concerning ports to non-Intel architecture platforms
-freebsd-ports Discussion of the ports collection
-freebsd-scsi The SCSI subsystem
-freebsd-security Security issues
-freebsd-smp Design discussions for [A]Symmetric MultiProcessing
-freebsd-sparc Porting FreeBSD to Sparc systems.
-
-
-Limited lists: The following lists require approval from
-core@FreeBSD.ORG to join,
-though anyone is free to send messages to them which fall within the
-scope of their charters. It is also a good idea establish a presence
-in the technical lists before asking to join one of these limited lists.
-List Purpose
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-freebsd-admin Administrative issues
-freebsd-arch Architecture and design discussions
-freebsd-core FreeBSD core team
-freebsd-hubs People running mirror sites (infrastructural support)
-freebsd-install Installation development
-freebsd-security-notifications Security notifications
-freebsd-user-groups User group coordination
-
-
-CVS lists: The following lists are for people interested in
-seeing the log messages for changes to various areas of the source tree.
-They are Read-Only lists and should not have mail sent to them.
-
-
-List name Source area Area Description (source for)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-cvs-CVSROOT /usr/src/[A-Z]* Top level /usr/src file changes
-cvs-all /usr/src All changes to the tree (superset)
-cvs-bin /usr/src/bin System binaries
-cvs-etc /usr/src/etc System files
-cvs-games /usr/src/games Games
-cvs-gnu /usr/src/gnu GPL'd utilities
-cvs-include /usr/src/include Include files
-cvs-kerberosIV /usr/src/kerberosIV Kerberos encryption code
-cvs-lib /usr/src/lib System libraries
-cvs-libexec /usr/src/libexec System binaries
-cvs-ports /usr/ports Ported software
-cvs-sbin /usr/src/sbin System binaries
-cvs-share /usr/src/share System shared files
-cvs-sys /usr/src/sys Kernel
-cvs-usrbin /usr/src/usr.bin Use binaries
-cvs-usrsbin /usr/src/usr.sbin System binaries
-
-
-
-
-
-How to subscribe
-
-All mailing lists live on FreeBSD.ORG, so to post to a
-given list you simply mail to listname@FreeBSD.ORG. It
-will then be redistributed to mailing list members world-wide.
-
-To subscribe to a list, send mail to &a.majordomo; and include
-
-subscribe <listname> [<optional address>]
-
-
-In the body of your message. For example, to subscribe yourself to
-freebsd-announce, you'd do:
-
-% mail majordomo@FreeBSD.ORG
-subscribe freebsd-announce
-^D
-
-
-If you want to subscribe yourself under a different name, or submit a
-subscription request for a local mailing list (note: this is more efficient
-if you have several interested parties at one site, and highly appreciated by
-us!), you would do something like:
-
-% mail majordomo@FreeBSD.ORG
-subscribe freebsd-announce local-announce@somesite.com
-^D
-
-
-Finally, it is also possible to unsubscribe yourself from a list, get a
-list of other list members or see the list of mailing lists again by
-sending other types of control messages to majordomo. For a complete
-list of available commands, do this:
-
-% mail majordomo@FreeBSD.ORG
-help
-^D
-
-
-Again, we would like to request that you keep discussion in the technical mailing
-lists on a technical track. If you are only interested in the "high points"
-then it is suggested that you join freebsd-announce, which is intended only
-for infrequent traffic.
-
-
-
-
-List charters
-
-AllFreeBSD mailing lists have certain basic rules
-which must be adhered to by anyone using them. Failure to comply
-with these guidelines will result in two (2) written warnings from the
-FreeBSD Postmaster,
-after which, on a third offense, the poster will removed from all
-FreeBSD mailing lists and filtered from further posting to them.
-We regret that such rules and measures are necessary at all, but
-today's Internet is a pretty harsh environment, it would seem, and
-many fail to appreciate just how fragile some of its mechanisms are.
-
-Rules of the road:
-
-
-
-The topic of any posting should adhere to the basic charter of the list
-it is posted to, e.g. if the list is about technical issues then your
-posting should contain technical discussion. Ongoing irrelevant chatter
-or flaming only detracts from the value of the mailing list for everyone
-on it and will not be tolerated. For free-form discussion on no
-particular topic, the freebsd-chat mailing list is freely available and should
-be used instead.
-
-
-
-No posting should be made to more than 2 mailing lists, and only
-to 2 when a clear and obvious need to post to both lists exists.
-For most lists, there is already a great deal of subscriber overlap
-and except for the most esoteric mixes (say "-stable & -scsi"), there
-really is no reason to post to more than one list at a time.
-If a message is sent to you in such a way that multiple mailing lists
-appear on the Cc line then the cc line should also be trimmed before
-sending it out again.
-You are still responsible for your own cross-postings, no
-matter who the originator might have been.
-
-
-
-Personal attacks and profanity (in the context of an argument) are
-not allowed, and that includes users and developers alike. Gross
-breaches of netiquette, like excerpting or reposting private mail
-when permission to do so was not and would not be forthcoming,
-are frowned upon but not specifically enforced. However,
-there are also very few cases where such content would fit within the
-charter of a list and it would therefore probably rate a warning
-(or ban) on that basis alone.
-
-
-
-Advertising of non-FreeBSD related products or services is
-strictly prohibited and will result in an immediate ban if it
-is clear that the offender is advertising by spam.
-
-
-
-
-
-Individual list charters:
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-AFS
-
-Andrew File System
-This list is for discussion on porting and using AFS from CMU/Transarc
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-ADMIN
-
-
-Administrative issues
-This list is purely for discussion of freebsd.org related issues
-and to report problems or abuse of project resources. It is a closed
-list, though anyone may report a problem (with our systems!) to it.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-ANNOUNCE
-
-
-Important events / milestones
-This is the mailing list for people interested only in occasional
-announcements of significant freebsd events. This includes
-announcements about snapshots and other releases. It contains
-announcements of new FreeBSD capabilities. It may contain calls
-for volunteers etc. This is a low volume, strictly moderated mailing list.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-ARCH
-
-
-Architecture and design discussions
-This is the mailing list for people discussing FreeBSD architectural
-issues. It is a closed list, and not for general subscription.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-BUGS
-
-
-Bug reports
-This is the mailing list for reporting bugs in FreeBSD
-Whenever possible, bugs should be submitted using the "send-pr(1)"
-command or the WEB interface to it.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-CHAT
-
-
-Non technical items related to the
-FreeBSD community
-This list contains the overflow from the other lists about
-non-technical, social information. It includes discussion about
-whether Jordan looks like a toon ferret or not, whether or not to
-type in capitals, who is drinking too much coffee, where the best
-beer is brewed, who is brewing beer in their basement, and so on.
-Occasional announcements of important events (such as upcoming
-parties, weddings, births, new jobs, etc) can be made to the
-technical lists, but the follow ups should be directed to this
--chat list.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-CORE
-
-
-FreeBSD core team
-This is an internal mailing list for use by the core members.
-Messages can be sent to it when a serious FreeBSD-related matter
-requires arbitration or high-level scrutiny.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-CURRENT
-
-
-Discussions about the use of
-FreeBSD-current This is the mailing list for users
-of freebsd-current. It includes warnings about new features
-coming out in -current that will affect the users, and
-instructions on steps that must be taken to remain -current.
-Anyone running "current" must subscribe to this list.
-This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
-content is expected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-CURRENT-DIGEST
-
-
-Discussions about the use of
-FreeBSD-current This is the digest version of the
-freebsd-current mailing list. The digest consists of all
-messages sent to freebsd-current bundled together and mailed out
-as a single message. The average digest size is about 40kB.
-This list is Read-Only and should not be posted to.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-STABLE
-
-
-Discussions about the use of
-FreeBSD-stable This is the mailing list for users
-of freebsd-stable. It includes warnings about new features
-coming out in -stable that will affect the users, and
-instructions on steps that must be taken to remain -stable.
-Anyone running ``stable'' should subscribe to this list.
-This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
-content is expected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-DOC
-
-
-Documentation project
-This mailing list belongs to the FreeBSD Doc Project and is for
-the discussion of documentation related issues and projects.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-FS
-
-
-Filesystems
-Discussions concerning FreeBSD filesystems.
-This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
-content is expected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-ISDN
-
-
-ISDN Communications
-This is the mailing list for people discussing the development
-of ISDN support for FreeBSD.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-JAVA
-
-
-Java Development
-This is the mailing list for people discussing the development of
-significant Java applications for FreeBSD and the porting and maintenance
-of JDKs.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-HACKERS
-
-
-Technical discussions
-This is a forum for technical discussions related to FreeBSD. This
-is the primary technical mailing list. It
-is for individuals actively working on FreeBSD, to bring up problems
-or discuss alternative solutions. Individuals interested in
-following the technical discussion are also welcome.
-This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
-content is expected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-HACKERS-DIGEST
-
-
-Technical
-discussions This is the digest version of the
-freebsd-hackers mailing list. The digest consists of all
-messages sent to freebsd-hackers bundled together and mailed out
-as a single message. The average digest size is about 40kB.
-This list is Read-Only and should not be posted to.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-HARDWARE
-
-
-General discussion of FreeBSD
-hardware General discussion about the types of
-hardware that FreeBSD runs on, various problems and suggestions
-concerning what to buy or avoid.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-INSTALL
-
-
-Installation discussion
-This mailing list is for discussing FreeBSD installation
-development for the future releases and is closed.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-ISP
-
-
-Issues for Internet Service Providers
-This mailing list is for discussing topics relevant to Internet
-Service Providers (ISPs) using FreeBSD.
-This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
-content is expected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-MULTIMEDIA
-
-
-Multimedia discussions
-This is a forum about multimedia applications using FreeBSD.
-Discussion center around multimedia applications, their installation, their
-development and their support within FreeBSD
-This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
-content is expected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-PLATFORMS
-
-
-Porting to Non-Intel
-platforms Cross-platform freebsd issues, general
-discussion and proposals for non-Intel FreeBSD ports.
-This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
-content is expected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-PORTS
-
-
-Discussion of "ports"
-Discussions concerning FreeBSD's "ports collection" (/usr/ports), proposed
-ports, modifications to ports collection infrastructure and general
-coordination efforts.
-This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
-content is expected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-QUESTIONS
-
-
-User questions
-This is the mailing list for questions about FreeBSD. You should not
-send "how to" questions to the technical lists unless you consider the
-question to be pretty technical.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-QUESTIONS-DIGEST
-
-
-User questions
-This is the digest version of the freebsd-questions mailing list.
-The digest consists of all messages sent to freebsd-questions
-bundled together and mailed out as a single message. The average
-digest size is about 40kB.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-SCSI
-
-
-SCSI subsystem
-This is the mailing list for people working on the scsi subsystem
-for FreeBSD.
-This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
-content is expected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-SECURITY
-
-
-Security issues
-FreeBSD computer security issues (DES, Kerberos, known security holes and
-fixes, etc).
-This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
-content is expected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-SECURITY-NOTIFICATIONS
-
-
-Security Notifications
-Notifications of FreeBSD security problems and fixes. This is not
-a discussion list. The discussion list is FreeBSD-security.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-USER-GROUPS
-
-
-User Group Coordination List
-This is the mailing list for the coordinators from each of the
-local area Users Groups to discuss matters with each other and a
-designated individual from the Core Team. This mail list should
-be limited to meeting synopsis and coordination of projects that span
-User Groups. It is a closed list.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Usenet newsgroups
-
-In addition to two FreeBSD specific newsgroups, there
-are many others in which FreeBSD is discussed or are
-otherwise relevant to FreeBSD users. Keyword searchable archives are available for
-some of these newsgroups from courtesy of Warren Toomey
-<wkt@cs.adfa.oz.au>.
-
-
-
-BSD specific newsgroups
-
-
-
-
-
-comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.announce
-
-
-
-comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.misc
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Other Unix newsgroups of interest
-
-
-
-
-
-comp.unix
-
-
-
-comp.unix.questions
-
-
-
-comp.unix.admin
-
-
-
-comp.unix.programmer
-
-
-
-comp.unix.shell
-
-
-
-comp.unix.user-friendly
-
-
-
-comp.security.unix
-
-
-
-comp.sources.unix
-
-
-
-comp.unix.advocacy
-
-
-
-comp.unix.misc
-
-
-
-comp.os.386bsd.announc
-
-
-
-comp.os.386bsd.app
-
-
-
-comp.os.386bsd.bugs
-
-
-
-comp.os.386bsd.development
-
-
-
-comp.os.386bsd.misc
-
-
-
-comp.os.386bsd.questions
-
-
-
-comp.bugs.4bsd
-
-
-
-comp.bugs.4bsd.ucb-fixes
-
-
-
-comp.unix.bsd
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-X Window System
-
-
-
-
-
-comp.windows.x.i386unix
-
-
-
-comp.windows.x
-
-
-
-comp.windows.x.apps
-
-
-
-comp.windows.x.announce
-
-
-
-comp.windows.x.intrinsics
-
-
-
-comp.windows.x.motif
-
-
-
-comp.windows.x.pex
-
-
-
-comp.emulators.ms-windows.wine
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-World Wide Web servers
-
-
-
-
-
-http://www.FreeBSD.ORG/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.au.freebsd.org/FreeBSD/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.br.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.ca.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://sunsite.mff.cuni.cz/www.freebsd.org/.
-
-
-
-http://sunsite.auc.dk/www.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.ee.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.fi.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.de.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.ie.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.jp.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.kr.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.nl.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.pt.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.se.freebsd.org/www.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.tw.freebsd.org/freebsd.html .
-
-
-
-http://www2.ua.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FreeBSD Project Staff
-
-The FreeBSD Project is managed and operated by the following
-groups of people:
-
-
-
-The FreeBSD Core Team
-
-The FreeBSD core team constitutes the project's ``Board of Directors'',
-responsible for deciding the project's overall goals and direction
-as well as managing of
-the FreeBSD project landscape.
-
-(in alphabetical order by last name):
-
-
-
-
-
-&a.asami;
-
-
-
-&a.jmb;
-
-
-
-&a.ache;
-
-
-
-&a.dyson;
-
-
-
-&a.bde;
-
-
-
-&a.gibbs;
-
-
-
-&a.davidg;
-
-
-
-&a.jkh;
-
-
-
-&a.phk;
-
-
-
-&a.rich;
-
-
-
-&a.gpalmer;
-
-
-
-&a.jdp;
-
-
-
-&a.guido;
-
-
-
-&a.sos;
-
-
-
-&a.peter;
-
-
-
-&a.wollman;
-
-
-
-&a.joerg;
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The FreeBSD Developers
-
-These are the people who have commit privileges and do the engineering
-work on the FreeBSD source tree. All core team members and most
-FreeBSD Documentation project personnel are also developers.
-
-
-
-
-
-&a.mbarkah;
-
-
-
-&a.stb;
-
-
-
-&a.jb;
-
-
-
-&a.torstenb;
-
-
-
-&a.danny;
-
-
-
-&a.charnier;
-
-
-
-&a.kjc;
-
-
-
-&a.gclarkii;
-
-
-
-&a.cracauer;
-
-
-
-&a.adam;
-
-
-
-&a.dufault;
-
-
-
-&a.uhclem;
-
-
-
-&a.tegge;
-
-
-
-&a.eivind;
-
-
-
-&a.julian;
-
-
-
-&a.rse;
-
-
-
-&a.se;
-
-
-
-&a.sef;
-
-
-
-&a.fenner;
-
-
-
-&a.jfieber;
-
-
-
-&a.jfitz;
-
-
-
-&a.lars;
-
-
-
-&a.scrappy;
-
-
-
-&a.tg;
-
-
-
-&a.brandon;
-
-
-
-&a.graichen;
-
-
-
-&a.jgreco;
-
-
-
-&a.rgrimes;
-
-
-
-&a.jmg;
-
-
-
-&a.hanai;
-
-
-
-&a.ahasty;
-
-
-
-&a.jhay;
-
-
-
-&a.helbig;
-
-
-
-&a.erich;
-
-
-
-&a.hsu;
-
-
-
-&a.itojun;
-
-
-
-&a.ugen;
-
-
-
-&a.gj;
-
-
-
-&a.nsj;
-
-
-
-&a.ljo;
-
-
-
-&a.kato;
-
-
-
-&a.andreas;
-
-
-
-&a.imp;
-
-
-
-&a.smace;
-
-
-
-&a.mckay;
-
-
-
-&a.jlemon;
-
-
-
-&a.tedm;
-
-
-
-&a.amurai;
-
-
-
-&a.markm;
-
-
-
-&a.max;
-
-
-
-&a.alex;
-
-
-
-&a.davidn;
-
-
-
-&a.obrien;
-
-
-
-&a.fsmp;
-
-
-
-&a.smpatel;
-
-
-
-&a.wpaul;
-
-
-
-&a.jmacd;
-
-
-
-&a.steve;
-
-
-
-&a.mpp;
-
-
-
-&a.dfr;
-
-
-
-&a.jraynard;
-
-
-
-&a.darrenr;
-
-
-
-&a.csgr;
-
-
-
-&a.martin;
-
-
-
-&a.paul;
-
-
-
-&a.roberto;
-
-
-
-&a.chuckr;
-
-
-
-&a.dima;
-
-
-
-&a.wosch;
-
-
-
-&a.ats;
-
-
-
-&a.jseger;
-
-
-
-&a.vanilla;
-
-
-
-&a.msmith;
-
-
-
-&a.brian;
-
-
-
-&a.stark;
-
-
-
-&a.karl;
-
-
-
-&a.cwt;
-
-
-
-&a.pst;
-
-
-
-&a.hoek;
-
-
-
-&a.swallace;
-
-
-
-&a.nate;
-
-
-
-&a.yokota;
-
-
-
-&a.jmz;
-
-
-
-&a.hosokawa;
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The FreeBSD Documentation Project
-
-
-The FreeBSD Documentation Project is responsible for a
-number of different services, each service being run by an
-individual and his deputies (if any):
-
-
-
-Documentation Project Manager
-
-&a.jfieber;
-
-
-
-
-Webmaster
-
-
-&a.mbarkah;
-
-Deputy: &a.paul;
-
-
-
-
-Handbook & FAQ Editor
-
-
-&a.faq;
-
-
-
-
-Build Engineer
-
-
-&a.paul;
-
-Deputy: &a.dave;
-
-
-
-
-Mirror Manager
-
-
-&a.ulf;
-
-Deputy: &a.john;
-
-
-
-
-News Editor
-
-
-&a.nsj;
-
-Deputy: &a.john;
-
-
-
-
-Gallery and Commercial Editor
-
-
-&a.nsj;
-
-Deputy: &a.cawimm;
-
-
-
-
-Style Police & Art Director
-
-
-&a.dave;
-
-Deputy: &a.opsys;
-
-
-
-
-Database Engineer
-
-
-&a.mayo;
-
-Deputy: &a.cracauer;
-
-
-
-
-CGI Engineer
-
-
-&a.cracauer;
-
-Deputy: &a.stb;
-
-
-
-
-Bottle Washing
-
-
-&a.nsj;
-
-Drying plates: &a.nik;
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Who Is Responsible for What
-
-
-
-Principal Architect
-
-&a.davidg;
-
-
-
-
-Documentation Project Manager
-
-
-&a.jfieber;
-
-
-
-
-Internationalization
-
-
-&a.ache;
-
-
-
-
-Networking
-
-
-&a.wollman;
-
-
-
-
-Postmaster
-
-
-&a.jmb;
-
-
-
-
-Release Coordinator
-
-
-&a.jkh;
-
-
-
-
-Public Relations & Corporate Liaison
-
-
-&a.jkh;
-
-
-
-
-Security Officer
-
-
-&a.guido;
-
-
-
-
-Source Repository Managers
-
-
-Principal: &a.peter;
-Assistant: &a.jdp;
-International (Crypto): &a.markm;
-
-
-
-
-Ports Manager
-
-
-&a.asami;
-
-
-
-
-XFree86 Project, Inc. Liaison
-
-
-&a.rich;
-
-
-
-
-Usenet Support
-
-
-&a.joerg;
-
-
-
-
-GNATS Administrator
-
-
-&a.steve;
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-PGP keys
-
- In case you need to verify a signature or send encrypted
-email to one of the officers or core team members a
-number of keys are provided here for your convenience.
-
-
-
-Officers
-
-
-
-FreeBSD Security Officer <security-officer@freebsd.org>
-
-
-
-
-FreeBSD Security Officer <security-officer@freebsd.org>
-Fingerprint = 41 08 4E BB DB 41 60 71 F9 E5 0E 98 73 AF 3F 11
-
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-
-
-
-
-
-
-&a.imp;
-
-
-
-Warner Losh <imp@village.org>
- aka <imp@freebsd.org>
-Fingerprint = D4 31 FD B9 F7 90 17 E8 37 C5 E7 7F CF A6 C1 B9
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-Guido van Rooij <guido@gvr.win.tue.nl>
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-Peter Wemm <peter@FreeBSD.org>
- aka <peter@spinner.dialix.com>
- aka <peter@haywire.dialix.com>
- aka <peter@perth.dialix.oz.au>
-Key fingerprint = 47 05 04 CA 4C EE F8 93 F6 DB 02 92 6D F5 58 8A
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-
-
-
-Type Bits/KeyID Date User ID
-pub 1024/76A3F7B1 1996/04/27 Joerg Wunsch <joerg_wunsch@uriah.heep.sax.de>
- Key fingerprint = DC 47 E6 E4 FF A6 E9 8F 93 21 E0 7D F9 12 D6 4E
- Joerg Wunsch <joerg_wunsch@interface-business.de>
- Joerg Wunsch <j@uriah.heep.sax.de>
- Joerg Wunsch <j@interface-business.de>
-
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-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
+
+
+
+
+
+ If you don't have a CDROM distribution then simply download the installation boot disk image file to your hard
+ drive, being sure to tell your browser to
+ save rather than display the file.
+ Note: This disk image can only be used with
+ 1.44 megabyte 3.5 inch floppy disks.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Make the installation boot disk from the image file:
+
+
+
+
+
+ If you are using MS-DOS then download
+ fdimage.exe or get it from tools\fdimage.exe
+ on the CDROM and then run it like so:
+
+ E:\> tools\fdimage floppies\boot.flp a:
+
+ The fdimage
+ program will format the A: drive and then copy the
+ boot.flp image onto it (assuming that you're at the top
+ level of a FreeBSD distribution and the floppy images
+ live in the floppies subdirectory, as is typically the case).
+
+
+
+
+
+ If you are using a UNIX system to create the floppy image:
+
+ % dd if=boot.flp of=disk_device
+
+
+ where disk_device is the /dev
+ entry for the floppy drive. On FreeBSD systems, this
+ is /dev/rfd0 for the A: drive and
+ /dev/rfd1 for the B: drive.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ With the installation disk in the A: drive, reboot your
+ computer. You should get a boot prompt something like this:
+
+ >> FreeBSD BOOT ...
+ Usage: [[[0:][wd](0,a)]/kernel][-abcCdhrsv]
+ Use 1:sd(0,a)kernel to boot sd0 if it is BIOS drive 1
+ Use ? for file list or press Enter for defaults
+ Boot:
+
+
+ If you do not type anything, FreeBSD will automatically boot
+ with its default configuration after a delay of about
+ five seconds. As FreeBSD boots, it probes your computer
+ to determine what hardware is installed. The results of
+ this probing is displayed on the screen.
+
+
+
+
+
+ When the booting process is finished, The main FreeBSD
+ installation menu will be displayed.
+
+
+
+
+
+ If something goes wrong...
+
+ Due to limitations of the PC architecture, it is
+ impossible for probing to be 100 percent reliable. In the event
+ that your hardware is incorrectly identified, or that the
+ probing causes your computer to lock up, first check the
+ section of this installation guide to be
+ sure that your hardware is indeed supported by FreeBSD.
+
+ If your hardware is supported, reset the computer and when
+ the Boot: prompt comes up, type . This puts
+ FreeBSD into a configuration mode where you can supply
+ hints about your hardware. The FreeBSD kernel on the
+ installation disk is configured assuming that most hardware
+ devices are in their factory default configuration in terms
+ of IRQs, IO addresses and DMA channels. If your hardware
+ has been reconfigured, you will most likely need to use the
+ option at boot to tell FreeBSD where things are.
+
+ It is also possible that a probe for a device not present
+ will cause a later probe for another device that is present
+ to fail. In that case, the probes for the conflicting
+ driver(s) should be disabled.
+
+ In the configuration mode, you can:
+
+
+
+
+
+ List the device drivers installed in the kernel.
+
+
+
+ Disable device drivers for hardware not present in your
+ system.
+
+
+
+ Change the IRQ, DRQ, and IO port addresses used by a
+ device driver.
+
+
+
+
+
+ While at the config> prompt, type
+ help for more information on the available
+ commands. After adjusting the kernel to match how you have
+ your hardware configured, type quit at the
+ config> prompt to continue booting with the new
+ settings.
+
+ After FreeBSD has been installed, changes made in the
+ configuration mode will be permanent so you do not have
+ to reconfigure every time you boot. Even so, it is likely
+ that you will want to build a custom kernel to optimize the
+ performance of your system. See for more information on
+ creating custom kernels.
+
+
+
+ Supported Configurations
+
+ FreeBSD currently runs on a wide variety of ISA, VLB,
+ EISA and PCI bus based PC's, ranging from 386sx to
+ Pentium class machines (though the 386sx is not
+ recommended). Support for generic IDE or ESDI drive
+ configurations, various SCSI controller, network and
+ serial cards is also provided.
+
+ A minimum of four megabytes of RAM is required to run FreeBSD.
+ To run the X Window System, eight megabytes of RAM is the
+ recommended minimum.
+
+ Following is a list of all disk controllers and Ethernet
+ cards currently known to work with FreeBSD. Other
+ configurations may very well work, and we have simply not
+ received any indication of this.
+
+
+
+ Disk Controllers
+
+
+
+
+
+ WD1003 (any generic MFM/RLL)
+
+
+
+ WD1007 (any generic IDE/ESDI)
+
+
+
+ IDE
+
+
+
+ ATA
+
+
+
+
+ Adaptec 1505 ISA SCSI controller
+
+
+
+ Adaptec 152x series ISA SCSI controllers
+
+
+
+ Adaptec 1535 ISA SCSI controllers
+
+
+
+ Adaptec 154x series ISA SCSI controllers
+
+
+
+ Adaptec 174x series EISA SCSI controller in
+ standard and enhanced mode.
+
+
+
+ Adaptec 274x/284x/2940/2940U/3940
+ (Narrow/Wide/Twin)
+ series EISA/VLB/PCI SCSI controllers
+
+
+
+ Adaptec AIC7850 on-board SCSI controllers
+
+
+
+ Adaptec
+ AIC-6360 based boards,
+ which includes the AHA-152x and SoundBlaster SCSI
+ cards.
+
+ Note: You cannot boot from the
+ SoundBlaster cards as they have no on-board BIOS,
+ which is necessary for mapping the boot device into
+ the system BIOS I/O vectors. They are perfectly
+ usable for external tapes, CDROMs, etc, however.
+ The same goes for any other AIC-6x60 based card
+ without a boot ROM. Some systems DO have a boot
+ ROM, which is generally indicated by some sort of
+ message when the system is first powered up or
+ reset. Check your system/board documentation for
+ more details.
+
+
+
+
+ Buslogic 545S & 545c
+ Note: that Buslogic was formerly known as "Bustek".
+
+
+
+ Buslogic 445S/445c VLB SCSI controller
+
+
+
+ Buslogic 742A/747S/747c EISA SCSI controller.
+
+
+
+ Buslogic 946c PCI SCSI controller
+
+
+
+ Buslogic 956c PCI SCSI controller
+
+
+
+
+ NCR 53C810/53C815/53C825/53C860/53C875 PCI SCSI controller.
+
+
+
+ NCR5380/NCR53400 (``ProAudio Spectrum'') SCSI controller.
+
+
+
+
+ DTC 3290 EISA SCSI controller in 1542 emulation mode.
+
+
+
+
+ UltraStor 14F/24F/34F SCSI controllers.
+
+
+
+
+ Seagate ST01/02 SCSI controllers.
+
+
+
+
+ Future Domain 8xx/950 series SCSI controllers.
+
+
+
+
+ WD7000 SCSI controllers.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ With all supported SCSI controllers, full support is
+ provided for SCSI-I & SCSI-II peripherals,
+ including Disks, tape drives (including DAT) and CD ROM
+ drives.
+
+ The following CD-ROM type systems are supported at this
+ time:
+
+
+
+
+
+ SoundBlaster SCSI and ProAudio Spectrum SCSI (cd)
+
+
+
+ Mitsumi (all models) proprietary interface (mcd)
+
+
+
+ Matsushita/Panasonic (Creative)
+ CR-562/CR-563 proprietary interface (matcd)
+
+
+
+ Sony proprietary interface (scd)
+
+
+
+ ATAPI IDE interface
+ (experimental and should be considered ALPHA quality!)
+ (wcd)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Ethernet cards
+
+
+
+
+
+ Allied-Telesis AT1700 and RE2000 cards
+
+
+
+
+ SMC Elite 16 WD8013 Ethernet interface, and
+ most other WD8003E, WD8003EBT, WD8003W, WD8013W,
+ WD8003S, WD8003SBT and WD8013EBT based clones. SMC
+ Elite Ultra and 9432TX based cards are also supported.
+
+
+
+
+ DEC EtherWORKS III NICs (DE203, DE204, and DE205)
+
+
+
+ DEC EtherWORKS II NICs (DE200, DE201, DE202, and DE422)
+
+
+
+ DEC DC21040/DC21041/DC21140 based NICs:
+
+
+
+ ASUS PCI-L101-TB
+
+
+
+ Accton ENI1203
+
+
+
+ Cogent EM960PCI
+
+
+
+ Compex CPXPCI/32C
+
+
+
+ D-Link DE-530
+
+
+
+ DEC DE435
+
+
+
+ Danpex EN-9400P3
+
+
+
+ JCIS Condor JC1260
+
+
+
+ Kingston KNE100TX
+
+
+
+ Linksys EtherPCI
+
+
+
+ Mylex LNP101
+
+
+
+ SMC EtherPower 10/100 (Model 9332)
+
+
+
+ SMC EtherPower (Model 8432)
+
+
+
+ SMC EtherPower (2)
+
+
+
+ Zynx ZX314
+
+
+
+ Zynx ZX342
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ DEC FDDI (DEFPA/DEFEA) NICs
+
+
+
+
+ Fujitsu FMV-181 and FMV-182
+
+
+
+
+ Fujitsu MB86960A/MB86965A
+
+
+
+
+ Intel EtherExpress
+
+
+
+
+ Intel EtherExpress Pro/100B 100Mbit.
+
+
+
+
+ Isolan AT 4141-0 (16 bit)
+
+
+
+ Isolink 4110 (8 bit)
+
+
+
+
+ Lucent WaveLAN wireless networking interface.
+
+
+
+
+ Novell NE1000, NE2000, and NE2100 ethernet interface.
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com 3C501 cards
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com 3C503 Etherlink II
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com 3c505 Etherlink/+
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com 3C507 Etherlink 16/TP
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com 3C509, 3C579, 3C589 (PCMCIA) Etherlink III
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com 3C590, 3C595 Etherlink III
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com 3C90x cards.
+
+
+
+
+ HP PC Lan Plus (27247B and 27252A)
+
+
+
+
+ Toshiba ethernet cards
+
+
+
+
+ PCMCIA ethernet cards from IBM and National
+ Semiconductor are also supported.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Note: FreeBSD does not currently support
+ PnP (plug-n-play) features present on some ethernet
+ cards. If your card has PnP and is giving you problems,
+ try disabling its PnP features.
+
+
+
+
+ Miscellaneous devices
+
+
+
+
+
+ AST 4 port serial card using shared IRQ.
+
+
+
+
+ ARNET 8 port serial card using shared IRQ.
+
+
+
+
+ BOCA IOAT66 6 port serial card using shared IRQ.
+
+
+
+
+ BOCA 2016 16 port serial card using shared IRQ.
+
+
+
+
+ Cyclades Cyclom-y Serial Board.
+
+
+
+
+ STB 4 port card using shared IRQ.
+
+
+
+
+ SDL Communications Riscom/8 Serial Board.
+
+
+
+
+ SDL Communications RISCom/N2 and N2pci sync serial cards.
+
+
+
+
+ Digiboard Sync/570i high-speed sync serial card.
+
+
+
+
+ Decision-Computer Intl. "Eight-Serial" 8 port serial cards
+ using shared IRQ.
+
+
+
+
+ Adlib, SoundBlaster, SoundBlaster Pro,
+ ProAudioSpectrum, Gravis UltraSound, Gravis UltraSound MAX
+ and Roland MPU-401 sound cards.
+
+
+
+
+ Matrox Meteor video frame grabber.
+
+
+
+
+ Creative Labs Video spigot frame grabber.
+
+
+
+
+ Omnimedia Talisman frame grabber.
+
+
+
+
+ Brooktree BT848 chip based frame grabbers.
+
+
+
+
+ X-10 power controllers.
+
+
+
+
+ PC joystick and speaker.
+
+
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD does not currently support IBM's microchannel (MCA) bus.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Preparing for the Installation
+
+ There are a number of different methods by which FreeBSD
+ can be installed. The following describes what
+ preparation needs to be done for each type.
+
+
+
+ Before installing from CDROM
+
+ If your CDROM is of an unsupported type, then please
+ skip to .
+
+ There is not a lot of preparatory work that needs to be done to
+ successfully install from one of Walnut Creek's FreeBSD CDROMs (other
+ CDROM distributions may work as well, though we cannot say for certain
+ as we have no hand or say in how they are created). You can either
+ boot into the CD installation directly from DOS using Walnut Creek's
+ supplied ``install.bat'' batch file or you can make a boot floppy with
+ the ``makeflp.bat'' command. [NOTE: If you are running
+ FreeBSD 2.1-RELEASE and have an IDE CDROM, use the
+ inst_ide.bat or atapiflp.bat batch files instead].
+
+ For the easiest interface of all (from DOS), type
+ ``view''. This will bring up a DOS menu utility that
+ leads you through all the available options.
+
+ If you are creating the boot floppy from a UNIX machine,
+ see for examples. of how to create the boot floppy.
+
+ Once you have booted from DOS or floppy, you should then
+ be able to select CDROM as the media type in the Media
+ menu and load the entire distribution from CDROM. No
+ other types of installation media should be required.
+
+ After your system is fully installed and you have rebooted
+ from the hard disk, you can mount the CDROM at any time by
+ typing: mount /cdrom
+
+ Before removing the CD again, also note that it is necessary to first
+ type: umount /cdrom. Do not just remove it from the drive!
+
+
+
+ Special note: Before invoking the
+ installation, be sure that the CDROM is in the drive
+ so that the install probe can find it. This is also
+ true if you wish the CDROM to be added to the default
+ system configuration automatically during the install
+ (whether or not you actually use it as the
+ installation media).
+
+
+
+ Finally, if you would like people to be able to FTP
+ install FreeBSD directly from the CDROM in your
+ machine, you will find it quite easy. After the machine
+ is fully installed, you simply need to add the
+ following line to the password file (using the vipw
+ command):
+
+
+
+ ftp:*:99:99::0:0:FTP:/cdrom:/nonexistent
+
+
+
+ Anyone with network connectivity to your machine (and permission
+ to log into it) can now chose a Media type of FTP and type
+ in: ftp://your machine after picking ``Other''
+ in the ftp sites menu.
+
+
+
+
+ Before installing from Floppy
+
+ If you must install from floppy disks, either due to
+ unsupported hardware or simply because you enjoy doing
+ things the hard way, you must first prepare some
+ floppies for the install.
+
+ You will need, at minimum, as many 1.44MB or 1.2MB floppies as
+ it takes to hold all files in the bin (binary distribution)
+ directory. If you are preparing these floppies under DOS, then
+ THESE floppies *must* be formatted using the MS-DOS FORMAT
+ command. If you are using Windows, use the Windows File
+ Manager format command.
+
+ Do not trust Factory Preformatted floppies! Format
+ them again yourself, just to make sure. Many problems
+ reported by our users in the past have resulted from the use
+ of improperly formatted media, which is why I am taking such
+ special care to mention it here!
+
+ If you are creating the floppies from another FreeBSD machine,
+ a format is still not a bad idea though you do not need to put
+ a DOS filesystem on each floppy. You can use the `disklabel'
+ and `newfs' commands to put a UFS filesystem on them instead,
+ as the following sequence of commands (for a 3.5" 1.44MB floppy
+ disk) illustrates:
+
+
+
+ fdformat -f 1440 fd0.1440
+ disklabel -w -r fd0.1440 floppy3
+ newfs -t 2 -u 18 -l 1 -i 65536 /dev/rfd0
+
+ (Use "fd0.1200" and "floppy5" for 5.25" 1.2MB disks).
+
+
+
+ Then you can mount and write to them like any other file
+ system.
+
+ After you have formatted the floppies, you will need to copy
+ the files onto them. The distribution files are split into
+ chunks conveniently sized so that 5 of them will fit on a
+ conventional 1.44MB floppy. Go through all your floppies,
+ packing as many files as will fit on each one, until you have
+ got all the distributions you want packed up in this fashion.
+ Each distribution should go into a subdirectory on the
+ floppy, e.g.: a:\bin\bin.aa,
+ a:\bin\bin.ab, and so on.
+
+ Once you come to the Media screen of the install,
+ select ``Floppy'' and you will be prompted for the rest.
+
+
+
+
+ Before installing from a MS-DOS partition
+
+ To prepare for installation from an MS-DOS partition,
+ copy the files from the distribution into a directory
+ called C:\FREEBSD. The directory tree structure
+ of the CDROM must be partially reproduced within this directory
+ so we suggest using the DOS xcopy
+ command. For example, to prepare for a minimal installation of
+ FreeBSD:
+
+ C> MD C:\FREEBSD
+ C> XCOPY /S E:\BIN C:\FREEBSD\BIN\
+ C> XCOPY /S E:\MANPAGES C:\FREEBSD\MANPAGES\
+
+
+ assuming that C: is where you have free space
+ and E: is where your CDROM is mounted.
+
+ For as many `DISTS' you wish to install from MS-DOS
+ (and you have free space for), install each one under
+ C:\FREEBSD - the BIN dist is only the
+ minimal requirement.
+
+
+
+
+ Before installing from QIC/SCSI Tape
+
+ Installing from tape is probably the easiest method,
+ short of an on-line install using FTP or a CDROM
+ install. The installation program expects the files to
+ be simply tar'ed onto the tape, so after getting all of
+ the files for distribution you are interested in, simply
+ tar them onto the tape with a command like:
+
+ cd /freebsd/distdir
+ tar cvf /dev/rwt0 (or /dev/rst0) dist1 .. dist2
+
+
+
+ When you go to do the installation, you should also
+ make sure that you leave enough room in some temporary
+ directory (which you will be allowed to choose) to
+ accommodate the full contents of the tape you have
+ created. Due to the non-random access nature of tapes,
+ this method of installation requires quite a bit of
+ temporary storage. You should expect to require as
+ much temporary storage as you have stuff written on
+ tape.
+
+
+
+ Note: When going to do the
+ installation, the tape must be in the drive
+ before booting from the boot floppy. The
+ installation probe may otherwise fail to find it.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Before installing over a network
+
+ You can do network installations over 3 types of
+ communications links:
+
+ Serial port
+
+ SLIP or PPP
+
+
+
+
+ Parallel port
+
+
+ PLIP (laplink cable)
+
+
+
+
+ Ethernet
+
+
+ A
+ standard ethernet controller (includes some PCMCIA).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ SLIP support is rather primitive, and limited primarily
+ to hard-wired links, such as a serial cable running
+ between a laptop computer and another computer. The
+ link should be hard-wired as the SLIP installation
+ does not currently offer a dialing capability; that
+ facility is provided with the PPP utility, which should
+ be used in preference to SLIP whenever possible.
+
+ If you are using a modem, then PPP is almost certainly
+ your only choice. Make sure that you have your service
+ provider's information handy as you will need to know it
+ fairly soon in the installation process. You will need
+ to know how to dial your ISP using the ``AT commands''
+ specific to your modem, as the PPP dialer provides only a
+ very simple terminal emulator. If you're using PAP or
+ CHAP, you'll need to type the necessary ``set authname''
+ and ``set authkey'' commands before typing ``term''.
+ Refer to the user-ppp
+ and FAQ entries
+ for further information. If you have problems, logging can
+ be directed to the screen using the command set log
+ local ....
+
+ If a hard-wired connection to another FreeBSD (2.0R or
+ later) machine is available, you might also consider
+ installing over a ``laplink'' parallel port cable. The
+ data rate over the parallel port is much higher than
+ what is typically possible over a serial line (up to
+ 50k/sec), thus resulting in a quicker installation.
+
+ Finally, for the fastest possible network installation,
+ an ethernet adaptor is always a good choice! FreeBSD
+ supports most common PC ethernet cards, a table of
+ supported cards (and their required settings) is
+ provided in . If you are using one of the supported
+ PCMCIA ethernet cards, also be sure that it is plugged
+ in before the laptop is powered on! FreeBSD
+ does not, unfortunately, currently support hot
+ insertion of PCMCIA cards during installation.
+
+ You will also need to know your IP address on the
+ network, the netmask value for your address class,
+ and the name of your machine. Your system
+ administrator can tell you which values to use for your
+ particular network setup. If you will be referring to
+ other hosts by name rather than IP address, you will also
+ need a name server and possibly the address of a
+ gateway (if you are using PPP, it is your provider's IP
+ address) to use in talking to it. If you do not know
+ the answers to all or most of these questions, then you
+ should really probably talk to your system
+ administrator first before trying this type of
+ installation.
+
+ Once you have a network link of some sort working, the
+ installation can continue over NFS or FTP.
+
+
+
+ Preparing for NFS installation
+
+ NFS installation is fairly straight-forward: Simply
+ copy the FreeBSD distribution files you want onto a
+ server somewhere and then point the NFS media
+ selection at it.
+
+ If this server supports only ``privileged port'' access
+ (as is generally the default for Sun workstations),
+ you will need to set this option in the Options menu
+ before installation can proceed.
+
+ If you have a poor quality ethernet card which
+ suffers from very slow transfer rates, you may also
+ wish to toggle the appropriate Options flag.
+
+ In order for NFS installation to work, the server
+ must support subdir mounts, e.g., if your FreeBSD
+ &rel.current; distribution directory lives on:
+ ziggy:/usr/archive/stuff/FreeBSD Then ziggy will have
+ to allow the direct mounting of
+ /usr/archive/stuff/FreeBSD, not just /usr or
+ /usr/archive/stuff.
+
+ In FreeBSD's /etc/exports file, this is controlled by
+ the ``'' option. Other NFS servers may have
+ different conventions. If you are getting
+ `Permission Denied' messages from the server then
+ it is likely that you do not have this enabled
+ properly.
+
+
+
+
+ Preparing for FTP Installation
+
+ FTP installation may be done from any mirror site
+ containing a reasonably up-to-date version of FreeBSD
+ &rel.current;. A full menu of reasonable choices from almost
+ anywhere in the world is provided by the FTP site
+ menu.
+
+ If you are installing from some other FTP site not
+ listed in this menu, or you are having troubles
+ getting your name server configured properly, you can
+ also specify your own URL by selecting the ``Other''
+ choice in that menu. A URL can also be a direct IP
+ address, so the following would work in the absence
+ of a name server:
+
+
+
+ ftp://165.113.121.81/pub/FreeBSD/&rel.current;-RELEASE
+
+
+
+ There are two FTP installation modes you can use:
+
+
+
+ FTP Active
+
+ For all FTP transfers, use ``Active'' mode. This
+ will not work through firewalls, but will often
+ work with older ftp servers that do not support
+ passive mode. If your connection hangs with
+ passive mode (the default), try active!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FTP Passive
+
+
+ For all FTP transfers, use ``Passive'' mode. This
+ allows the user to pass through firewalls that do
+ not allow incoming connections on random port
+ addresses.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Note: Active and passive modes are
+ not the same as a `proxy' connection, where a proxy
+ FTP server is listening and forwarding FTP requests!
+
+
+
+ For a proxy FTP server, you should usually give name of
+ the server you really want as a part of the username,
+ after an @-sign. The proxy server then 'fakes' the real
+ server. An example: Say you want to install from
+ ftp.freebsd.org, using the proxy FTP server foo.bar.com,
+ listening on port 1234.
+
+ In this case, you go to the options menu, set the FTP
+ username to ftp@ftp.freebsd.org, and the password to your
+ e-mail address. As your installation media, you specify
+ FTP (or passive FTP, if the proxy support it), and the URL
+
+ ftp://foo.bar.com:1234/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+ /pub/FreeBSD from ftp.freebsd.org is proxied under
+ foo.bar.com, allowing you to install from _that_ machine
+ (which fetch the files from ftp.freebsd.org as your
+ installation requests them).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Installing FreeBSD
+
+ Once you have taken note of the appropriate
+ preinstallation steps, you should be able to install
+ FreeBSD without any further trouble.
+
+ Should this not be true, then you may wish to go back and
+ re-read the relevant preparation section above
+ for the installation media type you are trying to use,
+ perhaps there is a helpful hint there that you missed the
+ first time? If you are having hardware trouble, or
+ FreeBSD refuses to boot at all, read the Hardware Guide
+ provided on the boot floppy for a list of possible
+ solutions.
+
+ The FreeBSD boot floppy contains all the on-line
+ documentation you should need to be able to navigate
+ through an installation and if it does not then we would
+ like to know what you found most confusing. Send your
+ comments to the &a.doc;.
+ It is the objective of the
+ FreeBSD installation program (sysinstall) to be
+ self-documenting enough that painful ``step-by-step''
+ guides are no longer necessary. It may take us a little
+ while to reach that objective, but that is the objective!
+
+ Meanwhile, you may also find the following ``typical
+ installation sequence'' to be helpful:
+
+
+
+
+
+ Boot the boot floppy. After a boot sequence
+ which can take anywhere from 30 seconds to 3
+ minutes, depending on your hardware, you should be
+ presented with a menu of initial choices. If the
+ floppy does not boot at all, or the boot hangs at some
+ stage, go read the Q&A section of the Hardware Guide
+ for possible causes.
+
+
+
+
+ Press F1. You should see some basic usage
+ instructions on the menu system and general
+ navigation. If you have not used this menu system
+ before then PLEASE read this thoroughly!
+
+
+
+
+ Select the Options item and set any special
+ preferences you may have.
+
+
+
+
+ Select a Novice, Custom or Express install, depending on
+ whether or not you would like the installation to help
+ you through a typical installation, give you a high degree of
+ control over each step of the installation or simply whizz
+ through it (using reasonable defaults when possible) as fast
+ as possible. If you have never used FreeBSD before then the
+ Novice installation method is most recommended.
+
+
+
+
+ The final configuration menu choice allows you to
+ further configure your FreeBSD installation by giving you
+ menu-driven access to various system defaults. Some
+ items, like networking, may be especially important
+ if you did a CDROM/Tape/Floppy installation and have
+ not yet configured your network interfaces (assuming
+ you have any). Properly configuring such interfaces
+ here will allow FreeBSD to come up on the network
+ when you first reboot from the hard disk.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ MS-DOS User's Questions and Answers
+
+ Many FreeBSD users wish to install FreeBSD on PCs inhabited
+ by MS-DOS. Here are some commonly asked questions about
+ installing FreeBSD on such systems.
+
+ Help! I have no space! Do I need to delete
+ everything first?
+
+ If your machine is already running MS-DOS and has little
+ or no free space available for FreeBSD's installation,
+ all is not lost! You may find the FIPS utility, provided
+ in the tools directory on the FreeBSD CDROM or
+ on the various FreeBSD ftp sites, to be quite useful.
+
+ FIPS allows you to split an existing MS-DOS partition
+ into two pieces, preserving the original partition and
+ allowing you to install onto the second free piece. You
+ first defragment your MS-DOS partition, using the DOS
+ 6.xx DEFRAG utility or the Norton Disk tools, then run
+ FIPS. It will prompt you for the rest of the information
+ it needs. Afterwards, you can reboot and install FreeBSD
+ on the new free slice. See the Distributions
+ menu for an estimation of how much free space you will need
+ for the kind of installation you want.
+
+ Can I use compressed MS-DOS filesystems from
+ FreeBSD?
+
+ No. If you are using a utility such as Stacker(tm) or
+ DoubleSpace(tm), FreeBSD will only be able to use
+ whatever portion of the filesystem you leave
+ uncompressed. The rest of the filesystem will show up as
+ one large file (the stacked/dblspaced file!). Do not
+ remove that file! You will probably regret it
+ greatly!
+
+ It is probably better to create another uncompressed
+ MS-DOS primary partition and use this for communications
+ between MS-DOS and FreeBSD.
+
+ Can I mount my MS-DOS extended partitions?
+
+ Yes. DOS extended partitions are mapped in at the end of the other
+ ``slices'' in FreeBSD, e.g. your D: drive might be /dev/sd0s5,
+ your E: drive /dev/sd0s6, and so on. This example assumes, of
+ course, that your extended partition is on SCSI drive 0. For IDE drives,
+ substitute ``wd'' for ``sd'' appropriately. You otherwise mount extended
+ partitions exactly like you would mount any other DOS drive, e.g.:
+
+
+
+ mount -t msdos /dev/sd0s5 /dos_d
+
+
+
+ Can I run MS-DOS binaries under FreeBSD?
+
+ BSDI has donated their DOS emulator to the BSD world and
+ this has been ported to FreeBSD.
+
+ There is also a (technically) nice application available in the
+ called pcemu
+ which allows you to run many basic MS-DOS text-mode binaries
+ by entirely emulating an 8088 CPU.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Unix Basics
+
+
+
+ The Online Manual
+
+ The most comprehensive documentation on FreeBSD is in
+ the form of man pages. Nearly every program
+ on the system comes with a short reference manual
+ explaining the basic operation and various arguments.
+ These manuals can be view with the
+ man command. Use of the
+ man command is simple:
+
+ mancommand
+
+
+ where command is the name of the command
+ you wish to learn about. For example, to learn more about
+ ls command type:
+
+ % man ls
+
+
+
+ The online manual is divided up into numbered
+ sections:
+
+
+
+ User commands
+
+
+
+ System calls and error numbers
+
+
+
+ Functions in the C libraries
+
+
+
+ Device drivers
+
+
+
+ File formats
+
+
+
+ Games and other diversions
+
+
+
+ Miscellaneous information
+
+
+
+ System maintenance and operation commands
+
+
+
+
+ in some cases, the same topic may appear in more than
+ one section of the on-line manual. For example, there
+ is a chmod user command and a
+ chmod() system call. In this case,
+ you can tell the man command which
+ one you want by specifying the section:
+
+ % man 1 chmod
+
+
+ which will display the manual page for the user command
+ chmod. References to a particular
+ section of the on-line manual are traditionally placed
+ in parenthesis in written documentation, so
+ chmod(1) refers to the chmod user command and chmod(2)
+ refers to the system call.
+
+ This is fine if you know the name of the command and
+ simply wish to know how to use it, but what if you cannot recall the
+ command name? You can use man to
+ search for keywords in the command descriptions by
+ using the switch:
+
+ % man -k mail
+
+
+ With this command you will be presented with a list of
+ commands that have the keyword `mail' in their
+ descriptions. This is actually functionally equivalent to
+ using the apropos command.
+
+ So, you are looking at all those fancy commands in /usr/bin but do not even have the faintest idea
+ what most of them actually do? Simply do a
+
+ % cd /usr/bin; man -f *
+
+
+ or
+
+ % cd /usr/bin; whatis *
+
+
+ which does the same thing.
+
+
+
+
+ GNU Info Files
+
+ FreeBSD includes many applications and utilities
+ produced by the Free Software Foundation (FSF). In
+ addition to man pages, these programs come with more
+ extensive hypertext documents called info
+ files which can be viewed with the info
+ command or, if you installed emacs, the info
+ mode of emacs.
+
+ To use the info(1) command, simply type:
+
+ % info
+
+ For a brief
+ introduction, type h. For a quick
+ command reference, type ?.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Installing Applications: The Ports collection
+
+ Contributed by &a.jraynard;.
+
+ The FreeBSD Ports collection allows you to compile and install a very
+ wide range of applications with a minimum of effort.
+
+ For all the hype about open standards, getting a program to work
+ on different versions of Unix in the real world can be a tedious and
+ tricky business, as anyone who has tried it will know. You may be lucky
+ enough to find that the program you want will compile cleanly on your
+ system, install itself in all the right places and run flawlessly
+ ``out of the box'', but this is unfortunately rather rare. With most
+ programs, you will find yourself doing a fair bit of head-scratching,
+ and there are quite a few programs that will result in premature
+ greying, or even chronic alopecia...
+
+ Some software distributions have attacked this problem by
+ providing configuration scripts. Some of these are very clever, but
+ they have an unfortunate tendency to triumphantly announce that your
+ system is something you have never heard of and then ask you lots of
+ questions that sound like a final exam in system-level Unix
+ programming (``Does your system's gethitlist function return a const
+ pointer to a fromboz or a pointer to a const fromboz? Do you have
+ Foonix style unacceptable exception handling? And if not, why not?'').
+
+ Fortunately, with the Ports collection, all the hard work involved
+ has already been done, and you can just type 'make install' and get a
+ working program.
+
+
+
+ Why Have a Ports Collection?
+
+ The base FreeBSD system comes with a very wide range of tools and
+ system utilities, but a lot of popular programs are not in the base
+ system, for good reasons:-
+
+
+
+
+
+ Programs that some people cannot live without and other people
+ cannot stand, such as a certain Lisp-based editor.
+
+
+
+
+ Programs which are too specialised to put in the base system
+ (CAD, databases).
+
+
+
+
+ Programs which fall into the ``I must have a look at
+ that when I get a spare minute'' category, rather than system-critical
+ ones (some languages, perhaps).
+
+
+
+
+ Programs that are far too much fun to be supplied with a serious
+ operating system like FreeBSD ;-)
+
+
+
+
+ However many programs you put in the base system, people will
+ always want more, and a line has to be drawn somewhere (otherwise
+ FreeBSD distributions would become absolutely enormous).
+
+
+
+
+
+ Obviously it would be unreasonable to expect everyone to port their
+ favourite programs by hand (not to mention a tremendous amount of
+ duplicated work), so the FreeBSD Project came up with an ingenious
+ way of using standard tools that would automate the process.
+
+ Incidentally, this is an excellent illustration of how ``the Unix way''
+ works in practice by combining a set of simple but very flexible tools
+ into something very powerful.
+
+
+
+
+ How Does the Ports Collection Work?
+
+ Programs are typically distributed on the Internet as a
+ consisting of
+ a Makefile and the source code for the program and usually
+ some instructions (which are unfortunately not always as instructive
+ as they could be), with perhaps a configuration script.
+
+ The standard scenario is that you FTP down the tarball, extract it
+ somewhere, glance through the instructions, make any changes that seem
+ necessary, run the configure script to set things up and use the standard
+ `make' program to compile and install the program from the source.
+
+ FreeBSD ports still use the tarball mechanism, but use a
+ to hold the "knowledge"
+ of how to get the program working on FreeBSD, rather than expecting the
+ user to be able to work it out. They also supply their own customised
+ , so that almost every port
+ can be built in the same way.
+
+ If you look at a port skeleton (either on your FreeBSD system or the FTP site) and expect to find all sorts of pointy-headed rocket
+ science lurking there, you may be disappointed by the one or two
+ rather unexciting-looking files and directories you find there.
+ (We will discuss in a minute how to go about ).
+
+ ``How on earth can this do anything?'' I hear you cry. ``There
+ is no source code there!''
+
+ Fear not, gentle reader, all will become clear (hopefully). Let's
+ see what happens if we try and install a port. I have chosen `ElectricFence',
+ a useful tool for developers, as the skeleton is more straightforward than
+ most.
+
+ Note if you are trying this at home, you will need to be root.
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports/devel/ElectricFence
+ # make install
+ >> Checksum OK for ElectricFence-2.0.5.tar.gz.
+ ===> Extracting for ElectricFence-2.0.5
+ ===> Patching for ElectricFence-2.0.5
+ ===> Applying FreeBSD patches for ElectricFence-2.0.5
+ ===> Configuring for ElectricFence-2.0.5
+ ===> Building for ElectricFence-2.0.5
+ [lots of compiler output...]
+ ===> Installing for ElectricFence-2.0.5
+ ===> Warning: your umask is "0002".
+ If this is not desired, set it to an appropriate value
+ and install this port again by ``make reinstall''.
+ install -c -o bin -g bin -m 444 /usr/ports/devel/ElectricFence/work/ElectricFence-2.0.5/libefence.a /usr/local/lib
+ install -c -o bin -g bin -m 444 /usr/ports/devel/ElectricFence/work/ElectricFence-2.0.5/libefence.3 /usr/local/man/man3
+ ===> Compressing manual pages for ElectricFence-2.0.5
+ ===> Registering installation for ElectricFence-2.0.5
+
+
+ To avoid confusing the issue, I have completely removed the build output.
+
+ If you tried this yourself, you may well have got something like this at
+ the start:-
+
+
+ # make install
+ >> ElectricFence-2.0.5.tar.gz doesn't seem to exist on this system.
+ >> Attempting to fetch from ftp://ftp.doc.ic.ac.uk/Mirrors/sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/devel/lang/c/.
+
+
+ The `make' program has noticed that you did not have a local copy
+ of the source code and tried to FTP it down so it could get the job
+ done. I already had the
+ source handy in my example, so it did not need to fetch it.
+
+ Let's go through this and see what the `make' program was doing.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Locate the source code If it is not available locally, try to grab it from an
+ FTP site.
+
+
+
+
+ Run a test on the
+ tarball to make sure it has not been tampered with, accidentally
+ truncated, downloaded in ASCII mode, struck by neutrinos while in transit, etc.
+
+
+
+
+ Extract the tarball into a temporary work directory.
+
+
+
+
+ Apply any needed to get
+ the source to compile and run under FreeBSD.
+
+
+
+
+ Run any configuration script required by the build process and
+ correctly answer any questions it asks.
+
+
+
+
+ (Finally!) Compile the code.
+
+
+
+
+ Install the program executable and other supporting files, man
+ pages, etc. under the /usr/local hierarchy, where they will not get mixed
+ up with system programs. This also makes sure that all the ports you
+ install will go in the same place, instead of being flung all over
+ your system.
+
+
+
+
+ Register the installation in a database. This means
+ that, if you do not like the program, you can cleanly all traces of it from your system.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Scroll up to the make output and see if you can match these steps to it.
+ And if you were not impressed before, you should be by now!
+
+
+
+
+ Getting a FreeBSD Port
+
+ There are two ways of getting hold of the FreeBSD port for a
+ program. One requires a , the other involves using an
+
+
+
+ Compiling ports from CDROM
+
+ If you answered yes to the question ``Do you want to link the ports
+ collection to your CDROM'' during the FreeBSD installation, the initial
+ setting up will already have been done for you.
+
+ If not, make sure the FreeBSD CDROM is in the drive and mounted on,
+ say, /cdrom. Then do
+
+
+ # mkdir /usr/ports
+ # cd /usr/ports
+ # ln -s /cdrom/ports/distfiles distfiles
+
+
+ to enable the ports make mechanism to find the tarballs (it expects to
+ find them in /usr/ports/distfiles, which is why we sym-linked the
+ CDROM's tarball directory to that directory).
+
+ Now, suppose you want to install the gnats program from the databases
+ directory. Here is how to do it:-
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports
+ # mkdir databases
+ # cp -R /cdrom/ports/databases/gnats databases
+ # cd databases/gnats
+ # make install
+
+
+ Or if you are a serious database user and you want to compare all the
+ ones available in the Ports collection, do
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports
+ # cp -R /cdrom/ports/databases .
+ # cd databases
+ # make install
+
+
+ (yes, that really is a dot on its own after the cp command and not a
+ mistake. It is Unix-ese for ``the current directory'')
+
+ and the ports make mechanism will automatically compile and install
+ all the ports in the databases directory for you!
+
+ If you do not like this method, here is a completely different way of
+ doing it:-
+
+ Create a "link tree" to it using the lndir(1) command that
+ comes with the XFree86 distribution. Find a location with
+ some free space, create a directory there and then cd to it. Then
+ invoke the lndir(1) command with the full pathname of the ``ports''
+ directory on the CDROM as the first argument and . (the current directory)
+ as the second. This might be, for example, something like:
+ lndir /cdrom/ports .
+
+
+ Then you can build ports directly off the CDROM by building them in the
+ link tree you have created.
+
+ Note that there are some ports for which we cannot provide the original
+ source in the CDROM due to licensing limitations. In that case,
+ you will need to look at the section on
+
+
+
+
+ Compiling ports from the Internet
+
+ If you do not have a CDROM, or you want to make sure you get the very
+ latest version of the port you want, you will need to download the
+ for the port. Now this
+ might sound like rather a fiddly job
+ full of pitfalls, but it is actually very easy.
+
+ The key to it is that the FreeBSD FTP server can create on-the-fly
+ for you. Here is how it works,
+ with the gnats program in the databases directory as an example (the
+ bits in square brackets are comments. Do not type them in if you are
+ trying this yourself!):-
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports
+ # mkdir databases
+ # cd databases
+ # ftp ftp.freebsd.org
+ [log in as `ftp' and give your email address when asked for a
+ password. Remember to use binary (also known as image) mode!]
+ > cd /pub/FreeBSD/ports/databases
+ > get gnats.tar [tars up the gnats skeleton for us]
+ > quit
+ # tar xf gnats.tar [extract the gnats skeleton]
+ # cd gnats
+ # make install [build and install gnats]
+
+
+ What happened here? We connected to the FTP server in the usual way
+ and went to its databases sub-directory. When we gave it the command
+ `get gnats.tar', the FTP server up the gnats directory for us.
+
+ We then extracted the gnats skeleton and went into the gnats directory
+ to build the port. As we explained , the make process noticed we did not have a copy of the
+ source locally, so it fetched one before extracting, patching and
+ building it.
+
+ Let's try something more ambitious now. Instead of getting a single
+ port skeleton, let's get a whole sub-directory, for example all the
+ database skeletons in the ports collection. It looks almost the same:-
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports
+ # ftp ftp.freebsd.org
+ [log in as `ftp' and give your email address when asked for a
+ password. Remember to use binary (also known as image) mode!]
+ > cd /pub/FreeBSD/ports
+ > get databases.tar [tars up the databases directory for us]
+ > quit
+ # tar xf databases.tar [extract all the database skeletons]
+ # cd databases
+ # make install [build and install all the database ports]
+
+
+ With half a dozen straightforward commands, we have now got a set of
+ database programs on our FreeBSD machine! All we did that was
+ different from getting a single port skeleton and building it was that
+ we got a whole directory at once, and compiled everything in it at
+ once. Pretty impressive, no?
+
+ If you expect to be installing many ports, it is
+ probably worth downloading all the ports directories.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Skeletons
+
+ A team of compulsive hackers who have forgotten to eat in a frantic
+ attempt to make a deadline? Something unpleasant lurking in the FreeBSD
+ attic? No, a skeleton here is a minimal framework that supplies everything
+ needed to make the ports magic work.
+
+
+
+ Makefile
+
+ The most important component of a skeleton is the Makefile. This contains
+ various statements that specify how the port should be compiled and
+ installed. Here is the Makefile for ElectricFence:-
+
+
+ # New ports collection makefile for: Electric Fence
+ # Version required: 2.0.5
+ # Date created: 13 November 1997
+ # Whom: jraynard
+ #
+ # $Id: book.sgml,v 1.2 1998-04-01 19:12:43 nik Exp $
+ #
+
+ DISTNAME= ElectricFence-2.0.5
+ CATEGORIES= devel
+ MASTER_SITES= ${MASTER_SITE_SUNSITE}
+ MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR= devel/lang/c
+
+ MAINTAINER= jraynard@freebsd.org
+
+ MAN3= libefence.3
+
+ do-install:
+ ${INSTALL_DATA} ${WRKSRC}/libefence.a ${PREFIX}/lib
+ ${INSTALL_MAN} ${WRKSRC}/libefence.3 ${PREFIX}/man/man3
+
+ .include <bsd.port.mk>
+
+
+ The lines beginning with a "#" sign are comments for the benefit
+ of human readers (as in most Unix script files).
+
+ `DISTNAME" specifies the name of the , but without the extension.
+
+ `CATEGORIES" states what kind of program this is. In this case, a
+ utility for developers.
+
+ `MASTER_SITES" is the URL(s) of the master FTP site, which is
+ used to retrieve the if it is not
+ available on the local system. This is a site which is regarded as
+ reputable, and is normally the one from which the program is officially
+ distributed (in so far as any software is "officially" distributed
+ on the Internet).
+
+ `MAINTAINER" is the email address of the person who is
+ responsible for updating the skeleton if, for example a new version
+ of the program comes out.
+
+ Skipping over the next few lines for a minute, the line
+ .include <bsd.port.mk>
+
+ says that the other statements and commands
+ needed for this port are in a standard file called
+ `bsd.port.mk". As these are the same for all ports, there is
+ no point in duplicating them all over the place, so they are kept in a
+ single standard file.
+
+ This is probably not the place to go into a detailed examination of
+ how Makefiles work; suffice it to say that the line starting with ``MAN3''
+ ensures that the ElectricFence man page is compressed after installation,
+ to help conserve your precious disk space. The original port did not
+ provide an ``install'' target, so the three lines from ``do-install''
+ ensure that the files produced by this port are placed in the correct
+ destination.
+
+
+
+
+ The files directory
+
+ The file containing the for
+ the port is called "md5", after the MD5 algorithm
+ used for ports checksums. It lives in a directory with the slightly
+ confusing name of "files".
+
+ This directory can also contain other miscellaneous files that are required
+ by the port and do not belong anywhere else.
+
+
+
+
+ The patches directory
+
+ This directory contains the needed
+ to make everything work properly under FreeBSD.
+
+
+
+
+ The pkg directory
+
+ This program contains three quite useful files:-
+
+
+
+
+
+ COMMENT - a one-line description of the program.
+
+
+
+
+ DESCR - a more detailed description.
+
+
+
+
+ PLIST - a list of all the files that will be created when the program is installed.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ What to do when a port does not work.
+
+ Oh. You can do one of four (4) things :
+
+
+
+
+
+ Fix it yourself. Technical details on how ports work can be found in
+
+
+
+
+ Gripe. This is done by e-mail *ONLY*! Send such e-mail to the &a.ports;
+ and please include the name/version of the port, where you got both the port
+ source & distfile(s) from, and what the text of the error was.
+
+
+
+
+ Forget it. This is the easiest for most - very few of the programs in
+ ports can be classified as `essential'!
+
+
+
+
+ Grab the pre-compiled package from a ftp server. The ``master'' package
+ collection is on FreeBSD's FTP server in the packages directory, though check your local mirror first, please!
+
+ These are more likely to work (on the whole) than trying to compile from
+ source and a lot faster besides! Use the pkg_add(1)
+ program to install a package file on your system.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ I Want to Make a Port!
+
+ Great! Please see the
+ for detailed instructions on how to do this.
+
+
+
+
+ Some Questions and Answers
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I thought this was going to be a discussion about modems??!
+
+
+ A. Ah. You must be thinking of the serial ports on the back of your
+ computer. We are using `port' here to mean the result of `porting' a
+ program from one version of Unix to another. (It is an unfortunate bad
+ habit of computer people to use the same word to refer to several
+ completely different things).
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I thought you were supposed to use packages to install extra
+ programs?
+
+
+ A. Yes, that is usually the quickest and easiest way of doing it.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. So why bother with ports then?
+
+
+ A. Several reasons:-
+
+
+
+
+
+ The licensing conditions on some software distributions
+ require that they be distributed as source code, not binaries.
+
+
+
+
+ Some people do not trust binary distributions. At least with
+ source code you can (in theory) read through it and look for potential
+ problems yourself.
+
+
+
+
+ If you have some local patches, you will need the source to add
+ them yourself.
+
+
+
+
+ You might have opinions on how a program should be compiled
+ that differ from the person who did the package - some people have
+ strong views on what optimisation setting should be used, whether to
+ build debug versions and then strip them or not, etc. etc.
+
+
+
+
+ Some people like having code around, so they can read it if
+ they get bored, hack around with it, borrow from it (licence terms
+ permitting, of course!) and so on.
+
+
+
+
+ If you ain't got the source, it ain't software! ;-)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. What is a patch?
+
+
+ A. A patch is a small (usually) file that specifies how to go from one
+ version of a file to another. It contains text that says, in effect,
+ things like ``delete line 23'', ``add these two lines after line 468''
+ or ``change line 197 to this''. Also known as a `diff', since it is
+ generated by a program of that name.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. What is all this about tarballs?
+
+
+ A. It is a file ending in .tar or .tar.gz (with variations like .tar.Z, or
+ even .tgz if you are trying to squeeze the names into a DOS filesystem).
+
+ Basically, it is a directory tree that has been archived into a single
+ file (.tar) and optionally compressed (.gz). This technique was originally
+ used for Tape ARchives (hence the name `tar'), but it is a
+ widely used way of distributing program source code around the
+ Internet.
+
+ You can see what files are in them, or even extract them yourself, by
+ using the standard Unix tar program, which comes with the base FreeBSD
+ system, like this:-
+
+
+ tar tvzf foobar.tar.gz # View contents of foobar.tar.gz
+ tar xzvf foobar.tar.gz # Extract contents into the current directory
+ tar tvf foobar.tar # View contents of foobar.tar
+ tar xvf foobar.tar # Extract contents into the current directory
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. And a checksum?
+
+
+ A. It is a number generated by adding up all the data in the file you
+ want to check. If any of the characters change, the checksum will no
+ longer be equal to the total, so a simple comparison will allow you to
+ spot the difference. (In practice, it is done in a more complicated way
+ to spot problems like position-swapping, which will not show up with a
+ simplistic addition).
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I did what you said for and it worked great until I tried to install the kermit
+ port:-
+
+ # make install
+ >> cku190.tar.gz doesn't seem to exist on this system.
+ >> Attempting to fetch from ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/archives/.
+
+
+ Why can it not be found? Have I got a dud CDROM?
+
+
+ A. The licensing terms for kermit do not allow us to put the tarball
+ for it on the CDROM, so you will have to fetch it by hand - sorry!
+ The reason why you got all those error messages was because you
+ were not connected to the Internet at the time. Once you have downloaded
+ it from any of the sites above, you can re-start the process (try and
+ choose the nearest site to you, though, to save your time and the
+ Internet's bandwidth).
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I did that, but when I tried to put it into /usr/ports/distfiles I
+ got some error about not having permission.
+
+
+ A. The ports mechanism looks for the tarball in /usr/ports/distfiles,
+ but you will not be able to copy anything there because it is sym-linked
+ to the CDROM, which is read-only. You can tell it to look somewhere
+ else by doing
+
+
+ DISTDIR=/where/you/put/it make install
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. Does the ports scheme only work if you have everything in
+ /usr/ports? My system administrator says I must put everything under
+ /u/people/guests/wurzburger, but it does not seem to work.
+
+
+ A. You can use the PORTSDIR and PREFIX variables to tell the ports
+ mechanism to use different directories. For instance,
+
+
+ make PORTSDIR=/u/people/guests/wurzburger/ports install
+
+
+ will compile the port in /u/people/guests/wurzburger/ports and install
+ everything under /usr/local.
+
+
+
+ make PREFIX=/u/people/guests/wurzburger/local install
+
+
+ will compile it in /usr/ports and install it in
+ /u/people/guests/wurzburger/local.
+
+ And of course
+
+
+ make PORTSDIR=.../ports PREFIX=.../local install
+
+
+ will combine the two (it is too long to fit on the page if I write it
+ in full, but I am sure you get the idea).
+
+ If you do not fancy typing all that in every time you install a port
+ (and to be honest, who would?), it is a good idea to put these variables
+ into your environment.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I do not have a FreeBSD CDROM, but I would like to have all the tarballs
+ handy on my system so I do not have to wait for a download every time I
+ install a port. Is there an easy way to get them all at once?
+
+
+ A. To get every single tarball for the ports collection, do
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports
+ # make fetch
+
+
+ For all the tarballs for a single ports directory, do
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports/directory
+ # make fetch
+
+
+ and for just one port - well, I think you have guessed already.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I know it is probably faster to fetch the tarballs from one of the
+ FreeBSD mirror sites close by. Is there any way to tell the port to
+ fetch them from servers other than ones listed in the MASTER_SITES?
+
+
+ A. Yes. If you know, for example, ftp.FreeBSD.ORG is much closer than
+ sites listed in MASTER_SITES, do as following example.
+ # cd /usr/ports/directory
+ # make MASTER_SITE_OVERRIDE=ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/distfiles/ fetch
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I want to know what files make is going to need before it tries to
+ pull them down.
+
+
+ A. 'make fetch-list' will display a list of the files needed for a port.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. Is there any way to stop the port from compiling? I want to do some
+ hacking on the source before I install it, but it is a bit tiresome having
+ to watch it and hit control-C every time.
+
+
+ A. Doing 'make extract' will stop it after it has fetched and
+ extracted the source code.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I am trying to make my own port and I want to be able to stop it
+ compiling until I have had a chance to see if my patches worked properly.
+ Is there something like 'make extract', but for patches?
+
+
+ A. Yep, 'make patch' is what you want. You will probably find the
+ PATCH_DEBUG option useful as well. And by the way, thank you for
+ your efforts!
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I have heard that some compiler options can cause bugs. Is this true?
+ How can I make sure that I compile ports with the right settings?
+
+
+ A. Yes, with version 2.6.3 of gcc (the version shipped with FreeBSD
+ 2.1.0 and 2.1.5), the -O2 option could result in buggy code unless you
+ used the -fno-strength-reduce option as well. (Most of the ports don't
+ use -O2). You should be able to specify the compiler options
+ used by something like
+
+
+ make CFLAGS='-O2 -fno-strength-reduce' install
+
+
+ or by editing /etc/make.conf, but unfortunately not all ports respect
+ this. The surest way is to do 'make configure', then go into the
+ source directory and inspect the Makefiles by hand, but this can get
+ tedious if the source has lots of sub-directories, each with their own
+ Makefiles.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. There are so many ports it is hard to find the one I want. Is there a
+ list anywhere of what ports are available?
+
+
+ A. Look in the INDEX file in /usr/ports.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I went to install the 'foo' port but the system suddenly stopped
+ compiling it and starting compiling the 'bar' port. What's going on?
+
+
+ A. The 'foo' port needs something that is supplied with 'bar' - for
+ instance, if 'foo' uses graphics, 'bar' might have a library with
+ useful graphics processing routines. Or 'bar' might be a tool that is
+ needed to compile the 'foo' port.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I installed the grizzle program from the ports and frankly it is a
+ complete waste of disk space. I want to delete it but I do not know
+ where it put all the files. Any clues?
+
+
+ A. No problem, just do
+
+
+ pkg_delete grizzle-6.5
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. Hang on a minute, you have to know the version number to use that
+ command. You do not seriously expect me to remember that, do you??
+
+
+ A. Not at all, you can find it out by doing
+
+
+ pkg_info -a | grep grizzle
+
+
+ And it will tell you:-
+
+
+ Information for grizzle-6.5:
+ grizzle-6.5 - the combined piano tutorial, LOGO interpreter and shoot 'em up arcade game.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. Talking of disk space, the ports directory seems to be taking up
+ an awful lot of room. Is it safe to go in there and delete things?
+
+
+ A. Yes, if you have installed the program and are fairly certain you
+ will not need the source again, there is no point in keeping it hanging
+ around. The best way to do this is
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports
+ # make clean
+
+
+ which will go through all the ports subdirectories and delete
+ everything except the skeletons for each port.
+
+
+
+ Q. I tried that and it still left all those tarballs or whatever you
+ called them in the distfiles directory. Can I delete those as well?
+
+
+ A. Yes, if you are sure you have finished with them, those can go as
+ well.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I like having lots and lots of programs to play with. Is there any
+ way of installing all the ports in one go?
+
+
+ A. Just do
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports
+ # make install
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. OK, I tried that, but I thought it would take a very long time so I
+ went to bed and left it to get on with it. When I looked at the
+ computer this morning, it had only done three and a half ports. Did
+ something go wrong?
+
+
+ A. No, the problem is that some of the ports need to ask you questions
+ that we cannot answer for you (eg ``Do you want to print on A4 or US
+ letter sized paper?'') and they need to have someone on hand to answer
+ them.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I really do not want to spend all day staring at the monitor. Any
+ better ideas?
+
+
+ A. OK, do this before you go to bed/work/the local park:-
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports
+ # make -DBATCH install
+
+
+ This will install every port that does not require user
+ input. Then, when you come back, do
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports
+ # make -DIS_INTERACTIVE install
+
+
+ to finish the job.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. At work, we are using frobble, which is in your ports collection,
+ but we have altered it quite a bit to get it to do what we need. Is
+ there any way of making our own packages, so we can distribute it more
+ easily around our sites?
+
+
+ A. No problem, assuming you know how to make patches for your changes:-
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports/somewhere/frobble
+ # make extract
+ # cd work/frobble-2.8
+ [Apply your patches]
+ # cd ../..
+ # make package
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. This ports stuff is really clever. I am desperate to find out how
+ you did it. What is the secret?
+
+
+ A. Nothing secret about it at all, just look at the bsd.ports.mk and
+ bsd.ports.subdir.mk files in your makefiles directory.
+ (Note: readers with an aversion to intricate shell-scripts are advised
+ not to follow this link...)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ System Administration
+
+
+
+ Configuring the FreeBSD Kernel
+
+ Contributed by &a.jehamby;.6 October 1995.
+
+ This large section of the handbook discusses the basics of
+ building your own custom kernel for FreeBSD. This section
+ is appropriate for both novice system administrators and
+ those with advanced Unix experience.
+
+
+
+ Why Build a Custom Kernel?
+
+ Building a custom kernel is one of the most important
+ rites of passage every Unix system administrator must
+ endure. This process, while time-consuming, will provide
+ many benefits to your FreeBSD system. Unlike the GENERIC
+ kernel, which must support every possible SCSI and
+ network card, along with tons of other rarely used
+ hardware support, a custom kernel only contains support
+ for your PC's hardware. This has a number of
+ benefits:
+
+
+
+
+
+ It will take less time to boot because it does not
+ have to spend time probing for hardware which you
+ do not have.
+
+
+
+
+ A custom kernel often uses less memory, which is
+ important because the kernel is the one process which
+ must always be present in memory, and so all of that
+ unused code ties up pages of RAM that your programs
+ would otherwise be able to use. Therefore, on a
+ system with limited RAM, building a custom kernel is
+ of critical importance.
+
+
+
+
+ Finally, there are several kernel options which
+ you can tune to fit your needs, and device driver
+ support for things like sound cards which you can
+ include in your kernel but are not present
+ in the GENERIC kernel.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Building and Installing a Custom Kernel
+
+ First, let us take a quick tour of the kernel build
+ directory. All directories mentioned will be relative to
+ the main /usr/src/sys directory, which is also
+ accessible through /sys. There are a number of
+ subdirectories here representing different parts of the
+ kernel, but the most important, for our purposes, are
+ i386/conf, where you will edit your custom
+ kernel configuration, and compile, which is the
+ staging area where your kernel will be built. Notice the
+ logical organization of the directory tree, with each
+ supported device, filesystem, and option in its own
+ subdirectory. Also, anything inside the i386
+ directory deals with PC hardware only, while everything
+ outside the i386 directory is common to all
+ platforms which FreeBSD could potentially be ported to.
+
+
+
+ Note: If there is not a
+ /usr/src/sys directory on your system, then the
+ kernel source has not been been installed. Follow the
+ instructions for installing packages to add this package
+ to your system.
+
+
+
+ Next, move to the i386/conf directory and copy
+ the GENERIC configuration file to the name you want to
+ give your kernel. For example:
+
+ # cd /usr/src/sys/i386/conf
+ # cp GENERIC MYKERNEL
+
+
+ Traditionally, this name is in all capital letters and,
+ if you are maintaining multiple FreeBSD machines with
+ different hardware, it is a good idea to name it after
+ your machine's hostname. We will call it MYKERNEL for
+ the purpose of this example.
+
+
+
+ Note: You must execute these and all of the
+ following commands under the root account or you will get
+ ``permission denied'' errors.
+
+
+
+ Now, edit MYKERNEL with your favorite text editor. If
+ you are just starting out, the only editor available will
+ probably be vi, which is too complex to explain
+ here, but is covered well in many books in the . Feel free to change the
+ comment lines at the top to reflect your configuration or the
+ changes you have made to differentiate it from GENERIC.
+
+ If you have build a kernel under SunOS or some other BSD
+ operating system, much of this file will be very familiar
+ to you. If you are coming from some other operating
+ system such as DOS, on the other hand, the GENERIC
+ configuration file might seem overwhelming to you, so
+ follow the descriptions in the
+ section slowly and carefully.
+
+
+
+ Note: If you are trying to upgrade your kernel from an
+ older version of FreeBSD, you will probably have to get a new
+ version of config(8) from the same place you got the new
+ kernel sources. It is located in /usr/src/usr.sbin, so
+ you will need to download those sources as well. Re-build and install
+ it before running the next commands.
+
+
+
+ When you are finished, type the following to compile and
+ install your kernel:
+
+ # /usr/sbin/config MYKERNEL
+ # cd ../../compile/MYKERNEL
+ # make depend
+ # make
+ # make install
+
+
+ The new kernel will be copied to the root directory as
+ /kernel and the old kernel will be moved to
+ /kernel.old. Now, shutdown the system and
+ reboot to use your kernel. In case something goes wrong,
+ there are some instructions at the end of this
+ document. Be sure to read the section which explains how
+ to recover in case your new kernel .
+
+
+
+ Note: If you have added any new devices (such
+ as sound cards) you may have to add some to your
+ /dev directory before you can use them.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The Configuration File
+
+ The general format of a configuration file is quite simple.
+ Each line contains a keyword and one or more arguments. For
+ simplicity, most lines only contain one argument. Anything
+ following a # is considered a comment and ignored.
+ The following sections describe each keyword, generally in the
+ order they are listed in GENERIC, although some related
+ keywords have been grouped together in a single section (such
+ as Networking) even though they are actually scattered
+ throughout the GENERIC file.
+ An exhaustive list of options and more detailed explanations
+ of the device lines is present in the LINT configuration file,
+ located in the same directory as GENERIC. If you are in doubt
+ as to the purpose or necessity of a line, check first in LINT.
+
+ The kernel is currently being moved to a better organization
+ of the option handling. Traditionally, each option in the
+ config file was simply converted into a switch
+ for the CFLAGS line of the kernel Makefile. Naturally,
+ this caused a creeping optionism, with nobody really knowing
+ which option has been referenced in what files.
+
+ In the new scheme, every #ifdef that is intended to
+ be dependent upon an option gets this option out of an
+ opt_foo.h declaration file created in the
+ compile directory by config. The list of valid options
+ for config lives in two files: options that do not
+ depend on the architecture are listed in
+ /sys/conf/options, architecture-dependent ones
+ in /sys/arch/conf/options.arch,
+ with arch being for example i386.
+
+
+
+ Mandatory Keywords
+
+ These keywords are required in every kernel you build.
+
+
+
+ machine ``i386''
+
+
+
+ The first keyword is machine, which,
+ since FreeBSD only runs on Intel 386 and compatible
+ chips, is i386.
+
+
+
+ Note: that any keyword which
+ contains numbers used as text must be enclosed in
+ quotation marks, otherwise config gets
+ confused and thinks you mean the actual number
+ 386.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cpu ``cpu_type''
+
+
+
+
+ The next keyword is cpu, which includes
+ support for each CPU supported by FreeBSD. The
+ possible values of cpu_type
+ include:
+
+
+
+ I386_CPU
+
+
+
+ I486_CPU
+
+
+
+ I586_CPU
+
+
+
+ I686_CPU
+
+
+
+
+ and multiple instances of the cpu line may
+ be present with different values of
+ cpu_type as are present in the
+ GENERIC kernel. For a custom kernel, it is best to
+ specify only the cpu you have. If, for example,
+ you have an Intel Pentium, use I586_CPU
+ for cpu_type.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ ident machine_name
+
+
+
+
+ Next, we have ident, which is the
+ identification of the kernel. You should change
+ this from GENERIC to whatever you named your
+ kernel, in this example, MYKERNEL. The value you
+ put in ident will print when you boot up
+ the kernel, so it is useful to give a kernel a
+ different name if you want to keep it separate from
+ your usual kernel (if you want to build an
+ experimental kernel, for example). Note that, as
+ with machine and cpu, enclose
+ your kernel's name in quotation marks if it
+ contains any numbers.
+
+ Since this name is passed to the C compiler as a
+ switch, do not use names like DEBUG, or something that could be confused
+ with another machine or CPU name, like vax.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ maxusers number
+
+
+
+
+ This file sets the size of a number of important
+ system tables. This number is supposed to be
+ roughly equal to the number of simultaneous users
+ you expect to have on your machine. However, under
+ normal circumstances, you will want to set
+ maxusers to at least four, especially if
+ you are using the X Window System or compiling software. The
+ reason is that the most important table set by
+ maxusers is the maximum number of
+ processes, which is set to 20 + 16 *
+ maxusers, so if you set maxusers
+ to one, then you can only have 36 simultaneous
+ processes, including the 18 or so that the system
+ starts up at boot time, and the 15 or so you will
+ probably create when you start the X Window System. Even a
+ simple task like reading a man page will
+ start up nine processes to filter, decompress, and
+ view it. Setting maxusers to 4 will allow
+ you to have up to 84 simultaneous processes, which
+ should be enough for anyone. If, however, you see
+ the dreaded ``proc table full'' error when trying
+ to start another program, or are running a server
+ with a large number of simultaneous users (like
+ Walnut Creek CDROM's FTP site), you can always
+ increase this number and rebuild.
+
+
+
+ Note:maxuser does
+ not limit the number of users which can
+ log into your machine. It simply sets various
+ table sizes to reasonable values considering the
+ maximum number of users you will likely have on
+ your system and how many processes each of them
+ will be running. One keyword which
+ does limit the number of simultaneous
+ remote logins is .
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ config kernel_name root on root_device
+
+
+
+
+ This line specifies the location and name of the
+ kernel. Traditionally the kernel is called
+ vmunix but in FreeBSD, it is aptly named
+ kernel. You should always use
+ kernel for kernel_name because
+ changing it will render numerous system utilities
+ inoperative. The second part of the line specifies
+ the disk and partition where the root filesystem
+ and kernel can be found. Typically this will be
+ wd0 for systems with non-SCSI drives, or
+ sd0 for systems with SCSI drives.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ General Options
+
+ These lines provide kernel support for various
+ filesystems and other options.
+
+
+
+ options MATH_EMULATE
+
+
+
+ This line allows the kernel to simulate a math
+ co-processor if your computer does not have one (386
+ or 486SX). If you have a Pentium, a 486DX, or a
+ 386 or 486SX with a separate 387 or 487 chip, you
+ can comment this line out.
+
+
+
+ Note: The normal math co-processor
+ emulation routines that come with FreeBSD are
+ not very accurate. If you do not have a
+ math co-processor, and you need the best accuracy,
+ I recommend that you change this option to
+ GPL_MATH_EMULATE to use the superior GNU
+ math support, which is not included by default
+ for licensing reasons.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options ``COMPAT_43''
+
+
+
+
+ Compatibility with 4.3BSD. Leave this in; some
+ programs will act strangely if you comment this
+ out.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options BOUNCE_BUFFERS
+
+
+
+
+ ISA devices and EISA devices operating in an ISA
+ compatibility mode can only perform DMA (Direct
+ Memory Access) to memory below 16 megabytes. This
+ option enables such devices to work in systems with
+ more than 16 megabytes of memory.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options UCONSOLE
+
+
+
+
+ Allow users to grab the console, useful for X
+ Windows. For example, you can create a console
+ xterm by typing xterm -C, which will
+ display any `write', `talk', and other messages you
+ receive, as well as any console messages sent by the
+ kernel.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options SYSVSHM
+
+
+
+
+ This option
+ provides for System V shared memory. The most
+ common use of this is the XSHM extension in X
+ Windows, which many graphics-intensive programs
+ (such as the movie player XAnim, and Linux DOOM)
+ will automatically take advantage of for extra
+ speed. If you use the X Window System, you will definitely
+ want to include this.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options SYSVSEM
+
+
+
+
+ Support for System V
+ semaphores. Less commonly used but only adds a few
+ hundred bytes to the kernel.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options SYSVMSG
+
+
+
+
+ Support for System V
+ messages. Again, only adds a few hundred bytes to
+ the kernel.
+
+
+
+ Note: The ipcs(1) command will
+ tell will list any processes using each of
+ these System V facilities.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Filesystem Options
+
+ These options add support for various filesystems.
+ You must include at least one of these to support the
+ device you boot from; typically this will be
+ FFS if you boot from a hard drive, or
+ NFS if you are booting a diskless workstation
+ from Ethernet. You can include other commonly-used
+ filesystems in the kernel, but feel free to comment out
+ support for filesystems you use less often (perhaps the
+ MS-DOS filesystem?), since they will be dynamically
+ loaded from the Loadable Kernel Module directory
+ /lkm the first time you mount a partition of
+ that type.
+
+
+
+ options FFS
+
+
+
+ The basic hard drive
+ filesystem; leave it in if you boot from the hard
+ disk.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options NFS
+
+
+
+
+ Network Filesystem. Unless
+ you plan to mount partitions from a Unix file
+ server over Ethernet, you can comment this out.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options MSDOSFS
+
+
+
+
+ MS-DOS Filesystem. Unless
+ you plan to mount a DOS formatted hard drive
+ partition at boot time, you can safely comment this
+ out. It will be automatically loaded the first
+ time you mount a DOS partition, as described above.
+ Also, the excellent mtools software (in
+ the ports collection) allows you to access DOS
+ floppies without having to mount and unmount them
+ (and does not require MSDOSFS at all).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options ``CD9660''
+
+
+
+
+ ISO 9660 filesystem for
+ CD-ROMs. Comment it out if you do not have a
+ CD-ROM drive or only mount data CD's occasionally
+ (since it will be dynamically loaded the first time
+ you mount a data CD). Audio CD's do not need this
+ filesystem.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options PROCFS
+
+
+
+
+ Process filesystem. This
+ is a pretend filesystem mounted on /proc which
+ allows programs like ps(1) to give you
+ more information on what processes are running.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options MFS
+
+
+
+
+ Memory-mapped file system.
+ This is basically a RAM disk for fast storage of
+ temporary files, useful if you have a lot of swap
+ space that you want to take advantage of. A
+ perfect place to mount an MFS partition is on the
+ /tmp directory, since many programs store
+ temporary data here. To mount an MFS RAM disk on
+ /tmp, add the following line to
+ /etc/fstab and then reboot or type
+ mount /tmp:
+
+ /dev/wd1s2b /tmp mfs rw 0 0
+
+
+
+
+
+ Note: Replace the /dev/wd1s2b
+ with the name of your swap partition, which will
+ be listed in your /etc/fstab as follows:
+
+ /dev/wd1s2b none swap sw 0 0
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Note: Also, the MFS filesystem
+ can not be dynamically loaded, so you
+ must compile it into your kernel if you
+ want to experiment with it.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options "EXT2FS"
+
+
+
+
+ Linux's native file system.
+ With ext2fs support you are able to read and write to Linux
+ partitions. This is useful if you dual-boot FreeBSD and Linux
+ and want to share data between the two systems.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options QUOTA
+
+
+
+
+ Enable disk quotas. If you
+ have a public access system, and do not want users
+ to be able to overflow the /home
+ partition, you can establish disk quotas for each
+ user. Refer to the
+
+ section for more information.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Basic Controllers and Devices
+
+ These sections describe the basic disk, tape, and
+ CD-ROM controllers supported by FreeBSD. There are
+ separate sections for controllers and cards.
+
+
+
+ controller isa0
+
+
+
+ All PC's supported by
+ FreeBSD have one of these. If you have an IBM PS/2
+ (Micro Channel Architecture), then you cannot run
+ FreeBSD at this time.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller pci0
+
+
+
+
+ Include this if you have a
+ PCI motherboard. This enables auto-detection of
+ PCI cards and gatewaying from the PCI to the ISA
+ bus.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller fdc0
+
+
+
+
+ Floppy drive controller:
+ fd0 is the ``A:'' floppy drive, and
+ fd1 is the ``B:'' drive. ft0 is
+ a QIC-80 tape drive attached to the floppy
+ controller. Comment out any lines corresponding to
+ devices you do not have.
+
+
+
+ Note: QIC-80 tape support requires a
+ separate filter program called ft(8), see
+ the manual page for details.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller wdc0
+
+
+
+
+ This is the primary IDE
+ controller. wd0 and wd1 are the
+ master and slave hard drive, respectively.
+ wdc1 is a secondary IDE controller where
+ you might have a third or fourth hard drive, or an
+ IDE CD-ROM. Comment out the lines which do not
+ apply (if you have a SCSI hard drive, you will
+ probably want to comment out all six lines, for
+ example).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device wcd0
+
+
+
+
+ This device
+ provides IDE CD-ROM support. Be sure to leave
+ wdc0 uncommented, and wdc1 if you have
+ more than one IDE controller and your CD-ROM is on
+ the second one card. To use this, you must
+ also include the line options ATAPI.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device npx0 at isa? port ``IO_NPX'' irq 13 vector npxintr
+
+
+
+
+ npx0 is the interface to the floating point math
+ unit in FreeBSD, either the hardware co-processor or the
+ software math emulator. It is NOT optional.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device wt0 at isa? port 0x300 bio irq 5 drq 1 vector wtintr
+
+
+
+
+ Wangtek and Archive
+ QIC-02/QIC-36 tape drive support
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Proprietary CD-ROM support
+
+
+
+
+ The following
+ drivers are for the so-called proprietary
+ CD-ROM drives. These drives have their own
+ controller card or might plug into a sound card
+ such as the SoundBlaster 16. They are not
+ IDE or SCSI. Most older single-speed and
+ double-speed CD-ROMs use these interfaces, while
+ newer quad-speeds are likely to be or .
+
+
+
+ device mcd0 at isa? port 0x300 bio irq 10 vector mcdintr
+
+
+
+ Mitsumi CD-ROM (LU002,
+ LU005, FX001D).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device scd0 at isa? port 0x230 bio
+
+
+
+
+ Sony CD-ROM (CDU31, CDU33A).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller matcd0 at isa? port ? bio
+
+
+
+
+ Matsushita/Panasonic CD-ROM (sold by Creative
+ Labs for SoundBlaster).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ SCSI Device Support
+
+ This section describes the various SCSI controllers
+ and devices supported by FreeBSD.
+
+
+
+ SCSI Controllers
+
+
+
+ The next ten or so lines include support for
+ different kinds of SCSI controllers. Comment out
+ all except for the one(s) you have:
+
+
+
+ controller bt0 at isa? port ``IO_BT0'' bio irq ? vector btintr
+
+
+
+ Most Buslogic controllers
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller uha0 at isa? port ``IO_UHA0'' bio irq ? drq 5 vector uhaintr
+
+
+
+
+ UltraStor 14F and 34F
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller ahc0
+
+
+
+
+ Adaptec 274x/284x/294x
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller ahb0 at isa? bio irq ? vector ahbintr
+
+
+
+
+ Adaptec 174x
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller aha0 at isa? port ``IO_AHA0'' bio irq ? drq 5 vector ahaintr
+
+
+
+
+ Adaptec 154x
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller aic0 at isa? port 0x340 bio irq 11 vector aicintr
+
+
+
+
+ Adaptec 152x and sound cards using Adaptec AIC-6360 (slow!)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller nca0 at isa? port 0x1f88 bio irq 10 vector ncaintr
+
+
+
+
+ ProAudioSpectrum cards using NCR 5380 or Trantor T130
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller sea0 at isa? bio irq 5 iomem 0xc8000 iosiz 0x2000 vector seaintr
+
+
+
+
+ Seagate ST01/02 8 bit controller (slow!)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller wds0 at isa? port 0x350 bio irq 15 drq 6 vector wdsintr
+
+
+
+
+ Western Digital WD7000 controller
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller ncr0
+
+
+
+
+ NCR 53C810, 53C815, 53C825, 53C860, 53C875 PCI SCSI controller
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options ``SCSI_DELAY=15''
+
+
+
+
+ This causes the
+ kernel to pause 15 seconds before probing each SCSI
+ device in your system. If you only have IDE hard
+ drives, you can ignore this, otherwise you will
+ probably want to lower this number, perhaps to 5
+ seconds, to speed up booting. Of course if you do
+ this, and FreeBSD has trouble recognizing your SCSI
+ devices, you will have to raise it back up.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller scbus0
+
+
+
+
+ If you have any SCSI
+ controllers, this line provides generic SCSI
+ support. If you do not have SCSI, you can comment
+ this, and the following three lines, out.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device sd0
+
+
+
+
+ Support for SCSI hard
+ drives.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device st0
+
+
+
+
+ Support for SCSI tape
+ drives.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device cd0
+
+
+
+
+ Support for SCSI CD-ROM
+ drives.
+
+
+
+ Note that the number 0 in the above entries
+ is slightly misleading: all these devices are
+ automatically configured as they are found, regardless
+ of how many of them are hooked up to the SCSI bus(es),
+ and which target IDs they have.
+
+ If you want to ``wire down'' specific target IDs to
+ particular devices, refer to the appropriate section
+ of the LINT kernel config file.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Console, Bus Mouse, and X Server Support
+
+ You must choose one of these two console types, and, if you plan
+ to use the X Window System with the vt220 console, enable the
+ XSERVER option and optionally, a bus mouse or PS/2 mouse device.
+
+
+
+ device sc0 at isa? port ``IO_KBD' tty irq 1 vector scintr
+
+
+
+ sc0 is the default
+ console driver, which resembles an SCO console.
+ Since most full-screen programs access the console
+ through a terminal database library like
+ termcap, it should not matter much whether
+ you use this or vt0, the VT220 compatible
+ console driver. When you log in, set your TERM
+ variable to ``scoansi'' if full-screen programs
+ have trouble running under this console.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device vt0 at isa? port ``IO_KBD'' tty irq 1 vector pcrint
+
+
+
+
+ This is a VT220-compatible
+ console driver, backwards compatible to VT100/102.
+ It works well on some laptops which have hardware
+ incompatibilities with sc0. Also, set
+ your TERM variable to ``vt100'' or ``vt220'' when
+ you log in. This driver might also prove useful
+ when connecting to a large number of different
+ machines over the network, where the termcap
+ or terminfo entries for the sc0
+ device are often not available -- ``vt100'' should be
+ available on virtually any platform.
+
+
+
+ options ``PCVT_FREEBSD=210''
+
+
+
+ Required
+ with the vt0 console driver.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options XSERVER
+
+
+
+
+ Only applicable with the vt0 console driver.
+ This includes code
+ required to run the XFree86 X Window
+ Server under the vt0 console driver.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device mse0 at isa? port 0x23c tty irq 5 vector ms
+
+
+
+
+ Use this device if you have a Logitech or
+ ATI InPort bus mouse card.
+
+
+
+ Note: If you have a serial mouse,
+ ignore these two lines, and instead, make sure
+ the appropriate port is enabled (probably
+ COM1).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device psm0 at isa? port ``IO_KBD'' conflicts tty irq 12 vector psmintr
+
+
+
+
+ Use this device if your
+ mouse plugs into the PS/2 mouse port.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Serial and Parallel Ports
+
+ Nearly all systems have these. If you are attaching a
+ printer to one of these ports, the section of the handbook is very
+ useful. If you are using modem, provides extensive detail on
+ serial port configuration for use with such devices.
+
+
+
+ device sio0 at isa? port ``IO_COM1'' tty irq 4 vector siointr
+
+
+
+ sio0
+ through sio3 are the four serial ports
+ referred to as COM1 through COM4 in the MS-DOS
+ world. Note that if you have an internal modem on
+ COM4 and a serial port at COM2 you will have to
+ change the IRQ of the modem to 2 (for obscure
+ technical reasons IRQ 2 = IRQ 9) in order to access
+ it from FreeBSD. If you have a multiport serial
+ card, check the manual page for sio(4) for
+ more information on the proper values for these
+ lines. Some video cards (notably
+ those based on S3 chips) use IO addresses of the
+ form 0x*2e8, and since many cheap serial
+ cards do not fully decode the 16-bit IO address
+ space, they clash with these cards, making the
+ COM4 port practically unavailable.
+
+ Each serial port is required to have a unique
+ IRQ (unless you are using one of the multiport cards
+ where shared interrupts are supported), so the default
+ IRQs for COM3 and COM4 cannot be used.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device lpt0 at isa? port? tty irq 7 vector lptintr
+
+
+
+
+ lpt0 through lpt2
+ are the three printer ports you could conceivably
+ have. Most people just have one, though, so feel
+ free to comment out the other two lines if you do
+ not have them.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Networking
+
+ FreeBSD, as with Unix in general, places a
+ big emphasis on networking. Therefore, even
+ if you do not have an Ethernet card, pay attention to
+ the mandatory options and the dial-up networking
+ support.
+
+
+
+ options INET
+
+ Networking support. Leave it in even if you do not plan
+ to be connected to a network. Most programs require at least
+ loopback networking (i.e. making network connections within your
+ PC) so this is essentially mandatory.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Ethernet cards
+
+
+
+
+ The next lines enable support for various Ethernet
+ cards. If you do not have a network card, you can
+ comment out all of these lines. Otherwise, you will
+ want to leave in support for your particular
+ Ethernet card(s):
+
+
+
+ device de0
+
+
+
+ Ethernet adapters based on Digital Equipment DC21040,
+ DC21041 or DC21140 chips
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device fxp0
+
+
+
+
+ Intel EtherExpress Pro/100B
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device vx0
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com 3C590 and 3C595 (buggy)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device cx0 at isa? port 0x240 net irq 15 drq 7 vector cxintr
+
+
+
+
+ Cronyx/Sigma multiport
+ sync/async (with Cisco or PPP framing)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device ed0 at isa? port 0x280 net irq 5 iomem 0xd8000 vector edintr
+
+
+
+
+ Western Digital and SMC 80xx and 8216; Novell NE1000
+ and NE2000; 3Com 3C503; HP PC Lan Plus (HP27247B and HP27252A)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device el0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 9 vector elintr
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com 3C501 (slow!)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device eg0 at isa? port 0x310 net irq 5 vector egintr
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com 3C505
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device ep0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 10 vector epintr
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com 3C509 (buggy)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device fe0 at isa? port 0x240 net irq ? vector feintr
+
+
+
+
+ Fujitsu MB86960A/MB86965A Ethernet
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device fea0 at isa? net irq ? vector feaintr
+
+
+
+
+ DEC DEFEA EISA FDDI adapter
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device ie0 at isa? port 0x360 net irq 7 iomem 0xd0000 vector ieintr
+
+
+
+
+ AT&T StarLAN 10 and EN100; 3Com 3C507;
+ unknown NI5210
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device ix0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 10 iomem 0xd0000 iosiz 32768 vector ixintr
+
+
+
+
+ Intel EtherExpress 16
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device le0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 5 iomem 0xd0000 vector le_intr
+
+
+
+
+ Digital Equipment EtherWorks 2 and EtherWorks
+ 3 (DEPCA, DE100, DE101, DE200, DE201, DE202,
+ DE203, DE204, DE205, DE422)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device lnc0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 10 drq 0 vector lncintr
+
+
+
+
+ Lance/PCnet cards (Isolan, Novell NE2100,
+ NE32-VL)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device ze0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 5 iomem 0xd8000 vector zeintr
+
+
+
+
+ IBM/National Semiconductor PCMCIA ethernet
+ controller.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device zp0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 10 iomem 0xd8000 vector zpintr
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com PCMCIA Etherlink III
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Note: With certain cards (notably the
+ NE2000) you will have to change the port and/or IRQ
+ since there is no ``standard'' location for these
+ cards.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device loop
+
+
+
+
+ loop is the
+ generic loopback device for TCP/IP. If you telnet
+ or FTP to localhost
+ (a.k.a. 127.0.0.1) it will come back at
+ you through this pseudo-device. Mandatory.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device ether
+
+
+
+
+ ether is only
+ needed if you have an Ethernet card and includes
+ generic Ethernet protocol code.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device sl number
+
+
+
+
+ sl is for SLIP (Serial Line Internet
+ Protocol) support. This has been almost entirely
+ supplanted by PPP, which is easier to set up,
+ better suited for modem-to-modem connections, as
+ well as more powerful. The number after
+ sl specifies how many simultaneous SLIP
+ sessions to support. This handbook has more
+ information on setting up a SLIP or .
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device ppp number
+
+
+
+
+ ppp is for kernel-mode PPP (Point-to-Point
+ Protocol) support for dial-up Internet connections.
+ There is also version of PPP implemented as a user
+ application that uses the tun and offers
+ more flexibility and features such as demand
+ dialing. If you still want to use this PPP driver,
+ read the
+ section of the handbook. As with the sl
+ device, number specifies how many
+ simultaneous PPP connections to support.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device tun number
+
+
+
+
+ tun is used by the user-mode PPP software.
+ This program is easy to set up and very fast. It
+ also has special features such as automatic
+ dial-on-demand. The number after tun
+ specifies the number of simultaneous PPP sessions
+ to support. See the section of the handbook for
+ more information.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device bpfilter number
+
+
+
+
+ Berkeley packet filter. This pseudo-device allows
+ network interfaces to be placed in promiscuous
+ mode, capturing every packet on a broadcast network
+ (e.g. an ethernet). These packets can be captured
+ to disk and/or examined with the
+ tcpdump(1) program. Note that
+ implementation of this capability can seriously
+ compromise your overall network security.
+ The number after bpfilter is the number of
+ interfaces that can be examined
+ simultaneously. Optional, not recommended except
+ for those who are fully aware of the potential
+ pitfalls. Not all network cards support this
+ capability.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Sound cards
+
+ This is the first section containing lines that are
+ not in the GENERIC kernel. To include sound card
+ support, you will have to copy the appropriate lines from
+ the LINT kernel (which contains support for
+ every device) as follows:
+
+
+
+ controller snd0
+
+
+
+ Generic sound driver code.
+ Required for all of the following sound cards
+ except pca.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device pas0 at isa? port 0x388 irq 10 drq 6 vector pasintr
+
+
+
+
+ ProAudioSpectrum digital audio and MIDI.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device sb0 at isa? port 0x220 irq 7 conflicts drq 1 vector sbintr
+
+
+
+
+ SoundBlaster digital audio.
+
+
+
+ Note: If your SoundBlaster is on a
+ different IRQ (such as 5), change irq 7
+ to, for example, irq 5 and remove the
+ conflicts keyword. Also, you must add
+ the line: options ``SBC_IRQ=5''
+
+ Note: If your SB16 is on a different
+ 16-bit DMA channel (such as 6 or 7), change the
+ drq 5 keyword appropriately, and then
+ add the line: options
+ "SB16_DMA=6"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device sbmidi0 at isa? port 0x330
+
+
+
+
+ SoundBlaster 16 MIDI interface. If you have a
+ SoundBlaster 16, you must include this line, or the
+ kernel will not compile.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device gus0 at isa? port 0x220 irq 10 drq 1 vector gusintr
+
+
+
+
+ Gravis Ultrasound.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device mss0 at isa? port 0x530 irq 10 drq 1 vector adintr
+
+
+
+
+ Microsoft Sound System.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device opl0 at isa? port 0x388 conflicts
+
+
+
+
+ AdLib FM-synthesis audio. Include this line for
+ AdLib, SoundBlaster, and ProAudioSpectrum users, if
+ you want to play MIDI songs with a program such as
+ playmidi (in the ports collection).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device mpu0 at isa? port 0x330 irq 6 drq 0
+
+
+
+
+ Roland MPU-401 stand-alone card.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device uart0 at isa? port 0x330 irq 5 vector ``m6850intr''
+
+
+
+
+ Stand-alone 6850 UART for MIDI.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device pca0 at isa? port ``IO_TIMER1'' tty
+
+
+
+
+ Digital audio through PC speaker. This is going to
+ be very poor sound quality and quite CPU-intensive,
+ so you have been warned (but it does not require a
+ sound card).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Note: There is some additional
+ documentation in
+ /usr/src/sys/i386/isa/sound/sound.doc.
+ Also, if you add any of these devices, be sure to
+ create the sound .
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Pseudo-devices
+
+ Pseudo-device drivers are parts of the kernel that act
+ like device drivers but do not correspond to any actual
+ hardware in the machine. The
+ pseudo-devices are in that section, while the remainder
+ are here.
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device gzip
+
+
+
+ gzip allows you to run FreeBSD programs
+ that have been compressed with gzip. The
+ programs in /stand are compressed so it
+ is a good idea to have this option in your kernel.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device log
+
+
+
+
+ log is used for logging of kernel error
+ messages. Mandatory.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device pty number
+
+
+
+
+ pty is a ``pseudo-terminal'' or simulated
+ login port. It is used by incoming telnet
+ and rlogin sessions, xterm, and some other
+ applications such as emacs. The number
+ indicates the number of ptys to create.
+ If you need more than GENERIC default of 16
+ simultaneous xterm windows and/or remote logins, be
+ sure to increase this number accordingly, up to a
+ maximum of 64.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device snp number
+
+
+
+
+ Snoop device. This pseudo-device allows one
+ terminal session to watch another using the
+ watch(8) command. Note that
+ implementation of this capability has important
+ security and privacy implications. The
+ number after snp is the total number of
+ simultaneous snoop sessions. Optional.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device vn
+
+
+
+
+ Vnode driver. Allows a file to be treated as a
+ device after being set up with the
+ vnconfig(8) command. This driver can be
+ useful for manipulating floppy disk images and
+ using a file as a swap device (e.g. an MS Windows
+ swap file). Optional.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device ccd number
+
+
+
+
+ Concatenated disks. This pseudo-device allows you to
+ concatenate multiple disk partitions into one large
+ ``meta''-disk. The number after ccd is the
+ total number of concatenated disks (not total number of
+ disks that can be concatenated) that can be created.
+ (See ccd(4) and ccdconfig(8) man pages
+ for more details.) Optional.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Joystick, PC Speaker, Miscellaneous
+
+ This section describes some miscellaneous hardware
+ devices supported by FreeBSD. Note that none of these
+ lines are included in the GENERIC kernel, you will have
+ to copy them from this handbook or the LINT kernel
+ (which contains support for every device):
+
+
+
+ device joy0 at isa? port ``IO_GAME''
+
+
+
+ PC joystick device.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device speaker
+
+
+
+
+ Supports IBM BASIC-style noises through the PC
+ speaker. Some fun programs which use this are
+ /usr/sbin/spkrtest, which is a shell
+ script that plays some simple songs, and
+ /usr/games/piano which lets you play songs
+ using the keyboard as a simple piano (this file
+ only exists if you have installed the games
+ package). Also, the excellent text role-playing
+ game NetHack (in the ports collection) can be
+ configured to use this device to play songs when
+ you play musical instruments in the game.
+
+
+
+ See also the device.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Making Device Nodes
+
+ Almost every device in the kernel has a corresponding
+ ``node'' entry in the /dev directory. These
+ nodes look like regular files, but are actually special
+ entries into the kernel which programs use to access the
+ device. The shell script /dev/MAKEDEV, which is
+ executed when you first install the operating system,
+ creates nearly all of the device nodes supported.
+ However, it does not create all of them, so when
+ you add support for a new device, it pays to make sure
+ that the appropriate entries are in this directory, and
+ if not, add them. Here is a simple example:
+
+ Suppose you add the IDE CD-ROM support to the kernel.
+ The line to add is:
+
+ controller wcd0
+
+
+ This means that you should look for some entries that
+ start with wcd0 in the /dev directory,
+ possibly followed by a letter, such as `c', or preceded
+ by the letter 'r', which means a `raw' device. It turns
+ out that those files are not there, so I must change to
+ the /dev directory and type:
+
+ # sh MAKEDEV wcd0
+
+
+ When this script finishes, you will find that there are
+ now wcd0c and rwcd0c entries in
+ /dev so you know that it executed correctly.
+
+ For sound cards, the command:
+
+ # sh MAKEDEV snd0
+
+
+ creates the appropriate entries. Note: when creating device
+ nodes for devices such as sound cards, if other people have
+ access to your machine, it may be desirable to
+ protect the devices from outside access by adding them to the
+ /etc/fbtab file. See man fbtab for
+ more information.
+
+ Follow this simple procedure for any other non-GENERIC
+ devices which do not have entries.
+
+
+
+ Note: All SCSI controllers use the same set
+ of /dev entries, so you do not need to create
+ these. Also, network cards and SLIP/PPP pseudo-devices
+ do not have entries in /dev at all, so you do
+ not have to worry about these either.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ If Something Goes Wrong
+
+ There are four categories of trouble that can occur when
+ building a custom kernel. They are:
+
+
+
+ Config command fails
+
+
+
+ If the config
+ command fails when you give it your kernel
+ description, you have probably made a simple error
+ somewhere. Fortunately, config will print
+ the line number that it had trouble with, so you can
+ quickly skip to it with vi. For example, if
+ you see:
+
+ config: line 17: syntax error
+
+
+ you can skip to the problem in vi by typing
+ ``17G'' in command mode. Make sure the keyword is
+ typed correctly, by comparing it to the GENERIC
+ kernel or another reference.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Make command fails
+
+
+
+
+ If the make
+ command fails, it usually signals an error in your
+ kernel description, but not severe enough for
+ config to catch it. Again, look over your
+ configuration, and if you still cannot resolve the
+ problem, send mail to the &a.questions; with your kernel
+ configuration, and it should be diagnosed very
+ quickly.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Kernel will not boot
+
+
+
+
+ If your new kernel
+ does not boot, or fails to recognize your devices,
+ do not panic! Fortunately, BSD has an excellent
+ mechanism for recovering from incompatible kernels.
+ Simply type the name of the kernel you want to boot
+ from (i.e. ``kernel.old'') at the FreeBSD boot
+ prompt instead of pressing return. When
+ reconfiguring a kernel, it is always a good idea to
+ keep a kernel that is known to work on hand.
+
+ After booting with a good kernel you can check over
+ your configuration file and try to build it again.
+ One helpful resource is the
+ /var/log/messages file which records, among
+ other things, all of the kernel messages from every
+ successful boot. Also, the dmesg(8) command
+ will print the kernel messages from the current boot.
+
+
+
+ Note: If you are having trouble building
+ a kernel, make sure to keep a GENERIC, or some
+ other kernel that is known to work on hand as a
+ different name that will not get erased on the next
+ build. You cannot rely on kernel.old
+ because when installing a new kernel,
+ kernel.old is overwritten with the last
+ installed kernel which may be non-functional.
+ Also, as soon as possible, move the working kernel
+ to the proper ``kernel'' location or commands such
+ as ps(1) will not work properly. The
+ proper command to ``unlock'' the kernel file that
+ make installs (in order to move another
+ kernel back permanently) is:
+
+ # chflags noschg /kernel
+
+
+ And, if you want to ``lock'' your new kernel into place, or any file
+ for that matter, so that it cannot be moved or tampered with:
+
+ # chflags schg /kernel
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Kernel works, but ps does not work any more!
+
+
+
+
+ If you have installed a different version
+ of the kernel from the one that the system utilities
+ have been built with, for example, an experimental
+ ``2.2.0'' kernel on a 2.1.0-RELEASE system, many
+ system-status commands like ps(1) and
+ vmstat(8) will not work any more. You must
+ recompile the libkvm library as well as
+ these utilities. This is one reason it is not
+ normally a good idea to use a different version of
+ the kernel from the rest of the operating system.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Security
+
+
+
+ DES, MD5, and Crypt
+
+ Contributed by &a.wollman;24 September 1995.
+
+ In order to protect the security of passwords on UN*X systems from
+ being easily exposed, passwords have traditionally been scrambled in
+ some way. Starting with Bell Labs' Seventh Edition Unix, passwords
+ were encrypted using what the security people call a ``one-way hash
+ function''. That is to say, the password is transformed in such a way
+ that the original password cannot be regained except by brute-force
+ searching the space of possible passwords. Unfortunately, the only
+ secure method that was available to the AT&T researchers at the
+ time was based on DES, the Data Encryption Standard. This causes only
+ minimal difficulty for commercial vendors, but is a serious problem
+ for an operating system like FreeBSD where all the source code is
+ freely available, because national governments in many places like to
+ place restrictions on cross-border transport of DES and other
+ encryption software.
+
+ So, the FreeBSD team was faced with a dilemma: how could we provide
+ compatibility with all those UNIX systems out there while still not
+ running afoul of the law? We decided to take a dual-track approach:
+ we would make distributions which contained only a non-regulated
+ password scrambler, and then provide as a separate add-on library the
+ DES-based password hash. The password-scrambling function was moved
+ out of the C library to a separate library, called `libcrypt'
+ because the name of the C function to implement it is
+ `crypt'. In FreeBSD 1.x and some pre-release 2.0 snapshots,
+ the non-regulated scrambler uses an insecure function written by Nate
+ Williams; in subsequent releases this was replaced by a mechanism
+ using the RSA Data Security, Inc., MD5 one-way hash function. Because
+ neither of these functions involve encryption, they are believed to be
+ exportable from the US and importable into many other countries.
+
+ Meanwhile, work was also underway on the DES-based password hash
+ function. First, a version of the `crypt' function which was
+ written outside the US was imported, thus synchronizing the US and
+ non-US code. Then, the library was modified and split into two; the
+ DES `libcrypt' contains only the code involved in performing
+ the one-way password hash, and a separate `libcipher' was
+ created with the entry points to actually perform encryption. The
+ code was partitioned in this way to make it easier to get an export
+ license for the compiled library.
+
+
+
+ Recognizing your `crypt' mechanism
+
+ It is fairly easy to recognize whether a particular password
+ string was created using the DES- or MD5-based hash function.
+ MD5 password strings always begin with the characters
+ `$1$'. DES password strings do not have
+ any particular identifying characteristics, but they are shorter
+ than MD5 passwords, and are coded in a 64-character alphabet
+ which does not include the `$' character, so a
+ relatively short string which doesn't begin with a dollar sign is
+ very likely a DES password.
+
+ Determining which library is being used on your system is fairly
+ easy for most programs, except for those like `init' which
+ are statically linked. (For those programs, the only way is to try
+ them on a known password and see if it works.) Programs which use
+ `crypt' are linked against `libcrypt', which for
+ each type of library is a symbolic link to the appropriate
+ implementation. For example, on a system using the DES versions:
+
+
+
+ $ cd /usr/lib
+ $ ls -l /usr/lib/libcrypt*
+ lrwxr-xr-x 1 bin bin 13 Sep 5 12:50 libcrypt.a -> libdescrypt.a
+ lrwxr-xr-x 1 bin bin 18 Sep 5 12:50 libcrypt.so.2.0 -> libdescrypt.so.2.0
+ lrwxr-xr-x 1 bin bin 15 Sep 5 12:50 libcrypt_p.a -> libdescrypt_p.a
+
+
+
+ On a system using the MD5-based libraries, the same links will be
+ present, but the target will be `libscrypt' rather than
+ `libdescrypt'.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ S/Key
+
+ Contributed by &a.wollman;25 September 1995.
+
+ S/Key is a one-time password scheme based on a one-way hash function
+ (in our version, this is MD4 for compatibility; other versions have
+ used MD5 and DES-MAC). S/Key has been a standard part of all FreeBSD
+ distributions since version 1.1.5, and is also implemented on a large
+ and growing number of other systems. S/Key is a registered trademark
+ of Bell Communications Research, Inc.
+
+ There are three different sorts of passwords which we will talk about
+ in the discussion below. The first is your usual UNIX-style or Kerberos
+ password; we will call this a ``UNIX password''. The second sort is the
+ one-time password which is generated by the S/Key `key' program and
+ accepted by the `keyinit' program and the login prompt; we will call
+ this a ``one-time password''. The final sort of password is the
+ secret password which you give to the `key' program (and sometimes the
+ `keyinit' program) which it uses to generate one-time passwords; we will
+ call it a ``secret password'' or just unqualified ``password''.
+
+ The secret password does not necessarily have anything to do with your
+ UNIX password (while they can be the same, this is not recommended).
+ While UNIX passwords are limited to eight characters in length, your
+ S/Key secret password can be as long as you like; I use seven-word
+ phrases. In general, the S/Key system operates completely
+ independently of the UNIX password system.
+
+ There are in addition two other sorts of data involved in the S/Key
+ system; one is called the ``seed'' or (confusingly) ``key'', and
+ consists of two letters and five digits, and the other is the
+ ``iteration count'' and is a number between 100 and 1. S/Key
+ constructs a one-time password from these components by concatenating
+ the seed and the secret password, then applying a one-way hash (the
+ RSA Data Security, Inc., MD4 secure hash function) iteration-count
+ times, and turning the result into six short English words. The
+ `login' and `su' programs keep track of the last one-time
+ password used, and the user is authenticated if the hash of the
+ user-provided password is equal to the previous password. Because a
+ one-way hash function is used, it is not possible to generate future
+ one-time passwords having overheard one which was successfully used;
+ the iteration count is decremented after each successful login to keep
+ the user and login program in sync. (When you get the iteration count
+ down to 1, it is time to reinitialize S/Key.)
+
+ There are four programs involved in the S/Key system which we will
+ discuss below. The `key' program accepts an iteration count, a
+ seed, and a secret password, and generates a one-time password. The
+ `keyinit' program is used to initialized S/Key, and to change
+ passwords, iteration counts, or seeds; it takes either a secret
+ password, or an iteration count, seed, and one-time password. The
+ `keyinfo' program examines the /etc/skeykeys file and
+ prints out the invoking user's current iteration count and seed.
+ Finally, the `login' and `su' programs contain the necessary
+ logic to accept S/Key one-time passwords for authentication. The
+ `login' program is also capable of disallowing the use of UNIX
+ passwords on connections coming from specified addresses.
+
+ There are four different sorts of operations we will cover. The first
+ is using the `keyinit' program over a secure connection to set up
+ S/Key for the first time, or to change your password or seed. The
+ second operation is using the `keyinit' program over an insecure
+ connection, in conjunction with the `key' program over a secure
+ connection, to do the same. The third is using the `key' program to
+ log in over an insecure connection. The fourth is using the `key'
+ program to generate a number of keys which can be written down or
+ printed out to carry with you when going to some location without
+ secure connections to anywhere (like at a conference).
+
+
+
+ Secure connection initialization
+
+ To initialize S/Key, change your password, or change your seed while
+ logged in over a secure connection (e.g., on the console of a machine),
+ use the `keyinit' command without any parameters while logged in as
+ yourself:
+
+
+
+ $ keyinit
+ Updating wollman: ) these will not appear if you
+ Old key: ha73895 ) have not used S/Key before
+ Reminder - Only use this method if you are directly connected.
+ If you are using telnet or rlogin exit with no password and use keyinit -s.
+ Enter secret password: ) I typed my pass phrase here
+ Again secret password: ) I typed it again
+
+ ID wollman s/key is 99 ha73896 ) discussed below
+ SAG HAS FONT GOUT FATE BOOM )
+
+
+
+ There is a lot of information here. At the `Enter secret password:'
+ prompt, you should enter some password or phrase (I use phrases of
+ minimum seven words) which will be needed to generate login keys. The
+ line starting `ID' gives the parameters of your particular S/Key
+ instance: your login name, the iteration count, and seed. When
+ logging in with S/Key, the system will remember these parameters and
+ present them back to you so you do not have to remember them. The last
+ line gives the particular one-time password which corresponds to those
+ parameters and your secret password; if you were to re-login
+ immediately, this one-time password is the one you would use.
+
+
+
+
+ Insecure connection initialization
+
+ To initialize S/Key or change your password or seed over an insecure
+ connection, you will need to already have a secure connection to some
+ place where you can run the `key' program; this might be in the form
+ of a desk accessory on a Macintosh, or a shell prompt on a machine you
+ trust (we will show the latter). You will also need to make up an
+ iteration count (100 is probably a good value), and you may make up
+ your own seed or use a randomly-generated one. Over on the insecure
+ connection (to the machine you are initializing), use the `keyinit -s'
+ command:
+
+
+
+ $ keyinit -s
+ Updating wollman:
+ Old key: kh94741
+ Reminder you need the 6 English words from the skey command.
+ Enter sequence count from 1 to 9999: 100 ) I typed this
+ Enter new key [default kh94742]:
+ s/key 100 kh94742
+
+
+
+ To accept the default seed (which the `keyinit' program confusingly
+ calls a `key'), press return. Then move over to your secure
+ connection or S/Key desk accessory, and give it the same parameters:
+
+
+
+ $ key 100 kh94742
+ Reminder - Do not use this program while logged in via telnet or rlogin.
+ Enter secret password: ) I typed my secret password
+ HULL NAY YANG TREE TOUT VETO
+
+
+
+ Now switch back over to the insecure connection, and copy the one-time
+ password generated by `key' over to the `keyinit' program:
+
+
+
+ s/key access password: HULL NAY YANG TREE TOUT VETO
+
+ ID wollman s/key is 100 kh94742
+ HULL NAY YANG TREE TOUT VETO
+
+
+
+ The rest of the description from the previous section applies here as
+ well.
+
+
+
+
+ Diversion: a login prompt
+
+ Before explaining how to generate one-time passwords, we should go
+ over an S/Key login prompt:
+
+
+
+ $ telnet himalia
+ Trying 18.26.0.186...
+ Connected to himalia.lcs.mit.edu.
+ Escape character is '^]'.
+ s/key 92 hi52030
+ Password:
+
+
+
+ Note that, before prompting for a password, the login program
+ prints out the iteration number and seed which you will need in order
+ to generate the appropriate key. You will also find a useful feature
+ (not shown here): if you press return at the password prompt, the
+ login program will turn echo on, so you can see what you are typing.
+ This can be extremely useful if you are attempting to type in an S/Key
+ by hand, such as from a printout.
+
+ If this machine were configured to disallow UNIX passwords over a
+ connection from my machine, the prompt would have also included the
+ annotation `(s/key required)', indicating that only S/Key one-time
+ passwords will be accepted.
+
+
+
+
+ Generating a single one-time password
+
+ Now, to generate the one-time password needed to answer this login
+ prompt, we use a trusted machine and the `key' program. (There are
+ versions of the `key' program from DOS and Windows machines, and there
+ is an S/Key desk accessory for Macintosh computers as well.) The
+ command-line `key' program takes as its parameters the iteration count
+ and seed; you can cut-and-paste right from the login prompt starting
+ at ``key'' to the end of the line. Thus:
+
+
+
+ $ key 92 hi52030 ) pasted from previous section
+ Reminder - Do not use this program while logged in via telnet or rlogin.
+ Enter secret password: ) I typed my secret password
+ ADEN BED WOLF HAW HOT STUN
+
+
+
+ And in the other window:
+
+
+
+ s/key 92 hi52030 ) from previous section
+ Password:
+ (turning echo on)
+ Password:ADEN BED WOLF HAW HOT STUN
+ Last login: Wed Jun 28 15:31:00 from halloran-eldar.l
+ [etc.]
+
+
+
+ This is the easiest mechanism if you have a trusted machine.
+ There is a Java S/Key key applet,
+ The Java OTP Calculator,
+ that you can download and run locally on any Java supporting brower.
+
+
+
+
+ Generating multiple one-time passwords
+
+ Sometimes we have to go places where no trusted machines or
+ connections are available. In this case, it is possible to use the
+ `key' command to generate a number of one-time passwords in the same
+ command; these can then be printed out. For example:
+
+
+
+ $ key -n 25 57 zz99999
+ Reminder - Do not use this program while logged in via telnet or rlogin.
+ Enter secret password:
+ 33: WALT THY MALI DARN NIT HEAD
+ 34: ASK RICE BEAU GINA DOUR STAG
+ [...]
+ 56: AMOS BOWL LUG FAT CAIN INCH
+ 57: GROW HAYS TUN DISH CAR BALM
+
+
+
+ The `' requests twenty-five keys in sequence; the `57' indicates
+ the ending iteration number; and the rest is as before. Note that
+ these are printed out in reverse order of eventual use. If you are
+ really paranoid, you might want to write the results down by hand;
+ otherwise you can cut-and-paste into `lpr'. Note that each line shows
+ both the iteration count and the one-time password; you may still find
+ it handy to scratch off passwords as you use them.
+
+
+
+
+ Restricting use of UNIX passwords
+
+ The configuration file /etc/skey.access can be used to
+ configure restrictions on the use of UNIX passwords based on the host
+ name, user name, terminal port, or IP address of a login session. The
+ complete format of the file is documented in the skey.access(5)
+ manual page; there are also some security cautions there which should
+ be read before depending on this file for security.
+
+ If there is no /etc/skey.access file (which is the default
+ state as FreeBSD is shipped), then all users will be allowed to use
+ UNIX passwords. If the file exists, however, then all users will be
+ required to use S/Key unless explicitly permitted to do otherwise by
+ configuration statements in the skey.access file. In all cases,
+ UNIX passwords are permitted on the console.
+
+ Here is a sample configuration file which illustrates the three most
+ common sorts of configuration statements:
+
+
+
+ permit internet 18.26.0.0 255.255.0.0
+ permit user jrl
+ permit port ttyd0
+
+
+
+ The first line (`permit internet') allows users whose IP source
+ address (which is vulnerable to spoofing) matches the specified value
+ and mask, to use UNIX passwords. This should not be considered a
+ security mechanism, but rather, a means to remind authorized users
+ that they are using an insecure network and need to use S/Key for
+ authentication.
+
+ The second line (`permit user') allows the specified user to
+ use UNIX passwords at any time. Generally speaking, this should only
+ be used for people who are either unable to use the `key'
+ program, like those with dumb terminals, or those who are uneducable.
+
+ The third line (`permit port') allows all users logging in on
+ the specified terminal line to use UNIX passwords; this would be used
+ for dial-ups.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Kerberos
+
+ Contributed by &a.markm; (based on contribution by &a.md;).
+
+ Kerberos is a network add-on system/protocol that allows users to
+ authenticate themselves through the services of a secure server.
+ Services such as remote login, remote copy, secure inter-system
+ file copying and other high-risk tasks are made considerably safer
+ and more controllable.
+
+ The following instructions can be used as a guide on how to
+ set up Kerberos as distributed for FreeBSD. However, you should refer
+ to the relevant manual pages for a complete description.
+
+ In FreeBSD, the Kerberos is not that from the original 4.4BSD-Lite,
+ distribution, but eBones, which had been previously ported to
+ FreeBSD 1.1.5.1, and was sourced from outside the USA/Canada,
+ and is thus available to system owners outside those countries.
+
+ For those needing to get a legal foreign distribution of this
+ software, please DO NOT get it from a USA or Canada site.
+ You will get that site in big trouble! A legal copy of this is
+ available from skeleton.mikom.csir.co.za, which is in South
+ Africa.
+
+
+
+ Creating the initial database
+
+ This is done on the Kerberos server only. First make sure that you
+ do not have any old Kerberos databases around. You should change to the
+ directory /etc/kerberosIV and check that only the following
+ files are present:
+
+
+
+ grunt# cd /etc/kerberosIV
+ grunt# ls
+ README krb.conf krb.realms
+
+
+
+ If any additional files (such as principal.* or
+ master_key) exist, then use the kdb_destroy
+ command to destroy the old Kerberos database, of if Kerberos
+ is not running, simply delete the extra files with rm.
+
+ You should now edit the krb.conf and krb.realms
+ files to define your Kerberos realm. In this case the realm will
+ be GRONDAR.ZA and the server is grunt.grondar.za.
+ We edit or create the krb.conf file:
+
+
+
+ grunt# cat krb.conf
+ GRONDAR.ZA
+ GRONDAR.ZA grunt.grondar.za admin server
+ CS.BERKELEY.EDU okeeffe.berkeley.edu
+ ATHENA.MIT.EDU kerberos.mit.edu
+ ATHENA.MIT.EDU kerberos-1.mit.edu
+ ATHENA.MIT.EDU kerberos-2.mit.edu
+ ATHENA.MIT.EDU kerberos-3.mit.edu
+ LCS.MIT.EDU kerberos.lcs.mit.edu
+ TELECOM.MIT.EDU bitsy.mit.edu
+ ARC.NASA.GOV trident.arc.nasa.gov
+
+
+
+ In this case, the other realms do not need to be there.
+ They are here as an example of how a machine may be made aware
+ of multiple realms. You may wish to not include them for simplicity.
+
+ The first line names the realm in which this system works. The other
+ lines contain realm/host entries. The first item on a line is a realm,
+ and the second is a host in that realm that is acting as a ``key
+ distribution centre''. The words ``admin server'' following a hosts
+ name means that host also provides an administrative database server.
+ For further explanation of these terms, please consult the Kerberos
+ man pages.
+
+ Now we have to add grunt.grondar.za to the GRONDAR.ZA
+ realm and also add an entry to put all hosts in the .grondar.za
+ domain in the GRONDAR.ZA realm. The krb.realms file
+ would be updated as follows:
+
+
+
+ grunt# cat krb.realms
+ grunt.grondar.za GRONDAR.ZA
+ .grondar.za GRONDAR.ZA
+ .berkeley.edu CS.BERKELEY.EDU
+ .MIT.EDU ATHENA.MIT.EDU
+ .mit.edu ATHENA.MIT.EDU
+
+
+
+ Again, the other realms do not need to be there.
+ They are here as an example of how a machine may be made aware
+ of multiple realms. You may wish to remove them to simplify things.
+
+ The first line puts the specific system into the named
+ realm. The rest of the lines show how to default systems of a
+ particular subdomain to a named realm.
+
+ Now we are ready to create the database. This only needs to run on
+ the Kerberos server (or Key Distribution Centre). Issue the
+ kdb_init command to do this:
+
+
+
+ grunt# kdb_init
+ Realm name [default ATHENA.MIT.EDU ]: GRONDAR.ZA
+ You will be prompted for the database Master Password.
+ It is important that you NOT FORGET this password.
+
+ Enter Kerberos master key:
+
+
+
+ Now we have to save the key so that servers on the local
+ machine can pick it up. Use the kstash command to
+ do this.
+
+
+
+ grunt# kstash
+
+ Enter Kerberos master key:
+
+ Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
+
+ Master key entered. BEWARE!
+
+
+
+ This saves the encrypted master password in
+ /etc/kerberosIV/master_key.
+
+
+
+
+ Making it all run
+
+ Two principals need to be added to the database for each
+ system that will be secured with Kerberos. Their names are
+ kpasswd and rcmd These two principals are
+ made for each system, with the instance being the name of the
+ individual system.
+
+ These daemons, kpasswd and rcmd allow other systems
+ to change Kerberos passwords and run commands like rcp,
+ rlogin and rsh.
+
+ Now let's add these entries:
+
+
+
+ grunt# kdb_edit
+ Opening database...
+
+ Enter Kerberos master key:
+
+ Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
+
+ Master key entered. BEWARE!
+ Previous or default values are in [brackets] ,
+ enter return to leave the same, or new value.
+
+ Principal name: passwd
+ Instance: grunt
+
+ <Not found>, Create [y] ? y
+
+ Principal: passwd, Instance: grunt, kdc_key_ver: 1
+ New Password: <---- enter RANDOM here
+ Verifying password
+
+ New Password: <---- enter RANDOM here
+
+ Random password [y] ? y
+
+ Principal's new key version = 1
+ Expiration date (enter yyyy-mm-dd) [ 2000-01-01 ] ?
+ Max ticket lifetime (*5 minutes) [ 255 ] ?
+ Attributes [ 0 ] ?
+ Edit O.K.
+ Principal name: rcmd
+ Instance: grunt
+
+ <Not found>, Create [y] ?
+
+ Principal: rcmd, Instance: grunt, kdc_key_ver: 1
+ New Password: <---- enter RANDOM here
+ Verifying password
+
+ New Password: <---- enter RANDOM here
+
+ Random password [y] ?
+
+ Principal's new key version = 1
+ Expiration date (enter yyyy-mm-dd) [ 2000-01-01 ] ?
+ Max ticket lifetime (*5 minutes) [ 255 ] ?
+ Attributes [ 0 ] ?
+ Edit O.K.
+ Principal name: <---- null entry here will cause an exit
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Creating the server file
+
+ We now have to extract all the instances which define the services
+ on each machine. For this we use the ext_srvtab command.
+ This will create a file which must be copied or moved by secure
+ means to each Kerberos client's /etc/kerberosIV directory. This
+ file must be present on each server and client, and is crucial to the
+ operation of Kerberos.
+
+
+
+ grunt# ext_srvtab grunt
+
+ Enter Kerberos master key:
+
+ Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
+
+ Master key entered. BEWARE!
+ Generating 'grunt-new-srvtab'....
+
+
+
+ Now, this command only generates a temporary file
+ which must be renamed to srvtab so that all the
+ server can pick it up. Use the mv command to move it
+ into place on the original system:
+
+
+
+ grunt# mv grunt-new-srvtab srvtab
+
+
+
+ If the file is for a client system, and the network is not
+ deemed safe, then copy the <client>-new-srvtab to
+ removable media and transport it by secure physical means. Be
+ sure to rename it to srvtab in the client's
+ /etc/kerberosIV directory, and make sure it is mode 600:
+
+
+
+ grumble# mv grumble-new-srvtab srvtab
+ grumble# chmod 600 srvtab
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Populating the database
+
+ We now have to add some user entries into the database.
+ First let's create an entry for the user jane. Use
+ the kdb_edit command to do this:
+
+
+
+ grunt# kdb_edit
+ Opening database...
+
+ Enter Kerberos master key:
+
+ Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
+
+ Master key entered. BEWARE!
+ Previous or default values are in [brackets] ,
+ enter return to leave the same, or new value.
+
+ Principal name: jane
+ Instance:
+
+ <Not found>, Create [y] ? y
+
+ Principal: jane, Instance: , kdc_key_ver: 1
+ New Password: <---- enter a secure password here
+ Verifying password
+
+ New Password: <---- re-enter the password here
+
+ Principal's new key version = 1
+ Expiration date (enter yyyy-mm-dd) [ 2000-01-01 ] ?
+ Max ticket lifetime (*5 minutes) [ 255 ] ?
+ Attributes [ 0 ] ?
+ Edit O.K.
+ Principal name: <---- null entry here will cause an exit
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Testing it all out
+
+ First we have to start the Kerberos daemons. NOTE that if you have
+ correctly edited your /etc/rc.conf then this will happen
+ automatically when you reboot. This is only necessary on the Kerberos
+ server. Kerberos clients will automagically get what they need from
+ the /etc/kerberosIV directory.
+
+
+
+ grunt# kerberos &
+ grunt# Kerberos server starting
+ Sleep forever on error
+ Log file is /var/log/kerberos.log
+ Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
+
+ Master key entered. BEWARE!
+
+ Current Kerberos master key version is 1
+ Local realm: GRONDAR.ZA
+ grunt# kadmind -n &
+ grunt# KADM Server KADM0.0A initializing
+ Please do not use 'kill -9' to kill this job, use a
+ regular kill instead
+
+ Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
+
+ Master key entered. BEWARE!
+
+
+
+ Now we can try using the kinit command to get a ticket for
+ the id jane that we created above:
+
+
+
+ grunt$ kinit jane
+ MIT Project Athena (grunt.grondar.za)
+ Kerberos Initialization for "jane"
+ Password:
+
+
+
+ Try listing the tokens using klist to see if we really have them:
+
+
+
+ grunt$ klist
+ Ticket file: /tmp/tkt245
+ Principal: jane@GRONDAR.ZA
+
+ Issued Expires Principal
+ Apr 30 11:23:22 Apr 30 19:23:22 krbtgt.GRONDAR.ZA@GRONDAR.ZA
+
+
+
+ Now try changing the password using passwd to check if the
+ kpasswd daemon can get authorization to the Kerberos database:
+
+
+
+ grunt$ passwd
+ realm GRONDAR.ZA
+ Old password for jane:
+ New Password for jane:
+ Verifying password
+ New Password for jane:
+ Password changed.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Adding su privileges
+
+ Kerberos allows us to give each user who needs root
+ privileges their own separatesupassword. We
+ could now add an id which is authorized to su to root.
+ This is controlled by having an instance of root associated
+ with a principal. Using kdb_edit we can create the entry
+ jane.root in the Kerberos database:
+
+
+
+ grunt# kdb_edit
+ Opening database...
+
+ Enter Kerberos master key:
+
+ Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
+
+ Master key entered. BEWARE!
+ Previous or default values are in [brackets] ,
+ enter return to leave the same, or new value.
+
+ Principal name: jane
+ Instance: root
+
+ <Not found>, Create [y] ? y
+
+ Principal: jane, Instance: root, kdc_key_ver: 1
+ New Password: <---- enter a SECURE password here
+ Verifying password
+
+ New Password: <---- re-enter the password here
+
+ Principal's new key version = 1
+ Expiration date (enter yyyy-mm-dd) [ 2000-01-01 ] ?
+ Max ticket lifetime (*5 minutes) [ 255 ] ? 12 <--- Keep this short!
+ Attributes [ 0 ] ?
+ Edit O.K.
+ Principal name: <---- null entry here will cause an exit
+
+
+
+ Now try getting tokens for it to make sure it works:
+
+
+
+ grunt# kinit jane.root
+ MIT Project Athena (grunt.grondar.za)
+ Kerberos Initialization for "jane.root"
+ Password:
+
+
+
+
+ Now we need to add the user to root's .klogin file:
+
+
+
+ grunt# cat /root/.klogin
+ jane.root@GRONDAR.ZA
+
+
+
+ Now try doing the su:
+
+
+
+ [jane@grunt 10407] su
+ Password:
+ grunt#
+
+
+
+
+ and take a look at what tokens we have:
+
+
+
+ grunt# klist
+ Ticket file: /tmp/tkt_root_245
+ Principal: jane.root@GRONDAR.ZA
+
+ Issued Expires Principal
+ May 2 20:43:12 May 3 04:43:12 krbtgt.GRONDAR.ZA@GRONDAR.ZA
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Using other commands
+
+ In an earlier example, we created a principal called jane
+ with an instance root. This was based on a user with the
+ same name as the principal, and this is a Kerberos default; that a
+ <principal>.<instance> of the form
+ <username>.root will allow that
+ <username> to su to root if the necessary
+ entries are in the .klogin file in root's home
+ directory:
+
+
+
+ grunt# cat /root/.klogin
+ jane.root@GRONDAR.ZA
+
+
+
+ Likewise, if a user has in their own home directory lines of the
+ form:
+
+
+
+ [jane@grunt 10543] cat ~/.klogin
+ jane@GRONDAR.ZA
+ jack@GRONDAR.ZA
+
+
+
+ This allows anyone in the GRONDAR.ZA realm who has
+ authenticated themselves to jane or jack (via
+ kinit, see above) access to rlogin to jane's
+ account or files on this system (grunt) via rlogin,
+ rsh or rcp.
+
+ For example, Jane now logs into another system, using Kerberos:
+
+
+
+ [jane@grumble 573] kinit
+ MIT Project Athena (grunt.grondar.za)
+ Password:
+ [jane@grumble 574] rlogin grunt
+ Last login: Mon May 1 21:14:47 from grumble
+ Copyright (c) 1980, 1983, 1986, 1988, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994
+ The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
+
+ FreeBSD BUILT-19950429 (GR386) #0: Sat Apr 29 17:50:09 SAT 1995
+
+ [jane@grunt 10567]
+
+
+
+ Or Jack logs into Jane's account on the same machine (Jane having set up
+ the .klogin file as above, and the person in charge of Kerberos
+ having set up principal jack with a null instance:
+
+
+
+ [jack@grumble 573] kinit
+ [jack@grumble 574] rlogin grunt -l jane
+ MIT Project Athena (grunt.grondar.za)
+ Password:
+ Last login: Mon May 1 21:16:55 from grumble
+ Copyright (c) 1980, 1983, 1986, 1988, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994
+ The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
+
+ FreeBSD BUILT-19950429 (GR386) #0: Sat Apr 29 17:50:09 SAT 1995
+
+ [jane@grunt 10578]
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Firewalls
+
+ Contributed by &a.gpalmer; and &a.alex;.
+
+ Firewalls are an area of increasing interest for people who are
+ connected to the Internet, and are even finding applications on
+ private networks to provide enhanced security. This section will
+ hopefully explain what firewalls are, how to use them, and how to use
+ the facilities provided in the FreeBSD kernel to implement them.
+
+
+
+ Note: People often think that having a firewall between
+ your companies internal network and the ``Big Bad Internet'' will
+ solve all your security problems. It may help, but a poorly setup
+ firewall system is more of a security risk than not having one at all.
+ A firewall can only add another layer of security to your systems, but
+ they will not be able to stop a really determined hacker from
+ penetrating your internal network. If you let internal security lapse
+ because you believe your firewall to be impenetrable, you have just
+ made the hackers job that bit easier.
+
+
+
+
+
+ What is a firewall?
+
+ There are currently two distinct types of firewalls in common
+ use on the Internet today. The first type is more properly called
+ a packet filtering router, where the kernel on a
+ multi-homed machine chooses whether to forward or block packets
+ based on a set of rules. The second type, known as proxy
+ servers, rely on daemons to provide authentication and to
+ forward packets, possibly on a multi-homed machine which has
+ kernel packet forwarding disabled.
+
+ Sometimes sites combine the two types of firewalls, so that only a
+ certain machine (known as a bastion host) is allowed to send
+ packets through a packet filtering router onto an internal
+ network. Proxy services are run on the bastion host, which are
+ generally more secure than normal authentication mechanisms.
+
+ FreeBSD comes with a kernel packet filter (known as IPFW),
+ which is what the rest of this section will concentrate on. Proxy
+ servers can be built on FreeBSD from third party software, but there
+ is such a variety of proxy servers available that it would be
+ impossible to cover them in this document.
+
+
+
+ Packet filtering routers
+
+ A router is a machine which forwards packets between two or more
+ networks. A packet filtering router has an extra piece of code in its
+ kernel, which compares each packet to a list of rules before deciding
+ if it should be forwarded or not. Most modern IP routing software has
+ packet filtering code in it, which defaults to forwarding all
+ packets. To enable the filters, you need to define a set of rules for
+ the filtering code, so that it can decide if the packet should be
+ allowed to pass or not.
+
+ To decide if a packet should be passed on or not, the code looks
+ through its set of rules for a rule which matches the contents of
+ this packets headers. Once a match is found, the rule action is
+ obeyed. The rule action could be to drop the packet, to forward the
+ packet, or even to send an ICMP message back to the originator. Only
+ the first match counts, as the rules are searched in order. Hence, the
+ list of rules can be referred to as a ``rule chain''.
+
+ The packet matching criteria varies depending on the software used,
+ but typically you can specify rules which depend on the source IP
+ address of the packet, the destination IP address, the source port
+ number, the destination port number (for protocols which support
+ ports), or even the packet type (UDP, TCP, ICMP, etc).
+
+
+
+
+ Proxy servers
+
+ Proxy servers are machines which have had the normal system daemons
+ (telnetd, ftpd, etc) replaced with special servers. These servers are
+ called proxy servers as they normally only allow onward
+ connections to be made. This enables you to run (for example) a proxy
+ telnet server on your firewall host, and people can telnet in to your
+ firewall from the outside, go through some authentication mechanism,
+ and then gain access to the internal network (alternatively, proxy
+ servers can be used for signals coming from the internal network and
+ heading out).
+
+ Proxy servers are normally more secure than normal servers, and
+ often have a wider variety of authentication mechanisms available,
+ including ``one-shot'' password systems so that even if someone
+ manages to discover what password you used, they will not be able to use
+ it to gain access to your systems as the password instantly
+ expires. As they do not actually give users access to the host machine,
+ it becomes a lot more difficult for someone to install backdoors
+ around your security system.
+
+ Proxy servers often have ways of restricting access further, so
+ that only certain hosts can gain access to the servers, and often they
+ can be set up so that you can limit which users can talk to which
+ destination machine. Again, what facilities are available depends
+ largely on what proxy software you choose.
+
+
+
+
+
+ What does IPFW allow me to do?
+
+ IPFW, the software supplied with FreeBSD, is a packet
+ filtering and accounting system which resides in the kernel, and has a
+ user-land control utility, ipfw(8). Together, they
+ allow you to define and query the rules currently used by the kernel
+ in its routing decisions.
+
+ There are two related parts to IPFW. The firewall section
+ allows you to perform packet filtering. There is also an IP accounting
+ section which allows you to track usage of your router, based on
+ similar rules to the firewall section. This allows you to see (for
+ example) how much traffic your router is getting from a certain
+ machine, or how much WWW (World Wide Web) traffic it is forwarding.
+
+ As a result of the way that IPFW is designed, you can use
+ IPFW on non-router machines to perform packet filtering on
+ incoming and outgoing connections. This is a special case of the more
+ general use of IPFW, and the same commands and techniques
+ should be used in this situation.
+
+
+
+
+ Enabling IPFW on FreeBSD
+
+ As the main part of the IPFW system lives in the kernel, you will
+ need to add one or more options to your kernel configuration
+ file, depending on what facilities you want, and recompile your kernel. See
+ for more
+ details on how to recompile your kernel.
+
+ There are currently three kernel configuration options
+ relevant to IPFW:
+
+
+
+ options IPFIREWALL
+
+ Compiles into the kernel the code for packet
+ filtering.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options IPFIREWALL_VERBOSE
+
+
+ Enables code to allow logging of
+ packets through syslogd(8). Without this option, even if you
+ specify that packets should be logged in the filter rules, nothing
+ will happen.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options IPFIREWALL_VERBOSE_LIMIT=10
+
+
+ Limits the number of
+ packets logged through syslogd(8) on a per entry basis.
+ You may wish to use this option in hostile environments in which
+ you want to log firewall activity, but do not want to be open to
+ a denial of service attack via syslog flooding.
+
+
+
+ When a chain entry reaches the packet limit specified, logging
+ is turned off for that particular entry. To resume logging, you
+ will need to reset the associated counter using the ipfw(8)
+ utility:
+
+
+
+ ipfw zero 4500
+
+
+
+ Where 4500 is the chain entry you wish to continue logging.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Previous versions of FreeBSD contained an IPFIREWALL_ACCT
+ option. This is now obsolete as the firewall code automatically
+ includes accounting facilities.
+
+
+
+
+ Configuring IPFW
+
+ The configuration of the IPFW software is done through the
+ ipfw(8) utility. The syntax for this command looks
+ quite complicated, but it is relatively simple once you understand
+ its structure.
+
+ There are currently four different command categories used by the
+ utility: addition/deletion, listing, flushing, and clearing.
+ Addition/deletion is used to build the rules that control how packets
+ are accepted, rejected, and logged. Listing is used to examine the
+ contents of your rule set (otherwise known as the chain) and packet
+ counters (accounting). Flushing is used to remove all entries from
+ the chain. Clearing is used to zero out one or more accounting
+ entries.
+
+
+
+ Altering the IPFW rules
+
+ The syntax for this form of the command is:
+
+ ipfw [-N] command [index]
+ action [log] protocoladdresses
+ [options]
+
+
+
+ There is one valid flag when using this form of the command:
+
+
+
+ -N
+
+ Resolve addresses and service names in output.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The command given can be shortened to the shortest unique
+ form. The valid commands are:
+
+
+
+ add
+
+ Add an entry to the firewall/accounting rule list
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ delete
+
+
+ Delete an entry from the firewall/accounting rule list
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Previous versions of IPFW used separate firewall and
+ accounting entries. The present version provides packet accounting
+ with each firewall entry.
+
+ If an index value is supplied, it used to place the entry
+ at a specific point in the chain. Otherwise, the entry is placed at
+ the end of the chain at an index 100 greater than the last chain
+ entry (this does not include the default policy, rule 65535, deny).
+
+ The log option causes matching rules to be output to the
+ system console if the kernel was compiled with IPFIREWALL_VERBOSE.
+
+ Valid actions are:
+
+
+
+ reject
+
+ Drop the packet, and send an ICMP host or port
+ unreachable (as appropriate) packet to the source.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ allow
+
+
+ Pass the packet on as normal. (aliases: pass and
+ accept)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ deny
+
+
+ Drop the packet. The source is not notified via an ICMP
+ message (thus it appears that the packet never arrived at the
+ destination).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ count
+
+
+ Update packet counters but do not allow/deny the packet
+ based on this rule. The search continues with the next chain entry.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Each action will be recognized by the shortest unambiguous
+ prefix.
+
+ The protocols which can be specified are:
+
+
+
+ all
+
+ Matches any IP packet
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ icmp
+
+
+ Matches ICMP packets
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ tcp
+
+
+ Matches TCP packets
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ udp
+
+
+ Matches UDP packets
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The address specification is:
+
+ from <address/mask>[port] to
+ <address/mask>[port] [via <interface>]
+
+
+
+ You can only specify port in conjunction with
+ protocols which support ports (UDP and TCP).
+
+ The via is optional and may specify the IP address or
+ domain name of a local IP interface, or an interface name (e.g.
+ ed0) to match only packets coming through this interface.
+ Interface unit numbers can be specified with an optional wildcard.
+ For example, ppp* would match all kernel PPP interfaces.
+
+ The syntax used to specify an <address/mask> is:
+
+ <address>
+
+
+ or
+
+ <address>/mask-bits
+
+
+ or
+
+ <address>:mask-pattern
+
+
+
+ A valid hostname may be specified in place of the IP
+ address. mask-bits is a decimal number representing how many
+ bits in the address mask should be set. e.g. specifying
+
+ 192.216.222.1/24
+
+
+ will create a mask which will allow any address in a class C subnet
+ (in this case, 192.216.222) to be matched. mask-pattern is an IP
+ address which will be logically AND'ed with the address given. The
+ keyword any may be used to specify ``any IP address''.
+
+ The port numbers to be blocked are specified as:
+
+ port[,port[,port[...]]]
+
+
+ to specify either a single port or a list of ports, or
+
+ port-port
+
+
+ to specify a range of ports. You may also combine a single range with a
+ list, but the range must always be specified first.
+
+ The options available are:
+
+
+
+ frag
+
+ Matches if the packet is not the first fragment of the datagram.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ in
+
+
+ Matches if the packet is on the way in.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ out
+
+
+ Matches if the packet is on the way out.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ ipoptions spec
+
+
+ Matches if the IP header contains the
+ comma separated list of options specified in spec. The
+ supported list of IP options are: ssrr (strict source route),
+ lsrr (loose source route), rr (record packet route),
+ and ts (timestamp). The absence of a particular option may
+ be denoted with a leading '!'.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ established
+
+
+ Matches if the packet is part of an already established
+ TCP connection (i.e. it has the RST or ACK bits set). You can optimize
+ the performance of the firewall by placing established rules
+ early in the chain.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ setup
+
+
+ Matches if the packet is an attempt to establish a TCP connection
+ (the SYN bit set is set but the ACK bit is not).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ tcpflags flags
+
+
+ Matches if the TCP header contains
+ the comma separated list of flags. The supported flags
+ are fin, syn, rst, psh, ack,
+ and urg. The absence of a particular flag may be indicated
+ by a leading '!'.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ icmptypes types
+
+
+ Matches if the ICMP type is present in
+ the list types. The list may be specified as any combination
+ of ranges and/or individual types separated by commas. Commonly used
+ ICMP types are: 0 echo reply (ping reply), 5
+ redirect, 8 echo request (ping request), and 11
+ time exceeded (used to indicate TTL expiration as with
+ traceroute(8)).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Listing the IPFW rules
+
+ The syntax for this form of the command is:
+
+ ipfw [-atN] l
+
+
+
+ There are three valid flags when using this form of the command:
+
+
+
+ -a
+
+ While listing, show counter values. This option is the only
+ way to see accounting counters.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ -t
+
+
+ Display the last match times for each chain entry. The time
+ listing is incompatible with the input syntax used by the
+ ipfw(8) utility.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ -N
+
+
+ Attempt to resolve given addresses and service names.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Flushing the IPFW rules
+
+ The syntax for flushing the chain is:
+
+ ipfw flush
+
+
+
+ This causes all entries in the firewall chain to be removed except
+ the fixed default policy enforced by the kernel (index 65535). Use
+ caution when flushing rules, the default deny policy will leave your
+ system cut off from the network until allow entries are added to the
+ chain.
+
+
+
+
+ Clearing the IPFW packet counters
+
+ The syntax for clearing one or more packet counters is:
+
+ ipfw zero [index]
+
+
+
+ When used without an index argument, all packet counters
+ are cleared. If an index is supplied, the clearing operation
+ only affects a specific chain entry.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Example commands for ipfw
+
+ This command will deny all packets from the host
+ evil.hacker.org to the telnet port of the host
+ nice.people.org by being forwarded by the router:
+
+
+
+ ipfw add deny tcp from evil.hacker.org to nice.people.org 23
+
+
+
+ The next example denies and logs any TCP traffic from the entire
+ hacker.org network (a class C) to the nice.people.org
+ machine (any port).
+
+
+
+ ipfw add deny log tcp from evil.hacker.org/24 to nice.people.org
+
+
+
+ If you do not want people sending X sessions to your internal network
+ (a subnet of a class C), the following command will do the necessary
+ filtering:
+
+
+
+ ipfw add deny tcp from any to my.org/28 6000 setup
+
+
+
+ To see the accounting records:
+
+ ipfw -a list
+
+
+ or in the short form
+
+ ipfw -a l
+
+
+ You can also see the last time a chain entry was matched with
+
+ ipfw -at l
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Building a packet filtering firewall
+
+
+
+ Note: The following suggestions are just that:
+ suggestions. The requirements of each firewall are different and I
+ cannot tell you how to build a firewall to meet your particular
+ requirements.
+
+
+
+ When initially setting up your firewall, unless you have a test
+ bench setup where you can configure your firewall host in a controlled
+ environment, I strongly recommend you use the logging version of the
+ commands and enable logging in the kernel. This will allow you to
+ quickly identify problem areas and cure them without too much
+ disruption. Even after the initial setup phase is complete, I
+ recommend using the logging for of `deny' as it allows tracing of
+ possible attacks and also modification of the firewall rules if your
+ requirements alter.
+
+
+
+ Note: If you use the logging versions of the
+ accept command, it can generate large amounts
+ of log data as one log line will be generated for every packet
+ that passes through the firewall, so large ftp/http transfers,
+ etc, will really slow the system down. It also increases the
+ latencies on those packets as it requires more work to be done by
+ the kernel before the packet can be passed on. syslogd with also
+ start using up a lot more processor time as it logs all the extra
+ data to disk, and it could quite easily fill the partition
+ /var/log is located on.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Synchronous Serial Transmission
+
+ Synchronous serial transmission requires that the sender and
+ receiver share a clock with one another, or that the sender provide
+ a strobe or other timing signal so that the receiver knows when to
+ "read" the next bit of the data. In most forms of serial
+ Synchronous communication, if there is no data available at a given
+ instant to transmit, a fill character must be sent instead so that
+ data is always being transmitted. Synchronous communication is
+ usually more efficient because only data bits are transmitted
+ between sender and receiver, and synchronous communication can be
+ more more costly if extra wiring and circuits are required to
+ share a clock signal between the sender and receiver.
+
+ A form of Synchronous transmission is used with printers and
+ fixed disk devices in that the data is sent on one set of wires
+ while a clock or strobe is sent on a different wire. Printers and
+ fixed disk devices are not normally serial devices because most
+ fixed disk interface standards send an entire word of data for each
+ clock or strobe signal by using a separate wire for each bit of the
+ word. In the PC industry, these are known as Parallel devices.
+
+ The standard serial communications hardware in the PC does not
+ support Synchronous operations. This mode is described here for
+ comparison purposes only.
+
+
+
+
+ Asynchronous Serial Transmission
+
+ Asynchronous transmission allows data to be transmitted without
+ the sender having to send a clock signal to the receiver. Instead,
+ the sender and receiver must agree on timing parameters in advance
+ and special bits are added to each word which are used to
+ synchronize the sending and receiving units.
+
+ When a word is given to the UART for Asynchronous transmissions,
+ a bit called the "Start Bit" is added to the beginning of each word
+ that is to be transmitted. The Start Bit is used to alert the
+ receiver that a word of data is about to be sent, and to force the
+ clock in the receiver into synchronization with the clock in the
+ transmitter. These two clocks must be accurate enough to not
+ have the frequency drift by more than 10% during the transmission
+ of the remaining bits in the word. (This requirement was set in
+ the days of mechanical teleprinters and is easily met by modern
+ electronic equipment.)
+
+ After the Start Bit, the individual bits of the word of data are
+ sent, with the Least Significant Bit (LSB) being sent first. Each
+ bit in the transmission is transmitted for exactly the same
+ amount of time as all of the other bits, and the receiver "looks"
+ at the wire at approximately halfway through the period assigned
+ to each bit to determine if the bit is a "1" or a "0". For example,
+ if it takes two seconds to send each bit, the receiver will examine
+ the signal to determine if it is a "1" or a "0" after one second
+ has passed, then it will wait two seconds and then examine the value
+ of the next bit, and so on.
+
+ The sender does not know when the receiver has "looked" at the
+ value of the bit. The sender only knows when the clock says to
+ begin transmitting the next bit of the word.
+
+ When the entire data word has been sent, the transmitter may add
+ a Parity Bit that the transmitter generates. The Parity Bit may
+ be used by the receiver to perform simple error checking. Then at
+ least one Stop Bit is sent by the transmitter.
+
+ When the receiver has received all of the bits in the data word,
+ it may check for the Parity Bits (both sender and receiver must
+ agree on whether a Parity Bit is to be used), and then the receiver
+ looks for a Stop Bit. If the Stop Bit does not appear when it is
+ supposed to, the UART considers the entire word to be garbled and
+ will report a Framing Error to the host processor when the data
+ word is read. The usual cause of a Framing Error is that the sender
+ and receiver clocks were not running at the same speed, or that
+ the signal was interrupted.
+
+ Regardless of whether the data was received correctly or not, the
+ UART automatically discards the Start, Parity and Stop bits. If the
+ sender and receiver are configured identically, these bits are not
+ passed to the host.
+
+ If another word is ready for transmission, the Start Bit for the new
+ word can be sent as soon as the Stop Bit for the previous
+ word has been sent.
+
+ Because asynchronous data is "self synchronizing", if there is no
+ data to transmit, the transmission line can be idle.
+
+
+
+
+ Other UART Functions
+
+ In addition to the basic job of converting data from parallel to
+ serial for transmission and from serial to parallel on reception,
+ a UART will usually provide additional circuits for signals that
+ can be used to indicate the state of the transmission media, and
+ to regulate the flow of data in the event that the remote device
+ is not prepared to accept more data. For example, when the
+ device connected to the UART is a modem, the modem may report the
+ presence of a carrier on the phone line while the computer may be
+ able to instruct the modem to reset itself or to not take calls
+ by asserting or deasserting one more more of these extra signals.
+ The function of each of these additional signals is defined in
+ the EIA RS232-C standard.
+
+
+
+
+ The RS232-C and V.24 Standards
+
+ In most computer systems, the UART is connected to circuitry that
+ generates signals that comply with the EIA RS232-C specification.
+ There is also a CCITT standard named V.24 that mirrors the
+ specifications included in RS232-C.
+
+
+
+ RS232-C Bit Assignments (Marks and Spaces)
+
+ In RS232-C, a value of "1" is called a "Mark" and a value of "0"
+ is called a "Space". When a communication line is idle, the line
+ is said to be "Marking", or transmitting continuous "1" values.
+
+ The Start bit always has a value of "0" (a Space). The Stop Bit
+ always has a value of "1" (a Mark). This means that there will
+ always be a Mark (1) to Space (0) transition on the line at the
+ start of every word, even when multiple word are
+ transmitted back to back. This guarantees that sender and
+ receiver can resynchronize their clocks regardless of the content
+ of the data bits that are being transmitted.
+
+ The idle time between Stop and Start bits does not have
+ to be an exact multiple (including zero) of the bit rate of the
+ communication link, but most UARTs are designed this way for
+ simplicity.
+
+ In RS232-C, the "Marking" signal (a "1") is represented by a voltage
+ between -2 VDC and -12 VDC, and a "Spacing" signal (a "0") is
+ represented by a voltage between 0 and +12 VDC. The transmitter
+ is supposed to send +12 VDC or -12 VDC, and the receiver is supposed
+ to allow for some voltage loss in long cables. Some transmitters
+ in low power devices (like portable computers) sometimes use only
+ +5 VDC and -5 VDC, but these values are still acceptable to a
+ RS232-C receiver, provided that the cable lengths are short.
+
+
+
+
+ RS232-C Break Signal
+
+ RS232-C also specifies a signal called a "Break", which is caused
+ by sending continuous Spacing values (no Start or Stop bits). When
+ there is no electricity present on the data circuit, the line is
+ considered to be sending "Break".
+
+ The "Break" signal must be of a duration longer than the time
+ it takes to send a complete byte plus Start, Stop and Parity bits.
+ Most UARTs can distinguish between a Framing Error and a
+ Break, but if the UART cannot do this, the Framing Error detection
+ can be used to identify Breaks.
+
+ In the days of teleprinters, when numerous printers around the
+ country were wired in series (such as news services), any unit
+ could cause a "Break" by temporarily opening the entire circuit
+ so that no current flowed. This was used to allow a location with
+ urgent news to interrupt some other location that was currently
+ sending information.
+
+ In modern systems there are two types of Break signals. If the
+ Break is longer than 1.6 seconds, it is considered a "Modem Break",
+ and some modems can be programmed to terminate the conversation and
+ go on-hook or enter the modems' command mode when the modem detects
+ this signal. If the Break is smaller than 1.6 seconds, it signifies
+ a Data Break and it is up to the remote computer to respond to
+ this signal. Sometimes this form of Break is used as an Attention
+ or Interrupt signal and sometimes is accepted as a substitute for
+ the ASCII CONTROL-C character.
+
+ Marks and Spaces are also equivalent to "Holes" and "No Holes"
+ in paper tape systems.
+
+ Note that Breaks cannot be generated from paper tape or from any
+ other byte value, since bytes are always sent with Start and Stop
+ bit. The UART is usually capable of generating the continuous
+ Spacing signal in response to a special command from the host
+ processor.
+
+
+
+
+ RS232-C DTE and DCE Devices
+
+ The RS232-C specification defines two types of equipment: the Data
+ Terminal Equipment (DTE) and the Data Carrier Equipment (DCE).
+ Usually, the DTE device is the terminal (or computer), and the DCE
+ is a modem. Across the phone line at the other end of a
+ conversation, the receiving modem is also a DCE device and the
+ computer that is connected to that modem is a DTE device. The DCE
+ device receives signals on the pins that the DTE device transmits on,
+ and vice versa.
+
+ When two devices that are both DTE or both DCE must be connected
+ together without a modem or a similar media translater between them,
+ a NULL modem must be used. The NULL modem electrically re-arranges
+ the cabling so that the transmitter output is connected to the
+ receiver input on the other device, and vice versa. Similar
+ translations are performed on all of the control signals so that
+ each device will see what it thinks are DCE (or DTE) signals from
+ the other device.
+
+ The number of signals generated by the DTE and DCE devices are
+ not symmetrical. The DTE device generates fewer signals for
+ the DCE device than the DTE device receives from the DCE.
+
+
+
+
+ RS232-C Pin Assignments
+
+ The EIA RS232-C specification (and the ITU equivalent, V.24) calls
+ for a twenty-five pin connector (usually a DB25) and defines the
+ purpose of most of the pins in that connector.
+
+ In the IBM Personal Computer and similar systems, a subset of
+ RS232-C signals are provided via nine pin connectors (DB9).
+ The signals that are not included on the PC connector deal mainly
+ with synchronous operation, and this transmission mode is not
+ supported by the UART that IBM selected for use in the IBM PC.
+
+ Depending on the computer manufacturer, a DB25, a DB9, or
+ both types of connector may be used for RS232-C communications.
+ (The IBM PC also uses a DB25 connector for the parallel printer
+ interface which causes some confusion.)
+
+ Below is a table of the RS232-C signal assignments in the DB25
+ and DB9 connectors.
+
+
+ DB25 DB9 EIA CCITT Common Signal Description
+ RS232-C IBM PC Circuit Circuit Name Source
+ Pin Pin Symbol Symbol
+
+ 1 - AA 101 PG/FG --- Frame/Protective Ground
+ 2 3 BA 103 TD DTE Transmit Data
+ 3 2 BB 104 RD DCE Receive Data
+ 4 7 CA 105 RTS DTE Request to Send
+ 5 8 CB 106 CTS DCE Clear to Send
+ 6 6 CC 107 DSR DCE Data Set Ready
+ 7 5 AV 102 SG/GND --- Signal Ground
+ 8 1 CF 109 DCD/CD DCE Data Carrier Detect
+ 9 - - - - - Reserved for Test
+ 10 - - - - - Reserved for Test
+ 11 - - - - - Unassigned
+ 12 - CI 122 SRLSD DCE Sec. Recv. Line Signal Detector
+ 13 - SCB 121 SCTS DCE Secondary Clear To Send
+ 14 - SBA 118 STD DTE Secondary Transmit Data
+ 15 - DB 114 TSET DCE Trans. Sig. Element Timing
+ 16 - SBB 119 SRD DCE Secondary Received Data
+ 17 - DD 115 RSET DCE Receiver Signal Element Timing
+ 18 - - 141 LOOP DTE Local Loopback
+ 19 - SCA 120 SRS DTE Secondary Request to Send
+ 20 4 CD 108.2 DTR DTE Data Terminal Ready
+ 21 - - - RDL DTE Remote Digital Loopback
+ 22 9 CE 125 RI DCE Ring Indicator
+ 23 - CH 111 DSRS DTE Data Signal Rate Selector
+ 24 - DA 113 TSET DTE Trans. Sig. Element Timing
+ 25 - - 142 - DCE Test Mode
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Bits, Baud and Symbols
+
+ Baud is a measurement of transmission speed in asynchronous
+ communication. Because of advances in modem communication
+ technology, this term is frequently misused when describing
+ the data rates in newer devices.
+
+ Traditionally, a Baud Rate represents the number of bits that are
+ actually being sent over the media, not the amount of data
+ that is actually moved from one DTE device to the other. The
+ Baud count includes the overhead bits Start, Stop and Parity
+ that are generated by the sending UART and removed by the
+ receiving UART. This means that seven-bit words of data
+ actually take 10 bits to be completely transmitted.
+ Therefore, a modem capable of moving 300 bits per second from one
+ place to another can normally only move 30 7-bit words if
+ Parity is used and one Start and Stop bit are present.
+
+ If 8-bit data words are used and Parity bits are also used, the
+ data rate falls to 27.27 words per second, because it now
+ takes 11 bits to send the eight-bit words, and the modem still
+ only sends 300 bits per second.
+
+ The formula for converting bytes per second into a baud rate
+ and vice versa was simple until error-correcting modems
+ came along. These modems receive the serial stream of bits
+ from the UART in the host computer (even when internal modems
+ are used the data is still frequently serialized) and converts
+ the bits back into bytes. These bytes are then combined into
+ packets and sent over the phone line using a Synchronous
+ transmission method. This means that the Stop, Start, and Parity
+ bits added by the UART in the DTE (the computer) were removed by
+ the modem before transmission by the sending modem. When these
+ bytes are received by the remote modem, the remote modem adds
+ Start, Stop and Parity bits to the words, converts them to a
+ serial format and then sends them to the receiving UART in the remote
+ computer, who then strips the Start, Stop and Parity bits.
+
+ The reason all these extra conversions are done is so that the
+ two modems can perform error correction, which means that the
+ receiving modem is able to ask the sending modem to resend a
+ block of data that was not received with the correct checksum.
+ This checking is handled by the modems, and the DTE devices are
+ usually unaware that the process is occurring.
+
+ By striping the Start, Stop and Parity bits, the additional bits of
+ data that the two modems must share between themselves to perform
+ error-correction are mostly concealed from the effective
+ transmission rate seen by the sending and receiving DTE equipment.
+ For example, if a modem sends ten 7-bit words to another modem
+ without including the Start, Stop and Parity bits, the sending
+ modem will be able to add 30 bits of its own information that
+ the receiving modem can use to do error-correction without
+ impacting the transmission speed of the real data.
+
+ The use of the term Baud is further confused by modems that perform
+ compression. A single 8-bit word passed over the telephone
+ line might represent a dozen words that were transmitted to
+ the sending modem. The receiving modem will expand the data back
+ to its original content and pass that data to the receiving DTE.
+
+ Modern modems also include buffers that allow the rate that
+ bits move across the phone line (DCE to DCE) to be a different speed
+ than the speed that the bits move between the DTE and DCE on both
+ ends of the conversation. Normally the speed between the DTE and
+ DCE is higher than the DCE to DCE speed because of the use of
+ compression by the modems.
+
+ Because the number of bits needed to describe a byte varied
+ during the trip between the two machines plus the differing
+ bits-per-seconds speeds that are used present on the DTE-DCE and
+ DCE-DCE links, the usage of the term Baud to describe the
+ overall communication speed causes problems and can misrepresent
+ the true transmission speed. So Bits Per Second (bps) is the correct
+ term to use to describe the transmission rate seen at the
+ DCE to DCE interface and Baud or Bits Per Second are acceptable
+ terms to use when a connection is made between two systems with a
+ wired connection, or if a modem is in use that is not performing
+ error-correction or compression.
+
+ Modern high speed modems (2400, 9600, 14,400, and 19,200bps) in
+ reality still operate at or below 2400 baud, or more accurately,
+ 2400 Symbols per second. High speed modem are able to encode more
+ bits of data into each Symbol using a technique called Constellation
+ Stuffing, which is why the effective bits per second rate of the
+ modem is higher, but the modem continues to operate within the
+ limited audio bandwidth that the telephone system provides.
+ Modems operating at 28,800 and higher speeds have variable Symbol
+ rates, but the technique is the same.
+
+
+
+
+ The IBM Personal Computer UART
+
+ Starting with the original IBM Personal Computer, IBM selected
+ the National Semiconductor INS8250 UART for use in the IBM PC
+ Parallel/Serial Adapter. Subsequent generations of compatible
+ computers from IBM and other vendors continued to use the INS8250
+ or improved versions of the National Semiconductor UART family.
+
+
+
+ National Semiconductor UART Family Tree
+
+ There have been several versions and subsequent generations of
+ the INS8250 UART. Each major version is described below.
+
+
+ INS8250 -> INS8250B
+ \
+ \
+ \-> INS8250A -> INS82C50A
+ \
+ \
+ \-> NS16450 -> NS16C450
+ \
+ \
+ \-> NS16550 -> NS16550A -> PC16550D
+
+
+
+
+ INS8250
+
+ This part was used in the original IBM PC and
+ IBM PC/XT. The original name for this part was the INS8250 ACE
+ (Asynchronous Communications Element) and it is made from NMOS
+ technology.
+
+ The 8250 uses eight I/O ports and has a one-byte send and
+ a one-byte receive buffer. This original UART has several
+ race conditions and other flaws. The original IBM BIOS
+ includes code to work around these flaws, but this made
+ the BIOS dependent on the flaws being present, so subsequent
+ parts like the 8250A, 16450 or 16550 could not be used in
+ the original IBM PC or IBM PC/XT.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ INS8250-B
+
+
+ This is the slower speed of the INS8250 made
+ from NMOS technology. It contains the same problems as the original
+ INS8250.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ INS8250A
+
+
+ An improved version of the INS8250 using XMOS
+ technology with various functional flaws corrected. The INS8250A
+ was used initially in PC clone computers by vendors who used
+ "clean" BIOS designs. Because of the corrections in the chip, this
+ part could not be used with a BIOS compatible with the INS8250
+ or INS8250B.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ INS82C50A
+
+
+ This is a CMOS version (low power consumption)
+ of the INS8250A and has similar functional characteristics.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ NS16450
+
+
+ Same as NS8250A with improvements so it can be
+ used with faster CPU bus designs. IBM used this part in the IBM AT
+ and updated the IBM BIOS to no longer rely on the bugs in the
+ INS8250.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ NS16C450
+
+
+ This is a CMOS version (low power consumption)
+ of the NS16450.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ NS16550
+
+
+ Same as NS16450 with a 16-byte send and receive
+ buffer but the buffer design was flawed and could not be reliably
+ be used.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ NS16550A
+
+
+ Same as NS16550 with the buffer flaws corrected.
+ The 16550A and its successors have become the most popular UART
+ design in the PC industry, mainly due it its ability to reliably
+ handle higher data rates on operating systems with sluggish interrupt
+ response times.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ NS16C552
+
+
+ This component consists of two NS16C550A CMOS
+ UARTs in a single package.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ PC16550D
+
+
+ Same as NS16550A with subtle flaws corrected. This
+ is revision D of the 16550 family and is the latest design available
+ from National Semiconductor.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The NS16550AF and the PC16550D are the same thing
+
+ National reorganized their part numbering system a few years ago,
+ and the NS16550AFN no longer exists by that name. (If you
+ have a NS16550AFN, look at the date code on the part, which is a
+ four digit number that usually starts with a nine. The first two
+ digits of the number are the year, and the last two digits are the
+ week in that year when the part was packaged. If you have a
+ NS16550AFN, it is probably a few years old.)
+
+ The new numbers are like PC16550DV, with minor differences in the
+ suffix letters depending on the package material and its shape.
+ (A description of the numbering system can be found below.)
+
+ It is important to understand that in some stores, you may pay
+ $15(US) for a NS16550AFN made in 1990 and in the next bin are the
+ new PC16550DN parts with minor fixes that National has made since the
+ AFN part was in production, the PC16550DN was probably made in the
+ past six months and it costs half (as low as $5(US) in volume) as
+ much as the NS16550AFN because they are readily available.
+
+ As the supply of NS16550AFN chips continues to shrink, the price will
+ probably continue to increase until more people discover and accept
+ that the PC16550DN really has the same function as the old part
+ number.
+
+
+
+
+ National Semiconductor Part Numbering System
+
+ The older NSnnnnnrqp part numbers are now of the
+ format PCnnnnnrgp.
+
+ The "r" is the revision field. The current revision of
+ the 16550 from National Semiconductor is "D".
+
+ The "p" is the package-type field. The types are:
+ "F" QFP (quad flat pack) L lead type
+ "N" DIP (dual inline package) through hole straight lead type
+ "V" LPCC (lead plastic chip carrier) J lead type
+
+
+ The "g" is the product grade field. If an "I" precedes
+ the package-type letter, it indicates an "industrial" grade part,
+ which has higher specs than a standard part but not as high as
+ Military Specification (Milspec) component. This is an optional field.
+
+ So what we used to call a NS16550AFN (DIP Package) is now called a
+ PC16550DN or PC16550DIN.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Other Vendors and Similar UARTs
+
+ Over the years, the 8250, 8250A, 16450 and 16550 have been licensed
+ or copied by other chip vendors. In the case of the 8250, 8250A
+ and 16450, the exact circuit (the "megacell") was licensed to many
+ vendors, including Western Digital and Intel. Other vendors
+ reverse-engineered the part or produced emulations that had similar
+ behavior.
+
+ In internal modems, the modem designer will frequently emulate the
+ 8250A/16450 with the modem microprocessor, and the emulated UART will
+ frequently have a hidden buffer consisting of several hundred bytes.
+ Because of the size of the buffer, these emulations can be as
+ reliable as a 16550A in their ability to handle high speed data.
+ However, most operating systems will still report that
+ the UART is only a 8250A or 16450, and may not make effective use
+ of the extra buffering present in the emulated UART unless special
+ drivers are used.
+
+ Some modem makers are driven by market forces to abandon a design
+ that has hundreds of bytes of buffer and instead use a 16550A UART
+ so that the product will compare favorably in market comparisons
+ even though the effective performance may be lowered by this action.
+
+ A common misconception is that all parts with "16550A" written on
+ them are identical in performance. There are differences, and in
+ some cases, outright flaws in most of these 16550A clones.
+
+ When the NS16550 was developed, the National Semiconductor obtained
+ several patents on the design and they also limited licensing, making
+ it harder for other vendors to provide a chip with similar features.
+ Because of the patents, reverse-engineered designs and emulations
+ had to avoid infringing the claims covered by the patents.
+ Subsequently, these copies almost never perform exactly the same as
+ the NS16550A or PC16550D, which are the parts most computer and
+ modem makers want to buy but are sometimes unwilling to pay the
+ price required to get the genuine part.
+
+ Some of the differences in the clone 16550A parts are unimportant,
+ while others can prevent the device from being used at all with a
+ given operating system or driver. These differences may show up
+ when using other drivers, or when particular combinations of events
+ occur that were not well tested or considered in the Windows driver.
+ This is because most modem vendors and 16550-clone makers use the
+ Microsoft drivers from Windows for Workgroups 3.11 and the Microsoft
+ MSD utility as the primary tests for compatibility with the
+ NS16550A. This over-simplistic criteria means that if a different
+ operating system is used, problems could appear due to subtle
+ differences between the clones and genuine components.
+
+ National Semiconductor has made available a program named COMTEST
+ that performs compatibility tests independent of any OS drivers.
+ It should be remembered that the purpose of this type of program is
+ to demonstrate the flaws in the products of the competition, so the
+ program will report major as well as extremely subtle differences in
+ behavior in the part being tested.
+
+ In a series of tests performed by the author of this document in
+ 1994, components made by National Semiconductor, TI, StarTech, and
+ CMD as well as megacells and emulations embedded in internal modems
+ were tested with COMTEST. A difference count for some of these
+ components is listed below. Because these tests were performed in
+ 1994, they may not reflect the current performance of the given
+ product from a vendor.
+
+ It should be noted that COMTEST normally aborts when an excessive
+ number or certain types of problems have been detected. As part of
+ this testing, COMTEST was modified so that it would not abort no
+ matter how many differences were encountered.
+
+
+ Vendor Part number Errors aka "differences" reported
+ National (PC16550DV) 0 *
+
+ National (NS16550AFN) 0
+
+ National (NS16C552V) 0 *
+
+ TI (TL16550AFN) 3
+
+ CMD (16C550PE) 19
+
+ StarTech (ST16C550J) 23
+
+ Rockwell reference modem
+ with internal 16550 or an
+ emulation (RC144DPi/C3000-25) 117
+
+ Sierra modem with an internal
+ 16550 (SC11951/SC11351) 91
+
+
+ It is important to understand that a simple count of differences
+ from COMTEST does not reveal a lot about what differences are
+ important and which are not. For example, about half of the
+ differences reported in the two modems listed above that have
+ internal UARTs were caused by the clone UARTs not supporting
+ five- and six-bit character modes. The real 16550, 16450, and
+ 8250 UARTs all support these modes and COMTEST checks the
+ functionality of these modes so over fifty differences are
+ reported. However, almost no modern modem supports five- or
+ six-bit characters, particularly those with error-correction
+ and compression capabilities. This means that the differences
+ related to five- and six-bit character modes can be discounted.
+
+ Many of the differences COMTEST reports have to do with timing. In
+ many of the clone designs, when the host reads from one port, the
+ status bits in some other port may not update in the same amount
+ of time (some faster, some slower) as a real NS16550AFN
+ and COMTEST looks for these differences. This means that the number
+ of differences can be misleading in that one device may only have
+ one or two differences but they are extremely serious, and some
+ other device that updates the status registers faster or slower
+ than the reference part (that would probably never affect the
+ operation of a properly written driver) could have dozens of
+ differences reported.
+
+ * To date, the author of this document has not found any non-National
+ parts that report zero differences using the COMTEST program. It
+ should also be noted that National has had five versions of the
+ 16550 over the years and the newest parts behave a bit differently
+ than the classic NS16550AFN that is considered the benchmark for
+ functionality. COMTEST appears to turn a blind eye to the
+ differences within the National product line and reports no errors
+ on the National parts (except for the original 16550) even when
+ there are official erratas that describe bugs in the A, B and C
+ revisions of the parts, so this bias in COMTEST must be taken into
+ account.
+
+ COMTEST can be used as a screening tool to alert the administrator
+ to the presence of potentially incompatible components
+ that might cause problems or have to be handled as a special case.
+
+ If you run COMTEST on a 16550 that is in a modem or a modem is
+ attached to the serial port, you need to first issue a ATE0&W
+ command to the modem so that the modem will not echo any of the test
+ characters. If you forget to do this, COMTEST will report at least
+ this one difference:
+
+ This is a user process PPP software package. Normally, PPP is
+ implemented as a part of the kernel (e.g. as managed by pppd) and
+ it is thus somewhat hard to debug and/or modify its behavior. However,
+ in this implementation PPP is done as a user process with the help of
+ the tunnel device driver (tun).
+
+
+
+ In essence, this means that rather than running a PPP daemon, the ppp
+ program can be run as and when desired. No PPP interface needs to be
+ compiled into the kernel, as the program can use the generic tunnel
+ device to get data into and out of the kernel.
+
+ From here on out, user ppp will be referred to simply as ppp unless a
+ distinction needs to be made between it and any other PPP client/server
+ software such as pppd. Unless otherwise stated, all commands in this
+ section should be executed as root.
+
+
+
+ Before you start
+
+ This document assumes you are in roughly this position:
+
+ You have an account with an Internet Service Provider (ISP) which lets you
+ use PPP. Further, you have a modem (or other device) connected and
+ configured correctly which allows you to connect to your ISP.
+
+ You are going to need the following information to hand:
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Your ISPs phone number(s).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Your login name and password. This can be either a regular
+ unix style login/password pair, or a PPP PAP or CHAP
+ login/password pair.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The IP address of your ISP's gateway. The gateway is the
+ machine to which you will connect and will
+ be set up as your default route. If your ISP hasn't
+ given you this number, don't worry. We can make one up and
+ your ISP's PPP server will tell us when we connect.
+
+ This number is known from now on as HISADDR.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Your ISP's netmask setting. Again, if your ISP hasn't given
+ you this information, you can safely use a netmask of
+ 255.255.255.0.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The IP addresses of one or more nameservers. Normally, you
+ will be given two IP numbers. You MUST have this
+ information unless you run your own nameserver.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ If your ISP allocates you a static IP address and hostname
+ then you will need this information too. If not, you will need
+ to know from what range of IP addresses your allocated IP address
+ will belong. If you haven't been given this range, don't worry.
+ You can configure PPP to accept any IP number (as explained later).
+
+
+
+
+
+ If you do not have any of the required information, contact your ISP
+ and make sure they provide it to you.
+
+
+
+
+ Building a ppp ready kernel
+
+ As the description states, ``ppp'' uses the kernel ``tun'' device.
+ It is necessary to make sure that your kernel has support for this
+ device compiled in.
+
+ To check this, go to your kernel compile directory (/sys/i386/conf
+ or /sys/pc98/conf) and examine your kernel configuration file.
+ It needs to have the line
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device tun 1
+
+
+
+ in it somewhere. The stock GENERIC kernel has this as standard, so
+ if you have not installed a custom kernel or you do not have a /sys
+ directory, you do not have to change anything.
+
+ If your kernel configuration file does not have this line in it, or
+ you need to configure more than one tun device (for example, if
+ you are setting up a server and could have 16 dialup ppp connections
+ at any one time then you will need to use ``16'' instead of ``1''),
+ then you should add the line, re-compile, re-install and boot the new
+ kernel. Please refer to the
+
+ section for more information on kernel configuration.
+
+ You can check how many tunnel devices your current kernel has by
+ typing the following:
+
+
+
+ # ifconfig -a
+ tun0: flags=8051<UP,POINTOPOINT,RUNNING,MULTICAST> mtu 1500
+ inet 200.10.100.1 --> 203.10.100.24 netmask 0xffffffff
+ tun1: flags=8050<POINTOPOINT,RUNNING,MULTICAST> mtu 576
+ tun2: flags=8051<UP,POINTOPOINT,RUNNING,MULTICAST> mtu 1500
+ inet 203.10.100.1 --> 203.10.100.20 netmask 0xffffffff
+ tun3: flags=8050<POINTOPOINT,RUNNING,MULTICAST> mtu 1500
+
+
+
+ which in this case shows four tunnel devices, two of which are
+ currently configured and being used.
+
+ If you have a kernel without the tun device, and you can not
+ rebuild it for some reason, all is not lost. You should be
+ able to dynamically load the code. Refer to the appropriate
+ modload(8) and lkm(4) pages for further details.
+
+ You may also wish to take this opportunity to configure a firewall.
+ Details can be found in the
+ section.
+
+
+
+
+ Check the tun device
+
+ Most users will only require one ``tun'' device (tun0). If you have
+ used more (i.e., a number other than `1' in the pseudo-device line
+ in the kernel configuration file) then alter all references to ``tun0''
+ below to reflect whichever device number you are using.
+
+ The easiest way to make sure that the tun0 device is configured correctly
+ is to re-make it. To do this, execute the following commands:
+
+
+
+ # cd /dev
+ # ./MAKEDEV tun0
+
+
+
+ If you require 16 tunnel devices in your kernel, you will need to
+ create more than just tun0:
+
+
+
+ # cd /dev
+ # ./MAKEDEV tun15
+
+
+
+ Also, to confirm that the kernel is configured correctly,
+ the following command should give the indicated output:
+
+
+
+ $ ifconfig tun0
+ tun0: flags=8050<POINTOPOINT,RUNNING,MULTICAST> mtu 1500
+ $
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Name Resolution Configuration
+
+ The resolver is the part of the system that turns IP addresses
+ into hostnames and vice versa. It can be configured to look for
+ maps that describe IP to hostname mappings in one of two places.
+ The first is a file called /etc/hosts (man 5 hosts).
+ The second is the Internet Domain Name Service (DNS), a distributed
+ data base, the discussion of which is beyond the scope of this document.
+
+ This section describes briefly how to configure your resolver.
+
+ The resolver is a set of system calls that do the name mappings, but
+ you have to tell them where to find their information. You do
+ this by first editing the file /etc/host.conf. Do
+ not call this file /etc/hosts.conf (note the extra
+ ``s'') as the results can be confusing.
+
+
+
+ Edit the /etc/host.conf file
+
+ This file should contain the following two lines:
+
+
+
+ hosts
+ bind
+
+
+ which instructs the resolver to first look in the file
+ /etc/hosts, and then to consult the DNS if the
+ name was not found.
+
+
+
+
+ Edit the /etc/hosts(5) file
+
+ This file should contain the IP addresses and names of machines on your
+ network. At a bare minimum it should contain entries for the machine
+ which will be running ppp. Assuming that your machine is called
+ foo.bar.com with the IP address 10.0.0.1, /etc/hosts should
+ contain:
+
+
+
+ 127.0.0.1 localhost
+ 10.0.0.1 foo.bar.com foo
+
+
+
+ The first line defines the alias ``localhost'' as a synonym for the
+ current machine. Regardless of your own IP address, the IP address for
+ this line should always be 127.0.0.1. The second line maps the name
+ ``foo.bar.com'' (and the shorthand ``foo'') to the IP address 10.0.0.1.
+
+ If your provider allocates you a static IP address and name, then use
+ these in place of the 10.0.0.1 entry.
+
+
+
+
+ Edit the /etc/resolv.conf file
+
+ /etc/resolv.conf tells the resolver how to behave. If you are
+ running your own DNS, you may leave this file empty. Normally, you will
+ need to enter the following line(s):
+
+
+
+ nameserver x.x.x.x
+ nameserver y.y.y.y
+ domain bar.com
+
+
+
+ The x.x.x.x and y.y.y.y addresses are those given
+ to you by your ISP. Add as many ``nameserver'' lines as your ISP
+ provides. The ``domain'' line defaults to your hostname's domain, and
+ is probably unnecessary. Refer to the resolv.conf manual page for details
+ of other possible entries in this file.
+
+
+
+
+
+ PPP Configuration
+
+ Both user ppp and pppd (the kernel level implementation of PPP)
+ use configuration files located in the /etc/ppp directory.
+ The sample configuration files provided are a good reference for
+ user ppp, so don't delete them.
+
+ Configuring ppp requires that you edit a number of files, depending
+ on your requirements. What you put in them depends to some extent
+ on whether your ISP allocates IP addresses statically (i.e., you get
+ given one IP address, and always use that one) or dynamically (i.e.,
+ your IP address can be different for each PPP session).
+
+
+
+ PPP and Static IP addresses
+
+
+ You will need to create a configuration file called
+ /etc/ppp/ppp.conf. It should look similar to the example
+ below. Note that lines that end in a ``:'' start in the first column,
+ all other lines should be indented as shown using spaces or tabs.
+
+
+
+ 1 default:
+ 2 set device /dev/cuaa0
+ 3 set speed 115200
+ 4 set dial "ABORT BUSY ABORT NO\\sCARRIER TIMEOUT 5 \"\" ATE1Q0 OK-AT-OK
+ \\dATDT\\T TIMEOUT 40 CONNECT"
+ 5 provider:
+ 6 set phone "(0123) 456 7890"
+ 7 set login "TIMEOUT 10 gin:-BREAK-gin: foo word: bar col: ppp"
+ 8 set timeout 300
+ 9 deny lqr
+ 10 set ifaddr x.x.x.x y.y.y.y
+ 11 delete ALL
+ 12 add 0 0 HISADDR
+
+
+ Do not include the line numbers, they are just for reference in
+ this discussion.
+
+
+
+ Line 1:
+
+ Identifies the default entry. Commands in this entry are
+ executed automatically when ppp is run.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 2:
+
+
+ Identifies the device to which the modem is connected.
+ COM1: is /dev/cuaa0 and COM2: is /dev/cuaa1.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 3:
+
+
+ Sets the speed you want to connect at. If 115200 doesn't
+ work (it should with any reasonably new modem), try 38400
+ instead.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 4:
+
+
+ The dial string. User ppp uses an expect-send syntax similar
+ to the chat(8) program. Refer to the manual page
+ for information on the features of this language.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 5:
+
+
+ Identifies an entry for a provider called ``provider''.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 6:
+
+
+ Sets the phone number for this provider. Multiple phone
+ numbers may be specified using the ``:'' or ``|'' character as
+ a separator. The difference between these spearators is
+ described in the ppp manual page. To summarize, if you want
+ to rotate through the numbers, use the ``:''. If you want to
+ always attempt to dial the first number first and only use
+ the other numbers if the first number fails, use the ``|''.
+ Always quote the entire set of phone numbers as shown.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 7:
+
+
+ The login string is of the same chat-like syntax as the dial
+ string. In this example, the string works for a service whose
+ login session looks like this:
+
+
+
+ J. Random Provider
+ login: foo
+ password: bar
+ protocol: ppp
+
+
+
+ You will need to alter this script to suit your own needs.
+ If you're using PAP or CHAP, there will be no login at this
+ point, so your login string can be left blank. See
+
+ for further details.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 8:
+
+
+ Sets the default timeout (in seconds) for the connection.
+ Here, the connection will be closed automatically after
+ 300 seconds of inactivity. If you never want to timeout,
+ set this value to zero.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 9:
+
+
+ Ppp can be configured to exchange Link Quality Report (LQR)
+ packets. These packets describe how good the physical link
+ is. Ppp's LQR strategy is to close the connection when a
+ number of these packets are missed. This is useful when
+ you have a direct serial link to another machine and the
+ DSR modem signal is not available to indicate that the line
+ is up. When data saturates the line, LQR packets are
+ sometimes ``missed'', causing ppp to close the connection
+ prematurely. Refusing to negotiate lqr is sometimes prudent
+ (if you are going through a modem) as it avoids this whole
+ mess. By default, ppp will not attempt to negotiate LQR,
+ but will accept LQR negotiation from the peer.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 10:
+
+
+ Sets the interface addresses. The string x.x.x.x should be
+ replaced by the IP address that your provider has allocated
+ to you. The string y.y.y.y should be replaced by the IP
+ address that your ISP indicated for their gateway (the
+ machine to which you connect). If your ISP hasn't given you
+ a gateway address, use 10.0.0.2/0. If you need to
+ use a ``guessed'' address, make sure that you create an entry
+ in /etc/ppp/ppp.linkup as per the instructions for
+ .
+ If this line is omitted, ppp cannot run in or
+ mode.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 11:
+
+
+ Deletes all existing routing table entries for the acquired
+ tun device. This should not normally be necessary, but will
+ make sure that PPP is starting with a clean bill of health.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 12:
+
+
+ Adds a default route to your ISPs gateway. The special
+ word HISADDR is replaced with the gateway address
+ specified on line 9. It is important that this line appears
+ after line 9, otherwise HISADDR will not yet be
+ initialized.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ It is not necessary to add an entry to ppp.linkup when you have
+ a static IP address as your routing table entries are already correct
+ before you connect. You may however wish to create an entry to invoke
+ programs after connection. This is explained later with the sendmail
+ example.
+
+ Example configuration files can be found in the /etc/ppp
+ directory.
+
+
+
+
+ PPP and Dynamic IP addresses
+
+
+ If your service provider does not assign static IP numbers,
+ ppp can be configured to negotiate the local and
+ remote addresses. This is done by "guessing" an IP number
+ and allowing ppp to set it up correctly using the IP Configuration
+ Protocol (IPCP) after connecting. The ppp.conf configuration
+ is the same as , with the following change:
+
+
+
+ 10 set ifaddr 10.0.0.1/0 10.0.0.2/0 255.255.255.0
+
+
+
+ Again, do not include the line numbers, they are just for reference in
+ this discussion. Indentation of at least one space is required.
+
+
+
+ Line 10:
+
+ The number after the ``/'' character is the number of bits of
+ the address that ppp will insist on. You may wish to use
+ IP numbers more appropriate to your circumstances, but the
+ above example will almost always work. If it fails, you may
+ be able to defeat some broken ppp implementations by
+ supplying an additional 0.0.0.0 argument:
+
+
+
+ set ifaddr 10.0.0.1/0 10.0.0.2/0 255.255.255.0 0.0.0.0
+
+
+
+ This tells ppp to negotiate using address 0.0.0.0
+ rather than 10.0.0.1. Do not use 0.0.0.0/0
+ as the first argument to set ifaddr as it prevents
+ ppp from setting up an initial route in and
+ mode.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ You will also need to create an entry in /etc/ppp/ppp.linkup.
+ Ppp.linkup is used after a connection has been established. At
+ this point, ppp will know what IP addresses should really be
+ used. The following entry will delete the existing bogus routes, and
+ create correct ones:
+
+
+
+ 1 provider:
+ 2 delete ALL
+ 3 add 0 0 HISADDR
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 1:
+
+ On establishing a connection, ppp will look for an entry in
+ ppp.linkup according to the following rules: First,
+ try to match the same label as we used in ppp.conf.
+ If that fails, look for an entry for the IP number of our
+ gateway. This entry is a four-octet IP style label. If
+ we still haven't found an entry, look for the MYADDR
+ entry.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 2:
+
+
+ This line tells ppp to delete all existing routes for the
+ acquired tun interface (except the direct route entry).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 3:
+
+
+ This line tells ppp to add a default route that points to
+ HISADDR. HISADDR will be replaced with
+ the IP number of the gateway as negotiated in the IPCP.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ See the pmdemand entry in the files /etc/ppp/ppp.conf.sample and
+ /etc/ppp/ppp.linkup.sample for a detailed example.
+
+
+
+
+ Receiving incoming calls with PPP
+
+ This section describes setting up ppp in a server role.
+
+ When you configure ppp to receive incoming calls, you
+ must decide whether you wish to forward packets for just
+ ppp connections, for all interfaces, or not at all.
+ To forward for just ppp connections, include the line
+
+
+
+ enable proxy
+
+
+
+ in your ppp.conf file. If you wish to forward packets on all
+ interfaces, use the
+
+
+
+ gateway=YES
+
+
+
+ option in /etc/rc.conf (this file used to be called
+ /etc/sysconfig).
+
+
+
+ Which getty?
+
+
+ provides a good description on enabling dialup services using getty.
+
+ An alternative to getty is
+ mgetty,
+ a smarter version of getty designed with dialup lines in mind.
+
+ The advantages of using mgetty is that it actively talks to
+ modems, meaning if port is turned off in /etc/ttys then
+ your modem won't answer the phone.
+
+ Later versions of mgetty (from 0.99beta onwards) also support the
+ automatic detection of PPP streams, allowing your clients script-less
+ access to your server.
+
+ Refer to for more
+ information on mgetty.
+
+
+
+
+ PPP permissions
+
+ PPP must normally be run as user id 0. If however you wish to allow
+ ppp to run in server mode as a normal user by executing ppp as described
+ below, that user must be given permission to run ppp by adding them to
+ the network group in /etc/group.
+
+
+
+
+ Setting up a PPP shell for dynamic-IP users
+
+ Create a file called /etc/ppp/ppp-shell containing the
+ following:
+
+
+
+ #!/bin/sh
+ IDENT=`echo $0 | sed -e 's/^.*-\(.*\)$/\1/'`
+ CALLEDAS="$IDENT"
+ TTY=`tty`
+
+ if [ x$IDENT = xdialup ]; then
+ IDENT=`basename $TTY`
+ fi
+
+ echo "PPP for $CALLEDAS on $TTY"
+ echo "Starting PPP for $IDENT"
+
+ exec /usr/sbin/ppp -direct $IDENT
+
+
+
+ This script should be executable. Now make a symbolic link called
+ ppp-dialup to this script using the following commands:
+
+
+
+ # ln -s /etc/ppp/ppp-shell /etc/ppp/ppp-dialup
+
+
+
+ You should use this script as the shell for all your dialup
+ ppp users. This is an example from /etc/password
+ for a dialup PPP user with username pchilds. (remember don't directly
+ edit the password file, use vipw)
+
+
+
+ pchilds:*:1011:300:Peter Childs PPP:/home/ppp:/etc/ppp/ppp-dialup
+
+
+
+ Create a /home/ppp directory that is world readable
+ containing the following 0 byte files
+
+
+
+ -r--r--r-- 1 root wheel 0 May 27 02:23 .hushlogin
+ -r--r--r-- 1 root wheel 0 May 27 02:22 .rhosts
+
+
+
+ which prevents /etc/motd from being displayed.
+
+
+
+
+ Setting up a PPP shell for static-IP users
+
+ Create the ppp-shell file as above and for each account with
+ statically assigned IPs create a symbolic link to ppp-shell.
+
+ For example, if you have three dialup customers fred, sam, and mary,
+ that you route class C networks for, you would type the following:
+
+
+
+ # ln -s /etc/ppp/ppp-shell /etc/ppp/ppp-fred
+ # ln -s /etc/ppp/ppp-shell /etc/ppp/ppp-sam
+ # ln -s /etc/ppp/ppp-shell /etc/ppp/ppp-mary
+
+
+
+ Each of these users dialup accounts should have their shell set
+ to the symbolic link created above. (ie. mary's shell should be
+ /etc/ppp/ppp-mary).
+
+
+
+
+ Setting up ppp.conf for dynamic-IP users
+
+ The /etc/ppp/ppp.conf file should contain something along
+ the lines of
+
+
+
+ default:
+ set debug phase lcp chat
+ set timeout 0
+
+ ttyd0:
+ set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.100.20 255.255.255.255
+ enable proxy
+
+ ttyd1:
+ set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.100.21 255.255.255.255
+ enable proxy
+
+
+
+ Note the indenting is important.
+
+ The default: section is loaded for each session. For each
+ dialup line enabled in /etc/ttys create an entry similar
+ to the one for ttyd0: above. Each line should get a unique
+ IP from your pool of ip address for dynamic users.
+
+
+
+
+ Setting up ppp.conf for static-IP users
+
+ Along with the contents of the sample /etc/ppp/ppp.conf
+ above you should add a section for each of the statically assigned
+ dialup users. We will continue with our fred, sam, and mary example.
+
+
+
+ fred:
+ set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.101.1 255.255.255.255
+
+ sam:
+ set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.102.1 255.255.255.255
+
+ mary:
+ set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.103.1 255.255.255.255
+
+
+
+ The file /etc/ppp/ppp.linkup should also contain routing
+ information for each static IP user if required. The line below
+ would add a route for the 203.14.101.0 class C via
+ the client's ppp link.
+
+
+
+ fred:
+ add 203.14.101.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 HISADDR
+
+ sam:
+ add 203.14.102.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 HISADDR
+
+ mary:
+ add 203.14.103.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 HISADDR
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ More on mgetty, AutoPPP, and MS extensions
+
+
+
+ Mgetty and AutoPPP
+
+
+ Configuring and compiling mgetty with the AUTO_PPP option enabled
+ allows mgetty to detect the LCP phase of PPP connections and automatically
+ spawn off a ppp shell. However, since the default login/password sequence
+ does not occur it is necessary to authenticate users using either PAP
+ or CHAP.
+
+ This section assumes the user has successfully configured, compiled, and
+ installed a version of mgetty with the AUTO_PPP option (v0.99beta or later)
+
+ Make sure your /usr/local/etc/mgetty+sendfax/login.config file
+ has the following in it:
+
+
+
+ /AutoPPP/ - - /etc/ppp/ppp-pap-dialup
+
+
+
+ This will tell mgetty to run the ppp-pap-dialup script for
+ detected PPP connections.
+
+ Create a file called /etc/ppp/ppp-pap-dialup containing the
+ following (the file should be executable):
+
+
+
+ #!/bin/sh
+ TTY=`tty`
+ IDENT=`basename $TTY`
+ exec /usr/sbin/ppp -direct pap$IDENT
+
+
+
+ For each dialup line enabled in /etc/ttys create a corresponding
+ entry in /etc/ppp/ppp.conf. This will happily co-exist with
+ the definitions we created above.
+
+
+
+ papttyd0:
+ enable pap
+ set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.100.20 255.255.255.255
+ enable proxy
+
+ papttyd1:
+ enable pap
+ set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.100.21 255.255.255.255
+ enable proxy
+
+
+
+ Each user logging in with this method will need to have a username/password
+ in /etc/ppp/ppp.secret file, or alternatively add the
+
+
+
+ enable passwdauth
+
+
+
+ option to authenticate users via pap from the /etc/passwordd
+ file. (*)
+
+ (*) Note this option only available in 2.2-961014-SNAP or later, or by
+ getting the updated ppp code for 2.1.x. (see MS extensions below for details)
+
+
+
+
+ MS extentions
+
+ From 2.2-961014-SNAP onwards it is possible to allow the automatic
+ negotiation of DNS and NetBIOS name servers with clients supporting
+ this feature (namely Win95/NT clients). See RFC1877 for more details
+ on the protocol.
+
+ An example of enabling these extensions in your
+ /etc/ppp/ppp.conf file is illustrated below.
+
+
+
+ default:
+ set debug phase lcp chat
+ set timeout 0
+ enable msext
+ set ns 203.14.100.1 203.14.100.2
+ set nbns 203.14.100.5
+
+
+
+ This will tell the clients the primary and secondary
+ name server addresses, and a netbios nameserver host.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ PAP and CHAP authentication
+
+
+ Some ISPs set their system up so that the authentication part of
+ your connection is done using either of the PAP or CHAP authentication
+ mechanisms. If this is the case, your ISP will not give a login:
+ prompt when you connect, but will start talking PPP immediately.
+
+ PAP is less secure than CHAP, but security is not normally an issue
+ here as passwords, although being sent as plain text with PAP, are being
+ transmitted down a serial line only. There's not much room for hackers
+ to "eavesdrop".
+
+ Referring back to the or sections, the following alterations
+ must be made:
+
+
+
+ 7 set login
+ .....
+ 13 set authname MyUserName
+ 14 set authkey MyPassword
+
+
+
+ As always, do not include the line numbers, they are just for reference
+ in this discussion. Indentation of at least one space is required.
+
+
+
+ Line 7:
+
+ Your ISP will not normally require that you log into the
+ server if you're using PAP or CHAP. You must therefore
+ disable your "set login" string.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 13:
+
+
+ This line specifies your PAP/CHAP user name. You will need
+ to insert the correct value for MyUserName.
+
+
+
+
+ Line 14:
+
+
+ This line specifies your PAP/CHAP password. You will need
+ to insert the correct value for MyPassword.
+ You may want to add an additional line
+
+ 15 accept PAP
+
+
+ or
+
+ 15 accept CHAP
+
+
+ to make it obvious that this is the intention, but PAP
+ and CHAP are accepted by default.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ NOTE: Your authkey will be logged if you have
+ command logging turned on (set log +command). Care should be
+ taken when deciding the ppp log file permissions.
+
+
+
+
+ Changing your ppp configuration on the fly
+
+ It is possible to talk to the ppp program while it is running in
+ the background, but only if a suitable password has been set up.
+
+ By default, ppp will listen to a TCP port of 3000 + tunno,
+ where tunno is the number of the tun device acquired, however,
+ if a password for the local machine is not set up in
+ /etc/ppp/ppp.secret, no server connection will be created.
+ To set your password, put the following line in
+ /etc/ppp/ppp.secret:
+
+
+
+ foo MyPassword
+
+
+
+ where foo is your local hostname (run hostname -s to
+ determine the correct name), and MyPassword is the unencrypted
+ password that you wish to use. /etc/ppp/ppp.secret should
+ NOT be accessable by anyone without user id 0. This means that
+ /, /etc and /etc/ppp should not be writable,
+ and ppp.secret should be owned by user id 0 and have permissions
+ 0600.
+
+ It is also possible to select a specific port number or to have ppp listen
+ to a local unix domain socket rather than to a TCP socket. Refer to the
+ set socket command in manual page for further details.
+
+ Once a socket has been set up, the pppctl(8) program may be used
+ in scripts that wish to manipulate the running program.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Final system configuration
+
+
+ You now have PPP configured, but there are a few more things to
+ do before it is ready to work. They all involve editing the
+ /etc/rc.conf file (was /etc/sysconfig).
+
+ Working from the top down in this file, make sure the ``hostname='' line
+ is set, e.g.:
+
+
+
+ hostname=foo.bar.com
+
+
+
+ If your ISP has supplied you with a static IP address and name, it's
+ probably best that you use this name as your host name.
+
+ Look for the network_interfaces variable. If you want to configure
+ your system to dial your ISP on demand, make sure the tun0 device is
+ added to the list, otherwise remove it.
+
+
+
+ network_interfaces="lo0 tun0"
+ ifconfig_tun0=
+
+
+
+ Note, the ifconfig_tun0 variable should be empty, and
+ a file called /etc/start_if.tun0 should be created. This file
+ should contain the line
+
+
+
+ ppp -auto mysystem
+
+
+
+ This script is executed at network configuration time, starting
+ your ppp daemon in automatic mode. If you have a LAN for which
+ this machine is a gateway, you may also wish to use the
+ switch. Refer to the manual page for further
+ details.
+
+ Set the router program to ``NO'' with the line
+
+
+
+ router_enable=NO (/etc/rc.conf)
+ router=NO (/etc/sysconfig)
+
+
+
+ It is important that the routed daemon is not started
+ (it's started by default) as routed tends to delete the default
+ routing table entries created by ppp.
+
+ It is probably worth your while ensuring that the ``sendmail_flags'' line
+ does not include the ``-q'' option, otherwise sendmail will attempt to do
+ a network lookup every now and then, possibly causing your machine to dial
+ out. You may try:
+
+
+
+ sendmail_flags="-bd"
+
+
+
+ The upshot of this is that you must force sendmail to re-examine the
+ mail queue whenever the ppp link is up by typing:
+
+
+
+ # /usr/sbin/sendmail -q
+
+
+
+ You may wish to use the !bg command in ppp.linkup to do this
+ automatically:
+
+
+
+ 1 provider:
+ 2 delete ALL
+ 3 add 0 0 HISADDR
+ 4 !bg sendmail -bd -q30m
+
+
+
+ If you don't like this, it is possible to set up a "dfilter" to block
+ SMTP traffic. Refer to the sample files for further details.
+
+ All that is left is to reboot the machine.
+
+ After rebooting, you can now either type
+
+
+
+ # ppp
+
+
+
+ and then ``dial provider'' to start the PPP session, or, if you
+ want ppp to establish sessions automatically when there is outbound
+ traffic (and you haven't created the start_if.tun0 script), type
+
+
+
+ # ppp -auto provider
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Summary
+
+ To recap, the following steps are necessary when setting up ppp
+ for the first time:
+
+ Client side:
+
+
+
+
+
+ Ensure that the tun device is built into your kernel.
+
+
+
+ Ensure that the tunX device file is available in the
+ /dev directory.
+
+
+
+ Create an entry in /etc/ppp/ppp.conf. The
+ pmdemand example should suffice for most
+ ISPs.
+
+
+
+ If you have a dynamic IP address, create an entry in
+ /etc/ppp/ppp.linkup.
+
+
+
+ Update your /etc/rc.conf (or sysconfig) file.
+
+
+
+ Create a start_if.tun0 script if you require demand
+ dialing.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Server side:
+
+
+
+ Ensure that the tun device is built into your kernel.
+
+
+
+ Ensure that the tunX device file is available in the
+ /dev directory.
+
+
+
+ Create an entry in /etc/passwd (using the vipw(8)
+ program).
+
+
+
+ Create a profile in this users home directory that
+ runs ``ppp -direct direct-server'' or similar.
+
+
+
+ Create an entry in /etc/ppp/ppp.conf. The
+ direct-server example should suffice.
+
+
+
+ Create an entry in /etc/ppp/ppp.linkup.
+
+
+
+ Update your /etc/rc.conf (or sysconfig) file.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Acknowledgments
+
+ This section of the handbook was last updated on Sun Sep 7, 1997
+ by &a.brian;
+
+ Thanks to the following for their input, comments & suggestions:
+
+ &a.nik;
+
+ &a.dirkvangulik;
+
+ &a.pjc;
+
+
+
+
+
+ Setting up Kernel PPP
+
+ Contributed by &a.gena;.
+
+ Before you start setting up PPP on your machine make
+ sure that pppd is located in /usr/sbin and directory /etc/ppp
+ exists.
+
+ pppd can work in two modes:
+
+
+
+ as a "client" , i.e. you want to connect your machine to outside
+ world via PPP serial connection or modem line.
+
+
+
+
+ as a "server" , i.e. your machine is located on the network and
+ used to connect other computers using PPP.
+
+
+
+
+ In both cases you will need to set up an options file (/etc/ppp/options
+ or ~/.ppprc if you have more then one user on your machine that uses
+ PPP).
+
+ You also will need some modem/serial software ( preferably kermit )
+ so you can dial and establish connection with remote host.
+
+
+
+ Working as a PPP client
+
+ I used the following /etc/ppp/options to connect to CISCO terminal
+ server PPP line.
+ crtscts # enable hardware flow control
+ modem # modem control line
+ noipdefault # remote PPP server must supply your IP address.
+ # if the remote host doesn't send your IP during IPCP
+ # negotiation , remove this option
+ passive # wait for LCP packets
+ domain ppp.foo.com # put your domain name here
+
+ :<remote_ip> # put the IP of remote PPP host here
+ # it will be used to route packets via PPP link
+ # if you didn't specified the noipdefault option
+ # change this line to <local_ip>:<remote_ip>
+
+ defaultroute # put this if you want that PPP server will be your
+ # default router
+
+
+ To connect:
+
+
+
+ Dial to the remote host using kermit ( or other modem program )
+ enter your user name and password ( or whatever is needed to enable PPP
+ on the remote host )
+
+
+
+
+ Exit kermit. ( without hanging up the line )
+
+
+
+
+ enter:
+ /usr/src/usr.sbin/pppd.new/pppd /dev/tty01 19200
+
+ ( put the appropriate speed and device name )
+
+
+
+
+
+ Now your computer is connected with PPP. If the connection fails for some
+ reasons you can add the "debug" option to the /etc/ppp/options file
+ and check messages on the console to track the problem
+
+ Following /etc/ppp/pppup script will make all 3 stages automatically:
+ #!/bin/sh
+ ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep
+ pid=`ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
+ if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
+ echo 'killing pppd, PID=' ${pid}
+ kill ${pid}
+ fi
+ ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep
+ pid=`ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
+ if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
+ echo 'killing kermit, PID=' ${pid}
+ kill -9 ${pid}
+ fi
+
+ ifconfig ppp0 down
+ ifconfig ppp0 delete
+
+ kermit -y /etc/ppp/kermit.dial
+ pppd /dev/tty01 19200
+
+
+ /etc/ppp/kermit.dial is kermit script that dials and makes all
+ necessary authorization on the remote host.
+ ( Example of such script is attached to the end of this document )
+
+ Use the following /etc/ppp/pppdown script to disconnect the PPP line:
+ #!/bin/sh
+ pid=`ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
+ if [ X${pid} != "X" ] ; then
+ echo 'killing pppd, PID=' ${pid}
+ kill -TERM ${pid}
+ fi
+
+ ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep
+ pid=`ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
+ if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
+ echo 'killing kermit, PID=' ${pid}
+ kill -9 ${pid}
+ fi
+
+ /sbin/ifconfig ppp0 down
+ /sbin/ifconfig ppp0 delete
+ kermit -y /etc/ppp/kermit.hup
+ /etc/ppp/ppptest
+
+
+ Check if PPP is still running (/usr/etc/ppp/ppptest):
+ #!/bin/sh
+ pid=`ps ax| grep pppd |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
+ if [ X${pid} != "X" ] ; then
+ echo 'pppd running: PID=' ${pid-NONE}
+ else
+ echo 'No pppd running.'
+ fi
+ set -x
+ netstat -n -I ppp0
+ ifconfig ppp0
+
+
+ Hangs up modem line (/etc/ppp/kermit.hup):
+ set line /dev/tty01 ; put your modem device here
+ set speed 19200
+ set file type binary
+ set file names literal
+ set win 8
+ set rec pack 1024
+ set send pack 1024
+ set block 3
+ set term bytesize 8
+ set command bytesize 8
+ set flow none
+
+ pau 1
+ out +++
+ inp 5 OK
+ out ATH0\13
+ echo \13
+ exit
+
+
+ Here is an alternate method using chat instead of
+ kermit.
+
+ Contributed by &a.rhuff;.
+
+ The following two files are sufficient to accomplish a pppd
+ connection.
+
+ /etc/ppp/options:
+ /dev/cuaa1 115200
+
+ crtscts # enable hardware flow control
+ modem # modem control line
+ connect "/usr/bin/chat -f /etc/ppp/login.chat.script"
+ noipdefault # remote PPP server must supply your IP address.
+ # if the remote host doesn't send your IP during
+ # IPCP negotiation, remove this option
+ passive # wait for LCP packets
+ domain <your.domain> # put your domain name here
+
+ : # put the IP of remote PPP host here
+ # it will be used to route packets via PPP link
+ # if you didn't specified the noipdefault option
+ # change this line to <local_ip>:<remote_ip>
+
+ defaultroute # put this if you want that PPP server will be
+ # your default router
+
+
+ /etc/ppp/login.chat.script:
+
+ (This should actually go into a single line.)
+
+
+ ABORT BUSY ABORT 'NO CARRIER' "" AT OK ATDT<phone.number>
+ CONNECT "" TIMEOUT 10 ogin:-\\r-ogin: <login-id>
+ TIMEOUT 5 sword: <password>
+
+
+ Once these are installed and modified correctly, all you need to
+ do is
+
+ pppd.
+
+ This sample based primarily on information provided by: Trev Roydhouse
+ <Trev.Roydhouse@f401.n711.z3.fidonet.org> and used by
+ permission.
+
+
+
+
+ Working as a PPP server
+
+ /etc/ppp/options:
+ crtscts # Hardware flow control
+ netmask 255.255.255.0 # netmask ( not required )
+ 192.114.208.20:192.114.208.165 # ip's of local and remote hosts
+ # local ip must be different from one
+ # you assigned to the ethernet ( or other )
+ # interface on your machine.
+ # remote IP is ip address that will be
+ # assigned to the remote machine
+ domain ppp.foo.com # your domain
+ passive # wait for LCP
+ modem # modem line
+
+
+ Following /etc/ppp/pppserv script will enable ppp server on your
+ machine
+ #!/bin/sh
+ ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep
+ pid=`ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
+ if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
+ echo 'killing pppd, PID=' ${pid}
+ kill ${pid}
+ fi
+ ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep
+ pid=`ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
+ if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
+ echo 'killing kermit, PID=' ${pid}
+ kill -9 ${pid}
+ fi
+
+ # reset ppp interface
+ ifconfig ppp0 down
+ ifconfig ppp0 delete
+
+ # enable autoanswer mode
+ kermit -y /etc/ppp/kermit.ans
+
+ # run ppp
+ pppd /dev/tty01 19200
+
+
+ Use this /etc/ppp/pppservdown script to stop ppp server:
+ #!/bin/sh
+ ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep
+ pid=`ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
+ if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
+ echo 'killing pppd, PID=' ${pid}
+ kill ${pid}
+ fi
+ ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep
+ pid=`ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
+ if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
+ echo 'killing kermit, PID=' ${pid}
+ kill -9 ${pid}
+ fi
+ ifconfig ppp0 down
+ ifconfig ppp0 delete
+
+ kermit -y /etc/ppp/kermit.noans
+
+
+ Following kermit script will enable/disable autoanswer mode
+ on your modem (/etc/ppp/kermit.ans):
+ set line /dev/tty01
+ set speed 19200
+ set file type binary
+ set file names literal
+ set win 8
+ set rec pack 1024
+ set send pack 1024
+ set block 3
+ set term bytesize 8
+ set command bytesize 8
+ set flow none
+
+ pau 1
+ out +++
+ inp 5 OK
+ out ATH0\13
+ inp 5 OK
+ echo \13
+ out ATS0=1\13 ; change this to out ATS0=0\13 if you want to disable
+ ; autoanswer mod
+ inp 5 OK
+ echo \13
+ exit
+
+
+ This /etc/ppp/kermit.dial script is used for dialing and authorizing
+ on remote host. You will need to customize it for your needs.
+ Put your login and password in this script , also you will need
+ to change input statement depending on responses from your modem
+ and remote host.
+ ;
+ ; put the com line attached to the modem here:
+ ;
+ set line /dev/tty01
+ ;
+ ; put the modem speed here:
+ ;
+ set speed 19200
+ set file type binary ; full 8 bit file xfer
+ set file names literal
+ set win 8
+ set rec pack 1024
+ set send pack 1024
+ set block 3
+ set term bytesize 8
+ set command bytesize 8
+ set flow none
+ set modem hayes
+ set dial hangup off
+ set carrier auto ; Then SET CARRIER if necessary,
+ set dial display on ; Then SET DIAL if necessary,
+ set input echo on
+ set input timeout proceed
+ set input case ignore
+ def \%x 0 ; login prompt counter
+ goto slhup
+
+ :slcmd ; put the modem in command mode
+ echo Put the modem in command mode.
+ clear ; Clear unread characters from input buffer
+ pause 1
+ output +++ ; hayes escape sequence
+ input 1 OK\13\10 ; wait for OK
+ if success goto slhup
+ output \13
+ pause 1
+ output at\13
+ input 1 OK\13\10
+ if fail goto slcmd ; if modem doesn't answer OK, try again
+
+ :slhup ; hang up the phone
+ clear ; Clear unread characters from input buffer
+ pause 1
+ echo Hanging up the phone.
+ output ath0\13 ; hayes command for on hook
+ input 2 OK\13\10
+ if fail goto slcmd ; if no OK answer, put modem in command mode
+
+ :sldial ; dial the number
+ pause 1
+ echo Dialing.
+ output atdt9,550311\13\10 ; put phone number here
+ assign \%x 0 ; zero the time counter
+
+ :look
+ clear ; Clear unread characters from input buffer
+ increment \%x ; Count the seconds
+ input 1 {CONNECT }
+ if success goto sllogin
+ reinput 1 {NO CARRIER\13\10}
+ if success goto sldial
+ reinput 1 {NO DIALTONE\13\10}
+ if success goto slnodial
+ reinput 1 {\255}
+ if success goto slhup
+ reinput 1 {\127}
+ if success goto slhup
+ if < \%x 60 goto look
+ else goto slhup
+
+ :sllogin ; login
+ assign \%x 0 ; zero the time counter
+ pause 1
+ echo Looking for login prompt.
+
+ :slloop
+ increment \%x ; Count the seconds
+ clear ; Clear unread characters from input buffer
+ output \13
+ ;
+ ; put your expected login prompt here:
+ ;
+ input 1 {Username: }
+ if success goto sluid
+ reinput 1 {\255}
+ if success goto slhup
+ reinput 1 {\127}
+ if success goto slhup
+ if < \%x 10 goto slloop ; try 10 times to get a login prompt
+ else goto slhup ; hang up and start again if 10 failures
+
+ :sluid
+ ;
+ ; put your userid here:
+ ;
+ output ppp-login\13
+ input 1 {Password: }
+ ;
+ ; put your password here:
+ ;
+ output ppp-password\13
+ input 1 {Entering SLIP mode.}
+ echo
+ quit
+
+ :slnodial
+ echo \7No dialtone. Check the telephone line!\7
+ exit 1
+
+ ; local variables:
+ ; mode: csh
+ ; comment-start: "; "
+ ; comment-start-skip: "; "
+ ; end:
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Setting up a SLIP Client
+
+ Contributed by &a.asami;8 Aug 1995.
+
+ The following is one way to set up a FreeBSD machine for SLIP on a
+ static host network. For dynamic hostname assignments (i.e., your
+ address changes each time you dial up), you probably need to do
+ something much fancier.
+
+ First, determine which serial port your modem is connected to. I have
+ a symbolic link /dev/modem -> cuaa1, and only use the modem name in my
+ configuration files. It can become quite cumbersome when you need to
+ fix a bunch of files in /etc and .kermrc's all over the system! (Note
+ that /dev/cuaa0 is COM1, cuaa1 is COM2, etc.)
+
+ Make sure you have
+ pseudo-device sl 1
+
+ in your kernel's config file. It is included in the GENERIC kernel,
+ so this will not be a problem unless you deleted it.
+
+
+
+ Things you have to do only once
+
+
+
+
+
+ Add your home machine, the gateway and nameservers to your
+ /etc/hosts file. Mine looks like this:
+ 127.0.0.1 localhost loghost
+ 136.152.64.181 silvia.HIP.Berkeley.EDU silvia.HIP silvia
+
+ 136.152.64.1 inr-3.Berkeley.EDU inr-3 slip-gateway
+ 128.32.136.9 ns1.Berkeley.edu ns1
+ 128.32.136.12 ns2.Berkeley.edu ns2
+
+ By the way, silvia is the name of the car that I had when I was
+ back in Japan (it is called 2?0SX here in U.S.).
+
+
+
+
+ Make sure you have "hosts" before "bind" in your /etc/host.conf.
+ Otherwise, funny things may happen.
+
+
+
+
+ Edit the file /etc/rc.conf. Note that you should edit
+ the file /etc/sysconfig instead if you are running FreeBSD
+ previous to version 2.2.2.
+
+
+
+ Set your hostname by editing the line that says:
+ hostname=myname.my.domain
+
+ You should give it your full Internet hostname.
+
+
+
+
+ Add sl0 to the list of network interfaces by changing the line
+ that says:
+ network_interfaces="lo0"
+
+ to:
+ network_interfaces="lo0 sl0"
+
+
+
+
+
+ Set the startup flags of sl0 by adding a line:
+ ifconfig_sl0="inet ${hostname} slip-gateway netmask 0xffffff00 up"
+
+
+
+
+
+ Designate the default router by changing the line:
+ defaultrouter=NO
+
+ to:
+ defaultrouter=slip-gateway
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Make a file /etc/resolv.conf which contains:
+ domain HIP.Berkeley.EDU
+ nameserver 128.32.136.9
+ nameserver 128.32.136.12
+
+ As you can see, these set up the nameserver hosts. Of course, the
+ actual domain names and addresses depend on your environment.
+
+
+
+
+ Set the password for root and toor (and any other accounts that
+ does not have a password). Use passwd, do not edit the /etc/passwd
+ or /etc/master.passwd files!
+
+
+
+
+ Reboot your machine and make sure it comes up with the correct
+ hostname.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Making a SLIP connection
+
+
+
+
+
+ Dial up, type "slip" at the prompt, enter your machine name and
+ password. The things you need to enter depends on your
+ environment. I use kermit, with a script like this:
+ # kermit setup
+ set modem hayes
+ set line /dev/modem
+ set speed 115200
+ set parity none
+ set flow rts/cts
+ set terminal bytesize 8
+ set file type binary
+ # The next macro will dial up and login
+ define slip dial 643-9600, input 10 =>, if failure stop, -
+ output slip\x0d, input 10 Username:, if failure stop, -
+ output silvia\x0d, input 10 Password:, if failure stop, -
+ output ***\x0d, echo \x0aCONNECTED\x0a
+
+ (of course, you have to change the hostname and password to fit
+ yours). Then you can just type "slip" from the kermit prompt to
+ get connected.
+
+ Note: leaving your password in plain text anywhere in the
+ filesystem is generally a BAD idea. Do it at your own risk. I am
+ just too lazy.
+
+
+
+
+ Leave the kermit there (you can suspend it by "z") and as root,
+ type
+ slattach -h -c -s 115200 /dev/modem
+
+ if you are able to "ping" hosts on the other side of the router,
+ you are connected! If it does not work, you might want to try "-a"
+ instead of "-c" as an argument to slattach.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ How to shutdown the connection
+
+ Type "kill -INT `cat /var/run/slattach.modem.pid`" (as root) to
+ kill slattach. Then go back to kermit ("fg" if you suspended it)
+ and exit from it ("q").
+
+ The slattach man page says you have to use "ifconfig sl0 down" to
+ mark the interface down, but this does not seem to make any
+ difference for me. ("ifconfig sl0" reports the same thing.)
+
+ Some times, your modem might refuse to drop the carrier (mine
+ often does). In that case, simply start kermit and quit it again.
+ It usually goes out on the second try.
+
+
+
+
+ Troubleshooting
+
+ If it does not work, feel free to ask me. The things that people
+ tripped over so far:
+
+
+
+ Not using "-c" or "-a" in slattach (I have no idea why this can be
+ fatal, but adding this flag solved the problem for at least one
+ person)
+
+
+
+
+ Using "s10" instead of "sl0" (might be hard to see the difference on
+ some fonts).
+
+
+
+
+ Try "ifconfig sl0" to see your interface status. I get:
+ silvia# ifconfig sl0
+ sl0: flags=10<POINTOPOINT>
+ inet 136.152.64.181 --> 136.152.64.1 netmask ffffff00
+
+
+
+
+
+ Also, netstat -r will give the routing table, in case you get
+ the "no route to host" messages from ping. Mine looks like:
+ silvia# netstat -r
+ Routing tables
+ Destination Gateway Flags Refs Use IfaceMTU Rtt
+ Netmasks:
+ (root node)
+ (root node)
+
+ Route Tree for Protocol Family inet:
+ (root node) =>
+ default inr-3.Berkeley.EDU UG 8 224515 sl0 - -
+ localhost.Berkel localhost.Berkeley UH 5 42127 lo0 - 0.438
+ inr-3.Berkeley.E silvia.HIP.Berkele UH 1 0 sl0 - -
+ silvia.HIP.Berke localhost.Berkeley UGH 34 47641234 lo0 - 0.438
+ (root node)
+
+ (this is after transferring a bunch of files, your numbers should be
+ smaller).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Setting up a SLIP Server
+
+ Contributed by &a.ghelmer;.
+ v1.0, 15 May 1995.
+
+ This document provides suggestions for setting up SLIP Server services
+ on a FreeBSD system, which typically means configuring your system to
+ automatically startup connections upon login for remote SLIP clients.
+ The author has written this document based on his experience;
+ however, as your system and needs may be different, this document may
+ not answer all of your questions, and the author cannot be responsible
+ if you damage your system or lose data due to attempting to follow the
+ suggestions here.
+
+ This guide was originally written for SLIP Server services on a
+ FreeBSD 1.x system. It has been modified to reflect changes in the
+ pathnames and the removal of the SLIP interface compression flags in
+ early versions of FreeBSD 2.X, which appear to be the only major
+ changes between FreeBSD versions. If you do encounter mistakes in
+ this document, please email the author with enough information to
+ help correct the problem.
+
+
+
+ Prerequisites
+
+ This document is very technical in nature, so background knowledge is
+ required. It is assumed that you are familiar with the TCP/IP network
+ protocol, and in particular, network and node addressing, network
+ address masks, subnetting, routing, and routing protocols, such as
+ RIP. Configuring SLIP services on a dial-up server requires a
+ knowledge of these concepts, and if you are not familiar with them,
+ please read a copy of either Craig Hunt's TCP/IP Network
+ Administration published by O'Reilly & Associates, Inc. (ISBN
+ Number 0-937175-82-X), or Douglas Comer's books on the TCP/IP
+ protocol.
+
+ It is further assumed that you have already setup your modem(s) and
+ configured the appropriate system files to allow logins through your
+ modems. If you have not prepared your system for this yet, please see
+ the tutorial for configuring dialup services; if you have a World-Wide
+ Web browser available, browse the list of tutorials at
+ http://www.freebsd.org/; otherwise, check the place
+ where you found this document for a document named dialup.txt or
+ something similar. You may also want to check the manual pages for
+ sio(4) for information on the serial port device driver and
+ ttys(5), gettytab(5), getty(8), & init(8) for
+ information relevant to configuring the system to accept logins on
+ modems, and perhaps stty(1) for information on setting serial
+ port parameters [such as clocal for directly-connected
+ serial interfaces].
+
+
+
+
+ Quick Overview
+
+ In its typical configuration, using FreeBSD as a SLIP server works as
+ follows: a SLIP user dials up your FreeBSD SLIP Server system and logs
+ in with a special SLIP login ID that uses /usr/sbin/sliplogin
+ as the special user's shell. The sliplogin program browses the
+ file /etc/sliphome/slip.hosts to find a matching line for
+ the special user, and if it finds a match, connects the serial line to
+ an available SLIP interface and then runs the shell script
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.login to configure the SLIP interface.
+
+
+
+ An Example of a SLIP Server Login
+
+ For example, if a SLIP user ID were Shelmerg, Shelmerg's
+ entry in /etc/master.passwd would look something like this
+ (except it would be all on one line):
+
+
+
+ Shelmerg:password:1964:89::0:0:Guy Helmer - SLIP:
+ /usr/users/Shelmerg:/usr/sbin/sliplogin
+
+
+
+ and, when Shelmerg logs in, sliplogin will search
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.hosts for a line that had a matching user
+ ID; for example, there may be a line in
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.hosts that reads:
+
+
+
+ Shelmerg dc-slip sl-helmer 0xfffffc00 autocomp
+
+
+
+ sliplogin will find that matching line, hook the serial line into
+ the next available SLIP interface, and then execute
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.login like this:
+
+
+
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.login 0 19200 Shelmerg dc-slip sl-helmer 0xfffffc00 autocomp
+
+
+
+ If all goes well, /etc/sliphome/slip.login will issue an
+ ifconfig for the SLIP interface to which sliplogin
+ attached itself (slip interface 0, in the above example, which was the
+ first parameter in the list given to slip.login) to set the
+ local IP address (dc-slip), remote IP address
+ (sl-helmer), network mask for the SLIP interface
+ (0xfffffc00), and any additional flags (autocomp).
+ If something goes wrong, sliplogin usually logs good
+ informational messages via the daemon syslog facility, which usually
+ goes into /var/log/messages (see the manual pages for
+ syslogd(8) and syslog.conf(5), and perhaps check
+ /etc/syslog.conf to see to which files syslogd is
+ logging).
+
+ OK, enough of the examples -- let us dive into setting up the system.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Kernel Configuration
+
+ FreeBSD's default kernels usually come with two SLIP interfaces
+ defined (sl0 and sl1); you can use netstat
+ -i to see whether these interfaces are defined in your kernel.
+
+ Sample output from netstat -i:
+
+
+
+ Name Mtu Network Address Ipkts Ierrs Opkts Oerrs Coll
+ ed0 1500 <Link>0.0.c0.2c.5f.4a 291311 0 174209 0 133
+ ed0 1500 138.247.224 ivory 291311 0 174209 0 133
+ lo0 65535 <Link> 79 0 79 0 0
+ lo0 65535 loop localhost 79 0 79 0 0
+ sl0* 296 <Link> 0 0 0 0 0
+ sl1* 296 <Link> 0 0 0 0 0
+
+
+
+ The sl0 and sl1 interfaces shown in netstat
+ -i's output indicate that there are two SLIP interfaces built
+ into the kernel. (The asterisks after the sl0 and
+ sl1 indicate that the interfaces are ``down''.)
+
+ However, FreeBSD's default kernels do not come configured to forward
+ packets (ie, your FreeBSD machine will not act as a router) due to
+ Internet RFC requirements for Internet hosts (see RFC's 1009
+ [Requirements for Internet Gateways], 1122
+ [Requirements for Internet Hosts -- Communication Layers],
+ and perhaps 1127 [A Perspective on the Host Requirements
+ RFCs]), so if you want your FreeBSD SLIP Server to act as a
+ router, you will have to edit the /etc/rc.conf file (called
+ /etc/sysconfig in FreeBSD releases prior to 2.2.2) and change
+ the setting of the gateway variable to YES. If you
+ have an older system which predates even the /etc/sysconfig
+ file, then add the following command:
+ sysctl -w net.inet.ip.forwarding = 1
+
+ to your /etc/rc.local file.
+
+ You will then need to reboot for the new settings to take effect.
+
+ You will notice that near the end of the default kernel configuration
+ file (/sys/i386/conf/GENERIC) is a line that reads:
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device sl 2
+
+
+
+ which is the line that defines the number of SLIP devices available in
+ the kernel; the number at the end of the line is the maximum number of
+ SLIP connections that may be operating simultaneously.
+
+ Please refer to
+ for help in reconfiguring your kernel.
+
+
+
+
+ Sliplogin Configuration
+
+ As mentioned earlier, there are three files in the
+ /etc/sliphome directory that are part of the configuration
+ for /usr/sbin/sliplogin (see sliplogin(8) for the
+ actual manual page for sliplogin): slip.hosts, which
+ defines the SLIP users & their associated IP addresses;
+ slip.login, which usually just configures the SLIP interface;
+ and (optionally) slip.logout, which undoes
+ slip.login's effects when the serial connection is
+ terminated.
+
+
+
+ slip.hosts Configuration
+
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.hosts contains lines which have at least
+ four items, separated by whitespace:
+
+
+
+
+
+ SLIP user's login ID
+
+
+
+ Local address (local to the SLIP server) of the SLIP link
+
+
+
+ Remote address of the SLIP link
+
+
+
+ Network mask
+
+
+
+
+
+ The local and remote addresses may be host names (resolved to IP
+ addresses by /etc/hosts or by the domain name service,
+ depending on your specifications in /etc/host.conf), and I
+ believe the network mask may be a name that can be resolved by a
+ lookup into /etc/networks. On a sample system,
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.hosts looks like this:
+
+
+
+ ----- begin /etc/sliphome/slip.hosts -----
+ #
+ # login local-addr remote-addr mask opt1 opt2
+ # (normal,compress,noicmp)
+ #
+ Shelmerg dc-slip sl-helmerg 0xfffffc00 autocomp
+ ----- end /etc/sliphome/slip.hosts ------
+
+
+
+ At the end of the line is one or more of the options.
+
+
+
+
+
+ normal - no header compression
+
+
+
+ compress - compress headers
+
+
+
+ autocomp - compress headers if the remote end allows it
+
+
+
+ noicmp - disable ICMP packets (so any ``ping'' packets will be
+ dropped instead of using up your bandwidth)
+
+
+
+
+
+ Note that sliplogin under early releases of FreeBSD 2 ignored
+ the options that FreeBSD 1.x recognized, so the options
+ normal, compress, autocomp, and noicmp had no effect
+ until support was added in FreeBSD 2.2 (unless your slip.login script
+ included code to make use of the flags).
+
+ Your choice of local and remote addresses for your SLIP links depends
+ on whether you are going to dedicate a TCP/IP subnet or if you are
+ going to use ``proxy ARP'' on your SLIP server (it is not ``true''
+ proxy ARP, but that is the terminology used in this document to
+ describe it). If you are not sure which method to select or how to
+ assign IP addresses, please refer to the TCP/IP books referenced in
+ the section and/or consult your IP network manager.
+
+ If you are going to use a separate subnet for your SLIP clients, you
+ will need to allocate the subnet number out of your assigned IP
+ network number and assign each of your SLIP client's IP numbers out of
+ that subnet. Then, you will probably either need to configure a
+ static route to the SLIP subnet via your SLIP server on your nearest
+ IP router, or install gated on your FreeBSD SLIP server and
+ configure it to talk the appropriate routing protocols to your other
+ routers to inform them about your SLIP server's route to the SLIP
+ subnet.
+
+ Otherwise, if you will use the ``proxy ARP'' method, you will need to
+ assign your SLIP client's IP addresses out of your SLIP server's
+ Ethernet subnet, and you will also need to adjust your
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.login and
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.logout scripts to use arp(8) to
+ manage the proxy-ARP entries in the SLIP server's ARP table.
+
+
+
+
+ slip.login Configuration
+
+ The typical /etc/sliphome/slip.login file looks like this:
+
+
+
+ ----- begin /etc/sliphome/slip.login -----
+ #!/bin/sh -
+ #
+ # @(#)slip.login 5.1 (Berkeley) 7/1/90
+
+ #
+ # generic login file for a slip line. sliplogin invokes this with
+ # the parameters:
+ # 1 2 3 4 5 6 7-n
+ # slipunit ttyspeed loginname local-addr remote-addr mask opt-args
+ #
+ /sbin/ifconfig sl$1 inet $4 $5 netmask $6
+ ----- end /etc/sliphome/slip.login -----
+
+
+
+ This slip.login file merely ifconfig's the appropriate SLIP
+ interface with the local and remote addresses and network mask of the
+ SLIP interface.
+
+ If you have decided to use the ``proxy ARP'' method (instead of using
+ a separate subnet for your SLIP clients), your
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.login file will need to look something
+ like this:
+
+
+
+ ----- begin /etc/sliphome/slip.login for "proxy ARP" -----
+ #!/bin/sh -
+ #
+ # @(#)slip.login 5.1 (Berkeley) 7/1/90
+
+ #
+ # generic login file for a slip line. sliplogin invokes this with
+ # the parameters:
+ # 1 2 3 4 5 6 7-n
+ # slipunit ttyspeed loginname local-addr remote-addr mask opt-args
+ #
+ /sbin/ifconfig sl$1 inet $4 $5 netmask $6
+ # Answer ARP requests for the SLIP client with our Ethernet addr
+ /usr/sbin/arp -s $5 00:11:22:33:44:55 pub
+ ----- end /etc/sliphome/slip.login for "proxy ARP" -----
+
+
+
+ The additional line in this slip.login, arp -s $5
+ 00:11:22:33:44:55 pub, creates an ARP entry in the SLIP server's
+ ARP table. This ARP entry causes the SLIP server to respond with the
+ SLIP server's Ethernet MAC address whenever a another IP node on the
+ Ethernet asks to speak to the SLIP client's IP address.
+
+ When using the example above, be sure to replace the Ethernet MAC
+ address (00:11:22:33:44:55) with the MAC address of your
+ system's Ethernet card, or your ``proxy ARP'' will definitely not work!
+ You can discover your SLIP server's Ethernet MAC address by looking at
+ the results of running netstat -i; the second line of the output
+ should look something like:
+
+
+
+ ed0 1500 <Link>0.2.c1.28.5f.4a 191923 0 129457 0 116
+ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+
+
+
+ which indicates that this particular system's Ethernet MAC address is
+ 00:02:c1:28:5f:4a -- the periods in the Ethernet MAC address
+ given by netstat -i must be changed to colons and leading zeros
+ should be added to each single-digit hexadecimal number to convert the
+ address into the form that arp(8) desires; see the manual page on
+ arp(8) for complete information on usage.
+
+ Note that when you create /etc/sliphome/slip.login and
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.logout, the ``execute'' bit (ie,
+ chmod 755 /etc/sliphome/slip.login
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.logout) must be set, or sliplogin
+ will be unable to execute it.
+
+
+
+
+ slip.logout Configuration
+
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.logout is not strictly needed (unless you
+ are implementing ``proxy ARP''), but if you decide to create it, this
+ is an example of a basic slip.logout script:
+
+
+
+ ----- begin /etc/sliphome/slip.logout -----
+ #!/bin/sh -
+ #
+ # slip.logout
+
+ #
+ # logout file for a slip line. sliplogin invokes this with
+ # the parameters:
+ # 1 2 3 4 5 6 7-n
+ # slipunit ttyspeed loginname local-addr remote-addr mask opt-args
+ #
+ /sbin/ifconfig sl$1 down
+ ----- end /etc/sliphome/slip.logout -----
+
+
+
+ If you are using ``proxy ARP'', you will want to have
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.logout remove the ARP entry for the SLIP
+ client:
+
+
+
+ ----- begin /etc/sliphome/slip.logout for "proxy ARP" -----
+ #!/bin/sh -
+ #
+ # @(#)slip.logout
+
+ #
+ # logout file for a slip line. sliplogin invokes this with
+ # the parameters:
+ # 1 2 3 4 5 6 7-n
+ # slipunit ttyspeed loginname local-addr remote-addr mask opt-args
+ #
+ /sbin/ifconfig sl$1 down
+ # Quit answering ARP requests for the SLIP client
+ /usr/sbin/arp -d $5
+ ----- end /etc/sliphome/slip.logout for "proxy ARP" -----
+
+
+
+ The arp -d $5 removes the ARP entry that the ``proxy ARP''
+ slip.login added when the SLIP client logged in.
+
+ It bears repeating: make sure /etc/sliphome/slip.logout has
+ the execute bit set for after you create it (ie, chmod 755
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.logout).
+
+
+
+
+
+ Routing Considerations
+
+ If you are not using the ``proxy ARP'' method for routing packets
+ between your SLIP clients and the rest of your network (and perhaps
+ the Internet), you will probably either have to add static routes to
+ your closest default router(s) to route your SLIP client subnet via
+ your SLIP server, or you will probably need to install and configure
+ gated on your FreeBSD SLIP server so that it will tell your
+ routers via appropriate routing protocols about your SLIP subnet.
+
+
+
+ Static Routes
+
+ Adding static routes to your nearest default routers can be
+ troublesome (or impossible, if you do not have authority to do so...).
+ If you have a multiple-router network in your organization, some
+ routers, such as Cisco and Proteon, may not only need to be configured
+ with the static route to the SLIP subnet, but also need to be told
+ which static routes to tell other routers about, so some expertise and
+ troubleshooting/tweaking may be necessary to get static-route-based
+ routing to work.
+
+
+
+
+ Running gated
+
+ An alternative to the headaches of static routes is to install
+ gated on your FreeBSD SLIP server and configure it to use the
+ appropriate routing protocols (RIP/OSPF/BGP/EGP) to tell other routers
+ about your SLIP subnet. You can use gated from the
+ or retrieve and build it yourself
+ from the GateD anonymous ftp site;
+ I believe the current version as of this writing
+ is gated-R3_5Alpha_8.tar.Z, which includes support for
+ FreeBSD ``out-of-the-box''. Complete information and documentation on
+ gated is available on the Web starting at
+ the Merit GateD Consortium.
+ Compile and install it, and
+ then write a /etc/gated.conf file to configure your gated;
+ here is a sample, similar to what the author used on a FreeBSD SLIP
+ server:
+
+
+
+ ----- begin sample /etc/gated.conf for gated version 3.5Alpha5 -----
+ #
+ # gated configuration file for dc.dsu.edu; for gated version 3.5alpha5
+ # Only broadcast RIP information for xxx.xxx.yy out the ed Ethernet interface
+ #
+ #
+ # tracing options
+ #
+ traceoptions "/var/tmp/gated.output" replace size 100k files 2 general ;
+
+ rip yes {
+ interface sl noripout noripin ;
+ interface ed ripin ripout version 1 ;
+ traceoptions route ;
+ } ;
+
+ #
+ # Turn on a bunch of tracing info for the interface to the kernel:
+ kernel {
+ traceoptions remnants request routes info interface ;
+ } ;
+
+ #
+ # Propagate the route to xxx.xxx.yy out the Ethernet interface via RIP
+ #
+
+ export proto rip interface ed {
+ proto direct {
+ xxx.xxx.yy mask 255.255.252.0 metric 1; # SLIP connections
+ } ;
+ } ;
+
+ #
+ # Accept routes from RIP via ed Ethernet interfaces
+
+ import proto rip interface ed {
+ all ;
+ } ;
+
+ ----- end sample /etc/gated.conf -----
+
+
+
+ The above sample gated.conf file broadcasts routing
+ information regarding the SLIP subnet xxx.xxx.yy via RIP onto
+ the Ethernet; if you are using a different Ethernet driver than the
+ ed driver, you will need to change the references to the ed
+ interface appropriately. This sample file also sets up tracing to
+ /var/tmp/gated.output for debugging gated's
+ activity; you can certainly turn off the tracing options if
+ gated works OK for you. You will need to change the
+ xxx.xxx.yy's into the network address of your own SLIP subnet
+ (be sure to change the net mask in the proto direct clause as
+ well).
+
+ When you get gated built and installed and create a
+ configuration file for it, you will need to run gated in place
+ of routed on your FreeBSD system; change the
+ routed/gated startup parameters in /etc/netstart as
+ appropriate for your system. Please see the manual page for
+ gated for information on gated's command-line
+ parameters.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Acknowledgments
+
+ Thanks to these people for comments and advice regarding this tutorial:
+
+
+
+ &a.wilko;
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Piero Serini
+
+
+ <Piero@Strider.Inet.IT>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Advanced Networking
+
+
+
+ Gateways and Routes
+
+ Contributed by &a.gryphon;.6 October 1995.
+
+ For one machine to be able to find another, there must be a
+ mechanism in place to describe how to get from one to the
+ other. This is called Routing. A ``route'' is a defined
+ pair of addresses: a destination and a
+ gateway. The pair indicates that if you are
+ trying to get to this destination, send along
+ through this gateway. There are three types of
+ destinations: individual hosts, subnets, and ``default''. The
+ ``default route'' is used if none of the other routes
+ apply. We will talk a little bit more about default routes
+ later on. There are also three types of gateways:
+ individual hosts, interfaces (also called ``links''), and
+ ethernet hardware addresses.
+
+
+
+ An example
+
+ To illustrate different aspects of routing, we will use
+ the following example which is the output of the command
+ netstat -r:
+
+
+
+ Destination Gateway Flags Refs Use Netif Expire
+
+ default outside-gw UGSc 37 418 ppp0
+ localhost localhost UH 0 181 lo0
+ test0 0:e0:b5:36:cf:4f UHLW 5 63288 ed0 77
+ 10.20.30.255 link#1 UHLW 1 2421
+ foobar.com link#1 UC 0 0
+ host1 0:e0:a8:37:8:1e UHLW 3 4601 lo0
+ host2 0:e0:a8:37:8:1e UHLW 0 5 lo0 =>
+ host2.foobar.com link#1 UC 0 0
+ 224 link#1 UC 0 0
+
+
+
+ The first two lines specify the default route (which we
+ will cover in the next section) and the localhost route.
+
+ The interface (Netif column) that it specifies to use
+ for localhost is lo0, also known as the
+ loopback device. This says to keep all traffic for this
+ destination internal, rather than sending it out over the
+ LAN, since it will only end up back where it started
+ anyway.
+
+ The next thing that stands out are the
+ ``0:e0:...'' addresses. These are ethernet
+ hardware addresses. FreeBSD will automatically identify any
+ hosts (test0 in the example) on the local ethernet and
+ add a route for that host, directly to it over the ethernet
+ interface, ed0. There is also a timeout
+ (Expire column) associated with this type of route,
+ which is used if we fail to hear from the host in a
+ specific amount of time. In this case the route will be
+ automatically deleted. These hosts are identified using a
+ mechanism known as RIP (Routing Information Protocol),
+ which figures out routes to local hosts based upon a
+ shortest path determination.
+
+ FreeBSD will also add subnet routes for the local subnet
+ (10.20.30.255 is the broadcast address for the subnet
+ 10.20.30, and foobar.com is the domain name
+ associated with that subnet). The designation link#1
+ refers to the first ethernet card in the machine. You will
+ notice no additional interface is specified for those.
+
+ Both of these groups (local network hosts and local
+ subnets) have their routes automatically configured by a
+ daemon called routed. If this is not run, then only
+ routes which are statically defined (ie. entered
+ explicitly) will exist.
+
+ The host1 line refers to our host, which it knows by
+ ethernet address. Since we are the sending host, FreeBSD
+ knows to use the loopback interface (lo0) rather than
+ sending it out over the ethernet interface.
+
+ The two host2 lines are an example of what happens
+ when we use an ifconfig alias (see the section of ethernet
+ for reasons why we would do this). The =>
+ symbol after the lo0 interface says that not only are
+ we using the loopback (since this is address also refers to
+ the local host), but specifically it is an alias. Such
+ routes only show up on the host that supports the alias;
+ all other hosts on the local network will simply have a
+ link#1 line for such.
+
+ The final line (destination subnet 224) deals with
+ MultiCasting, which will be covered in a another section.
+
+ The other column that we should talk about are the
+ Flags. Each route has different attributes that are
+ described in the column. Below is a short table of some of
+ these flags and their meanings:
+
+
+
+ U
+
+ Up: The route is active.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ H
+
+
+ Host: The route destination is a single host.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ G
+
+
+ Gateway: Send anything for this destination
+ on to this remote system, which will figure out from
+ there where to send it.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ S
+
+
+ Static: This route was configured manually,
+ not automatically generated by the system.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ C
+
+
+ Clone: Generates a new route based upon this
+ route for machines we connect to. This type of route is
+ normally used for local networks.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ W
+
+
+ WasCloned Indicated a route that was
+ auto-configured based upon a local area network (Clone)
+ route.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ L
+
+
+ Link: Route involves references to ethernet
+ hardware.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Default routes
+
+ When the local system needs to make a connection to
+ remote host, it checks the routing table to determine if
+ a known path exists. If the remote host falls into a
+ subnet that we know how to reach (Cloned routes), then
+ the system checks to see if it can connect along that
+ interface.
+
+ If all known paths fail, the system has one last option:
+ the default route. This route is a special type
+ of gateway route (usually the only one present in the
+ system), and is always marked with a ``c'' in
+ the flags field. For hosts on a local area network, this
+ gateway is set to whatever machine has a direct
+ connection to the outside world (whether via PPP link, or
+ your hardware device attached to a dedicated data line).
+
+ If you are configuring the default route for a machine
+ which itself is functioning as the gateway to the outside
+ world, then the default route will be the gateway machine
+ at your Internet Service Provider's (ISP) site.
+
+ Let us look at an example of default routes. This is a
+ common configuration:
+
+ [Local2] <--ether--> [Local1] <--PPP--> [ISP-Serv] <--ether--> [T1-GW]
+
+
+
+ The hosts Local1 and Local2 are at your
+ site, with the formed being your PPP connection to your
+ ISP's Terminal Server. Your ISP has a local network at
+ their site, which has, among other things, the server
+ where you connect and a hardware device (T1-GW) attached
+ to the ISP's Internet feed.
+
+ The default routes for each of your machines will be:
+
+
+
+ host default gateway interface
+ ---- --------------- ---------
+ Local2 Local1 ethernet
+ Local1 T1-GW PPP
+
+
+
+ A common question is ``Why (or how) would we set the
+ T1-GW to be the default gateway for Local1, rather than
+ the ISP server it is connected to?''.
+
+ Remember, since the PPP interface is using an address on
+ the ISP's local network for your side of the connection,
+ routes for any other machines on the ISP's local network
+ will be automatically generated. Hence, you will already
+ know how to reach the T1-GW machine, so there is no need
+ for the intermediate step of sending traffic to the ISP
+ server.
+
+ As a final note, it is common to use the address ``...1''
+ as the gateway address for your local network. So (using
+ the same example), if your local class-C address space
+ was 10.20.30 and your ISP was using 10.9.9 then the
+ default routes would be:
+
+
+
+ Local2 (10.20.30.2) --> Local1 (10.20.30.1)
+ Local1 (10.20.30.1, 10.9.9.30) --> T1-GW (10.9.9.1)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Dual homed hosts
+
+ There is one other type of configuration that we should
+ cover, and that is a host that sits on two different
+ networks. Technically, any machine functioning as a
+ gateway (in the example above, using a PPP connection)
+ counts as a dual-homed host. But the term is really only
+ used to refer to a machine that sits on two local-area
+ networks.
+
+ In one case, the machine as two ethernet cards, each
+ having an address on the separate subnets. Alternately,
+ the machine may only have one ethernet card, and be using
+ ifconfig aliasing. The former is used if two physically
+ separate ethernet networks are in use, the latter if
+ there is one physical network segment, but two logically
+ separate subnets.
+
+ Either way, routing tables are set up so that each subnet
+ knows that this machine is the defined gateway (inbound
+ route) to the other subnet. This configuration, with the
+ machine acting as a Bridge between the two subnets, is
+ often used when we need to implement packet filtering or
+ firewall security in either or both directions.
+
+
+
+
+ Routing propagation
+
+ We have already talked about how we define our routes to
+ the outside world, but not about how the outside world
+ finds us.
+
+ We already know that routing tables can be set up so that
+ all traffic for a particular address space (in our
+ examples, a class-C subnet) can be sent to a particular
+ host on that network, which will forward the packets
+ inbound.
+
+ When you get an address space assigned to your site, your
+ service provider will set up their routing tables so that
+ all traffic for your subnet will be sent down your PPP
+ link to your site. But how do sites across the country
+ know to send to your ISP?
+
+ There is a system (much like the distributed DNS
+ information) that keeps track of all assigned
+ address-spaces, and defines their point of connection to
+ the Internet Backbone. The ``Backbone'' are the main
+ trunk lines that carry Internet traffic across the
+ country, and around the world. Each backbone machine has
+ a copy of a master set of tables, which direct traffic
+ for a particular network to a specific backbone carrier,
+ and from there down the chain of service providers until
+ it reaches your network.
+
+ It is the task of your service provider to advertise to
+ the backbone sites that they are the point of connection
+ (and thus the path inward) for your site. This is known
+ as route propagation.
+
+
+
+
+ Troubleshooting
+
+ Sometimes, there is a problem with routing propagation,
+ and some sites are unable to connect to you. Perhaps the
+ most useful command for trying to figure out where a
+ routing is breaking down is the traceroute(8)
+ command. It is equally useful if you cannot seem to make
+ a connection to a remote machine (ie. ping(8)
+ fails).
+
+ The traceroute(8) command is run with the name
+ of the remote host you are trying to connect to. It will
+ show the gateway hosts along the path of the attempt,
+ eventually either reaching the target host, or
+ terminating because of a lack of connection.
+
+ For more information, see the manual page for
+ traceroute(8).
+
+
+
+
+
+ NFS
+
+ Contributed by &a.jlind;.
+
+ Certain Ethernet adapters for ISA PC systems have limitations which
+ can lead to serious network problems, particularly with NFS. This
+ difficulty is not specific to FreeBSD, but FreeBSD systems are affected
+ by it.
+
+ The problem nearly always occurs when (FreeBSD) PC systems are networked
+ with high-performance workstations, such as those made by Silicon Graphics,
+ Inc., and Sun Microsystems, Inc. The NFS mount will work fine, and some
+ operations may succeed, but suddenly the server will seem to become
+ unresponsive to the client, even though requests to and from other systems
+ continue to be processed. This happens to the client system, whether the
+ client is the FreeBSD system or the workstation. On many systems, there is
+ no way to shut down the client gracefully once this problem has manifested
+ itself. The only solution is often to reset the client, because the NFS
+ situation cannot be resolved.
+
+ Though the "correct" solution is to get a higher performance and capacity
+ Ethernet adapter for the FreeBSD system, there is a simple workaround that
+ will allow satisfactory operation. If the FreeBSD system is the SERVER,
+ include the option "-w=1024" on the mount from the client. If the
+ FreeBSD system is the CLIENT, then mount the NFS file system with the
+ option "-r=1024". These options may be specified using the fourth
+ field of the fstab entry on the client for automatic mounts, or by using
+ the "-o" parameter of the mount command for manual mounts.
+
+ It should be noted that there is a different problem,
+ sometimes mistaken for this one,
+ when the NFS servers and clients are on different networks.
+ If that is the case, make CERTAIN that your routers are routing the
+ necessary UDP information, or you will not get anywhere, no matter
+ what else you are doing.
+
+ In the following examples, "fastws" is the host (interface) name of a
+ high-performance workstation, and "freebox" is the host (interface) name of
+ a FreeBSD system with a lower-performance Ethernet adapter. Also,
+ "/sharedfs" will be the exported NFS filesystem (see "man exports"), and
+ "/project" will be the mount point on the client for the exported file
+ system. In all cases, note that additional options, such as "hard" or
+ "soft" and "bg" may be desirable in your application.
+
+ Examples for the FreeBSD system ("freebox") as the client:
+ in /etc/fstab on freebox:
+ fastws:/sharedfs /project nfs rw,-r=1024 0 0
+ as a manual mount command on freebox:
+ mount -t nfs -o -r=1024 fastws:/sharedfs /project
+
+ Examples for the FreeBSD system as the server:
+ in /etc/fstab on fastws:
+ freebox:/sharedfs /project nfs rw,-w=1024 0 0
+ as a manual mount command on fastws:
+ mount -t nfs -o -w=1024 freebox:/sharedfs /project
+
+ Nearly any 16-bit Ethernet adapter will allow operation without the above
+ restrictions on the read or write size.
+
+ For anyone who cares, here is what happens when the failure occurs, which
+ also explains why it is unrecoverable. NFS typically works with a "block"
+ size of 8k (though it may do fragments of smaller sizes). Since the maximum
+ Ethernet packet is around 1500 bytes, the NFS "block" gets split into
+ multiple Ethernet packets, even though it is still a single unit to the
+ upper-level code, and must be received, assembled, and ACKNOWLEDGED as a
+ unit. The high-performance workstations can pump out the packets which
+ comprise the NFS unit one right after the other, just as close together as
+ the standard allows. On the smaller, lower capacity cards, the later
+ packets overrun the earlier packets of the same unit before they can be
+ transferred to the host and the unit as a whole cannot be reconstructed or
+ acknowledged. As a result, the workstation will time out and try again,
+ but it will try again with the entire 8K unit, and the process will be
+ repeated, ad infinitum.
+
+ By keeping the unit size below the Ethernet packet size limitation, we
+ ensure that any complete Ethernet packet received can be acknowledged
+ individually, avoiding the deadlock situation.
+
+ Overruns may still occur when a high-performance workstations is slamming
+ data out to a PC system, but with the better cards, such overruns are
+ not guaranteed on NFS "units". When an overrun occurs, the units affected
+ will be retransmitted, and there will be a fair chance that they will be
+ received, assembled, and acknowledged.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Diskless Operation
+
+ Contributed by &a.martin;.
+
+ netboot.com/netboot.rom allow you to boot your
+ FreeBSD machine over the network and run FreeBSD without
+ having a disk on your client. Under 2.0 it is now
+ possible to have local swap. Swapping over NFS is also
+ still supported.
+
+ Supported Ethernet cards include: Western Digital/SMC
+ 8003, 8013, 8216 and compatibles; NE1000/NE2000 and
+ compatibles (requires recompile)
+
+
+
+ Setup Instructions
+
+
+
+
+
+ Find a machine that will be your server. This
+ machine will require enough disk space to hold the
+ FreeBSD 2.0 binaries and have bootp, tftp and NFS
+ services available.
+
+ Tested machines:
+
+
+
+ HP9000/8xx running HP-UX 9.04 or later (pre
+ 9.04 doesn't work)
+
+
+
+ Sun/Solaris 2.3. (you may need to get
+ bootp)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Set up a bootp server to provide the client with
+ IP, gateway, netmask.
+
+ diskless:\
+ :ht=ether:\
+ :ha=0000c01f848a:\
+ :sm=255.255.255.0:\
+ :hn:\
+ :ds=192.1.2.3:\
+ :ip=192.1.2.4:\
+ :gw=192.1.2.5:\
+ :vm=rfc1048:
+
+
+
+
+
+ Set up a TFTP server (on same machine as bootp
+ server) to provide booting information to client.
+ The name of this file is cfg.X.X.X.X (or
+ /tftpboot/cfg.X.X.X.X, it will try both)
+ where X.X.X.X is the IP address of the
+ client. The contents of this file can be any valid
+ netboot commands. Under 2.0, netboot has the
+ following commands:
+
+ help - print help list
+ ip <X.X.X.X> - print/set client's IP address
+ server <X.X.X.X> - print/set bootp/tftp server address
+ netmask <X.X.X.X> - print/set netmask
+ hostname <name> - print/set hostname
+ kernel <name> - print/set kernel name
+ rootfs <ip:/fs> - print/set root filesystem
+ swapfs <ip:/fs> - print/set swap filesystem
+ swapsize <size> - set diskless swapsize in Kbytes
+ diskboot - boot from disk
+ autoboot - continue boot process
+ trans <on|off> - turn transceiver on|off
+ flags [bcdhsv] - set boot flags
+
+
+ A typical completely diskless cfg file might contain:
+
+ rootfs 192.1.2.3:/rootfs/myclient
+ swapfs 192.1.2.3:/swapfs
+ swapsize 20000
+ hostname myclient.mydomain
+
+
+ A cfg file for a machine with local swap might contain:
+
+ rootfs 192.1.2.3:/rootfs/myclient
+ hostname myclient.mydomain
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Ensure that your NFS server has exported the root
+ (and swap if applicable) filesystems to your client,
+ and that the client has root access to these
+ filesystems
+
+ A typical /etc/exports file on FreeBSD might
+ look like:
+
+ /rootfs/myclient -maproot=0:0 myclient.mydomain
+ /swapfs -maproot=0:0 myclient.mydomain
+
+
+
+ And on HP-UX:
+
+ /rootfs/myclient -root=myclient.mydomain
+ /swapfs -root=myclient.mydomain
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ If you are swapping over NFS (completely diskless
+ configuration) create a swap file for your client
+ using dd. If your swapfs command has the
+ arguments /swapfs and the size 20000 as in the
+ example above, the swapfile for myclient will be called
+ /swapfs/swap.X.X.X.X where X.X.X.X
+ is the client's IP addr, eg:
+
+ # dd if=/dev/zero of=/swapfs/swap.192.1.2.4 bs=1k count=20000
+
+
+
+ Also, the client's swap space might contain sensitive
+ information once swapping starts, so make sure to
+ restrict read and write access to this file to prevent
+ unauthorized access:
+
+ # chmod 0600 /swapfs/swap.192.1.2.4
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Unpack the root filesystem in the directory the
+ client will use for its root filesystem
+ (/rootfs/myclient in the example above).
+
+
+
+
+ On HP-UX systems: The server should be
+ running HP-UX 9.04 or later for HP9000/800 series
+ machines. Prior versions do not allow the
+ creation of device files over NFS.
+
+
+
+
+ When extracting /dev in
+ /rootfs/myclient, beware that some
+ systems (HPUX) will not create device files that
+ FreeBSD is happy with. You may have to go to
+ single user mode on the first bootup (press
+ control-c during the bootup phase), cd
+ /dev and do a "sh ./MAKEDEV
+ all" from the client to fix this.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Run netboot.com on the client or make an EPROM
+ from the netboot.rom file
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Using Shared / and /usr filesystems
+
+ At present there isn't an officially sanctioned way of
+ doing this, although I have been using a shared /usr
+ filesystem and individual / filesystems for each client.
+ If anyone has any suggestions on how to do this cleanly,
+ please let me and/or the &a.core; know.
+
+
+
+
+ Compiling netboot for specific setups
+
+ Netboot can be compiled to support NE1000/2000 cards by
+ changing the configuration in
+ /sys/i386/boot/netboot/Makefile. See the
+ comments at the top of this file.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ISDN
+
+ Last modified by &a.wlloyd;.
+
+ A good resource for information on ISDN technology and hardware is
+ Dan Kegel's ISDN Page.
+
+ A quick simple roadmap to ISDN follows:
+
+
+
+ If you live in Europe I suggest you investigate the ISDN card
+ section.
+
+
+
+
+ If you are planning to use ISDN primarily to connect to the
+ Internet with an Internet Provider on a dialup non-dedicated basis, I
+ suggest you look into Terminal Adapters. This will give you the most
+ flexibility, with the fewest problems, if you change providers.
+
+
+
+
+ If you are connecting two lans together, or connecting to the
+ Internet with a dedicated ISDN connection, I suggest you consider the
+ stand alone router/bridge option.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Cost is a significant factor in determining what solution you will
+ choose. The following options are listed from least expensive to most
+ expensive.
+
+
+
+ ISDN Cards
+
+ Original Contribution by &a.hm;.
+
+ This section is really only relevant to European ISDN users. The
+ cards supported are not yet(?) available for North American ISDN
+ standards.
+
+ You should be aware that this code is largely under development.
+ Specifically, drivers have only been written for two manufacturers
+ cards.
+
+ PC ISDN cards support the full bandwidth of ISDN, 128Kbs. These
+ cards are often the least expensive type of ISDN equipment.
+
+ Under FreeBSD 2.1.0 and 2.1.5, there is early unfinished ISDN code
+ under /usr/src/gnu/isdn. This code is out of date and should not be
+ used. If you want to go this route, get the bisdn stuff. This code
+ has been removed from the main source tree starting with FreeBSD 2.2.
+
+ There is the bisdn ISDN package available from
+ hub.freebsd.org
+ supporting FreeBSD 2.1R, FreeBSD-current and NetBSD.
+ The latest source can be found on the above mentioned ftp server under
+ directory isdn as file bisdn-097.tar.gz.
+
+ There are drivers for the following cards:
+
+
+
+ Currently all (passive) Teles cards and their clones are supported
+ for the EuroISDN (DSS1) and 1TR6 protocols.
+
+
+
+ Dr. Neuhaus - Niccy 1016
+
+
+
+
+
+ There are several limitations with the bisdn stuff. Specifically the
+ following features usually associated with ISDN are not supported.
+
+
+
+
+
+ No PPP support, only raw hdlc. This means you cannot connect to most
+ standalone routers.
+
+
+
+ Bridging Control Protocol not supported.
+
+
+
+ Multiple cards are not supported.
+
+
+
+ No bandwidth on demand.
+
+
+
+ No channel bundling.
+
+
+
+
+
+ A majordomo maintained mailing list is available.
+ To join the list, send mail to &a.majordomo; and specify:
+ subscribe freebsd-isdn
+
+ In the body of your message.
+
+
+
+
+ ISDN Terminal Adapters
+
+ Terminal adapters(TA), are to ISDN what modems are to regular phone
+ lines.
+
+ Most TA's use the standard hayes modem AT command set, and can be
+ used as a drop in replacement for a modem.
+
+ A TA will operate basically the same as a modem except connection and
+ throughput speeds will be much faster than your old modem. You will
+ need to configure exactly the same as for a
+ modem setup. Make sure you set your serial speed as high as possible.
+
+ The main advantage of using a TA to connect to an Internet Provider is
+ that you can do Dynamic PPP. As IP address space becomes more and more
+ scarce, most providers are not willing to provide you with a static IP
+ anymore. Most standalone routers are not able to accommodate dynamic IP
+ allocation.
+
+ TA's completely rely on the PPP daemon that you are running for their
+ features and stability of connection. This allows you to upgrade easily
+ from using a modem to ISDN on a FreeBSD machine, if you already have PPP
+ setup. However, at the same time any problems you experienced with the
+ PPP program and are going to persist.
+
+ If you want maximum stability, use the kernel
+ option, not the user-land .
+
+ The following TA's are know to work with FreeBSD.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Motorola BitSurfer and Bitsurfer Pro
+
+
+
+ Adtran
+
+
+
+
+
+ Most other TA's will probably work as well, TA vendors try to make sure
+ their product can accept most of the standard modem AT command set.
+
+ The real problem with external TA's is like modems you need a good
+ serial card in your computer.
+
+ You should read the section in the
+ handbook for a detailed understanding of serial devices, and the
+ differences between asynchronous and synchronous serial ports.
+
+ A TA running off a standard PC serial port (asynchronous) limits you to
+ 115.2Kbs, even though you have a 128Kbs connection. To fully utilize
+ the 128Kbs that ISDN is capable of, you must move the TA to a
+ synchronous serial card.
+
+ Do not be fooled into buying an internal TA and thinking you have
+ avoided the synchronous/asynchronous issue. Internal TA's simply have a
+ standard PC serial port chip built into them. All this will do, is save
+ you having to buy another serial cable, and find another empty
+ electrical socket.
+
+ A synchronous card with a TA is at least as fast as a standalone router,
+ and with a simple 386 FreeBSD box driving it, probably more flexible.
+
+ The choice of sync/TA vs standalone router is largely a religious
+ issue. There has been some discussion of this in the mailing lists. I
+ suggest you search the archives for the complete discussion.
+
+
+
+
+ Standalone ISDN Bridges/Routers
+
+ ISDN bridges or routers are not at all specific to FreeBSD or any
+ other operating system. For a more complete description of routing and
+ bridging technology, please refer to a Networking reference book.
+
+ In the context of this page, I will use router and bridge
+ interchangeably.
+
+ As the cost of low end ISDN routers/bridges comes down, it will
+ likely become a more and more popular choice. An ISDN router is a small
+ box that plugs directly into your local Ethernet network(or card), and
+ manages its own connection to the other bridge/router. It has all the
+ software to do PPP and other protocols built in.
+
+ A router will allow you much faster throughput that a standard TA, since
+ it will be using a full synchronous ISDN connection.
+
+ The main problem with ISDN routers and bridges is that interoperability
+ between manufacturers can still be a problem. If you are planning to
+ connect to an Internet provider, I recommend that you discuss your needs
+ with them.
+
+ If you are planning to connect two lan segments together, ie: home
+ lan to the office lan, this is the simplest lowest maintenance
+ solution. Since you are buying the equipment for both sides of the
+ connection you can be assured that the link will work.
+
+ For example to connect a home computer or branch office network to a
+ head office network the following setup could be used.
+
+ Branch office or Home network
+
+ Network is 10 Base T Ethernet. Connect router to network cable with
+ AUI/10BT transceiver, if necessary.
+
+
+ ---Sun workstation
+ |
+ ---FreeBSD box
+ |
+ ---Windows 95 (Do not admit to owning it)
+ |
+ Standalone router
+ |
+ ISDN BRI line
+
+ If your home/branch office is only one computer you can use a twisted
+ pair crossover cable to connect to the standalone router directly.
+
+ Head office or other lan
+
+ Network is Twisted Pair Ethernet.
+ -------Novell Server
+ | H |
+ | ---Sun
+ | |
+ | U ---FreeBSD
+ | |
+ | ---Windows 95
+ | B |
+ |___---Standalone router
+ |
+ ISDN BRI line
+
+
+ One large advantage of most routers/bridges is that they allow you to
+ have 2 SEPARATE INDEPENDENT PPP connections to 2 separate sites at the
+ SAME time. This is not supported on most TA's, except for
+ specific(expensive) models that have two serial ports. Do not confuse
+ this with channel bonding, MPP etc.
+
+ This can be very useful feature, for example if you have an dedicated
+ internet ISDN connection at your office and would like to tap into it,
+ but don't want to get another ISDN line at work. A router at the office
+ location can manage a dedicated B channel connection (64Kbs) to the
+ internet, as well as a use the other B channel for a separate data connection.
+ The second B channel can be used for dialin, dialout or dynamically
+ bond(MPP etc.) with the first B channel for more bandwidth.
+
+ An Ethernet bridge will also allow you to transmit more than just
+ IP traffic, you can also send IPX/SPX or whatever other protocols you
+ use.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Electronic Mail
+
+ Contributed by &a.wlloyd;.
+
+ Electronic Mail configuration is the subject of many books. If you plan on doing anything beyond setting up one mailhost for your network, you need industrial strength help.
+
+ Some parts of E-Mail configuration are controlled in the Domain Name System (DNS). If you are going to run your own own DNS server check out /etc/namedb and ' man -k named ' for more information.
+
+
+
+ Basic Information
+
+ These are the major programs involved in an E-Mail exchange.
+ A mailhost is a server that is responsible for delivering and receiving all email for your host, and possibly your network.
+
+
+
+ User program
+
+ This is a program like elm, pine, mail , or something more sophisticated like a WWW browser. This program will simply pass off all e-mail transactions to the local mailhost , either by calling sendmail or delivering it over TCP.
+
+
+
+
+ Mailhost Server Daemon
+
+ Usually this program is sendmail or smail running in the background. Turn it off or change the command line options in /etc/rc.conf
+ (or, prior to FreeBSD 2.2.2, /etc/sysconfig). It is best to leave it on, unless you have a specific reason to want it off. Example: You are building a .
+
+ You should be aware that sendmail is a potential weak link in a secure site. Some versions of sendmail have known security problems.
+
+ sendmail does two jobs. It looks after delivering and receiving mail.
+
+ If sendmail needs to deliver mail off your site it will look up in the DNS to determine the actual host that will receive mail for the destination.
+
+ If it is acting as a delivery agent sendmail will take the message from the local queue and deliver it across the Internet to another sendmail on the receivers computer.
+
+
+
+
+ DNS - Name Service
+
+ The Domain Name System and its daemon named , contain the database mapping hostname to IP address, and hostname to mailhost. The IP address is specified in an "A" record. The "MX" record specifies the mailhost that will receive mail for you. If you do not have a "MX" record mail for your hostname, the mail will be delivered to your host directly.
+
+ Unless you are running your own DNS server, you will not be able to change any information in the DNS yourself. If you are using an Internet Provider, speak to them.
+
+
+
+
+ POP Servers
+
+ This program gets the mail from your mailbox and gives it to your browser. If you want to run a POP server on your computer, you will need to do 2 things.
+
+
+
+ Get pop software from the Ports collection that can be found in /usr/ports
+ or packages collection. This handbook section has a complete reference on the system.
+
+
+
+ Modify /etc/inetd.conf to load the POP server.
+
+
+
+
+
+ The pop program will have instructions with it. Read them.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Configuration
+
+
+
+ Basic
+
+ As your FreeBSD system comes "out of the box"[TM], you should be able to send E-mail to external hosts as long as you have /etc/resolv.conf setup or are running a name server.
+ If you want to have mail for your host delivered to your specific host,there are two methods:
+
+ - Run a name server ( man -k named ) and have your own domain smallminingco.com
+
+ - Get mail delivered to the current DNS name for your host. Ie: dorm6.ahouse.school.edu
+
+ No matter what option you choose, to have mail delivered directly to your host, you must be a full Internet host. You must have a permanent IP address. IE: NO dynamic PPP. If you are behind a firewall, the firewall must be passing on smtp traffic to you. From /etc/services
+ smtp 25/tcp mail #Simple Mail Transfer
+
+ If you want to receive mail at your host itself, you must make sure that the DNS MX entry points to your host address, or there is no MX entry for your DNS name.
+
+ Try this
+ newbsdbox# hostname
+ newbsdbox.freebsd.org
+ newbsdbox# host newbsdbox.freebsd.org
+ newbsdbox.freebsd.org has address 204.216.27.xx
+
+
+ If that is all that comes out for your machine, mail directory to root@newbsdbox.freebsd.org will work no problems.
+
+ If instead, you have this
+ newbsdbox# host newbsdbox.freebsd.org
+ newbsdbox.FreeBSD.org has address 204.216.27.xx
+ newbsdbox.FreeBSD.org mail is handled (pri=10) by freefall.FreeBSD.org
+
+ All mail sent to your host directly will end up on freefall, under the same username.
+
+ This information is setup in your domain name server. This should be the same host that is listed as your primary nameserver in /etc/resolv.conf
+
+ The DNS record that carries mail routing information is the Mail eXchange entry. If no MX entry exists, mail will be delivered directly to the host by way of the Address record.
+
+ The MX entry for freefall.freebsd.org at one time.
+ freefall MX 30 mail.crl.net
+ freefall MX 40 agora.rdrop.com
+ freefall HINFO Pentium FreeBSD
+ freefall MX 10 freefall.FreeBSD.org
+ freefall MX 20 who.cdrom.com
+ freefall A 204.216.27.xx
+ freefall CNAME www.FreeBSD.org
+
+
+ Freefall has many MX entries. The lowest MX number gets the mail in the end. The others will queue mail temporarily, if freefall is busy or down.
+
+ Alternate MX sites should have separate connections to the Internet, to be most useful. An Internet Provider or other friendly site can provide this service.
+
+ dig, nslookup, and host are your friends.
+
+
+
+
+ Mail for your Domain (Network).
+
+ To setup up a network mailhost, you need to direct the mail from arriving at all the workstations. In other words, you want to hijack all mail for *.smallminingco.com and divert it to one machine, your mailhost.
+
+ The network users on their workstations will most likely pick up their mail over POP or telnet.
+
+ A user account with the SAME USERNAME should exist on both machines. Please use adduser to do this as required. If you set the shell to /nonexistent the user will not be allowed to login.
+
+ The mailhost that you will be using must be designated the Mail eXchange for each workstation. This must be arranged in DNS (ie BIND, named). Please refer to a Networking book for in-depth information.
+
+ You basically need to add these lines in your DNS server.
+ pc24.smallminingco.com A xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx ; Workstation ip
+ MX 10 smtp.smallminingco.com ; Your mailhost
+
+
+ You cannot do this yourself unless you are running a DNS server. If you do not want to run a DNS server, get somebody else like your Internet Provider to do it.
+
+ This will redirect mail for the workstation to the Mail eXchange host. It does not matter what machine the A record points to, the mail will be sent to the MX host.
+
+ This feature is used to implement Virtual E-Mail Hosting.
+
+ Example
+
+ I have a customer with domain foo.bar and I want all mail for foo.bar to be sent to my machine smtp.smalliap.com. You must make an entry in your DNS server like:
+
+ foo.bar MX 10 smtp.smalliap.com ; your mailhost
+
+ The A record is not needed if you only want E-Mail for the domain. IE: Don't expect ping foo.bar to work unless an Address record for foo.bar exists as well.
+
+ On the mailhost that actually accepts mail for final delivery to a mailbox, sendmail must be told what hosts it will be accepting mail for.
+
+ Add pc24.smallminingco.com to /etc/sendmail.cw (if you are using FEATURE(use_cw_file)), or add a "Cw myhost.smalliap.com" line to /etc/sendmail.cf
+
+ If you plan on doing anything serious with sendmail you should install the sendmail source. The source has plenty of documentation with it. You will find information on getting sendmail source from .
+
+
+
+
+ Setting up UUCP.
+
+ Stolen from the FAQ.
+
+ The sendmail configuration that ships with FreeBSD is
+ suited for sites that connect directly to the Internet.
+ Sites that wish to exchange their mail via UUCP must install
+ another sendmail configuration file.
+
+ Tweaking /etc/sendmail.cf manually is considered
+ something for purists. Sendmail version 8 comes with a
+ new approach of generating config files via some m4
+ preprocessing, where the actual hand-crafted configuration
+ is on a higher abstraction level. You should use the
+ configuration files under
+
+
+ /usr/src/usr.sbin/sendmail/cf
+
+
+ If you did not install your system with full sources,
+ the sendmail config stuff has been
+ broken out into a separate source distribution tarball just
+ for you. Assuming you have your CD-ROM mounted, do:
+
+
+ cd /usr/src
+ tar -xvzf /cdrom/dists/src/ssmailcf.aa
+
+
+ Do not panic, this is only a few hundred kilobytes in size.
+ The file README in the cf directory can
+ serve as a basic introduction to m4 configuration.
+
+ For UUCP delivery, you are best advised to use the
+ mailertable feature. This constitutes a database
+ that sendmail can use to base its routing decision upon.
+
+ First, you have to create your .mc file. The
+ directory /usr/src/usr.sbin/sendmail/cf/cf is the
+ home of these files. Look around, there are already a few
+ examples. Assuming you have named your file foo.mc,
+ all you need to do in order to convert it into a valid
+ sendmail.cf is:
+
+
+ cd /usr/src/usr.sbin/sendmail/cf/cf
+ make foo.cf
+
+
+ If you don't have a /usr/obj hiearchy, then:
+
+
+ cp foo.cf /etc/sendmail.cf
+
+
+ Otherwise:
+
+
+ cp /usr/obj/`pwd`/foo.cf /etc/sendmail.cf
+
+
+ A typical .mc file might look like:
+
+
+ include(`../m4/cf.m4')
+ VERSIONID(`Your version number')
+ OSTYPE(bsd4.4)
+
+ FEATURE(nodns)
+ FEATURE(nocanonify)
+ FEATURE(mailertable)
+
+ define(`UUCP_RELAY', your.uucp.relay)
+ define(`UUCP_MAX_SIZE', 200000)
+
+ MAILER(local)
+ MAILER(smtp)
+ MAILER(uucp)
+
+ Cw your.alias.host.name
+ Cw youruucpnodename.UUCP
+
+
+ The nodns and nocanonify features will
+ prevent any usage of the DNS during mail delivery. The
+ UUCP_RELAY clause is needed for bizarre reasons,
+ do not ask. Simply put an Internet hostname there that
+ is able to handle .UUCP pseudo-domain addresses; most likely,
+ you will enter the mail relay of your ISP there.
+
+ Once you have this, you need this file called
+ /etc/mailertable. A typical example of this
+ gender again:
+
+
+ #
+ # makemap hash /etc/mailertable.db < /etc/mailertable
+ #
+ horus.interface-business.de uucp-dom:horus
+ .interface-business.de uucp-dom:if-bus
+ interface-business.de uucp-dom:if-bus
+ .heep.sax.de smtp8:%1
+ horus.UUCP uucp-dom:horus
+ if-bus.UUCP uucp-dom:if-bus
+ . uucp-dom:sax
+
+
+ As you can see, this is part of a real-life file. The first
+ three lines handle special cases where domain-addressed mail
+ should not be sent out to the default route, but instead to
+ some UUCP neighbor in order to ``shortcut'' the delivery
+ path. The next line handles mail to the local Ethernet
+ domain that can be delivered using SMTP. Finally, the UUCP
+ neighbors are mentioned in the .UUCP pseudo-domain notation,
+ to allow for a ``uucp-neighbor!recipient'' override of the
+ default rules. The last line is always a single dot, matching
+ everything else, with UUCP delivery to a UUCP neighbor that
+ serves as your universal mail gateway to the world. All of
+ the node names behind the uucp-dom: keyword must
+ be valid UUCP neighbors, as you can verify using the
+ command uuname.
+
+ As a reminder that this file needs to be converted into a
+ DBM database file before being usable, the command line to
+ accomplish this is best placed as a comment at the top of
+ the mailertable. You always have to execute this command
+ each time you change your mailertable.
+
+ Final hint: if you are uncertain whether some particular
+ mail routing would work, remember the option to
+ sendmail. It starts sendmail in address test mode;
+ simply enter ``0 '', followed by the address you wish to
+ test for the mail routing. The last line tells you the used
+ internal mail agent, the destination host this agent will be
+ called with, and the (possibly translated) address. Leave
+ this mode by typing Control-D.
+
+
+ j@uriah 191% sendmail -bt
+ ADDRESS TEST MODE (ruleset 3 NOT automatically invoked)
+ Enter <ruleset> <address>
+ > 0 foo@interface-business.de
+ rewrite: ruleset 0 input: foo @ interface-business . de
+ ...
+ rewrite: ruleset 0 returns: $# uucp-dom $@ if-bus $: foo \
+ < @ interface-business . de >
+ > ^D
+ j@uriah 192%
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FAQ
+
+ Migration from FAQ.
+
+
+
+ Why do I have to use the FQDN for hosts on my site?
+
+ You will probably find that the host is actually in a different
+ domain; for example, if you are in foo.bar.edu and you wish to reach
+ a host called ``mumble'' in the bar.edu domain, you will have to
+ refer to it by the fully-qualified domain name, ``mumble.bar.edu'',
+ instead of just ``mumble''.
+
+ Traditionally, this was allowed by BSD BIND resolvers. However
+ the current version of BIND that ships with FreeBSD
+ no longer provides default abbreviations for non-fully
+ qualified domain names other than the domain you are in.
+ So an unqualified host mumble must either be found
+ as mumble.foo.bar.edu, or it will be searched for
+ in the root domain.
+
+ This is different from the previous behavior, where the
+ search continued across mumble.bar.edu, and
+ mumble.edu. Have a look at RFC 1535 for why this
+ was considered bad practice, or even a security hole.
+
+ As a good workaround, you can place the line
+
+ search foo.bar.edu bar.edu
+
+ instead of the previous
+
+ domain foo.bar.edu
+
+ into your /etc/resolv.conf. However, make sure
+ that the search order does not go beyond the ``boundary
+ between local and public administration'', as RFC 1535
+ calls it.
+
+
+
+
+ Sendmail says ``mail loops back to myself''
+
+ This is answered in the sendmail FAQ as follows:-
+ * I am getting "Local configuration error" messages, such as:
+
+ 553 relay.domain.net config error: mail loops back to myself
+ 554 <user@domain.net>... Local configuration error
+
+ How can I solve this problem?
+
+ You have asked mail to the domain (e.g., domain.net) to be
+ forwarded to a specific host (in this case, relay.domain.net)
+ by using an MX record, but the relay machine does not recognize
+ itself as domain.net. Add domain.net to /etc/sendmail.cw
+ (if you are using FEATURE(use_cw_file)) or add "Cw domain.net"
+ to /etc/sendmail.cf.
+
+
+
+ The sendmail FAQ is in /usr/src/usr.sbin/sendmail
+ and is recommended reading if you want to do any
+ ``tweaking'' of your mail setup.
+
+
+
+
+ How can I do E-Mail with a dialup PPP host?
+
+ You want to connect a FreeBSD box on a lan, to the Internet. The FreeBSD box will be a mail gateway for the lan. The PPP connection is non-dedicated.
+
+ There are at least two way to do this.
+
+ The other is to use UUCP.
+
+ The key is to get a Internet site to provide secondary MX services for your domain.
+ For example:
+ bigco.com. MX 10 bigco.com.
+ MX 20 smalliap.com.
+
+
+ Only one host should be specified as the final recipient ( add ``Cw bigco.com'' in /etc/sendmail.cf on bigco.com).
+
+ When the senders sendmail is trying to deliver the mail it will try to connect to you over the modem link. It will most likely time out because you are not online. Sendmail will automatically deliver it to the secondary MX site, ie your Internet provider. The secondary MX site will try every (sendmail_flags = "-bd -q15m" in /etc/rc.conf ) 15 minutes to connect to your host to deliver the mail to the primary MX site.
+
+ You might wat to use something like this as a login script.
+ #!/bin/sh
+ # Put me in /usr/local/bin/pppbigco
+ ( sleep 60 ; /usr/sbin/sendmail -q ) &
+ /usr/sbin/ppp -direct pppbigco
+
+ If you are going to create a separate login script for a user you could use sendmail -qRbigco.com instead in the script above. This will force all mail in your queue for bigco.com to be processed immediately.
+
+ A further refinement of the situation is as follows.
+
+ Message stolen from the freebsd-isp mailing list.
+ > we provide the secondary mx for a customer. The customer connects to
+ > our services several times a day automatically to get the mails to
+ > his primary mx (We do not call his site when a mail for his domains
+ > arrived). Our sendmail sends the mailqueue every 30 minutes. At the
+ > moment he has to stay 30 minutes online to be sure that all mail is
+ > gone to the primary mx.
+ >
+ > Is there a command that would initiate sendmail to send all the mails
+ > now? The user has not root-privileges on our machine of course.
+
+ In the 'privacy flags' section of sendmail.cf, there is a definition
+ Opgoaway,restrictqrun
+
+ Remove restrictqrun to allow non-root users to start the queue processing.
+ You might also like to rearrange the MXs. We are the 1st MX for our
+ customers like this, and we have defined:
+
+ # If we are the best MX for a host, try directly instead of generating
+ # local config error.
+ OwTrue
+
+ That way a remote site will deliver straight to you, without trying
+ the customer connection. You then send to your customer. Only works for
+ "hosts", so you need to get your customer to name their mail machine
+ "customer.com" as well as "hostname.customer.com" in the DNS. Just put
+ an A record in the DNS for "customer.com".
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Advanced topics
+
+
+
+ The Cutting Edge: FreeBSD-current and FreeBSD-stable
+
+ FreeBSD is under constant development between releases. For
+ people who want to be on the cutting edge, there are several
+ easy mechanisms for keeping your system in sync with the latest
+ developments. Be warned: the cutting edge is not for everyone!
+ This chapter will help you decide if you want to track the development
+ system, or stick with one of the released versions.
+
+
+
+ Staying Current with FreeBSD
+
+ Contributed by &a.jkh;.
+
+
+
+ What is FreeBSD-current?
+
+ FreeBSD-current is, quite literally, nothing more than a daily
+ snapshot of the working sources for FreeBSD. These include work in
+ progress, experimental changes and transitional mechanisms that may or
+ may not be present in the next official release of the software.
+ While many of us compile almost daily from FreeBSD-current sources,
+ there are periods of time when the sources are literally un-compilable.
+ These problems are generally resolved as expeditiously as possible,
+ but whether or not FreeBSD-current sources bring disaster or greatly
+ desired functionality can literally be a matter of which part of any
+ given 24 hour period you grabbed them in!
+
+
+
+
+ Who needs FreeBSD-current?
+
+ FreeBSD-current is made generally available for 3 primary interest groups:
+
+
+
+ Members of the FreeBSD group who are actively working on some
+ part of the source tree and for whom keeping `current' is an
+ absolute requirement.
+
+
+
+
+ Members of the FreeBSD group who are active testers,
+ willing to spend time working through problems in order to
+ ensure that FreeBSD-current remains as sane as possible. These
+ are also people who wish to make topical suggestions on changes
+ and the general direction of FreeBSD.
+
+
+
+
+ Peripheral members of the FreeBSD (or some other) group who merely
+ wish to keep an eye on things and use the current sources for
+ reference purposes (e.g. for reading, not running). These
+ people also make the occasional comment or contribute code.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ What is FreeBSD-current NOT?
+
+
+
+
+
+ A fast-track to getting pre-release bits because you heard there is
+ some cool new feature in there and you want to be the first on
+ your block to have it.
+
+
+
+
+ A quick way of getting bug fixes.
+
+
+
+
+ In any way ``officially supported'' by us.
+
+ We do our best to help people genuinely in one of the 3
+ ``legitimate'' FreeBSD-current categories, but we simply do not
+ have the time to provide tech support for it.
+ This is not because we are mean and nasty people who do not like
+ helping people out (we would not even be doing FreeBSD if we were),
+ it is literally because we cannot answer 400 messages a day
+ and actually work on FreeBSD! I am sure that, if given
+ the choice between having us answer lots of questions or continuing to
+ improve FreeBSD, most of you would vote for us improving it.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Using FreeBSD-current
+
+
+
+
+
+ Join the &a.current; and the &a.cvsall; .
+ This is not just a good idea, it is essential.
+ If you are not on the FreeBSD-current mailing list you
+ will not see the comments that people are making about the
+ current state of the system and thus will probably end up stumbling
+ over a lot of problems that others have already found and
+ solved. Even more importantly, you will miss out on
+ potentially critical information (e.g. ``Yo, Everybody!
+ Before you rebuild /usr/src, you must
+ rebuild the kernel or your system will crash horribly!").
+
+ The cvs-all mailing list will allow you to see the commit log
+ entry for each change as it is made along with any pertinent
+ information on possible side-effects.
+
+ To join these lists, send mail to &a.majordomo; and specify:
+ subscribe freebsd-current
+ subscribe cvs-all
+
+ In the body of your message. Optionally, you can also say `help'
+ and Majordomo will send you full help on how to subscribe and
+ unsubscribe to the various other mailing lists we support.
+
+
+
+
+ Grab the sources from ftp.FreeBSD.ORG. You can do this in
+ three ways:
+
+
+
+
+ Use the facility. Unless you
+ have a good TCP/IP connection at a flat rate, this is
+ the way to do it.
+
+
+
+
+ Use the program with
+ this supfile.
+ This is the second most recommended method, since it allows
+ you to grab the entire collection once and then only what has
+ changed from then on. Many people run cvsup from cron
+ and keep their sources up-to-date automatically.
+
+
+
+
+ Use ftp. The source tree for FreeBSD-current is always
+ "exported" on:
+ ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/FreeBSD-current
+ We also use `wu-ftpd' which allows compressed/tar'd grabbing
+ of whole trees. e.g. you see:
+ usr.bin/lex
+
+ You can do:
+ ftp> cd usr.bin
+ ftp> get lex.tar.Z
+
+ And it will get the whole directory for you as a compressed
+ tar file.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Essentially, if you need rapid on-demand access to the source and
+ communications bandwidth is not a consideration, use cvsup or ftp.
+ Otherwise, use CTM.
+
+
+
+
+ If you are grabbing the sources to run, and not just look at,
+ then grab all of current, not just selected portions. The
+ reason for this is that various parts of the source depend on
+ updates elsewhere, and trying to compile just a subset is almost
+ guaranteed to get you into trouble.
+
+
+
+
+ Before compiling current, read the Makefile in /usr/src
+ carefully. You should at least run a `' the first time through as part of the upgrading
+ process. Reading the &a.current; will keep you up-to-date on other
+ bootstrapping procedures that sometimes become necessary as we move
+ towards the next release.
+
+
+
+
+ Be active! If you are running FreeBSD-current, we want to know
+ what you have to say about it, especially if you have suggestions
+ for enhancements or bug fixes. Suggestions with accompanying code
+ are received most enthusiastically!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Staying Stable with FreeBSD
+
+ Contributed by &a.jkh;.
+
+
+
+ What is FreeBSD-stable?
+
+ FreeBSD-stable is our development branch for a more low-key and
+ conservative set of changes intended for our next mainstream release.
+ Changes of an experimental or untested nature do not go into this
+ branch (see ).
+
+
+
+
+ Who needs FreeBSD-stable?
+
+ If you are a commercial user or someone who puts maximum stability of
+ their FreeBSD system before all other concerns, you should consider tracking
+ stable. This is especially true if you have installed the most
+ recent release (&rel.current;-RELEASE at the time of this writing) since the stable
+ branch is effectively a bug-fix stream relative to the previous release.
+
+ Please note that the stable tree endeavors, above all, to
+ be fully compilable and stable at all times, but we do occasionally
+ make mistakes (these are still active sources with quickly-transmitted
+ updates, after all). We also do our best to thoroughly test fixes in
+ current before bringing them into stable, but sometimes
+ our tests fail to catch every case. If something breaks for you in
+ stable, please let us know immediately! (see
+ next section).
+
+
+
+
+ Using FreeBSD-stable
+
+
+
+
+
+ Join the &a.stable; . This will
+ keep you informed of build-dependencies that may appear in
+ stable or any other issues requiring special attention.
+ Developers will also make announcements in this mailing list when
+ they are contemplating some controversial fix or update, giving
+ the users a chance to respond if they have any issues to raise concerning
+ the proposed change.
+
+ To join this list, send mail to &a.majordomo; and say:
+ subscribe freebsd-stable
+
+ In the body of your message. Optionally, you can also say `help'
+ and Majordomo will send you full help on how to subscribe and
+ unsubscribe to the various other mailing lists we support.
+
+
+
+
+ Grab the sources from ftp.FreeBSD.ORG. You can do this in
+ three ways:
+
+
+
+
+ Use the facility. Unless you
+ have a good TCP/IP connection at a flat rate, this is
+ the way to do it.
+
+
+
+
+ Use the program with
+ this supfile.
+ This is the second most recommended method, since it allows
+ you to grab the entire collection once and then only what has
+ changed from then on. Many people run cvsup from cron
+ to keep their sources up-to-date automatically.
+
+
+
+
+ Use ftp. The source tree for FreeBSD-stable is always
+ "exported" on:
+ ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/FreeBSD-stable
+
+
+
+ We also use `wu-ftpd' which allows compressed/tar'd grabbing
+ of whole trees. e.g. you see:
+ usr.bin/lex
+
+ You can do:
+ ftp> cd usr.bin
+ ftp> get lex.tar.Z
+
+ And it will get the whole directory for you as a compressed
+ tar file.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Essentially, if you need rapid on-demand access to the source and
+ communications bandwidth is not a consideration, use cvsup or ftp.
+ Otherwise, use CTM.
+
+
+
+
+ Before compiling stable, read the Makefile in /usr/src
+ carefully. You should at least run a `' the first time through as part of the upgrading
+ process. Reading the &a.stable; will keep you up-to-date on other
+ bootstrapping procedures that sometimes become necessary as we move
+ towards the next release.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Synchronizing Source Trees over the Internet
+
+ Contributed by &a.jkh;.
+
+ There are various ways of using an Internet (or email) connection
+ to stay up-to-date with any given area of the FreeBSD project sources,
+ or all areas, depending on what interests you. The primary
+ services we offer are CVSup and CTM.
+
+ CVSup uses the pull model of updating. The
+ user (or a cron script) invokes the cvsup program, and it
+ interacts with a cvsupd server somewhere to bring your files
+ up to date. The updates you receive are up-to-the-minute and you get
+ them when, and only when, you want them. You can easily restrict your
+ updates to the specific files or directories that are of interest to
+ you. Updates are generated on the fly by the server, according to
+ what you have and what you want to have.
+
+ CTM, on the other hand, does not interactively compare
+ the sources you have with those on the master archive. Instead, a script
+ which identifies changes in files since its previous run is executed several
+ times a day on the master archive, any detected changes being compressed,
+ stamped with a sequence-number and encoded for transmission over email
+ (printable ASCII only). Once received, these "CTM deltas" can then be
+ handed to the ctm_rmail(1) utility which will automatically decode, verify
+ and apply the changes to the user's copy of the sources. This process is
+ far more efficient than CVSup, and places less strain on our server resources
+ since it is a push rather than a pull model.
+
+ There are other trade-offs, of course. If you
+ inadvertently wipe out portions of your archive, CVSup will detect
+ and rebuild the damaged portions for you. CTM won't do this, and if
+ you wipe some portion of your source tree out (and don't have it backed
+ up) then you will have to start from scratch (from the most recent CVS
+ "base delta") and rebuild it all.
+
+ For more information on CTM and CVSup, please
+ see one of the following sections:
+
+
+
+ CTM
+
+ Contributed by &a.phk;. Updated 19-October-1997.
+
+ CTM is a method for keeping a remote directory tree in sync with a
+ central one. It has been developed for usage with FreeBSD's source
+ trees, though other people may find it useful for other purposes as
+ time goes by. Little, if any, documentation currently exists at
+ this time on the process of creating deltas, so talk to &a.phk;
+ for more information should you wish to use CTM for other things.
+
+
+
+ Why should I use CTM?
+
+ CTM will give you a local copy of the FreeBSD source trees.
+ There are a number of ``flavors'' of the tree available. Whether
+ you wish to track the entire cvs tree or just one of the branches,
+ CTM can provide you the information.
+ If you are an active developer on FreeBSD, but have lousy
+ or non-existent TCP/IP connectivity, or simply wish to have the
+ changes automatically sent to you, CTM was made for you.
+ You will need to obtain up to three deltas per day for the most
+ active branches. However, you should consider having them sent
+ by automatic email. The sizes of the updates are
+ always kept as small as possible. This is typically less than 5K,
+ with an occasional (one in ten) being 10-50K and every now and
+ then a biggie of 100K+ or more coming around.
+
+ You will also need to make yourself aware of the various caveats
+ related to working directly from the development sources rather
+ than a pre-packaged release. This is particularly true if you
+ choose the ``current'' sources. It is recommended that
+ you read .
+
+
+
+
+ What do I need to use CTM?
+
+ You will need two things: The ``CTM'' program and the initial
+ deltas to feed it (to get up to ``current'' levels).
+
+ The CTM program has been part of FreeBSD ever since version 2.0
+ was released, and lives in /usr/src/usr.sbin/CTM if you
+ have a copy of the source online.
+
+ If you are running a pre-2.0 version of FreeBSD, you can fetch the
+ current CTM sources directly from:
+
+ ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/FreeBSD-current/src/usr.sbin/ctm
+
+ The ``deltas'' you feed CTM can be had two ways, FTP or e-mail.
+ If you have general FTP access to the Internet then the following
+ FTP sites support access to CTM:
+
+ ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/CTM
+
+ or see section .
+
+ FTP the relevant directory and fetch the README file,
+ starting from there.
+
+ If you may wish to get your deltas via email:
+
+ Send email to &a.majordomo; to subscribe to one of the CTM
+ distribution lists. ``ctm-cvs-cur'' supports the entire cvs tree.
+ ``ctm-src-cur'' supports the head of the development branch.
+ ``ctm-src-2_2'' supports the 2.2 release branch, etc.
+ (If you do not know how to subscribe
+ yourself using majordomo, send a message first containing the
+ word ``help'' - it will send you back usage instructions.)
+
+ When you begin receiving your CTM updates in the mail, you may
+ use the ctm_rmail program to unpack and apply them. You
+ can actually use the ctm_rmail program directly from a entry
+ in /etc/aliases if you want to have the process run in a
+ fully automated fashion. Check the ctm_rmail man page for more
+ details.
+
+ NOTE: No matter what method you use to get the CTM
+ deltas, you should subscribe to the ctm-announce@FreeBSD.ORG
+ mailing list. In the future, this will be the only place where
+ announcements concerning the operations of the CTM system will be
+ posted. Send an email to &a.majordomo; with a single
+ line of ``subscribe ctm-announce'' to get added to the list.
+
+
+
+
+ Starting off with CTM for the first time
+
+ Before you can start using CTM deltas, you will need to get a
+ to a starting point for the deltas produced subsequently to it.
+
+ First you should determine what you already have. Everyone can
+ start from an ``Empty'' directory. However, since the trees are
+ many tens of megabytes, you should prefer to start from something
+ already at hand. If you have a RELEASE CD, you can copy or extract
+ an initial source from it. This will save a significant transfer
+ of data.
+
+ Once you identify a suitable starting point, you must use an initial
+ ``transition'' delta to transform your starting point into a
+ CTM supported tree.
+
+ You can recognize these transition deltas by the ``X'' appended
+ to the number (src-cur.3210XEmpty.gz for instance).
+ The designation following the ``X'' corresponds to the origin
+ of your initial ``seed''. ``Empty'' is an empty directory, ``R225''
+ would designate the 2.2.5 release, etc.
+ As a rule a base transition from ``Empty'' is producted
+ every 100 deltas. By the way, they are large! 25 to 30
+ Megabytes of gzip'ed data is common for the ``XEmpty'' deltas.
+
+ Once you've picked a base delta to start from, you will also need
+ all deltas with higher numbers following it.
+
+
+
+
+ Using CTM in your daily life
+
+ To apply the deltas, simply say:
+
+ cd /where/ever/you/want/the/stuff
+ ctm -v -v /where/you/store/your/deltas/src-xxx.*
+
+
+
+
+ CTM understands deltas which have been put through gzip,
+ so you do not need to gunzip them first, this saves disk space.
+
+ Unless it feels very secure about the entire process, CTM will
+ not touch your tree. To verify a delta you can also use the
+ ``'' flag and CTM will not actually touch your tree; it will
+ merely verify the integrity of the delta and see if it would apply
+ cleanly to your current tree.
+
+ There are other options to CTM as well, see the manual pages
+ or look in the sources for more information.
+
+ I would also be very happy if somebody could help with the ``user
+ interface'' portions, as I have realized that I cannot make up my
+ mind on what options should do what, how and when...
+
+ That's really all there is to it. Every time you get a new delta,
+ just run it through CTM to keep your sources up to date.
+
+ Do not remove the deltas if they are hard to download again. You
+ just might want to keep them around in case something bad happens.
+ Even if you only have floppy disks, consider using fdwrite to
+ make a copy.
+
+
+
+
+ Keeping your local changes
+
+ As a developer one would like to experiment with and change
+ files in the source tree. CTM supports local modifications in a
+ limited way: before checking for the presence of a file
+ foo, it first looks for foo.ctm. If this
+ file exists, CTM will operate on it instead of foo.
+
+ This behaviour gives us a simple way to maintain local changes:
+ simply copy the files you plan to modify to the corresponding
+ file names with a .ctm suffix. Then you can freely hack
+ the code, while CTM keeps the .ctm file up-to-date.
+
+
+
+
+ Other interesting CTM options
+
+
+
+ Finding out exactly what would be touched by an update
+
+ You can determine the list of changes that CTM will make on your
+ source repository using the ``'' option to CTM.
+
+ This is useful if you would like to keep logs of the changes,
+ pre- or post- process the modified files in any manner, or just
+ are feeling a tad paranoid :-).
+
+
+
+
+ Making backups before updating
+
+ Sometimes you may want to backup all the files that would be changed
+ by a CTM update.
+
+ Specifying the ``'' option causes
+ CTM to backup all files that would be touched by a given CTM
+ delta to backup-file.
+
+
+
+
+ Restricting the files touched by an update
+
+ Sometimes you would be interested in restricting the scope of a
+ given CTM update, or may be interested in extracting just a few
+ files from a sequence of deltas.
+
+ You can control the list of files that CTM would operate on by
+ specifying filtering regular expressions using the
+ ``'' and ``'' options.
+
+ For example, to extract an up-to-date copy of
+ lib/libc/Makefile from your collection of saved CTM deltas,
+ run the commands:
+
+ cd /where/ever/you/want/to/extract/it/
+ ctm -e '^lib/libc/Makefile' ~ctm/src-xxx.*
+
+
+
+
+ For every file specified in a CTM delta, the ``'' and
+ ``'' options are applied in the order given on the
+ command line. The file is processed by CTM only if it is
+ marked as eligible after all the ``'' and
+ ``'' options are applied to it.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Future plans for CTM
+
+ Tons of them:
+
+
+
+ Use some kind of authentication into the CTM system, so as to
+ allow detection of spoofed CTM updates.
+
+
+
+ Clean up the options to CTM, they became confusing and
+ counter intuitive.
+
+
+
+
+
+ The bad news is that I am very busy, so any help in doing this will
+ be most welcome. And do not forget to tell me what you want also...
+
+
+
+
+ Miscellaneous stuff
+
+ All the ``DES infected'' (e.g. export controlled) source is not
+ included. You will get the ``international'' version only. If
+ sufficient interest appears, we will set up a ``sec-cur''
+ sequence too.
+ There is a sequence of deltas for the ports collection too,
+ but interest has not been all that high yet. Tell me if you want
+ an email list for that too and we will consider setting it up.
+
+
+
+
+ Thanks!
+
+
+
+ &a.bde;
+
+ for his pointed pen and invaluable comments.
+
+
+
+
+ &a.sos;
+
+
+ for patience.
+
+
+
+
+ Stephen McKay
+
+
+ wrote ctm_[rs]mail, much appreciated.
+
+
+
+
+ &a.jkh;
+
+
+ for being so stubborn that I had to make it better.
+
+
+
+
+ All the users
+
+
+ I hope you like it...
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ CVSup
+
+ Contributed by &a.jdp;.
+
+
+
+ Introduction
+
+ CVSup is a software package for distributing and updating source
+ trees from a master CVS repository on a remote server host. The
+ FreeBSD sources are maintained in a CVS repository on a central
+ development machine in California. With CVSup, FreeBSD users can
+ easily keep their own source trees up to date.
+
+ CVSup uses the so-called pull model of updating. Under the pull
+ model, each client asks the server for updates, if and when they are
+ wanted. The server waits passively for update requests from its
+ clients. Thus all updates are instigated by the client. The server
+ never sends unsolicited updates. Users must either run the CVSup client
+ manually to get an update, or they must set up a cron job to run it
+ automatically on a regular basis.
+
+ The term "CVSup", capitalized just so, refers to the entire software
+ package. Its main components are the client "cvsup" which runs on each
+ user's machine, and the server "cvsupd" which runs at each of the
+ FreeBSD mirror sites.
+
+ As you read the FreeBSD documentation and mailing lists, you may
+ see references to sup. Sup was the predecessor of CVSup,
+ and it served a similar purpose. CVSup is in used in much the same
+ way as sup and, in fact, uses configuration files which are
+ backward-compatible with sup's. Sup is no longer used in the FreeBSD
+ project, because CVSup is both faster and more flexible.
+
+
+
+
+ Installation
+
+ The easiest way to install CVSup if you are running FreeBSD 2.2 or
+ later is to use either the port from the FreeBSD or the corresponding binary package, depending on whether you prefer to roll your
+ own or not.
+
+ If you are running FreeBSD-2.1.6 or 2.1.7, you unfortunately cannot use the
+ binary package versions due to the fact that it requires a version of
+ the C library that does not yet exist in FreeBSD-2.1.{6,7}. You can easily
+ use the port, however, just as with FreeBSD 2.2. Simply unpack
+ the tar file, cd to the cvsup subdirectory and type "make install".
+
+ Because CVSup is written in Modula-3, both the package and the port require that the
+ Modula-3 runtime libraries be installed. These are available as the
+ lang/modula-3-lib port and the lang/modula-3-lib-3.6 package. If you follow the same
+ directions as for cvsup, these libraries will be compiled and/or
+ installed automatically when you install the CVSup port or package.
+
+ The Modula-3 libraries are rather large, and fetching and compiling
+ them is not an instantaneous process. For that reason, a third option
+ is provided. You can get statically linked FreeBSD
+ executables for CVSup from either the USA distribution site:
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsup-bin-15.3.tar.gz
+ (client including GUI).
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsup.nogui-bin-15.3.tar.gz
+ (client without GUI).
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsupd-bin-15.3.tar.gz
+ (server).
+
+
+
+
+
+ or the German mirror:
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.cs.tu-berlin.de/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsup-bin-15.3.tar.gz
+ (client including GUI).
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.cs.tu-berlin.de/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsup.nogui-bin-15.3.tar.gz
+ (client without GUI).
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.cs.tu-berlin.de/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsupd-bin-15.3.tar.gz
+ (server).
+
+
+
+
+
+ Most users will need only the client. These executables are entirely
+ self-contained, and they will run on any version of FreeBSD from
+ FreeBSD-2.1.0 to FreeBSD-current.
+
+ In summary, your options for installing CVSup are:
+
+
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.2 or later: static binary, port, or package
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.1.6, 2.1.7: static binary or port
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.1.5 or earlier: static binary
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Configuration
+
+ CVSup's operation is controlled by a configuration file called the
+ "supfile". Beginning with FreeBSD-2.2, there are some sample supfiles
+ in the directory /usr/share/examples/cvsup. These examples are also available
+ from ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/FreeBSD-current/src/share/examples/cvsup/ if you are on a pre-2.2 system.
+
+ The information in a supfile answers the following questions for cvsup:
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ In the following sections, we will construct a typical supfile by
+ answering each of these questions in turn. First, we describe the
+ overall structure of a supfile.
+
+ A supfile is a text file. Comments begin with "#" and extend to
+ the end of the line. Lines that are blank and lines that contain only
+ comments are ignored.
+
+ Each remaining line describes a set of files that the user wishes
+ to receive. The line begins with the name of a "collection", a
+ logical grouping of files defined by the server. The name of the
+ collection tells the server which files you want. After the
+ collection name come zero or more fields, separated by white space.
+ These fields answer the questions listed above. There are two types
+ of fields: flag fields and value fields. A flag field consists of a
+ keyword standing alone, e.g., "delete" or "compress". A value field
+ also begins with a keyword, but the keyword is followed without
+ intervening white space by "=" and a second word. For example,
+ "release=cvs" is a value field.
+
+ A supfile typically specifies more than one collection to receive.
+ One way to structure a supfile is to specify all of the relevant
+ fields explicitly for each collection. However, that tends to make
+ the supfile lines quite long, and it is inconvenient because most
+ fields are the same for all of the collections in a supfile. CVSup
+ provides a defaulting mechanism to avoid these problems. Lines
+ beginning with the special pseudo-collection name "*default" can be
+ used to set flags and values which will be used as defaults for the
+ subsequent collections in the supfile. A default value can be
+ overridden for an individual collection, by specifying a different
+ value with the collection itself. Defaults can also be changed or
+ augmented in mid-supfile by additional "*default" lines.
+
+ With this background, we will now proceed to construct a supfile
+ for receiving and updating the main source tree of .
+
+
+
+
+
+ Which files do you want to receive?
+
+
+
+ The files available via CVSup are organized into named
+ groups called "collections". The collections that are available are
+ described .
+ In this example, we wish to receive the
+ entire main source tree for the FreeBSD system. There is a single
+ large collection "src-all" which will give us all of that, except the
+ export-controlled cryptography support. Let us assume for this
+ example that we are in the USA or Canada. Then we can get the
+ cryptography code with one additional collection, "cvs-crypto".
+ As a first step toward constructing our supfile, we
+ simply list these collections, one per line:
+
+
+ src-all
+ cvs-crypto
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Which version(s) of them do you want?
+
+
+
+ With CVSup, you can receive virtually any version of the sources
+ that ever existed. That is possible because the cvsupd server works
+ directly from the CVS repository, which contains all of the versions.
+ You specify which one of them you want using the "tag=" and "date="
+ value fields.
+
+
+
+ WARNING: Be very careful to specify any "tag=" fields
+ correctly. Some tags are valid only for certain collections of
+ files. If you specify an incorrect or misspelled tag, CVSup will
+ delete files which you probably do not want deleted.
+ In particular, use only "tag=." for the "ports-*"
+ collections.
+
+
+
+ The "tag=" field names a symbolic tag in the repository. There are
+ two kinds of tags, revision tags and branch tags. A revision tag
+ refers to a specific revision. Its meaning stays the same from day to
+ day. A branch tag, on the other hand, refers to the latest revision
+ on a given line of development, at any given time. Because a branch
+ tag does not refer to a specific revision, it may mean something
+ different tomorrow than it means today.
+
+
+
+ Here are the branch tags that users might be interested in:
+
+
+
+ tag=.
+
+ The main line of development, also known as FreeBSD-current.
+ Note: the "." is not punctuation; it is the name of the tag.
+ Valid for all collections.
+
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_2
+
+
+ The line of development for FreeBSD-2.2.x, also known as
+ FreeBSD-stable.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_1_0
+
+
+ The line of development for FreeBSD-2.1.x - this branch
+ is largely obsolete.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Here are the revision tags that users might be interested in:
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_2_6_RELEASE
+
+ FreeBSD-2.2.6.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_2_5_RELEASE
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.2.5.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_2_2_RELEASE
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.2.2.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_2_1_RELEASE
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.2.1.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_2_0_RELEASE
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.2.0.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_1_7_RELEASE
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.1.7.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_1_6_1_RELEASE
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.1.6.1.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_1_6_RELEASE
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.1.6.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_1_5_RELEASE
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.1.5.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_1_0_RELEASE
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.1.0.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ WARNING: Be very careful to type the tag name exactly as
+ shown. CVSup cannot distinguish between valid and invalid tags.
+ If you misspell the tag, CVSup will behave as though you had
+ specified a valid tag which happens to refer to no files at all.
+ It will delete your existing sources in that case.
+
+
+
+ When you specify a branch tag, you normally receive the latest versions
+ of the files on that line of development. If you wish to receive some
+ past version, you can do so by specifying a date with the "date=" value
+ field. The cvsup(1) manual page explains how to do that.
+
+
+
+ For our example, we wish to receive FreeBSD-current. We add this line
+ at the beginning of our supfile:
+
+
+ *default tag=.
+
+
+
+
+ There is an important special case that comes into play if you specify
+ neither a "tag=" field nor a "date=" field. In that case, you receive
+ the actual RCS files directly from the server's CVS repository, rather
+ than receiving a particular version. Developers generally prefer this
+ mode of operation. By maintaining a copy of the repository itself on
+ their systems, they gain the ability to browse the revision histories
+ and examine past versions of files. This gain is achieved at a large
+ cost in terms of disk space, however.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Where do you want to get them from?
+
+
+
+ We use the "host=" field to tell cvsup where to obtain its updates.
+ Any of the will do,
+ though you should try to select one that's near to you.
+ In this example, we'll use the primary FreeBSD distribution site,
+ "cvsup.FreeBSD.org":
+
+
+ *default host=cvsup.FreeBSD.org
+
+
+
+
+ On any particular run of cvsup, you can override this setting on the
+ command line, with "-h hostname".
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Where do you want to put them on your own machine?
+
+
+
+ The "prefix=" field tells cvsup where to put the files it receives.
+ In this example, we will put the source files directly into our main
+ source tree, "/usr/src". The "src" directory is already implicit in the
+ collections we have chosen to receive, so this is the correct
+ specification:
+
+
+ *default prefix=/usr
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Where should cvsup maintain its status files?
+
+
+
+ The cvsup client maintains certain status files in what is called
+ the "base" directory. These files help CVSup to work more
+ efficiently, by keeping track of which updates you have already
+ received. We will use the standard base directory,
+ "/usr/local/etc/cvsup":
+
+
+ *default base=/usr/local/etc/cvsup
+
+
+
+
+ This setting is used by default if it is not specified in the
+ supfile, so we actually do not need the above line.
+
+
+
+ If your base directory does not already exist, now would be a good
+ time to create it. The cvsup client will refuse to run if the base
+ directory does not exist.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Miscellaneous supfile settings:
+
+
+
+ There is one more line of boiler plate that normally needs to be
+ present in the supfile:
+
+
+ *default release=cvs delete use-rel-suffix compress
+
+
+
+
+ "release=cvs" indicates that the server should get its information
+ out of the main FreeBSD CVS repository. This is virtually always the
+ case, but there are other possibilities which are beyond the scope of
+ this discussion.
+
+
+
+ "delete" gives CVSup permission to delete files. You should always
+ specify this, so that CVSup can keep your source tree fully up to
+ date. CVSup is careful to delete only those files for which it is
+ responsible. Any extra files you happen to have will be left strictly
+ alone.
+
+
+
+ "use-rel-suffix" is ... arcane. If you really want to know about
+ it, see the cvsup(1) manual page. Otherwise, just specify it and
+ do not worry about it.
+
+
+
+ "compress" enables the use of gzip-style compression on the
+ communication channel. If your network link is T1 speed or faster,
+ you probably should not use compression. Otherwise, it helps
+ substantially.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Putting it all together:
+
+
+
+ Here is the entire supfile for our example:
+
+
+ *default tag=.
+ *default host=cvsup.FreeBSD.org
+ *default prefix=/usr
+ *default base=/usr/local/etc/cvsup
+ *default release=cvs delete use-rel-suffix compress
+ src-all
+ cvs-crypto
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Running CVSup
+
+ You are now ready to try an update. The command line for doing this is
+ quite simple:
+
+
+ cvsup supfile
+
+
+ where "supfile" is of course the name of the supfile you have just created.
+ Assuming you are running under X11, cvsup will display a GUI window with
+ some buttons to do the usual things. Press the "go" button, and watch
+ it run.
+
+ Since you are updating your actual "/usr/src" tree in this example, you
+ will need to run the program as root so that cvsup has the permissions
+ it needs to update your files. Having just created your configuration
+ file, and having never used this program before, that might
+ understandably make you nervous. There is an easy way to do a trial run
+ without touching your precious files. Just create an empty directory
+ somewhere convenient, and name it as an extra argument on the command
+ line:
+
+
+ mkdir /var/tmp/dest
+ cvsup supfile /var/tmp/dest
+
+
+ The directory you specify will be used as the destination directory
+ for all file updates. CVSup will examine your usual files in
+ "/usr/src", but it will not modify or delete any of them. Any file
+ updates will instead land in "/var/tmp/dest/usr/src". CVSup will also
+ leave its base directory status files untouched when run this way.
+ The new versions of those files will be written into the specified
+ directory. As long as you have read access to "/usr/src", you do not
+ even need to be root to perform this kind of trial run.
+
+ If you are not running X11 or if you just do not like GUIs, you
+ should add a couple of options to the command line when you run cvsup:
+
+
+ cvsup -g -L 2 supfile
+
+
+ The "-g" tells cvsup not to use its GUI. This is automatic if you are
+ not running X11, but otherwise you have to specify it.
+
+ The "-L 2" tells cvsup to print out the details of all the file updates
+ it is doing. There are three levels of verbosity, from "-L 0" to "-L 2".
+ The default is 0, which means total silence except for error messages.
+
+ There are plenty of other options available. For a brief list of them,
+ type "cvsup -H". For more detailed descriptions, see the manual page.
+
+ Once you are satisfied with the way updates are working, you can arrange
+ for regular runs of cvsup using cron(8). Obviously, you should not let
+ cvsup use its GUI when running it from cron.
+
+
+
+
+ CVSup File Collections
+
+ The file collections available via CVSup are organized
+ hierarchically. There are a few large collections, and they are
+ divided into smaller sub-collections. Receiving a large collection
+ is equivalent to receiving each of its sub-collections.
+ The hierarchical relationships among collections are reflected by
+ the use of indentation in the list below.
+
+ The most commonly used collections are src-all,
+ cvs-crypto, and ports-all. The other collections are used
+ only by small groups of people for specialized purposes, and some mirror
+ sites may not carry all of them.
+
+
+
+ cvs-all release=cvs
+
+ The main FreeBSD CVS repository, excluding the export-restricted
+ cryptography code.
+
+
+
+ distrib release=cvs
+
+ Files related to the distribution and mirroring of FreeBSD.
+
+
+
+
+ doc-all release=cvs
+
+
+ Sources for the FreeBSD handbook and other documentation.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-all release=cvs
+
+
+ The FreeBSD ports collection.
+
+
+
+ ports-archivers release=cvs
+
+ Archiving tools.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-astro release=cvs
+
+
+ Astronomical ports.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-audio release=cvs
+
+
+ Sound support.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-base release=cvs
+
+
+ Miscellaneous files at the top of /usr/ports.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-benchmarks release=cvs
+
+
+ Benchmarks.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-biology release=cvs
+
+
+ Biology.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-cad release=cvs
+
+
+ Computer aided design tools.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-chinese release=cvs
+
+
+ Chinese language support.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-comms release=cvs
+
+
+ Communication software.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-converters release=cvs
+
+
+ character code converters.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-databases release=cvs
+
+
+ Databases.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-devel release=cvs
+
+
+ Development utilities.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-editors release=cvs
+
+
+ Editors.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-emulators release=cvs
+
+
+ Emulators for other operating systems.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-games release=cvs
+
+
+ Games.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-german release=cvs
+
+
+ German language support.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-graphics release=cvs
+
+
+ Graphics utilities.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-japanese release=cvs
+
+
+ Japanese language support.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-korean release=cvs
+
+
+ Korean language support.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-lang release=cvs
+
+
+ Programming languages.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-mail release=cvs
+
+
+ Mail software.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-math release=cvs
+
+
+ Numerical computation software.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-mbone release=cvs
+
+
+ MBone applications.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-misc release=cvs
+
+
+ Miscellaneous utilities.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-net release=cvs
+
+
+ Networking software.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-news release=cvs
+
+
+ USENET news software.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-plan9 release=cvs
+
+
+ Various programs from Plan9.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-print release=cvs
+
+
+ Printing software.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-russian release=cvs
+
+
+ Russian language support.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-security release=cvs
+
+
+ Security utilities.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-shells release=cvs
+
+
+ Command line shells.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-sysutils release=cvs
+
+
+ System utilities.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-textproc release=cvs
+
+
+ text processing utilities (does not include desktop publishing).
+
+
+
+
+ ports-vietnamese release=cvs
+
+
+ Vietnamese language support.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-www release=cvs
+
+
+ Software related to the World Wide Web.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-x11 release=cvs
+
+
+ X11 software.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ src-all release=cvs
+
+
+ The main FreeBSD sources, excluding the export-restricted cryptography
+ code.
+
+
+
+ src-base release=cvs
+
+ Miscellaneous files at the top of /usr/src.
+
+
+
+
+ src-bin release=cvs
+
+
+ User utilities that may be needed in single-user mode
+ (/usr/src/bin).
+
+
+
+
+ src-contrib release=cvs
+
+
+ Utilities and libraries from outside the FreeBSD project, used
+ relatively unmodified (/usr/src/contrib).
+
+
+
+
+ src-etc release=cvs
+
+
+ System configuration files (/usr/src/etc).
+
+
+
+
+ src-games release=cvs
+
+
+ Games (/usr/src/games).
+
+
+
+
+ src-gnu release=cvs
+
+
+ Utilities covered by the GNU Public License (/usr/src/gnu).
+
+
+
+
+ src-include release=cvs
+
+
+ Header files (/usr/src/include).
+
+
+
+
+ src-kerberosIV release=cvs
+
+
+ KerberosIV security package (/usr/src/kerberosIV).
+
+
+
+
+ src-lib release=cvs
+
+
+ Libraries (/usr/src/lib).
+
+
+
+
+ src-libexec release=cvs
+
+
+ System programs normally executed by other programs
+ (/usr/src/libexec).
+
+
+
+
+ src-release release=cvs
+
+
+ Files required to produce a FreeBSD release (/usr/src/release).
+
+
+
+
+ src-sbin release=cvs
+
+
+ System utilities for single-user mode (/usr/src/sbin).
+
+
+
+
+ src-share release=cvs
+
+
+ Files that can be shared across multiple systems (/usr/src/share).
+
+
+
+
+ src-sys release=cvs
+
+
+ The kernel (/usr/src/sys).
+
+
+
+
+ src-tools release=cvs
+
+
+ Various tools for the maintenance of FreeBSD (/usr/src/tools).
+
+
+
+
+ src-usrbin release=cvs
+
+
+ User utilities (/usr/src/usr.bin).
+
+
+
+
+ src-usrsbin release=cvs
+
+
+ System utilities (/usr/src/usr.sbin).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ www release=cvs
+
+
+ The sources for the World Wide Web data.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvs-crypto release=cvs
+
+
+ The export-restricted cryptography code.
+
+
+
+ src-crypto release=cvs
+
+ Export-restricted utilities and libraries from outside the FreeBSD
+ project, used relatively unmodified (/usr/src/crypto).
+
+
+
+
+ src-eBones release=cvs
+
+
+ Kerberos and DES (/usr/src/eBones).
+
+
+
+
+ src-secure release=cvs
+
+
+ DES (/usr/src/secure).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ distrib release=self
+
+
+ The CVSup server's own configuration files. Used by CVSup mirror sites.
+
+
+
+
+ gnats release=current
+
+
+ The GNATS bug-tracking database.
+
+
+
+
+ mail-archive release=current
+
+
+ FreeBSD mailing list archive.
+
+
+
+
+ www release=current
+
+
+ The installed World Wide Web data. Used by WWW mirror sites.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Announcements, Questions, and Bug Reports
+
+ Most FreeBSD-related discussion of CVSup takes place on the
+ &a.hackers;. New versions of the software are announced there, as
+ well as on the &a.announce;.
+
+ Questions and bug reports should be addressed to the author of the
+ program at cvsup-bugs@polstra.com.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Using make world to rebuild your system
+
+ Contributed by &a.nik;.
+
+ Once you have synchronised your local source tree against a particular
+ version of FreeBSD (stable, current and so on) you
+ must then use the source tree to rebuild the system.
+
+ Currently, the best source of information on how to do that is a
+ tutorial available from http://www.nothing-going-on.demon.co.uk/FreeBSD/make-world/make-world.html.
+
+ A successor to this tutorial will be integrated into the handbook.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Contributing to FreeBSD
+
+ Contributed by &a.jkh;.
+
+ So you want to contribute something to FreeBSD? That is great!
+ We can always use the help, and FreeBSD is one of those systems
+ that relies on the contributions of its user base in order
+ to survive. Your contributions are not only appreciated, they are
+ vital to FreeBSD's continued growth!
+
+ Contrary to what some people might also have you believe, you do not
+ need to be a hot-shot programmer or a close personal friend of the
+ FreeBSD core team in order to have your contributions accepted. The
+ FreeBSD Project's development is done by a large and growing number of
+ international contributors whose ages and areas of technical expertise
+ vary greatly, and there is always more work to be done than there are
+ people available to do it.
+
+ Since the FreeBSD project is responsible for an entire operating
+ system environment (and its installation) rather than just a kernel or
+ a few scattered utilities, our "TODO" list also spans a very wide
+ range of tasks, from documentation, beta testing and presentation to
+ highly specialized types of kernel development. No matter what your
+ skill level, there is almost certainly something you can do to help the
+ project!
+
+ Commercial entities engaged in FreeBSD-related enterprises are
+ also encouraged to contact us. Need a special extension to make your
+ product work? You will find us receptive to your requests, given that
+ they are not too outlandish. Working on a value-added product? Please
+ let us know! We may be able to work cooperatively on some aspect of
+ it. The free software world is challenging a lot of existing
+ assumptions about how software is developed, sold, and maintained
+ throughout its life cycle, and we urge you to at least give it a
+ second look.
+
+
+
+ What Is Needed
+
+ The following list of tasks and sub-projects represents something
+ of an amalgam of the various core team TODO lists and user requests
+ we have collected over the last couple of months. Where possible, tasks
+ have been ranked by degree of urgency. If you are interested in
+ working on one of the tasks you see here, send mail to the coordinator
+ listed by clicking on their names. If no coordinator has been
+ appointed, maybe you would like to volunteer?
+
+
+
+ High priority tasks
+
+ The following tasks are considered to be urgent, usually because
+ they represent something that is badly broken or sorely needed:
+
+
+
+ 3-stage boot issues. Overall coordination:
+ &a.hackers;
+
+
+
+
+
+ Autodetect memory over 64MB properly.
+
+
+
+ Move userconfig (-c) into 3rd stage boot.
+
+
+
+ Do WinNT compatible drive tagging so that the 3rd stage can
+ provide an accurate mapping of BIOS geometries for disks.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Filesystem problems. Overall coordination:
+ &a.fs;
+
+
+
+ Fix the MSDOS file system.
+
+
+
+ Clean up and document the nullfs filesystem code. Coordinator: &a.gibbs;
+
+
+
+ Fix the union file system. Coordinator: &a.dyson;
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Implement kernel and user vm86 support. Coordinator: &a.hackers;
+
+
+
+ Implement Int13 vm86 disk driver. Coordinator: &a.hackers;
+
+
+
+ SCSI driver issues. Overall coordination: &a.hackers;
+
+
+
+
+
+ Support tagged queuing generically. Requires a rewrite of how we do
+ our command queuing, but we need this anyway to for prioritized I/O
+ (CD-R writers/scanners).
+
+
+
+ Better error handling (Busy status and retries).
+
+
+
+ Merged Scatter-Gather list creation code.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Kernel issues. Overall coordination:
+ &a.hackers;
+
+
+
+
+
+ Complete the eisaconf conversion of all existing drivers.
+
+
+
+ Change all interrupt routines to take a (void *) instead of
+ using unit numbers.
+
+
+
+ Merge EISA/PCI/ISA interrupt registration code.
+
+
+
+ Split PCI/EISA/ISA probes out from drivers like bt742a.c (WIP)
+
+
+
+ Fix the syscons ALT-Fn/vt switching hangs. Coordinator: &a.sos;
+
+
+
+ Rewrite the Intel Etherexpress 16 driver.
+
+
+
+ Merge the 3c509 and 3c590 drivers (essentially provide a PCI probe for
+ ep.c).
+
+
+
+ Support Adaptec 3985 (first as a simple 3 channel SCSI card)
+ Coordinator: &a.gibbs;
+
+
+
+ Support Advansys SCSI controller products. Coordinator: &a.gibbs;
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Medium priority tasks
+
+ The following tasks need to be done, but not with any particular
+ urgency:
+
+
+
+ Port AFS (Andrew File System) to FreeBSD Coordinator: Alexander Seth Jones
+
+
+
+
+ MCA support? This should be finalized one way or the other.
+
+
+
+ Full LKM based driver support/Configuration Manager.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Devise a way to do all LKM registration without ld. This means
+ some kind of symbol table in the kernel.
+
+
+
+ Write a configuration manager (in the 3rd stage boot?) that probes
+ your hardware in a sane manner, keeps only the LKMs required for
+ your hardware, etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ PCMCIA/PCCARD. Coordinators: &a.nate; and &a.phk;
+
+
+
+ Documentation!
+
+
+
+ Reliable operation of the pcic driver (needs testing).
+
+
+
+ Recognizer and handler for sio.c (mostly done).
+
+
+
+ Recognizer and handler for ed.c (mostly done).
+
+
+
+ Recognizer and handler for ep.c (mostly done).
+
+
+
+ User-mode recognizer and handler (partially done).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Advanced Power Management. Coordinators: &a.nate; and &a.phk;
+
+
+
+ APM sub-driver (mostly done).
+
+
+
+ IDE/ATA disk sub-driver (partially done).
+
+
+
+ syscons/pcvt sub-driver.
+
+
+
+ Integration with the PCMCIA/PCCARD drivers (suspend/resume).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Low priority tasks
+
+ The following tasks are purely cosmetic or represent such an
+ investment of work that it is not likely that anyone will get them done
+ anytime soon:
+
+ The first 20 items are from Terry Lambert <terry@lambert.org>
+
+
+
+ Ability to make BIOS calls from protected mode using V86 mode
+ on the processor and return the results via a mapped interrupt
+ IPC mechanism to the protected mode caller.
+
+
+
+
+ Drivers built into the kernel that use the BIOS call mechanism
+ to allow them to be independent of the actual underlying hardware
+ the same way that DOS is independent of the underlying hardware.
+ This includes NetWork and ASPI drivers loaded in DOS prior to
+ BSD being loaded by a DOS-based loader program, which means
+ potential polling, which means DOS-not-busy interrupt generation
+ for V86 machines by the protected mode kernel.
+
+
+
+
+ An image format that allows tagging of such drivers data and
+ text areas in the default kernel executable so that that portion
+ of the kernel address space may be recovered at a later time,
+ after hardware specific protected mode drivers have been loaded
+ and activated. This includes separation of BIOS based drivers
+ from each other, since it is better to run with a BIOS based
+ driver in all cases than to not run at all.
+
+
+
+
+ Abstraction of the bus interface mechanism. Currently, PCMCIA,
+ EISA, and PCI busses are assumed to be bridged from ISA. This
+ is not something which should be assumed.
+
+
+
+
+ A configuration manager that knows about PNP events, including
+ power management events, insertion, extraction, and bus (PNP ISA
+ and PCMCIA bridging chips) vs. card level event management.
+
+
+
+
+ A topological sort mechanism for assigning reassignable addresses
+ that do not collide with other reassignable and non-reassignable
+ device space resource usage by fixed devices.
+
+
+
+
+ A registration based mechanism for hardware services registration.
+ Specifically, a device centric registration mechanism for timer
+ and sound and other system critical service providers. Consider
+ Timer2 and Timer0 and speaker services as one example of a single
+ monolithic service provider.
+
+
+
+
+ A kernel exported symbol space in the kernel data space accessible
+ by an LKM loader mechanism that does relocation and symbol space
+ manipulation. The intent of this interface is to support the
+ ability to demand load and unload kernel modules.
+
+
+
+
+ NetWare Server (protected mode ODI driver) loader and subservices
+ to allow the use of ODI card drivers supplied with network cards.
+ The same thing for NDIS drivers and NetWare SCSI drivers.
+
+
+
+
+ An "upgrade system" option that works on Linux boxes instead
+ of just previous rev FreeBSD boxes.
+
+
+
+
+ Splitting of the console driver into abstraction layers, both to
+ make it easier to port and to kill the X and ThinkPad and PS/2
+ mouse and LED and console switching and bouncing NumLock problems
+ once and for all.
+
+
+
+
+ Other kernel emulation environments for other foreign drivers
+ as opportunity permits. SCO and Solaris are good candidates,
+ followed by UnixWare, etc.
+
+
+
+
+ Processor emulation environments for execution of foreign binaries.
+ This is easier than it sounds if the system call interface does not
+ change much.
+
+
+
+
+ Streams to allow the use of commercial streams drivers.
+
+
+
+
+ Kernel multithreading (requires kernel preemption).
+
+
+
+
+ Symmetric Multiprocessing with kernel preemption (requires kernel
+ preemption).
+
+
+
+
+ A concerted effort at support for portable computers. This is
+ somewhat handled by changing PCMCIA bridging rules and power
+ management event handling. But there are things like detecting
+ internal vs. external display and picking a different screen
+ resolution based on that fact, not spinning down the disk if
+ the machine is in dock, and allowing dock-based cards to disappear
+ without affecting the machines ability to boot (same issue for
+ PCMCIA).
+
+
+
+
+ Reorganization of the source tree for multiple platform ports.
+
+
+
+
+ A "make world" that "makes the world" (rename the current one
+ to "make regress" if that is all it is good for).
+
+
+
+
+ A 4M (preferably smaller!) memory footprint.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Smaller tasks
+
+ Most of the tasks listed in the previous sections require either a
+ considerable investment of time or an in-depth knowledge of the FreeBSD
+ kernel (or both). However, there are also many useful tasks which are
+ suitable for "weekend hackers", or people without programming
+ skills.
+
+
+
+
+
+ If you run FreeBSD-current and have a good Internet connection,
+ there is a machine current.freebsd.org which builds a full release
+ once a day - every now and again, try and install the latest release
+ from it and report any failures in the process.
+
+
+
+
+ Read the freebsd-bugs mailing list. There might be a problem
+ you can comment constructively on or with patches you can test. Or
+ you could even try to fix one of the problems yourself.
+
+
+
+
+ Read through the FAQ and Handbook periodically. If anything is
+ badly explained, out of date or even just completely wrong, let us
+ know. Even better, send us a fix (SGML is not difficult to learn, but
+ there is no objection to ASCII submissions).
+
+
+
+
+ Help translate FreeBSD documentation into your native language (if
+ not already available) - just send an email to &a.doc; asking if anyone is
+ working on it. Note that you are not committing yourself to translating
+ every single FreeBSD document by doing this - in fact, the documentation
+ most in need of translation is the installation instructions.
+
+
+
+
+ Read the freebsd-questions mailing list and the newsgroup
+ comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.misc occasionally (or even regularly). It can
+ be very satisfying to share your expertise and help people solve their
+ problems; sometimes you may even learn something new yourself! These
+ forums can also be a source of ideas for things to work on.
+
+
+
+
+ If you know of any bugfixes which have been successfully applied
+ to -current but have not been merged into -stable after a decent
+ interval (normally a couple of weeks), send the committer a polite
+ reminder.
+
+
+
+
+ Move contributed software to src/contrib in the source tree.
+
+
+
+
+ Make sure code in src/contrib is up to date.
+
+
+
+
+ Look for year 2000 bugs (and fix any you find!)
+
+
+
+
+ Build the source tree (or just part of it) with extra warnings
+ enabled and clean up the warnings.
+
+
+
+
+ Fix warnings for ports which do deprecated things like using
+ gets() or including malloc.h.
+
+
+
+
+ If you have contributed any ports, send your patches back to the
+ original author (this will make your life easier when they bring out
+ the next version)
+
+
+
+
+ Suggest further tasks for this list!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ How to Contribute
+
+ Contributions to the system generally fall into one or more of
+ the following 6 categories:
+
+
+
+ Bug reports and general commentary
+
+
+ An idea or suggestion of general technical interest
+ should be mailed to the &a.hackers;. Likewise, people with an
+ interest in such things (and a tolerance for a high
+ volume of mail!) may subscribe to the hackers mailing list by
+ sending mail to &a.majordomo;. See
+
+ for more information about this and other mailing lists.
+
+ If you find a bug or are submitting a specific change, please report
+ it using the send-pr(1) program or its
+ WEB-based equivalent.
+ Try to fill-in each field of the bug report. Unless they exceed
+ 65KB, include any patches directly in the report. Consider compressing
+ them and using uuencode(1) if they exceed 20KB.
+
+ After filing a report, you should receive confirmation along with
+ a tracking number. Keep this tracking number so that you can
+ update us with details about the problem by sending mail to
+ bug-followup@FreeBSD.ORG. Use the number as the
+ message subject, e.g. "Re: kern/3377". Additional
+ information for any bug report should be submitted this way.
+
+ If you do not receive confirmation in a timely fashion (3 days to
+ a week, depending on your email connection) or are, for some
+ reason, unable to use the send-pr(1) command,
+ then you may ask someone to file it for you by sending mail
+ to the &a.bugs;.
+
+
+
+
+ Changes to the documentation
+
+ Changes to the documentation are overseen by the &a.doc;.
+ Send submissions and changes (even small ones are welcome!)
+ using send-pr as described in
+ .
+
+
+
+
+ Changes to existing source code
+
+ An addition or change to the existing source code is a somewhat trickier
+ affair and depends a lot on how far out of date you are with the current
+ state of the core FreeBSD development. There is a special on-going release
+ of FreeBSD known as ``FreeBSD-current'' which is made available in
+ a variety of ways for the convenience of developers working
+ actively on the system. See for more information about getting and using
+ FreeBSD-current.
+
+ Working from older sources unfortunately means that your changes may
+ sometimes be too obsolete or too divergent for easy re-integration into
+ FreeBSD. Chances of this can be minimized somewhat by subscribing to the
+ &a.announce; and the &a.current; lists, where discussions
+ on the current state of the system take place.
+
+ Assuming that you can manage to secure fairly up-to-date sources to base
+ your changes on, the next step is to produce a set of diffs to send to the
+ FreeBSD maintainers. This is done with the diff(1) command,
+ with the `context diff' form being preferred. For example:
+
+ diff -c oldfile newfile
+
+
+ or
+
+ diff -c -r olddir newdir
+
+
+ would generate such a set of context diffs for the given source file
+ or directory hierarchy. See the man page for diff(1) for more
+ details.
+
+ Once you have a set of diffs (which you may test with the
+ patch(1) command), you should submit them for inclusion
+ with FreeBSD. Use the send-pr(1) program as described in
+ .
+ Do not just send the diffs to the &a.hackers; or they will get
+ lost! We greatly appreciate your submission (this is a volunteer
+ project!); because we are busy, we may not be able to address it
+ immediately, but it will remain in the pr database until we do.
+
+ If you feel it appropriate (e.g. you have added, deleted, or
+ renamed files), bundle your changes into a tar file
+ and run the uuencode(1) program on it. Shar archives are
+ also welcome.
+
+ If your change is of a potentially sensitive nature, e.g.
+ you are unsure of copyright issues governing its further distribution
+ or you are simply not ready to release it without a tighter review first,
+ then you should send it to &a.core; directly rather than submitting
+ it with send-pr(1). The core mailing list
+ reaches a much smaller group of people who do much of the
+ day-to-day work on FreeBSD. Note that this group is also
+ very busy and so you should only send mail to them
+ where it is truly necessary.
+
+ Please refer to man 9 intro and man 9 style
+ for some information on coding style. We would appreciate
+ it if you were at least aware of this information before
+ submitting code.
+
+
+
+
+ New code or major value-added packages
+
+ In the rare case of a significant contribution of a large body
+ work, or the addition of an important new feature to FreeBSD,
+ it becomes almost always necessary to either send changes as
+ uuencode'd tar files or upload them to our ftp site ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/incoming.
+
+ When working with large amounts of code, the touchy subject of
+ copyrights also invariably comes up. Acceptable copyrights
+ for code included in FreeBSD are:
+
+
+
+
+
+ The BSD copyright. This copyright is most preferred
+ due to its ``no strings attached'' nature and general
+ attractiveness to commercial enterprises. Far from
+ discouraging such commercial use, the FreeBSD Project
+ actively encourages such participation by commercial interests
+ who might eventually be inclined to invest something of their own
+ into FreeBSD.
+
+
+
+
+ The GNU Public License, or ``GPL''. This license is not quite
+ as popular with us due to the amount of extra effort demanded
+ of anyone using the code for commercial purposes, but given
+ the sheer quantity of GPL'd code we currently require (compiler,
+ assembler, text formatter, etc) it would be silly to refuse
+ additional contributions under this license. Code under the GPL
+ also goes into a different part of the tree, that being
+ /sys/gnu or /usr/src/gnu, and is therefore
+ easily identifiable to anyone for whom the GPL presents a problem.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Contributions coming under any other type of copyright must be
+ carefully reviewed before their inclusion into FreeBSD will
+ be considered. Contributions for which particularly restrictive
+ commercial copyrights apply are generally rejected, though the
+ authors are always encouraged to make such changes available
+ through their own channels.
+
+ To place a ``BSD-style'' copyright on your work, include the following
+ text at the very beginning of every source code file you wish
+ to protect, replacing the text between the `%%' with
+ the appropriate information.
+
+ Copyright (c) %%proper_years_here%%
+ %%your_name_here%%, %%your_state%% %%your_zip%%. All rights reserved.
+
+ Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
+ modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
+ are met:
+ 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
+ notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer as
+ the first lines of this file unmodified.
+ 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
+ notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
+ documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
+
+ THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY %%your_name_here%% ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR
+ IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES
+ OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED.
+ IN NO EVENT SHALL %%your_name_here%% BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT,
+ INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT
+ NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
+ DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
+ THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
+ (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF
+ THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
+
+ $Id$
+
+
+ For your convenience, a copy of this text can be found in
+ /usr/share/examples/etc/bsd-style-copyright.
+
+
+
+
+ Porting an existing piece of free software
+
+ Contributed by &a.jkh;, &a.gpalmer;, &a.asami; and
+ &a.obrien;.28 August 1996.
+
+ The porting of freely available software, while perhaps not as
+ gratifying as developing your own from scratch, is still a vital part
+ of FreeBSD's growth and of great usefulness to those who would not
+ otherwise know where to turn for it. All ported software is organized
+ into a carefully organized hierarchy known as ``the ports collection''.
+ The collection enables a new user to get a quick and complete overview
+ of what is available for FreeBSD in an easy-to-compile form. It also
+ saves considerable space by not actually containing the majority
+ of the sources being ported, but merely those differences required for
+ running under FreeBSD.
+
+ What follows are some guidelines for creating a new port for
+ FreeBSD 3.x. The bulk of the work is done by
+ /usr/share/mk/bsd.port.mk, which all port Makefiles include.
+ Please refer to that file for more details on the inner workings of
+ the ports collection. Even if you don't hack Makefiles daily, it is
+ well commented, and you will still gain much knowledge from it.
+
+
+
+ Before Starting the Port
+
+ Note: Only a fraction of the overridable variables
+ (${..}) are mentioned in this document. Most
+ (if not all) are documented at the start of
+ bsd.port.mk. This file uses a non-standard tab
+ setting. Emacs and Vim should recognize the setting
+ on loading the file. vi or ex can be set to
+ using the correct value by typing `:set tabstop=4'
+ once the file has been loaded.
+
+ You may come across code that needs modifications or
+ conditional compilation based upon what version of UNIX it is
+ running under. If you need to make such changes to the code
+ for conditional compilation, make sure you make the changes as
+ general as possible so that we can back-port code to FreeBSD
+ 1.x systems and cross-port to other BSD systems such as 4.4BSD
+ from CSRG, BSD/386, 386BSD, NetBSD, and OpenBSD.
+
+ The preferred way to tell 4.3BSD/Reno (1990) and newer versions of
+ the BSD code apart is by using the `BSD' macro
+ defined in <sys/param.h>. Hopefully that file
+ is already included; if not, add the code:
+
+
+
+ #ifdef (defined(__unix__) || defined(unix)) && !defined(USG)
+ #include <sys/param.h>
+ #endif
+
+
+
+ to the proper place in the .c file. We believe that every
+ system that defines these to symbols has sys/param.h. If you find
+ a system that doesn't, we would like to know. Please send
+ mail to &a.ports;.
+
+ Another way is to use the GNU Autoconf style of doing this:
+
+
+
+ #ifdef HAVE_SYS_PARAM_H
+ #include <sys/param.h>
+ #endif
+
+
+
+ Don't forget to add -DHAVE_SYS_PARAM_H to the CFLAGS
+ in the Makefile for this method.
+
+ Once you have <sys/param.h> included, you may use:
+
+
+
+ #if (defined(BSD) && (BSD >= 199103))
+
+
+
+ to detect if the code is being compiled on a 4.3 Net2 code
+ base or newer (e.g. FreeBSD 1.x, 4.3/Reno, NetBSD 0.9, 386BSD,
+ BSD/386 1.1 and below).
+
+ Use:
+
+
+
+ #if (defined(BSD) && (BSD >= 199306))
+
+
+
+ to detect if the code is being compiled on a 4.4 code base or
+ newer (e.g. FreeBSD 2.x, 4.4, NetBSD 1.0, BSD/386 2.0 or
+ above).
+
+ The value of the BSD macro is 199506 for the 4.4BSD-Lite2 code
+ base. This is stated for informational purposes only. It should
+ not be used to distinguish between version of FreeBSD based only
+ on 4.4-Lite vs. versions that have merged in changes from 4.4-Lite2.
+ The __FreeBSD__ macro should be used instead.
+
+ Use sparingly:
+
+
+
+
+
+ __FreeBSD__ is defined in all versions of
+ FreeBSD. Use it if the change you are making ONLY affects
+ FreeBSD. Porting gotchas like the use of
+ sys_errlist[] vs strerror() are
+ Berkeleyisms, not FreeBSD changes.
+
+
+
+
+ In FreeBSD 2.x, __FreeBSD__ is defined to be
+ 2. In earlier versions, it is 1. Later
+ versions will bump it to match their major version number.
+
+
+
+
+ If you need to tell the difference between a FreeBSD 1.x
+ system and a FreeBSD 2.x or 3.x system, usually the right answer is
+ to use the BSD macros described above. If there
+ actually is a FreeBSD specific change (such as special
+ shared library options when using `ld') then it is
+ OK to use __FreeBSD__ and `#if __FreeBSD__ >
+ 1' to detect a FreeBSD 2.x and later system.
+
+ If you need more granularity in detecting FreeBSD systems since
+ 2.0-RELEASE you can use the following:
+
+
+ #if __FreeBSD__ >= 2
+ #include <osreldate.h>
+ # if __FreeBSD_version >= 199504
+ /* 2.0.5+ release specific code here */
+ # endif
+ #endif
+
+
+ __FreeBSD_version values:
+
+ 2.0-RELEASE: 199411
+ 2.1-current's: 199501, 199503
+ 2.0.5-RELEASE: 199504
+ 2.2-current before 2.1: 199508
+ 2.1.0-RELEASE: 199511
+ 2.2-current before 2.1.5: 199512
+ 2.1.5-RELEASE: 199607
+ 2.2-current before 2.1.6: 199608
+ 2.1.6-RELEASE: 199612
+ 2.1.7-RELEASE: 199612
+ 2.2-RELEASE: 220000
+ 2.2.1-RELEASE: 220000 (yes, no change)
+ 2.2-STABLE after 2.2.1-RELEASE: 220000 (yes, still no change)
+ 2.2-STABLE after texinfo-3.9: 221001
+ 2.2-STABLE after top: 221002
+ 2.2.2-RELEASE: 222000
+ 2.2-STABLE after 2.2.2-RELEASE: 222001
+ 2.2.5-RELEASE: 225000
+ 2.2-STABLE after 2.2.5-RELEASE: 225001
+ 2.2-STABLE after ldconfig -R merge: 225002
+ 2.2.6-RELEASE: 226000
+ 2.2-STABLE after 2.2.6-RELEASE: 226001
+ 3.0-current before mount(2) change: 300000
+ 3.0-current as of Nov 1997: 300001
+
+
+ (Note that 2.2-STABLE sometimes identifies itself as
+ "2.2.5-STABLE" after the 2.2.5-RELEASE.)
+ The pattern used to be year followed by the month, but we
+ decided to change it to a more straightforward major/minor
+ system starting from 2.2. This is because the parallel
+ development on several branches made it infeasible to
+ classify the releases simply by their real release dates.
+ (Note that if you are making a port now, you don't have to
+ worry about old -current's; they are listed here just for
+ your reference.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ In the hundreds of ports that have been done, there have
+ only been one or two cases where __FreeBSD__
+ should have been used. Just because an earlier port
+ screwed up and used it in the wrong place does not mean
+ you should do so too.
+
+
+
+
+ Quick Porting
+
+ This section tells you how to do a quick port. In many
+ cases, it is not enough, but we will see.
+
+ First, get the original tarball and put it into
+ ${DISTDIR}, which defaults to
+ /usr/ports/distfiles.
+
+ Note: The following assumes that the software compiled
+ out-of-the-box, i.e., there was absolutely no change required
+ for the port to work on your FreeBSD box. If you needed to
+ change something, you will have to refer to the next section
+ too.
+
+
+
+ Writing the Makefile
+
+ The minimal Makefile would look something like this:
+
+
+
+ # New ports collection makefile for: oneko
+ # Version required: 1.1b
+ # Date created: 5 December 1994
+ # Whom: asami
+ #
+ # $Id$
+ #
+
+ DISTNAME= oneko-1.1b
+ CATEGORIES= games
+ MASTER_SITES= ftp://ftp.cs.columbia.edu/archives/X11R5/contrib/
+
+ MAINTAINER= asami@FreeBSD.ORG
+
+ USE_IMAKE= yes
+
+ .include <bsd.port.mk>
+
+
+
+ See if you can figure it out. Do not worry about the contents
+ of the $Id$ line, it will be filled in
+ automatically by CVS when the port is imported to our main
+ ports tree. You can find a more detailed example in the section.
+
+
+
+
+ Writing the description files
+
+ There are three required description files that are
+ required for any port, whether they actually package or not.
+ They are COMMENT, DESCR, and
+ PLIST, and reside in the pkg subdirectory.
+
+
+
+ COMMENT
+
+ This is the one-line description of the port. PLEASE
+ do not include the package name (or version number of the
+ software) in the comment.
+ Here is an example:
+
+ A cat chasing a mouse all over the screen.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ DESCR
+
+ This is a longer description of the port. One to a few
+ paragraphs concisely explaining what the port does is
+ sufficient. Note: This is not a manual nor an
+ in-depth description on how to use or compile the port.
+ In particular, please do not just copy the README
+ file here, unless, of course, it is a concise description
+ of the port.
+
+ It is recommended that you sign the name at the end of
+ this file, as in:
+
+
+
+ This is a port of oneko, in which a cat chases a poor mouse all over
+ the screen.
+ :
+ (etc.)
+
+ - Satoshi
+ asami@cs.berkeley.edu
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ PLIST
+
+ This file lists all the files installed by the port. It
+ is also called the `packing list' because the package is
+ generated by packing the files listed here. The pathnames
+ are relative to the installation prefix (usually
+ /usr/local or /usr/X11R6). Also it is assumed
+ the manpages will be compressed.
+
+ Here is a small example:
+
+
+
+ bin/oneko
+ man/man1/oneko.1.gz
+ lib/X11/app-defaults/Oneko
+ lib/X11/oneko/cat1.xpm
+ lib/X11/oneko/cat2.xpm
+ lib/X11/oneko/mouse.xpm
+
+
+
+ Refer to the pkg_create(1) man page for details
+ on the packing list.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Creating the checksum file
+
+ Just type `make makesum'. The ports make rules
+ will automatically generate the file files/md5.
+
+
+
+
+ Testing the port
+
+ You should make sure that the port rules do exactly what
+ you want it to do, including packaging up the port. Try
+ doing `make install', `make package' and
+ then `make deinstall' and see if all
+ the files and directories are correctly deleted. Then do a
+ `pkg_add `make package-name`.tgz' and see if everything
+ re-appears and works correctly. Then do another
+ `make deinstall' and then `make
+ reinstall; make package' to make sure you haven't
+ included in the packing list any files that are not
+ installed by your port.
+
+
+
+
+ Submitting the port
+
+ Now that you are happy with your port, the only thing
+ remaining is to put it in the main FreeBSD ports tree and
+ make everybody else happy about it too. To accomplish this,
+ pack the necessary files (everything described in this
+ section -- in particular do not include the
+ original source tarball, the `work' subdirectory or
+ the package) into a .tar.gz file, stick it in the
+ directory
+
+ ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/incoming/
+
+
+ and send mail to us using send-pr(1) (please
+ classify it as category `ports' and class `change-request').
+ There is no need to upload the package, we will build it by
+ ourselves.
+ We will take a look, get back to you if necessary, and put
+ it in the tree. Your name will also appear in the list of
+ `Additional FreeBSD contributors' on the FreeBSD Handbook
+ and other files. Isn't that great?!? :)
+
+
+
+
+
+ Slow Porting
+
+ Ok, so it was not that simple, and the port required some
+ modifications to get it to work. In this section, we will
+ explain, step by step, how to modify it to get it to work with
+ the ports paradigm.
+
+
+
+ How things work
+
+ First, this is the sequence of events which occurs when the
+ user first types `make' in your port's directory,
+ and you may find that having bsd.port.mk in another
+ window while you read this really helps to understand it.
+
+ But do not worry if you do not really understand what
+ bsd.port.mk is doing, not many people
+ do... :>
+
+
+
+
+
+ The fetch target is run. The fetch target is
+ responsible for making sure that the tarball exists
+ locally in ${DISTDIR}. If fetch cannot
+ find the required files in ${DISTDIR} it
+ will look up the URL ${MASTER_SITES},
+ which is set in the Makefile, as well as our main ftp
+ site at ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/distfiles/,
+ where we put sanctioned distfiles as backup. It will then
+ attempt to
+ fetch the named distribution file with
+ ${FETCH}, assuming that the requesting
+ site has direct access to the Internet. If that succeeds,
+ it will save the file in ${DISTDIR} for
+ future use and proceed.
+
+
+
+
+ The extract target is run. It looks for your ports'
+ distribution file in ${DISTDIR} (typically
+ a gzip'd tarball) and unpacks it into a temporary
+ subdirectory specified by ${WRKDIR}
+ (defaults to work).
+
+
+
+
+ The patch target is run. First, any patches defined
+ in ${PATCHFILES} are applied. Second, if
+ any patches are found in ${PATCHDIR}
+ (defaults to the patches subdirectory), they are
+ applied at this time in alphabetical order.
+
+
+
+
+ The configure target is run. This can do any one of
+ many different things.
+
+
+
+
+ If it exists, scripts/configure is run.
+
+
+
+
+ If ${HAS_CONFIGURE} or
+ ${GNU_CONFIGURE} is set,
+ ${WRKSRC}/configure is run.
+
+
+
+
+ If ${USE_IMAKE} is set,
+ ${XMKMF} (default: `xmkmf
+ -a') is run.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The build target is run. This is responsible for
+ descending into the ports' private working directory
+ (${WRKSRC}) and building it. If
+ ${USE_GMAKE} is set, GNU make
+ will be used, otherwise the system make will be
+ used.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The above are the default actions. In addition, you can
+ define targets `pre-<something>' or
+ `post-<something>', or put scripts with those
+ names, in the scripts subdirectory, and they will
+ be run before or after the default actions are done.
+
+ For example, if you have a post-extract target
+ defined in your Makefile, and a file pre-build in
+ the scripts subdirectory, the
+ post-extract target will be called after the
+ regular extraction actions, and the pre-build
+ script will be executed before the default build rules are
+ done. It is recommended that you use Makefile targets if
+ the actions are simple enough, because it will be easier for
+ someone to figure out what kind of non-default action the
+ port requires.
+
+ The default actions are done by the bsd.port.mk
+ targets `do-<something>'. For example, the
+ commands to extract a port are in the target
+ `do-extract'. If you are not happy with the
+ default target, you can fix it by redefining the
+ `do-<something>' target in your Makefile.
+
+ Note that the `main' targets (e.g., extract,
+ configure, etc.) do nothing more than make sure all
+ the stages up to that one is completed and call the real
+ targets or scripts, and they are not intended to be
+ changed. If you want to fix the extraction, fix
+ do-extract, but never ever touch extract!
+
+ Now that you understand what goes on when the user types
+ `make', let us go through the recommended steps to
+ create the perfect port.
+
+
+
+
+ Getting the original sources
+
+ Get the original sources (normally) as a compressed tarball
+ (<foo>.tar.gz or <foo>.tar.Z)
+ and copy it into ${DISTDIR}. Always use
+ mainstream sources when and where you can.
+
+ If you cannot find a ftp/http site that is well-connected
+ to the net, or can only find sites that have irritatingly
+ non-standard formats, we can `house' it ourselves by putting
+ it on
+
+ ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/distfiles/LOCAL_PORTS/
+
+
+ as the last resort. Please refer to this location as
+ ${MASTER_SITE_LOCAL}. Send mail to the &a.ports;if you are not sure what to do.
+
+ If your port requires some additional `patches' that are
+ available on the Internet, fetch them too and put them in
+ ${DISTDIR}. Do not worry if they come from
+ site other than where you got the main source tarball,
+ we have a way to handle these situations (see the
+ description of below).
+
+
+
+
+ Modifying the port
+
+ Unpack a copy of the tarball in a private directory and
+ make whatever changes are necessary to get the port to
+ compile properly under the current version of FreeBSD. Keep
+ careful track of everything you do, as you will be
+ automating the process shortly. Everything, including the
+ deletion, addition or modification of files should be doable
+ using an automated script or patch file when your port is
+ finished.
+
+ If your port requires significant user
+ interaction/customization to compile or install, you should
+ take a look at one of Larry Wall's classic Configure scripts
+ and perhaps do something similar yourself. The goal of the
+ new ports collection is to make each port as `plug-and-play'
+ as possible for the end-user while using a minimum of disk
+ space.
+
+ Note: Unless explicitly stated, patch files, scripts, and
+ other files you have created and contributed to the FreeBSD
+ ports collection are assumed to be covered by the standard
+ BSD copyright conditions.
+
+
+
+
+ Patching
+
+ In the preparation of the port, files that have been added
+ or changed can be picked up with a recursive diff for later
+ feeding to patch. Each set of patches you wish to apply
+ should be collected into a file named
+ `patch-<xx>' where <xx>
+ denotes the sequence in which the patches will be applied --
+ these are done in alphabetical order, thus
+ `aa' first, `ab' second and so on. These
+ files should be stored in ${PATCHDIR}, from
+ where they will be automatically applied. All patches
+ should be relative to ${WRKSRC} (generally
+ the directory your port's tarball unpacks itself into, that
+ being where the build is done). To make fixes and upgrades
+ easier you should avoid having more than one patch fix the
+ same file (e.g., patch-aa and patch-ab both changing
+ ${WRKSRC}/foobar.c).
+
+
+
+
+ Configuring
+
+ Include any additional customization commands to your
+ configure script and save it in the
+ `scripts' subdirectory. As mentioned above, you
+ can also do this as Makefile targets and/or scripts with the
+ name pre-configure or post-configure.
+
+
+
+
+ Handling user input
+
+ If your port requires user input to build, configure or
+ install, then set IS_INTERACTIVE in your Makefile.
+ This will allow `overnight builds' to skip your port if the
+ user sets the variable BATCH in his environment
+ (and if the user sets the variable INTERACTIVE,
+ then only those ports requiring interaction are
+ built).
+
+
+
+
+
+ Configuring the Makefile
+
+ Configuring the Makefile is pretty simple, and again we
+ suggest that you look at existing examples before starting.
+ Also, there is a in this handbook, so take a look and please follow
+ the ordering of variables and sections in that template to
+ make your port easier for others to read.
+
+ Now, consider the following problems in sequence as you
+ design your new Makefile:
+
+
+
+ The original source
+
+ Does it live in ${DISTDIR} as a standard
+ gzip'd tarball? If so, you can go on to the next step. If
+ not, you should look at overriding any of the
+ ${EXTRACT_CMD},
+ ${EXTRACT_BEFORE_ARGS},
+ ${EXTRACT_AFTER_ARGS},
+ ${EXTRACT_SUFX}, or
+ ${DISTFILES} variables, depending on how
+ alien a format your port's distribution file is. (The most
+ common case is `EXTRACT_SUFX=.tar.Z', when the
+ tarball is condensed by regular compress, not gzip.)
+
+ In the worst case, you can simply create your own
+ `do-extract' target to override the default, though
+ this should be rarely, if ever, necessary.
+
+
+
+
+ DISTNAME
+
+ You should set ${DISTNAME} to be the base
+ name of your port. The default rules expect the
+ distribution file list (${DISTFILES}) to be
+ named
+ ${DISTNAME}${EXTRACT_SUFX}
+ by default which, if it is a normal tarball, is going to be
+ something like:
+
+
+ foozolix-1.0.tar.gz
+
+
+ for a setting of `DISTNAME=foozolix-1.0'.
+
+ The default rules also expect the tarball(s) to extract into
+ a subdirectory called work/${DISTNAME}, e.g.
+
+
+ work/foozolix-1.0/
+
+
+
+ All this behavior can be overridden, of course, it simply
+ represents the most common time-saving defaults. For a port
+ requiring multiple distribution files, simply set
+ ${DISTFILES} explicitly. If only a subset
+ of ${DISTFILES} are actual extractable
+ archives, then set them up in
+ ${EXTRACT_ONLY}, which will override the
+ ${DISTFILES} list when it comes to
+ extraction, and the rest will be just left in
+ ${DISTDIR} for later use.
+
+
+
+
+ CATEGORIES
+
+ When a package is created, it is put under
+ /usr/ports/packages/All and links are made from one
+ or more subdirectories of /usr/ports/packages. The
+ names of these subdirectories are specified by the variable
+ ${CATEGORIES}. It is intended to make life
+ easier for the user when he is wading through the pile of
+ packages on the ftp site or the CD-ROM. Please take a look
+ at the existing categories (you can find them in the ports page) and pick the ones that are suitable for your port.
+ If your port truly belongs to something that is different
+ from all the existing ones, you can even create a new
+ category name.
+
+
+
+
+ MASTER_SITES
+
+ Record the directory part of the ftp/http-URL pointing at
+ the original tarball in ${MASTER_SITES}.
+ Do not forget the trailing slash (/)!
+
+ The make macros will try to use this specification for
+ grabbing the distribution file with ${FETCH}
+ if they cannot find it already on the system.
+
+ It is recommended that you put multiple sites on this list,
+ preferably from different continents. This will safeguard
+ against wide-area network problems, and we are even planning
+ to add support for automatically determining the closest
+ master site and fetching from there!
+
+ If the original tarball is part of one of the following
+ popular archives: X-contrib, GNU, Perl CPAN, TeX CTAN, or
+ Linux Sunsite, you refer to those sites in an easy compact
+ form using MASTER_SITE_XCONTRIB, MASTER_SITE_GNU,
+ MASTER_SITE_PERL_CPAN, MASTER_SITE_TEX_CTAN, and
+ MASTER_SITE_SUNSITE. Simply set MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR to the path
+ with in the archive. Here is an example:
+
+ MASTER_SITES= ${MASTER_SITE_XCONTRIB}
+ MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR= applications
+
+
+
+ The user can also set the MASTER_SITE_* variables in
+ /etc/make.conf to override our choices, and use their
+ favorite mirrors of these popular archives instead.
+
+
+
+
+ PATCHFILES
+
+ If your port requires some additional patches that are
+ available by ftp or http, set ${PATCHFILES}
+ to the names of the files and ${PATCH_SITES}
+ to the URL of the directory that contains them (the format
+ is the same as ${MASTER_SITES}).
+
+ If the patch is not relative to the top of the source tree
+ (i.e., ${WKRSRC}) because it contains some
+ extra pathnames, set ${PATCH_DIST_STRIP}
+ accordingly. For instance, if all the pathnames in the
+ patch has an extra `foozolix-1.0/' in front of the
+ filenames, then set `PATCH_DIST_STRIP=-p1'.
+
+ Do not worry if the patches are compressed, they will be
+ decompressed automatically if the filenames end with
+ `.gz' or `.Z'.
+
+ If the patch is distributed with some other files, such as
+ documentation, in a gzip'd tarball, you can't just use
+ ${PATCHFILES}. If that is the case, add the
+ name and the location of the patch tarball to
+ ${DISTFILES} and
+ ${MASTER_SITES}. Then, from the
+ pre-patch target, apply the patch either by running
+ the patch command from there, or copying the patch file into
+ the ${PATCHDIR} directory and calling it
+ patch-<xx>. (Note the tarball will have been
+ extracted alongside the regular source by then, so there is
+ no need to explicitly extract it if it is a regular gzip'd
+ or compress'd tarball.) If you do the latter, take extra
+ care not to overwrite something that already exists in that
+ directory. Also do not forget to add a command to remove
+ the copied patch in the pre-clean target.
+
+
+
+
+ MAINTAINER
+
+ Set your mail-address here. Please. :)
+
+ For detailed description of the responsibility of maintainers,
+ refer to section.
+
+
+
+
+ Dependencies
+
+ Many ports depend on other ports. There are five
+ variables that you can use to ensure that all the required
+ bits will be on the user's machine.
+
+
+
+ LIB_DEPENDS
+
+ This variable specifies the shared libraries this port
+ depends on. It is a list of `lib:dir' pairs
+ where lib is the name of the shared library, and
+ dir is the directory in which to find it in case
+ it is not available. For example,
+
+ LIB_DEPENDS= jpeg\\.6\\.:${PORTSDIR}/graphics/jpeg
+
+
+ will check for a shared jpeg library with major version 6,
+ and descend into the graphics/jpeg subdirectory
+ of your ports tree to build and install it if it is not
+ found.
+
+ Note that the lib part is just an argument given
+ to `ldconfig -r | grep', so periods should be
+ escaped by two backslashes like in the example above.
+
+ The dependency is checked from within the extract
+ target. Also, the name of the dependency is put in to the
+ package so that pkg_add will automatically
+ install it if it is not on the user's system.
+
+
+
+
+ RUN_DEPENDS
+
+ This variable specifies executables or files this port
+ depends on during run-time. It is a list of
+ `path:dir' pairs where path is the name
+ of the executable or file, and dir is the
+ directory in which to find it in case it is not
+ available. If path starts with a slash
+ (/), it is treated as a file and its existence is
+ tested with `test -e'; otherwise, it is assumed
+ to be an executable, and `which -s' is used to
+ determine if the program exists in the user's search path.
+
+ For example,
+
+ RUN_DEPENDS= ${PREFIX}/etc/innd:${PORTSDIR}/news/inn \
+ wish:${PORTSDIR}/x11/tk
+
+
+ will check if the file `/usr/local/etc/innd'
+ exists, and build and install it from the
+ news/inn subdirectory of the ports tree if it is
+ not found. It will also see if an executable called
+ `wish' is in your search path, and descend into
+ the x11/tk subdirectory of your ports tree to
+ build and install it if it is not found. (Note that in
+ this case, `innd' is actually an executable; if
+ an executable is in a place that is not expected to be in
+ a normal user's search path, you should use the full
+ pathname.)
+
+ The dependency is checked from within the install
+ target. Also, the name of the dependency is put in to the
+ package so that pkg_add will automatically
+ install it if it is not on the user's system.
+
+
+
+
+ BUILD_DEPENDS
+
+ This variable specifies executables or files this port
+ requires to build. Like RUN_DEPENDS, it is a
+ list of `path:dir' pairs. For example,
+
+ BUILD_DEPENDS= unzip:${PORTSDIR}/archivers/unzip
+
+
+ will check for an executable called `unzip', and
+ descend into the archivers/unzip subdirectory of
+ your ports tree to build and install it if it is not found.
+
+ Note that `build' here means everything from extracting to
+ compilation. The dependency is checked from within the
+ extract target.
+
+
+
+
+ FETCH_DEPENDS
+
+ This variable specifies executables or files this port
+ requires to fetch. Like the previous two, it is a list of
+ `path:dir' pairs. For example,
+
+ FETCH_DEPENDS= ncftp2:${PORTSDIR}/net/ncftp2
+
+
+ will check for an executable called `ncftp2', and
+ descend into the net/ncftp2 subdirectory of
+ your ports tree to build and install it if it is not found.
+
+ The dependency is checked from within the fetch
+ target.
+
+
+
+
+ DEPENDS
+
+ If there is a dependency that does not fall into either of
+ the above four categories, or your port requires to have
+ the source of the other port extracted (i.e., having them
+ installed is not enough), then use this variable. This is
+ just a list of directories, as there is nothing to check,
+ unlike the previous four.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Building mechanisms
+
+ If your package uses GNU make, set
+ `USE_GMAKE=yes'. If your package uses GNU
+ configure, set `GNU_CONFIGURE=yes'. If
+ you want to give some extra arguments to GNU
+ configure (other than the default
+ `--prefix=${PREFIX}'),
+ set those extra arguments in
+ ${CONFIGURE_ARGS}.
+
+ If your package is an X application that creates Makefiles
+ from Imakefiles using imake, then set
+ `USE_IMAKE=yes'. This will cause the configure
+ stage to automatically do an xmkmf -a. If the
+ `' flag is a problem for your port, set
+ `XMKMF=xmkmf'.
+
+ If your port's source Makefile has something else than
+ `all' as the main build target, set
+ ${ALL_TARGET} accordingly. Same goes for
+ `install' and ${INSTALL_TARGET}.
+
+
+
+
+ NO_INSTALL_MANPAGES
+
+ If the port uses imake but does not understand the
+ `install.man' target,
+ `NO_INSTALL_MANPAGES=yes' should be set. In
+ addition, the author of the original port should be
+ shot. :>
+
+
+
+
+
+ Ports that require Motif
+
+ There are many programs that require a Motif library
+ (available from several commercial vendors, while there is (at
+ least) one effort to create a free clone) to compile. Since
+ it is a popular toolkit and their licenses usually permit
+ redistribution of statically linked binaries, we have made
+ special provisions for handling ports that require Motif in a
+ way that we can easily compile binaries linked either
+ dynamically or statically.
+
+
+
+ REQUIRES_MOTIF
+
+ If your port requires Motif, define this variable in the
+ Makefile. This will prevent people who don't own a copy of
+ Motif from even attempting to build it.
+
+
+
+
+ ${MOTIFLIB}
+
+ This variable will be set by bsd.port.mk to be the
+ appropriate reference to the Motif library. Please patch
+ the source to use this wherever the Motif library is
+ referenced in the Makefile or Imakefile.
+
+ There are two common cases:
+
+
+
+ If the port refers to the Motif library as
+ `' in its Makefile or Imakefile, simply
+ substitute `${MOTIFLIB}' for it.
+
+
+
+
+ If the port uses `XmClientLibs' in its
+ Imakefile, change it to `${MOTIFLIB}
+ ${XTOOLLIB} ${XLIB}'.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Note that ${MOTIFLIB} (usually) expands to
+ `' or
+ `/usr/X11R6/lib/libXm.a', so there is no need to
+ add `' or `' in front.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Info files
+
+ The new version of texinfo (included in 2.2.2-RELEASE and
+ onwards) contains a utility called `install-info' to add
+ and delete entries to the `dir' file. If your port
+ installs any info documents, please follow these instructions
+ so your port/package will correctly update the user's
+ ${PREFIX}/info/dir file. (Sorry for the length
+ of this section, but it is imperative to weave all the info
+ files together. If done correctly, it will produce a
+ beautiful listing, so please bear with me! :)
+
+ First, this is what you (as a porter) need to know:
+
+
+
+ % install-info --help
+ install-info [OPTION]... [INFO-FILE [DIR-FILE]]
+ Install INFO-FILE in the Info directory file DIR-FILE.
+
+ Options:
+ --delete Delete existing entries in INFO-FILE;
+ don't insert any new entries.
+ :
+ --entry=TEXT Insert TEXT as an Info directory entry.
+ :
+ --section=SEC Put this file's entries in section SEC of the directory.
+ :
+
+
+
+ Note that this program will not actually install
+ info files; it merely inserts or deletes entries in the
+ dir file.
+
+ Here's a seven-step procedure to convert ports to use
+ install-info. I will use editors/emacs as an
+ example.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Look at the texinfo sources and make a patch to insert
+ @dircategory and @direntry statements to files
+ that don't have them. This is part of my patch:
+
+
+ --- ./man/vip.texi.org Fri Jun 16 15:31:11 1995
+ +++ ./man/vip.texi Tue May 20 01:28:33 1997
+ @@ -2,6 +2,10 @@
+
+ @setfilename ../info/vip
+ @settitle VIP
+ +@dircategory The Emacs editor and associated tools
+ +@direntry
+ +* VIP: (vip). A VI-emulation for Emacs.
+ +@end direntry
+
+ @iftex
+ @finalout
+ :
+
+
+
+
+
+ The format should be self-explanatory. Many authors leave
+ a dir file in the source tree that contains all the
+ entries you need, so look around before you try to write
+ your own. Also, make sure you look into related ports and
+ make the section names and entry indentations consistent (we
+ recommend that all entry text start at the 4th tab stop).
+
+
+
+ Note that you can put only one info entry per file because
+ of a bug in `install-info --delete' that deletes
+ only the first entry if you specify multiple entries in the
+ @direntry section.
+
+
+
+ You can give the dir entries to install-info as
+ arguments ( and ) instead of
+ patching the texinfo sources. I do not think this is a good
+ idea for ports because you need to duplicate the same
+ information in three places (Makefile and
+ @exec/@unexec of PLIST; see below). However,
+ if you have a Japanese (or other multibyte encoding) info
+ files, you will have to use the extra arguments to
+ install-info because makeinfo can't handle those
+ texinfo sources. (See Makefile and PLIST of
+ japanese/skk for examples on how to do this).
+
+
+
+
+
+ Go back to the port directory and do a `make clean;
+ make' and verify that the info files are regenerated
+ from the texinfo sources. Since the texinfo sources are
+ newer than the info files, they should be rebuilt when you
+ type make; but many Makefiles don't include
+ correct dependencies for info files. In emacs' case, I had
+ to patch the main Makefile.in so it will descend into
+ the man subdirectory to rebuild the info pages.
+
+
+ --- ./Makefile.in.org Mon Aug 19 21:12:19 1996
+ +++ ./Makefile.in Tue Apr 15 00:15:28 1997
+ @@ -184,7 +184,7 @@
+ # Subdirectories to make recursively. `lisp' is not included
+ # because the compiled lisp files are part of the distribution
+ # and you cannot remake them without installing Emacs first.
+ -SUBDIR = lib-src src
+ +SUBDIR = lib-src src man
+
+ # The makefiles of the directories in $SUBDIR.
+ SUBDIR_MAKEFILES = lib-src/Makefile man/Makefile src/Makefile oldXMenu/Makefile lwlib/Makefile
+ --- ./man/Makefile.in.org Thu Jun 27 15:27:19 1996
+ +++ ./man/Makefile.in Tue Apr 15 00:29:52 1997
+ @@ -66,6 +66,7 @@
+ ${srcdir}/gnu1.texi \
+ ${srcdir}/glossary.texi
+
+ +all: info
+ info: $(INFO_TARGETS)
+
+ dvi: $(DVI_TARGETS)
+
+
+
+
+
+ The second hunk was necessary because the default target in
+ the man subdir is called info, while the
+ main Makefile wants to call all. I also deleted the
+ installation of the info info file because we already
+ have one with the same name in /usr/share/info
+ (that patch is not shown here).
+
+
+
+
+
+ If there is a place in the Makefile that is
+ installing the dir file, delete it. Your port may not
+ be doing it. Also, remove any commands that are otherwise
+ mucking around with the dir file.
+
+
+ --- ./Makefile.in.org Mon Aug 19 21:12:19 1996
+ +++ ./Makefile.in Mon Apr 14 23:38:07 1997
+ @@ -368,14 +368,8 @@
+ if [ `(cd ${srcdir}/info && /bin/pwd)` != `(cd ${infodir} && /bin/pwd)` ]; \
+ then \
+ (cd ${infodir}; \
+ - if [ -f dir ]; then \
+ - if [ ! -f dir.old ]; then mv -f dir dir.old; \
+ - else mv -f dir dir.bak; fi; \
+ - fi; \
+ cd ${srcdir}/info ; \
+ - (cd $${thisdir}; ${INSTALL_DATA} ${srcdir}/info/dir ${infodir}/dir); \
+ - (cd $${thisdir}; chmod a+r ${infodir}/dir); \
+ for f in ccmode* cl* dired-x* ediff* emacs* forms* gnus* info* message* mh-e* sc* vip*; do \
+ (cd $${thisdir}; \
+ ${INSTALL_DATA} ${srcdir}/info/$$f ${infodir}/$$f; \
+ chmod a+r ${infodir}/$$f); \
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ (This step is only necessary if you are modifying an
+ existing port.) Take a look at pkg/PLIST and
+ delete anything that is trying to patch up
+ info/dir. They may be in pkg/INSTALL or
+ some other file, so search extensively.
+
+
+ Index: pkg/PLIST
+ ===================================================================
+ RCS file: /usr/cvs/ports/editors/emacs/pkg/PLIST,v
+ retrieving revision 1.15
+ diff -u -r1.15 PLIST
+ --- PLIST 1997/03/04 08:04:00 1.15
+ +++ PLIST 1997/04/15 06:32:12
+ @@ -15,9 +15,6 @@
+ man/man1/emacs.1.gz
+ man/man1/etags.1.gz
+ man/man1/ctags.1.gz
+ -@unexec cp %D/info/dir %D/info/dir.bak
+ -info/dir
+ -@unexec cp %D/info/dir.bak %D/info/dir
+ info/cl
+ info/cl-1
+ info/cl-2
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Add a post-install target to the Makefile to create
+ a dir file if it is not there. Also, call
+ install-info with the installed info files.
+
+
+ Index: Makefile
+ ===================================================================
+ RCS file: /usr/cvs/ports/editors/emacs/Makefile,v
+ retrieving revision 1.26
+ diff -u -r1.26 Makefile
+ --- Makefile 1996/11/19 13:14:40 1.26
+ +++ Makefile 1997/05/20 10:25:09 1.28
+ @@ -20,5 +20,11 @@
+ post-install:
+ .for file in emacs-19.34 emacsclient etags ctags b2m
+ strip ${PREFIX}/bin/${file}
+ .endfor
+ + if [ ! -f ${PREFIX}/info/dir ]; then \
+ + ${SED} -ne '1,/Menu:/p' /usr/share/info/dir > ${PREFIX}/info/dir; \
+ + fi
+ +.for info in emacs vip viper forms gnus mh-e cl sc dired-x ediff ccmode
+ + install-info ${PREFIX}/info/${info} ${PREFIX}/info/dir
+ +.endfor
+
+ .include <bsd.port.mk>
+
+
+
+
+
+ Do not use anything other than /usr/share/info/dir
+ and the above command to create a new info file. In fact,
+ I'd add the first three lines of the above patch to
+ bsd.port.mk if you (the porter) wouldn't have to do it
+ in PLIST by yourself anyway.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Edit PLIST and add equivalent @exec statements
+ and also @unexec for pkg_delete. You do not need
+ to delete info/dir with @unexec.
+
+
+ Index: pkg/PLIST
+ ===================================================================
+ RCS file: /usr/cvs/ports/editors/emacs/pkg/PLIST,v
+ retrieving revision 1.15
+ diff -u -r1.15 PLIST
+ --- PLIST 1997/03/04 08:04:00 1.15
+ +++ PLIST 1997/05/20 10:25:12 1.17
+ @@ -16,7 +14,15 @@
+ man/man1/etags.1.gz
+ man/man1/ctags.1.gz
+ +@unexec install-info --delete %D/info/emacs %D/info/dir
+ :
+ +@unexec install-info --delete %D/info/ccmode %D/info/dir
+ info/cl
+ info/cl-1
+ @@ -87,6 +94,18 @@
+ info/viper-3
+ info/viper-4
+ +@exec [ -f %D/info/dir ] || sed -ne '1,/Menu:/p' /usr/share/info/dir > %D/info/dir
+ +@exec install-info %D/info/emacs %D/info/dir
+ :
+ +@exec install-info %D/info/ccmode %D/info/dir
+ libexec/emacs/19.34/i386--freebsd/cvtmail
+ libexec/emacs/19.34/i386--freebsd/digest-doc
+
+
+
+
+
+ Note that the `@unexec install-info --delete'
+ commands have to be listed before the info files themselves
+ so they can read the files. Also, the `@exec
+ install-info' commands have to be after the info files
+ and the @exec command that creates the the dir
+ file.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Test and admire your work. :) The sequence I
+ recommend is: `make package', `pkg_delete', then
+ `pkg_add'. Check the dir file before and after
+ each step.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Licensing Problems
+
+ Some software packages have restrictive licenses or can be in
+ violation to the law (PKP's patent on public key crypto,
+ ITAR (export of crypto software) to name just two of them).
+ What we can do with them vary a lot, depending on the exact
+ wordings of the respective licenses.
+
+ Note that it is your responsibility as a porter to read the
+ licensing terms of the software and make sure that the FreeBSD
+ project will not be held accountable of violating them by
+ redistributing the source or compiled binaries either via ftp
+ or CD-ROM. If in doubt, please contact the &a.ports;.
+
+ There are two variables you can set in the Makefile to handle
+ the situations that arise frequently:
+
+
+
+
+
+ If the port has a `do not sell for profit' type of
+ license, set the variable NO_CDROM. We will make
+ sure such ports won't go into the CD-ROM come release time.
+ The distfile and package will still be available via ftp.
+
+
+
+
+ If the resulting package needs to be built uniquely for
+ each site, or the resulting binary package can't be distributed
+ due to licensing; set the variable NO_PACKAGE.
+ We will make sure such packages won't go on the ftp site, nor
+ into the CD-ROM come release time. The distfile will still be
+ included on both however.
+
+
+
+
+ If the port has legal restrictions on who can use it
+ (e.g., crypto stuff) or has a `no commercial use' license,
+ set the variable RESTRICTED to be the string
+ describing the reason why. For such ports, the
+ distfiles/packages will not be available even from our ftp
+ sites.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Note: The GNU General Public License (GPL), both version 1
+ and 2, should not be a problem for ports.
+
+ Note: If you are a committer, make sure you update the
+ ports/LEGAL file too.
+
+
+
+
+ Upgrading
+
+ When you notice that a port is out of date compared to the
+ latest version from the original authors, first make sure you
+ have the latest port. You can find them in the
+ ports-current directory of the ftp mirror sites.
+
+ The next step is to send a mail to the maintainer, if one is
+ listed in the port's Makefile. That person may already be
+ working on an upgrade, or have a reason to not upgrade the
+ port right now (because of, for example, stability problems
+ of the new version).
+
+ If the maintainer asks you to do the upgrade or there isn't
+ any such person to begin with, please make the upgrade and
+ send the recursive diff (either unified or context diff is
+ fine, but port committers appear to prefer unified diff more)
+ of the new and old ports directories
+ to us (i.e., if your modified ports directory is called
+ `superedit' and the original as in our tree is
+ `superedit.bak', then send us the result of `diff
+ -ruN superedit.bak superedit'). Please examine the output
+ to make sure all the changes make sense. The best way to send
+ us the diff is by including it to send-pr(1) (category
+ `ports'). Please
+ mention any added or deleted files in the message, as they
+ have to be explicitly specified to CVS when doing a commit.
+ If the diff is more than about 20KB, please compress and
+ uuencode it; otherwise, just include it in as is in the PR.
+
+
+
+
+ Do's and Dont's
+
+ Here is a list of common do's and dont's that you encounter
+ during the porting process.
+
+
+
+ WRKDIR
+
+ Do not leave anything valuable lying around in the
+ work subdirectory, `make clean' will
+ nuke it completely! If you need auxiliary files
+ that are not scripts or patches, put them in the
+ ${FILESDIR} subdirectory (files by default)
+ and use the post-extract target to
+ copy them to the work subdirectory.
+
+
+
+
+ Package information
+
+ Do include package information, i.e. COMMENT,
+ DESCR, and PLIST, in
+ pkg. Note that these files are not used only for
+ packaging anymore, and are mandatory now, even if
+ ${NO_PACKAGE} is set.
+
+
+
+
+ Compress manpages, strip binaries
+
+ Do compress manpages and strip binaries. If the original
+ source already strips the binary, fine; otherwise, you can add a
+ post-install rule to do it yourself. Here is an example:
+
+ post-install:
+ strip ${PREFIX}/bin/xdl
+
+
+
+ Use the file command on the installed executable
+ to check whether the binary is stripped or not. If it
+ does not say `not stripped', it is stripped.
+
+ To automagically compress the manpages, use the MAN[1-9LN]
+ variables. They will check the variable
+ NOMANCOMPRESS that the user can set in
+ /etc/make.conf to disable man page compression.
+ Place them last in the section below the
+ MAINTAINER variable. Here is an example:
+
+ MAN1= foo.1 bar.1
+ MAN5= foo.conf.5
+ MAN8= baz.8
+
+
+
+ Note that this is not usually necessary with ports that are X
+ applications and use Imake to build.
+
+ If your port anchors its man tree somewhere other than
+ PREFIX, you can use the MANPREFIX to set it.
+ Also, if only manpages in certain section go in a
+ non-standard place, such as many Perl modules ports, you
+ can set individual man paths using
+ MANsectPREFIX (where sect is one
+ of 1-9, L or N).
+
+
+
+
+ INSTALL_* macros
+
+ Do use the macros provided in bsd.port.mk to
+ ensure correct modes and ownership of files in your own
+ *-install targets. They are:
+
+
+
+
+
+ ${INSTALL_PROGRAM} is a command to install
+ binary executables.
+
+
+
+ ${INSTALL_SCRIPT} is a command to install
+ executable scripts.
+
+
+
+ ${INSTALL_DATA} is a command to install
+ sharable data.
+
+
+
+ ${INSTALL_MAN} is a command to install
+ manpages and other documentation (it doesn't compress anything).
+
+
+
+
+
+ These are basically the install command with all
+ the appropriate flags. See below for an example on how to
+ use them.
+
+
+
+
+ INSTALL package script
+
+ If your port needs execute commands when the binary package
+ is installed with pkg_add you can do with via the pkg/INSTALL
+ script. This script will automatically be added to the
+ package, and will be run twice by pkg_add. The first time
+ will as `INSTALL ${PKGNAME} PRE-INSTALL'
+ and the second time as `INSTALL ${PKGNAME} POST-INSTALL'.
+ `$2' can be tested to determine which mode
+ the script is being run in.
+ The `PKG_PREFIX' environmental variable will be set to
+ the package installation directory. See man pkg_add(1)
+ for additional information.
+ Note, that this script is not run automatically if you install
+ the port with `make install'. If you are depending
+ on it being run, you will have to explicitly call it on your
+ port's Makefile.
+
+
+
+
+ REQ package script
+
+ If your port needs to determine if it should install or not, you
+ can create a pkg/REQ ``requirements'' script. It will be invoked
+ automatically at installation/deinstallation time to determine
+ whether or not installation/deinstallation should proceed.
+ See man pkg_create(1) and man pkg_add(1) for
+ more information.
+
+
+
+
+ Install additional documentation
+
+ If your software has some documentation other than the
+ standard man and info pages that you think is useful for the
+ user, install it under ${PREFIX}/share/doc.
+ This can be done, like the previous item, in the
+ post-install target.
+
+ Create a new directory for your port. The directory name
+ should reflect what the port is. This usually means
+ ${PKGNAME} minus the version part. However,
+ if you think the user might want different versions of the
+ port to be installed at the same time, you
+ can use the whole ${PKGNAME}.
+
+ Make the installation dependent to the variable
+ NOPORTDOCS so that users can disable it in
+ /etc/make.conf, like this:
+
+ post-install:
+ .if !defined(NOPORTDOCS)
+ ${MKDIR} ${PREFIX}/share/doc/xv
+ ${INSTALL_MAN} ${WRKSRC}/docs/xvdocs.ps ${PREFIX}/share/doc/xv
+ .endif
+
+
+
+ Do not forget to add them to pkg/PLIST too! (Do not
+ worry about NOPORTDOCS here; there is currently no
+ way for the packages to read variables from
+ /etc/make.conf.)
+
+ If you need to display a message to the installer, you may
+ place the message in pkg/MESSAGE. This capibility
+ is often useful to display additional installation steps to
+ be taken after a pkg_add, or to display licensing information.
+ (note: the MESSAGE file does not need to be added to pkg/PLIST).
+
+
+
+
+ DIST_SUBDIR
+
+ Do not let your port clutter /usr/ports/distfiles. If
+ your port requires a lot of files to be
+ fetched, or contains a file that has a name that might conflict
+ with other ports (e.g., `Makefile'), set
+ ${DIST_SUBDIR} to the name of the port
+ (${PKGNAME} without the version part should work
+ fine). This will change ${DISTDIR} from the
+ default /usr/ports/distfiles to
+ /usr/ports/distfiles/${DIST_SUBDIR}, and in
+ effect puts everything that is required for your port into that
+ subdirectory.
+
+ It will also look at the subdirectory with the same name on the
+ backup master site at ftp.freebsd.org. (Setting
+ ${DISTDIR} explicitly in your Makefile will not
+ accomplish this, so please use ${DIST_SUBDIR}.)
+
+ Note this does not affect the ${MASTER_SITES}
+ you define in your Makefile.
+
+
+
+
+ Feedback
+
+ Do send applicable changes/patches to the original
+ author/maintainer for inclusion in next release of the code.
+ This will only make your job that much easier for the next
+ release.
+
+
+
+
+ RCS strings
+
+ Do not put RCS strings in patches. CVS will mangle them
+ when we put the files into the ports tree, and when we check
+ them out again, they will come out different and the patch
+ will fail. RCS strings are surrounded by dollar
+ (`$') signs, and typically start with
+ `$Id' or `$RCS'.
+
+
+
+
+ Recursive diff
+
+ Using the recurse (`') option to diff
+ to generate patches is fine, but please take a look at the
+ resulting patches to make sure you don't have any
+ unnecessary junk in there. In particular, diffs between two
+ backup files, Makefiles when the port uses Imake or GNU
+ configure, etc., are unnecessary and should be deleted.
+ Also, if you had to delete a file, then you can do it in the
+ post-extract target rather than as part of the
+ patch. Once you are happy with the resuling diff, please
+ split it up into one source file per patch file.
+
+
+
+
+ PREFIX
+
+ Do try to make your port install relative to
+ ${PREFIX}. (The value of this variable will be
+ set to ${LOCALBASE} (default
+ /usr/local), unless ${USE_IMAKE} or
+ ${USE_X11} is set, in which case it will be
+ ${X11BASE} (default /usr/X11R6).)
+
+ Not hard-coding `/usr/local' or `/usr/X11R6'
+ anywhere in the source will make the port much more flexible and
+ able to cater to the needs of other sites. For X ports that use
+ imake, this is automatic; otherwise, this can often be done by
+ simply replacing the occurrences of `/usr/local' (or
+ `/usr/X11R6' for X ports that do not use imake) in the
+ various scripts/Makefiles in the port to read
+ `${PREFIX}', as this variable is automatically
+ passed down to every stage of the build and install processes.
+
+ The variable ${PREFIX} can be reassigned in your
+ Makefile or in the user's environment. However, it is strongly
+ discouraged for individual ports to set this variable explicitly
+ in the Makefiles. (If your port is an X port but does not use
+ imake, set USE_X11=yes; this is quite different from
+ setting PREFIX=/usr/X11R6.)
+
+ Also, refer to programs/files from other ports with the
+ variables mentioned above, not explicit pathnames. For instance,
+ if your port requires a macro PAGER to be the full
+ pathname of less, use the compiler flag:
+ -DPAGER=\"${PREFIX}/bin/less\"
+ or
+ -DPAGER=\"${LOCALBASE}/bin/less\"
+ if this is an
+ X port, instead of
+ -DPAGER=\"/usr/local/bin/less\".
+
+ This way it will have a better chance of working if the system
+ administrator has moved the whole `/usr/local' tree somewhere
+ else.
+
+
+
+
+ Subdirectories
+
+ Try to let the port put things in the right subdirectories
+ of ${PREFIX}. Some ports lump everything
+ and put it in the subdirectory with the port's name, which is
+ incorrect. Also, many ports put everything except binaries,
+ header files and manual pages in the a subdirectory of
+ `lib', which does not bode well with the BSD
+ paradigm. Many of the files should be moved to one of the
+ following: `etc' (setup/configuration files),
+ `libexec' (executables started internally),
+ `sbin' (executables for superusers/managers),
+ `info' (documentation for info browser) or
+ `share' (architecture independent files). See man
+ hier(7) for details, the rule governing
+ /usr pretty much applies to /usr/local
+ too. The exception are ports dealing with USENET `news'.
+ They may use ${PREFIX}/news as a destination
+ for their files.
+
+
+
+
+ ldconfig
+
+ If your port installs a shared library, add a
+ post-install target to your Makefile that runs
+ `/sbin/ldconfig -m' on the directory where the new
+ library is installed (usually ${PREFIX}/lib)
+ to register it into the shared library cache.
+
+ Also, add an @exec line to your pkg/PLIST
+ file so that a user who installed the package can start
+ using the shared library immediately. This line should
+ immediately follow the line for the shared library itself,
+ as in:
+
+ lib/libtcl80.so.1.0
+ @exec /sbin/ldconfig -m %D/lib
+
+
+
+ Never, ever, ever add a line that says
+ `ldconfig' without any arguments to your Makefile
+ or pkg/PLIST. This will reset the shared library cache to
+ the contents of /usr/lib only, and will royally
+ screw up the user's machine ("Help, xinit does not run
+ anymore after I install this port!"). Anybody who does this
+ will be shot and cut into 65,536 pieces by a rusty knife and
+ have his liver chopped out by a bunch of crows and will
+ eternally rot to death in the deepest bowels of hell (not
+ necessarily in that order)....
+
+
+
+
+ UIDs
+
+ If your port requires a certain user ID to be on the
+ installed system, let the pkg/INSTALL script call
+ pw to create it automatically. Look at
+ japanese/Wnn or net/cvsup-mirror for
+ examples. It is customary to use UIDs in the upper 2-digit
+ range (i.e., from around 50 to 99) for this purpose.
+
+ Make sure you don't use a UID already used by the system or
+ other ports. This is the current list of UIDs between 50
+ and 99.
+
+
+
+ majordom:*:54:1024:Majordomo Pseudo User:/usr/local/majordomo:/nonexistent
+ cyrus:*:60:248:the cyrus mail server:/nonexistent:/nonexistent
+ gnats:*:61:1:GNATS database owner:/usr/local/share/gnats/gnats-db:/bin/sh
+ uucp:*:66:66:UUCP pseudo-user:/var/spool/uucppublic:/usr/libexec/uucp/uucico
+ xten:*:67:67:X-10 daemon:/usr/local/xten:/nonexistent
+ pop:*:68:6:Post Office Owner:/nonexistent:/nonexistent
+ wnn:*:69:7:Wnn:/nonexistent:/nonexistent
+ ifmail:*:70:66:Ifmail user:/nonexistent:/nonexistent
+ pgsql:*:71:246:PostgreSQL pseudo-user:/usr/local/pgsql:/bin/sh
+ msql:*:80:249:mSQL-2 pseudo-user:/var/db/msqldb:/bin/sh
+
+
+
+ Please send a notice to &a.ports; if you submit or commit a
+ port that allocates a new UID in this range so we can keep
+ this list up to date.
+
+
+
+
+ If you are stuck....
+
+ Do look at existing examples and the bsd.port.mk
+ file before asking us questions! ;)
+
+ Do ask us questions if you have any trouble! Do not just
+ beat your head against a wall! :)
+
+
+
+
+
+ A Sample Makefile
+
+ Here is a sample Makefile that you can use to create a new
+ port. Make sure you remove all the extra comments (ones
+ between brackets)!
+
+ It is recommended that you follow this format (ordering of
+ variables, empty lines between sections, etc.). Not all of
+ the existing Makefiles are in this format (mostly old ones),
+ but we are trying to uniformize how they look. This format is
+ designed so that the most important information is easy to
+ locate.
+
+
+
+ [the header...just to make it easier for us to identify the ports.]
+ # New ports collection makefile for: xdvi
+ [the version required header should updated when upgrading a port.]
+ # Version required: pl18 [things like "1.5alpha" are fine here too]
+ [this is the date when the first version of this Makefile was created.
+ Never change this when doing an update of the port.]
+ # Date created: 26 May 1995
+ [this is the person who did the original port to FreeBSD, in particular, the
+ person who wrote the first version of this Makefile. Remember, this should
+ not be changed when upgrading the port later.]
+ # Whom: Satoshi Asami <asami@FreeBSD.ORG>
+ #
+ # $Id$
+ [ ^^^^ This will be automatically replaced with RCS ID string by CVS
+ when it is committed to our repository.]
+ #
+
+ [section to describe the port itself and the master site - DISTNAME
+ is always first, followed by PKGNAME (if necessary), CATEGORIES,
+ and then MASTER_SITES, which can be followed by MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR.
+ After those, one of EXTRACT_SUFX or DISTFILES can be specified too.]
+ DISTNAME= xdvi
+ PKGNAME= xdvi-pl18
+ CATEGORIES= print
+ [do not forget the trailing slash ("/")!
+ if you aren't using MASTER_SITE_* macros]
+ MASTER_SITES= ${MASTER_SITE_XCONTRIB}
+ MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR= applications
+ [set this if the source is not in the standard ".tar.gz" form]
+ EXTRACT_SUFX= .tar.Z
+
+ [section for distributed patches -- can be empty]
+ PATCH_SITES= ftp://ftp.sra.co.jp/pub/X11/japanese/
+ PATCHFILES= xdvi-18.patch1.gz xdvi-18.patch2.gz
+
+ [maintainer; *mandatory*! This is the person (preferably with commit
+ privileges) who a user can contact for questions and bug reports - this
+ person should be the porter or someone who can forward questions to the
+ original porter reasonably promptly. If you really do not want to have
+ your address here, set it to "ports@FreeBSD.ORG".]
+ MAINTAINER= asami@FreeBSD.ORG
+
+ [dependencies -- can be empty]
+ RUN_DEPENDS= gs:${PORTSDIR}/print/ghostscript
+ LIB_DEPENDS= Xpm\\.4\\.:${PORTSDIR}/graphics/xpm
+
+ [this section is for other standard bsd.port.mk variables that do not
+ belong to any of the above]
+ [If it asks questions during configure, build, install...]
+ IS_INTERACTIVE= yes
+ [If it extracts to a directory other than ${DISTNAME}...]
+ WRKSRC= ${WRKDIR}/xdvi-new
+ [If the distributed patches were not made relative to ${WRKSRC}, you
+ may need to tweak this]
+ PATCH_DIST_STRIP= -p1
+ [If it requires a "configure" script generated by GNU autoconf to be run]
+ GNU_CONFIGURE= yes
+ [If it requires GNU make, not /usr/bin/make, to build...]
+ USE_GMAKE= yes
+ [If it is an X application and requires "xmkmf -a" to be run...]
+ USE_IMAKE= yes
+ [et cetera.]
+
+ [non-standard variables to be used in the rules below]
+ MY_FAVORITE_RESPONSE= "yeah, right"
+
+ [then the special rules, in the order they are called]
+ pre-fetch:
+ i go fetch something, yeah
+
+ post-patch:
+ i need to do something after patch, great
+
+ pre-install:
+ and then some more stuff before installing, wow
+
+ [and then the epilogue]
+ .include <bsd.port.mk>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Package Names
+
+ The following are the conventions you should follow in
+ naming your packages. This is to have our package directory
+ easy to scan, as there are already lots and lots of packages
+ and users are going to turn away if they hurt their eyes!
+
+ The package name should look like
+
+
+
+ [<language>-]<name>[[-]<compiled.specifics>]-<version.string.numbers>;
+
+
+
+ If your ${DISTNAME} doesn't look like that,
+ set ${PKGNAME} to something in that format.
+
+
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD strives to support the native language of its
+ users. The `<language>' part should be a two letter
+ abbreviation of the natural language defined by ISO-639 if
+ the port is specific to a certain language. Examples are
+ `ja' for Japanese, `ru' for Russian, `vi' for Vietnamese,
+ `zh' for Chinese, `ko' for Korean and `de' for German.
+
+
+
+
+ The `<name>' part should be all
+ lowercases, except for a really large package (with lots of
+ programs in it). Things like XFree86 (yes there really is a
+ package of it, check it out) and ImageMagick fall into this
+ category. Otherwise, convert the name (or at least the
+ first letter) to lowercase. If the software in question
+ really is called that way, you can have numbers, hyphens and
+ underscores in the name too (like `kinput2').
+
+
+
+
+ If the port can be built with different hardcoded
+ defaults (usually specified as environment variables or on
+ the make command line), the
+ `<compiled.specifics>' part should state the
+ compiled-in defaults (the hyphen is optional). Examples are
+ papersize and font units.
+
+
+
+
+ The version string should be a period-separated list of
+ integers and single lowercase alphabetics. The only exception
+ is the string `pl' (meaning `patchlevel'), which can be used
+ only when there are no major and minor version
+ numbers in the software.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Here are some (real) examples on how to convert a
+ ${DISTNAME} into a suitable
+ ${PKGNAME}:
+
+
+
+ DISTNAME PKGNAME Reason
+ mule-2.2.2 mule-2.2.2 no prob at all
+ XFree86-3.1.2 XFree86-3.1.2 ditto
+ EmiClock-1.0.2 emiclock-1.0.2 no uppercase names for single programs
+ gmod1.4 gmod-1.4 need hyphen after `<name>'
+ xmris.4.02 xmris-4.02 ditto
+ rdist-1.3alpha rdist-1.3a no strings like `alpha' allowed
+ es-0.9-beta1 es-0.9b1 ditto
+ v3.3beta021.src tiff-3.3 what the heck was that anyway? ;)
+ tvtwm tvtwm-pl11 version string always required
+ piewm piewm-1.0 ditto
+ xvgr-2.10pl1 xvgr-2.10.1 `pl' allowed only when no maj/minor numbers
+ gawk-2.15.6 ja-gawk-2.15.6 Japanese language version
+ psutils-1.13 psutils-letter-1.13 papersize hardcoded at package build time
+ pkfonts pkfonts300-1.0 package for 300dpi fonts
+
+
+
+ If there is absolutely no trace of version information in the
+ original source and it is unlikely that the original author
+ will ever release another version, just set the version string
+ to `1.0' (like the piewm example above). Otherwise, ask the
+ original author or use the date string (`yy.mm.dd') as the
+ version.
+
+
+
+
+ That is It, Folks!
+
+ Boy, this sure was a long tutorial, wasn't it? Thanks for
+ following us to here, really.
+
+ Well, now that you know how to do a port, let us go at it and
+ convert everything in the world into ports! That is the
+ easiest way to start contributing to the FreeBSD Project!
+ :)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Money, Hardware or Internet access
+
+ We are always very happy to accept donations to further the cause of
+ the FreeBSD Project and, in a volunteer effort like ours, a little can go
+ a long way! Donations of hardware are also very important to expanding
+ our list of supported peripherals since we generally lack the funds to
+ buy such items ourselves.
+
+
+
+ Donating funds
+
+ While the FreeBSD Project is not a 501(C3) (non-profit) corporation and
+ hence cannot offer special tax incentives for any donations made, any such
+ donations will be gratefully accepted on behalf of the project by
+ FreeBSD, Inc.
+
+ FreeBSD, Inc. was founded in early 1995 by &a.jkh; and &a.davidg; with the
+ goal of furthering the aims of the FreeBSD Project and giving it a minimal
+ corporate presence. Any and all funds donated (as well as any profits
+ that may eventually be realized by FreeBSD, Inc.) will be used exclusively
+ to further the project's goals.
+
+ Please make any checks payable to FreeBSD, Inc., sent in care of the
+ following address:
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD, Inc.
+ c/o Jordan Hubbard
+ 4041 Pike Lane, suite #D.
+ Concord CA, 94520
+
+ [temporarily using the Walnut Creek CDROM address until a PO box can be
+ opened]
+
+
+
+ Wire transfers may also be sent directly to:
+
+
+
+ Bank Of America
+ Concord Main Office
+ P.O. Box 37176
+ San Francisco CA, 94137-5176
+
+ Routing #: 121-000-358
+ Account #: 01411-07441 (FreeBSD, Inc.)
+
+
+
+ Any correspondence related to donations should be sent to
+ Jordan Hubbard, either
+ via email or to the FreeBSD, Inc. postal address given above.
+
+ If you do not wish to be listed in our
+ section, please specify this when making your donation. Thanks!
+
+
+
+
+ Donating hardware
+
+ Donations of hardware in any of the 3 following categories are also gladly
+ accepted by the FreeBSD Project:
+
+
+
+
+
+ General purpose hardware such as disk drives, memory or complete
+ systems should be sent to the FreeBSD, Inc. address listed in the
+ donating funds section.
+
+
+
+
+ Hardware for which ongoing compliance testing is desired.
+ We are currently trying to put together a testing lab of all components
+ that FreeBSD supports so that proper regression testing can be done with
+ each new release. We are still lacking many important pieces (network cards,
+ motherboards, etc) and if you would like to make such a donation, please contact
+ &a.davidg; for information on which items are still required.
+
+
+
+
+ Hardware currently unsupported by FreeBSD for which you would like to
+ see such support added. Please contact the &a.core; before sending
+ such items as we will need to find a developer willing to take on the task
+ before we can accept delivery of new hardware.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Donating Internet access
+
+ We can always use new mirror sites for FTP, WWW or cvsup.
+ If you would like to be such a mirror, please contact
+ the FreeBSD project administrators for more information.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Donors Gallery
+
+ The FreeBSD Project is indebted to the following donors and would
+ like to publically thank them here!
+
+
+
+
+
+ Contributors to the central server project:
+
+
+ The following individuals and businesses made it possible for
+ the FreeBSD Project to build a new central server machine to eventually
+ replace freefall.freebsd.org by donating the following items:
+
+
+
+
+
+ Ade Barkah
+ and his employer, Hemisphere Online, donated a Pentium Pro (P6) 200Mhz CPU
+
+
+
+
+ ASA Computers
+ donated a Tyan 1662 motherboard.
+
+
+
+
+ Joe McGuckin of
+ ViaNet Communications
+ donated a Kingston ethernet controller.
+
+
+
+
+ Jack O'Neill donated an NCR 53C875 SCSI
+ controller card.
+
+
+
+
+ Ulf Zimmermann
+ of Alameda Networks
+ donated 128MB of memory, a 4 Gb disk drive
+ and the case.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Direct funding:
+
+
+ The following individuals and businesses have generously contributed
+ direct funding to the project:
+
+
+
+
+
+ Annelise Anderson
+
+
+
+
+ Matt Dillon
+
+
+
+
+ Epilogue Technology Corporation
+
+
+
+
+ Sean Eric Fagan
+
+
+
+
+ Gianmarco Giovannelli
+
+
+
+
+ Josef C. Grosch
+
+
+
+
+ Chuck Robey
+
+
+
+
+ Kenneth P. Stox of Imaginary Landscape, LLC.
+
+
+
+
+ Dmitry S. Kohmanyuk
+
+
+
+
+ Laser5
+ of Japan (a portion of the profits from sales of their
+ various FreeBSD CD-ROMs.
+
+
+
+
+ Fuki Shuppan Publishing Co. donated a portion of
+ their profits from Hajimete no FreeBSD
+ (FreeBSD, Getting started) to the FreeBSD and XFree86
+ projects.
+
+
+
+ ASCII Corp. donated a portion of
+ their profits from several FreeBSD-related books to the
+ FreeBSD project.
+
+
+
+ Yokogawa Electric Corp has generously donated
+ significant funding to the FreeBSD project.
+
+
+
+ BuffNET
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Hardware contributors:
+
+
+ The following individuals and businesses have generously contributed
+ hardware for testing and device driver development/support:
+
+
+
+
+
+ Walnut Creek CDROM for providing the Pentium P5-90 and
+ 486/DX2-66 EISA/VL systems that are being used for our development
+ work, to say nothing of the network access and other donations of
+ hardware resources.
+
+
+
+
+ TRW Financial Systems, Inc. provided 130 PCs, three 68 GB
+ fileservers, twelve Ethernets, two routers and an ATM
+ switch for debugging the diskless code. They also keep a
+ couple of FreeBSD hackers alive and busy. Thanks!
+
+
+
+
+ Dermot McDonnell donated the Toshiba XM3401B CDROM drive
+ currently used in freefall.
+
+
+
+
+ &a.chuck; contributed his floppy tape streamer for experimental
+ work.
+
+
+
+
+ Larry Altneu <larry@ALR.COM>, and &a.wilko;,
+ provided Wangtek and Archive QIC-02 tape drives in order to
+ improve the wt driver.
+
+
+
+
+ Ernst Winter <ewinter@lobo.muc.de> contributed a 2.88 MB
+ floppy drive to the project. This will hopefully increase the
+ pressure for rewriting the floppy disk driver. ;-)
+
+
+
+
+ Tekram Technologies
+ sent one each of their DC-390, DC-390U and DC-390F FAST and ULTRA
+ SCSI host adapter cards for regression testing of the NCR and AMD
+ drivers with their cards. They are also to be applauded for making
+ driver sources for free operating systems available from their
+ FTP server ftp://ftp.tekram.com/scsi/FreeBSD.
+
+
+
+
+ Larry M. Augustin
+ contributed not only a Symbios Sym8751S SCSI card, but also a set
+ of data books, including one about the forthcoming Sym53c895 chip
+ with Ultra-2 and LVD support, and the latest programming manual with
+ information on how to safely use the advanced features of the latest
+ Symbios SCSI chips. Thanks a lot!
+
+
+
+
+ Christoph Kukulies
+ donated an FX120 12 speed Mitsumi CDROM drive for IDE CDROM driver
+ development.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Special contributors:
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Walnut Creek CDROM
+ has donated almost more than we can say (see the
+ document for more details).
+ In particular, we would like to thank them for the original hardware
+ used for freefall.FreeBSD.ORG, our primary development
+ machine, and for thud.FreeBSD.ORG, a testing and build box.
+ We are also indebted to them for funding various contributors over
+ the years and providing us with unrestricted use of their T1
+ connection to the Internet.
+
+
+
+ The interface business GmbH, Dresden has been patiently
+ supporting &a.joerg; who has often preferred FreeBSD work over
+ paywork, and used to fall back to their (quite expensive) EUnet
+ Internet connection whenever his private connection became too
+ slow or flakey to work with it...
+
+
+
+ Berkeley Software Design, Inc. has contributed their DOS emulator code to the
+ remaining BSD world, which is used in the dosemu
+ command.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Derived Software Contributors
+
+ This software was originally derived from William
+ F. Jolitz's 386BSD release 0.1, though almost none of the
+ original 386BSD specific code remains. This software has
+ been essentially re-implemented from the 4.4BSD-Lite
+ release provided by the Computer Science Research Group
+ (CSRG) at the University of California, Berkeley and
+ associated academic contributors.
+
+ There are also portions of NetBSD that have been integrated
+ into FreeBSD as well, and we would therefore like to thank
+ all the contributors to NetBSD for their work.
+
+
+
+
+ Additional FreeBSD Contributors
+
+ (in alphabetical order by first name):
+
+
+
+
+
+ A JOSEPH KOSHY <koshy@india.hp.com>
+
+
+
+ ABURAYA Ryushirou <rewsirow@ff.iij4u.or.jp>
+
+
+
+ Ada T Lim <ada@bsd.org>
+
+
+
+ Adam Glass <glass@postgres.berkeley.edu>
+
+
+
+ Adrian T. Filipi-Martin <atf3r@agate.cs.virginia.edu>
+
+
+
+ Akito Fujita <fujita@zoo.ncl.omron.co.jp>
+
+
+
+ Alain Kalker <A.C.P.M.Kalker@student.utwente.nl>
+
+
+
+ Alan Cox <alc@cs.rice.edu>
+
+
+
+ Andreas Kohout <shanee@rabbit.augusta.de>
+
+
+
+ Andreas Lohr <andreas@marvin.RoBIN.de>
+
+
+
+ Andrew Gordon <andrew.gordon@net-tel.co.uk>
+
+
+
+ Andrew Herbert <andrew@werple.apana.org.au>
+
+
+
+ Andrew McRae <amcrae@cisco.com>
+
+
+
+ Andrew Moore <alm@FreeBSD.org>
+
+
+
+ Andrew Stevenson <andrew@ugh.net.au>
+
+
+
+ Andrew V. Stesin <stesin@elvisti.kiev.ua>
+
+
+
+ Andrey Zakhvatov <andy@icc.surw.chel.su>
+
+
+
+ Andy Whitcroft <andy@sarc.city.ac.uk>
+
+
+
+ Angelo Turetta <ATuretta@stylo.it>
+
+
+
+ Anthony Yee-Hang Chan <yeehang@netcom.com>
+
+
+
+ Ari Suutari <ari@suutari.iki.fi>
+
+
+
+ Brent J. Nordquist <bjn@visi.com>
+
+
+
+ Bernd Rosauer <br@schiele-ct.de>
+
+
+
+ Bill Kish <kish@osf.org>
+
+
+
+ &a.wlloyd;
+
+
+
+ Bob Wilcox <bob@obiwan.uucp>
+
+
+
+ Boyd Faulkner <faulkner@mpd.tandem.com>
+
+
+
+ Brent J. Nordquist <bjn@visi.com>
+
+
+
+ Brett Taylor <brett@peloton.physics.montana.edu>
+
+
+
+ Brian Clapper <bmc@willscreek.com>
+
+
+
+ Brian Handy <handy@lambic.space.lockheed.com>
+
+
+
+ Brian Tao <taob@risc.org>
+
+
+
+ Brion Moss <brion@queeg.com>
+
+
+
+ Bruce Gingery <bgingery@gtcs.com>
+
+
+
+ Carey Jones <mcj@acquiesce.org>
+
+
+
+ Carl Fongheiser <cmf@netins.net>
+
+
+
+ Charles Hannum <mycroft@ai.mit.edu>
+
+
+
+ Charles Mott <cmott@srv.net>
+
+
+
+ Chet Ramey <chet@odin.INS.CWRU.Edu>
+
+
+
+ Chris Dabrowski < chris@vader.org>
+
+
+
+ Chris G. Demetriou <cgd@postgres.berkeley.edu>
+
+
+
+ Chris Shenton <cshenton@angst.it.hq.nasa.gov>
+
+
+
+ Chris Stenton <jacs@gnome.co.uk>
+
+
+
+ Chris Timmons <skynyrd@opus.cts.cwu.edu>
+
+
+
+ Chris Torek <torek@ee.lbl.gov>
+
+
+
+ Christian Gusenbauer <cg@fimp01.fim.uni-linz.ac.at>
+
+
+
+ Christian Haury <Christian.Haury@sagem.fr>
+
+
+
+ Christoph Robitschko <chmr@edvz.tu-graz.ac.at>
+
+
+
+ Choi Jun Ho <junker@jazz.snu.ac.kr>
+
+
+
+ Chuck Hein <chein@cisco.com>
+
+
+
+ Conrad Sabatier <conrads@neosoft.com>
+
+
+
+ Cornelis van der Laan <nils@guru.ims.uni-stuttgart.de>
+
+
+
+ Craig Struble <cstruble@vt.edu>
+
+
+
+ Cristian Ferretti <cfs@riemann.mat.puc.cl>
+
+
+
+ Curt Mayer <curt@toad.com>
+
+
+
+ Dai Ishijima <ishijima@tri.pref.osaka.jp>
+
+
+
+ Dan Cross <tenser@spitfire.ecsel.psu.edu>
+
+
+
+ Daniel Baker <dbaker@crash.ops.neosoft.com>
+
+
+
+ Daniel M. Eischen <deischen@iworks.InterWorks.org>
+
+
+
+ Daniel O'Connor <doconnor@gsoft.com.au>
+
+
+
+ Danny J. Zerkel <dzerkel@feephi.phofarm.com>
+
+
+
+ Dave Bodenstab <imdave@synet.net>
+
+
+
+ Dave Burgess <burgess@hrd769.brooks.af.mil>
+
+
+
+ Dave Chapeskie <dchapes@zeus.leitch.com>
+
+
+
+ Dave Edmondson <davided@sco.com>
+
+
+
+ Dave Rivers <rivers@ponds.uucp>
+
+
+
+ David A. Bader <dbader@umiacs.umd.edu>
+
+
+
+ David Dawes <dawes@physics.su.OZ.AU>
+
+
+
+ David Holloway <daveh@gwythaint.tamis.com>
+
+
+
+ David Leonard <d@scry.dstc.edu.au>
+
+
+
+ Dean Huxley <dean@fsa.ca>
+
+
+
+ Dirk Froemberg <dirk@hal.in-berlin.de>
+
+
+
+ Dmitrij Tejblum <dima@tejblum.dnttm.rssi.ru>
+
+
+
+ Dmitry Kohmanyuk <dk@farm.org>
+
+
+
+ &a.whiteside;
+
+
+
+ Don Yuniskis <dgy@rtd.com>
+
+
+
+ Donald Burr <d_burr@ix.netcom.com>
+
+
+
+ Doug Ambrisko <ambrisko@ambrisko.roble.com>
+
+
+
+ Douglas Carmichael <dcarmich@mcs.com>
+
+
+
+ Eiji-usagi-MATSUmoto <usagi@ruby.club.or.jp>
+
+
+
+ ELISA Font Project
+
+
+
+ Eric A. Griff <eagriff@global2000.net>
+
+
+
+ Eric Blood <eblood@cs.unr.edu>
+
+
+
+ Eric J. Chet <ejc@bazzle.com>
+
+
+
+ Eric J. Schwertfeger <eric@cybernut.com>
+
+
+
+ Francis M J Hsieh <mjhsieh@life.nthu.edu.tw>
+
+
+
+ Frank Bartels <knarf@camelot.de>
+
+
+
+ Frank Chen Hsiung Chan <frankch@waru.life.nthu.edu.tw>
+
+
+
+ Frank Maclachlan <fpm@crash.cts.com>
+
+
+
+ Frank Nobis <fn@trinity.radio-do.de>
+
+
+
+ FUJIMOTO Kensaku <fujimoto@oscar.elec.waseda.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ FURUSAWA Kazuhisa <furusawa@com.cs.osakafu-u.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Gary A. Browning <gab10@griffcd.amdahl.com>
+
+
+
+ Gary Kline <kline@thought.org>
+
+
+
+ Gerard Roudier <groudier@club-internet.fr>
+
+
+
+ Greg Ungerer <gerg@stallion.oz.au>
+
+
+
+ Harlan Stenn <Harlan.Stenn@pfcs.com>
+
+
+
+ Havard Eidnes <Havard.Eidnes@runit.sintef.no>
+
+
+
+ Hideaki Ohmon <ohmon@tom.sfc.keio.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Hidekazu Kuroki <hidekazu@cs.titech.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Hidetoshi Shimokawa <simokawa@sat.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Hideyuki Suzuki <hideyuki@sat.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Hironori Ikura <hikura@kaisei.org>
+
+
+
+ Holger Veit <Holger.Veit@gmd.de>
+
+
+
+ Hung-Chi Chu <hcchu@r350.ee.ntu.edu.tw>
+
+
+
+ Ian Vaudrey <i.vaudrey@bigfoot.com>
+
+
+
+ Igor Vinokurov <igor@zynaps.ru>
+
+
+
+ Ikuo Nakagawa <ikuo@isl.intec.co.jp>
+
+
+
+ IMAMURA Tomoaki <tomoak-i@is.aist-nara.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Ishii Masahiro
+
+
+
+ Issei Suzuki<issei@t-cnet.or.jp>
+
+
+
+ Itsuro Saito <saito@miv.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ J. David Lowe <lowe@saturn5.com>
+
+
+
+ J.T. Conklin <jtc@cygnus.com>
+
+
+
+ James Clark <jjc@jclark.com>
+
+
+
+ James da Silva <jds@cs.umd.edu> et al
+
+
+
+ Janusz Kokot <janek@gaja.ipan.lublin.pl>
+
+
+
+ Jason Thorpe <thorpej@nas.nasa.gov>
+
+
+
+ Javier Martin Rueda <jmrueda@diatel.upm.es>
+
+
+
+ Jeff Bartig <jeffb@doit.wisc.edu>
+
+
+
+ Jeffrey Wheat <jeff@cetlink.net>
+
+
+
+ Jian-Da Li <jdli@csie.NCTU.edu.tw>
+
+
+
+ Jim Binkley <jrb@cs.pdx.edu>
+
+
+
+ Jim Lowe <james@cs.uwm.edu>
+
+
+
+ Jim Wilson <wilson@moria.cygnus.com>
+
+
+
+ Joao Carlos Mendes Luis <jonny@coppe.ufrj.br>
+
+
+
+ Joel Sutton <sutton@aardvark.apana.org.au>
+
+
+
+ Johann Tonsing <jtonsing@mikom.csir.co.za>
+
+
+
+ John Capo <jc@irbs.com>
+
+
+
+ John Heidemann <johnh@isi.edu>
+
+
+
+ John Perry <perry@vishnu.alias.net>
+
+
+
+ John Polstra <jdp@polstra.com>
+
+
+
+ John Rochester <jr@cs.mun.ca>
+
+
+
+ Josef Karthauser <joe@uk.freebsd.org>
+
+
+
+ Joseph Stein <joes@seaport.net>
+
+
+
+ Josh Gilliam <josh@quick.net>
+
+
+
+ Josh Tiefenbach <josh@ican.net>
+
+
+
+ Juergen Lock <nox@jelal.hb.north.de>
+
+
+
+ Juha Inkari <inkari@cc.hut.fi>
+
+
+
+ Julian Assange <proff@suburbia.net>
+
+
+
+ Julian Jenkins <kaveman@magna.com.au>
+
+
+
+ Julian Stacey <jhs@freebsd.org>
+
+
+
+ Junichi Satoh <junichi@jp.freebsd.org>
+
+
+
+ Kapil Chowksey <kchowksey@hss.hns.com>
+
+
+
+ Kazuhiko Kiriyama <kiri@kiri.toba-cmt.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Keith Bostic <bostic@bostic.com>
+
+
+
+ Keith Moore
+
+
+
+ Kenneth Monville <desmo@bandwidth.org>
+
+
+
+ Kent Vander Velden <graphix@iastate.edu>
+
+
+
+ Kirk McKusick <mckusick@mckusick.com>
+
+
+
+ Kiroh HARADA <kiroh@kh.rim.or.jp>
+
+
+
+ Koichi Sato <copan@ppp.fastnet.or.jp>
+
+
+
+ Kostya Lukin <lukin@okbmei.msk.su>
+
+
+
+ Kurt Olsen <kurto@tiny.mcs.usu.edu>
+
+
+
+ Lars Koeller <Lars.Koeller@Uni-Bielefeld.DE>
+
+
+
+ Lucas James <Lucas.James@ldjpc.apana.org.au>
+
+
+
+ Luigi Rizzo <luigi@iet.unipi.it>
+
+
+
+ Makoto MATSUSHITA <matusita@jp.freebsd.org>
+
+
+
+ Manu Iyengar <iyengar@grunthos.pscwa.psca.com>
+
+
+
+ Marc Frajola <marc@dev.com>
+
+
+
+ Marc Ramirez <mrami@mramirez.sy.yale.edu>
+
+
+
+ Marc Slemko <marcs@znep.com>
+
+
+
+ Marc van Kempen <wmbfmk@urc.tue.nl>
+
+
+
+ Mario Sergio Fujikawa Ferreira <lioux@gns.com.br>
+
+
+
+ Mark Huizer <xaa@stack.nl>
+
+
+
+ Mark J. Taylor <mtaylor@cybernet.com>
+
+
+
+ Mark Krentel <krentel@rice.edu>
+
+
+
+ Mark Tinguely <tinguely@plains.nodak.edu>
+ <tinguely@hookie.cs.ndsu.NoDak.edu>
+
+
+
+ Martin Birgmeier
+
+
+
+ Martti Kuparinen <erakupa@kk.etx.ericsson.se>
+
+
+
+ Masachika ISHIZUKA <ishizuka@isis.min.ntt.jp>
+
+
+
+ Mats Lofkvist <mal@algonet.se>
+
+
+
+ Matt Bartley <mbartley@lear35.cytex.com>
+
+
+
+ Matt Thomas <thomas@lkg.dec.com>
+
+
+
+ Matt White <mwhite+@CMU.EDU>
+
+
+
+ Matthew Hunt <mph@pobox.com>
+
+
+
+ Matthew N. Dodd <winter@jurai.net>
+
+
+
+ Matthew Stein <matt@bdd.net>
+
+
+
+ Maurice Castro <maurice@planet.serc.rmit.edu.au>
+
+
+
+ Michael Butschky <butsch@computi.erols.com>
+
+
+
+ Michael Elbel <me@FreeBSD.ORG>
+
+
+
+ Michael Searle <searle@longacre.demon.co.uk>
+
+
+
+ Miguel Angel Sagreras <msagre@cactus.fi.uba.ar>
+
+
+
+ Mikael Hybsch <micke@dynas.se>
+
+
+
+ Mikhail Teterin <mi@aldan.ziplink.net>
+
+
+
+ Mike McGaughey <mmcg@cs.monash.edu.au>
+
+
+
+ Mike Peck <mike@binghamton.edu>
+
+
+
+ Ming-I Hseh <PA@FreeBSD.ee.Ntu.edu.TW>
+
+
+
+ MITA Yoshio <mita@jp.FreeBSD.ORG>
+
+
+
+ MOROHOSHI Akihiko <moro@race.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Murray Stokely <murray@cdrom.com>
+
+
+
+ NAKAMURA Kazushi <nkazushi@highway.or.jp>
+
+
+
+ Naoki Hamada <nao@tom-yam.or.jp>
+
+
+
+ Narvi <narvi@haldjas.folklore.ee>
+
+
+
+ NIIMI Satoshi <sa2c@and.or.jp>
+
+
+
+ Nick Sayer <nsayer@quack.kfu.com>
+
+
+
+ Nicolas Souchu <Nicolas.Souchu@prism.uvsq.fr>
+
+
+
+ Nisha Talagala <nisha@cs.berkeley.edu>
+
+
+
+ Nobuhiro Yasutomi <nobu@psrc.isac.co.jp>
+
+
+
+ Nobuyuki Koganemaru <kogane@kces.koganemaru.co.jp>
+
+
+
+ Noritaka Ishizumi <graphite@jp.FreeBSD.ORG>
+
+
+
+ Oliver Fromme <oliver.fromme@heim3.tu-clausthal.de>
+
+
+
+ Oliver Laumann <net@informatik.uni-bremen.de>
+
+
+
+ Oliver Oberdorf <oly@world.std.com>
+
+
+
+ Paul Fox <pgf@foxharp.boston.ma.us>
+
+
+
+ Paul Kranenburg <pk@cs.few.eur.nl>
+
+
+
+ Paul Mackerras <paulus@cs.anu.edu.au>
+
+
+
+ Paulo Menezes <paulo@isr.uc.pt>
+
+
+
+ Paul T. Root <proot@horton.iaces.com>
+
+
+
+ Pedro Giffuni <giffunip@asme.org>
+
+
+
+ Pedro A M Vazquez <vazquez@IQM.Unicamp.BR>
+
+
+
+ Peter Cornelius <pc@inr.fzk.de>
+
+
+
+ Peter Haight <peterh@prognet.com>
+
+
+
+ Peter Hawkins <peter@rhiannon.clari.net.au>
+
+
+
+ Peter Stubbs <PETERS@staidan.qld.edu.au>
+
+
+
+ Pierre Beyssac <bp@fasterix.freenix.org>
+
+
+
+ Phil Maker <pjm@cs.ntu.edu.au>
+
+
+
+ R. Kym Horsell
+
+
+
+ Randall Hopper <rhh@stealth.ct.picker.com>
+
+
+
+ Richard Hwang <rhwang@bigpanda.com>
+
+
+
+ Richard Seaman, Jr. <dick@tar.com>
+
+
+
+ Richard Stallman <rms@gnu.ai.mit.edu>
+
+
+
+ Richard Wiwatowski <rjwiwat@adelaide.on.net>
+
+
+
+ Rob Mallory <rmallory@csusb.edu>
+
+
+
+ Rob Shady <rls@id.net>
+
+
+
+ Rob Snow <rsnow@txdirect.net>
+
+
+
+ Robert Sanders <rsanders@mindspring.com>
+
+
+
+ Robert Withrow <witr@rwwa.com>
+
+
+
+ Ronald Kuehn <kuehn@rz.tu-clausthal.de>
+
+
+
+ Roland Jesse <jesse@cs.uni-magdeburg.de>
+
+
+
+ Ruslan Shevchenko <rssh@cki.ipri.kiev.ua>
+
+
+
+ Samuel Lam <skl@ScalableNetwork.com>
+
+
+
+ Sander Vesik <sander@haldjas.folklore.ee>
+
+
+
+ Sandro Sigala <ssigala@globalnet.it>
+
+
+
+ Sascha Blank <blank@fox.uni-trier.de>
+
+
+
+ Sascha Wildner <swildner@channelz.GUN.de>
+
+
+
+ Satoshi Taoka <taoka@infonets.hiroshima-u.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Scott Blachowicz <scott.blachowicz@seaslug.org>
+
+
+
+ Scott A. Kenney <saken@rmta.ml.org>
+
+
+
+ Serge V. Vakulenko <vak@zebub.msk.su>
+
+
+
+ Sheldon Hearn <axl@iafrica.com>
+
+
+
+ Simon Marlow <simonm@dcs.gla.ac.uk>
+
+
+
+ Slaven Rezic (Tomic) <eserte@cs.tu-berlin.de>
+
+
+
+ Soren Dayton <csdayton@midway.uchicago.edu>
+
+
+
+ Soren Dossing <sauber@netcom.com>
+
+
+
+ Stefan Moeding <moeding@bn.DeTeMobil.de>
+
+
+
+ Stephane Legrand <stephane@lituus.fr>
+
+
+
+ Stephen J. Roznowski <sjr@home.net>
+
+
+
+ Steve Gerakines <steve2@genesis.tiac.net>
+
+
+
+ Suzuki Yoshiaki <zensyo@ann.tama.kawasaki.jp>
+
+
+
+ Tadashi Kumano <kumano@strl.nhk.or.jp>
+
+
+
+ Taguchi Takeshi <taguchi@tohoku.iij.ad.jp>
+
+
+
+ Takayuki Ariga <a00821@cc.hc.keio.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Terry Lambert <terry@lambert.org>
+
+
+
+ Terry Lee <terry@uivlsi.csl.uiuc.edu>
+
+
+
+ Tetsuya Furukawa <tetsuya@secom-sis.co.jp>
+
+
+
+ Theo Deraadt <deraadt@fsa.ca>
+
+
+
+ Thomas König <Thomas.Koenig@ciw.uni-karlsruhe.de>
+
+
+
+ Þórður Ívarsson <totii@est.is>
+
+
+
+ Tim Kientzle <kientzle@netcom.com>
+
+
+
+ Tim Wilkinson <tim@sarc.city.ac.uk>
+
+
+
+ Tom Samplonius <tom@misery.sdf.com>
+
+
+
+ Torbjorn Granlund <tege@matematik.su.se>
+
+
+
+ Toshihiro Kanda <candy@fct.kgc.co.jp>
+
+
+
+ Trefor S. <trefor@flevel.co.uk>
+
+
+
+ Ville Eerola <ve@sci.fi>
+
+
+
+ Werner Griessl <werner@btp1da.phy.uni-bayreuth.de>
+
+
+
+ Wes Santee <wsantee@wsantee.oz.net>
+
+
+
+ Wilko Bulte <wilko@yedi.iaf.nl>
+
+
+
+ Wolfgang Stanglmeier <wolf@kintaro.cologne.de>
+
+
+
+ Wu Ching-hong <woju@FreeBSD.ee.Ntu.edu.TW>
+
+
+
+ Yen-Shuo Su <yssu@CCCA.NCTU.edu.tw>
+
+
+
+ Yoshiaki Uchikawa <yoshiaki@kt.rim.or.jp>
+
+
+
+ Yoshiro Mihira <sanpei@yy.cs.keio.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Yukihiro Nakai <nakai@mlab.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Yuval Yarom <yval@cs.huji.ac.il>
+
+
+
+ Yves Fonk <yves@cpcoup5.tn.tudelft.nl>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ 386BSD Patch Kit Patch Contributors
+
+ (in alphabetical order by first name):
+
+
+
+
+
+ Adam Glass <glass@postgres.berkeley.edu>
+
+
+
+ Adrian Hall <adrian@ibmpcug.co.uk>
+
+
+
+ Andrey A. Chernov <ache@astral.msk.su>
+
+
+
+ Andrew Herbert <andrew@werple.apana.org.au>
+
+
+
+ Andrew Moore <alm@netcom.com>
+
+
+
+ Andy Valencia <ajv@csd.mot.com>
+ <jtk@netcom.com>
+
+
+
+ Arne Henrik Juul <arnej@Lise.Unit.NO>
+
+
+
+ Bakul Shah <bvs@bitblocks.com>
+
+
+
+ Barry Lustig <barry@ictv.com>
+
+
+
+ Bob Wilcox <bob@obiwan.uucp>
+
+
+
+ Branko Lankester
+
+
+
+ Brett Lymn <blymn@mulga.awadi.com.AU>
+
+
+
+ Charles Hannum <mycroft@ai.mit.edu>
+
+
+
+ Chris G. Demetriou <cgd@postgres.berkeley.edu>
+
+
+
+ Chris Torek <torek@ee.lbl.gov>
+
+
+
+ Christoph Robitschko <chmr@edvz.tu-graz.ac.at>
+
+
+
+ Daniel Poirot <poirot@aio.jsc.nasa.gov>
+
+
+
+ Dave Burgess <burgess@hrd769.brooks.af.mil>
+
+
+
+ Dave Rivers <rivers@ponds.uucp>
+
+
+
+ David Dawes <dawes@physics.su.OZ.AU>
+
+
+
+ David Greenman <davidg@Root.COM>
+
+
+
+ Eric J. Haug <ejh@slustl.slu.edu>
+
+
+
+ Felix Gaehtgens <felix@escape.vsse.in-berlin.de>
+
+
+
+ Frank Maclachlan <fpm@crash.cts.com>
+
+
+
+ Gary A. Browning <gab10@griffcd.amdahl.com>
+
+
+
+ Gary Howland <gary@hotlava.com>
+
+
+
+ Geoff Rehmet <csgr@alpha.ru.ac.za>
+
+
+
+ Goran Hammarback <goran@astro.uu.se>
+
+
+
+ Guido van Rooij <guido@gvr.win.tue.nl>
+
+
+
+ Guy Harris <guy@auspex.com>
+
+
+
+ Havard Eidnes <Havard.Eidnes@runit.sintef.no>
+
+
+
+ Herb Peyerl <hpeyerl@novatel.cuc.ab.ca>
+
+
+
+ Holger Veit <Holger.Veit@gmd.de>
+
+
+
+ Ishii Masahiro, R. Kym Horsell
+
+
+
+ J.T. Conklin <jtc@cygnus.com>
+
+
+
+ Jagane D Sundar < jagane@netcom.com >
+
+
+
+ James Clark <jjc@jclark.com>
+
+
+
+ James Jegers <jimj@miller.cs.uwm.edu>
+
+
+
+ James W. Dolter
+
+
+
+ James da Silva <jds@cs.umd.edu> et al
+
+
+
+ Jay Fenlason <hack@datacube.com>
+
+
+
+ Jim Wilson <wilson@moria.cygnus.com>
+
+
+
+ Jörg Lohse <lohse@tech7.informatik.uni-hamburg.de>
+
+
+
+ Jörg Wunsch <joerg_wunsch@uriah.heep.sax.de>
+
+
+
+ John Dyson - <formerly dyson@ref.tfs.com>
+
+
+
+ John Woods <jfw@eddie.mit.edu>
+
+
+
+ Jordan K. Hubbard <jkh@whisker.hubbard.ie>
+
+
+
+ Julian Elischer <julian@dialix.oz.au>
+
+
+
+ Julian Stacey <jhs@freebsd.org>
+
+
+
+ Karl Lehenbauer <karl@NeoSoft.com>
+ <karl@one.neosoft.com>
+
+
+
+ Keith Bostic <bostic@toe.CS.Berkeley.EDU>
+
+
+
+ Ken Hughes
+
+
+
+ Kent Talarico <kent@shipwreck.tsoft.net>
+
+
+
+ Kevin Lahey <kml%rokkaku.UUCP@mathcs.emory.edu>
+ <kml@mosquito.cis.ufl.edu>
+
+
+
+ Marc Frajola <marc@dev.com>
+
+
+
+ Mark Tinguely <tinguely@plains.nodak.edu>
+ <tinguely@hookie.cs.ndsu.NoDak.edu>
+
+
+
+ Martin Renters <martin@tdc.on.ca>
+
+
+
+ Michael Clay <mclay@weareb.org>
+
+
+
+ Michael Galassi <nerd@percival.rain.com>
+
+
+
+ Mike Durkin <mdurkin@tsoft.sf-bay.org>
+
+
+
+ Naoki Hamada <nao@tom-yam.or.jp>
+
+
+
+ Nate Williams <nate@bsd.coe.montana.edu>
+
+
+
+ Nick Handel <nhandel@NeoSoft.com>
+ <nick@madhouse.neosoft.com>
+
+
+
+ Pace Willisson <pace@blitz.com>
+
+
+
+ Paul Kranenburg <pk@cs.few.eur.nl>
+
+
+
+ Paul Mackerras <paulus@cs.anu.edu.au>
+
+
+
+ Paul Popelka <paulp@uts.amdahl.com>
+
+
+
+ Peter da Silva <peter@NeoSoft.com>
+
+
+
+ Phil Sutherland <philsuth@mycroft.dialix.oz.au>
+
+
+
+ Poul-Henning Kamp<phk@FreeBSD.ORG>
+
+
+
+ Ralf Friedl <friedl@informatik.uni-kl.de>
+
+
+
+ Rick Macklem <root@snowhite.cis.uoguelph.ca>
+
+
+
+ Robert D. Thrush <rd@phoenix.aii.com>
+
+
+
+ Rodney W. Grimes <rgrimes@cdrom.com>
+
+
+
+ Sascha Wildner <swildner@channelz.GUN.de>
+
+
+
+ Scott Burris <scott@pita.cns.ucla.edu>
+
+
+
+ Scott Reynolds <scott@clmqt.marquette.mi.us>
+
+
+
+ Sean Eric Fagan <sef@kithrup.com>
+
+
+
+ Simon J Gerraty <sjg@melb.bull.oz.au>
+ <sjg@zen.void.oz.au>
+
+
+
+ Stephen McKay <syssgm@devetir.qld.gov.au>
+
+
+
+ Terry Lambert <terry@icarus.weber.edu>
+
+
+
+ Terry Lee <terry@uivlsi.csl.uiuc.edu>
+
+
+
+ Tor Egge <Tor.Egge@idi.ntnu.no>
+
+
+
+ Warren Toomey <wkt@csadfa.cs.adfa.oz.au>
+
+
+
+ Wiljo Heinen <wiljo@freeside.ki.open.de>
+
+
+
+ William Jolitz <withheld>
+
+
+
+ Wolfgang Solfrank <ws@tools.de>
+
+
+
+ Wolfgang Stanglmeier <wolf@dentaro.GUN.de>
+
+
+
+ Yuval Yarom <yval@cs.huji.ac.il>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Source Tree Guidelines and Policies
+
+
+ Contributed by &a.phk;.
+
+ This chapter documents various guidelines and policies in force
+ for the FreeBSD source tree.
+
+
+
+ MAINTAINER on Makefiles
+
+
+ June 1996.
+
+ If a particular portion of the FreeBSD distribution is being maintained by a
+ person or group of persons, they can communicate this fact to the
+ world by adding a
+
+
+ MAINTAINER= email-addresses
+
+
+ line to the makefiles covering this portion of the source tree.
+
+ The semantics of this are as follows:
+
+ The maintainer owns and is responsible for that code. This means
+ that he is responsible for fixing bugs and answer problem reports
+ pertaining to that piece of the code, and in the case of contributed
+ software, for tracking new versions, as appropriate.
+
+ Changes to directories which have a maintainer defined shall be
+ sent to the
+ maintainer for review before being committed. Only if the maintainer does not respond
+ for an unacceptable period of time, to several emails, will it be
+ acceptable to commit changes without review by the maintainer.
+ However, it is suggested that you try and have the changes reviewed
+ by someone else if at all possible.
+
+ It is of course not acceptable to add a person or group as maintainer
+ unless they agree to assume this duty. On the other hand it doesn't
+ have to be a committer and it can easily be a group of people.
+
+
+
+
+ Contributed Software
+
+ June 1996.
+
+ Some parts of the FreeBSD distribution consist of software that
+ is actively being maintained outside the FreeBSD project. For
+ historical reasons, we call this contributed software. Some
+ examples are perl, gcc and patch.
+
+ Over the last couple of years, various methods have been used in
+ dealing with this type of software and all have some number of
+ advantages and drawbacks. No clear winner has emerged.
+
+ Since this is the case, after some debate one of these methods has
+ been selected as the "official" method and will be required for
+ future imports of software of this kind. Furthermore, it is strongly
+ suggested that existing contributed software converge on this model
+ over time, as it has significant advantages over the old method,
+ including the ability to easily obtain diffs relative to the
+ "official" versions of the source by everyone (even without cvs
+ access). This will make it significantly easier to return changes
+ to the primary developers of the contributed software.
+
+ Ultimately, however, it comes down to the people actually doing
+ the work. If using this model is particularly unsuited to the
+ package being dealt with, exceptions to these rules may be granted
+ only with the approval of the core team and with the general
+ consensus of the other developers. The ability to maintain the
+ package in the future will be a key issue in the decisions.
+
+ The Tcl embedded programming language will be used as example
+ of how this model works:
+
+
+ src/contrib/tcl
+ contains the source as distributed by the maintainers
+ of this package. Parts that are entirely not applicable for FreeBSD
+ can be removed. In the case of Tcl, the "mac", "win" and "compat"
+ subdirectories were eliminated before the import
+
+
+ src/lib/libtcl
+ contains only a "bmake style" Makefile that uses
+ the standard bsd.lib.mk makefile rules to produce the library and
+ install the documentation.
+
+
+ src/usr.bin/tclsh
+ contains only a bmake style Makefile which will
+ produce and install the "tclsh" program and its associated man-pages
+ using the standard bsd.prog.mk rules.
+
+
+ src/tools/tools/tcl_bmake
+ contains a couple of shell-scripts that can be of help
+ when the tcl software needs updating. These are not part of the
+ built or installed software.
+
+ The important thing here is that the "src/contrib/tcl" directory
+ is created according to the rules: It is supposed to contain the
+ sources as distributed (on a proper CVS vendor-branch) with as few
+ FreeBSD-specific changes as possible. The 'easy-import' tool on
+ freefall will assist in doing the import, but if there are any
+ doubts on how to go about it, it is imperative that you ask first
+ and not blunder ahead and hope it "works out". CVS is not forgiving
+ of import accidents and a fair amount of effort is required to back
+ out major mistakes.
+
+ Because of some unfortunate design limitations with CVS's vendor
+ branches, it is required that "official" patches from the vendor
+ be applied to the original distributed sources and the result
+ re-imported onto the vendor branch again. Official patches should
+ never be patched into the FreeBSD checked out version and
+ "committed", as this destroys the vendor branch coherency and makes
+ importing future versions rather difficult as there will be conflicts.
+
+ Since many packages contain files that are meant for compatibility
+ with other architectures and environments that FreeBSD, it is
+ permissible to remove parts of the distribution tree that are of no interest
+ to FreeBSD in order to save space. Files containing copyright
+ notices and release-note kind of information applicable to the
+ remaining files shall not be removed.
+
+ If it seems easier, the "bmake" makefiles can be produced from the
+ dist tree automatically by some utility, something which would
+ hopefully make it even easier to upgrade to a new version. If this
+ is done, be sure to check in such utilities (as necessary) in the
+ src/tools directory along with the port itself so that it is available
+ to future maintainers.
+
+ In the src/contrib/tcl level directory, a file called FREEBSD-upgrade
+ should be added and it should states things like:
+
+
+
+
+
+ Which files have been left out
+
+
+
+ Where the original distribution was obtained from and/or the official
+ master site.
+
+
+
+ Where to send patches back to the original authors
+
+
+
+ Perhaps an overview of the FreeBSD-specific changes that have been made.
+
+
+
+
+
+ However, please do not import FREEBSD-upgrade with the contributed source.
+ Rather you should ``cvs add FREEBSD-upgrade ; cvs ci'' after the
+ initial import. Example wording from ``src/contrib/cpio'' is below:
+
+
+ This directory contains virgin sources of the original distribution files
+ on a "vendor" branch. Do not, under any circumstances, attempt to upgrade
+ the files in this directory via patches and a cvs commit. New versions or
+ official-patch versions must be imported.
+
+ For the import of GNU cpio 2.4.2, the following files were removed:
+
+ INSTALL cpio.info mkdir.c
+ Makefile.in cpio.texi mkinstalldirs
+
+ To upgrade to a newer version of cpio, when it is available:
+ 1. Unpack the new version into an empty directory.
+ [Do not make ANY changes to the files.]
+
+ 2. Remove the files listed above and any others that don't apply to
+ FreeBSD.
+
+ 3. Use the command:
+ cvs import -m 'Virgin import of GNU cpio v<version>' \
+ src/contrib/cpio GNU v<version>
+
+ For example, to do the import of version 2.4.2, I typed:
+ cvs import -m 'Virgin import of GNU v2.4.2' \
+ src/contrib/cpio GNU v2.4.2
+
+ 4. Follow the instructions printed out in step 3 to resolve any
+ conflicts between local FreeBSD changes and the newer version.
+
+ Do not, under any circumstances, deviate from this procedure.
+
+ To make local changes to cpio, simply patch and commit to the main
+ branch (aka HEAD). Never make local changes on the GNU branch.
+
+ All local changes should be submitted to "cpio@gnu.ai.mit.edu" for
+ inclusion in the next vendor release.
+
+ obrien@freebsd.org - 30 March 1997
+
+
+
+
+
+ Shared Libraries
+
+
+ Contributed by &a.asami;, &a.peter;, and &a.obrien;.
+ 9 December 1996.
+
+ If you are adding shared library support to a port or other piece
+ of software that doesn't have one, the version numbers should
+ follow these rules. Generally, the resulting numbers will have
+ nothing to do with the release version of the software.
+
+ The three principles of shared library building are:
+
+
+
+
+
+ Start from 1.0
+
+
+
+ If there is a change that is backwards compatible, bump
+ minor number
+
+
+
+ If there is an incompatible change, bump major number
+
+
+
+
+
+ For instance, added functions and bugfixes result in the minor
+ version number being bumped, while deleted functions, changed
+ function call syntax etc. will force the major version number
+ to change.
+
+ Stick to version numbers of the form major.minor (x.y). Our dynamic
+ linker does not handle version numbers of the form x.y.z well. Any
+ version number after the ``y'' (ie. the third digit) is totally ignored
+ when comparing shared lib version numbers to decide which library to
+ link with. Given two shared libraries that differ only in the `micro'
+ revision, ld.so will link with the higher one. Ie: if you link with
+ libfoo.so.3.3.3, the linker only records 3.3 in the headers, and will
+ link with anything starting with libfoo.so.3.(anything >= 3).(highest
+ available).
+
+ Note that ld.so will always use the highest "minor" revision.
+ Ie: it will use libc.so.2.2 in preference to libc.so.2.0, even if the
+ program was initially linked with libc.so.2.0.
+
+ For non-port libraries, it is also our policy to change the
+ shared library version number only once between releases. When
+ you make a change to a system library that requires the version
+ number to be bumped, check the Makefile's commit logs. It is the
+ responsibility of the committer to ensure that the first such
+ change since the release will result in the shared library version
+ number in the Makefile to be updated, and any subsequent changes
+ will not.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Adding New Kernel Configuration Options
+
+ Contributed by &a.joerg;
+
+ Note: You should be familiar with the section about before reading here.
+
+
+
+ What's a Kernel Option, Anyway?
+
+ The use of kernel options is basically described in the section.
+ There's also an explanation of ``historic'' and ``new-style''
+ options. The ultimate goal is to eventually turn all the supported
+ options in the kernel into new-style ones, so for people who
+ correctly did a make depend in their kernel compile directory
+ after running config(8), the build process will automatically
+ pick up modified options, and only recompile those files where it is
+ necessary. Wiping out the old compile directory on each run of
+ config(8) as it is still done now can then be eliminated again.
+
+ Basically, a kernel option is nothing else than the definition of
+ a C preprocessor macro for the kernel compilation process. To make
+ the build truly optional, the corresponding part of the kernel
+ source (or kernel .h file) must be written with the option
+ concept in mind, i. e. the default must have been made overridable
+ by the config option. This is usually done with something like:
+
+
+ #ifndef THIS_OPTION
+ #define THIS_OPTION (some_default_value)
+ #endif /* THIS_OPTION */
+
+
+ This way, an administrator mentioning another value for the
+ option in his config file will take the default out of effect, and
+ replace it with his new value. Clearly, the new value will be
+ substituted into the source code during the preprocessor run, so it
+ must be a valid C expression in whatever context the default value
+ would have been used.
+
+ It is also possible to create value-less options that simply
+ enable or disable a particular piece of code by embracing it in
+
+
+ #ifdef THAT_OPTION
+
+ [your code here]
+
+ #endif
+
+
+ Simply mentioning THAT_OPTION in the config file (with or
+ without any value) will then turn on the corresponding piece of
+ code.
+
+ People familiar with the C language will immediately recognize
+ that everything could be counted as a ``config option'' where
+ there is at least a single #ifdef referencing it... However,
+ it's unlikely that many people would put
+
+
+ options notyet,notdef
+
+
+ in their config file, and then wonder why the kernel compilation
+ falls over. :-)
+
+ Clearly, using arbitrary names for the options makes it very
+ hard to track their usage throughout the kernel source tree. That is
+ the rationale behind the new-style option scheme, where each
+ option goes into a separate .h file in the kernel compile
+ directory, which is by convention named opt_foo.h.
+ This way, the usual Makefile dependencies could be applied, and
+ make can determine what needs to be recompiled once an option
+ has been changed.
+
+ The old-style option mechanism still has one advantage for local
+ options or maybe experimental options that have a short anticipated
+ lifetime: since it is easy to add a new #ifdef to the kernel
+ source, this has already made it a kernel config option.
+ In this case, the administrator using such an
+ option is responsible himself for knowing about its implications
+ (and maybe manually forcing the recompilation of parts of his
+ kernel). Once the transition of all supported options has been
+ done, config(8) will warn whenever an unsupported option
+ appears in the config file, but it will nevertheless include it into
+ the kernel Makefile.
+
+
+
+
+ Now What Do I Have to Do for it?
+
+ First, edit sys/conf/options (or
+ sys/i386/conf/options.<arch>, e. g.
+ sys/i386/conf/options.i386), and select an
+ opt_foo.h file where your new option would best go
+ into.
+
+ If there is already something that comes close to the purpose of
+ the new option, pick this. For example, options modifying the
+ overall behaviour of the SCSI subsystem can go into opt_scsi.h.
+ By default, simply mentioning an option in the appropriate option
+ file, say FOO, implies its value will go into the
+ corresponding file opt_foo.h. This can be overridden on the
+ right-hand side of a rule by specifying another filename.
+
+ If there is no opt_foo.h already available for
+ the intended new option, invent a new name. Make it meaningful, and
+ comment the new section in the
+ options[.<arch>] file. config(8) will
+ automagically pick up the change, and create that file next time it
+ is run. Most options should go in a header file by themselves..
+
+ Packing too many options into a single
+ opt_foo.h will cause too many kernel files to be
+ rebuilt when one of the options has been changed in the config file.
+
+ Finally, find out which kernel files depend on the new option.
+ Unless you have just invented your option, and it does not exist
+ anywhere yet,
+
+
+ find /usr/src/sys -name type f | xargs fgrep NEW_OPTION
+
+
+ is your friend in finding them. Go and edit all those files, and
+ add
+
+
+ #include "opt_foo.h"
+
+
+ on top, before all the #include <xxx.h>
+ stuff. This sequence is most important as the options could
+ override defaults from the regular include files, if the
+ defaults are of the form
+
+
+ #ifndef NEW_OPTION
+ #define NEW_OPTION (something)
+ #endif
+
+
+ in the regular header.
+
+ Adding an option that overrides something in a system header file
+ (i. e., a file sitting in /usr/include/sys/) is almost
+ always a mistake. opt_foo.h cannot be included
+ into those files since it would break the headers more seriously,
+ but if it is not included, then places that include it may get an
+ inconsistent value for the option. Yes, there are precedents for
+ this right now, but that does not make them more correct.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Kernel Debugging
+
+ Contributed by &a.paul; and &a.joerg;
+
+
+
+ Debugging a Kernel Crash Dump with KGDB
+
+ Here are some instructions for getting kernel debugging
+ working on a crash dump. They assume that you have enough swap
+ space for a crash dump. If you have multiple swap
+ partitions and the first one is too small to hold the dump,
+ you can configure your kernel to use an alternate dump device
+ (in the config kernel line), or
+ you can specify an alternate using the dumpon(8) command.
+ Dumps to non-swap devices,
+ tapes for example, are currently not supported. Config your
+ kernel using config -g.
+ See for
+ details on configuring the FreeBSD kernel.
+
+ Use the dumpon(8) command to tell the kernel where to dump
+ to (note that this will have to be done after configuring the
+ partition in question as swap space via swapon(8)). This is
+ normally arranged via /etc/rc.conf and /etc/rc.
+ Alternatively, you can
+ hard-code the dump device via the `dump' clause in the `config' line
+ of your kernel config file. This is deprecated and should be used only if you
+ want a crash dump from a kernel that crashes during booting.
+
+ Note: In the following, the term `kgdb' refers
+ to gdb run in `kernel debug mode'. This can be accomplished by
+ either starting the gdb with the option , or by linking
+ and starting it under the name kgdb. This is not being
+ done by default, however, and the idea is basically deprecated since
+ the GNU folks do not like their tools to behave differently when
+ called by another name. This feature may well be discontinued
+ in further releases.
+
+ When the kernel has been built make a copy of it, say
+ kernel.debug, and then run strip -d on the
+ original. Install the original as normal. You may also install
+ the unstripped kernel, but symbol table lookup time for some
+ programs will drastically increase, and since
+ the whole kernel is loaded entirely at boot time and cannot be
+ swapped out later, several megabytes of
+ physical memory will be wasted.
+
+ If you are testing a new kernel, for example by typing the new
+ kernel's name at the boot prompt, but need to boot a different
+ one in order to get your system up and running again, boot it
+ only into single user state using the flag at the
+ boot prompt, and then perform the following steps:
+
+ fsck -p
+ mount -a -t ufs # so your file system for /var/crash is writable
+ savecore -N /kernel.panicked /var/crash
+ exit # ...to multi-user
+
+
+ This instructs savecore(8) to use another kernel for symbol name
+ extraction. It would otherwise default to the currently running kernel
+ and most likely not do anything at all since the crash dump and the
+ kernel symbols differ.
+
+ Now, after a crash dump, go to /sys/compile/WHATEVER and run
+ kgdb. From kgdb do:
+
+ symbol-file kernel.debug
+ exec-file /var/crash/kernel.0
+ core-file /var/crash/vmcore.0
+
+
+ and voila, you can debug the crash dump using the kernel sources
+ just like you can for any other program.
+
+ Here is a script log of a kgdb session illustrating the
+ procedure. Long
+ lines have been folded to improve readability, and the lines are
+ numbered for reference. Despite this, it is a real-world error
+ trace taken during the development of the pcvt console driver.
+
+ 1:Script started on Fri Dec 30 23:15:22 1994
+ 2:uriah # cd /sys/compile/URIAH
+ 3:uriah # kgdb kernel /var/crash/vmcore.1
+ 4:Reading symbol data from /usr/src/sys/compile/URIAH/kernel...done.
+ 5:IdlePTD 1f3000
+ 6:panic: because you said to!
+ 7:current pcb at 1e3f70
+ 8:Reading in symbols for ../../i386/i386/machdep.c...done.
+ 9:(kgdb) where
+ 10:#0 boot (arghowto=256) (../../i386/i386/machdep.c line 767)
+ 11:#1 0xf0115159 in panic ()
+ 12:#2 0xf01955bd in diediedie () (../../i386/i386/machdep.c line 698)
+ 13:#3 0xf010185e in db_fncall ()
+ 14:#4 0xf0101586 in db_command (-266509132, -266509516, -267381073)
+ 15:#5 0xf0101711 in db_command_loop ()
+ 16:#6 0xf01040a0 in db_trap ()
+ 17:#7 0xf0192976 in kdb_trap (12, 0, -272630436, -266743723)
+ 18:#8 0xf019d2eb in trap_fatal (...)
+ 19:#9 0xf019ce60 in trap_pfault (...)
+ 20:#10 0xf019cb2f in trap (...)
+ 21:#11 0xf01932a1 in exception:calltrap ()
+ 22:#12 0xf0191503 in cnopen (...)
+ 23:#13 0xf0132c34 in spec_open ()
+ 24:#14 0xf012d014 in vn_open ()
+ 25:#15 0xf012a183 in open ()
+ 26:#16 0xf019d4eb in syscall (...)
+ 27:(kgdb) up 10
+ 28:Reading in symbols for ../../i386/i386/trap.c...done.
+ 29:#10 0xf019cb2f in trap (frame={tf_es = -260440048, tf_ds = 16, tf_\
+ 30:edi = 3072, tf_esi = -266445372, tf_ebp = -272630356, tf_isp = -27\
+ 31:2630396, tf_ebx = -266427884, tf_edx = 12, tf_ecx = -266427884, tf\
+ 32:_eax = 64772224, tf_trapno = 12, tf_err = -272695296, tf_eip = -26\
+ 33:6672343, tf_cs = -266469368, tf_eflags = 66066, tf_esp = 3072, tf_\
+ 34:ss = -266427884}) (../../i386/i386/trap.c line 283)
+ 35:283 (void) trap_pfault(&frame, FALSE);
+ 36:(kgdb) frame frame->tf_ebp frame->tf_eip
+ 37:Reading in symbols for ../../i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_drv.c...done.
+ 38:#0 0xf01ae729 in pcopen (dev=3072, flag=3, mode=8192, p=(struct p\
+ 39:roc *) 0xf07c0c00) (../../i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_drv.c line 403)
+ 40:403 return ((*linesw[tp->t_line].l_open)(dev, tp));
+ 41:(kgdb) list
+ 42:398
+ 43:399 tp->t_state |= TS_CARR_ON;
+ 44:400 tp->t_cflag |= CLOCAL; /* cannot be a modem (:-) */
+ 45:401
+ 46:402 #if PCVT_NETBSD || (PCVT_FREEBSD >= 200)
+ 47:403 return ((*linesw[tp->t_line].l_open)(dev, tp));
+ 48:404 #else
+ 49:405 return ((*linesw[tp->t_line].l_open)(dev, tp, flag));
+ 50:406 #endif /* PCVT_NETBSD || (PCVT_FREEBSD >= 200) */
+ 51:407 }
+ 52:(kgdb) print tp
+ 53:Reading in symbols for ../../i386/i386/cons.c...done.
+ 54:$1 = (struct tty *) 0x1bae
+ 55:(kgdb) print tp->t_line
+ 56:$2 = 1767990816
+ 57:(kgdb) up
+ 58:#1 0xf0191503 in cnopen (dev=0x00000000, flag=3, mode=8192, p=(st\
+ 59:ruct proc *) 0xf07c0c00) (../../i386/i386/cons.c line 126)
+ 60: return ((*cdevsw[major(dev)].d_open)(dev, flag, mode, p));
+ 61:(kgdb) up
+ 62:#2 0xf0132c34 in spec_open ()
+ 63:(kgdb) up
+ 64:#3 0xf012d014 in vn_open ()
+ 65:(kgdb) up
+ 66:#4 0xf012a183 in open ()
+ 67:(kgdb) up
+ 68:#5 0xf019d4eb in syscall (frame={tf_es = 39, tf_ds = 39, tf_edi =\
+ 69: 2158592, tf_esi = 0, tf_ebp = -272638436, tf_isp = -272629788, tf\
+ 70:_ebx = 7086, tf_edx = 1, tf_ecx = 0, tf_eax = 5, tf_trapno = 582, \
+ 71:tf_err = 582, tf_eip = 75749, tf_cs = 31, tf_eflags = 582, tf_esp \
+ 72:= -272638456, tf_ss = 39}) (../../i386/i386/trap.c line 673)
+ 73:673 error = (*callp->sy_call)(p, args, rval);
+ 74:(kgdb) up
+ 75:Initial frame selected; you cannot go up.
+ 76:(kgdb) quit
+ 77:uriah # exit
+ 78:exit
+ 79:
+ 80:Script done on Fri Dec 30 23:18:04 1994
+
+
+ Comments to the above script:
+
+
+
+ line 6:
+
+ This is a dump taken from within DDB (see below), hence the
+ panic comment ``because you said to!'', and a rather long
+ stack trace; the initial reason for going into DDB has been
+ a page fault trap though.
+
+
+
+
+ line 20:
+
+
+ This is the location of function trap()
+ in the stack trace.
+
+
+
+
+ line 36:
+
+
+ Force usage of a new stack frame; this is no longer
+ necessary now. The stack frames are supposed to point to
+ the right locations now, even in case of a trap.
+ (I do not have a new core dump handy <g>, my kernel
+ has not panicked for a rather long time.)
+ From looking at the code in source line 403,
+ there is a high probability that either the pointer
+ access for ``tp'' was messed up, or the array access was
+ out of bounds.
+
+
+
+
+ line 52:
+
+
+ The pointer looks suspicious, but happens to be a valid
+ address.
+
+
+
+
+ line 56:
+
+
+ However, it obviously points to garbage, so we have found our
+ error! (For those unfamiliar with that particular piece
+ of code: tp->t_line refers to the line discipline
+ of the console device here, which must be a rather small integer
+ number.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Post-mortem Analysis of a Dump
+
+ What do you do if a kernel dumped core but you did not expect
+ it, and it is therefore not compiled using config -g?
+ Not everything is lost here. Do not panic!
+
+ Of course, you still need to enable crash dumps. See above
+ on the options you have to specify in order to do this.
+
+ Go to your kernel compile directory, and edit the line
+ containing COPTFLAGS?=-O. Add the option
+ there (but do not change anything on the level of
+ optimization). If you do already know roughly the probable
+ location of the failing piece of code (e.g., the pcvt
+ driver in the example above), remove all the object files for
+ this code. Rebuild the kernel. Due to the time stamp change on
+ the Makefile, there will be some other object files rebuild,
+ for example trap.o. With a bit of luck, the added
+ option will not change anything for the generated
+ code, so you will finally get a new kernel with similar code to
+ the faulting one but some debugging symbols. You should at
+ least verify the old and new sizes with the size(1) command. If
+ there is a mismatch, you probably need to give up here.
+
+ Go and examine the dump as described above. The debugging
+ symbols might be incomplete for some places, as can be seen in
+ the stack trace in the example above where some functions are
+ displayed without line numbers and argument lists. If you need
+ more debugging symbols, remove the appropriate object files and
+ repeat the kgdb session until you know enough.
+
+ All this is not guaranteed to work, but it will do it fine in
+ most cases.
+
+
+
+
+ On-line Kernel Debugging Using DDB
+
+ While kgdb as an offline debugger provides a very
+ high level of user interface, there are some things it cannot do.
+ The most important ones being breakpointing and single-stepping
+ kernel code.
+
+ If you need to do low-level debugging on your kernel, there is
+ an on-line debugger available called DDB. It allows to
+ setting breakpoints, single-steping kernel functions, examining
+ and changing kernel variables, etc. However, it cannot
+ access kernel source files, and only has access to the global
+ and static symbols, not to the full debug information like
+ kgdb.
+
+ To configure your kernel to include DDB, add the option line
+
+ options DDB
+
+
+ to your config file, and rebuild. (See for details on configuring the
+ FreeBSD kernel. Note that if you have an older version of the
+ boot blocks, your debugger symbols might not be loaded at all.
+ Update the boot blocks; the recent ones load the DDB symbols
+ automagically.)
+
+ Once your DDB kernel is running, there are several ways to
+ enter DDB. The first, and earliest way is to type the boot
+ flag right at the boot prompt. The kernel will
+ start up in debug mode and enter DDB prior to any device
+ probing. Hence you can even debug the device
+ probe/attach functions.
+
+ The second scenario is a hot-key on the keyboard, usually
+ Ctrl-Alt-ESC. For syscons, this can be remapped; some of
+ the distributed maps do this, so watch out.
+ There is an option
+ available for serial consoles
+ that allows the use of a serial line BREAK on the console line to
+ enter DDB (``options BREAK_TO_DEBUGGER''
+ in the kernel config file). It is not the default since there are a lot of
+ crappy serial adapters around that gratuitously generate a
+ BREAK condition, for example when pulling the cable.
+
+ The third way is that any panic condition will branch to DDB if
+ the kernel is configured to use it.
+ For this reason, it is not wise to
+ configure a kernel with DDB for a machine running unattended.
+
+ The DDB commands roughly resemble some gdb commands. The first
+ thing you probably need to do is to set a breakpoint:
+
+ b function-name
+ b address
+
+
+
+ Numbers are taken hexadecimal by default, but to make them
+ distinct from symbol names; hexadecimal numbers starting with the
+ letters a-f need to be preceded with
+ 0x (this is optional for other numbers). Simple
+ expressions are allowed, for example: function-name + 0x103.
+
+ To continue the operation of an interrupted kernel, simply type
+
+ c
+
+
+ To get a stack trace, use
+
+ trace
+
+
+ Note that when entering DDB via a hot-key, the kernel is currently
+ servicing an interrupt, so the stack trace might be not of much use
+ for you.
+
+ If you want to remove a breakpoint, use
+
+ del
+ del address-expression
+
+
+ The first form will be accepted immediately after a breakpoint hit,
+ and deletes the current breakpoint. The second form can remove any
+ breakpoint, but you need to specify the exact address; this can be
+ obtained from
+
+ show b
+
+
+ To single-step the kernel, try
+
+ s
+
+
+ This will step into functions, but you can make DDB trace them until
+ the matching return statement is reached by
+
+ n
+
+
+ Note: this is different from gdb's `next' statement; it is like
+ gdb's `finish'.
+
+ To examine data from memory, use (for example):
+
+ x/wx 0xf0133fe0,40
+ x/hd db_symtab_space
+ x/bc termbuf,10
+ x/s stringbuf
+
+
+ for word/halfword/byte access, and hexadecimal/decimal/character/
+ string display. The number after the comma is the object count.
+ To display the next 0x10 items, simply use
+
+ x ,10
+
+
+ Similarly, use
+
+ x/ia foofunc,10
+
+
+ to disassemble the first 0x10 instructions of foofunc, and display
+ them along with their offset from the beginning of foofunc.
+
+ To modify memory, use the write command:
+
+ w/b termbuf 0xa 0xb 0
+ w/w 0xf0010030 0 0
+
+
+ The command modifier (b/h/w)
+ specifies the size of the data to be written, the first
+ following expression is the address to write to and the remainder
+ is interpreted as data to write to successive memory locations.
+
+ If you need to know the current registers, use
+
+ show reg
+
+
+ Alternatively, you can display a single register value by e.g.
+
+ p $eax
+
+
+ and modify it by
+
+ set $eax new-value
+
+
+
+ Should you need to call some kernel functions from DDB, simply
+ say
+
+ call func(arg1, arg2, ...)
+
+
+ The return value will be printed.
+
+ For a ps(1) style summary of all running processes, use
+
+ ps
+
+
+
+ Now you have now examined why your kernel failed, and you wish to
+ reboot. Remember that, depending on the severity of previous
+ malfunctioning, not all parts of the kernel might still be working
+ as expected. Perform one of the following actions to shut down and
+ reboot your system:
+
+ call diediedie()
+
+
+
+ This will cause your kernel to dump core and reboot, so you can
+ later analyze the core on a higher level with kgdb. This
+ command usually must be followed by another
+ `continue' statement.
+ There is now an alias for this: `panic'.
+
+
+
+ call boot(0)
+
+
+ might be a good way to cleanly shut down the running system, sync()
+ all disks, and finally reboot. As long as the disk and file system
+ interfaces of the kernel are not damaged, this might be a good way
+ for an almost clean shutdown.
+
+
+
+ call cpu_reset()
+
+
+ is the final way out of disaster and almost the same as hitting
+ the Big Red Button.
+
+ If you need a short command summary, simply type
+
+ help
+
+
+ However, it is highly recommended to have a printed copy of the
+ ddb(4) manual page ready for a debugging session.
+ Remember that it is hard to read the on-line manual while
+ single-stepping the kernel.
+
+
+
+
+ On-line Kernel Debugging Using Remote GDB
+
+ This feature has been supported since FreeBSD 2.2, and it's actually
+ a very neat one.
+
+ GDB has already supported remote debugging for a long time.
+ This is done using a very simple protocol along a
+ serial line. Unlike the other methods
+ described above, you will need two machines for doing this. One is
+ the host providing the debugging environment, including all
+ the sources, and a copy of the kernel binary with all the
+ symbols in it, and the other one is the target machine that
+ simply runs a similar copy of the very same kernel (but stripped
+ of the debugging information).
+
+ You should configure the kernel in question with config -g,
+ include DDB into the configuration, and compile it as usual.
+ This gives a large blurb of a binary, due
+ to the debugging information. Copy this kernel to the target
+ machine, strip the debugging symbols off with strip -x,
+ and boot it using the boot option. Connect the first
+ serial line of the target machine to any serial line of the
+ debugging host. Now, on the debugging machine, go to the compile
+ directory of the target kernel, and start gdb:
+
+ % gdb -k kernel
+ GDB is free software and you are welcome to distribute copies of it
+ under certain conditions; type "show copying" to see the conditions.
+ There is absolutely no warranty for GDB; type "show warranty" for details.
+ GDB 4.16 (i386-unknown-freebsd),
+ Copyright 1996 Free Software Foundation, Inc...
+ (kgdb)
+
+
+
+ Initialize the remote debugging session (assuming the first serial
+ port is being used) by:
+
+ (kgdb) target remote /dev/cuaa0
+
+
+
+ Now, on the target host (the one that entered DDB right before even starting
+ the device probe), type:
+
+ Debugger("Boot flags requested debugger")
+ Stopped at Debugger+0x35: movb $0, edata+0x51bc
+ db> gdb
+
+
+
+ DDB will respond with:
+
+ Next trap will enter GDB remote protocol mode
+
+
+
+ Every time you type ``gdb'', the mode will be toggled between
+ remote GDB and local DDB. In order to force a next trap
+ immediately, simply type ``s'' (step). Your hosting GDB will
+ now gain control over the target kernel:
+
+ Remote debugging using /dev/cuaa0
+ Debugger (msg=0xf01b0383 "Boot flags requested debugger")
+ at ../../i386/i386/db_interface.c:257
+ (kgdb)
+
+
+
+ You can use this session almost as any other GDB session, including
+ full access to the source, running it in gud-mode inside an Emacs
+ window (which gives you an automatic source code display in another
+ Emacs window) etc.
+
+ Remote GDB can also be used to debug LKMs. First build the LKM
+ with debugging symbols:
+
+ # cd /usr/src/lkm/linux
+ # make clean; make COPTS=-g
+
+
+
+ Then install this version of the module on the target machine, load it
+ and use modstat to find out where it was loaded:
+
+ # linux
+ # modstat
+ Type Id Off Loadaddr Size Info Rev Module Name
+ EXEC 0 4 f5109000 001c f510f010 1 linux_mod
+
+
+
+ Take the load address of the module and add 0x20 (probably to account
+ for the a.out header). This is the address that the module code was
+ relocated to. Use the add-symbol-file command in GDB to tell the
+ debugger about the module:
+
+ (kgdb) add-symbol-file /usr/src/lkm/linux/linux_mod.o 0xf5109020
+ add symbol table from file "/usr/src/lkm/linux/linux_mod.o" at
+ text_addr = 0xf5109020?
+ (y or n) y
+ (kgdb)
+
+
+
+ You now have access to all the symbols in the LKM.
+
+
+
+
+ Debugging a Console Driver
+
+ Since you need a console driver to run DDB on, things are more
+ complicated if the console driver itself is failing. You might
+ remember the use of a serial console (either with modified boot
+ blocks, or by specifying at the Boot:
+ prompt), and hook up a standard
+ terminal onto your first serial port. DDB works on any configured
+ console driver, of course also on a serial console.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Linux Emulation
+
+ Contributed by &a.handy; and &a.rich;
+
+
+
+ How to Install the Linux Emulator
+
+ Linux emulation in FreeBSD has reached a point where it is possible
+ to run a large fraction of Linux binaries in both a.out and ELF
+ format. The linux emulation in the 2.1-STABLE branch is capable of
+ running Linux DOOM and Mathematica; the version present in
+ FreeBSD-2.2-RELEASE is vastly more capable and runs all these as well as
+ Quake, Abuse, IDL, netrek for Linux and a whole host of other
+ programs.
+
+ There are some Linux-specific operating system features that are not
+ supported on FreeBSD. Linux binaries will not work on FreeBSD if they
+ use the Linux /proc filesystem (which is different from the optional
+ FreeBSD /proc filesystem) or i386-specific calls, such as enabling
+ virtual 8086 mode.
+
+ To tell whether your kernel is configured for Linux
+ compatibility simply run any Linux binary. If it
+ prints the error message
+
+ linux-executable: Exec format error. Wrong Architecture.
+
+
+ then you do not have linux compatibility support and
+ you need to configure and install a new kernel.
+
+ Depending on which version of FreeBSD you are running, how you get
+ Linux-emulation up will vary slightly:
+
+
+
+ Installing Linux Emulation in 2.1-STABLE
+
+ The GENERIC kernel in 2.1-STABLE is not configured for linux
+ compatibility so you must reconfigure your kernel for it. There
+ are two ways to do this: 1. linking the emulator statically in the
+ kernel itself and 2. configuring your kernel to dynamically load the
+ linux loadable kernel module (LKM).
+
+ To enable the emulator, add the following to your configuration file
+ (c.f. /sys/i386/conf/LINT):
+
+ options COMPAT_LINUX
+
+
+ If you want to run doom or other applications
+ that need shared memory,
+ also add the following.
+
+ options SYSVSHM
+
+
+ The linux system calls require 4.3BSD system call compatibility. So
+ make sure you have the following.
+
+ options "COMPAT_43"
+
+
+
+ If you prefer to statically link the emulator in the kernel rather than
+ use the loadable kernel module (LKM), then add
+
+ options LINUX
+
+
+ Then run config and install the new kernel as described in the
+ section.
+
+ If you decide to use the LKM you must also install the loadable
+ module. A mismatch of versions between the kernel and loadable
+ module can cause the kernel to crash, so the safest thing to do is to
+ reinstall the LKM when you install the kernel.
+
+ % cd /usr/src/lkm/linux
+ % make all install
+
+
+ Once you have installed the kernel and the LKM, you can invoke
+ `linux' as root to load the LKM.
+
+ % linux
+ Linux emulator installed
+ Module loaded as ID 0
+ %
+
+
+ To see whether the LKM is loaded, run `modstat'.
+
+ % modstat
+ Type Id Off Loadaddr Size Info Rev Module Name
+ EXEC 0 3 f0baf000 0018 f0bb4000 1 linux_emulator
+ %
+
+
+ You can cause the LKM to be loaded when the system boots in either of
+ two ways. In FreeBSD 2.2.1-RELEASE and 2.1-STABLE enable it in
+ /etc/sysconfig
+
+ linux=YES
+
+
+ by changing it from NO to YES. FreeBSD 2.1 RELEASE and earlier do not
+ have such a line and on those you will need to edit /etc/rc.local to
+ add the following line.
+
+ linux
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Installing Linux Emulation in 2.2.2-RELEASE and later
+
+ It is no longer necessary to specify ``options LINUX''
+ or ``options COMPAT_LINUX''. Linux emulation is done with an LKM
+ (``Loadable Kernel Module'') so it can be installed on the fly without
+ having to reboot. You will need the following things in your startup files,
+ however:
+
+
+
+ In /etc/rc.conf, you need the following line:
+
+ linux_enable=YES
+
+
+
+
+
+ This, in turn, triggers the following action in /etc/rc.i386:
+
+ # Start the Linux binary emulation if requested.
+ if [ "X${linux_enable}" = X"YES" ]; then
+ echo -n ' linux'; linux > /dev/null 2>&1
+ fi
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ If you want to verify it is running, modstat will do that:
+
+ % modstat
+ Type Id Off Loadaddr Size Info Rev Module Name
+ EXEC 0 4 f09e6000 001c f09ec010 1 linux_mod
+ %
+
+
+ However, there have been reports that this fails on some 2.2-RELEASE and
+ later systems. If for some reason you cannot load the linux
+ LKM, then statically link the emulator in the kernel by adding
+
+ options LINUX
+
+
+ to your kernel config file. Then run config and install the new
+ kernel as described in the section.
+
+
+
+
+ Installing Linux Runtime Libraries
+
+
+
+ Installing using the linux_lib port
+
+ Most linux applications use shared libraries, so you are still not
+ done until you install the shared libraries. It is possible to do
+ this by hand, however, it is vastly simpler to just grab the
+ linux_lib port:
+
+ % cd /usr/ports-current/emulators/linux_lib
+ % make all install
+
+
+
+ and you should have a working linux emulator. Legend (and the mail
+ archives :-) seems to hold that Linux emulation works best with
+ linux binaries linked against the ZMAGIC libraries; QMAGIC libraries
+ (such as those used in Slackware V2.0) may tend to give the
+ Linuxulator heartburn. As of this writing (March 1996) ELF emulation
+ is still in the formulative stages but seems to work pretty well. Also,
+ expect some programs to complain about incorrect minor versions. In
+ general this does not seem to be a problem.
+
+
+
+
+ Installing libraries manually
+
+ If you do not have the ``ports'' distribution, you can install the
+ libraries by hand instead. You will need the Linux shared libraries
+ that the program depends on and the runtime linker. Also, you will
+ need to create a "shadow root" directory, /compat/linux, for Linux
+ libraries on your FreeBSD system. Any shared libraries opened by
+ Linux programs run under FreeBSD will look in this tree first. So, if
+ a Linux program loads, for example, /lib/libc.so, FreeBSD will first
+ try to open /compat/linux/lib/libc.so, and if that does not exist then
+ it will try /lib/libc.so. Shared libraries should be installed in the
+ shadow tree /compat/linux/lib rather than the paths that the Linux
+ ld.so reports.
+
+ FreeBSD-2.2-RELEASE and later works slightly differently with respect to
+ /compat/linux. On -CURRENT, all files, not just libraries, are
+ searched for from the ``shadow root'' /compat/linux.
+
+ Generally, you will need to look for the shared libraries that Linux
+ binaries depend on only the first few times that you install a Linux
+ program on your FreeBSD system. After a while, you will have a sufficient
+ set of Linux shared libraries on your system to be able to run newly
+ imported Linux binaries without any extra work.
+
+
+
+
+ How to install additional shared libraries
+
+ What if you install the linux_lib port and your application still
+ complains about missing shared libraries? How do you know which
+ shared libraries Linux binaries need, and where to get them?
+ Basically, there are 2 possibilities (when following these
+ instructions: you will need to be root on your FreeBSD system to do
+ the necessary installation steps).
+
+ If you have access to a Linux system, see what shared libraries
+ it needs, and copy them to your FreeBSD system. Example: you have
+ just ftp'ed the Linux binary of Doom. Put it on the Linux
+ system you have access to, and check which shared libraries it
+ needs by running `ldd linuxxdoom':
+
+
+
+ % ldd linuxxdoom
+ libXt.so.3 (DLL Jump 3.1) => /usr/X11/lib/libXt.so.3.1.0
+ libX11.so.3 (DLL Jump 3.1) => /usr/X11/lib/libX11.so.3.1.0
+ libc.so.4 (DLL Jump 4.5pl26) => /lib/libc.so.4.6.29
+
+
+
+ You would need to get all the files from the last column, and
+ put them under /compat/linux, with the names in the first column
+ as symbolic links pointing to them. This means you eventually have
+ these files on your FreeBSD system:
+
+ /compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libXt.so.3.1.0
+ /compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libXt.so.3 -> libXt.so.3.1.0
+ /compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libX11.so.3.1.0
+ /compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libX11.so.3 -> libX11.so.3.1.0
+ /compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4.6.29
+ /compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4 -> libc.so.4.6.29
+
+
+
+ Note that if you already have a Linux shared library with a
+ matching major revision number to the first column of the 'ldd'
+ output, you will not need to copy the file named in the last column to
+ your system, the one you already have should work. It is advisable to
+ copy the shared library anyway if it is a newer version, though. You
+ can remove the old one, as long as you make the symbolic link point to
+ the new one. So, if you have these libraries on your system:
+
+ /compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4.6.27
+ /compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4 -> libc.so.4.6.27
+
+
+
+ and you find a new binary that claims to require a later version
+ according to the output of ldd:
+
+ libc.so.4 (DLL Jump 4.5pl26) -> libc.so.4.6.29
+
+
+
+ If it is only one or two versions out of date in the in the trailing
+ digit then do not worry about copying /lib/libc.so.4.6.29 too, because
+ the program should work fine with the slightly older version.
+ However, if you like you can decide to replace the libc.so anyway, and
+ that should leave you with:
+
+ /compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4.6.29
+ /compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4 -> libc.so.4.6.29
+
+
+
+ Please note that the symbolic link mechanism is only
+ needed for Linux binaries. The FreeBSD runtime linker takes care of
+ looking for matching major revision numbers itself and you do not need to
+ worry about it.
+
+
+
+
+ Configuring the ld.so -- for FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE only
+
+ This section applies only to FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE and later. Those running
+ 2.1-STABLE should skip this section.
+
+ Finally, if you run FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE you must make sure that you
+ have the Linux runtime linker and its config files on your system. You
+ should copy these files from the Linux system to their appropriate
+ place on your FreeBSD system (to the /compat/linux tree):
+
+ /compat/linux/lib/ld.so
+ /compat/linux/etc/ld.so.config
+
+
+
+ If you do not have access to a Linux system, you should get the
+ extra files you need from various ftp sites. Information on where to
+ look for the various files is appended below. For now, let us assume
+ you know where to get the files.
+
+ Retrieve the following files (all from the same ftp site to avoid any
+ version mismatches), and install them under /compat/linux
+ (i.e. /foo/bar is installed as /compat/linux/foo/bar):
+
+ /sbin/ldconfig
+ /usr/bin/ldd
+ /lib/libc.so.x.y.z
+ /lib/ld.so
+
+
+
+ ldconfig and ldd do not necessarily need to be under /compat/linux;
+ you can install them elsewhere in the system too. Just make sure they
+ do not conflict with their FreeBSD counterparts. A good idea would be
+ to install them in /usr/local/bin as ldconfig-linux and ldd-linux.
+
+ Create the file /compat/linux/etc/ld.so.conf, containing the
+ directories in which the Linux runtime linker should look
+ for shared libs. It is a plain text file, containing a directory
+ name on each line. /lib and /usr/lib are standard, you could
+ add the following:
+
+ /usr/X11/lib
+ /usr/local/lib
+
+
+
+ When a linux binary opens a library such as /lib/libc.so the
+ emulator maps the name to /compat/linux/lib/libc.so internally. All
+ linux libraries should be installed under /compat/linux (e.g.
+ /compat/linux/lib/libc.so, /compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libX11.so, etc.)
+ in order for the emulator to find them.
+
+ Those running FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE should run the Linux ldconfig program.
+
+ % cd /compat/linux/lib
+ % /compat/linux/sbin/ldconfig
+
+
+
+ Ldconfig is statically linked, so it does not need any shared
+ libraries to run. It creates the file /compat/linux/etc/ld.so.cache
+ which contains the names of all the shared libraries and should be rerun
+ to recreate this file whenever you install additional shared
+ libraries.
+
+ On 2.1-STABLE do not install /compat/linux/etc/ld.so.cache or run
+ ldconfig; in 2.1-STABLE the syscalls are implemented
+ differently and ldconfig is not needed or used.
+
+ You should now be set up for Linux binaries which only need a
+ shared libc. You can test this by running the Linux ldd on
+ itself. Supposing that you have it installed as ldd-linux, it should
+ produce something like:
+
+ % ldd-linux `which ldd-linux`
+ libc.so.4 (DLL Jump 4.5pl26) => /lib/libc.so.4.6.29
+
+
+
+ This being done, you are ready to install new Linux binaries.
+ Whenever you install a new Linux program, you should check if it needs
+ shared libraries, and if so, whether you have them installed in the
+ /compat/linux tree. To do this, you run the Linux version ldd on the
+ new program, and watch its output. ldd (see also the manual page for
+ ldd(1)) will print a list of shared libraries that the program depends
+ on, in the form majorname (jumpversion) => fullname.
+
+ If it prints "not found" instead of fullname it means that you
+ need an extra library. The library needed is shown in majorname
+ and will be of the form libXXXX.so.N. You will need to find a
+ libXXXX.so.N.mm on a Linux ftp site, and install it on your
+ system. The XXXX (name) and N (major revision number) should match;
+ the minor number(s) mm are less important, though it is advised to
+ take the most recent version.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Configuring the host name resolver
+
+ If DNS does not work or you get the messages
+
+ resolv+: "bind" is an invalid keyword
+ resolv+: "hosts" is an invalid keyword
+
+
+
+ then you need to configure a /compat/linux/etc/host.conf file
+ containing:
+
+ order hosts, bind
+ multi on
+
+
+
+ where the order here specifies that /etc/hosts is searched first and
+ DNS is searched second. When /compat/linux/etc/host.conf is not
+ installed linux applications find FreeBSD's /etc/host.conf and
+ complain about the incompatible FreeBSD syntax. You should remove
+ `bind,' if you have not configured a name-server using the
+ /etc/resolv.conf file.
+
+ Lastly, those who run 2.1-STABLE need to set an the
+ RESOLV_HOST_CONF environment variable so that applications will know
+ how to search the host tables. If you run FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE, you can
+ skip this. For the /bin/csh shell use:
+
+ setenv RESOLV_HOST_CONF /compat/linux/etc/host.conf
+
+
+
+ For /bin/sh use:
+
+ RESOLV_HOST_CONF=/compat/linux/etc/host.conf; export RESOLV_HOST_CONF
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Finding the necessary files
+
+ Note: the information below is valid as of the time this document
+ was written, but certain details such as names of ftp sites,
+ directories and distribution names may have changed by the time you
+ read this.
+
+ Linux is distributed by several groups that make their own set
+ of binaries that they distribute. Each distribution has its own
+ name, like ``Slackware'' or ``Yggdrasil''. The distributions are
+ available on a lot of ftp sites. Sometimes the files are unpacked,
+ and you can get the individual files you need, but mostly they
+ are stored in distribution sets, usually consisting of subdirectories
+ with gzipped tar files in them. The primary ftp sites for the
+ distributions are:
+ sunsite.unc.edu:/pub/Linux/distributions
+ tsx-11.mit.edu:/pub/linux/distributions
+
+
+ Some European mirrors:
+ ftp.luth.se:/pub/linux/distributions
+ ftp.demon.co.uk:/pub/linux/distributions
+ src.doc.ic.ac.uk:/packages/linux/distributions
+
+
+ For simplicity, let us concentrate on Slackware here. This
+ distribution consists of a number of subdirectories, containing
+ separate packages. Normally, they are controlled by an install
+ program, but you can retrieve files "by hand" too. First of all, you
+ will need to look in the "contents" subdir of the distribution. You
+ will find a lot of small text files here describing the contents of the
+ separate packages. The fastest way to look something up is to retrieve
+ all the files in the contents subdirectory, and grep through them for
+ the file you need. Here is an example of a list of files that you
+ might need, and in which contents-file you will find it by grepping
+ through them:
+
+
+
+ So, in this case, you will need the packages ldso, shlibs, xf_lib
+ and oldlibs. In each of the contents-files for these packages, look
+ for a line saying ``PACKAGE LOCATION'', it will tell you on which `disk'
+ the package is, in our case it will tell us in which subdirectory we
+ need to look. For our example, we would find the following locations:
+
+ Note: The 8237 does allow two channels to
+ be connected together to allow memory-to-memory DMA
+ operations in a non-``fly-by'' mode, but nobody in the PC
+ industry uses this scarce resource this way since it is
+ faster to move data between memory locations using the
+ CPU.
+
+
+
+ In the PC architecture, each DMA channel is normally
+ activated only when the hardware that uses a given DMA channel
+ requests a transfer by asserting the DRQ line for that
+ channel.
+
+
+
+ A Sample DMA transfer
+
+ Here is an example of the steps that occur to cause and perform
+ a DMA transfer. In this example, the floppy disk
+ controller (FDC) has just read a byte from a diskette and
+ wants the DMA to place it in memory at location
+ 0x00123456. The process begins by the FDC asserting the
+ DRQ2 signal (the DRQ line for DMA channel 2) to alert the DMA
+ controller.
+
+ The DMA controller will note that the DRQ2 signal is asserted.
+ The DMA controller will then make sure that DMA channel 2
+ has been programmed and is unmasked (enabled). The DMA controller
+ also makes sure that none of the other DMA channels are active
+ or want to be active and have a higher priority. Once these checks
+ are complete, the DMA asks the CPU to release the bus so that
+ the DMA may use the bus. The DMA requests the bus by
+ asserting the HRQ signal which goes to the CPU.
+
+ The CPU detects the HRQ signal, and will complete
+ executing the current instruction. Once the processor
+ has reached a state where it can release the bus, it
+ will. Now all of the signals normally generated by the
+ CPU (-MEMR, -MEMW, -IOR, -IOW and a few others) are
+ placed in a tri-stated condition (neither high or low)
+ and then the CPU asserts the HLDA signal which tells the
+ DMA controller that it is now in charge of the bus.
+
+ Depending on the processor, the CPU may be able to
+ execute a few additional instructions now that it no
+ longer has the bus, but the CPU will eventually have to
+ wait when it reaches an instruction that must read
+ something from memory that is not in the internal
+ processor cache or pipeline.
+
+ Now that the DMA ``is in charge'', the DMA activates its
+ -MEMR, -MEMW, -IOR, -IOW output signals, and the address
+ outputs from the DMA are set to 0x3456, which will be
+ used to direct the byte that is about to transferred to a
+ specific memory location.
+
+ The DMA will then let the device that requested the DMA
+ transfer know that the transfer is commencing. This is
+ done by asserting the -DACK signal, or in the case of the
+ floppy disk controller, -DACK2 is asserted.
+
+ The floppy disk controller is now responsible for placing
+ the byte to be transferred on the bus Data lines. Unless
+ the floppy controller needs more time to get the data
+ byte on the bus (and if the peripheral does need more time it
+ alerts the DMA via the READY signal), the DMA will wait
+ one DMA clock, and then de-assert the -MEMW and -IOR
+ signals so that the memory will latch and store the byte
+ that was on the bus, and the FDC will know that the byte
+ has been transferred.
+
+ Since the DMA cycle only transfers a single byte at a
+ time, the FDC now drops the DRQ2 signal, so the DMA knows that
+ it is no longer needed. The DMA will de-assert the
+ -DACK2 signal, so that the FDC knows it must stop placing
+ data on the bus.
+
+ The DMA will now check to see if any of the other DMA
+ channels have any work to do. If none of the channels
+ have their DRQ lines asserted, the DMA controller has
+ completed its work and will now tri-state the -MEMR,
+ -MEMW, -IOR, -IOW and address signals.
+
+ Finally, the DMA will de-assert the HRQ signal. The CPU
+ sees this, and de-asserts the HOLDA signal. Now the CPU
+ activates its -MEMR, -MEMW, -IOR, -IOW and address lines,
+ and it resumes executing instructions and accessing main
+ memory and the peripherals.
+
+ For a typical floppy disk sector, the above process is
+ repeated 512 times, once for each byte. Each time a byte
+ is transferred, the address register in the DMA is
+ incremented and the counter in the DMA that shows how many
+ bytes are to be transferred is decremented.
+
+ When the counter reaches zero, the DMA asserts the EOP
+ signal, which indicates that the counter has reached zero
+ and no more data will be transferred until the DMA
+ controller is reprogrammed by the CPU. This event is
+ also called the Terminal Count (TC). There is only one
+ EOP signal, and since only DMA channel can be active at
+ any instant, the DMA channel that is currently active must
+ be the DMA channel that just completed its task.
+
+ If a peripheral wants to generate an interrupt when the
+ transfer of a buffer is complete, it can test for its
+ -DACKn signal and the EOP signal both being asserted at
+ the same time. When that happens, it means the DMA will not
+ transfer any more information for that peripheral without
+ intervention by the CPU. The peripheral can then assert
+ one of the interrupt signals to get the processors'
+ attention. In the PC architecture, the DMA chip itself is not
+ capable of generating an interrupt. The peripheral and its
+ associated hardware is responsible for generating any
+ interrupt that occurs. Subsequently, it is possible to have
+ a peripheral that uses DMA but does not use interrupts.
+
+ It is important to understand that although the CPU
+ always releases the bus to the DMA when the DMA makes the
+ request, this action is invisible to both applications
+ and the operating systems, except for slight changes in
+ the amount of time the processor takes to execute
+ instructions when the DMA is active. Subsequently, the
+ processor must poll the peripheral, poll the registers in
+ the DMA chip, or receive an interrupt from the peripheral
+ to know for certain when a DMA transfer has completed.
+
+
+
+
+ DMA Page Registers and 16Meg address space limitations
+
+ You may have noticed earlier that instead of the DMA
+ setting the address lines to 0x00123456 as we said
+ earlier, the DMA only set 0x3456. The reason for this
+ takes a bit of explaining.
+
+ When the original IBM PC was designed, IBM elected to use
+ both DMA and interrupt controller chips that were
+ designed for use with the 8085, an 8-bit processor with
+ an address space of 16 bits (64K). Since the IBM PC
+ supported more than 64K of memory, something had to be
+ done to allow the DMA to read or write memory locations
+ above the 64K mark. What IBM did to solve this problem
+ was to add an external data latch for each DMA channel that
+ holds the upper bits of the address to be read to or written from.
+ Whenever a DMA channel is active, the contents of that
+ latch are written to the address bus and kept there until
+ the DMA operation for the channel ends. IBM called these latches
+ ``Page Registers''.
+
+ So for our example above, the DMA would put the 0x3456
+ part of the address on the bus, and the Page Register for
+ DMA channel 2 would put 0x0012xxxx on the bus. Together,
+ these two values form the complete address in memory that
+ is to be accessed.
+
+ Because the Page Register latch is independent of the DMA
+ chip, the area of memory to be read or written must not
+ span a 64K physical boundary. For example, if the DMA accesses
+ memory location 0xffff, after that transfer the DMA will then
+ increment the address register and the DMA will access the next
+ byte at location 0x0000, not 0x10000. The results of letting
+ this happen are probably not intended.
+
+
+
+ Note: ``Physical'' 64K boundaries should
+ not be confused with 8086-mode 64K ``Segments'', which
+ are created by mathematically adding a segment register with an
+ offset register. Page Registers have no address overlap and
+ are mathematically OR-ed together.
+
+
+
+ To further complicate matters, the external DMA address
+ latches on the PC/AT hold only eight bits, so that gives
+ us 8+16=24 bits, which means that the DMA can only point
+ at memory locations between 0 and 16Meg. For newer
+ computers that allow more than 16Meg of memory, the standard
+ PC-compatible DMA cannot access memory locations above 16Meg.
+
+ To get around this restriction, operating systems will
+ reserve a RAM buffer in an area below 16Meg that also does not
+ span a physical 64K boundary. Then the DMA will be
+ programmed to transfer data from the peripheral and into that
+ buffer. Once the DMA has moved the data into this buffer,
+ the operating system will then copy the data from the buffer
+ to the address where the data is really supposed to be stored.
+
+ When writing data from an address above 16Meg to a
+ DMA-based peripheral, the data must be first copied from
+ where it resides into a buffer located below 16Meg, and
+ then the DMA can copy the data from the buffer to the
+ hardware. In FreeBSD, these reserved buffers are called
+ ``Bounce Buffers''. In the MS-DOS world, they are
+ sometimes called ``Smart Buffers''.
+
+
+
+ Note: A new implementation of the 8237, called the
+ 82374, allows 16 bits of page register to be specified, allows
+ access to the entire 32 bit address space, without the use of
+ bounce buffers.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ DMA Operational Modes and Settings
+
+ The 8237 DMA can be operated in several modes. The main
+ ones are:
+
+
+
+ Single
+
+ A single byte (or word) is transferred.
+ The DMA must release and re-acquire the bus for each
+ additional byte. This is commonly-used by devices
+ that cannot transfer the entire block of data
+ immediately. The peripheral will request the DMA
+ each time it is ready for another transfer.
+
+ The standard PC-compatible floppy disk controller (NEC 765)
+ only has a one-byte buffer, so it uses this mode.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Block/Demand
+
+
+ Once the DMA acquires the
+ system bus, an entire block of data is transferred,
+ up to a maximum of 64K. If the peripheral needs
+ additional time, it can assert the READY signal to
+ suspend the transfer briefly. READY should not be
+ used excessively, and for slow peripheral transfers,
+ the Single Transfer Mode should be used instead.
+
+ The difference between Block and Demand is that once a
+ Block transfer is started, it runs until the transfer
+ count reaches zero. DRQ only needs to be asserted
+ until -DACK is asserted. Demand Mode will transfer
+ one more bytes until DRQ is de-asserted, at which point the DMA
+ suspends the transfer and releases the bus back to the CPU.
+ When DRQ is asserted later, the transfer resumes where
+ it was suspended.
+
+ Older hard disk controllers used Demand Mode until
+ CPU speeds increased to the point that it was more
+ efficient to transfer the data using the CPU, particularly
+ if the memory locations used in the transfer were above the
+ 16Meg mark.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Cascade
+
+
+ This mechanism allows a DMA channel
+ to request the bus, but then the attached peripheral
+ device is responsible for placing the addressing
+ information on the bus instead of the DMA. This is also
+ used to implement a technique known as ``Bus Mastering''.
+
+ When a DMA channel in Cascade Mode receives control
+ of the bus, the DMA does not place addresses and I/O
+ control signals on the bus like the DMA normally does
+ when it is active. Instead, the DMA only asserts the
+ -DACK signal for the active DMA channel.
+
+ At this point it is up to the peripheral connected to that
+ DMA channel to provide address and bus control signals.
+ The peripheral has complete control over the system
+ bus, and can do reads and/or writes to any address
+ below 16Meg. When the peripheral is finished with
+ the bus, it de-asserts the DRQ line, and the DMA
+ controller can then return control to the CPU or to some
+ other DMA channel.
+
+ Cascade Mode can be used to chain multiple DMA controllers
+ together, and this is exactly what DMA Channel 4 is used
+ for in the PC architecture. When a peripheral requests
+ the bus on DMA channels 0, 1, 2 or 3, the slave DMA
+ controller asserts HLDREQ, but this wire is actually connected
+ to DRQ4 on the primary DMA controller instead of to the CPU.
+ The primary DMA controller, thinking it has work to do on
+ Channel 4, requests the bus from the CPU using HLDREQ signal.
+ Once the CPU grants the bus to the primary DMA controller,
+ -DACK4 is asserted, and that wire is actually connected to
+ the HLDA signal on the slave DMA controller. The slave DMA
+ controller then transfers data for the DMA channel that
+ requested it (0, 1, 2 or 3), or the slave DMA may grant the bus
+ to a peripheral that wants to perform its own bus-mastering,
+ such as a SCSI controller.
+
+ Because of this wiring arrangement, only DMA channels
+ 0, 1, 2, 3, 5, 6 and 7 are usable with peripherals on PC/AT
+ systems.
+
+
+
+ Note: DMA channel 0 was reserved for
+ refresh operations in early IBM PC computers, but
+ is generally available for use by peripherals in
+ modern systems.
+
+
+
+ When a peripheral is performing Bus Mastering, it is
+ important that the peripheral transmit data to or
+ from memory constantly while it holds the system bus.
+ If the peripheral cannot do this, it must release the
+ bus frequently so that the system can perform refresh
+ operations on main memory.
+
+ The Dynamic RAM used in all PCs for main memory must be
+ accessed frequently to keep the bits stored in the
+ components "charged". Dynamic RAM essentially consists
+ of millions of capacitors with each one holding one bit
+ of data. These capacitors are charged with power to
+ represent a "1" or drained to represent a "0". Because
+ all capacitors leak, power must be added at regular intervals
+ to keep the "1" values intact. The RAM chips actually handle
+ the task of pumping power back into all of the appropriate
+ locations in RAM, but they must be told when to do it by
+ the rest of the computer so that the refresh activity won't
+ interfere with the computer wanting to access RAM normally.
+ If the computer is unable to refresh memory, the contents
+ of memory will become corrupted in just a few milliseconds.
+
+ Since memory read and write cycles ``count'' as refresh
+ cycles (a dynamic RAM refresh cycle is actually an incomplete
+ memory read cycle), as long as the peripheral
+ controller continues reading or writing data to
+ sequential memory locations, that action will refresh
+ all of memory.
+
+ Bus-mastering is found in some SCSI host interfaces and
+ other high-performance peripheral controllers.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Autoinitialize
+
+
+ This mode causes the DMA to
+ perform Byte, Block or Demand transfers, but when the
+ DMA transfer counter reaches zero, the counter and
+ address are set back to where they were when the DMA
+ channel was originally programmed. This means that
+ as long as the peripheral requests transfers, they will
+ be granted. It is up to the CPU to move new data
+ into the fixed buffer ahead of where the DMA is about
+ to transfer it when doing output operations, and read new
+ data out of the buffer behind where the DMA is writing
+ when doing input operations.
+
+ This technique is frequently used on audio devices that
+ have small or no hardware ``sample'' buffers. There is
+ additional CPU overhead to manage this ``circular'' buffer,
+ but in some cases this may be the only way to eliminate the
+ latency that occurs when the DMA counter reaches zero
+ and the DMA stops transfers until it is reprogrammed.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Programming the DMA
+
+ The DMA channel that is to be programmed should always
+ be ``masked'' before loading any settings. This is because
+ the hardware might unexpectedly assert the DRQ for that channel,
+ and the DMA might respond, even though not all of the parameters
+ have been loaded or updated.
+
+ Once masked, the host must specify the direction of the
+ transfer (memory-to-I/O or I/O-to-memory), what mode of
+ DMA operation is to be used for the transfer (Single,
+ Block, Demand, Cascade, etc), and finally the address and
+ length of the transfer are loaded. The length that is
+ loaded is one less than the amount you expect the DMA to
+ transfer. The LSB and MSB of the address and length are
+ written to the same 8-bit I/O port, so another port must
+ be written to first to guarantee that the DMA accepts the
+ first byte as the LSB and the second byte as the MSB of
+ the length and address.
+
+ Then, be sure to update the Page Register, which is
+ external to the DMA and is accessed through a different
+ set of I/O ports.
+
+ Once all the settings are ready, the DMA channel can be
+ un-masked. That DMA channel is now considered to be
+ ``armed'', and will respond when the DRQ line for that channel
+ is asserted.
+
+ Refer to a hardware data book for precise programming
+ details for the 8237. You will also need to refer to the
+ I/O port map for the PC system, which describes where
+ the DMA and Page Register ports are located. A complete
+ port map table is located below.
+
+
+
+
+ DMA Port Map
+
+ All systems based on the IBM-PC and PC/AT have the DMA
+ hardware located at the same I/O ports. The complete
+ list is provided below. Ports assigned to DMA Controller
+ #2 are undefined on non-AT designs.
+
+
+
+ 0x00 - 0x1f DMA Controller #1 (Channels 0, 1, 2 and 3)
+
+ DMA Address and Count Registers
+
+
+ 0x00 write Channel 0 starting address
+ 0x00 read Channel 0 current address
+ 0x01 write Channel 0 starting word count
+ 0x01 read Channel 0 remaining word count
+
+ 0x02 write Channel 1 starting address
+ 0x02 read Channel 1 current address
+ 0x03 write Channel 1 starting word count
+ 0x03 read Channel 1 remaining word count
+
+ 0x04 write Channel 2 starting address
+ 0x04 read Channel 2 current address
+ 0x05 write Channel 2 starting word count
+ 0x05 read Channel 2 remaining word count
+
+ 0x06 write Channel 3 starting address
+ 0x06 read Channel 3 current address
+ 0x07 write Channel 3 starting word count
+ 0x07 read Channel 3 remaining word count
+
+
+ DMA Command Registers
+
+
+ 0x08 write Command Register
+ 0x08 read Status Register
+ 0x09 write Request Register
+ 0x09 read -
+ 0x0a write Single Mask Register Bit
+ 0x0a read -
+ 0x0b write Mode Register
+ 0x0b read -
+ 0x0c write Clear LSB/MSB Flip-Flop
+ 0x0c read -
+ 0x0d write Master Clear/Reset
+ 0x0d read Temporary Register (not available on newer versions)
+ 0x0e write Clear Mask Register
+ 0x0e read -
+ 0x0f write Write All Mask Register Bits
+ 0x0f read Read All Mask Register Bits (only in Intel 82374)
+
+
+
+
+
+ 0xc0 - 0xdf DMA Controller #2 (Channels 4, 5, 6 and 7)
+
+ DMA Address and Count Registers
+
+
+ 0xc0 write Channel 4 starting address
+ 0xc0 read Channel 4 current address
+ 0xc2 write Channel 4 starting word count
+ 0xc2 read Channel 4 remaining word count
+
+ 0xc4 write Channel 5 starting address
+ 0xc4 read Channel 5 current address
+ 0xc6 write Channel 5 starting word count
+ 0xc6 read Channel 5 remaining word count
+
+ 0xc8 write Channel 6 starting address
+ 0xc8 read Channel 6 current address
+ 0xca write Channel 6 starting word count
+ 0xca read Channel 6 remaining word count
+
+ 0xcc write Channel 7 starting address
+ 0xcc read Channel 7 current address
+ 0xce write Channel 7 starting word count
+ 0xce read Channel 7 remaining word count
+
+
+ DMA Command Registers
+
+
+ 0xd0 write Command Register
+ 0xd0 read Status Register
+ 0xd2 write Request Register
+ 0xd2 read -
+ 0xd4 write Single Mask Register Bit
+ 0xd4 read -
+ 0xd6 write Mode Register
+ 0xd6 read -
+ 0xd8 write Clear LSB/MSB Flip-Flop
+ 0xd8 read -
+ 0xda write Master Clear/Reset
+ 0xda read Temporary Register (not present in Intel 82374)
+ 0xdc write Clear Mask Register
+ 0xdc read -
+ 0xde write Write All Mask Register Bits
+ 0xdf read Read All Mask Register Bits (only in Intel 82374)
+
+
+
+
+
+ 0x80 - 0x9f DMA Page Registers
+
+
+ 0x87 r/w Channel 0 Low byte (23-16) page Register
+ 0x83 r/w Channel 1 Low byte (23-16) page Register
+ 0x81 r/w Channel 2 Low byte (23-16) page Register
+ 0x82 r/w Channel 3 Low byte (23-16) page Register
+
+ 0x8b r/w Channel 5 Low byte (23-16) page Register
+ 0x89 r/w Channel 6 Low byte (23-16) page Register
+ 0x8a r/w Channel 7 Low byte (23-16) page Register
+ 0x8f r/w Low byte page Refresh
+
+
+
+
+
+ 0x400 - 0x4ff 82374 Enhanced DMA Registers
+
+ The Intel 82374 EISA System Component (ESC) was introduced in early 1996
+ and includes a DMA controller that provides a superset of 8237 functionality
+ as well as other PC-compatible core peripheral components in a single
+ package. This chip is targeted at both EISA and PCI platforms, and provides
+ modern DMA features like scatter-gather, ring buffers as well as direct
+ access by the system DMA to all 32 bits of address space.
+
+ If these features are used, code should also be included to provide similar
+ functionality in the previous 16 years worth of PC-compatible computers.
+ For compatibility reasons, some of the 82374 registers must be programmed
+ after programming the traditional 8237 registers for each
+ transfer. Writing to a traditional 8237 register forces the contents
+ of some of the 82374 enhanced registers to zero to provide backward
+ software compatibility.
+
+
+ 0x401 r/w Channel 0 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
+ 0x403 r/w Channel 1 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
+ 0x405 r/w Channel 2 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
+ 0x407 r/w Channel 3 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
+ 0x4c6 r/w Channel 5 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
+ 0x4ca r/w Channel 6 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
+ 0x4ce r/w Channel 7 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
+
+ 0x487 r/w Channel 0 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
+ 0x483 r/w Channel 1 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
+ 0x481 r/w Channel 2 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
+ 0x482 r/w Channel 3 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
+ 0x48b r/w Channel 5 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
+ 0x489 r/w Channel 6 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
+ 0x48a r/w Channel 6 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
+ 0x48f r/w High byte page Refresh
+
+ 0x4e0 r/w Channel 0 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
+ 0x4e1 r/w Channel 0 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
+ 0x4e2 r/w Channel 0 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
+ 0x4e4 r/w Channel 1 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
+ 0x4e5 r/w Channel 1 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
+ 0x4e6 r/w Channel 1 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
+ 0x4e8 r/w Channel 2 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
+ 0x4e9 r/w Channel 2 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
+ 0x4ea r/w Channel 2 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
+ 0x4ec r/w Channel 3 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
+ 0x4ed r/w Channel 3 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
+ 0x4ee r/w Channel 3 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
+ 0x4f4 r/w Channel 5 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
+ 0x4f5 r/w Channel 5 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
+ 0x4f6 r/w Channel 5 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
+ 0x4f8 r/w Channel 6 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
+ 0x4f9 r/w Channel 6 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
+ 0x4fa r/w Channel 6 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
+ 0x4fc r/w Channel 7 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
+ 0x4fd r/w Channel 7 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
+ 0x4fe r/w Channel 7 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
+
+ 0x40a write Channels 0-3 Chaining Mode Register
+ 0x40a read Channel Interrupt Status Register
+ 0x4d4 write Channels 4-7 Chaining Mode Register
+ 0x4d4 read Chaining Mode Status
+ 0x40c read Chain Buffer Expiration Control Register
+
+ 0x410 write Channel 0 Scatter-Gather Command Register
+ 0x411 write Channel 1 Scatter-Gather Command Register
+ 0x412 write Channel 2 Scatter-Gather Command Register
+ 0x413 write Channel 3 Scatter-Gather Command Register
+ 0x415 write Channel 5 Scatter-Gather Command Register
+ 0x416 write Channel 6 Scatter-Gather Command Register
+ 0x417 write Channel 7 Scatter-Gather Command Register
+
+ 0x418 read Channel 0 Scatter-Gather Status Register
+ 0x419 read Channel 1 Scatter-Gather Status Register
+ 0x41a read Channel 2 Scatter-Gather Status Register
+ 0x41b read Channel 3 Scatter-Gather Status Register
+ 0x41d read Channel 5 Scatter-Gather Status Register
+ 0x41e read Channel 5 Scatter-Gather Status Register
+ 0x41f read Channel 7 Scatter-Gather Status Register
+
+ 0x420-0x423 r/w Channel 0 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
+ 0x424-0x427 r/w Channel 1 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
+ 0x428-0x42b r/w Channel 2 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
+ 0x42c-0x42f r/w Channel 3 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
+ 0x434-0x437 r/w Channel 5 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
+ 0x438-0x43b r/w Channel 6 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
+ 0x43c-0x43f r/w Channel 7 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Appendices
+
+
+
+ Obtaining FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ CD-ROM Publishers
+
+ FreeBSD is available on CD-ROM from Walnut Creek CDROM:
+
+ Walnut Creek CDROM
+ 4041 Pike Lane, Suite F
+ Concord CA 94520 USA
+ Phone: +1 925 674-0783
+ Fax: +1 925 674-0821
+ Email: info@cdrom.com
+ WWW: http://www.cdrom.com/
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FTP Sites
+
+ The official sources for FreeBSD are available via anonymous FTP from:
+
+ ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD.
+
+
+
+ Additionally, FreeBSD is available via anonymous FTP from the
+ following mirror sites. If you choose to obtain FreeBSD via
+ anonymous FTP, please try to use a site near you.
+
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ .
+
+
+
+ Argentina
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.ar.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Australia
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.au.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp2.au.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp3.au.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp4.au.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Brazil
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp2.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp3.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp4.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp5.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp6.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp7.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Canada
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.ca.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Czech Republic
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://sunsite.mff.cuni.cz/OS/FreeBSD
+ Contact: jj@sunsite.mff.cuni.cz.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Denmark
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.dk.freeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Estonia
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.ee.freebsd.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Finland
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.fi.freebsd.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ France
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.ibp.fr/pub/FreeBSD
+ Contact: Remy.Card@ibp.fr.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Germany
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.de.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp2.de.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp3.de.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp4.de.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp5.de.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp6.de.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp7.de.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Hong Kong
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.hk.super.net/pub/FreeBSD
+ Contact: ftp-admin@HK.Super.NET.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Ireland
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.ie.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Israel
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.il.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp2.il.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Japan
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.jp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp2.jp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp3.jp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp4.jp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp5.jp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp6.jp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Korea
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.kr.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp2.kr.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Netherlands
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.nl.freebsd.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Poland
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.pl.freebsd.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Portugal
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.pt.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp2.pt.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Russia
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.ru.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp2.ru.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp3.ru.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ South Africa
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.za.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp2.za.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp3.za.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Slovenia
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.si.freebsd.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Sweden
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.se.freebsd.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Taiwan
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.tw.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp2.tw.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp3.tw.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Thailand
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.nectec.or.th/pub/FreeBSD
+ Contact: ftpadmin@ftp.nectec.or.th.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Ukraine
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.ua.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+ Contact: archer@lucky.net.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ UK
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.uk.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp2.uk.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp3.uk.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp4.uk.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ USA
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp2.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp3.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp4.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp5.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp6.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The latest versions of export-restricted code for FreeBSD (2.0C or later)
+ (eBones and secure) are 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
+
+ Hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.internat.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp2.internat.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Brazil
+
+
+ Hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Finland
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://nic.funet.fi/pub/unix/FreeBSD/eurocrypt
+ Contact: count@nic.funet.fi.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ CTM Sites
+
+ /FreeBSD is available via anonymous FTP from the
+ following mirror sites. If you choose to obtain CTM via
+ anonymous FTP, please try to use a site near you.
+
+ In case of problems, please contact &a.phk;.
+
+
+
+ California, Bay Area, official source
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CTM
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Germany, Trier
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.uni-trier.de/pub/unix/systems/BSD/FreeBSD/CTM
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ South Africa, backup server for old deltas
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.internat.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CTM
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Taiwan/R.O.C, Chiayi
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ctm.tw.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CTM
+
+
+
+ ftp://ctm2.tw.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CTM
+
+
+
+ ftp://ctm3.tw.freebsd.org/pub/freebsd/CTM
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ If you did not find a mirror near to you or the mirror is incomplete,
+ try
+ FTP search at
+ http://ftpsearch.ntnu.no/ftpsearch.
+ FTP search is a great free archie server in Trondheim, Norway.
+
+
+
+
+ CVSup Sites
+
+ servers for FreeBSD are running at
+ the following sites:
+
+
+
+ Argentina
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.ar.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Australia
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.au.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Brazil
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.br.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Canada
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.ca.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Estonia
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.ee.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Finland
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.fi.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Germany
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.de.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+ cvsup2.de.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+ cvsup3.de.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Japan
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.jp.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+ cvsup2.jp.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Netherlands
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.nl.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Norway
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.no.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Russia
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.ru.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ South Africa
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.za.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+ cvsup2.za.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Taiwan
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.tw.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Ukraine
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup2.ua.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ United Kingdom
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.uk.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ USA
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+ cvsup2.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+ cvsup3.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The export-restricted code for FreeBSD (eBones and secure) is
+ available via CVSup at the following international repository.
+ Please use this site to get the export-restricted code, if you are
+ outside the USA or Canada.
+
+
+
+ South Africa
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.internat.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The following CVSup site is especially designed for users. Unlike the other CVSup mirrors, it is kept
+ up-to-date by CTM. That means if you CVSup cvs-all with
+ release=cvs from this site, you get a version of the
+ repository (including the inevitable .ctm_status file)
+ which is suitable for being updated using the CTM cvs-cur
+ deltas. This allows users who track the entire cvs-all
+ tree to go from CVSup to CTM without having to rebuild their
+ repository from scratch using a fresh CTM base delta.
+
+ Please note that this special feature only works for the
+ cvs-all distribution with cvs as the release tag.
+ CVSupping any other distribution and/or release will get you the
+ specified distribution, but it will not be suitable for CTM updating.
+
+ Also please note that, because the current version of CTM does
+ not preserve the timestamps of files, the timestamps at this mirror
+ site are not the same as those at other mirror sites. Switching
+ between this site and other sites is not recommended. It will work
+ correctly, but will be somewhat inefficient.
+
+
+
+ Germany
+
+
+
+
+
+ ctm.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Bibliography
+
+ While the manual pages provide the definitive reference
+ for individual pieces of the FreeBSD operating system,
+ they are notorious for not illustrating how to put the
+ pieces together to make the whole operating system run
+ smoothly. For this, there is no substitute for a good
+ book on UNIX system administration and a good users'
+ manual.
+
+
+
+ Books & Magazines Specific to FreeBSD
+
+ International books & Magazines:
+
+
+
+
+
+ Using FreeBSD (in Chinese).
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD for PC 98'ers (in Japanese), published by SHUWA
+ System Co, LTD. ISBN 4-87966-468-5 C3055 P2900E.
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD (in Japanese), published by CUTT.
+ ISBN 4-906391-22-2 C3055 P2400E.
+
+
+
+ Complete Introduction to FreeBSD (in Japanese),
+ published by Shoeisha Co., Ltd. ISBN 4-88135-473-6 P3600E.
+
+
+
+ Personal UNIX Starter Kit FreeBSD (in Japanese),
+ published by ASCII. ISBN 4-7561-1733-3 P3000E.
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD Handbook (Japanese translation),
+ published by ASCII. ISBN 4-7561-1580-2 P3800E.
+
+
+
+
+
+ English language books & Magazines:
+
+
+
+
+
+ The Complete FreeBSD, published by Walnut Creek CDROM.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Users' Guides
+
+
+
+
+
+ Computer Systems Research Group, UC Berkeley.
+ 4.4BSD User's Reference Manual.
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1994.
+ ISBN 1-56592-075-9
+
+
+
+ Computer Systems Research Group, UC Berkeley.
+ 4.4BSD User's Supplementary Documents.
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1994.
+ ISBN 1-56592-076-7
+
+
+
+ UNIX in a Nutshell.
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1990.
+ ISBN 093717520X
+
+
+
+ Mui, Linda.
+ What You Need To Know When You Can't Find Your UNIX
+ System Administrator.
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1995.
+ ISBN 1-56592-104-6
+
+
+
+ Ohio State University has written
+ a UNIX Introductory Course which is available online
+ in HTML and postscript format.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Administrators' Guides
+
+
+
+
+
+ Albitz, Paul and Liu, Cricket. DNS and
+ BIND, 2nd Ed.
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1997.
+ ISBN 1-56592-236-0
+
+
+
+ Computer Systems Research Group, UC Berkeley.
+ 4.4BSD System Manager's Manual.
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1994.
+ ISBN 1-56592-080-5
+
+
+
+ Costales, Brian, et al.
+ Sendmail, 2nd Ed. O'Reilly &
+ Associates, Inc., 1997.
+ ISBN 1-56592-222-0
+
+
+
+ Frisch, Æleen. Essential System
+ Administration, 2nd Ed. O'Reilly &
+ Associates, Inc., 1995. ISBN 1-56592-127-5
+
+
+
+ Hunt, Craig. TCP/IP Network Administration.
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1992.
+ ISBN 0-937175-82-X
+
+
+
+ Nemeth, Evi. UNIX System Administration
+ Handbook. 2nd ed. Prentice Hall, 1995.
+ ISBN 0131510517
+
+
+
+ Stern, Hal Managing NFS and NIS
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1991.
+ ISBN 0-937175-75-7
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Programmers' Guides
+
+
+
+
+
+ Asente, Paul. X Window System
+ Toolkit. Digital Press.
+ ISBN 1-55558-051-3
+
+
+
+ Computer Systems Research Group, UC Berkeley.
+ 4.4BSD Programmer's Reference Manual.
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1994.
+ ISBN 1-56592-078-3
+
+
+
+ Computer Systems Research Group, UC Berkeley.
+ 4.4BSD Programmer's Supplementary Documents.
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1994.
+ ISBN 1-56592-079-1
+
+
+
+ Ellis, Margaret A. and Stroustrup,
+ Bjarne. The Annotated C++ Reference
+ Manual. Addison-Wesley, 1990.
+ ISBN 0-201-51459-1
+
+
+
+ Harbison, Samuel P. and Steele, Guy
+ L. Jr. C: A Reference Manual. 4rd ed. Prentice
+ Hall, 1995. ISBN 0-13-326224-3
+
+
+
+ Kernighan, Brian and Dennis M. Ritchie.
+ The C Programming Language..
+ PTR Prentice Hall, 1988.
+ ISBN 0-13-110362-9
+
+
+
+ Lehey, Greg.
+ Port UNIX Software.
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1995.
+ ISBN 1-56592-126-7
+
+
+
+ Plauger, P. J. The Standard C
+ Library. Prentice Hall, 1992.
+ ISBN 0-13-131509-9
+
+
+
+ Stevens, W. Richard. Advanced
+ Programming in the UNIX Environment.
+ Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1992
+ ISBN 0-201-56317-7
+
+
+
+ Stevens, W. Richard. UNIX Network
+ Programming. PTR Prentice Hall, 1990.
+ ISBN 0-13-949876-1
+
+
+
+ Wells, Bill. "Writing Serial Drivers for UNIX".
+ Dr. Dobb's Journal. 19(15), December
+ 1994. pp68-71, 97-99.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Operating System Internals
+
+
+
+
+
+ Andleigh, Prabhat K. UNIX System Architecture.
+ Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1990.
+ ISBN 0-13-949843-5
+
+
+
+ Jolitz, William. "Porting UNIX to the
+ 386". Dr. Dobb's Journal. January
+ 1991-July 1992.
+
+
+
+ Leffler, Samuel J., Marshall Kirk McKusick,
+ Michael J Karels and John Quarterman The Design and
+ Implementation of the 4.3BSD UNIX Operating
+ System. Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1989.
+ ISBN 0-201-06196-1
+
+
+
+ Leffler, Samuel J., Marshall Kirk McKusick,
+ The Design and Implementation of the 4.3BSD
+ UNIX Operating System: Answer Book.
+ Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1991.
+ ISBN 0-201-54629-9
+
+
+
+ McKusick, Marshall Kirk, Keith Bostic, Michael J Karels,
+ and John Quarterman. The Design and
+ Implementation of the 4.4BSD Operating
+ System. Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1996.
+ ISBN 0-201-54979-4
+
+
+
+ Stevens, W. Richard. TCP/IP Illustrated,
+ Volume 1: The Protocols.
+ Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1996.
+ ISBN 0-201-63346-9
+
+
+
+ Stevens, W. Richard. TCP/IP Illustrated,
+ Volume 3: TCP for Transactions, HTTP, NNTP
+ and the UNIX Domain Protocols.
+ Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1996.
+ ISBN 0-201-63495-3
+
+
+
+ Vahalia, Uresh. UNIX Internals -- The New Frontiers.
+ Prentice Hall, 1996.
+ ISBN 0-13-101908-2
+
+
+
+ Wright, Gary R. and W. Richard Stevens.
+ TCP/IP Illustrated, Volume 2:
+ The Implementation.
+ Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1995.
+ ISBN 0-201-63354-X
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Security Reference
+
+
+
+
+
+ Cheswick, William R. and Steven M. Bellovin.
+ Firewalls and Internal Security:
+ Repelling the Wily Hacker.
+ Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1995.
+ ISBN 0-201-63357-4
+
+
+
+ Garfinkel, Simson and Gene Spafford.
+ Practical UNIX Security. 2nd Ed.
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1996.
+ ISBN 1-56592-148-8
+
+
+
+ Garfinkel, Simson.
+ PGP Pretty Good Privacy
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1995.
+ ISBN 1-56592-098-8
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Hardware Reference
+
+
+
+
+
+ Anderson, Don and Tom Shanley.
+ Pentium Processor System Architecture.
+ 2nd ed. Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1995.
+ ISBN 0-201-40992-5
+
+
+
+ Ferraro, Richard F. Programmer's Guide
+ to the EGA, VGA, and Super VGA Cards.
+ 3rd ed. Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1995.
+ ISBN 0-201-62490-7
+
+
+
+ Shanley, Tom. 80486 System
+ Architecture. 3rd ed. Reading, Mass. :
+ Addison-Wesley, 1995. ISBN
+ 0-201-40994-1
+
+
+
+ Shanley, Tom. ISA System
+ Architecture. 3rd ed. Reading, Mass. :
+ Addison-Wesley, 1995.
+ ISBN 0-201-40996-8
+
+
+
+ Shanley, Tom. PCI System
+ Architecture. 3rd ed. Reading, Mass. :
+ Addison-Wesley, 1995. ISBN
+ 0-201-40993-3
+
+
+
+ Van Gilluwe, Frank. The Undocumented PC.
+ Reading, Mass: Addison-Wesley Pub. Co., 1994.
+ ISBN 0-201-62277-7
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ UNIX History
+
+
+
+
+
+ Lion, John Lion's Commentary on UNIX, 6th Ed.
+ With Source Code.
+ ITP Media Group, 1996.
+ ISBN 1573980137
+
+
+
+ Raymond, Eric s. The New Hacker's Dictonary,
+ 3rd edition. MIT Press, 1996.
+ ISBN 0-262-68092-0
+ Also known as the
+ Jargon File
+
+
+
+ Salus, Peter H. A quarter century of UNIX.
+ Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, Inc., 1994.
+ ISBN 0-201-54777-5
+
+
+
+ Simon Garfinkel, Daniel Weise, Steven Strassmann.
+ The UNIX-HATERS Handbook.
+ IDG Books Worldwide, Inc., 1994.
+ ISBN 1-56884-203-1
+
+
+
+ Don Libes, Sandy Ressler Life with UNIX - special
+ edition. Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1989.
+ ISBN 0-13-536657-7
+
+
+
+ The BSD family tree. 1997.
+ http://www.de.freebsd.org/de/ftp/unix-stammbaum
+ or local on a FreeBSD-current machine.
+
+
+
+ The BSD Release Announcements collection. 1997.
+ http://www.de.FreeBSD.ORG/de/ftp/releases/
+
+
+
+ Networked Computer Science Technical Reports Library.
+ http://www.ncstrl.org/
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Magazines and Journals
+
+
+
+
+
+ The C/C++ Users Journal. R&D Publications
+ Inc. ISSN 1075-2838
+
+
+
+ Sys Admin - The Journal for UNIX System
+ Administrators Miller Freeman, Inc., ISSN 1061-2688
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Resources on the Internet
+
+ Contributed by &a.jkh;.
+
+ The rapid pace of FreeBSD progress makes print media impractical as a
+ means of following the latest developments. Electronic resources are
+ the best, if not often the only, way stay informed of the latest advances.
+ Since FreeBSD is a volunteer effort, the user community itself also
+ generally serves as a `technical support department' of sorts, with
+ electronic mail and USENET news being the most effective way of reaching
+ that community.
+
+ The most important points of contact with the FreeBSD
+ user community are outlined below. If you are aware of other
+ resources not mentioned here, please send them to the &a.doc;so that they may also be included.
+
+
+
+ Mailing lists
+
+ Though many of the FreeBSD development members read USENET, we cannot
+ always guarantee that we will get to your questions in a timely fashion
+ (or at all) if you post them only to one of the comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.*
+ groups. By addressing your questions to the appropriate mailing list
+ you will reach both us and a concentrated FreeBSD audience, invariably
+ assuring a better (or at least faster) response.
+
+ The charters for the various lists are given at the bottom of this
+ document. Please read the charter before joining or sending
+ mail to any list. Most of our list subscribers now receive many hundreds
+ of FreeBSD related messages every day, and by setting down charters
+ and rules for proper use we are striving to keep the signal-to-noise ratio
+ of the lists high. To do less would see the mailing lists ultimately fail
+ as an effective communications medium for the project.
+
+ Archives are kept for all of the mailing lists and can be searched
+ using the FreeBSD World Wide Web server. The keyword searchable archive
+ offers an excellent way of finding answers to frequently asked
+ questions and should be consulted before posting a question.
+
+
+
+ List summary
+
+ General lists: The following are general lists which
+ anyone is free to join:
+ List Purpose
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------------
+ freebsd-announce Important events and project milestones
+ freebsd-bugs Bug reports
+ freebsd-chat Non-technical items related to the FreeBSD community
+ freebsd-current Discussion concerning the use of FreeBSD-current
+ freebsd-stable Discussion concerning the use of FreeBSD-stable
+ freebsd-isp Issues for Internet Service Providers using FreeBSD
+ freebsd-jobs FreeBSD employment and consulting opportunities
+ freebsd-questions User questions
+
+
+ Technical lists: The following lists are for technical discussion.
+ You should read the charter for each list carefully before joining or
+ sending mail to one as there are firm guidelines for their use and content.
+ List Purpose
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------------
+ freebsd-afs Porting AFS to FreeBSD
+ freebsd-alpha Porting FreeBSD to the Alpha
+ freebsd-doc The FreeBSD Documentation project
+ freebsd-emulation Emulation of other systems such as Linux/DOS/Windows
+ freebsd-fs Filesystems
+ freebsd-hackers General technical discussion
+ freebsd-hardware General discussion of hardware for running FreeBSD
+ freebsd-isdn ISDN developers
+ freebsd-java Java developers and people porting JDKs to FreeBSD
+ freebsd-mobile Discussions about mobile computing
+ freebsd-multimedia Multimedia discussion
+ freebsd-platforms Concerning ports to non-Intel architecture platforms
+ freebsd-ports Discussion of the ports collection
+ freebsd-scsi The SCSI subsystem
+ freebsd-security Security issues
+ freebsd-smp Design discussions for [A]Symmetric MultiProcessing
+ freebsd-sparc Porting FreeBSD to Sparc systems.
+
+
+ Limited lists: The following lists require approval from
+ core@FreeBSD.ORG to join,
+ though anyone is free to send messages to them which fall within the
+ scope of their charters. It is also a good idea establish a presence
+ in the technical lists before asking to join one of these limited lists.
+ List Purpose
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------------
+ freebsd-admin Administrative issues
+ freebsd-arch Architecture and design discussions
+ freebsd-core FreeBSD core team
+ freebsd-hubs People running mirror sites (infrastructural support)
+ freebsd-install Installation development
+ freebsd-security-notifications Security notifications
+ freebsd-user-groups User group coordination
+
+
+ CVS lists: The following lists are for people interested in
+ seeing the log messages for changes to various areas of the source tree.
+ They are Read-Only lists and should not have mail sent to them.
+
+
+ List name Source area Area Description (source for)
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------------
+ cvs-CVSROOT /usr/src/[A-Z]* Top level /usr/src file changes
+ cvs-all /usr/src All changes to the tree (superset)
+ cvs-bin /usr/src/bin System binaries
+ cvs-etc /usr/src/etc System files
+ cvs-games /usr/src/games Games
+ cvs-gnu /usr/src/gnu GPL'd utilities
+ cvs-include /usr/src/include Include files
+ cvs-kerberosIV /usr/src/kerberosIV Kerberos encryption code
+ cvs-lib /usr/src/lib System libraries
+ cvs-libexec /usr/src/libexec System binaries
+ cvs-ports /usr/ports Ported software
+ cvs-sbin /usr/src/sbin System binaries
+ cvs-share /usr/src/share System shared files
+ cvs-sys /usr/src/sys Kernel
+ cvs-usrbin /usr/src/usr.bin Use binaries
+ cvs-usrsbin /usr/src/usr.sbin System binaries
+
+
+
+
+
+ How to subscribe
+
+ All mailing lists live on FreeBSD.ORG, so to post to a
+ given list you simply mail to listname@FreeBSD.ORG. It
+ will then be redistributed to mailing list members world-wide.
+
+ To subscribe to a list, send mail to &a.majordomo; and include
+
+ subscribe <listname> [<optional address>]
+
+
+ In the body of your message. For example, to subscribe yourself to
+ freebsd-announce, you'd do:
+
+ % mail majordomo@FreeBSD.ORG
+ subscribe freebsd-announce
+ ^D
+
+
+ If you want to subscribe yourself under a different name, or submit a
+ subscription request for a local mailing list (note: this is more efficient
+ if you have several interested parties at one site, and highly appreciated by
+ us!), you would do something like:
+
+ % mail majordomo@FreeBSD.ORG
+ subscribe freebsd-announce local-announce@somesite.com
+ ^D
+
+
+ Finally, it is also possible to unsubscribe yourself from a list, get a
+ list of other list members or see the list of mailing lists again by
+ sending other types of control messages to majordomo. For a complete
+ list of available commands, do this:
+
+ % mail majordomo@FreeBSD.ORG
+ help
+ ^D
+
+
+ Again, we would like to request that you keep discussion in the technical mailing
+ lists on a technical track. If you are only interested in the "high points"
+ then it is suggested that you join freebsd-announce, which is intended only
+ for infrequent traffic.
+
+
+
+
+ List charters
+
+ AllFreeBSD mailing lists have certain basic rules
+ which must be adhered to by anyone using them. Failure to comply
+ with these guidelines will result in two (2) written warnings from the
+ FreeBSD Postmaster,
+ after which, on a third offense, the poster will removed from all
+ FreeBSD mailing lists and filtered from further posting to them.
+ We regret that such rules and measures are necessary at all, but
+ today's Internet is a pretty harsh environment, it would seem, and
+ many fail to appreciate just how fragile some of its mechanisms are.
+
+ Rules of the road:
+
+
+
+ The topic of any posting should adhere to the basic charter of the list
+ it is posted to, e.g. if the list is about technical issues then your
+ posting should contain technical discussion. Ongoing irrelevant chatter
+ or flaming only detracts from the value of the mailing list for everyone
+ on it and will not be tolerated. For free-form discussion on no
+ particular topic, the freebsd-chat mailing list is freely available and should
+ be used instead.
+
+
+
+ No posting should be made to more than 2 mailing lists, and only
+ to 2 when a clear and obvious need to post to both lists exists.
+ For most lists, there is already a great deal of subscriber overlap
+ and except for the most esoteric mixes (say "-stable & -scsi"), there
+ really is no reason to post to more than one list at a time.
+ If a message is sent to you in such a way that multiple mailing lists
+ appear on the Cc line then the cc line should also be trimmed before
+ sending it out again.
+ You are still responsible for your own cross-postings, no
+ matter who the originator might have been.
+
+
+
+ Personal attacks and profanity (in the context of an argument) are
+ not allowed, and that includes users and developers alike. Gross
+ breaches of netiquette, like excerpting or reposting private mail
+ when permission to do so was not and would not be forthcoming,
+ are frowned upon but not specifically enforced. However,
+ there are also very few cases where such content would fit within the
+ charter of a list and it would therefore probably rate a warning
+ (or ban) on that basis alone.
+
+
+
+ Advertising of non-FreeBSD related products or services is
+ strictly prohibited and will result in an immediate ban if it
+ is clear that the offender is advertising by spam.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Individual list charters:
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-AFS
+
+ Andrew File System
+ This list is for discussion on porting and using AFS from CMU/Transarc
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-ADMIN
+
+
+ Administrative issues
+ This list is purely for discussion of freebsd.org related issues
+ and to report problems or abuse of project resources. It is a closed
+ list, though anyone may report a problem (with our systems!) to it.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-ANNOUNCE
+
+
+ Important events / milestones
+ This is the mailing list for people interested only in occasional
+ announcements of significant freebsd events. This includes
+ announcements about snapshots and other releases. It contains
+ announcements of new FreeBSD capabilities. It may contain calls
+ for volunteers etc. This is a low volume, strictly moderated mailing list.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-ARCH
+
+
+ Architecture and design discussions
+ This is the mailing list for people discussing FreeBSD architectural
+ issues. It is a closed list, and not for general subscription.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-BUGS
+
+
+ Bug reports
+ This is the mailing list for reporting bugs in FreeBSD
+ Whenever possible, bugs should be submitted using the "send-pr(1)"
+ command or the WEB interface to it.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-CHAT
+
+
+ Non technical items related to the
+ FreeBSD community
+ This list contains the overflow from the other lists about
+ non-technical, social information. It includes discussion about
+ whether Jordan looks like a toon ferret or not, whether or not to
+ type in capitals, who is drinking too much coffee, where the best
+ beer is brewed, who is brewing beer in their basement, and so on.
+ Occasional announcements of important events (such as upcoming
+ parties, weddings, births, new jobs, etc) can be made to the
+ technical lists, but the follow ups should be directed to this
+ -chat list.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-CORE
+
+
+ FreeBSD core team
+ This is an internal mailing list for use by the core members.
+ Messages can be sent to it when a serious FreeBSD-related matter
+ requires arbitration or high-level scrutiny.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-CURRENT
+
+
+ Discussions about the use of
+ FreeBSD-current This is the mailing list for users
+ of freebsd-current. It includes warnings about new features
+ coming out in -current that will affect the users, and
+ instructions on steps that must be taken to remain -current.
+ Anyone running "current" must subscribe to this list.
+ This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
+ content is expected.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-CURRENT-DIGEST
+
+
+ Discussions about the use of
+ FreeBSD-current This is the digest version of the
+ freebsd-current mailing list. The digest consists of all
+ messages sent to freebsd-current bundled together and mailed out
+ as a single message. The average digest size is about 40kB.
+ This list is Read-Only and should not be posted to.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-STABLE
+
+
+ Discussions about the use of
+ FreeBSD-stable This is the mailing list for users
+ of freebsd-stable. It includes warnings about new features
+ coming out in -stable that will affect the users, and
+ instructions on steps that must be taken to remain -stable.
+ Anyone running ``stable'' should subscribe to this list.
+ This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
+ content is expected.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-DOC
+
+
+ Documentation project
+ This mailing list belongs to the FreeBSD Doc Project and is for
+ the discussion of documentation related issues and projects.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-FS
+
+
+ Filesystems
+ Discussions concerning FreeBSD filesystems.
+ This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
+ content is expected.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-ISDN
+
+
+ ISDN Communications
+ This is the mailing list for people discussing the development
+ of ISDN support for FreeBSD.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-JAVA
+
+
+ Java Development
+ This is the mailing list for people discussing the development of
+ significant Java applications for FreeBSD and the porting and maintenance
+ of JDKs.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-HACKERS
+
+
+ Technical discussions
+ This is a forum for technical discussions related to FreeBSD. This
+ is the primary technical mailing list. It
+ is for individuals actively working on FreeBSD, to bring up problems
+ or discuss alternative solutions. Individuals interested in
+ following the technical discussion are also welcome.
+ This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
+ content is expected.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-HACKERS-DIGEST
+
+
+ Technical
+ discussions This is the digest version of the
+ freebsd-hackers mailing list. The digest consists of all
+ messages sent to freebsd-hackers bundled together and mailed out
+ as a single message. The average digest size is about 40kB.
+ This list is Read-Only and should not be posted to.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-HARDWARE
+
+
+ General discussion of FreeBSD
+ hardware General discussion about the types of
+ hardware that FreeBSD runs on, various problems and suggestions
+ concerning what to buy or avoid.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-INSTALL
+
+
+ Installation discussion
+ This mailing list is for discussing FreeBSD installation
+ development for the future releases and is closed.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-ISP
+
+
+ Issues for Internet Service Providers
+ This mailing list is for discussing topics relevant to Internet
+ Service Providers (ISPs) using FreeBSD.
+ This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
+ content is expected.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-MULTIMEDIA
+
+
+ Multimedia discussions
+ This is a forum about multimedia applications using FreeBSD.
+ Discussion center around multimedia applications, their installation, their
+ development and their support within FreeBSD
+ This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
+ content is expected.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-PLATFORMS
+
+
+ Porting to Non-Intel
+ platforms Cross-platform freebsd issues, general
+ discussion and proposals for non-Intel FreeBSD ports.
+ This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
+ content is expected.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-PORTS
+
+
+ Discussion of "ports"
+ Discussions concerning FreeBSD's "ports collection" (/usr/ports), proposed
+ ports, modifications to ports collection infrastructure and general
+ coordination efforts.
+ This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
+ content is expected.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-QUESTIONS
+
+
+ User questions
+ This is the mailing list for questions about FreeBSD. You should not
+ send "how to" questions to the technical lists unless you consider the
+ question to be pretty technical.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-QUESTIONS-DIGEST
+
+
+ User questions
+ This is the digest version of the freebsd-questions mailing list.
+ The digest consists of all messages sent to freebsd-questions
+ bundled together and mailed out as a single message. The average
+ digest size is about 40kB.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-SCSI
+
+
+ SCSI subsystem
+ This is the mailing list for people working on the scsi subsystem
+ for FreeBSD.
+ This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
+ content is expected.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-SECURITY
+
+
+ Security issues
+ FreeBSD computer security issues (DES, Kerberos, known security holes and
+ fixes, etc).
+ This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
+ content is expected.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-SECURITY-NOTIFICATIONS
+
+
+ Security Notifications
+ Notifications of FreeBSD security problems and fixes. This is not
+ a discussion list. The discussion list is FreeBSD-security.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-USER-GROUPS
+
+
+ User Group Coordination List
+ This is the mailing list for the coordinators from each of the
+ local area Users Groups to discuss matters with each other and a
+ designated individual from the Core Team. This mail list should
+ be limited to meeting synopsis and coordination of projects that span
+ User Groups. It is a closed list.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Usenet newsgroups
+
+ In addition to two FreeBSD specific newsgroups, there
+ are many others in which FreeBSD is discussed or are
+ otherwise relevant to FreeBSD users. Keyword searchable archives are available for
+ some of these newsgroups from courtesy of Warren Toomey
+ <wkt@cs.adfa.oz.au>.
+
+
+
+ BSD specific newsgroups
+
+
+
+
+
+ comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.announce
+
+
+
+ comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.misc
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Other Unix newsgroups of interest
+
+
+
+
+
+ comp.unix
+
+
+
+ comp.unix.questions
+
+
+
+ comp.unix.admin
+
+
+
+ comp.unix.programmer
+
+
+
+ comp.unix.shell
+
+
+
+ comp.unix.user-friendly
+
+
+
+ comp.security.unix
+
+
+
+ comp.sources.unix
+
+
+
+ comp.unix.advocacy
+
+
+
+ comp.unix.misc
+
+
+
+ comp.os.386bsd.announc
+
+
+
+ comp.os.386bsd.app
+
+
+
+ comp.os.386bsd.bugs
+
+
+
+ comp.os.386bsd.development
+
+
+
+ comp.os.386bsd.misc
+
+
+
+ comp.os.386bsd.questions
+
+
+
+ comp.bugs.4bsd
+
+
+
+ comp.bugs.4bsd.ucb-fixes
+
+
+
+ comp.unix.bsd
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ X Window System
+
+
+
+
+
+ comp.windows.x.i386unix
+
+
+
+ comp.windows.x
+
+
+
+ comp.windows.x.apps
+
+
+
+ comp.windows.x.announce
+
+
+
+ comp.windows.x.intrinsics
+
+
+
+ comp.windows.x.motif
+
+
+
+ comp.windows.x.pex
+
+
+
+ comp.emulators.ms-windows.wine
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ World Wide Web servers
+
+
+
+
+
+ http://www.FreeBSD.ORG/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.au.freebsd.org/FreeBSD/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.br.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.ca.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://sunsite.mff.cuni.cz/www.freebsd.org/.
+
+
+
+ http://sunsite.auc.dk/www.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.ee.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.fi.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.de.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.ie.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.jp.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.kr.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.nl.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.pt.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.se.freebsd.org/www.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.tw.freebsd.org/freebsd.html .
+
+
+
+ http://www2.ua.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD Project Staff
+
+ The FreeBSD Project is managed and operated by the following
+ groups of people:
+
+
+
+ The FreeBSD Core Team
+
+ The FreeBSD core team constitutes the project's ``Board of Directors'',
+ responsible for deciding the project's overall goals and direction
+ as well as managing of
+ the FreeBSD project landscape.
+
+ (in alphabetical order by last name):
+
+
+
+
+
+ &a.asami;
+
+
+
+ &a.jmb;
+
+
+
+ &a.ache;
+
+
+
+ &a.dyson;
+
+
+
+ &a.bde;
+
+
+
+ &a.gibbs;
+
+
+
+ &a.davidg;
+
+
+
+ &a.jkh;
+
+
+
+ &a.phk;
+
+
+
+ &a.rich;
+
+
+
+ &a.gpalmer;
+
+
+
+ &a.jdp;
+
+
+
+ &a.guido;
+
+
+
+ &a.sos;
+
+
+
+ &a.peter;
+
+
+
+ &a.wollman;
+
+
+
+ &a.joerg;
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The FreeBSD Developers
+
+ These are the people who have commit privileges and do the engineering
+ work on the FreeBSD source tree. All core team members and most
+ FreeBSD Documentation project personnel are also developers.
+
+
+
+
+
+ &a.mbarkah;
+
+
+
+ &a.stb;
+
+
+
+ &a.jb;
+
+
+
+ &a.torstenb;
+
+
+
+ &a.danny;
+
+
+
+ &a.charnier;
+
+
+
+ &a.kjc;
+
+
+
+ &a.gclarkii;
+
+
+
+ &a.cracauer;
+
+
+
+ &a.adam;
+
+
+
+ &a.dufault;
+
+
+
+ &a.uhclem;
+
+
+
+ &a.tegge;
+
+
+
+ &a.eivind;
+
+
+
+ &a.julian;
+
+
+
+ &a.rse;
+
+
+
+ &a.se;
+
+
+
+ &a.sef;
+
+
+
+ &a.fenner;
+
+
+
+ &a.jfieber;
+
+
+
+ &a.jfitz;
+
+
+
+ &a.lars;
+
+
+
+ &a.scrappy;
+
+
+
+ &a.tg;
+
+
+
+ &a.brandon;
+
+
+
+ &a.graichen;
+
+
+
+ &a.jgreco;
+
+
+
+ &a.rgrimes;
+
+
+
+ &a.jmg;
+
+
+
+ &a.hanai;
+
+
+
+ &a.ahasty;
+
+
+
+ &a.jhay;
+
+
+
+ &a.helbig;
+
+
+
+ &a.erich;
+
+
+
+ &a.hsu;
+
+
+
+ &a.itojun;
+
+
+
+ &a.ugen;
+
+
+
+ &a.gj;
+
+
+
+ &a.nsj;
+
+
+
+ &a.ljo;
+
+
+
+ &a.kato;
+
+
+
+ &a.andreas;
+
+
+
+ &a.imp;
+
+
+
+ &a.smace;
+
+
+
+ &a.mckay;
+
+
+
+ &a.jlemon;
+
+
+
+ &a.tedm;
+
+
+
+ &a.amurai;
+
+
+
+ &a.markm;
+
+
+
+ &a.max;
+
+
+
+ &a.alex;
+
+
+
+ &a.davidn;
+
+
+
+ &a.obrien;
+
+
+
+ &a.fsmp;
+
+
+
+ &a.smpatel;
+
+
+
+ &a.wpaul;
+
+
+
+ &a.jmacd;
+
+
+
+ &a.steve;
+
+
+
+ &a.mpp;
+
+
+
+ &a.dfr;
+
+
+
+ &a.jraynard;
+
+
+
+ &a.darrenr;
+
+
+
+ &a.csgr;
+
+
+
+ &a.martin;
+
+
+
+ &a.paul;
+
+
+
+ &a.roberto;
+
+
+
+ &a.chuckr;
+
+
+
+ &a.dima;
+
+
+
+ &a.wosch;
+
+
+
+ &a.ats;
+
+
+
+ &a.jseger;
+
+
+
+ &a.vanilla;
+
+
+
+ &a.msmith;
+
+
+
+ &a.brian;
+
+
+
+ &a.stark;
+
+
+
+ &a.karl;
+
+
+
+ &a.cwt;
+
+
+
+ &a.pst;
+
+
+
+ &a.hoek;
+
+
+
+ &a.swallace;
+
+
+
+ &a.nate;
+
+
+
+ &a.yokota;
+
+
+
+ &a.jmz;
+
+
+
+ &a.hosokawa;
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The FreeBSD Documentation Project
+
+
+ The FreeBSD Documentation Project is responsible for a
+ number of different services, each service being run by an
+ individual and his deputies (if any):
+
+
+
+ Documentation Project Manager
+
+ &a.jfieber;
+
+
+
+
+ Webmaster
+
+
+ &a.mbarkah;
+
+ Deputy: &a.paul;
+
+
+
+
+ Handbook & FAQ Editor
+
+
+ &a.faq;
+
+
+
+
+ Build Engineer
+
+
+ &a.paul;
+
+ Deputy: &a.dave;
+
+
+
+
+ Mirror Manager
+
+
+ &a.ulf;
+
+ Deputy: &a.john;
+
+
+
+
+ News Editor
+
+
+ &a.nsj;
+
+ Deputy: &a.john;
+
+
+
+
+ Gallery and Commercial Editor
+
+
+ &a.nsj;
+
+ Deputy: &a.cawimm;
+
+
+
+
+ Style Police & Art Director
+
+
+ &a.dave;
+
+ Deputy: &a.opsys;
+
+
+
+
+ Database Engineer
+
+
+ &a.mayo;
+
+ Deputy: &a.cracauer;
+
+
+
+
+ CGI Engineer
+
+
+ &a.cracauer;
+
+ Deputy: &a.stb;
+
+
+
+
+ Bottle Washing
+
+
+ &a.nsj;
+
+ Drying plates: &a.nik;
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Who Is Responsible for What
+
+
+
+ Principal Architect
+
+ &a.davidg;
+
+
+
+
+ Documentation Project Manager
+
+
+ &a.jfieber;
+
+
+
+
+ Internationalization
+
+
+ &a.ache;
+
+
+
+
+ Networking
+
+
+ &a.wollman;
+
+
+
+
+ Postmaster
+
+
+ &a.jmb;
+
+
+
+
+ Release Coordinator
+
+
+ &a.jkh;
+
+
+
+
+ Public Relations & Corporate Liaison
+
+
+ &a.jkh;
+
+
+
+
+ Security Officer
+
+
+ &a.guido;
+
+
+
+
+ Source Repository Managers
+
+
+ Principal: &a.peter;
+ Assistant: &a.jdp;
+ International (Crypto): &a.markm;
+
+
+
+
+ Ports Manager
+
+
+ &a.asami;
+
+
+
+
+ XFree86 Project, Inc. Liaison
+
+
+ &a.rich;
+
+
+
+
+ Usenet Support
+
+
+ &a.joerg;
+
+
+
+
+ GNATS Administrator
+
+
+ &a.steve;
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ PGP keys
+
+ In case you need to verify a signature or send encrypted
+ email to one of the officers or core team members a
+ number of keys are provided here for your convenience.
+
+
+
+ Officers
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD Security Officer <security-officer@freebsd.org>
+
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD Security Officer <security-officer@freebsd.org>
+ Fingerprint = 41 08 4E BB DB 41 60 71 F9 E5 0E 98 73 AF 3F 11
+
+ -----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
+ Version: 2.6.3i
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+ v4Xhp6a8RtDdUMBOTtro16iulGiRrCKxzVgEl4i+9Z0ZiE6BWlg5AetoF5n3mGk1
+ lw==
+ =ipyA
+ -----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ &a.imp;
+
+
+
+ Warner Losh <imp@village.org>
+ aka <imp@freebsd.org>
+ Fingerprint = D4 31 FD B9 F7 90 17 E8 37 C5 E7 7F CF A6 C1 B9
+ -----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
+ Version: 2.6.2
+
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+ aka <peter@haywire.dialix.com>
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diff --git a/en_US.ISO_8859-1/books/handbook/book.sgml b/en_US.ISO_8859-1/books/handbook/book.sgml
index 0a18f35821..b3bbc389a5 100644
--- a/en_US.ISO_8859-1/books/handbook/book.sgml
+++ b/en_US.ISO_8859-1/books/handbook/book.sgml
@@ -1,37488 +1,37488 @@
-
-
-
-FreeBSD Handbook
-
-
-
-The FreeBSD Documentation Project
-
-
-
-March 1998
-
-Welcome to FreeBSD! This handbook covers the
-installation and day to day use of FreeBSD Release
-&rel.current;. This manual is a work in progress and is the
-work of many individuals. Many sections do not yet exist
-and some of those that do exist need to be updated. If
-you are interested in helping with this project, send
-email to the &a.doc; The latest version of this
-document is always available from
-the FreeBSD World Wide Web server. It may also be downloaded in plain text, postscript or HTML from the FreeBSD FTP server or one of the numerous
-. You may also want to
-Search the Handbook.
-
-
-
-
-
-Getting Started
-
-
-
-Introduction
-
-FreeBSD is a 4.4BSD-Lite based operating system for Intel
-architecture (x86) based PCs. For an overview of FreeBSD, see
-. For a
-history of the project, read . To see a description of the
-latest release, read . If you're interested
-in contributing something to the FreeBSD project (code, equipment,
-sacks of unmarked bills), please see about .
-
-
-FreeBSD in a Nutshell
-
-FreeBSD is a state of the art operating system for
-personal computers based on the Intel CPU architecture, which
-includes the 386, 486 and Pentium processors (both SX and DX versions).
-Intel compatible CPUs from AMD and Cyrix are supported as well.
-FreeBSD provides you with many advanced features previously available
-only on much more expensive computers. These features include:
-
-
-
-
-
-Preemptive multitasking with dynamic priority
-adjustment to ensure smooth and fair sharing of the
-computer between applications and users.
-
-
-
-Multiuser access means that many people can use a
-FreeBSD system simultaneously for a variety of things. System
-peripherals such as printers and tape drives are also properly
-SHARED BETWEEN ALL users on the system.
-
-
-
-Complete TCP/IP networking including SLIP, PPP, NFS
-and NIS support. This means that your FreeBSD machine can
-inter-operate easily with other systems as well act as an enterprise
-server, providing vital functions such as NFS (remote file access) and
-e-mail services or putting your organization on the Internet
-with WWW, ftp, routing and firewall (security) services.
-
-
-
-Memory protection ensures that applications (or
-users) cannot interfere with each other. One application
-crashing will not affect others in any way.
-
-
-
-FreeBSD is a 32-bit operating system and was designed
-as such from the ground up.
-
-
-
-The industry standard X Window System (X11R6)
-provides a graphical user interface (GUI) for the cost of a
-common VGA card and monitor and comes with full sources.
-
-
-
-Binary compatibility with many programs built for SCO,
-BSDI, NetBSD, Linux and 386BSD.
-
-
-
-Hundreds of ready-to-run applications are
-available from the
-FreeBSD ports and packages
-collection. Why search the net when you can find it all
-right here?
-
-
-
-Thousands of additional and easy-to-port applications
-available on the Internet. FreeBSD is source code compatible
-with most popular commercial Unix systems and thus most
-applications require few, if any, changes to compile.
-
-
-
-Demand paged virtual memory and `merged VM/buffer cache'
-design efficiently satisfies applications with large appetites
-for memory while still maintaining interactive response to other
-users.
-
-
-
-Shared libraries (the Unix equivalent of
-MS-Windows DLLs) provide for efficient use of disk space
-and memory.
-
-
-
-A full compliment of C, C++ and
-Fortran development tools. Many additional
-languages for advanced research and development are
-also available in the ports and packages collection.
-
-
-
-Source code for the entire system means you have
-the greatest degree of control over your environment. Why be
-locked into a proprietary solution and at the mercy of your vendor
-when you can have a truly Open System?
-
-
-
-Extensive on-line documentation.
-
-
-
-And many more!
-
-
-
-
-
-FreeBSD is based on the 4.4BSD-Lite release from Computer
-Systems Research Group (CSRG) at the University of
-California at Berkeley, and carries on the distinguished
-tradition of BSD systems development. In addition to the
-fine work provided by CSRG, the FreeBSD Project has put in
-many thousands of hours in fine tuning the system for
-maximum performance and reliability in real-life load
-situations. As many of the commercial giants struggle to
-field PC operating systems with such features, performance
-and reliability, FreeBSD can offer them now!
-
-The applications to which FreeBSD can be put are truly
-limited only by your own imagination. From software
-development to factory automation, inventory control to
-azimuth correction of remote satellite antennae; if it can
-be done with a commercial UNIX product then it is more than
-likely that you can do it with FreeBSD, too! FreeBSD also
-benefits significantly from the literally thousands of high
-quality applications developed by research centers and
-universities around the world, often available at little
-to no cost. Commercial applications are also available
-and appearing in greater numbers every day.
-
-Because the source code for FreeBSD itself is generally
-available, the system can also be customized to an almost
-unheard of degree for special applications or projects, and
-in ways not generally possible with operating systems from
-most major commercial vendors. Here is just a sampling of
-some of the applications in which people are currently
-using FreeBSD:
-
-
-
-
-
-Internet Services: The robust TCP/IP networking
-built into FreeBSD makes it an ideal platform for a
-variety of Internet services such as:
-
-
-
-FTP servers
-
-
-
-World Wide Web servers
-
-
-
-Gopher servers
-
-
-
-Electronic Mail servers
-
-
-
-USENET News
-
-
-
-Bulletin Board Systems
-
-
-
-And more...
-
-
-
-
-You can easily start out small with an inexpensive 386
-class PC and upgrade as your enterprise grows.
-
-
-
-Education: Are you a student of computer science
-or a related engineering field? There is no better way
-of learning about operating systems, computer
-architecture and networking than the hands on, under the
-hood experience that FreeBSD can provide. A number of
-freely available CAD, mathematical and graphic design
-packages also make it highly useful to those whose
-primary interest in a computer is to get other
-work done!
-
-
-
-Research: With source code for the entire system
-available, FreeBSD is an excellent platform for research
-in operating systems as well as other branches of
-computer science. FreeBSD's freely available nature also
-makes it possible for remote groups to collaborate on
-ideas or shared development without having to worry about
-special licensing agreements or limitations on what
-may be discussed in open forums.
-
-
-
-Networking: Need a new router? A name server
-(DNS)? A firewall to keep people out of your internal
-network? FreeBSD can easily turn that unused 386 or 486 PC
-sitting in the corner into an advanced router with
-sophisticated packet filtering capabilities.
-
-
-
-X Window workstation: FreeBSD is a fine
-choice for an inexpensive X terminal solution, either
-using the freely available XFree86 server or one
-of the excellent commercial servers provided by X Inside.
-Unlike an X
-terminal, FreeBSD allows many applications to be run
-locally, if desired, thus relieving the burden on a
-central server. FreeBSD can even boot
-"diskless", making individual workstations even cheaper
-and easier to administer.
-
-
-
-Software Development: The basic FreeBSD system
-comes with a full compliment of development tools
-including the renowned GNU C/C++ compiler and
-debugger.
-
-
-
-
-
-FreeBSD is available in both source and binary form on CDROM and
-via anonymous ftp. See
-for more details.
-
-
-
-
-
-A Brief History of FreeBSD
-
-Contributed by &a.jkh;.
-
-The FreeBSD project had its genesis in the early part of 1993,
-partially as an outgrowth of the "Unofficial 386BSD Patchkit" by the
-patchkit's last 3 coordinators: Nate Williams, Rod Grimes and myself.
-
-Our original goal was to produce an intermediate snapshot of 386BSD in
-order to fix a number of problems with it that the patchkit mechanism
-just was not capable of solving. Some of you may remember the early
-working title for the project being "386BSD 0.5" or "386BSD Interim"
-in reference to that fact.
-
-386BSD was Bill Jolitz's operating system, which had been up to that
-point suffering rather severely from almost a year's worth of neglect.
-As the patchkit swelled ever more uncomfortably with each passing day,
-we were in unanimous agreement that something had to be done and
-decided to try and assist Bill by providing this interim "cleanup"
-snapshot. Those plans came to a rude halt when Bill Jolitz suddenly
-decided to withdraw his sanction from the project and without any
-clear indication of what would be done instead.
-
-It did not take us long to decide that the goal remained worthwhile,
-even without Bill's support, and so we adopted the name "FreeBSD",
-coined by David Greenman. Our initial objectives were set after
-consulting with the system's current users and, once it became clear
-that the project was on the road to perhaps even becoming a reality,
-I contacted Walnut Creek CDROM with an eye towards improving
-FreeBSD's distribution channels for those many unfortunates without
-easy access to the Internet. Walnut Creek CDROM not only supported
-the idea of distributing FreeBSD on CD but went so far as to provide
-the project with a machine to work on and a fast Internet connection.
-Without Walnut Creek CDROM's almost unprecedented degree of faith in
-what was, at the time, a completely unknown project, it is quite
-unlikely that FreeBSD would have gotten as far, as fast, as it
-has today.
-
-The first CDROM (and general net-wide) distribution was FreeBSD 1.0,
-released in December of 1993. This was based on the 4.3BSD-Lite
-("Net/2") tape from U.C. Berkeley, with many components also provided by
-386BSD and the Free Software Foundation. It was a fairly reasonable
-success for a first offering, and we followed it with the highly successful
-FreeBSD 1.1 release in May of 1994.
-
-Around this time, some rather unexpected storm clouds formed on the
-horizon as Novell and U.C. Berkeley settled their long-running lawsuit
-over the legal status of the Berkeley Net/2 tape. A condition of that
-settlement was U.C. Berkeley's concession that large parts of Net/2
-were "encumbered" code and the property of Novell, who had in turn acquired
-it from AT&T some time previously. What Berkeley got in return was
-Novell's "blessing" that the 4.4BSD-Lite release, when it was finally
-released, would be declared unencumbered and all existing Net/2 users
-would be strongly encouraged to switch. This included FreeBSD, and the
-project was given until the end of July 1994 to stop shipping its own
-Net/2 based product. Under the terms of that agreement, the project
-was allowed one last release before the deadline, that release being
-FreeBSD 1.1.5.1.
-
-FreeBSD then set about the arduous task of literally re-inventing itself
-from a completely new and rather incomplete set of 4.4BSD-Lite bits. The
-"Lite" releases were light in part because Berkeley's CSRG had removed
-large chunks of code required for actually constructing a bootable running
-system (due to various legal requirements) and the fact that the Intel
-port of 4.4 was highly incomplete. It took the project until December of 1994
-to make this transition, and in January of 1995 it released FreeBSD 2.0 to
-the net and on CDROM. Despite being still more than a little rough around
-the edges, the release was a significant success and was followed by the more
-robust and easier to install FreeBSD 2.0.5 release in June of 1995.
-
-We released FreeBSD 2.1.5 in August of 1996, and it appeared to be
-popular enough among the ISP and commercial communities that another
-release along the 2.1-stable branch was merited. This was FreeBSD 2.1.7.1,
-released in February 1997 and capping the end of mainstream development
-on 2.1-stable. Now in maintenance mode, only security enhancements and other
-critical bug fixes will be done on this branch (RELENG_2_1_0).
-
-FreeBSD 2.2 was branched from the development mainline ("-current") in
-November 1996 as the RELENG_2_2 branch, and the first full release
-(2.2.1) was released in April, 1997. Further releases along the 2.2 branch
-were done in the Summer and Fall of '97, the latest being 2.2.6 which
-appeared in late March of '98. The first official 3.0 release will appear
-later in 1998.
-
-Long term development projects for everything from SMP to DEC ALPHA support
-will continue to take place in the 3.0-current branch and SNAPshot releases
-of 3.0 on CDROM (and, of course, on the net).
-
-
-
-
-
-FreeBSD Project Goals
-
-Contributed by &a.jkh;.
-
-The goals of the FreeBSD Project are to provide software that may
-be used for any purpose and without strings attached. Many of us
-have a significant investment in the code (and project) and would
-certainly not mind a little financial compensation now and then,
-but we're definitely not prepared to insist on it. We believe
-that our first and foremost "mission" is to provide code to any
-and all comers, and for whatever purpose, so that the code gets
-the widest possible use and provides the widest possible benefit.
-This is, I believe, one of the most fundamental goals of Free
-Software and one that we enthusiastically support.
-
-That code in our source tree which falls under the GNU Public License
-(GPL) or GNU Library Public License (GLPL) comes with slightly more
-strings attached, though at least on the side of enforced
-access rather than the usual opposite. Due to the additional
-complexities that can evolve in the commercial use of GPL software,
-we do, however, endeavor to replace such software with submissions
-under the more relaxed BSD copyright whenever possible.
-
-
-
-
-
-The FreeBSD Development Model
-
-Contributed by &a.asami;.
-
-The development of FreeBSD is a very open and flexible process,
-FreeBSD being literally built from the contributions of hundreds of
-people around the world, as can be seen from our . We are constantly on the lookout for
-new developers and ideas, and those interested in becoming more
-closely involved with the project need simply contact us at the
-&a.hackers;. Those who prefer to work more independently are also
-accommodated, and they are free to use our FTP facilities at ftp.freebsd.org to distribute their own patches or work-in-progress
-sources. The &a.announce; is also available to those wishing
-to make other FreeBSD users aware of major areas of work.
-
-Useful things to know about the FreeBSD project and its development process,
-whether working independently or in close cooperation:
-
-
-
-The CVS repository
-
-
-
-The central source tree for FreeBSD is maintained by CVS
-(Concurrent Version System), a freely available source code control
-tool which comes bundled with FreeBSD. The primary CVS repository
-resides on a machine in Concord CA, USA from where it is replicated
-to numerous mirror machines throughout the world. The CVS tree, as well
-as the and trees which are checked out of it, can be easily
-replicated to your own machine as well. Please refer to the
-
-section for more information on doing this.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The committers list
-
-
-
-
-The are the people
-who have write access to the CVS tree, and are thus
-authorized to make modifications to the FreeBSD source (the term
-``committer'' comes from the cvs(1) ``commit''
-command, which is used to bring new changes into the CVS repository).
-The best way of making submissions for review by the committers list
-is to use the send-pr(1) command, though if something appears to be jammed
-in the system then you may also reach them by sending mail to committers@freebsd.org.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The FreeBSD core team
-
-
-
-
-The would be
-equivalent to the board of directors if the FreeBSD Project were a
-company. The primary task of the core team is to make sure the
-project, as a whole, is in good shape and is heading in the right
-directions. Inviting dedicated and responsible developers to join our
-group of committers is one of the functions of the core team, as is
-the recruitment of new core team members as others move on. Most
-current members of the core team started as committers who's addiction
-to the project got the better of them.
-
-
-
-Some core team members also have specific , meaning that they are committed to
-ensuring that some large portion of the system works as advertised.
-Note that most members of the core team are volunteers when it comes
-to FreeBSD development and do not benefit from the project
-financially, so "commitment" should also not be misconstrued as
-meaning "guaranteed support." The ``board of directors'' analogy
-above is not actually very accurate, and it may be more suitable to
-say that these are the people who gave up their lives in favor of
-FreeBSD against their better judgement! ;)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Outside contributors
-
-
-
-
-Last, but definitely not least, the largest group of developers are
-the users themselves who provide feedback and bug-fixes to us on an
-almost constant basis. The primary way of keeping in touch with FreeBSD's
-more non-centralized development is to subscribe to the &a.hackers;
-(see ) where such
-things are discussed.
-
-
-
- of those who have
-contributed something which made its way into our source tree is
-a long and growing one, so why not join it by contributing something
-back to FreeBSD today? :-)
-
-
-
-Providing code is not the only way of contributing to the project;
-for a more complete list of things that need doing, please refer to the section in this handbook.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-In summary, our development model is organized as a loose set of
-concentric circles. The centralized model is designed for the
-convenience of the users of FreeBSD, who are thereby provided
-with an easy way of tracking one central code base, not to keep
-potential contributors out! Our desire is to present a stable
-operating system with a large set of coherent that the users can easily install and
-use, and this model works very well in accomplishing that.
-
-All we ask of those who would join us as FreeBSD developers is some of
-the same dedication its current people have to its continued success!
-
-
-
-
-
-About the Current Release
-
-FreeBSD is a freely available, full source 4.4BSD-Lite
-based release for Intel i386/i486/Pentium/PentiumPro/Pentium II
-(or compatible) based PC's. It is based primarily on
-software from U.C. Berkeley's CSRG group, with some
-enhancements from NetBSD, OpenBSD, 386BSD, and the Free
-Software Foundation.
-
-Since our release of FreeBSD 2.0 in January of 95, the
-performance, feature set, and stability of FreeBSD has
-improved dramatically. The largest change is a
-revamped virtual memory system with a merged VM/file buffer
-cache that not only increases performance, but reduces
-FreeBSD's memory footprint, making a 5MB configuration
-a more acceptable minimum. Other enhancements include
-full NIS client and server support, transaction TCP
-support, dial-on-demand PPP, an improved SCSI
-subsystem, early ISDN support, support for FDDI and
-Fast Ethernet (100Mbit) adapters, improved support for
-the Adaptec 2940 (WIDE and narrow) and many hundreds of
-bug fixes.
-
-We have also taken the comments and suggestions of many
-of our users to heart and have attempted to provide
-what we hope is a more sane and easily understood
-installation process. Your feedback on this
-(constantly evolving) process is especially welcome!
-
-In addition to the base distributions, FreeBSD offers a
-new ported software collection with hundreds of commonly
-sought-after programs. At the end of March 1998 there were
-more than 1300 ports! The list of ports ranges from
-http (WWW) servers, to games, languages, editors and
-almost everything in between. The entire ports collection
-requires approximately 26MB of storage, all ports being
-expressed as ``deltas'' to their original sources. This makes
-it much easier for us to update ports, and greatly reduces
-the disk space demands made by the older 1.0 ports
-collection. To compile a port, you simply change to the
-directory of the program you wish to install, type ``make
-all'' followed by ``make install'' after successful
-compilation and let the system do the rest. The full
-original distribution for each port you build is retrieved
-dynamically off the CDROM or a local ftp site, so you need
-only enough disk space to build the ports you want.
-(Almost) every port is also provided as a pre-compiled
-"package" which can be installed with a simple command
-(pkg_add) by those who do not wish to compile their own
-ports from source.
-
-A number of additional documents which you may find
-very helpful in the process of installing and using
-FreeBSD may now also be found in the
-/usr/share/doc directory on any machine running
-FreeBSD 2.1 or later. You may view the locally installed
-manuals with any HTML capable browser using the
-following URLs:
-
-
-
-The FreeBSD handbook
-
-file:/usr/share/doc/handbook/handbook.html
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The FreeBSD FAQ
-
-
-file:/usr/share/doc/FAQ/FAQ.html
-
-
-
-
-
-
-You can also visit the master (and most frequently
-updated) copies at http://www.freebsd.org.
-
-The core of FreeBSD does not contain DES code which
-would inhibit its being exported outside the United
-States. There is an add-on package to the core
-distribution, for use only in the United States, that
-contains the programs that normally use DES. The
-auxiliary packages provided separately can be used by
-anyone. A freely (from outside the U.S.) exportable
-European distribution of DES for our non-U.S. users
-also exists and is described in the FreeBSD FAQ.
-
-If password security for FreeBSD is all you need, and
-you have no requirement for copying encrypted passwords
-from different hosts (Suns, DEC machines, etc) into
-FreeBSD password entries, then FreeBSD's MD5 based
-security may be all you require! We feel that our
-default security model is more than a match for DES,
-and without any messy export issues to deal with. If
-you are outside (or even inside) the U.S., give it a
-try!
-
-
-
-
-
-Installing FreeBSD
-
-So, you would like to try out FreeBSD on your system?
-This section is a quick-start guide for what you need to
-do. FreeBSD can be installed from a variety of media
-including CD-ROM, floppy disk, magnetic tape, an MS-DOS
-partition and, if you have a network connection, via
-anonymous ftp or NFS.
-
-Regardless of the installation media you choose, you can
-get started by creating the installation disk
-as described below. Booting your computer into the FreeBSD installer,
-even if you aren't planning on installing FreeBSD right away, will
-provide important information about compatibility between
-FreeBSD and your hardware which may, in turn, dictate which
-installation options are even possible. It can also provide
-early clues to any compatibility problems which could prevent
-FreeBSD running on your system at all. If you plan on
-installing via anonymous FTP then this installation disk
-is all you need to download (the installation will handle any
-further required downloading itself).
-
-For more information on obtaining the latest FreeBSD distributions,
-please see in the Appendix.
-
-So, to get the show on the road, follow these steps:
-
-
-
-
-
-Review the section of this installation guide to
-be sure that your hardware is supported by FreeBSD. It
-may be helpful to make a list of any special cards you
-have installed, such as SCSI controllers, Ethernet
-adapters or sound cards. This list should include
-relevant configuration parameters such as interrupts
-(IRQ) and IO port addresses.
-
-
-
-
-
-If you're installing FreeBSD from CDROM media then you have
-several different installation options:
-
-
-
-
-
-If the CD has been mastered with El Torrito boot support and
-your system supports direct booting from CDROM (and many older systems
-do not), simply insert the CD into the drive and boot
-directly from it.
-
-
-
-
-
-If you're running DOS and have the proper drivers to access
-your CD, run the install.bat script provided on the CD. This will
-attempt to boot into the FreeBSD installation straight from DOS
-(note: You must do this from actual DOS and not a Windows DOS box). If you also want to install FreeBSD from your DOS partition
-(perhaps because your CDROM drive is completely unsupported by
-FreeBSD) then run the setup program first to copy the
-appropriate files from the CD to your DOS partition, afterwards
-running install.
-
-
-
-
-
-If either of the two proceeding methods work then you can
-simply skip the rest of this section, otherwise your final option
-is to create a boot floppy from the floppies\boot.flp
-image - proceed to step 4 for instructions on how to do
-this.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-If you don't have a CDROM distribution then simply download the installation boot disk image file to your hard
-drive, being sure to tell your browser to
-save rather than display the file.
-Note: This disk image can only be used with
-1.44 megabyte 3.5 inch floppy disks.
-
-
-
-
-
-Make the installation boot disk from the image file:
-
-
-
-
-
-If you are using MS-DOS then download
-fdimage.exe or get it from tools\fdimage.exe
-on the CDROM and then run it like so:
-
-E:\> tools\fdimage floppies\boot.flp a:
-
- The fdimage
-program will format the A: drive and then copy the
-boot.flp image onto it (assuming that you're at the top
-level of a FreeBSD distribution and the floppy images
-live in the floppies subdirectory, as is typically the case).
-
-
-
-
-
-If you are using a UNIX system to create the floppy image:
-
-% dd if=boot.flp of=disk_device
-
-
-where disk_device is the /dev
-entry for the floppy drive. On FreeBSD systems, this
-is /dev/rfd0 for the A: drive and
-/dev/rfd1 for the B: drive.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-With the installation disk in the A: drive, reboot your
-computer. You should get a boot prompt something like this:
-
->> FreeBSD BOOT ...
-Usage: [[[0:][wd](0,a)]/kernel][-abcCdhrsv]
-Use 1:sd(0,a)kernel to boot sd0 if it is BIOS drive 1
-Use ? for file list or press Enter for defaults
-Boot:
-
-
-If you do not type anything, FreeBSD will automatically boot
-with its default configuration after a delay of about
-five seconds. As FreeBSD boots, it probes your computer
-to determine what hardware is installed. The results of
-this probing is displayed on the screen.
-
-
-
-
-
-When the booting process is finished, The main FreeBSD
-installation menu will be displayed.
-
-
-
-
-
-If something goes wrong...
-
-Due to limitations of the PC architecture, it is
-impossible for probing to be 100 percent reliable. In the event
-that your hardware is incorrectly identified, or that the
-probing causes your computer to lock up, first check the
- section of this installation guide to be
-sure that your hardware is indeed supported by FreeBSD.
-
-If your hardware is supported, reset the computer and when
-the Boot: prompt comes up, type . This puts
-FreeBSD into a configuration mode where you can supply
-hints about your hardware. The FreeBSD kernel on the
-installation disk is configured assuming that most hardware
-devices are in their factory default configuration in terms
-of IRQs, IO addresses and DMA channels. If your hardware
-has been reconfigured, you will most likely need to use the
- option at boot to tell FreeBSD where things are.
-
-It is also possible that a probe for a device not present
-will cause a later probe for another device that is present
-to fail. In that case, the probes for the conflicting
-driver(s) should be disabled.
-
-In the configuration mode, you can:
-
-
-
-
-
-List the device drivers installed in the kernel.
-
-
-
-Disable device drivers for hardware not present in your
-system.
-
-
-
-Change the IRQ, DRQ, and IO port addresses used by a
-device driver.
-
-
-
-
-
-While at the config> prompt, type
-help for more information on the available
-commands. After adjusting the kernel to match how you have
-your hardware configured, type quit at the
-config> prompt to continue booting with the new
-settings.
-
-After FreeBSD has been installed, changes made in the
-configuration mode will be permanent so you do not have
-to reconfigure every time you boot. Even so, it is likely
-that you will want to build a custom kernel to optimize the
-performance of your system. See for more information on
-creating custom kernels.
-
-
-
-Supported Configurations
-
-FreeBSD currently runs on a wide variety of ISA, VLB,
-EISA and PCI bus based PC's, ranging from 386sx to
-Pentium class machines (though the 386sx is not
-recommended). Support for generic IDE or ESDI drive
-configurations, various SCSI controller, network and
-serial cards is also provided.
-
-A minimum of four megabytes of RAM is required to run FreeBSD.
-To run the X Window System, eight megabytes of RAM is the
-recommended minimum.
-
-Following is a list of all disk controllers and Ethernet
-cards currently known to work with FreeBSD. Other
-configurations may very well work, and we have simply not
-received any indication of this.
-
-
-
-Disk Controllers
-
-
-
-
-
-WD1003 (any generic MFM/RLL)
-
-
-
-WD1007 (any generic IDE/ESDI)
-
-
-
-IDE
-
-
-
-ATA
-
-
-
-
-Adaptec 1505 ISA SCSI controller
-
-
-
-Adaptec 152x series ISA SCSI controllers
-
-
-
-Adaptec 1535 ISA SCSI controllers
-
-
-
-Adaptec 154x series ISA SCSI controllers
-
-
-
-Adaptec 174x series EISA SCSI controller in
-standard and enhanced mode.
-
-
-
-Adaptec 274x/284x/2940/2940U/3940
-(Narrow/Wide/Twin)
-series EISA/VLB/PCI SCSI controllers
-
-
-
-Adaptec AIC7850 on-board SCSI controllers
-
-
-
-Adaptec
-AIC-6360 based boards,
-which includes the AHA-152x and SoundBlaster SCSI
-cards.
-
-Note: You cannot boot from the
-SoundBlaster cards as they have no on-board BIOS,
-which is necessary for mapping the boot device into
-the system BIOS I/O vectors. They are perfectly
-usable for external tapes, CDROMs, etc, however.
-The same goes for any other AIC-6x60 based card
-without a boot ROM. Some systems DO have a boot
-ROM, which is generally indicated by some sort of
-message when the system is first powered up or
-reset. Check your system/board documentation for
-more details.
-
-
-
-
-Buslogic 545S & 545c
-Note: that Buslogic was formerly known as "Bustek".
-
-
-
-Buslogic 445S/445c VLB SCSI controller
-
-
-
-Buslogic 742A/747S/747c EISA SCSI controller.
-
-
-
-Buslogic 946c PCI SCSI controller
-
-
-
-Buslogic 956c PCI SCSI controller
-
-
-
-
-NCR 53C810/53C815/53C825/53C860/53C875 PCI SCSI controller.
-
-
-
-NCR5380/NCR53400 (``ProAudio Spectrum'') SCSI controller.
-
-
-
-
-DTC 3290 EISA SCSI controller in 1542 emulation mode.
-
-
-
-
-UltraStor 14F/24F/34F SCSI controllers.
-
-
-
-
-Seagate ST01/02 SCSI controllers.
-
-
-
-
-Future Domain 8xx/950 series SCSI controllers.
-
-
-
-
-WD7000 SCSI controllers.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-With all supported SCSI controllers, full support is
-provided for SCSI-I & SCSI-II peripherals,
-including Disks, tape drives (including DAT) and CD ROM
-drives.
-
-The following CD-ROM type systems are supported at this
-time:
-
-
-
-
-
-SoundBlaster SCSI and ProAudio Spectrum SCSI (cd)
-
-
-
-Mitsumi (all models) proprietary interface (mcd)
-
-
-
-Matsushita/Panasonic (Creative)
-CR-562/CR-563 proprietary interface (matcd)
-
-
-
-Sony proprietary interface (scd)
-
-
-
-ATAPI IDE interface
-(experimental and should be considered ALPHA quality!)
-(wcd)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Ethernet cards
-
-
-
-
-
-Allied-Telesis AT1700 and RE2000 cards
-
-
-
-
-SMC Elite 16 WD8013 Ethernet interface, and
-most other WD8003E, WD8003EBT, WD8003W, WD8013W,
-WD8003S, WD8003SBT and WD8013EBT based clones. SMC
-Elite Ultra and 9432TX based cards are also supported.
-
-
-
-
-DEC EtherWORKS III NICs (DE203, DE204, and DE205)
-
-
-
-DEC EtherWORKS II NICs (DE200, DE201, DE202, and DE422)
-
-
-
-DEC DC21040/DC21041/DC21140 based NICs:
-
-
-
-ASUS PCI-L101-TB
-
-
-
-Accton ENI1203
-
-
-
-Cogent EM960PCI
-
-
-
-Compex CPXPCI/32C
-
-
-
-D-Link DE-530
-
-
-
-DEC DE435
-
-
-
-Danpex EN-9400P3
-
-
-
-JCIS Condor JC1260
-
-
-
-Kingston KNE100TX
-
-
-
-Linksys EtherPCI
-
-
-
-Mylex LNP101
-
-
-
-SMC EtherPower 10/100 (Model 9332)
-
-
-
-SMC EtherPower (Model 8432)
-
-
-
-SMC EtherPower (2)
-
-
-
-Zynx ZX314
-
-
-
-Zynx ZX342
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-DEC FDDI (DEFPA/DEFEA) NICs
-
-
-
-
-Fujitsu FMV-181 and FMV-182
-
-
-
-
-Fujitsu MB86960A/MB86965A
-
-
-
-
-Intel EtherExpress
-
-
-
-
-Intel EtherExpress Pro/100B 100Mbit.
-
-
-
-
-Isolan AT 4141-0 (16 bit)
-
-
-
-Isolink 4110 (8 bit)
-
-
-
-
-Lucent WaveLAN wireless networking interface.
-
-
-
-
-Novell NE1000, NE2000, and NE2100 ethernet interface.
-
-
-
-
-3Com 3C501 cards
-
-
-
-
-3Com 3C503 Etherlink II
-
-
-
-
-3Com 3c505 Etherlink/+
-
-
-
-
-3Com 3C507 Etherlink 16/TP
-
-
-
-
-3Com 3C509, 3C579, 3C589 (PCMCIA) Etherlink III
-
-
-
-
-3Com 3C590, 3C595 Etherlink III
-
-
-
-
-3Com 3C90x cards.
-
-
-
-
-HP PC Lan Plus (27247B and 27252A)
-
-
-
-
-Toshiba ethernet cards
-
-
-
-
-PCMCIA ethernet cards from IBM and National
-Semiconductor are also supported.
-
-
-
-
-
-Note: FreeBSD does not currently support
-PnP (plug-n-play) features present on some ethernet
-cards. If your card has PnP and is giving you problems,
-try disabling its PnP features.
-
-
-
-
-Miscellaneous devices
-
-
-
-
-
-AST 4 port serial card using shared IRQ.
-
-
-
-
-ARNET 8 port serial card using shared IRQ.
-
-
-
-
-BOCA IOAT66 6 port serial card using shared IRQ.
-
-
-
-
-BOCA 2016 16 port serial card using shared IRQ.
-
-
-
-
-Cyclades Cyclom-y Serial Board.
-
-
-
-
-STB 4 port card using shared IRQ.
-
-
-
-
-SDL Communications Riscom/8 Serial Board.
-
-
-
-
-SDL Communications RISCom/N2 and N2pci sync serial cards.
-
-
-
-
-Digiboard Sync/570i high-speed sync serial card.
+
+
+ FreeBSD Handbook
+
+
+
+ The FreeBSD Documentation Project
+
+
+
+ March 1998
+
+ Welcome to FreeBSD! This handbook covers the
+ installation and day to day use of FreeBSD Release
+ &rel.current;. This manual is a work in progress and is the
+ work of many individuals. Many sections do not yet exist
+ and some of those that do exist need to be updated. If
+ you are interested in helping with this project, send
+ email to the &a.doc; The latest version of this
+ document is always available from
+ the FreeBSD World Wide Web server. It may also be downloaded in plain text, postscript or HTML from the FreeBSD FTP server or one of the numerous
+ . You may also want to
+ Search the Handbook.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Getting Started
+
+
+
+ Introduction
+
+ FreeBSD is a 4.4BSD-Lite based operating system for Intel
+ architecture (x86) based PCs. For an overview of FreeBSD, see
+ . For a
+ history of the project, read . To see a description of the
+ latest release, read . If you're interested
+ in contributing something to the FreeBSD project (code, equipment,
+ sacks of unmarked bills), please see about .
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD in a Nutshell
+
+ FreeBSD is a state of the art operating system for
+ personal computers based on the Intel CPU architecture, which
+ includes the 386, 486 and Pentium processors (both SX and DX versions).
+ Intel compatible CPUs from AMD and Cyrix are supported as well.
+ FreeBSD provides you with many advanced features previously available
+ only on much more expensive computers. These features include:
+
+
+
+
+
+ Preemptive multitasking with dynamic priority
+ adjustment to ensure smooth and fair sharing of the
+ computer between applications and users.
+
+
+
+ Multiuser access means that many people can use a
+ FreeBSD system simultaneously for a variety of things. System
+ peripherals such as printers and tape drives are also properly
+ SHARED BETWEEN ALL users on the system.
+
+
+
+ Complete TCP/IP networking including SLIP, PPP, NFS
+ and NIS support. This means that your FreeBSD machine can
+ inter-operate easily with other systems as well act as an enterprise
+ server, providing vital functions such as NFS (remote file access) and
+ e-mail services or putting your organization on the Internet
+ with WWW, ftp, routing and firewall (security) services.
+
+
+
+ Memory protection ensures that applications (or
+ users) cannot interfere with each other. One application
+ crashing will not affect others in any way.
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD is a 32-bit operating system and was designed
+ as such from the ground up.
+
+
+
+ The industry standard X Window System (X11R6)
+ provides a graphical user interface (GUI) for the cost of a
+ common VGA card and monitor and comes with full sources.
+
+
+
+ Binary compatibility with many programs built for SCO,
+ BSDI, NetBSD, Linux and 386BSD.
+
+
+
+ Hundreds of ready-to-run applications are
+ available from the
+ FreeBSD ports and packages
+ collection. Why search the net when you can find it all
+ right here?
+
+
+
+ Thousands of additional and easy-to-port applications
+ available on the Internet. FreeBSD is source code compatible
+ with most popular commercial Unix systems and thus most
+ applications require few, if any, changes to compile.
+
+
+
+ Demand paged virtual memory and `merged VM/buffer cache'
+ design efficiently satisfies applications with large appetites
+ for memory while still maintaining interactive response to other
+ users.
+
+
+
+ Shared libraries (the Unix equivalent of
+ MS-Windows DLLs) provide for efficient use of disk space
+ and memory.
+
+
+
+ A full compliment of C, C++ and
+ Fortran development tools. Many additional
+ languages for advanced research and development are
+ also available in the ports and packages collection.
+
+
+
+ Source code for the entire system means you have
+ the greatest degree of control over your environment. Why be
+ locked into a proprietary solution and at the mercy of your vendor
+ when you can have a truly Open System?
+
+
+
+ Extensive on-line documentation.
+
+
+
+ And many more!
+
+
+
-
-
-
-Decision-Computer Intl. "Eight-Serial" 8 port serial cards
-using shared IRQ.
-
-
-
-
-Adlib, SoundBlaster, SoundBlaster Pro,
-ProAudioSpectrum, Gravis UltraSound, Gravis UltraSound MAX
-and Roland MPU-401 sound cards.
-
-
-
-
-Matrox Meteor video frame grabber.
-
-
-
-
-Creative Labs Video spigot frame grabber.
-
-
-
-
-Omnimedia Talisman frame grabber.
-
-
-
-
-Brooktree BT848 chip based frame grabbers.
-
-
-
-
-X-10 power controllers.
-
-
-
-
-PC joystick and speaker.
-
-
-
-
-
-FreeBSD does not currently support IBM's microchannel (MCA) bus.
-
-
-
-
-
-Preparing for the Installation
-
-There are a number of different methods by which FreeBSD
-can be installed. The following describes what
-preparation needs to be done for each type.
-
-
-
-Before installing from CDROM
-
-If your CDROM is of an unsupported type, then please
-skip to .
-
-There is not a lot of preparatory work that needs to be done to
-successfully install from one of Walnut Creek's FreeBSD CDROMs (other
-CDROM distributions may work as well, though we cannot say for certain
-as we have no hand or say in how they are created). You can either
-boot into the CD installation directly from DOS using Walnut Creek's
-supplied ``install.bat'' batch file or you can make a boot floppy with
-the ``makeflp.bat'' command. [NOTE: If you are running
-FreeBSD 2.1-RELEASE and have an IDE CDROM, use the
-inst_ide.bat or atapiflp.bat batch files instead].
-
-For the easiest interface of all (from DOS), type
-``view''. This will bring up a DOS menu utility that
-leads you through all the available options.
-
-If you are creating the boot floppy from a UNIX machine,
-see for examples. of how to create the boot floppy.
-
-Once you have booted from DOS or floppy, you should then
-be able to select CDROM as the media type in the Media
-menu and load the entire distribution from CDROM. No
-other types of installation media should be required.
-
-After your system is fully installed and you have rebooted
-from the hard disk, you can mount the CDROM at any time by
-typing: mount /cdrom
-
-Before removing the CD again, also note that it is necessary to first
-type: umount /cdrom. Do not just remove it from the drive!
-
-
-
-Special note: Before invoking the
-installation, be sure that the CDROM is in the drive
-so that the install probe can find it. This is also
-true if you wish the CDROM to be added to the default
-system configuration automatically during the install
-(whether or not you actually use it as the
-installation media).
-
-
-
-Finally, if you would like people to be able to FTP
-install FreeBSD directly from the CDROM in your
-machine, you will find it quite easy. After the machine
-is fully installed, you simply need to add the
-following line to the password file (using the vipw
-command):
-
-
-
-ftp:*:99:99::0:0:FTP:/cdrom:/nonexistent
-
-
-
-Anyone with network connectivity to your machine (and permission
-to log into it) can now chose a Media type of FTP and type
-in: ftp://your machine after picking ``Other''
-in the ftp sites menu.
-
-
-
-
-Before installing from Floppy
-
-If you must install from floppy disks, either due to
-unsupported hardware or simply because you enjoy doing
-things the hard way, you must first prepare some
-floppies for the install.
-
-You will need, at minimum, as many 1.44MB or 1.2MB floppies as
-it takes to hold all files in the bin (binary distribution)
-directory. If you are preparing these floppies under DOS, then
-THESE floppies *must* be formatted using the MS-DOS FORMAT
-command. If you are using Windows, use the Windows File
-Manager format command.
-
-Do not trust Factory Preformatted floppies! Format
-them again yourself, just to make sure. Many problems
-reported by our users in the past have resulted from the use
-of improperly formatted media, which is why I am taking such
-special care to mention it here!
-
-If you are creating the floppies from another FreeBSD machine,
-a format is still not a bad idea though you do not need to put
-a DOS filesystem on each floppy. You can use the `disklabel'
-and `newfs' commands to put a UFS filesystem on them instead,
-as the following sequence of commands (for a 3.5" 1.44MB floppy
-disk) illustrates:
-
-
-
- fdformat -f 1440 fd0.1440
- disklabel -w -r fd0.1440 floppy3
- newfs -t 2 -u 18 -l 1 -i 65536 /dev/rfd0
-
-(Use "fd0.1200" and "floppy5" for 5.25" 1.2MB disks).
-
-
-
-Then you can mount and write to them like any other file
-system.
-
-After you have formatted the floppies, you will need to copy
-the files onto them. The distribution files are split into
-chunks conveniently sized so that 5 of them will fit on a
-conventional 1.44MB floppy. Go through all your floppies,
-packing as many files as will fit on each one, until you have
-got all the distributions you want packed up in this fashion.
-Each distribution should go into a subdirectory on the
-floppy, e.g.: a:\bin\bin.aa,
-a:\bin\bin.ab, and so on.
-
-Once you come to the Media screen of the install,
-select ``Floppy'' and you will be prompted for the rest.
-
-
-
-
-Before installing from a MS-DOS partition
-
-To prepare for installation from an MS-DOS partition,
-copy the files from the distribution into a directory
-called C:\FREEBSD. The directory tree structure
-of the CDROM must be partially reproduced within this directory
-so we suggest using the DOS xcopy
-command. For example, to prepare for a minimal installation of
-FreeBSD:
-
-C> MD C:\FREEBSD
-C> XCOPY /S E:\BIN C:\FREEBSD\BIN\
-C> XCOPY /S E:\MANPAGES C:\FREEBSD\MANPAGES\
-
-
-assuming that C: is where you have free space
-and E: is where your CDROM is mounted.
-
-For as many `DISTS' you wish to install from MS-DOS
-(and you have free space for), install each one under
-C:\FREEBSD - the BIN dist is only the
-minimal requirement.
-
-
-
-
-Before installing from QIC/SCSI Tape
-
-Installing from tape is probably the easiest method,
-short of an on-line install using FTP or a CDROM
-install. The installation program expects the files to
-be simply tar'ed onto the tape, so after getting all of
-the files for distribution you are interested in, simply
-tar them onto the tape with a command like:
-
-cd /freebsd/distdir
-tar cvf /dev/rwt0 (or /dev/rst0) dist1 .. dist2
-
-
-
-When you go to do the installation, you should also
-make sure that you leave enough room in some temporary
-directory (which you will be allowed to choose) to
-accommodate the full contents of the tape you have
-created. Due to the non-random access nature of tapes,
-this method of installation requires quite a bit of
-temporary storage. You should expect to require as
-much temporary storage as you have stuff written on
-tape.
-
-
-
-Note: When going to do the
-installation, the tape must be in the drive
-before booting from the boot floppy. The
-installation probe may otherwise fail to find it.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Before installing over a network
-
-You can do network installations over 3 types of
-communications links:
-
-Serial port
-
-SLIP or PPP
-
-
-
-
-Parallel port
-
-
-PLIP (laplink cable)
-
-
-
-
-Ethernet
-
-
-A
-standard ethernet controller (includes some PCMCIA).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-SLIP support is rather primitive, and limited primarily
-to hard-wired links, such as a serial cable running
-between a laptop computer and another computer. The
-link should be hard-wired as the SLIP installation
-does not currently offer a dialing capability; that
-facility is provided with the PPP utility, which should
-be used in preference to SLIP whenever possible.
-
-If you are using a modem, then PPP is almost certainly
-your only choice. Make sure that you have your service
-provider's information handy as you will need to know it
-fairly soon in the installation process. You will need
-to know how to dial your ISP using the ``AT commands''
-specific to your modem, as the PPP dialer provides only a
-very simple terminal emulator. If you're using PAP or
-CHAP, you'll need to type the necessary ``set authname''
-and ``set authkey'' commands before typing ``term''.
-Refer to the user-ppp
-and FAQ entries
-for further information. If you have problems, logging can
-be directed to the screen using the command set log
-local ....
-
-If a hard-wired connection to another FreeBSD (2.0R or
-later) machine is available, you might also consider
-installing over a ``laplink'' parallel port cable. The
-data rate over the parallel port is much higher than
-what is typically possible over a serial line (up to
-50k/sec), thus resulting in a quicker installation.
-
-Finally, for the fastest possible network installation,
-an ethernet adaptor is always a good choice! FreeBSD
-supports most common PC ethernet cards, a table of
-supported cards (and their required settings) is
-provided in . If you are using one of the supported
-PCMCIA ethernet cards, also be sure that it is plugged
-in before the laptop is powered on! FreeBSD
-does not, unfortunately, currently support hot
-insertion of PCMCIA cards during installation.
-
-You will also need to know your IP address on the
-network, the netmask value for your address class,
-and the name of your machine. Your system
-administrator can tell you which values to use for your
-particular network setup. If you will be referring to
-other hosts by name rather than IP address, you will also
-need a name server and possibly the address of a
-gateway (if you are using PPP, it is your provider's IP
-address) to use in talking to it. If you do not know
-the answers to all or most of these questions, then you
-should really probably talk to your system
-administrator first before trying this type of
-installation.
-
-Once you have a network link of some sort working, the
-installation can continue over NFS or FTP.
-
-
-
-Preparing for NFS installation
-
-NFS installation is fairly straight-forward: Simply
-copy the FreeBSD distribution files you want onto a
-server somewhere and then point the NFS media
-selection at it.
-
-If this server supports only ``privileged port'' access
-(as is generally the default for Sun workstations),
-you will need to set this option in the Options menu
-before installation can proceed.
-
-If you have a poor quality ethernet card which
-suffers from very slow transfer rates, you may also
-wish to toggle the appropriate Options flag.
-
-In order for NFS installation to work, the server
-must support subdir mounts, e.g., if your FreeBSD
-&rel.current; distribution directory lives on:
-ziggy:/usr/archive/stuff/FreeBSD Then ziggy will have
-to allow the direct mounting of
-/usr/archive/stuff/FreeBSD, not just /usr or
-/usr/archive/stuff.
-
-In FreeBSD's /etc/exports file, this is controlled by
-the ``'' option. Other NFS servers may have
-different conventions. If you are getting
-`Permission Denied' messages from the server then
-it is likely that you do not have this enabled
-properly.
-
-
-
-
-Preparing for FTP Installation
-
-FTP installation may be done from any mirror site
-containing a reasonably up-to-date version of FreeBSD
-&rel.current;. A full menu of reasonable choices from almost
-anywhere in the world is provided by the FTP site
-menu.
-
-If you are installing from some other FTP site not
-listed in this menu, or you are having troubles
-getting your name server configured properly, you can
-also specify your own URL by selecting the ``Other''
-choice in that menu. A URL can also be a direct IP
-address, so the following would work in the absence
-of a name server:
-
-
-
-ftp://165.113.121.81/pub/FreeBSD/&rel.current;-RELEASE
-
-
-
-There are two FTP installation modes you can use:
-
-
-
-FTP Active
-
-For all FTP transfers, use ``Active'' mode. This
-will not work through firewalls, but will often
-work with older ftp servers that do not support
-passive mode. If your connection hangs with
-passive mode (the default), try active!
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FTP Passive
-
-
-For all FTP transfers, use ``Passive'' mode. This
-allows the user to pass through firewalls that do
-not allow incoming connections on random port
-addresses.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Note: Active and passive modes are
-not the same as a `proxy' connection, where a proxy
-FTP server is listening and forwarding FTP requests!
-
-
-
-For a proxy FTP server, you should usually give name of
-the server you really want as a part of the username,
-after an @-sign. The proxy server then 'fakes' the real
-server. An example: Say you want to install from
-ftp.freebsd.org, using the proxy FTP server foo.bar.com,
-listening on port 1234.
-
-In this case, you go to the options menu, set the FTP
-username to ftp@ftp.freebsd.org, and the password to your
-e-mail address. As your installation media, you specify
-FTP (or passive FTP, if the proxy support it), and the URL
-
-ftp://foo.bar.com:1234/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-/pub/FreeBSD from ftp.freebsd.org is proxied under
-foo.bar.com, allowing you to install from _that_ machine
-(which fetch the files from ftp.freebsd.org as your
-installation requests them).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Installing FreeBSD
-
-Once you have taken note of the appropriate
-preinstallation steps, you should be able to install
-FreeBSD without any further trouble.
-
-Should this not be true, then you may wish to go back and
-re-read the relevant preparation section above
-for the installation media type you are trying to use,
-perhaps there is a helpful hint there that you missed the
-first time? If you are having hardware trouble, or
-FreeBSD refuses to boot at all, read the Hardware Guide
-provided on the boot floppy for a list of possible
-solutions.
-
-The FreeBSD boot floppy contains all the on-line
-documentation you should need to be able to navigate
-through an installation and if it does not then we would
-like to know what you found most confusing. Send your
-comments to the &a.doc;.
-It is the objective of the
-FreeBSD installation program (sysinstall) to be
-self-documenting enough that painful ``step-by-step''
-guides are no longer necessary. It may take us a little
-while to reach that objective, but that is the objective!
-
-Meanwhile, you may also find the following ``typical
-installation sequence'' to be helpful:
-
-
-
-
-
-Boot the boot floppy. After a boot sequence
-which can take anywhere from 30 seconds to 3
-minutes, depending on your hardware, you should be
-presented with a menu of initial choices. If the
-floppy does not boot at all, or the boot hangs at some
-stage, go read the Q&A section of the Hardware Guide
-for possible causes.
-
-
-
-
-Press F1. You should see some basic usage
-instructions on the menu system and general
-navigation. If you have not used this menu system
-before then PLEASE read this thoroughly!
-
-
-
-
-Select the Options item and set any special
-preferences you may have.
-
-
-
-
-Select a Novice, Custom or Express install, depending on
-whether or not you would like the installation to help
-you through a typical installation, give you a high degree of
-control over each step of the installation or simply whizz
-through it (using reasonable defaults when possible) as fast
-as possible. If you have never used FreeBSD before then the
-Novice installation method is most recommended.
-
-
-
-
-The final configuration menu choice allows you to
-further configure your FreeBSD installation by giving you
-menu-driven access to various system defaults. Some
-items, like networking, may be especially important
-if you did a CDROM/Tape/Floppy installation and have
-not yet configured your network interfaces (assuming
-you have any). Properly configuring such interfaces
-here will allow FreeBSD to come up on the network
-when you first reboot from the hard disk.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-MS-DOS User's Questions and Answers
-
-Many FreeBSD users wish to install FreeBSD on PCs inhabited
-by MS-DOS. Here are some commonly asked questions about
-installing FreeBSD on such systems.
-
-Help! I have no space! Do I need to delete
-everything first?
-
-If your machine is already running MS-DOS and has little
-or no free space available for FreeBSD's installation,
-all is not lost! You may find the FIPS utility, provided
-in the tools directory on the FreeBSD CDROM or
-on the various FreeBSD ftp sites, to be quite useful.
-
-FIPS allows you to split an existing MS-DOS partition
-into two pieces, preserving the original partition and
-allowing you to install onto the second free piece. You
-first defragment your MS-DOS partition, using the DOS
-6.xx DEFRAG utility or the Norton Disk tools, then run
-FIPS. It will prompt you for the rest of the information
-it needs. Afterwards, you can reboot and install FreeBSD
-on the new free slice. See the Distributions
-menu for an estimation of how much free space you will need
-for the kind of installation you want.
-
-Can I use compressed MS-DOS filesystems from
-FreeBSD?
-
-No. If you are using a utility such as Stacker(tm) or
-DoubleSpace(tm), FreeBSD will only be able to use
-whatever portion of the filesystem you leave
-uncompressed. The rest of the filesystem will show up as
-one large file (the stacked/dblspaced file!). Do not
-remove that file! You will probably regret it
-greatly!
-
-It is probably better to create another uncompressed
-MS-DOS primary partition and use this for communications
-between MS-DOS and FreeBSD.
-
-Can I mount my MS-DOS extended partitions?
-
-Yes. DOS extended partitions are mapped in at the end of the other
-``slices'' in FreeBSD, e.g. your D: drive might be /dev/sd0s5,
-your E: drive /dev/sd0s6, and so on. This example assumes, of
-course, that your extended partition is on SCSI drive 0. For IDE drives,
-substitute ``wd'' for ``sd'' appropriately. You otherwise mount extended
-partitions exactly like you would mount any other DOS drive, e.g.:
-
-
-
-mount -t msdos /dev/sd0s5 /dos_d
-
-
-
-Can I run MS-DOS binaries under FreeBSD?
-
-BSDI has donated their DOS emulator to the BSD world and
-this has been ported to FreeBSD.
-
-There is also a (technically) nice application available in the
- called pcemu
-which allows you to run many basic MS-DOS text-mode binaries
-by entirely emulating an 8088 CPU.
-
-
-
-
-
-Unix Basics
-
-
-
-The Online Manual
-
-The most comprehensive documentation on FreeBSD is in
-the form of man pages. Nearly every program
-on the system comes with a short reference manual
-explaining the basic operation and various arguments.
-These manuals can be view with the
-man command. Use of the
-man command is simple:
-
-mancommand
-
-
-where command is the name of the command
-you wish to learn about. For example, to learn more about
-ls command type:
-
-% man ls
-
-
-
-The online manual is divided up into numbered
-sections:
-
-
-
-User commands
-
-
-
-System calls and error numbers
-
-
-
-Functions in the C libraries
-
-
-
-Device drivers
-
-
-
-File formats
-
-
-
-Games and other diversions
-
-
-
-Miscellaneous information
-
-
-
-System maintenance and operation commands
-
-
-
-
-in some cases, the same topic may appear in more than
-one section of the on-line manual. For example, there
-is a chmod user command and a
-chmod() system call. In this case,
-you can tell the man command which
-one you want by specifying the section:
-
-% man 1 chmod
-
-
-which will display the manual page for the user command
-chmod. References to a particular
-section of the on-line manual are traditionally placed
-in parenthesis in written documentation, so
-chmod(1) refers to the chmod user command and chmod(2)
-refers to the system call.
-
-This is fine if you know the name of the command and
-simply wish to know how to use it, but what if you cannot recall the
-command name? You can use man to
-search for keywords in the command descriptions by
-using the switch:
-
-% man -k mail
-
-
-With this command you will be presented with a list of
-commands that have the keyword `mail' in their
-descriptions. This is actually functionally equivalent to
-using the apropos command.
-
-So, you are looking at all those fancy commands in /usr/bin but do not even have the faintest idea
-what most of them actually do? Simply do a
-
-% cd /usr/bin; man -f *
-
-
-or
-
-% cd /usr/bin; whatis *
-
-
-which does the same thing.
-
-
-
-
-GNU Info Files
-
-FreeBSD includes many applications and utilities
-produced by the Free Software Foundation (FSF). In
-addition to man pages, these programs come with more
-extensive hypertext documents called info
-files which can be viewed with the info
-command or, if you installed emacs, the info
-mode of emacs.
-
-To use the info(1) command, simply type:
-
-% info
-
- For a brief
-introduction, type h. For a quick
-command reference, type ?.
-
-
-
-
-
-Installing Applications: The Ports collection
-
-Contributed by &a.jraynard;.
-
-The FreeBSD Ports collection allows you to compile and install a very
-wide range of applications with a minimum of effort.
-
- For all the hype about open standards, getting a program to work
-on different versions of Unix in the real world can be a tedious and
-tricky business, as anyone who has tried it will know. You may be lucky
-enough to find that the program you want will compile cleanly on your
-system, install itself in all the right places and run flawlessly
-``out of the box'', but this is unfortunately rather rare. With most
-programs, you will find yourself doing a fair bit of head-scratching,
-and there are quite a few programs that will result in premature
-greying, or even chronic alopecia...
-
- Some software distributions have attacked this problem by
-providing configuration scripts. Some of these are very clever, but
-they have an unfortunate tendency to triumphantly announce that your
-system is something you have never heard of and then ask you lots of
-questions that sound like a final exam in system-level Unix
-programming (``Does your system's gethitlist function return a const
-pointer to a fromboz or a pointer to a const fromboz? Do you have
-Foonix style unacceptable exception handling? And if not, why not?'').
-
- Fortunately, with the Ports collection, all the hard work involved
-has already been done, and you can just type 'make install' and get a
-working program.
-
-
-
-Why Have a Ports Collection?
-
-The base FreeBSD system comes with a very wide range of tools and
-system utilities, but a lot of popular programs are not in the base
-system, for good reasons:-
-
-
-
-
-
-Programs that some people cannot live without and other people
-cannot stand, such as a certain Lisp-based editor.
-
-
-
-
-Programs which are too specialised to put in the base system
-(CAD, databases).
-
-
-
-
-Programs which fall into the ``I must have a look at
-that when I get a spare minute'' category, rather than system-critical
-ones (some languages, perhaps).
-
-
-
-
-Programs that are far too much fun to be supplied with a serious
-operating system like FreeBSD ;-)
-
-
-
-
-However many programs you put in the base system, people will
-always want more, and a line has to be drawn somewhere (otherwise
-FreeBSD distributions would become absolutely enormous).
-
-
-
-
-
- Obviously it would be unreasonable to expect everyone to port their
-favourite programs by hand (not to mention a tremendous amount of
-duplicated work), so the FreeBSD Project came up with an ingenious
-way of using standard tools that would automate the process.
-
- Incidentally, this is an excellent illustration of how ``the Unix way''
-works in practice by combining a set of simple but very flexible tools
-into something very powerful.
-
-
-
-
-How Does the Ports Collection Work?
-
-Programs are typically distributed on the Internet as a
- consisting of
-a Makefile and the source code for the program and usually
-some instructions (which are unfortunately not always as instructive
-as they could be), with perhaps a configuration script.
-
-The standard scenario is that you FTP down the tarball, extract it
-somewhere, glance through the instructions, make any changes that seem
-necessary, run the configure script to set things up and use the standard
-`make' program to compile and install the program from the source.
-
-FreeBSD ports still use the tarball mechanism, but use a
- to hold the "knowledge"
-of how to get the program working on FreeBSD, rather than expecting the
-user to be able to work it out. They also supply their own customised
-, so that almost every port
-can be built in the same way.
-
-If you look at a port skeleton (either on your FreeBSD system or the FTP site) and expect to find all sorts of pointy-headed rocket
-science lurking there, you may be disappointed by the one or two
-rather unexciting-looking files and directories you find there.
-(We will discuss in a minute how to go about ).
-
-``How on earth can this do anything?'' I hear you cry. ``There
-is no source code there!''
-
- Fear not, gentle reader, all will become clear (hopefully). Let's
-see what happens if we try and install a port. I have chosen `ElectricFence',
-a useful tool for developers, as the skeleton is more straightforward than
-most.
-
-Note if you are trying this at home, you will need to be root.
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports/devel/ElectricFence
-# make install
->> Checksum OK for ElectricFence-2.0.5.tar.gz.
-===> Extracting for ElectricFence-2.0.5
-===> Patching for ElectricFence-2.0.5
-===> Applying FreeBSD patches for ElectricFence-2.0.5
-===> Configuring for ElectricFence-2.0.5
-===> Building for ElectricFence-2.0.5
-[lots of compiler output...]
-===> Installing for ElectricFence-2.0.5
-===> Warning: your umask is "0002".
- If this is not desired, set it to an appropriate value
- and install this port again by ``make reinstall''.
-install -c -o bin -g bin -m 444 /usr/ports/devel/ElectricFence/work/ElectricFence-2.0.5/libefence.a /usr/local/lib
-install -c -o bin -g bin -m 444 /usr/ports/devel/ElectricFence/work/ElectricFence-2.0.5/libefence.3 /usr/local/man/man3
-===> Compressing manual pages for ElectricFence-2.0.5
-===> Registering installation for ElectricFence-2.0.5
-
-
- To avoid confusing the issue, I have completely removed the build output.
-
-If you tried this yourself, you may well have got something like this at
-the start:-
-
-
-# make install
->> ElectricFence-2.0.5.tar.gz doesn't seem to exist on this system.
->> Attempting to fetch from ftp://ftp.doc.ic.ac.uk/Mirrors/sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/devel/lang/c/.
-
-
- The `make' program has noticed that you did not have a local copy
-of the source code and tried to FTP it down so it could get the job
-done. I already had the
-source handy in my example, so it did not need to fetch it.
-
- Let's go through this and see what the `make' program was doing.
-
-
-
-
-
- Locate the source code If it is not available locally, try to grab it from an
-FTP site.
-
-
-
-
- Run a test on the
-tarball to make sure it has not been tampered with, accidentally
-truncated, downloaded in ASCII mode, struck by neutrinos while in transit, etc.
-
-
-
-
- Extract the tarball into a temporary work directory.
-
-
-
-
- Apply any needed to get
-the source to compile and run under FreeBSD.
-
-
-
-
- Run any configuration script required by the build process and
-correctly answer any questions it asks.
-
-
-
-
- (Finally!) Compile the code.
-
-
-
-
- Install the program executable and other supporting files, man
-pages, etc. under the /usr/local hierarchy, where they will not get mixed
-up with system programs. This also makes sure that all the ports you
-install will go in the same place, instead of being flung all over
-your system.
-
-
-
-
- Register the installation in a database. This means
-that, if you do not like the program, you can cleanly all traces of it from your system.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Scroll up to the make output and see if you can match these steps to it.
-And if you were not impressed before, you should be by now!
-
-
-
-
-Getting a FreeBSD Port
-
-There are two ways of getting hold of the FreeBSD port for a
-program. One requires a , the other involves using an
-
-
-
-Compiling ports from CDROM
-
-If you answered yes to the question ``Do you want to link the ports
-collection to your CDROM'' during the FreeBSD installation, the initial
-setting up will already have been done for you.
-
-If not, make sure the FreeBSD CDROM is in the drive and mounted on,
-say, /cdrom. Then do
-
-
- # mkdir /usr/ports
- # cd /usr/ports
- # ln -s /cdrom/ports/distfiles distfiles
-
-
-to enable the ports make mechanism to find the tarballs (it expects to
-find them in /usr/ports/distfiles, which is why we sym-linked the
-CDROM's tarball directory to that directory).
-
-Now, suppose you want to install the gnats program from the databases
-directory. Here is how to do it:-
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports
- # mkdir databases
- # cp -R /cdrom/ports/databases/gnats databases
- # cd databases/gnats
- # make install
-
-
-Or if you are a serious database user and you want to compare all the
-ones available in the Ports collection, do
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports
- # cp -R /cdrom/ports/databases .
- # cd databases
- # make install
-
-
-(yes, that really is a dot on its own after the cp command and not a
-mistake. It is Unix-ese for ``the current directory'')
-
-and the ports make mechanism will automatically compile and install
-all the ports in the databases directory for you!
-
-If you do not like this method, here is a completely different way of
-doing it:-
-
-Create a "link tree" to it using the lndir(1) command that
-comes with the XFree86 distribution. Find a location with
-some free space, create a directory there and then cd to it. Then
-invoke the lndir(1) command with the full pathname of the ``ports''
-directory on the CDROM as the first argument and . (the current directory)
-as the second. This might be, for example, something like:
- lndir /cdrom/ports .
-
-
-Then you can build ports directly off the CDROM by building them in the
-link tree you have created.
-
-Note that there are some ports for which we cannot provide the original
-source in the CDROM due to licensing limitations. In that case,
-you will need to look at the section on
-
-
-
-
-Compiling ports from the Internet
-
-If you do not have a CDROM, or you want to make sure you get the very
-latest version of the port you want, you will need to download the
- for the port. Now this
-might sound like rather a fiddly job
-full of pitfalls, but it is actually very easy.
-
-The key to it is that the FreeBSD FTP server can create on-the-fly
- for you. Here is how it works,
-with the gnats program in the databases directory as an example (the
-bits in square brackets are comments. Do not type them in if you are
-trying this yourself!):-
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports
- # mkdir databases
- # cd databases
- # ftp ftp.freebsd.org
- [log in as `ftp' and give your email address when asked for a
- password. Remember to use binary (also known as image) mode!]
- > cd /pub/FreeBSD/ports/databases
- > get gnats.tar [tars up the gnats skeleton for us]
- > quit
- # tar xf gnats.tar [extract the gnats skeleton]
- # cd gnats
- # make install [build and install gnats]
-
-
-What happened here? We connected to the FTP server in the usual way
-and went to its databases sub-directory. When we gave it the command
-`get gnats.tar', the FTP server up the gnats directory for us.
-
-We then extracted the gnats skeleton and went into the gnats directory
-to build the port. As we explained , the make process noticed we did not have a copy of the
-source locally, so it fetched one before extracting, patching and
-building it.
-
-Let's try something more ambitious now. Instead of getting a single
-port skeleton, let's get a whole sub-directory, for example all the
-database skeletons in the ports collection. It looks almost the same:-
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports
- # ftp ftp.freebsd.org
- [log in as `ftp' and give your email address when asked for a
- password. Remember to use binary (also known as image) mode!]
- > cd /pub/FreeBSD/ports
- > get databases.tar [tars up the databases directory for us]
- > quit
- # tar xf databases.tar [extract all the database skeletons]
- # cd databases
- # make install [build and install all the database ports]
-
-
-With half a dozen straightforward commands, we have now got a set of
-database programs on our FreeBSD machine! All we did that was
-different from getting a single port skeleton and building it was that
-we got a whole directory at once, and compiled everything in it at
-once. Pretty impressive, no?
-
-If you expect to be installing many ports, it is
-probably worth downloading all the ports directories.
-
-
-
-
-
-Skeletons
-
-A team of compulsive hackers who have forgotten to eat in a frantic
-attempt to make a deadline? Something unpleasant lurking in the FreeBSD
-attic? No, a skeleton here is a minimal framework that supplies everything
-needed to make the ports magic work.
-
-
-
-Makefile
-
-The most important component of a skeleton is the Makefile. This contains
-various statements that specify how the port should be compiled and
-installed. Here is the Makefile for ElectricFence:-
-
-
-# New ports collection makefile for: Electric Fence
-# Version required: 2.0.5
-# Date created: 13 November 1997
-# Whom: jraynard
-#
-# $Id: book.sgml,v 1.1 1998-04-01 18:25:32 nik Exp $
-#
-
-DISTNAME= ElectricFence-2.0.5
-CATEGORIES= devel
-MASTER_SITES= ${MASTER_SITE_SUNSITE}
-MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR= devel/lang/c
-
-MAINTAINER= jraynard@freebsd.org
-
-MAN3= libefence.3
-
-do-install:
- ${INSTALL_DATA} ${WRKSRC}/libefence.a ${PREFIX}/lib
- ${INSTALL_MAN} ${WRKSRC}/libefence.3 ${PREFIX}/man/man3
-
-.include <bsd.port.mk>
-
-
-The lines beginning with a "#" sign are comments for the benefit
-of human readers (as in most Unix script files).
-
-`DISTNAME" specifies the name of the , but without the extension.
-
-`CATEGORIES" states what kind of program this is. In this case, a
-utility for developers.
-
-`MASTER_SITES" is the URL(s) of the master FTP site, which is
-used to retrieve the if it is not
-available on the local system. This is a site which is regarded as
-reputable, and is normally the one from which the program is officially
-distributed (in so far as any software is "officially" distributed
-on the Internet).
-
-`MAINTAINER" is the email address of the person who is
-responsible for updating the skeleton if, for example a new version
-of the program comes out.
-
-Skipping over the next few lines for a minute, the line
- .include <bsd.port.mk>
-
-says that the other statements and commands
-needed for this port are in a standard file called
-`bsd.port.mk". As these are the same for all ports, there is
-no point in duplicating them all over the place, so they are kept in a
-single standard file.
-
-This is probably not the place to go into a detailed examination of
-how Makefiles work; suffice it to say that the line starting with ``MAN3''
-ensures that the ElectricFence man page is compressed after installation,
-to help conserve your precious disk space. The original port did not
-provide an ``install'' target, so the three lines from ``do-install''
-ensure that the files produced by this port are placed in the correct
-destination.
-
-
-
-
-The files directory
-
-The file containing the for
-the port is called "md5", after the MD5 algorithm
-used for ports checksums. It lives in a directory with the slightly
-confusing name of "files".
-
-This directory can also contain other miscellaneous files that are required
-by the port and do not belong anywhere else.
-
-
-
-
-The patches directory
-
-This directory contains the needed
-to make everything work properly under FreeBSD.
-
-
-
-
-The pkg directory
-
-This program contains three quite useful files:-
-
-
-
-
-
-COMMENT - a one-line description of the program.
-
-
-
-
-DESCR - a more detailed description.
-
-
-
-
-PLIST - a list of all the files that will be created when the program is installed.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-What to do when a port does not work.
-
-Oh. You can do one of four (4) things :
-
-
-
-
-
- Fix it yourself. Technical details on how ports work can be found in
-
-
-
-
- Gripe. This is done by e-mail *ONLY*! Send such e-mail to the &a.ports;
-and please include the name/version of the port, where you got both the port
-source & distfile(s) from, and what the text of the error was.
-
-
-
-
- Forget it. This is the easiest for most - very few of the programs in
-ports can be classified as `essential'!
-
-
-
-
- Grab the pre-compiled package from a ftp server. The ``master'' package
-collection is on FreeBSD's FTP server in the packages directory, though check your local mirror first, please!
-
-These are more likely to work (on the whole) than trying to compile from
-source and a lot faster besides! Use the pkg_add(1)
-program to install a package file on your system.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-I Want to Make a Port!
-
-Great! Please see the
-for detailed instructions on how to do this.
-
-
-
-
-Some Questions and Answers
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I thought this was going to be a discussion about modems??!
-
-
-A. Ah. You must be thinking of the serial ports on the back of your
-computer. We are using `port' here to mean the result of `porting' a
-program from one version of Unix to another. (It is an unfortunate bad
-habit of computer people to use the same word to refer to several
-completely different things).
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I thought you were supposed to use packages to install extra
-programs?
-
-
-A. Yes, that is usually the quickest and easiest way of doing it.
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. So why bother with ports then?
-
-
-A. Several reasons:-
-
-
-
-
-
- The licensing conditions on some software distributions
-require that they be distributed as source code, not binaries.
-
-
-
-
- Some people do not trust binary distributions. At least with
-source code you can (in theory) read through it and look for potential
-problems yourself.
-
-
-
-
- If you have some local patches, you will need the source to add
-them yourself.
-
-
-
-
- You might have opinions on how a program should be compiled
-that differ from the person who did the package - some people have
-strong views on what optimisation setting should be used, whether to
-build debug versions and then strip them or not, etc. etc.
-
-
-
-
- Some people like having code around, so they can read it if
-they get bored, hack around with it, borrow from it (licence terms
-permitting, of course!) and so on.
-
-
-
-
- If you ain't got the source, it ain't software! ;-)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. What is a patch?
-
-
-A. A patch is a small (usually) file that specifies how to go from one
-version of a file to another. It contains text that says, in effect,
-things like ``delete line 23'', ``add these two lines after line 468''
-or ``change line 197 to this''. Also known as a `diff', since it is
-generated by a program of that name.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. What is all this about tarballs?
-
-
-A. It is a file ending in .tar or .tar.gz (with variations like .tar.Z, or
-even .tgz if you are trying to squeeze the names into a DOS filesystem).
-
-Basically, it is a directory tree that has been archived into a single
-file (.tar) and optionally compressed (.gz). This technique was originally
-used for Tape ARchives (hence the name `tar'), but it is a
-widely used way of distributing program source code around the
-Internet.
-
-You can see what files are in them, or even extract them yourself, by
-using the standard Unix tar program, which comes with the base FreeBSD
-system, like this:-
-
-
- tar tvzf foobar.tar.gz # View contents of foobar.tar.gz
- tar xzvf foobar.tar.gz # Extract contents into the current directory
- tar tvf foobar.tar # View contents of foobar.tar
- tar xvf foobar.tar # Extract contents into the current directory
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. And a checksum?
-
-
-A. It is a number generated by adding up all the data in the file you
-want to check. If any of the characters change, the checksum will no
-longer be equal to the total, so a simple comparison will allow you to
-spot the difference. (In practice, it is done in a more complicated way
-to spot problems like position-swapping, which will not show up with a
-simplistic addition).
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I did what you said for and it worked great until I tried to install the kermit
-port:-
-
- # make install
- >> cku190.tar.gz doesn't seem to exist on this system.
- >> Attempting to fetch from ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/archives/.
-
-
-Why can it not be found? Have I got a dud CDROM?
-
-
-A. The licensing terms for kermit do not allow us to put the tarball
-for it on the CDROM, so you will have to fetch it by hand - sorry!
-The reason why you got all those error messages was because you
-were not connected to the Internet at the time. Once you have downloaded
-it from any of the sites above, you can re-start the process (try and
-choose the nearest site to you, though, to save your time and the
-Internet's bandwidth).
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I did that, but when I tried to put it into /usr/ports/distfiles I
-got some error about not having permission.
-
-
-A. The ports mechanism looks for the tarball in /usr/ports/distfiles,
-but you will not be able to copy anything there because it is sym-linked
-to the CDROM, which is read-only. You can tell it to look somewhere
-else by doing
-
-
- DISTDIR=/where/you/put/it make install
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. Does the ports scheme only work if you have everything in
-/usr/ports? My system administrator says I must put everything under
-/u/people/guests/wurzburger, but it does not seem to work.
-
-
-A. You can use the PORTSDIR and PREFIX variables to tell the ports
-mechanism to use different directories. For instance,
-
-
- make PORTSDIR=/u/people/guests/wurzburger/ports install
-
-
-will compile the port in /u/people/guests/wurzburger/ports and install
-everything under /usr/local.
-
-
-
- make PREFIX=/u/people/guests/wurzburger/local install
-
-
-will compile it in /usr/ports and install it in
-/u/people/guests/wurzburger/local.
-
-And of course
-
-
- make PORTSDIR=.../ports PREFIX=.../local install
-
-
-will combine the two (it is too long to fit on the page if I write it
-in full, but I am sure you get the idea).
-
-If you do not fancy typing all that in every time you install a port
-(and to be honest, who would?), it is a good idea to put these variables
-into your environment.
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I do not have a FreeBSD CDROM, but I would like to have all the tarballs
-handy on my system so I do not have to wait for a download every time I
-install a port. Is there an easy way to get them all at once?
-
-
-A. To get every single tarball for the ports collection, do
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports
- # make fetch
-
-
-For all the tarballs for a single ports directory, do
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports/directory
- # make fetch
-
-
-and for just one port - well, I think you have guessed already.
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I know it is probably faster to fetch the tarballs from one of the
-FreeBSD mirror sites close by. Is there any way to tell the port to
-fetch them from servers other than ones listed in the MASTER_SITES?
-
-
-A. Yes. If you know, for example, ftp.FreeBSD.ORG is much closer than
-sites listed in MASTER_SITES, do as following example.
- # cd /usr/ports/directory
- # make MASTER_SITE_OVERRIDE=ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/distfiles/ fetch
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I want to know what files make is going to need before it tries to
-pull them down.
-
-
-A. 'make fetch-list' will display a list of the files needed for a port.
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. Is there any way to stop the port from compiling? I want to do some
-hacking on the source before I install it, but it is a bit tiresome having
-to watch it and hit control-C every time.
-
-
-A. Doing 'make extract' will stop it after it has fetched and
-extracted the source code.
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I am trying to make my own port and I want to be able to stop it
-compiling until I have had a chance to see if my patches worked properly.
-Is there something like 'make extract', but for patches?
-
-
-A. Yep, 'make patch' is what you want. You will probably find the
-PATCH_DEBUG option useful as well. And by the way, thank you for
-your efforts!
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I have heard that some compiler options can cause bugs. Is this true?
-How can I make sure that I compile ports with the right settings?
-
-
-A. Yes, with version 2.6.3 of gcc (the version shipped with FreeBSD
-2.1.0 and 2.1.5), the -O2 option could result in buggy code unless you
-used the -fno-strength-reduce option as well. (Most of the ports don't
-use -O2). You should be able to specify the compiler options
-used by something like
-
-
- make CFLAGS='-O2 -fno-strength-reduce' install
-
-
-or by editing /etc/make.conf, but unfortunately not all ports respect
-this. The surest way is to do 'make configure', then go into the
-source directory and inspect the Makefiles by hand, but this can get
-tedious if the source has lots of sub-directories, each with their own
-Makefiles.
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. There are so many ports it is hard to find the one I want. Is there a
-list anywhere of what ports are available?
-
-
-A. Look in the INDEX file in /usr/ports.
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I went to install the 'foo' port but the system suddenly stopped
-compiling it and starting compiling the 'bar' port. What's going on?
-
-
-A. The 'foo' port needs something that is supplied with 'bar' - for
-instance, if 'foo' uses graphics, 'bar' might have a library with
-useful graphics processing routines. Or 'bar' might be a tool that is
-needed to compile the 'foo' port.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I installed the grizzle program from the ports and frankly it is a
-complete waste of disk space. I want to delete it but I do not know
-where it put all the files. Any clues?
-
-
-A. No problem, just do
-
-
- pkg_delete grizzle-6.5
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. Hang on a minute, you have to know the version number to use that
-command. You do not seriously expect me to remember that, do you??
-
-
-A. Not at all, you can find it out by doing
-
-
- pkg_info -a | grep grizzle
-
-
-And it will tell you:-
-
-
- Information for grizzle-6.5:
- grizzle-6.5 - the combined piano tutorial, LOGO interpreter and shoot 'em up arcade game.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. Talking of disk space, the ports directory seems to be taking up
-an awful lot of room. Is it safe to go in there and delete things?
-
-
-A. Yes, if you have installed the program and are fairly certain you
-will not need the source again, there is no point in keeping it hanging
-around. The best way to do this is
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports
- # make clean
-
-
-which will go through all the ports subdirectories and delete
-everything except the skeletons for each port.
-
-
-
-Q. I tried that and it still left all those tarballs or whatever you
-called them in the distfiles directory. Can I delete those as well?
-
-
-A. Yes, if you are sure you have finished with them, those can go as
-well.
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I like having lots and lots of programs to play with. Is there any
-way of installing all the ports in one go?
-
-
-A. Just do
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports
- # make install
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. OK, I tried that, but I thought it would take a very long time so I
-went to bed and left it to get on with it. When I looked at the
-computer this morning, it had only done three and a half ports. Did
-something go wrong?
-
-
-A. No, the problem is that some of the ports need to ask you questions
-that we cannot answer for you (eg ``Do you want to print on A4 or US
-letter sized paper?'') and they need to have someone on hand to answer
-them.
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. I really do not want to spend all day staring at the monitor. Any
-better ideas?
-
-
-A. OK, do this before you go to bed/work/the local park:-
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports
- # make -DBATCH install
-
-
-This will install every port that does not require user
-input. Then, when you come back, do
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports
- # make -DIS_INTERACTIVE install
-
-
-to finish the job.
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. At work, we are using frobble, which is in your ports collection,
-but we have altered it quite a bit to get it to do what we need. Is
-there any way of making our own packages, so we can distribute it more
-easily around our sites?
-
-
-A. No problem, assuming you know how to make patches for your changes:-
-
-
- # cd /usr/ports/somewhere/frobble
- # make extract
- # cd work/frobble-2.8
- [Apply your patches]
- # cd ../..
- # make package
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Q. This ports stuff is really clever. I am desperate to find out how
-you did it. What is the secret?
-
-
-A. Nothing secret about it at all, just look at the bsd.ports.mk and
-bsd.ports.subdir.mk files in your makefiles directory.
-(Note: readers with an aversion to intricate shell-scripts are advised
-not to follow this link...)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-System Administration
-
-
-
-Configuring the FreeBSD Kernel
-
-Contributed by &a.jehamby;.6 October 1995.
-
-This large section of the handbook discusses the basics of
-building your own custom kernel for FreeBSD. This section
-is appropriate for both novice system administrators and
-those with advanced Unix experience.
-
-
-
-Why Build a Custom Kernel?
-
-Building a custom kernel is one of the most important
-rites of passage every Unix system administrator must
-endure. This process, while time-consuming, will provide
-many benefits to your FreeBSD system. Unlike the GENERIC
-kernel, which must support every possible SCSI and
-network card, along with tons of other rarely used
-hardware support, a custom kernel only contains support
-for your PC's hardware. This has a number of
-benefits:
-
-
-
-
-
-It will take less time to boot because it does not
-have to spend time probing for hardware which you
-do not have.
-
-
-
-
-A custom kernel often uses less memory, which is
-important because the kernel is the one process which
-must always be present in memory, and so all of that
-unused code ties up pages of RAM that your programs
-would otherwise be able to use. Therefore, on a
-system with limited RAM, building a custom kernel is
-of critical importance.
-
-
-
-
-Finally, there are several kernel options which
-you can tune to fit your needs, and device driver
-support for things like sound cards which you can
-include in your kernel but are not present
-in the GENERIC kernel.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Building and Installing a Custom Kernel
-
-First, let us take a quick tour of the kernel build
-directory. All directories mentioned will be relative to
-the main /usr/src/sys directory, which is also
-accessible through /sys. There are a number of
-subdirectories here representing different parts of the
-kernel, but the most important, for our purposes, are
-i386/conf, where you will edit your custom
-kernel configuration, and compile, which is the
-staging area where your kernel will be built. Notice the
-logical organization of the directory tree, with each
-supported device, filesystem, and option in its own
-subdirectory. Also, anything inside the i386
-directory deals with PC hardware only, while everything
-outside the i386 directory is common to all
-platforms which FreeBSD could potentially be ported to.
-
-
-
-Note: If there is not a
-/usr/src/sys directory on your system, then the
-kernel source has not been been installed. Follow the
-instructions for installing packages to add this package
-to your system.
-
-
-
-Next, move to the i386/conf directory and copy
-the GENERIC configuration file to the name you want to
-give your kernel. For example:
-
-# cd /usr/src/sys/i386/conf
-# cp GENERIC MYKERNEL
-
-
-Traditionally, this name is in all capital letters and,
-if you are maintaining multiple FreeBSD machines with
-different hardware, it is a good idea to name it after
-your machine's hostname. We will call it MYKERNEL for
-the purpose of this example.
-
-
-
-Note: You must execute these and all of the
-following commands under the root account or you will get
-``permission denied'' errors.
-
-
-
-Now, edit MYKERNEL with your favorite text editor. If
-you are just starting out, the only editor available will
-probably be vi, which is too complex to explain
-here, but is covered well in many books in the . Feel free to change the
-comment lines at the top to reflect your configuration or the
-changes you have made to differentiate it from GENERIC.
-
-If you have build a kernel under SunOS or some other BSD
-operating system, much of this file will be very familiar
-to you. If you are coming from some other operating
-system such as DOS, on the other hand, the GENERIC
-configuration file might seem overwhelming to you, so
-follow the descriptions in the
-section slowly and carefully.
-
-
-
-Note: If you are trying to upgrade your kernel from an
-older version of FreeBSD, you will probably have to get a new
-version of config(8) from the same place you got the new
-kernel sources. It is located in /usr/src/usr.sbin, so
-you will need to download those sources as well. Re-build and install
-it before running the next commands.
-
-
-
-When you are finished, type the following to compile and
-install your kernel:
-
-# /usr/sbin/config MYKERNEL
-# cd ../../compile/MYKERNEL
-# make depend
-# make
-# make install
-
-
-The new kernel will be copied to the root directory as
-/kernel and the old kernel will be moved to
-/kernel.old. Now, shutdown the system and
-reboot to use your kernel. In case something goes wrong,
-there are some instructions at the end of this
-document. Be sure to read the section which explains how
-to recover in case your new kernel .
-
-
-
-Note: If you have added any new devices (such
-as sound cards) you may have to add some to your
-/dev directory before you can use them.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The Configuration File
-
-The general format of a configuration file is quite simple.
-Each line contains a keyword and one or more arguments. For
-simplicity, most lines only contain one argument. Anything
-following a # is considered a comment and ignored.
-The following sections describe each keyword, generally in the
-order they are listed in GENERIC, although some related
-keywords have been grouped together in a single section (such
-as Networking) even though they are actually scattered
-throughout the GENERIC file.
-An exhaustive list of options and more detailed explanations
-of the device lines is present in the LINT configuration file,
-located in the same directory as GENERIC. If you are in doubt
-as to the purpose or necessity of a line, check first in LINT.
-
-The kernel is currently being moved to a better organization
-of the option handling. Traditionally, each option in the
-config file was simply converted into a switch
-for the CFLAGS line of the kernel Makefile. Naturally,
-this caused a creeping optionism, with nobody really knowing
-which option has been referenced in what files.
-
-In the new scheme, every #ifdef that is intended to
-be dependent upon an option gets this option out of an
-opt_foo.h declaration file created in the
-compile directory by config. The list of valid options
-for config lives in two files: options that do not
-depend on the architecture are listed in
-/sys/conf/options, architecture-dependent ones
-in /sys/arch/conf/options.arch,
-with arch being for example i386.
-
-
-
-Mandatory Keywords
-
-These keywords are required in every kernel you build.
-
-
-
-machine ``i386''
-
-
-
-The first keyword is machine, which,
-since FreeBSD only runs on Intel 386 and compatible
-chips, is i386.
-
-
-
-Note: that any keyword which
-contains numbers used as text must be enclosed in
-quotation marks, otherwise config gets
-confused and thinks you mean the actual number
-386.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cpu ``cpu_type''
-
-
-
-
-The next keyword is cpu, which includes
-support for each CPU supported by FreeBSD. The
-possible values of cpu_type
-include:
-
-
-
-I386_CPU
-
-
-
-I486_CPU
-
-
-
-I586_CPU
-
-
-
-I686_CPU
-
-
-
-
-and multiple instances of the cpu line may
-be present with different values of
-cpu_type as are present in the
-GENERIC kernel. For a custom kernel, it is best to
-specify only the cpu you have. If, for example,
-you have an Intel Pentium, use I586_CPU
-for cpu_type.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-ident machine_name
-
-
-
-
-Next, we have ident, which is the
-identification of the kernel. You should change
-this from GENERIC to whatever you named your
-kernel, in this example, MYKERNEL. The value you
-put in ident will print when you boot up
-the kernel, so it is useful to give a kernel a
-different name if you want to keep it separate from
-your usual kernel (if you want to build an
-experimental kernel, for example). Note that, as
-with machine and cpu, enclose
-your kernel's name in quotation marks if it
-contains any numbers.
-
-Since this name is passed to the C compiler as a
- switch, do not use names like DEBUG, or something that could be confused
-with another machine or CPU name, like vax.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-maxusers number
-
-
-
-
-This file sets the size of a number of important
-system tables. This number is supposed to be
-roughly equal to the number of simultaneous users
-you expect to have on your machine. However, under
-normal circumstances, you will want to set
-maxusers to at least four, especially if
-you are using the X Window System or compiling software. The
-reason is that the most important table set by
-maxusers is the maximum number of
-processes, which is set to 20 + 16 *
-maxusers, so if you set maxusers
-to one, then you can only have 36 simultaneous
-processes, including the 18 or so that the system
-starts up at boot time, and the 15 or so you will
-probably create when you start the X Window System. Even a
-simple task like reading a man page will
-start up nine processes to filter, decompress, and
-view it. Setting maxusers to 4 will allow
-you to have up to 84 simultaneous processes, which
-should be enough for anyone. If, however, you see
-the dreaded ``proc table full'' error when trying
-to start another program, or are running a server
-with a large number of simultaneous users (like
-Walnut Creek CDROM's FTP site), you can always
-increase this number and rebuild.
-
-
-
-Note:maxuser does
-not limit the number of users which can
-log into your machine. It simply sets various
-table sizes to reasonable values considering the
-maximum number of users you will likely have on
-your system and how many processes each of them
-will be running. One keyword which
-does limit the number of simultaneous
-remote logins is .
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-config kernel_name root on root_device
-
-
-
-
-This line specifies the location and name of the
-kernel. Traditionally the kernel is called
-vmunix but in FreeBSD, it is aptly named
-kernel. You should always use
-kernel for kernel_name because
-changing it will render numerous system utilities
-inoperative. The second part of the line specifies
-the disk and partition where the root filesystem
-and kernel can be found. Typically this will be
-wd0 for systems with non-SCSI drives, or
-sd0 for systems with SCSI drives.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-General Options
-
-These lines provide kernel support for various
-filesystems and other options.
-
-
-
-options MATH_EMULATE
-
-
-
-This line allows the kernel to simulate a math
-co-processor if your computer does not have one (386
-or 486SX). If you have a Pentium, a 486DX, or a
-386 or 486SX with a separate 387 or 487 chip, you
-can comment this line out.
-
-
-
-Note: The normal math co-processor
-emulation routines that come with FreeBSD are
-not very accurate. If you do not have a
-math co-processor, and you need the best accuracy,
-I recommend that you change this option to
-GPL_MATH_EMULATE to use the superior GNU
-math support, which is not included by default
-for licensing reasons.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options ``COMPAT_43''
-
-
-
-
-Compatibility with 4.3BSD. Leave this in; some
-programs will act strangely if you comment this
-out.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options BOUNCE_BUFFERS
-
-
-
-
-ISA devices and EISA devices operating in an ISA
-compatibility mode can only perform DMA (Direct
-Memory Access) to memory below 16 megabytes. This
-option enables such devices to work in systems with
-more than 16 megabytes of memory.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options UCONSOLE
-
-
-
-
-Allow users to grab the console, useful for X
-Windows. For example, you can create a console
-xterm by typing xterm -C, which will
-display any `write', `talk', and other messages you
-receive, as well as any console messages sent by the
-kernel.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options SYSVSHM
-
-
-
-
-This option
-provides for System V shared memory. The most
-common use of this is the XSHM extension in X
-Windows, which many graphics-intensive programs
-(such as the movie player XAnim, and Linux DOOM)
-will automatically take advantage of for extra
-speed. If you use the X Window System, you will definitely
-want to include this.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options SYSVSEM
-
-
-
-
-Support for System V
-semaphores. Less commonly used but only adds a few
-hundred bytes to the kernel.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options SYSVMSG
-
-
-
-
-Support for System V
-messages. Again, only adds a few hundred bytes to
-the kernel.
-
-
-
-Note: The ipcs(1) command will
-tell will list any processes using each of
-these System V facilities.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Filesystem Options
-
-These options add support for various filesystems.
-You must include at least one of these to support the
-device you boot from; typically this will be
-FFS if you boot from a hard drive, or
-NFS if you are booting a diskless workstation
-from Ethernet. You can include other commonly-used
-filesystems in the kernel, but feel free to comment out
-support for filesystems you use less often (perhaps the
-MS-DOS filesystem?), since they will be dynamically
-loaded from the Loadable Kernel Module directory
-/lkm the first time you mount a partition of
-that type.
-
-
-
-options FFS
-
-
-
-The basic hard drive
-filesystem; leave it in if you boot from the hard
-disk.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options NFS
-
-
-
-
-Network Filesystem. Unless
-you plan to mount partitions from a Unix file
-server over Ethernet, you can comment this out.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options MSDOSFS
-
-
-
-
-MS-DOS Filesystem. Unless
-you plan to mount a DOS formatted hard drive
-partition at boot time, you can safely comment this
-out. It will be automatically loaded the first
-time you mount a DOS partition, as described above.
-Also, the excellent mtools software (in
-the ports collection) allows you to access DOS
-floppies without having to mount and unmount them
-(and does not require MSDOSFS at all).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options ``CD9660''
-
-
-
-
-ISO 9660 filesystem for
-CD-ROMs. Comment it out if you do not have a
-CD-ROM drive or only mount data CD's occasionally
-(since it will be dynamically loaded the first time
-you mount a data CD). Audio CD's do not need this
-filesystem.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options PROCFS
-
-
-
-
-Process filesystem. This
-is a pretend filesystem mounted on /proc which
-allows programs like ps(1) to give you
-more information on what processes are running.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options MFS
-
-
-
-
-Memory-mapped file system.
-This is basically a RAM disk for fast storage of
-temporary files, useful if you have a lot of swap
-space that you want to take advantage of. A
-perfect place to mount an MFS partition is on the
-/tmp directory, since many programs store
-temporary data here. To mount an MFS RAM disk on
-/tmp, add the following line to
-/etc/fstab and then reboot or type
-mount /tmp:
-
-/dev/wd1s2b /tmp mfs rw 0 0
-
-
-
-
-
-Note: Replace the /dev/wd1s2b
-with the name of your swap partition, which will
-be listed in your /etc/fstab as follows:
-
-/dev/wd1s2b none swap sw 0 0
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Note: Also, the MFS filesystem
-can not be dynamically loaded, so you
-must compile it into your kernel if you
-want to experiment with it.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options "EXT2FS"
-
-
-
-
-Linux's native file system.
-With ext2fs support you are able to read and write to Linux
-partitions. This is useful if you dual-boot FreeBSD and Linux
-and want to share data between the two systems.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options QUOTA
-
-
-
-
-Enable disk quotas. If you
-have a public access system, and do not want users
-to be able to overflow the /home
-partition, you can establish disk quotas for each
-user. Refer to the
-
-section for more information.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Basic Controllers and Devices
-
-These sections describe the basic disk, tape, and
-CD-ROM controllers supported by FreeBSD. There are
-separate sections for controllers and cards.
-
-
-
-controller isa0
-
-
-
-All PC's supported by
-FreeBSD have one of these. If you have an IBM PS/2
-(Micro Channel Architecture), then you cannot run
-FreeBSD at this time.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller pci0
-
-
-
-
-Include this if you have a
-PCI motherboard. This enables auto-detection of
-PCI cards and gatewaying from the PCI to the ISA
-bus.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller fdc0
-
-
-
-
-Floppy drive controller:
-fd0 is the ``A:'' floppy drive, and
-fd1 is the ``B:'' drive. ft0 is
-a QIC-80 tape drive attached to the floppy
-controller. Comment out any lines corresponding to
-devices you do not have.
-
-
-
-Note: QIC-80 tape support requires a
-separate filter program called ft(8), see
-the manual page for details.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller wdc0
-
-
-
-
-This is the primary IDE
-controller. wd0 and wd1 are the
-master and slave hard drive, respectively.
-wdc1 is a secondary IDE controller where
-you might have a third or fourth hard drive, or an
-IDE CD-ROM. Comment out the lines which do not
-apply (if you have a SCSI hard drive, you will
-probably want to comment out all six lines, for
-example).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device wcd0
-
-
-
-
-This device
-provides IDE CD-ROM support. Be sure to leave
-wdc0 uncommented, and wdc1 if you have
-more than one IDE controller and your CD-ROM is on
-the second one card. To use this, you must
-also include the line options ATAPI.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device npx0 at isa? port ``IO_NPX'' irq 13 vector npxintr
-
-
-
-
-npx0 is the interface to the floating point math
-unit in FreeBSD, either the hardware co-processor or the
-software math emulator. It is NOT optional.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device wt0 at isa? port 0x300 bio irq 5 drq 1 vector wtintr
-
-
-
-
-Wangtek and Archive
-QIC-02/QIC-36 tape drive support
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Proprietary CD-ROM support
-
-
-
-
-The following
-drivers are for the so-called proprietary
-CD-ROM drives. These drives have their own
-controller card or might plug into a sound card
-such as the SoundBlaster 16. They are not
-IDE or SCSI. Most older single-speed and
-double-speed CD-ROMs use these interfaces, while
-newer quad-speeds are likely to be or .
-
-
-
-device mcd0 at isa? port 0x300 bio irq 10 vector mcdintr
-
-
-
-Mitsumi CD-ROM (LU002,
-LU005, FX001D).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device scd0 at isa? port 0x230 bio
-
-
-
-
-Sony CD-ROM (CDU31, CDU33A).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller matcd0 at isa? port ? bio
-
-
-
-
-Matsushita/Panasonic CD-ROM (sold by Creative
-Labs for SoundBlaster).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-SCSI Device Support
-
-This section describes the various SCSI controllers
-and devices supported by FreeBSD.
-
-
-
-SCSI Controllers
-
-
-
-The next ten or so lines include support for
-different kinds of SCSI controllers. Comment out
-all except for the one(s) you have:
-
-
-
-controller bt0 at isa? port ``IO_BT0'' bio irq ? vector btintr
-
-
-
-Most Buslogic controllers
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller uha0 at isa? port ``IO_UHA0'' bio irq ? drq 5 vector uhaintr
-
-
-
-
-UltraStor 14F and 34F
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller ahc0
-
-
-
-
-Adaptec 274x/284x/294x
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller ahb0 at isa? bio irq ? vector ahbintr
-
-
-
-
-Adaptec 174x
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller aha0 at isa? port ``IO_AHA0'' bio irq ? drq 5 vector ahaintr
-
-
-
-
-Adaptec 154x
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller aic0 at isa? port 0x340 bio irq 11 vector aicintr
-
-
-
-
-Adaptec 152x and sound cards using Adaptec AIC-6360 (slow!)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller nca0 at isa? port 0x1f88 bio irq 10 vector ncaintr
-
-
-
-
-ProAudioSpectrum cards using NCR 5380 or Trantor T130
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller sea0 at isa? bio irq 5 iomem 0xc8000 iosiz 0x2000 vector seaintr
-
-
-
-
-Seagate ST01/02 8 bit controller (slow!)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller wds0 at isa? port 0x350 bio irq 15 drq 6 vector wdsintr
-
-
-
-
-Western Digital WD7000 controller
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller ncr0
-
-
-
-
-NCR 53C810, 53C815, 53C825, 53C860, 53C875 PCI SCSI controller
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options ``SCSI_DELAY=15''
-
-
-
-
-This causes the
-kernel to pause 15 seconds before probing each SCSI
-device in your system. If you only have IDE hard
-drives, you can ignore this, otherwise you will
-probably want to lower this number, perhaps to 5
-seconds, to speed up booting. Of course if you do
-this, and FreeBSD has trouble recognizing your SCSI
-devices, you will have to raise it back up.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-controller scbus0
-
-
-
-
-If you have any SCSI
-controllers, this line provides generic SCSI
-support. If you do not have SCSI, you can comment
-this, and the following three lines, out.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device sd0
-
-
-
-
-Support for SCSI hard
-drives.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device st0
-
-
-
-
-Support for SCSI tape
-drives.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device cd0
-
-
-
-
-Support for SCSI CD-ROM
-drives.
-
-
-
-Note that the number 0 in the above entries
-is slightly misleading: all these devices are
-automatically configured as they are found, regardless
-of how many of them are hooked up to the SCSI bus(es),
-and which target IDs they have.
-
-If you want to ``wire down'' specific target IDs to
-particular devices, refer to the appropriate section
-of the LINT kernel config file.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Console, Bus Mouse, and X Server Support
-
-You must choose one of these two console types, and, if you plan
-to use the X Window System with the vt220 console, enable the
-XSERVER option and optionally, a bus mouse or PS/2 mouse device.
-
-
-
-device sc0 at isa? port ``IO_KBD' tty irq 1 vector scintr
-
-
-
-sc0 is the default
-console driver, which resembles an SCO console.
-Since most full-screen programs access the console
-through a terminal database library like
-termcap, it should not matter much whether
-you use this or vt0, the VT220 compatible
-console driver. When you log in, set your TERM
-variable to ``scoansi'' if full-screen programs
-have trouble running under this console.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device vt0 at isa? port ``IO_KBD'' tty irq 1 vector pcrint
-
-
-
-
-This is a VT220-compatible
-console driver, backwards compatible to VT100/102.
-It works well on some laptops which have hardware
-incompatibilities with sc0. Also, set
-your TERM variable to ``vt100'' or ``vt220'' when
-you log in. This driver might also prove useful
-when connecting to a large number of different
-machines over the network, where the termcap
-or terminfo entries for the sc0
-device are often not available -- ``vt100'' should be
-available on virtually any platform.
-
-
-
-options ``PCVT_FREEBSD=210''
-
-
-
-Required
-with the vt0 console driver.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options XSERVER
-
-
-
-
-Only applicable with the vt0 console driver.
-This includes code
-required to run the XFree86 X Window
-Server under the vt0 console driver.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device mse0 at isa? port 0x23c tty irq 5 vector ms
-
-
-
-
-Use this device if you have a Logitech or
-ATI InPort bus mouse card.
-
-
-
-Note: If you have a serial mouse,
-ignore these two lines, and instead, make sure
-the appropriate port is enabled (probably
-COM1).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device psm0 at isa? port ``IO_KBD'' conflicts tty irq 12 vector psmintr
-
-
-
-
-Use this device if your
-mouse plugs into the PS/2 mouse port.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Serial and Parallel Ports
-
-Nearly all systems have these. If you are attaching a
-printer to one of these ports, the section of the handbook is very
-useful. If you are using modem, provides extensive detail on
-serial port configuration for use with such devices.
-
-
-
-device sio0 at isa? port ``IO_COM1'' tty irq 4 vector siointr
-
-
-
-sio0
-through sio3 are the four serial ports
-referred to as COM1 through COM4 in the MS-DOS
-world. Note that if you have an internal modem on
-COM4 and a serial port at COM2 you will have to
-change the IRQ of the modem to 2 (for obscure
-technical reasons IRQ 2 = IRQ 9) in order to access
-it from FreeBSD. If you have a multiport serial
-card, check the manual page for sio(4) for
-more information on the proper values for these
-lines. Some video cards (notably
-those based on S3 chips) use IO addresses of the
-form 0x*2e8, and since many cheap serial
-cards do not fully decode the 16-bit IO address
-space, they clash with these cards, making the
-COM4 port practically unavailable.
-
-Each serial port is required to have a unique
-IRQ (unless you are using one of the multiport cards
-where shared interrupts are supported), so the default
-IRQs for COM3 and COM4 cannot be used.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device lpt0 at isa? port? tty irq 7 vector lptintr
-
-
-
-
-lpt0 through lpt2
-are the three printer ports you could conceivably
-have. Most people just have one, though, so feel
-free to comment out the other two lines if you do
-not have them.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Networking
-
-FreeBSD, as with Unix in general, places a
-big emphasis on networking. Therefore, even
-if you do not have an Ethernet card, pay attention to
-the mandatory options and the dial-up networking
-support.
-
-
-
-options INET
-
-Networking support. Leave it in even if you do not plan
-to be connected to a network. Most programs require at least
-loopback networking (i.e. making network connections within your
-PC) so this is essentially mandatory.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Ethernet cards
-
-
-
-
-The next lines enable support for various Ethernet
-cards. If you do not have a network card, you can
-comment out all of these lines. Otherwise, you will
-want to leave in support for your particular
-Ethernet card(s):
-
-
-
-device de0
-
-
-
-Ethernet adapters based on Digital Equipment DC21040,
-DC21041 or DC21140 chips
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device fxp0
-
-
-
-
-Intel EtherExpress Pro/100B
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device vx0
-
-
-
-
-3Com 3C590 and 3C595 (buggy)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device cx0 at isa? port 0x240 net irq 15 drq 7 vector cxintr
-
-
-
-
-Cronyx/Sigma multiport
-sync/async (with Cisco or PPP framing)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device ed0 at isa? port 0x280 net irq 5 iomem 0xd8000 vector edintr
-
-
-
-
-Western Digital and SMC 80xx and 8216; Novell NE1000
-and NE2000; 3Com 3C503; HP PC Lan Plus (HP27247B and HP27252A)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device el0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 9 vector elintr
-
-
-
-
-3Com 3C501 (slow!)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device eg0 at isa? port 0x310 net irq 5 vector egintr
-
-
-
-
-3Com 3C505
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device ep0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 10 vector epintr
-
-
-
-
-3Com 3C509 (buggy)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device fe0 at isa? port 0x240 net irq ? vector feintr
-
-
-
-
-Fujitsu MB86960A/MB86965A Ethernet
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device fea0 at isa? net irq ? vector feaintr
-
-
-
-
-DEC DEFEA EISA FDDI adapter
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device ie0 at isa? port 0x360 net irq 7 iomem 0xd0000 vector ieintr
-
-
-
-
-AT&T StarLAN 10 and EN100; 3Com 3C507;
-unknown NI5210
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device ix0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 10 iomem 0xd0000 iosiz 32768 vector ixintr
-
-
-
-
-Intel EtherExpress 16
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device le0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 5 iomem 0xd0000 vector le_intr
-
-
-
-
-Digital Equipment EtherWorks 2 and EtherWorks
-3 (DEPCA, DE100, DE101, DE200, DE201, DE202,
-DE203, DE204, DE205, DE422)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device lnc0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 10 drq 0 vector lncintr
-
-
-
-
-Lance/PCnet cards (Isolan, Novell NE2100,
-NE32-VL)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device ze0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 5 iomem 0xd8000 vector zeintr
-
-
-
-
-IBM/National Semiconductor PCMCIA ethernet
-controller.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device zp0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 10 iomem 0xd8000 vector zpintr
-
-
-
-
-3Com PCMCIA Etherlink III
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Note: With certain cards (notably the
-NE2000) you will have to change the port and/or IRQ
-since there is no ``standard'' location for these
-cards.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device loop
-
-
-
-
-loop is the
-generic loopback device for TCP/IP. If you telnet
-or FTP to localhost
-(a.k.a. 127.0.0.1) it will come back at
-you through this pseudo-device. Mandatory.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device ether
-
-
-
-
-ether is only
-needed if you have an Ethernet card and includes
-generic Ethernet protocol code.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device sl number
-
-
-
-
-sl is for SLIP (Serial Line Internet
-Protocol) support. This has been almost entirely
-supplanted by PPP, which is easier to set up,
-better suited for modem-to-modem connections, as
-well as more powerful. The number after
-sl specifies how many simultaneous SLIP
-sessions to support. This handbook has more
-information on setting up a SLIP or .
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device ppp number
-
-
-
-
-ppp is for kernel-mode PPP (Point-to-Point
-Protocol) support for dial-up Internet connections.
-There is also version of PPP implemented as a user
-application that uses the tun and offers
-more flexibility and features such as demand
-dialing. If you still want to use this PPP driver,
-read the
-section of the handbook. As with the sl
-device, number specifies how many
-simultaneous PPP connections to support.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device tun number
-
-
-
-
-tun is used by the user-mode PPP software.
-This program is easy to set up and very fast. It
-also has special features such as automatic
-dial-on-demand. The number after tun
-specifies the number of simultaneous PPP sessions
-to support. See the section of the handbook for
-more information.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device bpfilter number
-
-
-
-
-Berkeley packet filter. This pseudo-device allows
-network interfaces to be placed in promiscuous
-mode, capturing every packet on a broadcast network
-(e.g. an ethernet). These packets can be captured
-to disk and/or examined with the
-tcpdump(1) program. Note that
-implementation of this capability can seriously
-compromise your overall network security.
-The number after bpfilter is the number of
-interfaces that can be examined
-simultaneously. Optional, not recommended except
-for those who are fully aware of the potential
-pitfalls. Not all network cards support this
-capability.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Sound cards
-
-This is the first section containing lines that are
-not in the GENERIC kernel. To include sound card
-support, you will have to copy the appropriate lines from
-the LINT kernel (which contains support for
-every device) as follows:
-
-
-
-controller snd0
-
-
-
-Generic sound driver code.
-Required for all of the following sound cards
-except pca.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device pas0 at isa? port 0x388 irq 10 drq 6 vector pasintr
-
-
-
-
-ProAudioSpectrum digital audio and MIDI.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device sb0 at isa? port 0x220 irq 7 conflicts drq 1 vector sbintr
-
-
-
-
-SoundBlaster digital audio.
-
-
-
-Note: If your SoundBlaster is on a
-different IRQ (such as 5), change irq 7
-to, for example, irq 5 and remove the
-conflicts keyword. Also, you must add
-the line: options ``SBC_IRQ=5''
-
-Note: If your SB16 is on a different
-16-bit DMA channel (such as 6 or 7), change the
-drq 5 keyword appropriately, and then
-add the line: options
-"SB16_DMA=6"
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device sbmidi0 at isa? port 0x330
-
-
-
-
-SoundBlaster 16 MIDI interface. If you have a
-SoundBlaster 16, you must include this line, or the
-kernel will not compile.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device gus0 at isa? port 0x220 irq 10 drq 1 vector gusintr
-
-
-
-
-Gravis Ultrasound.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device mss0 at isa? port 0x530 irq 10 drq 1 vector adintr
-
-
-
-
-Microsoft Sound System.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device opl0 at isa? port 0x388 conflicts
-
-
-
-
-AdLib FM-synthesis audio. Include this line for
-AdLib, SoundBlaster, and ProAudioSpectrum users, if
-you want to play MIDI songs with a program such as
-playmidi (in the ports collection).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device mpu0 at isa? port 0x330 irq 6 drq 0
-
-
-
-
-Roland MPU-401 stand-alone card.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device uart0 at isa? port 0x330 irq 5 vector ``m6850intr''
-
-
-
-
-Stand-alone 6850 UART for MIDI.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-device pca0 at isa? port ``IO_TIMER1'' tty
-
-
-
-
-Digital audio through PC speaker. This is going to
-be very poor sound quality and quite CPU-intensive,
-so you have been warned (but it does not require a
-sound card).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Note: There is some additional
-documentation in
-/usr/src/sys/i386/isa/sound/sound.doc.
-Also, if you add any of these devices, be sure to
-create the sound .
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Pseudo-devices
-
-Pseudo-device drivers are parts of the kernel that act
-like device drivers but do not correspond to any actual
-hardware in the machine. The
-pseudo-devices are in that section, while the remainder
-are here.
-
-
-
-pseudo-device gzip
-
-
-
-gzip allows you to run FreeBSD programs
-that have been compressed with gzip. The
-programs in /stand are compressed so it
-is a good idea to have this option in your kernel.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device log
-
-
-
-
-log is used for logging of kernel error
-messages. Mandatory.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device pty number
-
-
-
-
-pty is a ``pseudo-terminal'' or simulated
-login port. It is used by incoming telnet
-and rlogin sessions, xterm, and some other
-applications such as emacs. The number
-indicates the number of ptys to create.
-If you need more than GENERIC default of 16
-simultaneous xterm windows and/or remote logins, be
-sure to increase this number accordingly, up to a
-maximum of 64.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device snp number
-
-
-
-
-Snoop device. This pseudo-device allows one
-terminal session to watch another using the
-watch(8) command. Note that
-implementation of this capability has important
-security and privacy implications. The
-number after snp is the total number of
-simultaneous snoop sessions. Optional.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device vn
-
-
-
-
-Vnode driver. Allows a file to be treated as a
-device after being set up with the
-vnconfig(8) command. This driver can be
-useful for manipulating floppy disk images and
-using a file as a swap device (e.g. an MS Windows
-swap file). Optional.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device ccd number
-
-
-
-
-Concatenated disks. This pseudo-device allows you to
-concatenate multiple disk partitions into one large
-``meta''-disk. The number after ccd is the
-total number of concatenated disks (not total number of
-disks that can be concatenated) that can be created.
-(See ccd(4) and ccdconfig(8) man pages
-for more details.) Optional.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Joystick, PC Speaker, Miscellaneous
-
-This section describes some miscellaneous hardware
-devices supported by FreeBSD. Note that none of these
-lines are included in the GENERIC kernel, you will have
-to copy them from this handbook or the LINT kernel
-(which contains support for every device):
-
-
-
-device joy0 at isa? port ``IO_GAME''
-
-
-
-PC joystick device.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-pseudo-device speaker
-
-
-
-
-Supports IBM BASIC-style noises through the PC
-speaker. Some fun programs which use this are
-/usr/sbin/spkrtest, which is a shell
-script that plays some simple songs, and
-/usr/games/piano which lets you play songs
-using the keyboard as a simple piano (this file
-only exists if you have installed the games
-package). Also, the excellent text role-playing
-game NetHack (in the ports collection) can be
-configured to use this device to play songs when
-you play musical instruments in the game.
-
-
-
-See also the device.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Making Device Nodes
-
-Almost every device in the kernel has a corresponding
-``node'' entry in the /dev directory. These
-nodes look like regular files, but are actually special
-entries into the kernel which programs use to access the
-device. The shell script /dev/MAKEDEV, which is
-executed when you first install the operating system,
-creates nearly all of the device nodes supported.
-However, it does not create all of them, so when
-you add support for a new device, it pays to make sure
-that the appropriate entries are in this directory, and
-if not, add them. Here is a simple example:
-
-Suppose you add the IDE CD-ROM support to the kernel.
-The line to add is:
-
-controller wcd0
-
-
-This means that you should look for some entries that
-start with wcd0 in the /dev directory,
-possibly followed by a letter, such as `c', or preceded
-by the letter 'r', which means a `raw' device. It turns
-out that those files are not there, so I must change to
-the /dev directory and type:
-
-# sh MAKEDEV wcd0
-
-
-When this script finishes, you will find that there are
-now wcd0c and rwcd0c entries in
-/dev so you know that it executed correctly.
-
-For sound cards, the command:
-
-# sh MAKEDEV snd0
-
-
-creates the appropriate entries. Note: when creating device
-nodes for devices such as sound cards, if other people have
-access to your machine, it may be desirable to
-protect the devices from outside access by adding them to the
-/etc/fbtab file. See man fbtab for
-more information.
-
-Follow this simple procedure for any other non-GENERIC
-devices which do not have entries.
-
-
-
-Note: All SCSI controllers use the same set
-of /dev entries, so you do not need to create
-these. Also, network cards and SLIP/PPP pseudo-devices
-do not have entries in /dev at all, so you do
-not have to worry about these either.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-If Something Goes Wrong
-
-There are four categories of trouble that can occur when
-building a custom kernel. They are:
-
-
-
-Config command fails
-
-
-
-If the config
-command fails when you give it your kernel
-description, you have probably made a simple error
-somewhere. Fortunately, config will print
-the line number that it had trouble with, so you can
-quickly skip to it with vi. For example, if
-you see:
-
-config: line 17: syntax error
-
-
-you can skip to the problem in vi by typing
-``17G'' in command mode. Make sure the keyword is
-typed correctly, by comparing it to the GENERIC
-kernel or another reference.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Make command fails
-
-
-
-
-If the make
-command fails, it usually signals an error in your
-kernel description, but not severe enough for
-config to catch it. Again, look over your
-configuration, and if you still cannot resolve the
-problem, send mail to the &a.questions; with your kernel
-configuration, and it should be diagnosed very
-quickly.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Kernel will not boot
-
-
-
-
-If your new kernel
-does not boot, or fails to recognize your devices,
-do not panic! Fortunately, BSD has an excellent
-mechanism for recovering from incompatible kernels.
-Simply type the name of the kernel you want to boot
-from (i.e. ``kernel.old'') at the FreeBSD boot
-prompt instead of pressing return. When
-reconfiguring a kernel, it is always a good idea to
-keep a kernel that is known to work on hand.
-
-After booting with a good kernel you can check over
-your configuration file and try to build it again.
-One helpful resource is the
-/var/log/messages file which records, among
-other things, all of the kernel messages from every
-successful boot. Also, the dmesg(8) command
-will print the kernel messages from the current boot.
-
-
-
-Note: If you are having trouble building
-a kernel, make sure to keep a GENERIC, or some
-other kernel that is known to work on hand as a
-different name that will not get erased on the next
-build. You cannot rely on kernel.old
-because when installing a new kernel,
-kernel.old is overwritten with the last
-installed kernel which may be non-functional.
-Also, as soon as possible, move the working kernel
-to the proper ``kernel'' location or commands such
-as ps(1) will not work properly. The
-proper command to ``unlock'' the kernel file that
-make installs (in order to move another
-kernel back permanently) is:
-
-# chflags noschg /kernel
-
-
-And, if you want to ``lock'' your new kernel into place, or any file
-for that matter, so that it cannot be moved or tampered with:
-
-# chflags schg /kernel
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Kernel works, but ps does not work any more!
-
-
-
-
-If you have installed a different version
-of the kernel from the one that the system utilities
-have been built with, for example, an experimental
-``2.2.0'' kernel on a 2.1.0-RELEASE system, many
-system-status commands like ps(1) and
-vmstat(8) will not work any more. You must
-recompile the libkvm library as well as
-these utilities. This is one reason it is not
-normally a good idea to use a different version of
-the kernel from the rest of the operating system.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Security
-
-
-
-DES, MD5, and Crypt
-
-Contributed by &a.wollman;24 September 1995.
-
-In order to protect the security of passwords on UN*X systems from
-being easily exposed, passwords have traditionally been scrambled in
-some way. Starting with Bell Labs' Seventh Edition Unix, passwords
-were encrypted using what the security people call a ``one-way hash
-function''. That is to say, the password is transformed in such a way
-that the original password cannot be regained except by brute-force
-searching the space of possible passwords. Unfortunately, the only
-secure method that was available to the AT&T researchers at the
-time was based on DES, the Data Encryption Standard. This causes only
-minimal difficulty for commercial vendors, but is a serious problem
-for an operating system like FreeBSD where all the source code is
-freely available, because national governments in many places like to
-place restrictions on cross-border transport of DES and other
-encryption software.
-
-So, the FreeBSD team was faced with a dilemma: how could we provide
-compatibility with all those UNIX systems out there while still not
-running afoul of the law? We decided to take a dual-track approach:
-we would make distributions which contained only a non-regulated
-password scrambler, and then provide as a separate add-on library the
-DES-based password hash. The password-scrambling function was moved
-out of the C library to a separate library, called `libcrypt'
-because the name of the C function to implement it is
-`crypt'. In FreeBSD 1.x and some pre-release 2.0 snapshots,
-the non-regulated scrambler uses an insecure function written by Nate
-Williams; in subsequent releases this was replaced by a mechanism
-using the RSA Data Security, Inc., MD5 one-way hash function. Because
-neither of these functions involve encryption, they are believed to be
-exportable from the US and importable into many other countries.
-
-Meanwhile, work was also underway on the DES-based password hash
-function. First, a version of the `crypt' function which was
-written outside the US was imported, thus synchronizing the US and
-non-US code. Then, the library was modified and split into two; the
-DES `libcrypt' contains only the code involved in performing
-the one-way password hash, and a separate `libcipher' was
-created with the entry points to actually perform encryption. The
-code was partitioned in this way to make it easier to get an export
-license for the compiled library.
-
-
-
-Recognizing your `crypt' mechanism
-
-It is fairly easy to recognize whether a particular password
-string was created using the DES- or MD5-based hash function.
-MD5 password strings always begin with the characters
-`$1$'. DES password strings do not have
-any particular identifying characteristics, but they are shorter
-than MD5 passwords, and are coded in a 64-character alphabet
-which does not include the `$' character, so a
-relatively short string which doesn't begin with a dollar sign is
-very likely a DES password.
-
-Determining which library is being used on your system is fairly
-easy for most programs, except for those like `init' which
-are statically linked. (For those programs, the only way is to try
-them on a known password and see if it works.) Programs which use
-`crypt' are linked against `libcrypt', which for
-each type of library is a symbolic link to the appropriate
-implementation. For example, on a system using the DES versions:
-
-
-
-$ cd /usr/lib
-$ ls -l /usr/lib/libcrypt*
-lrwxr-xr-x 1 bin bin 13 Sep 5 12:50 libcrypt.a -> libdescrypt.a
-lrwxr-xr-x 1 bin bin 18 Sep 5 12:50 libcrypt.so.2.0 -> libdescrypt.so.2.0
-lrwxr-xr-x 1 bin bin 15 Sep 5 12:50 libcrypt_p.a -> libdescrypt_p.a
-
-
-
-On a system using the MD5-based libraries, the same links will be
-present, but the target will be `libscrypt' rather than
-`libdescrypt'.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-S/Key
-
-Contributed by &a.wollman;25 September 1995.
-
-S/Key is a one-time password scheme based on a one-way hash function
-(in our version, this is MD4 for compatibility; other versions have
-used MD5 and DES-MAC). S/Key has been a standard part of all FreeBSD
-distributions since version 1.1.5, and is also implemented on a large
-and growing number of other systems. S/Key is a registered trademark
-of Bell Communications Research, Inc.
-
-There are three different sorts of passwords which we will talk about
-in the discussion below. The first is your usual UNIX-style or Kerberos
-password; we will call this a ``UNIX password''. The second sort is the
-one-time password which is generated by the S/Key `key' program and
-accepted by the `keyinit' program and the login prompt; we will call
-this a ``one-time password''. The final sort of password is the
-secret password which you give to the `key' program (and sometimes the
-`keyinit' program) which it uses to generate one-time passwords; we will
-call it a ``secret password'' or just unqualified ``password''.
-
-The secret password does not necessarily have anything to do with your
-UNIX password (while they can be the same, this is not recommended).
-While UNIX passwords are limited to eight characters in length, your
-S/Key secret password can be as long as you like; I use seven-word
-phrases. In general, the S/Key system operates completely
-independently of the UNIX password system.
-
-There are in addition two other sorts of data involved in the S/Key
-system; one is called the ``seed'' or (confusingly) ``key'', and
-consists of two letters and five digits, and the other is the
-``iteration count'' and is a number between 100 and 1. S/Key
-constructs a one-time password from these components by concatenating
-the seed and the secret password, then applying a one-way hash (the
-RSA Data Security, Inc., MD4 secure hash function) iteration-count
-times, and turning the result into six short English words. The
-`login' and `su' programs keep track of the last one-time
-password used, and the user is authenticated if the hash of the
-user-provided password is equal to the previous password. Because a
-one-way hash function is used, it is not possible to generate future
-one-time passwords having overheard one which was successfully used;
-the iteration count is decremented after each successful login to keep
-the user and login program in sync. (When you get the iteration count
-down to 1, it is time to reinitialize S/Key.)
-
-There are four programs involved in the S/Key system which we will
-discuss below. The `key' program accepts an iteration count, a
-seed, and a secret password, and generates a one-time password. The
-`keyinit' program is used to initialized S/Key, and to change
-passwords, iteration counts, or seeds; it takes either a secret
-password, or an iteration count, seed, and one-time password. The
-`keyinfo' program examines the /etc/skeykeys file and
-prints out the invoking user's current iteration count and seed.
-Finally, the `login' and `su' programs contain the necessary
-logic to accept S/Key one-time passwords for authentication. The
-`login' program is also capable of disallowing the use of UNIX
-passwords on connections coming from specified addresses.
-
-There are four different sorts of operations we will cover. The first
-is using the `keyinit' program over a secure connection to set up
-S/Key for the first time, or to change your password or seed. The
-second operation is using the `keyinit' program over an insecure
-connection, in conjunction with the `key' program over a secure
-connection, to do the same. The third is using the `key' program to
-log in over an insecure connection. The fourth is using the `key'
-program to generate a number of keys which can be written down or
-printed out to carry with you when going to some location without
-secure connections to anywhere (like at a conference).
-
-
-
-Secure connection initialization
-
-To initialize S/Key, change your password, or change your seed while
-logged in over a secure connection (e.g., on the console of a machine),
-use the `keyinit' command without any parameters while logged in as
-yourself:
-
-
-
-$ keyinit
-Updating wollman: ) these will not appear if you
-Old key: ha73895 ) have not used S/Key before
-Reminder - Only use this method if you are directly connected.
-If you are using telnet or rlogin exit with no password and use keyinit -s.
-Enter secret password: ) I typed my pass phrase here
-Again secret password: ) I typed it again
-
-ID wollman s/key is 99 ha73896 ) discussed below
-SAG HAS FONT GOUT FATE BOOM )
-
-
-
-There is a lot of information here. At the `Enter secret password:'
-prompt, you should enter some password or phrase (I use phrases of
-minimum seven words) which will be needed to generate login keys. The
-line starting `ID' gives the parameters of your particular S/Key
-instance: your login name, the iteration count, and seed. When
-logging in with S/Key, the system will remember these parameters and
-present them back to you so you do not have to remember them. The last
-line gives the particular one-time password which corresponds to those
-parameters and your secret password; if you were to re-login
-immediately, this one-time password is the one you would use.
-
-
-
-
-Insecure connection initialization
-
-To initialize S/Key or change your password or seed over an insecure
-connection, you will need to already have a secure connection to some
-place where you can run the `key' program; this might be in the form
-of a desk accessory on a Macintosh, or a shell prompt on a machine you
-trust (we will show the latter). You will also need to make up an
-iteration count (100 is probably a good value), and you may make up
-your own seed or use a randomly-generated one. Over on the insecure
-connection (to the machine you are initializing), use the `keyinit -s'
-command:
-
-
-
-$ keyinit -s
-Updating wollman:
-Old key: kh94741
-Reminder you need the 6 English words from the skey command.
-Enter sequence count from 1 to 9999: 100 ) I typed this
-Enter new key [default kh94742]:
-s/key 100 kh94742
-
-
-
-To accept the default seed (which the `keyinit' program confusingly
-calls a `key'), press return. Then move over to your secure
-connection or S/Key desk accessory, and give it the same parameters:
-
-
-
-$ key 100 kh94742
-Reminder - Do not use this program while logged in via telnet or rlogin.
-Enter secret password: ) I typed my secret password
-HULL NAY YANG TREE TOUT VETO
-
-
-
-Now switch back over to the insecure connection, and copy the one-time
-password generated by `key' over to the `keyinit' program:
-
-
-
-s/key access password: HULL NAY YANG TREE TOUT VETO
-
-ID wollman s/key is 100 kh94742
-HULL NAY YANG TREE TOUT VETO
-
-
-
-The rest of the description from the previous section applies here as
-well.
-
-
-
-
-Diversion: a login prompt
-
-Before explaining how to generate one-time passwords, we should go
-over an S/Key login prompt:
-
-
-
-$ telnet himalia
-Trying 18.26.0.186...
-Connected to himalia.lcs.mit.edu.
-Escape character is '^]'.
-s/key 92 hi52030
-Password:
-
-
-
-Note that, before prompting for a password, the login program
-prints out the iteration number and seed which you will need in order
-to generate the appropriate key. You will also find a useful feature
-(not shown here): if you press return at the password prompt, the
-login program will turn echo on, so you can see what you are typing.
-This can be extremely useful if you are attempting to type in an S/Key
-by hand, such as from a printout.
-
-If this machine were configured to disallow UNIX passwords over a
-connection from my machine, the prompt would have also included the
-annotation `(s/key required)', indicating that only S/Key one-time
-passwords will be accepted.
-
-
-
-
-Generating a single one-time password
-
-Now, to generate the one-time password needed to answer this login
-prompt, we use a trusted machine and the `key' program. (There are
-versions of the `key' program from DOS and Windows machines, and there
-is an S/Key desk accessory for Macintosh computers as well.) The
-command-line `key' program takes as its parameters the iteration count
-and seed; you can cut-and-paste right from the login prompt starting
-at ``key'' to the end of the line. Thus:
-
-
-
-$ key 92 hi52030 ) pasted from previous section
-Reminder - Do not use this program while logged in via telnet or rlogin.
-Enter secret password: ) I typed my secret password
-ADEN BED WOLF HAW HOT STUN
-
-
-
-And in the other window:
-
-
-
-s/key 92 hi52030 ) from previous section
-Password:
- (turning echo on)
-Password:ADEN BED WOLF HAW HOT STUN
-Last login: Wed Jun 28 15:31:00 from halloran-eldar.l
-[etc.]
-
-
-
-This is the easiest mechanism if you have a trusted machine.
-There is a Java S/Key key applet,
-The Java OTP Calculator,
-that you can download and run locally on any Java supporting brower.
-
-
-
-
-Generating multiple one-time passwords
-
-Sometimes we have to go places where no trusted machines or
-connections are available. In this case, it is possible to use the
-`key' command to generate a number of one-time passwords in the same
-command; these can then be printed out. For example:
-
-
-
-$ key -n 25 57 zz99999
-Reminder - Do not use this program while logged in via telnet or rlogin.
-Enter secret password:
-33: WALT THY MALI DARN NIT HEAD
-34: ASK RICE BEAU GINA DOUR STAG
-[...]
-56: AMOS BOWL LUG FAT CAIN INCH
-57: GROW HAYS TUN DISH CAR BALM
-
-
-
-The `' requests twenty-five keys in sequence; the `57' indicates
-the ending iteration number; and the rest is as before. Note that
-these are printed out in reverse order of eventual use. If you are
-really paranoid, you might want to write the results down by hand;
-otherwise you can cut-and-paste into `lpr'. Note that each line shows
-both the iteration count and the one-time password; you may still find
-it handy to scratch off passwords as you use them.
-
-
-
-
-Restricting use of UNIX passwords
-
-The configuration file /etc/skey.access can be used to
-configure restrictions on the use of UNIX passwords based on the host
-name, user name, terminal port, or IP address of a login session. The
-complete format of the file is documented in the skey.access(5)
-manual page; there are also some security cautions there which should
-be read before depending on this file for security.
-
-If there is no /etc/skey.access file (which is the default
-state as FreeBSD is shipped), then all users will be allowed to use
-UNIX passwords. If the file exists, however, then all users will be
-required to use S/Key unless explicitly permitted to do otherwise by
-configuration statements in the skey.access file. In all cases,
-UNIX passwords are permitted on the console.
-
-Here is a sample configuration file which illustrates the three most
-common sorts of configuration statements:
-
-
-
-permit internet 18.26.0.0 255.255.0.0
-permit user jrl
-permit port ttyd0
-
-
-
-The first line (`permit internet') allows users whose IP source
-address (which is vulnerable to spoofing) matches the specified value
-and mask, to use UNIX passwords. This should not be considered a
-security mechanism, but rather, a means to remind authorized users
-that they are using an insecure network and need to use S/Key for
-authentication.
-
-The second line (`permit user') allows the specified user to
-use UNIX passwords at any time. Generally speaking, this should only
-be used for people who are either unable to use the `key'
-program, like those with dumb terminals, or those who are uneducable.
-
-The third line (`permit port') allows all users logging in on
-the specified terminal line to use UNIX passwords; this would be used
-for dial-ups.
-
-
-
-
-
-Kerberos
-
-Contributed by &a.markm; (based on contribution by &a.md;).
-
-Kerberos is a network add-on system/protocol that allows users to
-authenticate themselves through the services of a secure server.
-Services such as remote login, remote copy, secure inter-system
-file copying and other high-risk tasks are made considerably safer
-and more controllable.
-
-The following instructions can be used as a guide on how to
-set up Kerberos as distributed for FreeBSD. However, you should refer
-to the relevant manual pages for a complete description.
-
-In FreeBSD, the Kerberos is not that from the original 4.4BSD-Lite,
-distribution, but eBones, which had been previously ported to
-FreeBSD 1.1.5.1, and was sourced from outside the USA/Canada,
-and is thus available to system owners outside those countries.
-
-For those needing to get a legal foreign distribution of this
-software, please DO NOT get it from a USA or Canada site.
-You will get that site in big trouble! A legal copy of this is
-available from skeleton.mikom.csir.co.za, which is in South
-Africa.
-
-
-
-Creating the initial database
-
-This is done on the Kerberos server only. First make sure that you
-do not have any old Kerberos databases around. You should change to the
-directory /etc/kerberosIV and check that only the following
-files are present:
-
-
-
-grunt# cd /etc/kerberosIV
-grunt# ls
-README krb.conf krb.realms
-
-
-
-If any additional files (such as principal.* or
-master_key) exist, then use the kdb_destroy
-command to destroy the old Kerberos database, of if Kerberos
-is not running, simply delete the extra files with rm.
-
-You should now edit the krb.conf and krb.realms
-files to define your Kerberos realm. In this case the realm will
-be GRONDAR.ZA and the server is grunt.grondar.za.
-We edit or create the krb.conf file:
-
-
-
-grunt# cat krb.conf
-GRONDAR.ZA
-GRONDAR.ZA grunt.grondar.za admin server
-CS.BERKELEY.EDU okeeffe.berkeley.edu
-ATHENA.MIT.EDU kerberos.mit.edu
-ATHENA.MIT.EDU kerberos-1.mit.edu
-ATHENA.MIT.EDU kerberos-2.mit.edu
-ATHENA.MIT.EDU kerberos-3.mit.edu
-LCS.MIT.EDU kerberos.lcs.mit.edu
-TELECOM.MIT.EDU bitsy.mit.edu
-ARC.NASA.GOV trident.arc.nasa.gov
-
-
-
-In this case, the other realms do not need to be there.
-They are here as an example of how a machine may be made aware
-of multiple realms. You may wish to not include them for simplicity.
-
-The first line names the realm in which this system works. The other
-lines contain realm/host entries. The first item on a line is a realm,
-and the second is a host in that realm that is acting as a ``key
-distribution centre''. The words ``admin server'' following a hosts
-name means that host also provides an administrative database server.
-For further explanation of these terms, please consult the Kerberos
-man pages.
-
-Now we have to add grunt.grondar.za to the GRONDAR.ZA
-realm and also add an entry to put all hosts in the .grondar.za
-domain in the GRONDAR.ZA realm. The krb.realms file
-would be updated as follows:
-
-
-
- grunt# cat krb.realms
- grunt.grondar.za GRONDAR.ZA
- .grondar.za GRONDAR.ZA
- .berkeley.edu CS.BERKELEY.EDU
- .MIT.EDU ATHENA.MIT.EDU
- .mit.edu ATHENA.MIT.EDU
-
-
-
-Again, the other realms do not need to be there.
-They are here as an example of how a machine may be made aware
-of multiple realms. You may wish to remove them to simplify things.
-
-The first line puts the specific system into the named
-realm. The rest of the lines show how to default systems of a
-particular subdomain to a named realm.
-
-Now we are ready to create the database. This only needs to run on
-the Kerberos server (or Key Distribution Centre). Issue the
-kdb_init command to do this:
-
-
-
-grunt# kdb_init
-Realm name [default ATHENA.MIT.EDU ]: GRONDAR.ZA
-You will be prompted for the database Master Password.
-It is important that you NOT FORGET this password.
-
-Enter Kerberos master key:
-
-
-
-Now we have to save the key so that servers on the local
-machine can pick it up. Use the kstash command to
-do this.
-
-
-
-grunt# kstash
-
-Enter Kerberos master key:
-
-Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
-
-Master key entered. BEWARE!
-
-
-
-This saves the encrypted master password in
-/etc/kerberosIV/master_key.
-
-
-
-
-Making it all run
-
-Two principals need to be added to the database for each
-system that will be secured with Kerberos. Their names are
-kpasswd and rcmd These two principals are
-made for each system, with the instance being the name of the
-individual system.
-
-These daemons, kpasswd and rcmd allow other systems
-to change Kerberos passwords and run commands like rcp,
-rlogin and rsh.
-
-Now let's add these entries:
-
-
-
-grunt# kdb_edit
-Opening database...
-
-Enter Kerberos master key:
-
-Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
-
-Master key entered. BEWARE!
-Previous or default values are in [brackets] ,
-enter return to leave the same, or new value.
-
-Principal name: passwd
-Instance: grunt
-
-<Not found>, Create [y] ? y
-
-Principal: passwd, Instance: grunt, kdc_key_ver: 1
-New Password: <---- enter RANDOM here
-Verifying password
-
-New Password: <---- enter RANDOM here
-
-Random password [y] ? y
-
-Principal's new key version = 1
-Expiration date (enter yyyy-mm-dd) [ 2000-01-01 ] ?
-Max ticket lifetime (*5 minutes) [ 255 ] ?
-Attributes [ 0 ] ?
-Edit O.K.
-Principal name: rcmd
-Instance: grunt
-
-<Not found>, Create [y] ?
-
-Principal: rcmd, Instance: grunt, kdc_key_ver: 1
-New Password: <---- enter RANDOM here
-Verifying password
-
-New Password: <---- enter RANDOM here
-
-Random password [y] ?
-
-Principal's new key version = 1
-Expiration date (enter yyyy-mm-dd) [ 2000-01-01 ] ?
-Max ticket lifetime (*5 minutes) [ 255 ] ?
-Attributes [ 0 ] ?
-Edit O.K.
-Principal name: <---- null entry here will cause an exit
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Creating the server file
-
-We now have to extract all the instances which define the services
-on each machine. For this we use the ext_srvtab command.
-This will create a file which must be copied or moved by secure
-means to each Kerberos client's /etc/kerberosIV directory. This
-file must be present on each server and client, and is crucial to the
-operation of Kerberos.
-
-
-
-grunt# ext_srvtab grunt
-
-Enter Kerberos master key:
-
-Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
-
-Master key entered. BEWARE!
-Generating 'grunt-new-srvtab'....
-
-
-
-Now, this command only generates a temporary file
-which must be renamed to srvtab so that all the
-server can pick it up. Use the mv command to move it
-into place on the original system:
-
-
-
-grunt# mv grunt-new-srvtab srvtab
-
-
-
-If the file is for a client system, and the network is not
-deemed safe, then copy the <client>-new-srvtab to
-removable media and transport it by secure physical means. Be
-sure to rename it to srvtab in the client's
-/etc/kerberosIV directory, and make sure it is mode 600:
-
-
-
-grumble# mv grumble-new-srvtab srvtab
-grumble# chmod 600 srvtab
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Populating the database
-
-We now have to add some user entries into the database.
-First let's create an entry for the user jane. Use
-the kdb_edit command to do this:
-
-
-
-grunt# kdb_edit
-Opening database...
-
-Enter Kerberos master key:
-
-Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
-
-Master key entered. BEWARE!
-Previous or default values are in [brackets] ,
-enter return to leave the same, or new value.
-
-Principal name: jane
-Instance:
-
-<Not found>, Create [y] ? y
-
-Principal: jane, Instance: , kdc_key_ver: 1
-New Password: <---- enter a secure password here
-Verifying password
-
-New Password: <---- re-enter the password here
-
-Principal's new key version = 1
-Expiration date (enter yyyy-mm-dd) [ 2000-01-01 ] ?
-Max ticket lifetime (*5 minutes) [ 255 ] ?
-Attributes [ 0 ] ?
-Edit O.K.
-Principal name: <---- null entry here will cause an exit
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Testing it all out
-
-First we have to start the Kerberos daemons. NOTE that if you have
-correctly edited your /etc/rc.conf then this will happen
-automatically when you reboot. This is only necessary on the Kerberos
-server. Kerberos clients will automagically get what they need from
-the /etc/kerberosIV directory.
-
-
-
-grunt# kerberos &
-grunt# Kerberos server starting
- Sleep forever on error
- Log file is /var/log/kerberos.log
-Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
-
-Master key entered. BEWARE!
-
-Current Kerberos master key version is 1
-Local realm: GRONDAR.ZA
-grunt# kadmind -n &
-grunt# KADM Server KADM0.0A initializing
-Please do not use 'kill -9' to kill this job, use a
-regular kill instead
-
-Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
-
-Master key entered. BEWARE!
-
-
-
-Now we can try using the kinit command to get a ticket for
-the id jane that we created above:
-
-
-
-grunt$ kinit jane
-MIT Project Athena (grunt.grondar.za)
-Kerberos Initialization for "jane"
-Password:
-
-
-
-Try listing the tokens using klist to see if we really have them:
-
-
-
-grunt$ klist
-Ticket file: /tmp/tkt245
-Principal: jane@GRONDAR.ZA
-
- Issued Expires Principal
-Apr 30 11:23:22 Apr 30 19:23:22 krbtgt.GRONDAR.ZA@GRONDAR.ZA
-
-
-
-Now try changing the password using passwd to check if the
-kpasswd daemon can get authorization to the Kerberos database:
-
-
-
-grunt$ passwd
-realm GRONDAR.ZA
-Old password for jane:
-New Password for jane:
-Verifying password
-New Password for jane:
-Password changed.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Adding su privileges
-
-Kerberos allows us to give each user who needs root
-privileges their own separatesupassword. We
-could now add an id which is authorized to su to root.
-This is controlled by having an instance of root associated
-with a principal. Using kdb_edit we can create the entry
-jane.root in the Kerberos database:
-
-
-
-grunt# kdb_edit
-Opening database...
-
-Enter Kerberos master key:
-
-Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
-
-Master key entered. BEWARE!
-Previous or default values are in [brackets] ,
-enter return to leave the same, or new value.
-
-Principal name: jane
-Instance: root
-
-<Not found>, Create [y] ? y
-
-Principal: jane, Instance: root, kdc_key_ver: 1
-New Password: <---- enter a SECURE password here
-Verifying password
-
-New Password: <---- re-enter the password here
-
-Principal's new key version = 1
-Expiration date (enter yyyy-mm-dd) [ 2000-01-01 ] ?
-Max ticket lifetime (*5 minutes) [ 255 ] ? 12 <--- Keep this short!
-Attributes [ 0 ] ?
-Edit O.K.
-Principal name: <---- null entry here will cause an exit
-
-
-
-Now try getting tokens for it to make sure it works:
-
-
-
-grunt# kinit jane.root
-MIT Project Athena (grunt.grondar.za)
-Kerberos Initialization for "jane.root"
-Password:
-
-
-
-
-Now we need to add the user to root's .klogin file:
-
-
-
-grunt# cat /root/.klogin
-jane.root@GRONDAR.ZA
-
-
-
-Now try doing the su:
-
-
-
-[jane@grunt 10407] su
-Password:
-grunt#
-
-
-
-
-and take a look at what tokens we have:
-
-
-
-grunt# klist
-Ticket file: /tmp/tkt_root_245
-Principal: jane.root@GRONDAR.ZA
-
- Issued Expires Principal
-May 2 20:43:12 May 3 04:43:12 krbtgt.GRONDAR.ZA@GRONDAR.ZA
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Using other commands
-
-In an earlier example, we created a principal called jane
-with an instance root. This was based on a user with the
-same name as the principal, and this is a Kerberos default; that a
-<principal>.<instance> of the form
-<username>.root will allow that
-<username> to su to root if the necessary
-entries are in the .klogin file in root's home
-directory:
-
-
-
-grunt# cat /root/.klogin
-jane.root@GRONDAR.ZA
-
-
-
-Likewise, if a user has in their own home directory lines of the
-form:
-
-
-
-[jane@grunt 10543] cat ~/.klogin
-jane@GRONDAR.ZA
-jack@GRONDAR.ZA
-
-
-
-This allows anyone in the GRONDAR.ZA realm who has
-authenticated themselves to jane or jack (via
-kinit, see above) access to rlogin to jane's
-account or files on this system (grunt) via rlogin,
-rsh or rcp.
-
-For example, Jane now logs into another system, using Kerberos:
-
-
-
-[jane@grumble 573] kinit
-MIT Project Athena (grunt.grondar.za)
-Password:
-[jane@grumble 574] rlogin grunt
-Last login: Mon May 1 21:14:47 from grumble
-Copyright (c) 1980, 1983, 1986, 1988, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994
- The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
-
-FreeBSD BUILT-19950429 (GR386) #0: Sat Apr 29 17:50:09 SAT 1995
-
-[jane@grunt 10567]
-
-
-
-Or Jack logs into Jane's account on the same machine (Jane having set up
-the .klogin file as above, and the person in charge of Kerberos
-having set up principal jack with a null instance:
-
-
-
-[jack@grumble 573] kinit
-[jack@grumble 574] rlogin grunt -l jane
-MIT Project Athena (grunt.grondar.za)
-Password:
-Last login: Mon May 1 21:16:55 from grumble
-Copyright (c) 1980, 1983, 1986, 1988, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994
- The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
-
-FreeBSD BUILT-19950429 (GR386) #0: Sat Apr 29 17:50:09 SAT 1995
-
-[jane@grunt 10578]
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Firewalls
-
-Contributed by &a.gpalmer; and &a.alex;.
-
-Firewalls are an area of increasing interest for people who are
-connected to the Internet, and are even finding applications on
-private networks to provide enhanced security. This section will
-hopefully explain what firewalls are, how to use them, and how to use
-the facilities provided in the FreeBSD kernel to implement them.
-
-
-
-Note: People often think that having a firewall between
-your companies internal network and the ``Big Bad Internet'' will
-solve all your security problems. It may help, but a poorly setup
-firewall system is more of a security risk than not having one at all.
-A firewall can only add another layer of security to your systems, but
-they will not be able to stop a really determined hacker from
-penetrating your internal network. If you let internal security lapse
-because you believe your firewall to be impenetrable, you have just
-made the hackers job that bit easier.
-
-
-
-
-
-What is a firewall?
-
-There are currently two distinct types of firewalls in common
-use on the Internet today. The first type is more properly called
-a packet filtering router, where the kernel on a
-multi-homed machine chooses whether to forward or block packets
-based on a set of rules. The second type, known as proxy
-servers, rely on daemons to provide authentication and to
-forward packets, possibly on a multi-homed machine which has
-kernel packet forwarding disabled.
-
-Sometimes sites combine the two types of firewalls, so that only a
-certain machine (known as a bastion host) is allowed to send
-packets through a packet filtering router onto an internal
-network. Proxy services are run on the bastion host, which are
-generally more secure than normal authentication mechanisms.
-
-FreeBSD comes with a kernel packet filter (known as IPFW),
-which is what the rest of this section will concentrate on. Proxy
-servers can be built on FreeBSD from third party software, but there
-is such a variety of proxy servers available that it would be
-impossible to cover them in this document.
-
-
-
-Packet filtering routers
-
-A router is a machine which forwards packets between two or more
-networks. A packet filtering router has an extra piece of code in its
-kernel, which compares each packet to a list of rules before deciding
-if it should be forwarded or not. Most modern IP routing software has
-packet filtering code in it, which defaults to forwarding all
-packets. To enable the filters, you need to define a set of rules for
-the filtering code, so that it can decide if the packet should be
-allowed to pass or not.
-
-To decide if a packet should be passed on or not, the code looks
-through its set of rules for a rule which matches the contents of
-this packets headers. Once a match is found, the rule action is
-obeyed. The rule action could be to drop the packet, to forward the
-packet, or even to send an ICMP message back to the originator. Only
-the first match counts, as the rules are searched in order. Hence, the
-list of rules can be referred to as a ``rule chain''.
-
-The packet matching criteria varies depending on the software used,
-but typically you can specify rules which depend on the source IP
-address of the packet, the destination IP address, the source port
-number, the destination port number (for protocols which support
-ports), or even the packet type (UDP, TCP, ICMP, etc).
-
-
-
-
-Proxy servers
-
-Proxy servers are machines which have had the normal system daemons
-(telnetd, ftpd, etc) replaced with special servers. These servers are
-called proxy servers as they normally only allow onward
-connections to be made. This enables you to run (for example) a proxy
-telnet server on your firewall host, and people can telnet in to your
-firewall from the outside, go through some authentication mechanism,
-and then gain access to the internal network (alternatively, proxy
-servers can be used for signals coming from the internal network and
-heading out).
-
-Proxy servers are normally more secure than normal servers, and
-often have a wider variety of authentication mechanisms available,
-including ``one-shot'' password systems so that even if someone
-manages to discover what password you used, they will not be able to use
-it to gain access to your systems as the password instantly
-expires. As they do not actually give users access to the host machine,
-it becomes a lot more difficult for someone to install backdoors
-around your security system.
-
-Proxy servers often have ways of restricting access further, so
-that only certain hosts can gain access to the servers, and often they
-can be set up so that you can limit which users can talk to which
-destination machine. Again, what facilities are available depends
-largely on what proxy software you choose.
-
-
-
-
-
-What does IPFW allow me to do?
-
-IPFW, the software supplied with FreeBSD, is a packet
-filtering and accounting system which resides in the kernel, and has a
-user-land control utility, ipfw(8). Together, they
-allow you to define and query the rules currently used by the kernel
-in its routing decisions.
-
-There are two related parts to IPFW. The firewall section
-allows you to perform packet filtering. There is also an IP accounting
-section which allows you to track usage of your router, based on
-similar rules to the firewall section. This allows you to see (for
-example) how much traffic your router is getting from a certain
-machine, or how much WWW (World Wide Web) traffic it is forwarding.
-
-As a result of the way that IPFW is designed, you can use
-IPFW on non-router machines to perform packet filtering on
-incoming and outgoing connections. This is a special case of the more
-general use of IPFW, and the same commands and techniques
-should be used in this situation.
-
-
-
-
-Enabling IPFW on FreeBSD
-
-As the main part of the IPFW system lives in the kernel, you will
-need to add one or more options to your kernel configuration
-file, depending on what facilities you want, and recompile your kernel. See
- for more
-details on how to recompile your kernel.
-
-There are currently three kernel configuration options
-relevant to IPFW:
-
-
-
-options IPFIREWALL
-
-Compiles into the kernel the code for packet
-filtering.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options IPFIREWALL_VERBOSE
-
-
-Enables code to allow logging of
-packets through syslogd(8). Without this option, even if you
-specify that packets should be logged in the filter rules, nothing
-will happen.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-options IPFIREWALL_VERBOSE_LIMIT=10
-
-
-Limits the number of
-packets logged through syslogd(8) on a per entry basis.
-You may wish to use this option in hostile environments in which
-you want to log firewall activity, but do not want to be open to
-a denial of service attack via syslog flooding.
-
-
-
-When a chain entry reaches the packet limit specified, logging
-is turned off for that particular entry. To resume logging, you
-will need to reset the associated counter using the ipfw(8)
-utility:
-
-
-
-ipfw zero 4500
-
-
-
-Where 4500 is the chain entry you wish to continue logging.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Previous versions of FreeBSD contained an IPFIREWALL_ACCT
-option. This is now obsolete as the firewall code automatically
-includes accounting facilities.
-
-
-
-
-Configuring IPFW
-
-The configuration of the IPFW software is done through the
-ipfw(8) utility. The syntax for this command looks
-quite complicated, but it is relatively simple once you understand
-its structure.
-
-There are currently four different command categories used by the
-utility: addition/deletion, listing, flushing, and clearing.
-Addition/deletion is used to build the rules that control how packets
-are accepted, rejected, and logged. Listing is used to examine the
-contents of your rule set (otherwise known as the chain) and packet
-counters (accounting). Flushing is used to remove all entries from
-the chain. Clearing is used to zero out one or more accounting
-entries.
-
-
-
-Altering the IPFW rules
-
-The syntax for this form of the command is:
-
-ipfw [-N] command [index]
-action [log] protocoladdresses
-[options]
-
-
-
-There is one valid flag when using this form of the command:
-
-
-
--N
-
-Resolve addresses and service names in output.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The command given can be shortened to the shortest unique
-form. The valid commands are:
-
-
-
-add
-
-Add an entry to the firewall/accounting rule list
-
-
-
-
-
-
-delete
-
-
-Delete an entry from the firewall/accounting rule list
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Previous versions of IPFW used separate firewall and
-accounting entries. The present version provides packet accounting
-with each firewall entry.
-
-If an index value is supplied, it used to place the entry
-at a specific point in the chain. Otherwise, the entry is placed at
-the end of the chain at an index 100 greater than the last chain
-entry (this does not include the default policy, rule 65535, deny).
-
-The log option causes matching rules to be output to the
-system console if the kernel was compiled with IPFIREWALL_VERBOSE.
-
-Valid actions are:
-
-
-
-reject
-
-Drop the packet, and send an ICMP host or port
-unreachable (as appropriate) packet to the source.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-allow
-
-
-Pass the packet on as normal. (aliases: pass and
-accept)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-deny
-
-
-Drop the packet. The source is not notified via an ICMP
-message (thus it appears that the packet never arrived at the
-destination).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-count
-
-
-Update packet counters but do not allow/deny the packet
-based on this rule. The search continues with the next chain entry.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Each action will be recognized by the shortest unambiguous
-prefix.
-
-The protocols which can be specified are:
-
-
-
-all
-
-Matches any IP packet
-
-
-
-
-
-
-icmp
-
-
-Matches ICMP packets
-
-
-
-
-
-
-tcp
-
-
-Matches TCP packets
-
-
-
-
-
-
-udp
-
-
-Matches UDP packets
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The address specification is:
-
-from <address/mask>[port] to
-<address/mask>[port] [via <interface>]
-
-
-
-You can only specify port in conjunction with
-protocols which support ports (UDP and TCP).
-
-The via is optional and may specify the IP address or
-domain name of a local IP interface, or an interface name (e.g.
-ed0) to match only packets coming through this interface.
-Interface unit numbers can be specified with an optional wildcard.
-For example, ppp* would match all kernel PPP interfaces.
-
-The syntax used to specify an <address/mask> is:
-
-<address>
-
-
-or
-
-<address>/mask-bits
-
-
-or
-
-<address>:mask-pattern
-
-
-
-A valid hostname may be specified in place of the IP
-address. mask-bits is a decimal number representing how many
-bits in the address mask should be set. e.g. specifying
-
-192.216.222.1/24
-
-
-will create a mask which will allow any address in a class C subnet
-(in this case, 192.216.222) to be matched. mask-pattern is an IP
-address which will be logically AND'ed with the address given. The
-keyword any may be used to specify ``any IP address''.
-
-The port numbers to be blocked are specified as:
-
-port[,port[,port[...]]]
-
-
-to specify either a single port or a list of ports, or
-
-port-port
-
-
-to specify a range of ports. You may also combine a single range with a
-list, but the range must always be specified first.
-
-The options available are:
-
-
-
-frag
-
-Matches if the packet is not the first fragment of the datagram.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-in
-
-
-Matches if the packet is on the way in.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-out
-
-
-Matches if the packet is on the way out.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-ipoptions spec
-
-
-Matches if the IP header contains the
-comma separated list of options specified in spec. The
-supported list of IP options are: ssrr (strict source route),
-lsrr (loose source route), rr (record packet route),
-and ts (timestamp). The absence of a particular option may
-be denoted with a leading '!'.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-established
-
-
-Matches if the packet is part of an already established
-TCP connection (i.e. it has the RST or ACK bits set). You can optimize
-the performance of the firewall by placing established rules
-early in the chain.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-setup
-
-
-Matches if the packet is an attempt to establish a TCP connection
-(the SYN bit set is set but the ACK bit is not).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-tcpflags flags
-
-
-Matches if the TCP header contains
-the comma separated list of flags. The supported flags
-are fin, syn, rst, psh, ack,
-and urg. The absence of a particular flag may be indicated
-by a leading '!'.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-icmptypes types
-
-
-Matches if the ICMP type is present in
-the list types. The list may be specified as any combination
-of ranges and/or individual types separated by commas. Commonly used
-ICMP types are: 0 echo reply (ping reply), 5
-redirect, 8 echo request (ping request), and 11
-time exceeded (used to indicate TTL expiration as with
-traceroute(8)).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Listing the IPFW rules
-
-The syntax for this form of the command is:
-
-ipfw [-atN] l
-
-
-
-There are three valid flags when using this form of the command:
-
-
-
--a
-
-While listing, show counter values. This option is the only
-way to see accounting counters.
-
-
-
-
-
-
--t
-
-
-Display the last match times for each chain entry. The time
-listing is incompatible with the input syntax used by the
-ipfw(8) utility.
-
-
-
-
-
-
--N
-
-
-Attempt to resolve given addresses and service names.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Flushing the IPFW rules
-
-The syntax for flushing the chain is:
-
-ipfw flush
-
-
-
-This causes all entries in the firewall chain to be removed except
-the fixed default policy enforced by the kernel (index 65535). Use
-caution when flushing rules, the default deny policy will leave your
-system cut off from the network until allow entries are added to the
-chain.
-
-
-
-
-Clearing the IPFW packet counters
-
-The syntax for clearing one or more packet counters is:
-
-ipfw zero [index]
-
-
-
-When used without an index argument, all packet counters
-are cleared. If an index is supplied, the clearing operation
-only affects a specific chain entry.
-
-
-
-
-
-Example commands for ipfw
-
-This command will deny all packets from the host
-evil.hacker.org to the telnet port of the host
-nice.people.org by being forwarded by the router:
-
-
-
-ipfw add deny tcp from evil.hacker.org to nice.people.org 23
-
-
-
-The next example denies and logs any TCP traffic from the entire
-hacker.org network (a class C) to the nice.people.org
-machine (any port).
-
-
-
-ipfw add deny log tcp from evil.hacker.org/24 to nice.people.org
-
-
-
-If you do not want people sending X sessions to your internal network
-(a subnet of a class C), the following command will do the necessary
-filtering:
-
-
-
-ipfw add deny tcp from any to my.org/28 6000 setup
-
-
-
-To see the accounting records:
-
-ipfw -a list
-
-
-or in the short form
-
-ipfw -a l
-
-
-You can also see the last time a chain entry was matched with
-
-ipfw -at l
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Building a packet filtering firewall
-
-
-
-Note: The following suggestions are just that:
-suggestions. The requirements of each firewall are different and I
-cannot tell you how to build a firewall to meet your particular
-requirements.
-
-
-
-When initially setting up your firewall, unless you have a test
-bench setup where you can configure your firewall host in a controlled
-environment, I strongly recommend you use the logging version of the
-commands and enable logging in the kernel. This will allow you to
-quickly identify problem areas and cure them without too much
-disruption. Even after the initial setup phase is complete, I
-recommend using the logging for of `deny' as it allows tracing of
-possible attacks and also modification of the firewall rules if your
-requirements alter.
-
-
-
-Note: If you use the logging versions of the
-accept command, it can generate large amounts
-of log data as one log line will be generated for every packet
-that passes through the firewall, so large ftp/http transfers,
-etc, will really slow the system down. It also increases the
-latencies on those packets as it requires more work to be done by
-the kernel before the packet can be passed on. syslogd with also
-start using up a lot more processor time as it logs all the extra
-data to disk, and it could quite easily fill the partition
-/var/log is located on.
-
-
-
-
-
-Synchronous Serial Transmission
-
-Synchronous serial transmission requires that the sender and
-receiver share a clock with one another, or that the sender provide
-a strobe or other timing signal so that the receiver knows when to
-"read" the next bit of the data. In most forms of serial
-Synchronous communication, if there is no data available at a given
-instant to transmit, a fill character must be sent instead so that
-data is always being transmitted. Synchronous communication is
-usually more efficient because only data bits are transmitted
-between sender and receiver, and synchronous communication can be
-more more costly if extra wiring and circuits are required to
-share a clock signal between the sender and receiver.
-
-A form of Synchronous transmission is used with printers and
-fixed disk devices in that the data is sent on one set of wires
-while a clock or strobe is sent on a different wire. Printers and
-fixed disk devices are not normally serial devices because most
-fixed disk interface standards send an entire word of data for each
-clock or strobe signal by using a separate wire for each bit of the
-word. In the PC industry, these are known as Parallel devices.
-
-The standard serial communications hardware in the PC does not
-support Synchronous operations. This mode is described here for
-comparison purposes only.
-
-
-
-
-Asynchronous Serial Transmission
-
-Asynchronous transmission allows data to be transmitted without
-the sender having to send a clock signal to the receiver. Instead,
-the sender and receiver must agree on timing parameters in advance
-and special bits are added to each word which are used to
-synchronize the sending and receiving units.
-
-When a word is given to the UART for Asynchronous transmissions,
-a bit called the "Start Bit" is added to the beginning of each word
-that is to be transmitted. The Start Bit is used to alert the
-receiver that a word of data is about to be sent, and to force the
-clock in the receiver into synchronization with the clock in the
-transmitter. These two clocks must be accurate enough to not
-have the frequency drift by more than 10% during the transmission
-of the remaining bits in the word. (This requirement was set in
-the days of mechanical teleprinters and is easily met by modern
-electronic equipment.)
-
-After the Start Bit, the individual bits of the word of data are
-sent, with the Least Significant Bit (LSB) being sent first. Each
-bit in the transmission is transmitted for exactly the same
-amount of time as all of the other bits, and the receiver "looks"
-at the wire at approximately halfway through the period assigned
-to each bit to determine if the bit is a "1" or a "0". For example,
-if it takes two seconds to send each bit, the receiver will examine
-the signal to determine if it is a "1" or a "0" after one second
-has passed, then it will wait two seconds and then examine the value
-of the next bit, and so on.
-
-The sender does not know when the receiver has "looked" at the
-value of the bit. The sender only knows when the clock says to
-begin transmitting the next bit of the word.
-
-When the entire data word has been sent, the transmitter may add
-a Parity Bit that the transmitter generates. The Parity Bit may
-be used by the receiver to perform simple error checking. Then at
-least one Stop Bit is sent by the transmitter.
-
-When the receiver has received all of the bits in the data word,
-it may check for the Parity Bits (both sender and receiver must
-agree on whether a Parity Bit is to be used), and then the receiver
-looks for a Stop Bit. If the Stop Bit does not appear when it is
-supposed to, the UART considers the entire word to be garbled and
-will report a Framing Error to the host processor when the data
-word is read. The usual cause of a Framing Error is that the sender
-and receiver clocks were not running at the same speed, or that
-the signal was interrupted.
-
-Regardless of whether the data was received correctly or not, the
-UART automatically discards the Start, Parity and Stop bits. If the
-sender and receiver are configured identically, these bits are not
-passed to the host.
-
-If another word is ready for transmission, the Start Bit for the new
-word can be sent as soon as the Stop Bit for the previous
-word has been sent.
-
-Because asynchronous data is "self synchronizing", if there is no
-data to transmit, the transmission line can be idle.
-
-
-
-
-Other UART Functions
-
-In addition to the basic job of converting data from parallel to
-serial for transmission and from serial to parallel on reception,
-a UART will usually provide additional circuits for signals that
-can be used to indicate the state of the transmission media, and
-to regulate the flow of data in the event that the remote device
-is not prepared to accept more data. For example, when the
-device connected to the UART is a modem, the modem may report the
-presence of a carrier on the phone line while the computer may be
-able to instruct the modem to reset itself or to not take calls
-by asserting or deasserting one more more of these extra signals.
-The function of each of these additional signals is defined in
-the EIA RS232-C standard.
-
-
-
-
-The RS232-C and V.24 Standards
-
-In most computer systems, the UART is connected to circuitry that
-generates signals that comply with the EIA RS232-C specification.
-There is also a CCITT standard named V.24 that mirrors the
-specifications included in RS232-C.
-
-
-
-RS232-C Bit Assignments (Marks and Spaces)
-
-In RS232-C, a value of "1" is called a "Mark" and a value of "0"
-is called a "Space". When a communication line is idle, the line
-is said to be "Marking", or transmitting continuous "1" values.
-
-The Start bit always has a value of "0" (a Space). The Stop Bit
-always has a value of "1" (a Mark). This means that there will
-always be a Mark (1) to Space (0) transition on the line at the
-start of every word, even when multiple word are
-transmitted back to back. This guarantees that sender and
-receiver can resynchronize their clocks regardless of the content
-of the data bits that are being transmitted.
-
-The idle time between Stop and Start bits does not have
-to be an exact multiple (including zero) of the bit rate of the
-communication link, but most UARTs are designed this way for
-simplicity.
-
-In RS232-C, the "Marking" signal (a "1") is represented by a voltage
-between -2 VDC and -12 VDC, and a "Spacing" signal (a "0") is
-represented by a voltage between 0 and +12 VDC. The transmitter
-is supposed to send +12 VDC or -12 VDC, and the receiver is supposed
-to allow for some voltage loss in long cables. Some transmitters
-in low power devices (like portable computers) sometimes use only
-+5 VDC and -5 VDC, but these values are still acceptable to a
-RS232-C receiver, provided that the cable lengths are short.
-
-
-
-
-RS232-C Break Signal
-
-RS232-C also specifies a signal called a "Break", which is caused
-by sending continuous Spacing values (no Start or Stop bits). When
-there is no electricity present on the data circuit, the line is
-considered to be sending "Break".
-
-The "Break" signal must be of a duration longer than the time
-it takes to send a complete byte plus Start, Stop and Parity bits.
-Most UARTs can distinguish between a Framing Error and a
-Break, but if the UART cannot do this, the Framing Error detection
-can be used to identify Breaks.
-
-In the days of teleprinters, when numerous printers around the
-country were wired in series (such as news services), any unit
-could cause a "Break" by temporarily opening the entire circuit
-so that no current flowed. This was used to allow a location with
-urgent news to interrupt some other location that was currently
-sending information.
-
-In modern systems there are two types of Break signals. If the
-Break is longer than 1.6 seconds, it is considered a "Modem Break",
-and some modems can be programmed to terminate the conversation and
-go on-hook or enter the modems' command mode when the modem detects
-this signal. If the Break is smaller than 1.6 seconds, it signifies
-a Data Break and it is up to the remote computer to respond to
-this signal. Sometimes this form of Break is used as an Attention
-or Interrupt signal and sometimes is accepted as a substitute for
-the ASCII CONTROL-C character.
-
-Marks and Spaces are also equivalent to "Holes" and "No Holes"
-in paper tape systems.
-
-Note that Breaks cannot be generated from paper tape or from any
-other byte value, since bytes are always sent with Start and Stop
-bit. The UART is usually capable of generating the continuous
-Spacing signal in response to a special command from the host
-processor.
-
-
-
-
-RS232-C DTE and DCE Devices
-
-The RS232-C specification defines two types of equipment: the Data
-Terminal Equipment (DTE) and the Data Carrier Equipment (DCE).
-Usually, the DTE device is the terminal (or computer), and the DCE
-is a modem. Across the phone line at the other end of a
-conversation, the receiving modem is also a DCE device and the
-computer that is connected to that modem is a DTE device. The DCE
-device receives signals on the pins that the DTE device transmits on,
-and vice versa.
-
-When two devices that are both DTE or both DCE must be connected
-together without a modem or a similar media translater between them,
-a NULL modem must be used. The NULL modem electrically re-arranges
-the cabling so that the transmitter output is connected to the
-receiver input on the other device, and vice versa. Similar
-translations are performed on all of the control signals so that
-each device will see what it thinks are DCE (or DTE) signals from
-the other device.
-
-The number of signals generated by the DTE and DCE devices are
-not symmetrical. The DTE device generates fewer signals for
-the DCE device than the DTE device receives from the DCE.
-
-
-
-
-RS232-C Pin Assignments
-
-The EIA RS232-C specification (and the ITU equivalent, V.24) calls
-for a twenty-five pin connector (usually a DB25) and defines the
-purpose of most of the pins in that connector.
-
-In the IBM Personal Computer and similar systems, a subset of
-RS232-C signals are provided via nine pin connectors (DB9).
-The signals that are not included on the PC connector deal mainly
-with synchronous operation, and this transmission mode is not
-supported by the UART that IBM selected for use in the IBM PC.
-
-Depending on the computer manufacturer, a DB25, a DB9, or
-both types of connector may be used for RS232-C communications.
-(The IBM PC also uses a DB25 connector for the parallel printer
-interface which causes some confusion.)
-
-Below is a table of the RS232-C signal assignments in the DB25
-and DB9 connectors.
-
-
-DB25 DB9 EIA CCITT Common Signal Description
-RS232-C IBM PC Circuit Circuit Name Source
-Pin Pin Symbol Symbol
-
-1 - AA 101 PG/FG --- Frame/Protective Ground
-2 3 BA 103 TD DTE Transmit Data
-3 2 BB 104 RD DCE Receive Data
-4 7 CA 105 RTS DTE Request to Send
-5 8 CB 106 CTS DCE Clear to Send
-6 6 CC 107 DSR DCE Data Set Ready
-7 5 AV 102 SG/GND --- Signal Ground
-8 1 CF 109 DCD/CD DCE Data Carrier Detect
-9 - - - - - Reserved for Test
-10 - - - - - Reserved for Test
-11 - - - - - Unassigned
-12 - CI 122 SRLSD DCE Sec. Recv. Line Signal Detector
-13 - SCB 121 SCTS DCE Secondary Clear To Send
-14 - SBA 118 STD DTE Secondary Transmit Data
-15 - DB 114 TSET DCE Trans. Sig. Element Timing
-16 - SBB 119 SRD DCE Secondary Received Data
-17 - DD 115 RSET DCE Receiver Signal Element Timing
-18 - - 141 LOOP DTE Local Loopback
-19 - SCA 120 SRS DTE Secondary Request to Send
-20 4 CD 108.2 DTR DTE Data Terminal Ready
-21 - - - RDL DTE Remote Digital Loopback
-22 9 CE 125 RI DCE Ring Indicator
-23 - CH 111 DSRS DTE Data Signal Rate Selector
-24 - DA 113 TSET DTE Trans. Sig. Element Timing
-25 - - 142 - DCE Test Mode
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Bits, Baud and Symbols
-
-Baud is a measurement of transmission speed in asynchronous
-communication. Because of advances in modem communication
-technology, this term is frequently misused when describing
-the data rates in newer devices.
-
-Traditionally, a Baud Rate represents the number of bits that are
-actually being sent over the media, not the amount of data
-that is actually moved from one DTE device to the other. The
-Baud count includes the overhead bits Start, Stop and Parity
-that are generated by the sending UART and removed by the
-receiving UART. This means that seven-bit words of data
-actually take 10 bits to be completely transmitted.
-Therefore, a modem capable of moving 300 bits per second from one
-place to another can normally only move 30 7-bit words if
-Parity is used and one Start and Stop bit are present.
-
-If 8-bit data words are used and Parity bits are also used, the
-data rate falls to 27.27 words per second, because it now
-takes 11 bits to send the eight-bit words, and the modem still
-only sends 300 bits per second.
-
-The formula for converting bytes per second into a baud rate
-and vice versa was simple until error-correcting modems
-came along. These modems receive the serial stream of bits
-from the UART in the host computer (even when internal modems
-are used the data is still frequently serialized) and converts
-the bits back into bytes. These bytes are then combined into
-packets and sent over the phone line using a Synchronous
-transmission method. This means that the Stop, Start, and Parity
-bits added by the UART in the DTE (the computer) were removed by
-the modem before transmission by the sending modem. When these
-bytes are received by the remote modem, the remote modem adds
-Start, Stop and Parity bits to the words, converts them to a
-serial format and then sends them to the receiving UART in the remote
-computer, who then strips the Start, Stop and Parity bits.
-
-The reason all these extra conversions are done is so that the
-two modems can perform error correction, which means that the
-receiving modem is able to ask the sending modem to resend a
-block of data that was not received with the correct checksum.
-This checking is handled by the modems, and the DTE devices are
-usually unaware that the process is occurring.
-
-By striping the Start, Stop and Parity bits, the additional bits of
-data that the two modems must share between themselves to perform
-error-correction are mostly concealed from the effective
-transmission rate seen by the sending and receiving DTE equipment.
-For example, if a modem sends ten 7-bit words to another modem
-without including the Start, Stop and Parity bits, the sending
-modem will be able to add 30 bits of its own information that
-the receiving modem can use to do error-correction without
-impacting the transmission speed of the real data.
-
-The use of the term Baud is further confused by modems that perform
-compression. A single 8-bit word passed over the telephone
-line might represent a dozen words that were transmitted to
-the sending modem. The receiving modem will expand the data back
-to its original content and pass that data to the receiving DTE.
-
-Modern modems also include buffers that allow the rate that
-bits move across the phone line (DCE to DCE) to be a different speed
-than the speed that the bits move between the DTE and DCE on both
-ends of the conversation. Normally the speed between the DTE and
-DCE is higher than the DCE to DCE speed because of the use of
-compression by the modems.
-
-Because the number of bits needed to describe a byte varied
-during the trip between the two machines plus the differing
-bits-per-seconds speeds that are used present on the DTE-DCE and
-DCE-DCE links, the usage of the term Baud to describe the
-overall communication speed causes problems and can misrepresent
-the true transmission speed. So Bits Per Second (bps) is the correct
-term to use to describe the transmission rate seen at the
-DCE to DCE interface and Baud or Bits Per Second are acceptable
-terms to use when a connection is made between two systems with a
-wired connection, or if a modem is in use that is not performing
-error-correction or compression.
-
-Modern high speed modems (2400, 9600, 14,400, and 19,200bps) in
-reality still operate at or below 2400 baud, or more accurately,
-2400 Symbols per second. High speed modem are able to encode more
-bits of data into each Symbol using a technique called Constellation
-Stuffing, which is why the effective bits per second rate of the
-modem is higher, but the modem continues to operate within the
-limited audio bandwidth that the telephone system provides.
-Modems operating at 28,800 and higher speeds have variable Symbol
-rates, but the technique is the same.
-
-
-
-
-The IBM Personal Computer UART
-
-Starting with the original IBM Personal Computer, IBM selected
-the National Semiconductor INS8250 UART for use in the IBM PC
-Parallel/Serial Adapter. Subsequent generations of compatible
-computers from IBM and other vendors continued to use the INS8250
-or improved versions of the National Semiconductor UART family.
-
-
-
-National Semiconductor UART Family Tree
-
-There have been several versions and subsequent generations of
-the INS8250 UART. Each major version is described below.
-
-
- INS8250 -> INS8250B
- \
- \
- \-> INS8250A -> INS82C50A
- \
- \
- \-> NS16450 -> NS16C450
- \
- \
- \-> NS16550 -> NS16550A -> PC16550D
-
-
-
-
-INS8250
-
-This part was used in the original IBM PC and
-IBM PC/XT. The original name for this part was the INS8250 ACE
-(Asynchronous Communications Element) and it is made from NMOS
-technology.
-
-The 8250 uses eight I/O ports and has a one-byte send and
-a one-byte receive buffer. This original UART has several
-race conditions and other flaws. The original IBM BIOS
-includes code to work around these flaws, but this made
-the BIOS dependent on the flaws being present, so subsequent
-parts like the 8250A, 16450 or 16550 could not be used in
-the original IBM PC or IBM PC/XT.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-INS8250-B
-
-
-This is the slower speed of the INS8250 made
-from NMOS technology. It contains the same problems as the original
-INS8250.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-INS8250A
-
-
-An improved version of the INS8250 using XMOS
-technology with various functional flaws corrected. The INS8250A
-was used initially in PC clone computers by vendors who used
-"clean" BIOS designs. Because of the corrections in the chip, this
-part could not be used with a BIOS compatible with the INS8250
-or INS8250B.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-INS82C50A
-
-
-This is a CMOS version (low power consumption)
-of the INS8250A and has similar functional characteristics.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-NS16450
-
-
-Same as NS8250A with improvements so it can be
-used with faster CPU bus designs. IBM used this part in the IBM AT
-and updated the IBM BIOS to no longer rely on the bugs in the
-INS8250.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-NS16C450
-
-
-This is a CMOS version (low power consumption)
-of the NS16450.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-NS16550
-
-
-Same as NS16450 with a 16-byte send and receive
-buffer but the buffer design was flawed and could not be reliably
-be used.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-NS16550A
-
-
-Same as NS16550 with the buffer flaws corrected.
-The 16550A and its successors have become the most popular UART
-design in the PC industry, mainly due it its ability to reliably
-handle higher data rates on operating systems with sluggish interrupt
-response times.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-NS16C552
-
-
-This component consists of two NS16C550A CMOS
-UARTs in a single package.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-PC16550D
-
-
-Same as NS16550A with subtle flaws corrected. This
-is revision D of the 16550 family and is the latest design available
-from National Semiconductor.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The NS16550AF and the PC16550D are the same thing
-
-National reorganized their part numbering system a few years ago,
-and the NS16550AFN no longer exists by that name. (If you
-have a NS16550AFN, look at the date code on the part, which is a
-four digit number that usually starts with a nine. The first two
-digits of the number are the year, and the last two digits are the
-week in that year when the part was packaged. If you have a
-NS16550AFN, it is probably a few years old.)
-
-The new numbers are like PC16550DV, with minor differences in the
-suffix letters depending on the package material and its shape.
-(A description of the numbering system can be found below.)
-
-It is important to understand that in some stores, you may pay
-$15(US) for a NS16550AFN made in 1990 and in the next bin are the
-new PC16550DN parts with minor fixes that National has made since the
-AFN part was in production, the PC16550DN was probably made in the
-past six months and it costs half (as low as $5(US) in volume) as
-much as the NS16550AFN because they are readily available.
-
-As the supply of NS16550AFN chips continues to shrink, the price will
-probably continue to increase until more people discover and accept
-that the PC16550DN really has the same function as the old part
-number.
-
-
-
-
-National Semiconductor Part Numbering System
-
-The older NSnnnnnrqp part numbers are now of the
-format PCnnnnnrgp.
-
-The "r" is the revision field. The current revision of
-the 16550 from National Semiconductor is "D".
-
-The "p" is the package-type field. The types are:
- "F" QFP (quad flat pack) L lead type
- "N" DIP (dual inline package) through hole straight lead type
- "V" LPCC (lead plastic chip carrier) J lead type
-
-
-The "g" is the product grade field. If an "I" precedes
-the package-type letter, it indicates an "industrial" grade part,
-which has higher specs than a standard part but not as high as
-Military Specification (Milspec) component. This is an optional field.
-
-So what we used to call a NS16550AFN (DIP Package) is now called a
-PC16550DN or PC16550DIN.
-
-
-
-
-
-Other Vendors and Similar UARTs
-
-Over the years, the 8250, 8250A, 16450 and 16550 have been licensed
-or copied by other chip vendors. In the case of the 8250, 8250A
-and 16450, the exact circuit (the "megacell") was licensed to many
-vendors, including Western Digital and Intel. Other vendors
-reverse-engineered the part or produced emulations that had similar
-behavior.
-
-In internal modems, the modem designer will frequently emulate the
-8250A/16450 with the modem microprocessor, and the emulated UART will
-frequently have a hidden buffer consisting of several hundred bytes.
-Because of the size of the buffer, these emulations can be as
-reliable as a 16550A in their ability to handle high speed data.
-However, most operating systems will still report that
-the UART is only a 8250A or 16450, and may not make effective use
-of the extra buffering present in the emulated UART unless special
-drivers are used.
-
-Some modem makers are driven by market forces to abandon a design
-that has hundreds of bytes of buffer and instead use a 16550A UART
-so that the product will compare favorably in market comparisons
-even though the effective performance may be lowered by this action.
-
-A common misconception is that all parts with "16550A" written on
-them are identical in performance. There are differences, and in
-some cases, outright flaws in most of these 16550A clones.
-
-When the NS16550 was developed, the National Semiconductor obtained
-several patents on the design and they also limited licensing, making
-it harder for other vendors to provide a chip with similar features.
-Because of the patents, reverse-engineered designs and emulations
-had to avoid infringing the claims covered by the patents.
-Subsequently, these copies almost never perform exactly the same as
-the NS16550A or PC16550D, which are the parts most computer and
-modem makers want to buy but are sometimes unwilling to pay the
-price required to get the genuine part.
-
-Some of the differences in the clone 16550A parts are unimportant,
-while others can prevent the device from being used at all with a
-given operating system or driver. These differences may show up
-when using other drivers, or when particular combinations of events
-occur that were not well tested or considered in the Windows driver.
-This is because most modem vendors and 16550-clone makers use the
-Microsoft drivers from Windows for Workgroups 3.11 and the Microsoft
-MSD utility as the primary tests for compatibility with the
-NS16550A. This over-simplistic criteria means that if a different
-operating system is used, problems could appear due to subtle
-differences between the clones and genuine components.
-
-National Semiconductor has made available a program named COMTEST
-that performs compatibility tests independent of any OS drivers.
-It should be remembered that the purpose of this type of program is
-to demonstrate the flaws in the products of the competition, so the
-program will report major as well as extremely subtle differences in
-behavior in the part being tested.
-
-In a series of tests performed by the author of this document in
-1994, components made by National Semiconductor, TI, StarTech, and
-CMD as well as megacells and emulations embedded in internal modems
-were tested with COMTEST. A difference count for some of these
-components is listed below. Because these tests were performed in
-1994, they may not reflect the current performance of the given
-product from a vendor.
-
-It should be noted that COMTEST normally aborts when an excessive
-number or certain types of problems have been detected. As part of
-this testing, COMTEST was modified so that it would not abort no
-matter how many differences were encountered.
-
-
-Vendor Part number Errors aka "differences" reported
-National (PC16550DV) 0 *
-
-National (NS16550AFN) 0
-
-National (NS16C552V) 0 *
-
-TI (TL16550AFN) 3
-
-CMD (16C550PE) 19
-
-StarTech (ST16C550J) 23
-
-Rockwell reference modem
- with internal 16550 or an
- emulation (RC144DPi/C3000-25) 117
-
-Sierra modem with an internal
- 16550 (SC11951/SC11351) 91
-
-
-It is important to understand that a simple count of differences
-from COMTEST does not reveal a lot about what differences are
-important and which are not. For example, about half of the
-differences reported in the two modems listed above that have
-internal UARTs were caused by the clone UARTs not supporting
-five- and six-bit character modes. The real 16550, 16450, and
-8250 UARTs all support these modes and COMTEST checks the
-functionality of these modes so over fifty differences are
-reported. However, almost no modern modem supports five- or
-six-bit characters, particularly those with error-correction
-and compression capabilities. This means that the differences
-related to five- and six-bit character modes can be discounted.
-
-Many of the differences COMTEST reports have to do with timing. In
-many of the clone designs, when the host reads from one port, the
-status bits in some other port may not update in the same amount
-of time (some faster, some slower) as a real NS16550AFN
-and COMTEST looks for these differences. This means that the number
-of differences can be misleading in that one device may only have
-one or two differences but they are extremely serious, and some
-other device that updates the status registers faster or slower
-than the reference part (that would probably never affect the
-operation of a properly written driver) could have dozens of
-differences reported.
-
-* To date, the author of this document has not found any non-National
-parts that report zero differences using the COMTEST program. It
-should also be noted that National has had five versions of the
-16550 over the years and the newest parts behave a bit differently
-than the classic NS16550AFN that is considered the benchmark for
-functionality. COMTEST appears to turn a blind eye to the
-differences within the National product line and reports no errors
-on the National parts (except for the original 16550) even when
-there are official erratas that describe bugs in the A, B and C
-revisions of the parts, so this bias in COMTEST must be taken into
-account.
-
-COMTEST can be used as a screening tool to alert the administrator
-to the presence of potentially incompatible components
-that might cause problems or have to be handled as a special case.
-
-If you run COMTEST on a 16550 that is in a modem or a modem is
-attached to the serial port, you need to first issue a ATE0&W
-command to the modem so that the modem will not echo any of the test
-characters. If you forget to do this, COMTEST will report at least
-this one difference:
-
-This is a user process PPP software package. Normally, PPP is
-implemented as a part of the kernel (e.g. as managed by pppd) and
-it is thus somewhat hard to debug and/or modify its behavior. However,
-in this implementation PPP is done as a user process with the help of
-the tunnel device driver (tun).
-
-
-
-In essence, this means that rather than running a PPP daemon, the ppp
-program can be run as and when desired. No PPP interface needs to be
-compiled into the kernel, as the program can use the generic tunnel
-device to get data into and out of the kernel.
-
-From here on out, user ppp will be referred to simply as ppp unless a
-distinction needs to be made between it and any other PPP client/server
-software such as pppd. Unless otherwise stated, all commands in this
-section should be executed as root.
-
-
-
-Before you start
-
-This document assumes you are in roughly this position:
-
-You have an account with an Internet Service Provider (ISP) which lets you
-use PPP. Further, you have a modem (or other device) connected and
-configured correctly which allows you to connect to your ISP.
-
-You are going to need the following information to hand:
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Your ISPs phone number(s).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Your login name and password. This can be either a regular
-unix style login/password pair, or a PPP PAP or CHAP
-login/password pair.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The IP address of your ISP's gateway. The gateway is the
-machine to which you will connect and will
-be set up as your default route. If your ISP hasn't
-given you this number, don't worry. We can make one up and
-your ISP's PPP server will tell us when we connect.
-
-This number is known from now on as HISADDR.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Your ISP's netmask setting. Again, if your ISP hasn't given
-you this information, you can safely use a netmask of
-255.255.255.0.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The IP addresses of one or more nameservers. Normally, you
-will be given two IP numbers. You MUST have this
-information unless you run your own nameserver.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-If your ISP allocates you a static IP address and hostname
-then you will need this information too. If not, you will need
-to know from what range of IP addresses your allocated IP address
-will belong. If you haven't been given this range, don't worry.
-You can configure PPP to accept any IP number (as explained later).
-
-
-
-
-
-If you do not have any of the required information, contact your ISP
-and make sure they provide it to you.
-
-
-
-
-Building a ppp ready kernel
-
-As the description states, ``ppp'' uses the kernel ``tun'' device.
-It is necessary to make sure that your kernel has support for this
-device compiled in.
-
-To check this, go to your kernel compile directory (/sys/i386/conf
-or /sys/pc98/conf) and examine your kernel configuration file.
-It needs to have the line
-
-
-
- pseudo-device tun 1
-
-
-
-in it somewhere. The stock GENERIC kernel has this as standard, so
-if you have not installed a custom kernel or you do not have a /sys
-directory, you do not have to change anything.
-
-If your kernel configuration file does not have this line in it, or
-you need to configure more than one tun device (for example, if
-you are setting up a server and could have 16 dialup ppp connections
-at any one time then you will need to use ``16'' instead of ``1''),
-then you should add the line, re-compile, re-install and boot the new
-kernel. Please refer to the
-
-section for more information on kernel configuration.
-
-You can check how many tunnel devices your current kernel has by
-typing the following:
-
-
-
- # ifconfig -a
- tun0: flags=8051<UP,POINTOPOINT,RUNNING,MULTICAST> mtu 1500
- inet 200.10.100.1 --> 203.10.100.24 netmask 0xffffffff
- tun1: flags=8050<POINTOPOINT,RUNNING,MULTICAST> mtu 576
- tun2: flags=8051<UP,POINTOPOINT,RUNNING,MULTICAST> mtu 1500
- inet 203.10.100.1 --> 203.10.100.20 netmask 0xffffffff
- tun3: flags=8050<POINTOPOINT,RUNNING,MULTICAST> mtu 1500
-
-
-
-which in this case shows four tunnel devices, two of which are
-currently configured and being used.
-
-If you have a kernel without the tun device, and you can not
-rebuild it for some reason, all is not lost. You should be
-able to dynamically load the code. Refer to the appropriate
-modload(8) and lkm(4) pages for further details.
-
-You may also wish to take this opportunity to configure a firewall.
-Details can be found in the
-section.
-
-
-
-
-Check the tun device
-
-Most users will only require one ``tun'' device (tun0). If you have
-used more (i.e., a number other than `1' in the pseudo-device line
-in the kernel configuration file) then alter all references to ``tun0''
-below to reflect whichever device number you are using.
-
-The easiest way to make sure that the tun0 device is configured correctly
-is to re-make it. To do this, execute the following commands:
-
-
-
- # cd /dev
- # ./MAKEDEV tun0
-
-
-
-If you require 16 tunnel devices in your kernel, you will need to
-create more than just tun0:
-
-
-
- # cd /dev
- # ./MAKEDEV tun15
-
-
-
-Also, to confirm that the kernel is configured correctly,
-the following command should give the indicated output:
-
-
-
- $ ifconfig tun0
- tun0: flags=8050<POINTOPOINT,RUNNING,MULTICAST> mtu 1500
- $
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Name Resolution Configuration
-
-The resolver is the part of the system that turns IP addresses
-into hostnames and vice versa. It can be configured to look for
-maps that describe IP to hostname mappings in one of two places.
-The first is a file called /etc/hosts (man 5 hosts).
-The second is the Internet Domain Name Service (DNS), a distributed
-data base, the discussion of which is beyond the scope of this document.
-
-This section describes briefly how to configure your resolver.
-
-The resolver is a set of system calls that do the name mappings, but
-you have to tell them where to find their information. You do
-this by first editing the file /etc/host.conf. Do
-not call this file /etc/hosts.conf (note the extra
-``s'') as the results can be confusing.
-
-
-
-Edit the /etc/host.conf file
-
-This file should contain the following two lines:
-
-
-
- hosts
- bind
-
-
-which instructs the resolver to first look in the file
-/etc/hosts, and then to consult the DNS if the
-name was not found.
-
-
-
-
-Edit the /etc/hosts(5) file
-
-This file should contain the IP addresses and names of machines on your
-network. At a bare minimum it should contain entries for the machine
-which will be running ppp. Assuming that your machine is called
-foo.bar.com with the IP address 10.0.0.1, /etc/hosts should
-contain:
-
-
-
- 127.0.0.1 localhost
- 10.0.0.1 foo.bar.com foo
-
-
-
-The first line defines the alias ``localhost'' as a synonym for the
-current machine. Regardless of your own IP address, the IP address for
-this line should always be 127.0.0.1. The second line maps the name
-``foo.bar.com'' (and the shorthand ``foo'') to the IP address 10.0.0.1.
-
-If your provider allocates you a static IP address and name, then use
-these in place of the 10.0.0.1 entry.
-
-
-
-
-Edit the /etc/resolv.conf file
-
-/etc/resolv.conf tells the resolver how to behave. If you are
-running your own DNS, you may leave this file empty. Normally, you will
-need to enter the following line(s):
-
-
-
- nameserver x.x.x.x
- nameserver y.y.y.y
- domain bar.com
-
-
-
-The x.x.x.x and y.y.y.y addresses are those given
-to you by your ISP. Add as many ``nameserver'' lines as your ISP
-provides. The ``domain'' line defaults to your hostname's domain, and
-is probably unnecessary. Refer to the resolv.conf manual page for details
-of other possible entries in this file.
-
-
-
-
-
-PPP Configuration
-
-Both user ppp and pppd (the kernel level implementation of PPP)
-use configuration files located in the /etc/ppp directory.
-The sample configuration files provided are a good reference for
-user ppp, so don't delete them.
-
-Configuring ppp requires that you edit a number of files, depending
-on your requirements. What you put in them depends to some extent
-on whether your ISP allocates IP addresses statically (i.e., you get
-given one IP address, and always use that one) or dynamically (i.e.,
-your IP address can be different for each PPP session).
-
-
-
-PPP and Static IP addresses
-
-
-You will need to create a configuration file called
-/etc/ppp/ppp.conf. It should look similar to the example
-below. Note that lines that end in a ``:'' start in the first column,
-all other lines should be indented as shown using spaces or tabs.
-
-
-
-1 default:
-2 set device /dev/cuaa0
-3 set speed 115200
-4 set dial "ABORT BUSY ABORT NO\\sCARRIER TIMEOUT 5 \"\" ATE1Q0 OK-AT-OK
-\\dATDT\\T TIMEOUT 40 CONNECT"
-5 provider:
-6 set phone "(0123) 456 7890"
-7 set login "TIMEOUT 10 gin:-BREAK-gin: foo word: bar col: ppp"
-8 set timeout 300
-9 deny lqr
-10 set ifaddr x.x.x.x y.y.y.y
-11 delete ALL
-12 add 0 0 HISADDR
-
-
-Do not include the line numbers, they are just for reference in
-this discussion.
-
-
-
-Line 1:
-
-Identifies the default entry. Commands in this entry are
-executed automatically when ppp is run.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 2:
-
-
-Identifies the device to which the modem is connected.
-COM1: is /dev/cuaa0 and COM2: is /dev/cuaa1.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 3:
-
-
-Sets the speed you want to connect at. If 115200 doesn't
-work (it should with any reasonably new modem), try 38400
-instead.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 4:
-
-
-The dial string. User ppp uses an expect-send syntax similar
-to the chat(8) program. Refer to the manual page
-for information on the features of this language.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 5:
-
-
-Identifies an entry for a provider called ``provider''.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 6:
-
-
-Sets the phone number for this provider. Multiple phone
-numbers may be specified using the ``:'' or ``|'' character as
-a separator. The difference between these spearators is
-described in the ppp manual page. To summarize, if you want
-to rotate through the numbers, use the ``:''. If you want to
-always attempt to dial the first number first and only use
-the other numbers if the first number fails, use the ``|''.
-Always quote the entire set of phone numbers as shown.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 7:
-
-
-The login string is of the same chat-like syntax as the dial
-string. In this example, the string works for a service whose
-login session looks like this:
-
-
-
- J. Random Provider
- login: foo
- password: bar
- protocol: ppp
-
-
-
-You will need to alter this script to suit your own needs.
-If you're using PAP or CHAP, there will be no login at this
-point, so your login string can be left blank. See
-
-for further details.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 8:
-
-
-Sets the default timeout (in seconds) for the connection.
-Here, the connection will be closed automatically after
-300 seconds of inactivity. If you never want to timeout,
-set this value to zero.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 9:
-
-
-Ppp can be configured to exchange Link Quality Report (LQR)
-packets. These packets describe how good the physical link
-is. Ppp's LQR strategy is to close the connection when a
-number of these packets are missed. This is useful when
-you have a direct serial link to another machine and the
-DSR modem signal is not available to indicate that the line
-is up. When data saturates the line, LQR packets are
-sometimes ``missed'', causing ppp to close the connection
-prematurely. Refusing to negotiate lqr is sometimes prudent
-(if you are going through a modem) as it avoids this whole
-mess. By default, ppp will not attempt to negotiate LQR,
-but will accept LQR negotiation from the peer.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 10:
-
-
-Sets the interface addresses. The string x.x.x.x should be
-replaced by the IP address that your provider has allocated
-to you. The string y.y.y.y should be replaced by the IP
-address that your ISP indicated for their gateway (the
-machine to which you connect). If your ISP hasn't given you
-a gateway address, use 10.0.0.2/0. If you need to
-use a ``guessed'' address, make sure that you create an entry
-in /etc/ppp/ppp.linkup as per the instructions for
-.
-If this line is omitted, ppp cannot run in or
- mode.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 11:
-
-
-Deletes all existing routing table entries for the acquired
-tun device. This should not normally be necessary, but will
-make sure that PPP is starting with a clean bill of health.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 12:
-
-
-Adds a default route to your ISPs gateway. The special
-word HISADDR is replaced with the gateway address
-specified on line 9. It is important that this line appears
-after line 9, otherwise HISADDR will not yet be
-initialized.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-It is not necessary to add an entry to ppp.linkup when you have
-a static IP address as your routing table entries are already correct
-before you connect. You may however wish to create an entry to invoke
-programs after connection. This is explained later with the sendmail
-example.
-
-Example configuration files can be found in the /etc/ppp
-directory.
-
-
-
-
-PPP and Dynamic IP addresses
-
-
-If your service provider does not assign static IP numbers,
-ppp can be configured to negotiate the local and
-remote addresses. This is done by "guessing" an IP number
-and allowing ppp to set it up correctly using the IP Configuration
-Protocol (IPCP) after connecting. The ppp.conf configuration
-is the same as , with the following change:
-
-
-
-10 set ifaddr 10.0.0.1/0 10.0.0.2/0 255.255.255.0
-
-
-
-Again, do not include the line numbers, they are just for reference in
-this discussion. Indentation of at least one space is required.
-
-
-
-Line 10:
-
-The number after the ``/'' character is the number of bits of
-the address that ppp will insist on. You may wish to use
-IP numbers more appropriate to your circumstances, but the
-above example will almost always work. If it fails, you may
-be able to defeat some broken ppp implementations by
-supplying an additional 0.0.0.0 argument:
-
-
-
- set ifaddr 10.0.0.1/0 10.0.0.2/0 255.255.255.0 0.0.0.0
-
-
-
-This tells ppp to negotiate using address 0.0.0.0
-rather than 10.0.0.1. Do not use 0.0.0.0/0
-as the first argument to set ifaddr as it prevents
-ppp from setting up an initial route in and
- mode.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-You will also need to create an entry in /etc/ppp/ppp.linkup.
-Ppp.linkup is used after a connection has been established. At
-this point, ppp will know what IP addresses should really be
-used. The following entry will delete the existing bogus routes, and
-create correct ones:
-
-
-
-1 provider:
-2 delete ALL
-3 add 0 0 HISADDR
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 1:
-
-On establishing a connection, ppp will look for an entry in
-ppp.linkup according to the following rules: First,
-try to match the same label as we used in ppp.conf.
-If that fails, look for an entry for the IP number of our
-gateway. This entry is a four-octet IP style label. If
-we still haven't found an entry, look for the MYADDR
-entry.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 2:
-
-
-This line tells ppp to delete all existing routes for the
-acquired tun interface (except the direct route entry).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 3:
-
-
-This line tells ppp to add a default route that points to
-HISADDR. HISADDR will be replaced with
-the IP number of the gateway as negotiated in the IPCP.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-See the pmdemand entry in the files /etc/ppp/ppp.conf.sample and
-/etc/ppp/ppp.linkup.sample for a detailed example.
-
-
-
-
-Receiving incoming calls with PPP
-
-This section describes setting up ppp in a server role.
-
-When you configure ppp to receive incoming calls, you
-must decide whether you wish to forward packets for just
-ppp connections, for all interfaces, or not at all.
-To forward for just ppp connections, include the line
-
-
-
- enable proxy
-
-
-
-in your ppp.conf file. If you wish to forward packets on all
-interfaces, use the
-
-
-
- gateway=YES
-
-
-
-option in /etc/rc.conf (this file used to be called
-/etc/sysconfig).
-
-
-
-Which getty?
-
-
-provides a good description on enabling dialup services using getty.
-
-An alternative to getty is
-mgetty,
-a smarter version of getty designed with dialup lines in mind.
-
-The advantages of using mgetty is that it actively talks to
-modems, meaning if port is turned off in /etc/ttys then
-your modem won't answer the phone.
-
-Later versions of mgetty (from 0.99beta onwards) also support the
-automatic detection of PPP streams, allowing your clients script-less
-access to your server.
-
-Refer to for more
-information on mgetty.
-
-
-
-
-PPP permissions
-
-PPP must normally be run as user id 0. If however you wish to allow
-ppp to run in server mode as a normal user by executing ppp as described
-below, that user must be given permission to run ppp by adding them to
-the network group in /etc/group.
-
-
-
-
-Setting up a PPP shell for dynamic-IP users
-
-Create a file called /etc/ppp/ppp-shell containing the
-following:
-
-
-
- #!/bin/sh
- IDENT=`echo $0 | sed -e 's/^.*-\(.*\)$/\1/'`
- CALLEDAS="$IDENT"
- TTY=`tty`
-
- if [ x$IDENT = xdialup ]; then
- IDENT=`basename $TTY`
- fi
-
- echo "PPP for $CALLEDAS on $TTY"
- echo "Starting PPP for $IDENT"
-
- exec /usr/sbin/ppp -direct $IDENT
-
-
-
-This script should be executable. Now make a symbolic link called
-ppp-dialup to this script using the following commands:
-
-
-
- # ln -s /etc/ppp/ppp-shell /etc/ppp/ppp-dialup
-
-
-
-You should use this script as the shell for all your dialup
-ppp users. This is an example from /etc/password
-for a dialup PPP user with username pchilds. (remember don't directly
-edit the password file, use vipw)
-
-
-
- pchilds:*:1011:300:Peter Childs PPP:/home/ppp:/etc/ppp/ppp-dialup
-
-
-
-Create a /home/ppp directory that is world readable
-containing the following 0 byte files
-
-
-
- -r--r--r-- 1 root wheel 0 May 27 02:23 .hushlogin
- -r--r--r-- 1 root wheel 0 May 27 02:22 .rhosts
-
-
-
-which prevents /etc/motd from being displayed.
-
-
-
-
-Setting up a PPP shell for static-IP users
-
-Create the ppp-shell file as above and for each account with
-statically assigned IPs create a symbolic link to ppp-shell.
-
-For example, if you have three dialup customers fred, sam, and mary,
-that you route class C networks for, you would type the following:
-
-
-
- # ln -s /etc/ppp/ppp-shell /etc/ppp/ppp-fred
- # ln -s /etc/ppp/ppp-shell /etc/ppp/ppp-sam
- # ln -s /etc/ppp/ppp-shell /etc/ppp/ppp-mary
-
-
-
-Each of these users dialup accounts should have their shell set
-to the symbolic link created above. (ie. mary's shell should be
-/etc/ppp/ppp-mary).
-
-
-
-
-Setting up ppp.conf for dynamic-IP users
-
-The /etc/ppp/ppp.conf file should contain something along
-the lines of
-
-
-
- default:
- set debug phase lcp chat
- set timeout 0
-
- ttyd0:
- set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.100.20 255.255.255.255
- enable proxy
-
- ttyd1:
- set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.100.21 255.255.255.255
- enable proxy
-
-
-
-Note the indenting is important.
-
-The default: section is loaded for each session. For each
-dialup line enabled in /etc/ttys create an entry similar
-to the one for ttyd0: above. Each line should get a unique
-IP from your pool of ip address for dynamic users.
-
-
-
-
-Setting up ppp.conf for static-IP users
-
-Along with the contents of the sample /etc/ppp/ppp.conf
-above you should add a section for each of the statically assigned
-dialup users. We will continue with our fred, sam, and mary example.
-
-
-
- fred:
- set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.101.1 255.255.255.255
-
- sam:
- set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.102.1 255.255.255.255
-
- mary:
- set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.103.1 255.255.255.255
-
-
-
-The file /etc/ppp/ppp.linkup should also contain routing
-information for each static IP user if required. The line below
-would add a route for the 203.14.101.0 class C via
-the client's ppp link.
-
-
-
- fred:
- add 203.14.101.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 HISADDR
-
- sam:
- add 203.14.102.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 HISADDR
-
- mary:
- add 203.14.103.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 HISADDR
-
-
-
-
-
-
-More on mgetty, AutoPPP, and MS extensions
-
-
-
-Mgetty and AutoPPP
-
-
-Configuring and compiling mgetty with the AUTO_PPP option enabled
-allows mgetty to detect the LCP phase of PPP connections and automatically
-spawn off a ppp shell. However, since the default login/password sequence
-does not occur it is necessary to authenticate users using either PAP
-or CHAP.
-
-This section assumes the user has successfully configured, compiled, and
-installed a version of mgetty with the AUTO_PPP option (v0.99beta or later)
-
-Make sure your /usr/local/etc/mgetty+sendfax/login.config file
-has the following in it:
-
-
-
- /AutoPPP/ - - /etc/ppp/ppp-pap-dialup
-
-
-
-This will tell mgetty to run the ppp-pap-dialup script for
-detected PPP connections.
-
-Create a file called /etc/ppp/ppp-pap-dialup containing the
-following (the file should be executable):
-
-
-
- #!/bin/sh
- TTY=`tty`
- IDENT=`basename $TTY`
- exec /usr/sbin/ppp -direct pap$IDENT
-
-
-
-For each dialup line enabled in /etc/ttys create a corresponding
-entry in /etc/ppp/ppp.conf. This will happily co-exist with
-the definitions we created above.
-
-
-
- papttyd0:
- enable pap
- set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.100.20 255.255.255.255
- enable proxy
-
- papttyd1:
- enable pap
- set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.100.21 255.255.255.255
- enable proxy
-
-
-
-Each user logging in with this method will need to have a username/password
-in /etc/ppp/ppp.secret file, or alternatively add the
-
-
-
- enable passwdauth
-
-
-
-option to authenticate users via pap from the /etc/passwordd
-file. (*)
-
-(*) Note this option only available in 2.2-961014-SNAP or later, or by
-getting the updated ppp code for 2.1.x. (see MS extensions below for details)
-
-
-
-
-MS extentions
-
-From 2.2-961014-SNAP onwards it is possible to allow the automatic
-negotiation of DNS and NetBIOS name servers with clients supporting
-this feature (namely Win95/NT clients). See RFC1877 for more details
-on the protocol.
-
-An example of enabling these extensions in your
-/etc/ppp/ppp.conf file is illustrated below.
-
-
-
- default:
- set debug phase lcp chat
- set timeout 0
- enable msext
- set ns 203.14.100.1 203.14.100.2
- set nbns 203.14.100.5
-
-
-
-This will tell the clients the primary and secondary
-name server addresses, and a netbios nameserver host.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-PAP and CHAP authentication
-
-
-Some ISPs set their system up so that the authentication part of
-your connection is done using either of the PAP or CHAP authentication
-mechanisms. If this is the case, your ISP will not give a login:
-prompt when you connect, but will start talking PPP immediately.
-
-PAP is less secure than CHAP, but security is not normally an issue
-here as passwords, although being sent as plain text with PAP, are being
-transmitted down a serial line only. There's not much room for hackers
-to "eavesdrop".
-
-Referring back to the or sections, the following alterations
-must be made:
-
-
-
-7 set login
-.....
-13 set authname MyUserName
-14 set authkey MyPassword
-
-
-
-As always, do not include the line numbers, they are just for reference
-in this discussion. Indentation of at least one space is required.
-
-
-
-Line 7:
-
-Your ISP will not normally require that you log into the
-server if you're using PAP or CHAP. You must therefore
-disable your "set login" string.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Line 13:
-
-
-This line specifies your PAP/CHAP user name. You will need
-to insert the correct value for MyUserName.
-
-
-
-
-Line 14:
-
-
-This line specifies your PAP/CHAP password. You will need
-to insert the correct value for MyPassword.
-You may want to add an additional line
-
-15 accept PAP
-
-
-or
-
-15 accept CHAP
-
-
-to make it obvious that this is the intention, but PAP
-and CHAP are accepted by default.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-NOTE: Your authkey will be logged if you have
-command logging turned on (set log +command). Care should be
-taken when deciding the ppp log file permissions.
-
-
-
-
-Changing your ppp configuration on the fly
-
-It is possible to talk to the ppp program while it is running in
-the background, but only if a suitable password has been set up.
-
-By default, ppp will listen to a TCP port of 3000 + tunno,
-where tunno is the number of the tun device acquired, however,
-if a password for the local machine is not set up in
-/etc/ppp/ppp.secret, no server connection will be created.
-To set your password, put the following line in
-/etc/ppp/ppp.secret:
-
-
-
-foo MyPassword
-
-
-
-where foo is your local hostname (run hostname -s to
-determine the correct name), and MyPassword is the unencrypted
-password that you wish to use. /etc/ppp/ppp.secret should
-NOT be accessable by anyone without user id 0. This means that
-/, /etc and /etc/ppp should not be writable,
-and ppp.secret should be owned by user id 0 and have permissions
-0600.
-
-It is also possible to select a specific port number or to have ppp listen
-to a local unix domain socket rather than to a TCP socket. Refer to the
-set socket command in manual page for further details.
-
-Once a socket has been set up, the pppctl(8) program may be used
-in scripts that wish to manipulate the running program.
-
-
-
-
-
-Final system configuration
-
-
-You now have PPP configured, but there are a few more things to
-do before it is ready to work. They all involve editing the
-/etc/rc.conf file (was /etc/sysconfig).
-
-Working from the top down in this file, make sure the ``hostname='' line
-is set, e.g.:
-
-
-
- hostname=foo.bar.com
-
-
-
-If your ISP has supplied you with a static IP address and name, it's
-probably best that you use this name as your host name.
-
-Look for the network_interfaces variable. If you want to configure
-your system to dial your ISP on demand, make sure the tun0 device is
-added to the list, otherwise remove it.
-
-
-
- network_interfaces="lo0 tun0"
- ifconfig_tun0=
-
-
-
-Note, the ifconfig_tun0 variable should be empty, and
-a file called /etc/start_if.tun0 should be created. This file
-should contain the line
-
-
-
- ppp -auto mysystem
-
-
-
-This script is executed at network configuration time, starting
-your ppp daemon in automatic mode. If you have a LAN for which
-this machine is a gateway, you may also wish to use the
- switch. Refer to the manual page for further
-details.
-
-Set the router program to ``NO'' with the line
-
-
-
- router_enable=NO (/etc/rc.conf)
- router=NO (/etc/sysconfig)
-
-
-
-It is important that the routed daemon is not started
-(it's started by default) as routed tends to delete the default
-routing table entries created by ppp.
-
-It is probably worth your while ensuring that the ``sendmail_flags'' line
-does not include the ``-q'' option, otherwise sendmail will attempt to do
-a network lookup every now and then, possibly causing your machine to dial
-out. You may try:
-
-
-
- sendmail_flags="-bd"
-
-
-
-The upshot of this is that you must force sendmail to re-examine the
-mail queue whenever the ppp link is up by typing:
-
-
-
- # /usr/sbin/sendmail -q
-
-
-
-You may wish to use the !bg command in ppp.linkup to do this
-automatically:
-
-
-
-1 provider:
-2 delete ALL
-3 add 0 0 HISADDR
-4 !bg sendmail -bd -q30m
-
-
-
-If you don't like this, it is possible to set up a "dfilter" to block
-SMTP traffic. Refer to the sample files for further details.
-
-All that is left is to reboot the machine.
-
-After rebooting, you can now either type
-
-
-
- # ppp
-
-
-
-and then ``dial provider'' to start the PPP session, or, if you
-want ppp to establish sessions automatically when there is outbound
-traffic (and you haven't created the start_if.tun0 script), type
-
-
-
- # ppp -auto provider
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Summary
-
-To recap, the following steps are necessary when setting up ppp
-for the first time:
-
-Client side:
-
-
-
-
-
-Ensure that the tun device is built into your kernel.
-
-
-
-Ensure that the tunX device file is available in the
-/dev directory.
-
-
-
-Create an entry in /etc/ppp/ppp.conf. The
-pmdemand example should suffice for most
-ISPs.
-
-
-
-If you have a dynamic IP address, create an entry in
-/etc/ppp/ppp.linkup.
-
-
-
-Update your /etc/rc.conf (or sysconfig) file.
-
-
-
-Create a start_if.tun0 script if you require demand
-dialing.
-
-
-
-
-
-Server side:
-
-
-
-Ensure that the tun device is built into your kernel.
-
-
-
-Ensure that the tunX device file is available in the
-/dev directory.
-
-
-
-Create an entry in /etc/passwd (using the vipw(8)
-program).
-
-
-
-Create a profile in this users home directory that
-runs ``ppp -direct direct-server'' or similar.
-
-
-
-Create an entry in /etc/ppp/ppp.conf. The
-direct-server example should suffice.
-
-
-
-Create an entry in /etc/ppp/ppp.linkup.
-
-
-
-Update your /etc/rc.conf (or sysconfig) file.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Acknowledgments
-
-This section of the handbook was last updated on Sun Sep 7, 1997
-by &a.brian;
-
-Thanks to the following for their input, comments & suggestions:
-
-&a.nik;
-
-&a.dirkvangulik;
-
-&a.pjc;
-
-
-
-
-
-Setting up Kernel PPP
-
-Contributed by &a.gena;.
-
-Before you start setting up PPP on your machine make
-sure that pppd is located in /usr/sbin and directory /etc/ppp
-exists.
-
-pppd can work in two modes:
-
-
-
- as a "client" , i.e. you want to connect your machine to outside
-world via PPP serial connection or modem line.
-
-
-
-
- as a "server" , i.e. your machine is located on the network and
-used to connect other computers using PPP.
-
-
-
-
-In both cases you will need to set up an options file (/etc/ppp/options
-or ~/.ppprc if you have more then one user on your machine that uses
-PPP).
-
-You also will need some modem/serial software ( preferably kermit )
-so you can dial and establish connection with remote host.
-
-
-
-Working as a PPP client
-
-I used the following /etc/ppp/options to connect to CISCO terminal
-server PPP line.
-crtscts # enable hardware flow control
-modem # modem control line
-noipdefault # remote PPP server must supply your IP address.
- # if the remote host doesn't send your IP during IPCP
- # negotiation , remove this option
-passive # wait for LCP packets
-domain ppp.foo.com # put your domain name here
-
-:<remote_ip> # put the IP of remote PPP host here
- # it will be used to route packets via PPP link
- # if you didn't specified the noipdefault option
- # change this line to <local_ip>:<remote_ip>
-
-defaultroute # put this if you want that PPP server will be your
- # default router
-
-
-To connect:
-
-
-
- Dial to the remote host using kermit ( or other modem program )
-enter your user name and password ( or whatever is needed to enable PPP
-on the remote host )
-
-
-
-
- Exit kermit. ( without hanging up the line )
-
-
-
-
- enter:
-/usr/src/usr.sbin/pppd.new/pppd /dev/tty01 19200
-
-( put the appropriate speed and device name )
-
-
-
-
-
-Now your computer is connected with PPP. If the connection fails for some
-reasons you can add the "debug" option to the /etc/ppp/options file
-and check messages on the console to track the problem
-
-Following /etc/ppp/pppup script will make all 3 stages automatically:
-#!/bin/sh
-ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep
-pid=`ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
-if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
- echo 'killing pppd, PID=' ${pid}
- kill ${pid}
-fi
-ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep
-pid=`ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
-if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
- echo 'killing kermit, PID=' ${pid}
- kill -9 ${pid}
-fi
-
-ifconfig ppp0 down
-ifconfig ppp0 delete
-
-kermit -y /etc/ppp/kermit.dial
-pppd /dev/tty01 19200
-
-
-/etc/ppp/kermit.dial is kermit script that dials and makes all
-necessary authorization on the remote host.
-( Example of such script is attached to the end of this document )
-
-Use the following /etc/ppp/pppdown script to disconnect the PPP line:
-#!/bin/sh
-pid=`ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
-if [ X${pid} != "X" ] ; then
- echo 'killing pppd, PID=' ${pid}
- kill -TERM ${pid}
-fi
-
-ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep
-pid=`ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
-if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
- echo 'killing kermit, PID=' ${pid}
- kill -9 ${pid}
-fi
-
-/sbin/ifconfig ppp0 down
-/sbin/ifconfig ppp0 delete
-kermit -y /etc/ppp/kermit.hup
-/etc/ppp/ppptest
-
-
-Check if PPP is still running (/usr/etc/ppp/ppptest):
-#!/bin/sh
-pid=`ps ax| grep pppd |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
-if [ X${pid} != "X" ] ; then
- echo 'pppd running: PID=' ${pid-NONE}
-else
- echo 'No pppd running.'
-fi
-set -x
-netstat -n -I ppp0
-ifconfig ppp0
-
-
-Hangs up modem line (/etc/ppp/kermit.hup):
-set line /dev/tty01 ; put your modem device here
-set speed 19200
-set file type binary
-set file names literal
-set win 8
-set rec pack 1024
-set send pack 1024
-set block 3
-set term bytesize 8
-set command bytesize 8
-set flow none
-
-pau 1
-out +++
-inp 5 OK
-out ATH0\13
-echo \13
-exit
-
-
-Here is an alternate method using chat instead of
-kermit.
-
-Contributed by &a.rhuff;.
-
-The following two files are sufficient to accomplish a pppd
-connection.
-
-/etc/ppp/options:
- /dev/cuaa1 115200
-
-crtscts # enable hardware flow control
-modem # modem control line
-connect "/usr/bin/chat -f /etc/ppp/login.chat.script"
-noipdefault # remote PPP server must supply your IP address.
- # if the remote host doesn't send your IP during
- # IPCP negotiation, remove this option
-passive # wait for LCP packets
-domain <your.domain> # put your domain name here
-
-: # put the IP of remote PPP host here
- # it will be used to route packets via PPP link
- # if you didn't specified the noipdefault option
- # change this line to <local_ip>:<remote_ip>
-
-defaultroute # put this if you want that PPP server will be
- # your default router
-
-
-/etc/ppp/login.chat.script:
-
-(This should actually go into a single line.)
-
-
-ABORT BUSY ABORT 'NO CARRIER' "" AT OK ATDT<phone.number>
- CONNECT "" TIMEOUT 10 ogin:-\\r-ogin: <login-id>
- TIMEOUT 5 sword: <password>
-
-
-Once these are installed and modified correctly, all you need to
-do is
-
-pppd.
-
- This sample based primarily on information provided by: Trev Roydhouse
-<Trev.Roydhouse@f401.n711.z3.fidonet.org> and used by
-permission.
-
-
-
-
-Working as a PPP server
-
-/etc/ppp/options:
-crtscts # Hardware flow control
-netmask 255.255.255.0 # netmask ( not required )
-192.114.208.20:192.114.208.165 # ip's of local and remote hosts
- # local ip must be different from one
- # you assigned to the ethernet ( or other )
- # interface on your machine.
- # remote IP is ip address that will be
- # assigned to the remote machine
-domain ppp.foo.com # your domain
-passive # wait for LCP
-modem # modem line
-
-
-Following /etc/ppp/pppserv script will enable ppp server on your
-machine
-#!/bin/sh
-ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep
-pid=`ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
-if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
- echo 'killing pppd, PID=' ${pid}
- kill ${pid}
-fi
-ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep
-pid=`ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
-if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
- echo 'killing kermit, PID=' ${pid}
- kill -9 ${pid}
-fi
-
-# reset ppp interface
-ifconfig ppp0 down
-ifconfig ppp0 delete
-
-# enable autoanswer mode
-kermit -y /etc/ppp/kermit.ans
-
-# run ppp
-pppd /dev/tty01 19200
-
-
-Use this /etc/ppp/pppservdown script to stop ppp server:
-#!/bin/sh
-ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep
-pid=`ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
-if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
- echo 'killing pppd, PID=' ${pid}
- kill ${pid}
-fi
-ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep
-pid=`ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
-if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
- echo 'killing kermit, PID=' ${pid}
- kill -9 ${pid}
-fi
-ifconfig ppp0 down
-ifconfig ppp0 delete
-
-kermit -y /etc/ppp/kermit.noans
-
-
-Following kermit script will enable/disable autoanswer mode
-on your modem (/etc/ppp/kermit.ans):
-set line /dev/tty01
-set speed 19200
-set file type binary
-set file names literal
-set win 8
-set rec pack 1024
-set send pack 1024
-set block 3
-set term bytesize 8
-set command bytesize 8
-set flow none
-
-pau 1
-out +++
-inp 5 OK
-out ATH0\13
-inp 5 OK
-echo \13
-out ATS0=1\13 ; change this to out ATS0=0\13 if you want to disable
- ; autoanswer mod
-inp 5 OK
-echo \13
-exit
-
-
-This /etc/ppp/kermit.dial script is used for dialing and authorizing
-on remote host. You will need to customize it for your needs.
-Put your login and password in this script , also you will need
-to change input statement depending on responses from your modem
-and remote host.
-;
-; put the com line attached to the modem here:
-;
-set line /dev/tty01
-;
-; put the modem speed here:
-;
-set speed 19200
-set file type binary ; full 8 bit file xfer
-set file names literal
-set win 8
-set rec pack 1024
-set send pack 1024
-set block 3
-set term bytesize 8
-set command bytesize 8
-set flow none
-set modem hayes
-set dial hangup off
-set carrier auto ; Then SET CARRIER if necessary,
-set dial display on ; Then SET DIAL if necessary,
-set input echo on
-set input timeout proceed
-set input case ignore
-def \%x 0 ; login prompt counter
-goto slhup
-
-:slcmd ; put the modem in command mode
-echo Put the modem in command mode.
-clear ; Clear unread characters from input buffer
-pause 1
-output +++ ; hayes escape sequence
-input 1 OK\13\10 ; wait for OK
-if success goto slhup
-output \13
-pause 1
-output at\13
-input 1 OK\13\10
-if fail goto slcmd ; if modem doesn't answer OK, try again
-
-:slhup ; hang up the phone
-clear ; Clear unread characters from input buffer
-pause 1
-echo Hanging up the phone.
-output ath0\13 ; hayes command for on hook
-input 2 OK\13\10
-if fail goto slcmd ; if no OK answer, put modem in command mode
-
-:sldial ; dial the number
-pause 1
-echo Dialing.
-output atdt9,550311\13\10 ; put phone number here
-assign \%x 0 ; zero the time counter
-
-:look
-clear ; Clear unread characters from input buffer
-increment \%x ; Count the seconds
-input 1 {CONNECT }
-if success goto sllogin
-reinput 1 {NO CARRIER\13\10}
-if success goto sldial
-reinput 1 {NO DIALTONE\13\10}
-if success goto slnodial
-reinput 1 {\255}
-if success goto slhup
-reinput 1 {\127}
-if success goto slhup
-if < \%x 60 goto look
-else goto slhup
-
-:sllogin ; login
-assign \%x 0 ; zero the time counter
-pause 1
-echo Looking for login prompt.
-
-:slloop
-increment \%x ; Count the seconds
-clear ; Clear unread characters from input buffer
-output \13
-;
-; put your expected login prompt here:
-;
-input 1 {Username: }
-if success goto sluid
-reinput 1 {\255}
-if success goto slhup
-reinput 1 {\127}
-if success goto slhup
-if < \%x 10 goto slloop ; try 10 times to get a login prompt
-else goto slhup ; hang up and start again if 10 failures
-
-:sluid
-;
-; put your userid here:
-;
-output ppp-login\13
-input 1 {Password: }
-;
-; put your password here:
-;
-output ppp-password\13
-input 1 {Entering SLIP mode.}
-echo
-quit
-
-:slnodial
-echo \7No dialtone. Check the telephone line!\7
-exit 1
-
-; local variables:
-; mode: csh
-; comment-start: "; "
-; comment-start-skip: "; "
-; end:
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Setting up a SLIP Client
-
-Contributed by &a.asami;8 Aug 1995.
-
-The following is one way to set up a FreeBSD machine for SLIP on a
-static host network. For dynamic hostname assignments (i.e., your
-address changes each time you dial up), you probably need to do
-something much fancier.
-
-First, determine which serial port your modem is connected to. I have
-a symbolic link /dev/modem -> cuaa1, and only use the modem name in my
-configuration files. It can become quite cumbersome when you need to
-fix a bunch of files in /etc and .kermrc's all over the system! (Note
-that /dev/cuaa0 is COM1, cuaa1 is COM2, etc.)
-
-Make sure you have
-pseudo-device sl 1
-
-in your kernel's config file. It is included in the GENERIC kernel,
-so this will not be a problem unless you deleted it.
-
-
-
-Things you have to do only once
-
-
-
-
-
-Add your home machine, the gateway and nameservers to your
-/etc/hosts file. Mine looks like this:
-127.0.0.1 localhost loghost
-136.152.64.181 silvia.HIP.Berkeley.EDU silvia.HIP silvia
-
-136.152.64.1 inr-3.Berkeley.EDU inr-3 slip-gateway
-128.32.136.9 ns1.Berkeley.edu ns1
-128.32.136.12 ns2.Berkeley.edu ns2
-
-By the way, silvia is the name of the car that I had when I was
-back in Japan (it is called 2?0SX here in U.S.).
-
-
-
-
-Make sure you have "hosts" before "bind" in your /etc/host.conf.
-Otherwise, funny things may happen.
-
-
-
-
-Edit the file /etc/rc.conf. Note that you should edit
-the file /etc/sysconfig instead if you are running FreeBSD
-previous to version 2.2.2.
-
-
-
-Set your hostname by editing the line that says:
-hostname=myname.my.domain
-
-You should give it your full Internet hostname.
-
-
-
-
-Add sl0 to the list of network interfaces by changing the line
-that says:
-network_interfaces="lo0"
-
-to:
-network_interfaces="lo0 sl0"
-
-
-
-
-
-Set the startup flags of sl0 by adding a line:
-ifconfig_sl0="inet ${hostname} slip-gateway netmask 0xffffff00 up"
-
-
-
-
-
-Designate the default router by changing the line:
-defaultrouter=NO
-
-to:
-defaultrouter=slip-gateway
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Make a file /etc/resolv.conf which contains:
-domain HIP.Berkeley.EDU
-nameserver 128.32.136.9
-nameserver 128.32.136.12
-
-As you can see, these set up the nameserver hosts. Of course, the
-actual domain names and addresses depend on your environment.
-
-
-
-
-Set the password for root and toor (and any other accounts that
-does not have a password). Use passwd, do not edit the /etc/passwd
-or /etc/master.passwd files!
-
-
-
-
-Reboot your machine and make sure it comes up with the correct
-hostname.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Making a SLIP connection
-
-
-
-
-
-Dial up, type "slip" at the prompt, enter your machine name and
-password. The things you need to enter depends on your
-environment. I use kermit, with a script like this:
-# kermit setup
-set modem hayes
-set line /dev/modem
-set speed 115200
-set parity none
-set flow rts/cts
-set terminal bytesize 8
-set file type binary
-# The next macro will dial up and login
-define slip dial 643-9600, input 10 =>, if failure stop, -
-output slip\x0d, input 10 Username:, if failure stop, -
-output silvia\x0d, input 10 Password:, if failure stop, -
-output ***\x0d, echo \x0aCONNECTED\x0a
-
-(of course, you have to change the hostname and password to fit
-yours). Then you can just type "slip" from the kermit prompt to
-get connected.
-
-Note: leaving your password in plain text anywhere in the
-filesystem is generally a BAD idea. Do it at your own risk. I am
-just too lazy.
-
-
-
-
-Leave the kermit there (you can suspend it by "z") and as root,
-type
-slattach -h -c -s 115200 /dev/modem
-
-if you are able to "ping" hosts on the other side of the router,
-you are connected! If it does not work, you might want to try "-a"
-instead of "-c" as an argument to slattach.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-How to shutdown the connection
-
-Type "kill -INT `cat /var/run/slattach.modem.pid`" (as root) to
-kill slattach. Then go back to kermit ("fg" if you suspended it)
-and exit from it ("q").
-
-The slattach man page says you have to use "ifconfig sl0 down" to
-mark the interface down, but this does not seem to make any
-difference for me. ("ifconfig sl0" reports the same thing.)
-
-Some times, your modem might refuse to drop the carrier (mine
-often does). In that case, simply start kermit and quit it again.
-It usually goes out on the second try.
-
-
-
-
-Troubleshooting
-
-If it does not work, feel free to ask me. The things that people
-tripped over so far:
-
-
-
-Not using "-c" or "-a" in slattach (I have no idea why this can be
-fatal, but adding this flag solved the problem for at least one
-person)
-
-
-
-
-Using "s10" instead of "sl0" (might be hard to see the difference on
-some fonts).
-
-
-
-
-Try "ifconfig sl0" to see your interface status. I get:
-silvia# ifconfig sl0
-sl0: flags=10<POINTOPOINT>
- inet 136.152.64.181 --> 136.152.64.1 netmask ffffff00
-
-
-
-
-
-Also, netstat -r will give the routing table, in case you get
-the "no route to host" messages from ping. Mine looks like:
-silvia# netstat -r
-Routing tables
-Destination Gateway Flags Refs Use IfaceMTU Rtt
-Netmasks:
-(root node)
-(root node)
-
-Route Tree for Protocol Family inet:
-(root node) =>
-default inr-3.Berkeley.EDU UG 8 224515 sl0 - -
-localhost.Berkel localhost.Berkeley UH 5 42127 lo0 - 0.438
-inr-3.Berkeley.E silvia.HIP.Berkele UH 1 0 sl0 - -
-silvia.HIP.Berke localhost.Berkeley UGH 34 47641234 lo0 - 0.438
-(root node)
-
-(this is after transferring a bunch of files, your numbers should be
-smaller).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Setting up a SLIP Server
-
-Contributed by &a.ghelmer;.
-v1.0, 15 May 1995.
-
-This document provides suggestions for setting up SLIP Server services
-on a FreeBSD system, which typically means configuring your system to
-automatically startup connections upon login for remote SLIP clients.
-The author has written this document based on his experience;
-however, as your system and needs may be different, this document may
-not answer all of your questions, and the author cannot be responsible
-if you damage your system or lose data due to attempting to follow the
-suggestions here.
-
-This guide was originally written for SLIP Server services on a
-FreeBSD 1.x system. It has been modified to reflect changes in the
-pathnames and the removal of the SLIP interface compression flags in
-early versions of FreeBSD 2.X, which appear to be the only major
-changes between FreeBSD versions. If you do encounter mistakes in
-this document, please email the author with enough information to
-help correct the problem.
-
-
-
-Prerequisites
-
-This document is very technical in nature, so background knowledge is
-required. It is assumed that you are familiar with the TCP/IP network
-protocol, and in particular, network and node addressing, network
-address masks, subnetting, routing, and routing protocols, such as
-RIP. Configuring SLIP services on a dial-up server requires a
-knowledge of these concepts, and if you are not familiar with them,
-please read a copy of either Craig Hunt's TCP/IP Network
-Administration published by O'Reilly & Associates, Inc. (ISBN
-Number 0-937175-82-X), or Douglas Comer's books on the TCP/IP
-protocol.
-
-It is further assumed that you have already setup your modem(s) and
-configured the appropriate system files to allow logins through your
-modems. If you have not prepared your system for this yet, please see
-the tutorial for configuring dialup services; if you have a World-Wide
-Web browser available, browse the list of tutorials at
-http://www.freebsd.org/; otherwise, check the place
-where you found this document for a document named dialup.txt or
-something similar. You may also want to check the manual pages for
-sio(4) for information on the serial port device driver and
-ttys(5), gettytab(5), getty(8), & init(8) for
-information relevant to configuring the system to accept logins on
-modems, and perhaps stty(1) for information on setting serial
-port parameters [such as clocal for directly-connected
-serial interfaces].
-
-
-
-
-Quick Overview
-
-In its typical configuration, using FreeBSD as a SLIP server works as
-follows: a SLIP user dials up your FreeBSD SLIP Server system and logs
-in with a special SLIP login ID that uses /usr/sbin/sliplogin
-as the special user's shell. The sliplogin program browses the
-file /etc/sliphome/slip.hosts to find a matching line for
-the special user, and if it finds a match, connects the serial line to
-an available SLIP interface and then runs the shell script
-/etc/sliphome/slip.login to configure the SLIP interface.
-
-
-
-An Example of a SLIP Server Login
-
-For example, if a SLIP user ID were Shelmerg, Shelmerg's
-entry in /etc/master.passwd would look something like this
-(except it would be all on one line):
-
-
-
-Shelmerg:password:1964:89::0:0:Guy Helmer - SLIP:
- /usr/users/Shelmerg:/usr/sbin/sliplogin
-
-
-
-and, when Shelmerg logs in, sliplogin will search
-/etc/sliphome/slip.hosts for a line that had a matching user
-ID; for example, there may be a line in
-/etc/sliphome/slip.hosts that reads:
-
-
-
-Shelmerg dc-slip sl-helmer 0xfffffc00 autocomp
-
-
-
-sliplogin will find that matching line, hook the serial line into
-the next available SLIP interface, and then execute
-/etc/sliphome/slip.login like this:
-
-
-
-/etc/sliphome/slip.login 0 19200 Shelmerg dc-slip sl-helmer 0xfffffc00 autocomp
-
-
-
-If all goes well, /etc/sliphome/slip.login will issue an
-ifconfig for the SLIP interface to which sliplogin
-attached itself (slip interface 0, in the above example, which was the
-first parameter in the list given to slip.login) to set the
-local IP address (dc-slip), remote IP address
-(sl-helmer), network mask for the SLIP interface
-(0xfffffc00), and any additional flags (autocomp).
-If something goes wrong, sliplogin usually logs good
-informational messages via the daemon syslog facility, which usually
-goes into /var/log/messages (see the manual pages for
-syslogd(8) and syslog.conf(5), and perhaps check
-/etc/syslog.conf to see to which files syslogd is
-logging).
-
-OK, enough of the examples -- let us dive into setting up the system.
-
-
-
-
-
-Kernel Configuration
-
-FreeBSD's default kernels usually come with two SLIP interfaces
-defined (sl0 and sl1); you can use netstat
--i to see whether these interfaces are defined in your kernel.
-
-Sample output from netstat -i:
-
-
-
-Name Mtu Network Address Ipkts Ierrs Opkts Oerrs Coll
-ed0 1500 <Link>0.0.c0.2c.5f.4a 291311 0 174209 0 133
-ed0 1500 138.247.224 ivory 291311 0 174209 0 133
-lo0 65535 <Link> 79 0 79 0 0
-lo0 65535 loop localhost 79 0 79 0 0
-sl0* 296 <Link> 0 0 0 0 0
-sl1* 296 <Link> 0 0 0 0 0
-
-
-
-The sl0 and sl1 interfaces shown in netstat
--i's output indicate that there are two SLIP interfaces built
-into the kernel. (The asterisks after the sl0 and
-sl1 indicate that the interfaces are ``down''.)
-
-However, FreeBSD's default kernels do not come configured to forward
-packets (ie, your FreeBSD machine will not act as a router) due to
-Internet RFC requirements for Internet hosts (see RFC's 1009
-[Requirements for Internet Gateways], 1122
-[Requirements for Internet Hosts -- Communication Layers],
-and perhaps 1127 [A Perspective on the Host Requirements
-RFCs]), so if you want your FreeBSD SLIP Server to act as a
-router, you will have to edit the /etc/rc.conf file (called
-/etc/sysconfig in FreeBSD releases prior to 2.2.2) and change
-the setting of the gateway variable to YES. If you
-have an older system which predates even the /etc/sysconfig
-file, then add the following command:
-sysctl -w net.inet.ip.forwarding = 1
-
-to your /etc/rc.local file.
-
-You will then need to reboot for the new settings to take effect.
-
-You will notice that near the end of the default kernel configuration
-file (/sys/i386/conf/GENERIC) is a line that reads:
-
-
-
-pseudo-device sl 2
-
-
-
-which is the line that defines the number of SLIP devices available in
-the kernel; the number at the end of the line is the maximum number of
-SLIP connections that may be operating simultaneously.
-
-Please refer to
-for help in reconfiguring your kernel.
-
-
-
-
-Sliplogin Configuration
-
-As mentioned earlier, there are three files in the
-/etc/sliphome directory that are part of the configuration
-for /usr/sbin/sliplogin (see sliplogin(8) for the
-actual manual page for sliplogin): slip.hosts, which
-defines the SLIP users & their associated IP addresses;
-slip.login, which usually just configures the SLIP interface;
-and (optionally) slip.logout, which undoes
-slip.login's effects when the serial connection is
-terminated.
-
-
-
-slip.hosts Configuration
-
-/etc/sliphome/slip.hosts contains lines which have at least
-four items, separated by whitespace:
-
-
-
-
-
- SLIP user's login ID
-
-
-
- Local address (local to the SLIP server) of the SLIP link
-
-
-
- Remote address of the SLIP link
-
-
-
- Network mask
-
-
-
-
-
-The local and remote addresses may be host names (resolved to IP
-addresses by /etc/hosts or by the domain name service,
-depending on your specifications in /etc/host.conf), and I
-believe the network mask may be a name that can be resolved by a
-lookup into /etc/networks. On a sample system,
-/etc/sliphome/slip.hosts looks like this:
-
-
-
------ begin /etc/sliphome/slip.hosts -----
-#
-# login local-addr remote-addr mask opt1 opt2
-# (normal,compress,noicmp)
-#
-Shelmerg dc-slip sl-helmerg 0xfffffc00 autocomp
------ end /etc/sliphome/slip.hosts ------
-
-
-
-At the end of the line is one or more of the options.
-
-
-
-
-
-normal - no header compression
-
-
-
-compress - compress headers
-
-
-
-autocomp - compress headers if the remote end allows it
-
-
-
-noicmp - disable ICMP packets (so any ``ping'' packets will be
-dropped instead of using up your bandwidth)
-
-
-
-
-
-Note that sliplogin under early releases of FreeBSD 2 ignored
-the options that FreeBSD 1.x recognized, so the options
-normal, compress, autocomp, and noicmp had no effect
-until support was added in FreeBSD 2.2 (unless your slip.login script
-included code to make use of the flags).
-
-Your choice of local and remote addresses for your SLIP links depends
-on whether you are going to dedicate a TCP/IP subnet or if you are
-going to use ``proxy ARP'' on your SLIP server (it is not ``true''
-proxy ARP, but that is the terminology used in this document to
-describe it). If you are not sure which method to select or how to
-assign IP addresses, please refer to the TCP/IP books referenced in
-the section and/or consult your IP network manager.
-
-If you are going to use a separate subnet for your SLIP clients, you
-will need to allocate the subnet number out of your assigned IP
-network number and assign each of your SLIP client's IP numbers out of
-that subnet. Then, you will probably either need to configure a
-static route to the SLIP subnet via your SLIP server on your nearest
-IP router, or install gated on your FreeBSD SLIP server and
-configure it to talk the appropriate routing protocols to your other
-routers to inform them about your SLIP server's route to the SLIP
-subnet.
-
-Otherwise, if you will use the ``proxy ARP'' method, you will need to
-assign your SLIP client's IP addresses out of your SLIP server's
-Ethernet subnet, and you will also need to adjust your
-/etc/sliphome/slip.login and
-/etc/sliphome/slip.logout scripts to use arp(8) to
-manage the proxy-ARP entries in the SLIP server's ARP table.
-
-
-
-
-slip.login Configuration
-
-The typical /etc/sliphome/slip.login file looks like this:
-
-
-
------ begin /etc/sliphome/slip.login -----
-#!/bin/sh -
-#
-# @(#)slip.login 5.1 (Berkeley) 7/1/90
-
-#
-# generic login file for a slip line. sliplogin invokes this with
-# the parameters:
-# 1 2 3 4 5 6 7-n
-# slipunit ttyspeed loginname local-addr remote-addr mask opt-args
-#
-/sbin/ifconfig sl$1 inet $4 $5 netmask $6
------ end /etc/sliphome/slip.login -----
-
-
-
-This slip.login file merely ifconfig's the appropriate SLIP
-interface with the local and remote addresses and network mask of the
-SLIP interface.
-
-If you have decided to use the ``proxy ARP'' method (instead of using
-a separate subnet for your SLIP clients), your
-/etc/sliphome/slip.login file will need to look something
-like this:
-
-
-
------ begin /etc/sliphome/slip.login for "proxy ARP" -----
-#!/bin/sh -
-#
-# @(#)slip.login 5.1 (Berkeley) 7/1/90
-
-#
-# generic login file for a slip line. sliplogin invokes this with
-# the parameters:
-# 1 2 3 4 5 6 7-n
-# slipunit ttyspeed loginname local-addr remote-addr mask opt-args
-#
-/sbin/ifconfig sl$1 inet $4 $5 netmask $6
-# Answer ARP requests for the SLIP client with our Ethernet addr
-/usr/sbin/arp -s $5 00:11:22:33:44:55 pub
------ end /etc/sliphome/slip.login for "proxy ARP" -----
-
-
-
-The additional line in this slip.login, arp -s $5
-00:11:22:33:44:55 pub, creates an ARP entry in the SLIP server's
-ARP table. This ARP entry causes the SLIP server to respond with the
-SLIP server's Ethernet MAC address whenever a another IP node on the
-Ethernet asks to speak to the SLIP client's IP address.
-
-When using the example above, be sure to replace the Ethernet MAC
-address (00:11:22:33:44:55) with the MAC address of your
-system's Ethernet card, or your ``proxy ARP'' will definitely not work!
-You can discover your SLIP server's Ethernet MAC address by looking at
-the results of running netstat -i; the second line of the output
-should look something like:
-
-
-
-ed0 1500 <Link>0.2.c1.28.5f.4a 191923 0 129457 0 116
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-
-
-
-
-which indicates that this particular system's Ethernet MAC address is
-00:02:c1:28:5f:4a -- the periods in the Ethernet MAC address
-given by netstat -i must be changed to colons and leading zeros
-should be added to each single-digit hexadecimal number to convert the
-address into the form that arp(8) desires; see the manual page on
-arp(8) for complete information on usage.
-
-Note that when you create /etc/sliphome/slip.login and
-/etc/sliphome/slip.logout, the ``execute'' bit (ie,
-chmod 755 /etc/sliphome/slip.login
-/etc/sliphome/slip.logout) must be set, or sliplogin
-will be unable to execute it.
-
-
-
-
-slip.logout Configuration
-
-/etc/sliphome/slip.logout is not strictly needed (unless you
-are implementing ``proxy ARP''), but if you decide to create it, this
-is an example of a basic slip.logout script:
-
-
-
------ begin /etc/sliphome/slip.logout -----
-#!/bin/sh -
-#
-# slip.logout
-
-#
-# logout file for a slip line. sliplogin invokes this with
-# the parameters:
-# 1 2 3 4 5 6 7-n
-# slipunit ttyspeed loginname local-addr remote-addr mask opt-args
-#
-/sbin/ifconfig sl$1 down
------ end /etc/sliphome/slip.logout -----
-
-
-
-If you are using ``proxy ARP'', you will want to have
-/etc/sliphome/slip.logout remove the ARP entry for the SLIP
-client:
-
-
-
------ begin /etc/sliphome/slip.logout for "proxy ARP" -----
-#!/bin/sh -
-#
-# @(#)slip.logout
-
-#
-# logout file for a slip line. sliplogin invokes this with
-# the parameters:
-# 1 2 3 4 5 6 7-n
-# slipunit ttyspeed loginname local-addr remote-addr mask opt-args
-#
-/sbin/ifconfig sl$1 down
-# Quit answering ARP requests for the SLIP client
-/usr/sbin/arp -d $5
------ end /etc/sliphome/slip.logout for "proxy ARP" -----
-
-
-
-The arp -d $5 removes the ARP entry that the ``proxy ARP''
-slip.login added when the SLIP client logged in.
-
-It bears repeating: make sure /etc/sliphome/slip.logout has
-the execute bit set for after you create it (ie, chmod 755
-/etc/sliphome/slip.logout).
-
-
-
-
-
-Routing Considerations
-
-If you are not using the ``proxy ARP'' method for routing packets
-between your SLIP clients and the rest of your network (and perhaps
-the Internet), you will probably either have to add static routes to
-your closest default router(s) to route your SLIP client subnet via
-your SLIP server, or you will probably need to install and configure
-gated on your FreeBSD SLIP server so that it will tell your
-routers via appropriate routing protocols about your SLIP subnet.
-
-
-
-Static Routes
-
-Adding static routes to your nearest default routers can be
-troublesome (or impossible, if you do not have authority to do so...).
-If you have a multiple-router network in your organization, some
-routers, such as Cisco and Proteon, may not only need to be configured
-with the static route to the SLIP subnet, but also need to be told
-which static routes to tell other routers about, so some expertise and
-troubleshooting/tweaking may be necessary to get static-route-based
-routing to work.
-
-
-
-
-Running gated
-
-An alternative to the headaches of static routes is to install
-gated on your FreeBSD SLIP server and configure it to use the
-appropriate routing protocols (RIP/OSPF/BGP/EGP) to tell other routers
-about your SLIP subnet. You can use gated from the
- or retrieve and build it yourself
-from the GateD anonymous ftp site;
-I believe the current version as of this writing
-is gated-R3_5Alpha_8.tar.Z, which includes support for
-FreeBSD ``out-of-the-box''. Complete information and documentation on
-gated is available on the Web starting at
-the Merit GateD Consortium.
-Compile and install it, and
-then write a /etc/gated.conf file to configure your gated;
-here is a sample, similar to what the author used on a FreeBSD SLIP
-server:
-
-
-
------ begin sample /etc/gated.conf for gated version 3.5Alpha5 -----
-#
-# gated configuration file for dc.dsu.edu; for gated version 3.5alpha5
-# Only broadcast RIP information for xxx.xxx.yy out the ed Ethernet interface
-#
-#
-# tracing options
-#
-traceoptions "/var/tmp/gated.output" replace size 100k files 2 general ;
-
-rip yes {
- interface sl noripout noripin ;
- interface ed ripin ripout version 1 ;
- traceoptions route ;
-} ;
-
-#
-# Turn on a bunch of tracing info for the interface to the kernel:
-kernel {
- traceoptions remnants request routes info interface ;
-} ;
-
-#
-# Propagate the route to xxx.xxx.yy out the Ethernet interface via RIP
-#
-
-export proto rip interface ed {
- proto direct {
- xxx.xxx.yy mask 255.255.252.0 metric 1; # SLIP connections
- } ;
-} ;
-
-#
-# Accept routes from RIP via ed Ethernet interfaces
-
-import proto rip interface ed {
- all ;
-} ;
-
------ end sample /etc/gated.conf -----
-
-
-
-The above sample gated.conf file broadcasts routing
-information regarding the SLIP subnet xxx.xxx.yy via RIP onto
-the Ethernet; if you are using a different Ethernet driver than the
-ed driver, you will need to change the references to the ed
-interface appropriately. This sample file also sets up tracing to
-/var/tmp/gated.output for debugging gated's
-activity; you can certainly turn off the tracing options if
-gated works OK for you. You will need to change the
-xxx.xxx.yy's into the network address of your own SLIP subnet
-(be sure to change the net mask in the proto direct clause as
-well).
-
-When you get gated built and installed and create a
-configuration file for it, you will need to run gated in place
-of routed on your FreeBSD system; change the
-routed/gated startup parameters in /etc/netstart as
-appropriate for your system. Please see the manual page for
-gated for information on gated's command-line
-parameters.
-
-
-
-
-
-Acknowledgments
-
-Thanks to these people for comments and advice regarding this tutorial:
-
-
-
-&a.wilko;
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Piero Serini
-
-
-<Piero@Strider.Inet.IT>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Advanced Networking
-
-
-
-Gateways and Routes
-
-Contributed by &a.gryphon;.6 October 1995.
-
-For one machine to be able to find another, there must be a
-mechanism in place to describe how to get from one to the
-other. This is called Routing. A ``route'' is a defined
-pair of addresses: a destination and a
-gateway. The pair indicates that if you are
-trying to get to this destination, send along
-through this gateway. There are three types of
-destinations: individual hosts, subnets, and ``default''. The
-``default route'' is used if none of the other routes
-apply. We will talk a little bit more about default routes
-later on. There are also three types of gateways:
-individual hosts, interfaces (also called ``links''), and
-ethernet hardware addresses.
-
-
-
-An example
-
-To illustrate different aspects of routing, we will use
-the following example which is the output of the command
-netstat -r:
-
-
-
-Destination Gateway Flags Refs Use Netif Expire
-
-default outside-gw UGSc 37 418 ppp0
-localhost localhost UH 0 181 lo0
-test0 0:e0:b5:36:cf:4f UHLW 5 63288 ed0 77
-10.20.30.255 link#1 UHLW 1 2421
-foobar.com link#1 UC 0 0
-host1 0:e0:a8:37:8:1e UHLW 3 4601 lo0
-host2 0:e0:a8:37:8:1e UHLW 0 5 lo0 =>
-host2.foobar.com link#1 UC 0 0
-224 link#1 UC 0 0
-
-
-
-The first two lines specify the default route (which we
-will cover in the next section) and the localhost route.
-
-The interface (Netif column) that it specifies to use
-for localhost is lo0, also known as the
-loopback device. This says to keep all traffic for this
-destination internal, rather than sending it out over the
-LAN, since it will only end up back where it started
-anyway.
-
-The next thing that stands out are the
-``0:e0:...'' addresses. These are ethernet
-hardware addresses. FreeBSD will automatically identify any
-hosts (test0 in the example) on the local ethernet and
-add a route for that host, directly to it over the ethernet
-interface, ed0. There is also a timeout
-(Expire column) associated with this type of route,
-which is used if we fail to hear from the host in a
-specific amount of time. In this case the route will be
-automatically deleted. These hosts are identified using a
-mechanism known as RIP (Routing Information Protocol),
-which figures out routes to local hosts based upon a
-shortest path determination.
-
-FreeBSD will also add subnet routes for the local subnet
-(10.20.30.255 is the broadcast address for the subnet
-10.20.30, and foobar.com is the domain name
-associated with that subnet). The designation link#1
-refers to the first ethernet card in the machine. You will
-notice no additional interface is specified for those.
-
-Both of these groups (local network hosts and local
-subnets) have their routes automatically configured by a
-daemon called routed. If this is not run, then only
-routes which are statically defined (ie. entered
-explicitly) will exist.
-
-The host1 line refers to our host, which it knows by
-ethernet address. Since we are the sending host, FreeBSD
-knows to use the loopback interface (lo0) rather than
-sending it out over the ethernet interface.
-
-The two host2 lines are an example of what happens
-when we use an ifconfig alias (see the section of ethernet
-for reasons why we would do this). The =>
-symbol after the lo0 interface says that not only are
-we using the loopback (since this is address also refers to
-the local host), but specifically it is an alias. Such
-routes only show up on the host that supports the alias;
-all other hosts on the local network will simply have a
-link#1 line for such.
-
-The final line (destination subnet 224) deals with
-MultiCasting, which will be covered in a another section.
-
-The other column that we should talk about are the
-Flags. Each route has different attributes that are
-described in the column. Below is a short table of some of
-these flags and their meanings:
-
-
-
-U
-
-Up: The route is active.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-H
-
-
-Host: The route destination is a single host.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-G
-
-
-Gateway: Send anything for this destination
-on to this remote system, which will figure out from
-there where to send it.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-S
-
-
-Static: This route was configured manually,
-not automatically generated by the system.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-C
-
-
-Clone: Generates a new route based upon this
-route for machines we connect to. This type of route is
-normally used for local networks.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-W
-
-
-WasCloned Indicated a route that was
-auto-configured based upon a local area network (Clone)
-route.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-L
-
-
-Link: Route involves references to ethernet
-hardware.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Default routes
-
-When the local system needs to make a connection to
-remote host, it checks the routing table to determine if
-a known path exists. If the remote host falls into a
-subnet that we know how to reach (Cloned routes), then
-the system checks to see if it can connect along that
-interface.
-
-If all known paths fail, the system has one last option:
-the default route. This route is a special type
-of gateway route (usually the only one present in the
-system), and is always marked with a ``c'' in
-the flags field. For hosts on a local area network, this
-gateway is set to whatever machine has a direct
-connection to the outside world (whether via PPP link, or
-your hardware device attached to a dedicated data line).
-
-If you are configuring the default route for a machine
-which itself is functioning as the gateway to the outside
-world, then the default route will be the gateway machine
-at your Internet Service Provider's (ISP) site.
-
-Let us look at an example of default routes. This is a
-common configuration:
-
-[Local2] <--ether--> [Local1] <--PPP--> [ISP-Serv] <--ether--> [T1-GW]
-
-
-
-The hosts Local1 and Local2 are at your
-site, with the formed being your PPP connection to your
-ISP's Terminal Server. Your ISP has a local network at
-their site, which has, among other things, the server
-where you connect and a hardware device (T1-GW) attached
-to the ISP's Internet feed.
-
-The default routes for each of your machines will be:
-
-
-
-host default gateway interface
----- --------------- ---------
-Local2 Local1 ethernet
-Local1 T1-GW PPP
-
-
-
-A common question is ``Why (or how) would we set the
-T1-GW to be the default gateway for Local1, rather than
-the ISP server it is connected to?''.
-
-Remember, since the PPP interface is using an address on
-the ISP's local network for your side of the connection,
-routes for any other machines on the ISP's local network
-will be automatically generated. Hence, you will already
-know how to reach the T1-GW machine, so there is no need
-for the intermediate step of sending traffic to the ISP
-server.
-
-As a final note, it is common to use the address ``...1''
-as the gateway address for your local network. So (using
-the same example), if your local class-C address space
-was 10.20.30 and your ISP was using 10.9.9 then the
-default routes would be:
-
-
-
-Local2 (10.20.30.2) --> Local1 (10.20.30.1)
-Local1 (10.20.30.1, 10.9.9.30) --> T1-GW (10.9.9.1)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Dual homed hosts
-
-There is one other type of configuration that we should
-cover, and that is a host that sits on two different
-networks. Technically, any machine functioning as a
-gateway (in the example above, using a PPP connection)
-counts as a dual-homed host. But the term is really only
-used to refer to a machine that sits on two local-area
-networks.
-
-In one case, the machine as two ethernet cards, each
-having an address on the separate subnets. Alternately,
-the machine may only have one ethernet card, and be using
-ifconfig aliasing. The former is used if two physically
-separate ethernet networks are in use, the latter if
-there is one physical network segment, but two logically
-separate subnets.
-
-Either way, routing tables are set up so that each subnet
-knows that this machine is the defined gateway (inbound
-route) to the other subnet. This configuration, with the
-machine acting as a Bridge between the two subnets, is
-often used when we need to implement packet filtering or
-firewall security in either or both directions.
-
-
-
-
-Routing propagation
-
-We have already talked about how we define our routes to
-the outside world, but not about how the outside world
-finds us.
-
-We already know that routing tables can be set up so that
-all traffic for a particular address space (in our
-examples, a class-C subnet) can be sent to a particular
-host on that network, which will forward the packets
-inbound.
-
-When you get an address space assigned to your site, your
-service provider will set up their routing tables so that
-all traffic for your subnet will be sent down your PPP
-link to your site. But how do sites across the country
-know to send to your ISP?
-
-There is a system (much like the distributed DNS
-information) that keeps track of all assigned
-address-spaces, and defines their point of connection to
-the Internet Backbone. The ``Backbone'' are the main
-trunk lines that carry Internet traffic across the
-country, and around the world. Each backbone machine has
-a copy of a master set of tables, which direct traffic
-for a particular network to a specific backbone carrier,
-and from there down the chain of service providers until
-it reaches your network.
-
-It is the task of your service provider to advertise to
-the backbone sites that they are the point of connection
-(and thus the path inward) for your site. This is known
-as route propagation.
-
-
-
-
-Troubleshooting
-
-Sometimes, there is a problem with routing propagation,
-and some sites are unable to connect to you. Perhaps the
-most useful command for trying to figure out where a
-routing is breaking down is the traceroute(8)
-command. It is equally useful if you cannot seem to make
-a connection to a remote machine (ie. ping(8)
-fails).
-
-The traceroute(8) command is run with the name
-of the remote host you are trying to connect to. It will
-show the gateway hosts along the path of the attempt,
-eventually either reaching the target host, or
-terminating because of a lack of connection.
-
-For more information, see the manual page for
-traceroute(8).
-
-
-
-
-
-NFS
-
-Contributed by &a.jlind;.
-
-Certain Ethernet adapters for ISA PC systems have limitations which
-can lead to serious network problems, particularly with NFS. This
-difficulty is not specific to FreeBSD, but FreeBSD systems are affected
-by it.
-
-The problem nearly always occurs when (FreeBSD) PC systems are networked
-with high-performance workstations, such as those made by Silicon Graphics,
-Inc., and Sun Microsystems, Inc. The NFS mount will work fine, and some
-operations may succeed, but suddenly the server will seem to become
-unresponsive to the client, even though requests to and from other systems
-continue to be processed. This happens to the client system, whether the
-client is the FreeBSD system or the workstation. On many systems, there is
-no way to shut down the client gracefully once this problem has manifested
-itself. The only solution is often to reset the client, because the NFS
-situation cannot be resolved.
-
-Though the "correct" solution is to get a higher performance and capacity
-Ethernet adapter for the FreeBSD system, there is a simple workaround that
-will allow satisfactory operation. If the FreeBSD system is the SERVER,
-include the option "-w=1024" on the mount from the client. If the
-FreeBSD system is the CLIENT, then mount the NFS file system with the
-option "-r=1024". These options may be specified using the fourth
-field of the fstab entry on the client for automatic mounts, or by using
-the "-o" parameter of the mount command for manual mounts.
-
-It should be noted that there is a different problem,
-sometimes mistaken for this one,
-when the NFS servers and clients are on different networks.
-If that is the case, make CERTAIN that your routers are routing the
-necessary UDP information, or you will not get anywhere, no matter
-what else you are doing.
-
-In the following examples, "fastws" is the host (interface) name of a
-high-performance workstation, and "freebox" is the host (interface) name of
-a FreeBSD system with a lower-performance Ethernet adapter. Also,
-"/sharedfs" will be the exported NFS filesystem (see "man exports"), and
-"/project" will be the mount point on the client for the exported file
-system. In all cases, note that additional options, such as "hard" or
-"soft" and "bg" may be desirable in your application.
-
-Examples for the FreeBSD system ("freebox") as the client:
-in /etc/fstab on freebox:
-fastws:/sharedfs /project nfs rw,-r=1024 0 0
-as a manual mount command on freebox:
-mount -t nfs -o -r=1024 fastws:/sharedfs /project
-
-Examples for the FreeBSD system as the server:
-in /etc/fstab on fastws:
-freebox:/sharedfs /project nfs rw,-w=1024 0 0
-as a manual mount command on fastws:
-mount -t nfs -o -w=1024 freebox:/sharedfs /project
-
-Nearly any 16-bit Ethernet adapter will allow operation without the above
-restrictions on the read or write size.
-
-For anyone who cares, here is what happens when the failure occurs, which
-also explains why it is unrecoverable. NFS typically works with a "block"
-size of 8k (though it may do fragments of smaller sizes). Since the maximum
-Ethernet packet is around 1500 bytes, the NFS "block" gets split into
-multiple Ethernet packets, even though it is still a single unit to the
-upper-level code, and must be received, assembled, and ACKNOWLEDGED as a
-unit. The high-performance workstations can pump out the packets which
-comprise the NFS unit one right after the other, just as close together as
-the standard allows. On the smaller, lower capacity cards, the later
-packets overrun the earlier packets of the same unit before they can be
-transferred to the host and the unit as a whole cannot be reconstructed or
-acknowledged. As a result, the workstation will time out and try again,
-but it will try again with the entire 8K unit, and the process will be
-repeated, ad infinitum.
-
-By keeping the unit size below the Ethernet packet size limitation, we
-ensure that any complete Ethernet packet received can be acknowledged
-individually, avoiding the deadlock situation.
-
-Overruns may still occur when a high-performance workstations is slamming
-data out to a PC system, but with the better cards, such overruns are
-not guaranteed on NFS "units". When an overrun occurs, the units affected
-will be retransmitted, and there will be a fair chance that they will be
-received, assembled, and acknowledged.
-
-
-
-
-
-Diskless Operation
-
-Contributed by &a.martin;.
-
-netboot.com/netboot.rom allow you to boot your
-FreeBSD machine over the network and run FreeBSD without
-having a disk on your client. Under 2.0 it is now
-possible to have local swap. Swapping over NFS is also
-still supported.
-
-Supported Ethernet cards include: Western Digital/SMC
-8003, 8013, 8216 and compatibles; NE1000/NE2000 and
-compatibles (requires recompile)
-
-
-
-Setup Instructions
-
-
-
-
-
- Find a machine that will be your server. This
-machine will require enough disk space to hold the
-FreeBSD 2.0 binaries and have bootp, tftp and NFS
-services available.
-
-Tested machines:
-
-
-
-HP9000/8xx running HP-UX 9.04 or later (pre
-9.04 doesn't work)
-
-
-
-Sun/Solaris 2.3. (you may need to get
-bootp)
-
-
-
-
+ You can easily start out small with an inexpensive 386
+ class PC and upgrade as your enterprise grows.
+
+
+
+ Education: Are you a student of computer science
+ or a related engineering field? There is no better way
+ of learning about operating systems, computer
+ architecture and networking than the hands on, under the
+ hood experience that FreeBSD can provide. A number of
+ freely available CAD, mathematical and graphic design
+ packages also make it highly useful to those whose
+ primary interest in a computer is to get other
+ work done!
+
+
+
+ Research: With source code for the entire system
+ available, FreeBSD is an excellent platform for research
+ in operating systems as well as other branches of
+ computer science. FreeBSD's freely available nature also
+ makes it possible for remote groups to collaborate on
+ ideas or shared development without having to worry about
+ special licensing agreements or limitations on what
+ may be discussed in open forums.
+
+
+
+ Networking: Need a new router? A name server
+ (DNS)? A firewall to keep people out of your internal
+ network? FreeBSD can easily turn that unused 386 or 486 PC
+ sitting in the corner into an advanced router with
+ sophisticated packet filtering capabilities.
+
+
+
+ X Window workstation: FreeBSD is a fine
+ choice for an inexpensive X terminal solution, either
+ using the freely available XFree86 server or one
+ of the excellent commercial servers provided by X Inside.
+ Unlike an X
+ terminal, FreeBSD allows many applications to be run
+ locally, if desired, thus relieving the burden on a
+ central server. FreeBSD can even boot
+ "diskless", making individual workstations even cheaper
+ and easier to administer.
+
+
+
+ Software Development: The basic FreeBSD system
+ comes with a full compliment of development tools
+ including the renowned GNU C/C++ compiler and
+ debugger.
+
+
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD is available in both source and binary form on CDROM and
+ via anonymous ftp. See
+ for more details.
+
+
+
+
+
+ A Brief History of FreeBSD
+
+ Contributed by &a.jkh;.
+
+ The FreeBSD project had its genesis in the early part of 1993,
+ partially as an outgrowth of the "Unofficial 386BSD Patchkit" by the
+ patchkit's last 3 coordinators: Nate Williams, Rod Grimes and myself.
+
+ Our original goal was to produce an intermediate snapshot of 386BSD in
+ order to fix a number of problems with it that the patchkit mechanism
+ just was not capable of solving. Some of you may remember the early
+ working title for the project being "386BSD 0.5" or "386BSD Interim"
+ in reference to that fact.
+
+ 386BSD was Bill Jolitz's operating system, which had been up to that
+ point suffering rather severely from almost a year's worth of neglect.
+ As the patchkit swelled ever more uncomfortably with each passing day,
+ we were in unanimous agreement that something had to be done and
+ decided to try and assist Bill by providing this interim "cleanup"
+ snapshot. Those plans came to a rude halt when Bill Jolitz suddenly
+ decided to withdraw his sanction from the project and without any
+ clear indication of what would be done instead.
+
+ It did not take us long to decide that the goal remained worthwhile,
+ even without Bill's support, and so we adopted the name "FreeBSD",
+ coined by David Greenman. Our initial objectives were set after
+ consulting with the system's current users and, once it became clear
+ that the project was on the road to perhaps even becoming a reality,
+ I contacted Walnut Creek CDROM with an eye towards improving
+ FreeBSD's distribution channels for those many unfortunates without
+ easy access to the Internet. Walnut Creek CDROM not only supported
+ the idea of distributing FreeBSD on CD but went so far as to provide
+ the project with a machine to work on and a fast Internet connection.
+ Without Walnut Creek CDROM's almost unprecedented degree of faith in
+ what was, at the time, a completely unknown project, it is quite
+ unlikely that FreeBSD would have gotten as far, as fast, as it
+ has today.
+
+ The first CDROM (and general net-wide) distribution was FreeBSD 1.0,
+ released in December of 1993. This was based on the 4.3BSD-Lite
+ ("Net/2") tape from U.C. Berkeley, with many components also provided by
+ 386BSD and the Free Software Foundation. It was a fairly reasonable
+ success for a first offering, and we followed it with the highly successful
+ FreeBSD 1.1 release in May of 1994.
+
+ Around this time, some rather unexpected storm clouds formed on the
+ horizon as Novell and U.C. Berkeley settled their long-running lawsuit
+ over the legal status of the Berkeley Net/2 tape. A condition of that
+ settlement was U.C. Berkeley's concession that large parts of Net/2
+ were "encumbered" code and the property of Novell, who had in turn acquired
+ it from AT&T some time previously. What Berkeley got in return was
+ Novell's "blessing" that the 4.4BSD-Lite release, when it was finally
+ released, would be declared unencumbered and all existing Net/2 users
+ would be strongly encouraged to switch. This included FreeBSD, and the
+ project was given until the end of July 1994 to stop shipping its own
+ Net/2 based product. Under the terms of that agreement, the project
+ was allowed one last release before the deadline, that release being
+ FreeBSD 1.1.5.1.
+
+ FreeBSD then set about the arduous task of literally re-inventing itself
+ from a completely new and rather incomplete set of 4.4BSD-Lite bits. The
+ "Lite" releases were light in part because Berkeley's CSRG had removed
+ large chunks of code required for actually constructing a bootable running
+ system (due to various legal requirements) and the fact that the Intel
+ port of 4.4 was highly incomplete. It took the project until December of 1994
+ to make this transition, and in January of 1995 it released FreeBSD 2.0 to
+ the net and on CDROM. Despite being still more than a little rough around
+ the edges, the release was a significant success and was followed by the more
+ robust and easier to install FreeBSD 2.0.5 release in June of 1995.
+
+ We released FreeBSD 2.1.5 in August of 1996, and it appeared to be
+ popular enough among the ISP and commercial communities that another
+ release along the 2.1-stable branch was merited. This was FreeBSD 2.1.7.1,
+ released in February 1997 and capping the end of mainstream development
+ on 2.1-stable. Now in maintenance mode, only security enhancements and other
+ critical bug fixes will be done on this branch (RELENG_2_1_0).
+
+ FreeBSD 2.2 was branched from the development mainline ("-current") in
+ November 1996 as the RELENG_2_2 branch, and the first full release
+ (2.2.1) was released in April, 1997. Further releases along the 2.2 branch
+ were done in the Summer and Fall of '97, the latest being 2.2.6 which
+ appeared in late March of '98. The first official 3.0 release will appear
+ later in 1998.
+
+ Long term development projects for everything from SMP to DEC ALPHA support
+ will continue to take place in the 3.0-current branch and SNAPshot releases
+ of 3.0 on CDROM (and, of course, on the net).
+
+
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD Project Goals
+
+ Contributed by &a.jkh;.
+
+ The goals of the FreeBSD Project are to provide software that may
+ be used for any purpose and without strings attached. Many of us
+ have a significant investment in the code (and project) and would
+ certainly not mind a little financial compensation now and then,
+ but we're definitely not prepared to insist on it. We believe
+ that our first and foremost "mission" is to provide code to any
+ and all comers, and for whatever purpose, so that the code gets
+ the widest possible use and provides the widest possible benefit.
+ This is, I believe, one of the most fundamental goals of Free
+ Software and one that we enthusiastically support.
+
+ That code in our source tree which falls under the GNU Public License
+ (GPL) or GNU Library Public License (GLPL) comes with slightly more
+ strings attached, though at least on the side of enforced
+ access rather than the usual opposite. Due to the additional
+ complexities that can evolve in the commercial use of GPL software,
+ we do, however, endeavor to replace such software with submissions
+ under the more relaxed BSD copyright whenever possible.
+
+
+
+
+
+ The FreeBSD Development Model
+
+ Contributed by &a.asami;.
+
+ The development of FreeBSD is a very open and flexible process,
+ FreeBSD being literally built from the contributions of hundreds of
+ people around the world, as can be seen from our . We are constantly on the lookout for
+ new developers and ideas, and those interested in becoming more
+ closely involved with the project need simply contact us at the
+ &a.hackers;. Those who prefer to work more independently are also
+ accommodated, and they are free to use our FTP facilities at ftp.freebsd.org to distribute their own patches or work-in-progress
+ sources. The &a.announce; is also available to those wishing
+ to make other FreeBSD users aware of major areas of work.
+
+ Useful things to know about the FreeBSD project and its development process,
+ whether working independently or in close cooperation:
+
+
+
+ The CVS repository
+
+
+
+ The central source tree for FreeBSD is maintained by CVS
+ (Concurrent Version System), a freely available source code control
+ tool which comes bundled with FreeBSD. The primary CVS repository
+ resides on a machine in Concord CA, USA from where it is replicated
+ to numerous mirror machines throughout the world. The CVS tree, as well
+ as the and trees which are checked out of it, can be easily
+ replicated to your own machine as well. Please refer to the
+
+ section for more information on doing this.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The committers list
+
+
+
+
+ The are the people
+ who have write access to the CVS tree, and are thus
+ authorized to make modifications to the FreeBSD source (the term
+ ``committer'' comes from the cvs(1) ``commit''
+ command, which is used to bring new changes into the CVS repository).
+ The best way of making submissions for review by the committers list
+ is to use the send-pr(1) command, though if something appears to be jammed
+ in the system then you may also reach them by sending mail to committers@freebsd.org.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The FreeBSD core team
+
+
+
+
+ The would be
+ equivalent to the board of directors if the FreeBSD Project were a
+ company. The primary task of the core team is to make sure the
+ project, as a whole, is in good shape and is heading in the right
+ directions. Inviting dedicated and responsible developers to join our
+ group of committers is one of the functions of the core team, as is
+ the recruitment of new core team members as others move on. Most
+ current members of the core team started as committers who's addiction
+ to the project got the better of them.
+
+
+
+ Some core team members also have specific , meaning that they are committed to
+ ensuring that some large portion of the system works as advertised.
+ Note that most members of the core team are volunteers when it comes
+ to FreeBSD development and do not benefit from the project
+ financially, so "commitment" should also not be misconstrued as
+ meaning "guaranteed support." The ``board of directors'' analogy
+ above is not actually very accurate, and it may be more suitable to
+ say that these are the people who gave up their lives in favor of
+ FreeBSD against their better judgement! ;)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Outside contributors
+
+
+
+
+ Last, but definitely not least, the largest group of developers are
+ the users themselves who provide feedback and bug-fixes to us on an
+ almost constant basis. The primary way of keeping in touch with FreeBSD's
+ more non-centralized development is to subscribe to the &a.hackers;
+ (see ) where such
+ things are discussed.
+
+
+
+ of those who have
+ contributed something which made its way into our source tree is
+ a long and growing one, so why not join it by contributing something
+ back to FreeBSD today? :-)
+
+
+
+ Providing code is not the only way of contributing to the project;
+ for a more complete list of things that need doing, please refer to the section in this handbook.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ In summary, our development model is organized as a loose set of
+ concentric circles. The centralized model is designed for the
+ convenience of the users of FreeBSD, who are thereby provided
+ with an easy way of tracking one central code base, not to keep
+ potential contributors out! Our desire is to present a stable
+ operating system with a large set of coherent that the users can easily install and
+ use, and this model works very well in accomplishing that.
+
+ All we ask of those who would join us as FreeBSD developers is some of
+ the same dedication its current people have to its continued success!
+
+
+
+
+
+ About the Current Release
+
+ FreeBSD is a freely available, full source 4.4BSD-Lite
+ based release for Intel i386/i486/Pentium/PentiumPro/Pentium II
+ (or compatible) based PC's. It is based primarily on
+ software from U.C. Berkeley's CSRG group, with some
+ enhancements from NetBSD, OpenBSD, 386BSD, and the Free
+ Software Foundation.
+
+ Since our release of FreeBSD 2.0 in January of 95, the
+ performance, feature set, and stability of FreeBSD has
+ improved dramatically. The largest change is a
+ revamped virtual memory system with a merged VM/file buffer
+ cache that not only increases performance, but reduces
+ FreeBSD's memory footprint, making a 5MB configuration
+ a more acceptable minimum. Other enhancements include
+ full NIS client and server support, transaction TCP
+ support, dial-on-demand PPP, an improved SCSI
+ subsystem, early ISDN support, support for FDDI and
+ Fast Ethernet (100Mbit) adapters, improved support for
+ the Adaptec 2940 (WIDE and narrow) and many hundreds of
+ bug fixes.
+
+ We have also taken the comments and suggestions of many
+ of our users to heart and have attempted to provide
+ what we hope is a more sane and easily understood
+ installation process. Your feedback on this
+ (constantly evolving) process is especially welcome!
+
+ In addition to the base distributions, FreeBSD offers a
+ new ported software collection with hundreds of commonly
+ sought-after programs. At the end of March 1998 there were
+ more than 1300 ports! The list of ports ranges from
+ http (WWW) servers, to games, languages, editors and
+ almost everything in between. The entire ports collection
+ requires approximately 26MB of storage, all ports being
+ expressed as ``deltas'' to their original sources. This makes
+ it much easier for us to update ports, and greatly reduces
+ the disk space demands made by the older 1.0 ports
+ collection. To compile a port, you simply change to the
+ directory of the program you wish to install, type ``make
+ all'' followed by ``make install'' after successful
+ compilation and let the system do the rest. The full
+ original distribution for each port you build is retrieved
+ dynamically off the CDROM or a local ftp site, so you need
+ only enough disk space to build the ports you want.
+ (Almost) every port is also provided as a pre-compiled
+ "package" which can be installed with a simple command
+ (pkg_add) by those who do not wish to compile their own
+ ports from source.
+
+ A number of additional documents which you may find
+ very helpful in the process of installing and using
+ FreeBSD may now also be found in the
+ /usr/share/doc directory on any machine running
+ FreeBSD 2.1 or later. You may view the locally installed
+ manuals with any HTML capable browser using the
+ following URLs:
+
+
+
+ The FreeBSD handbook
+
+ file:/usr/share/doc/handbook/handbook.html
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The FreeBSD FAQ
+
+
+ file:/usr/share/doc/FAQ/FAQ.html
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ You can also visit the master (and most frequently
+ updated) copies at http://www.freebsd.org.
+
+ The core of FreeBSD does not contain DES code which
+ would inhibit its being exported outside the United
+ States. There is an add-on package to the core
+ distribution, for use only in the United States, that
+ contains the programs that normally use DES. The
+ auxiliary packages provided separately can be used by
+ anyone. A freely (from outside the U.S.) exportable
+ European distribution of DES for our non-U.S. users
+ also exists and is described in the FreeBSD FAQ.
+
+ If password security for FreeBSD is all you need, and
+ you have no requirement for copying encrypted passwords
+ from different hosts (Suns, DEC machines, etc) into
+ FreeBSD password entries, then FreeBSD's MD5 based
+ security may be all you require! We feel that our
+ default security model is more than a match for DES,
+ and without any messy export issues to deal with. If
+ you are outside (or even inside) the U.S., give it a
+ try!
+
+
+
+
+
+ Installing FreeBSD
+
+ So, you would like to try out FreeBSD on your system?
+ This section is a quick-start guide for what you need to
+ do. FreeBSD can be installed from a variety of media
+ including CD-ROM, floppy disk, magnetic tape, an MS-DOS
+ partition and, if you have a network connection, via
+ anonymous ftp or NFS.
+
+ Regardless of the installation media you choose, you can
+ get started by creating the installation disk
+ as described below. Booting your computer into the FreeBSD installer,
+ even if you aren't planning on installing FreeBSD right away, will
+ provide important information about compatibility between
+ FreeBSD and your hardware which may, in turn, dictate which
+ installation options are even possible. It can also provide
+ early clues to any compatibility problems which could prevent
+ FreeBSD running on your system at all. If you plan on
+ installing via anonymous FTP then this installation disk
+ is all you need to download (the installation will handle any
+ further required downloading itself).
+
+ For more information on obtaining the latest FreeBSD distributions,
+ please see in the Appendix.
+
+ So, to get the show on the road, follow these steps:
+
+
+
+
+
+ Review the section of this installation guide to
+ be sure that your hardware is supported by FreeBSD. It
+ may be helpful to make a list of any special cards you
+ have installed, such as SCSI controllers, Ethernet
+ adapters or sound cards. This list should include
+ relevant configuration parameters such as interrupts
+ (IRQ) and IO port addresses.
+
+
+
+
+
+ If you're installing FreeBSD from CDROM media then you have
+ several different installation options:
+
+
+
+
+
+ If the CD has been mastered with El Torrito boot support and
+ your system supports direct booting from CDROM (and many older systems
+ do not), simply insert the CD into the drive and boot
+ directly from it.
+
+
+
+
+
+ If you're running DOS and have the proper drivers to access
+ your CD, run the install.bat script provided on the CD. This will
+ attempt to boot into the FreeBSD installation straight from DOS
+ (note: You must do this from actual DOS and not a Windows DOS box). If you also want to install FreeBSD from your DOS partition
+ (perhaps because your CDROM drive is completely unsupported by
+ FreeBSD) then run the setup program first to copy the
+ appropriate files from the CD to your DOS partition, afterwards
+ running install.
+
+
+
+
+
+ If either of the two proceeding methods work then you can
+ simply skip the rest of this section, otherwise your final option
+ is to create a boot floppy from the floppies\boot.flp
+ image - proceed to step 4 for instructions on how to do
+ this.
+
+
+
-
-
-
-Set up a bootp server to provide the client with
-IP, gateway, netmask.
-
-diskless:\
- :ht=ether:\
- :ha=0000c01f848a:\
- :sm=255.255.255.0:\
- :hn:\
- :ds=192.1.2.3:\
- :ip=192.1.2.4:\
- :gw=192.1.2.5:\
- :vm=rfc1048:
-
-
-
-
-
-Set up a TFTP server (on same machine as bootp
-server) to provide booting information to client.
-The name of this file is cfg.X.X.X.X (or
-/tftpboot/cfg.X.X.X.X, it will try both)
-where X.X.X.X is the IP address of the
-client. The contents of this file can be any valid
-netboot commands. Under 2.0, netboot has the
-following commands:
-
-help - print help list
-ip <X.X.X.X> - print/set client's IP address
-server <X.X.X.X> - print/set bootp/tftp server address
-netmask <X.X.X.X> - print/set netmask
-hostname <name> - print/set hostname
-kernel <name> - print/set kernel name
-rootfs <ip:/fs> - print/set root filesystem
-swapfs <ip:/fs> - print/set swap filesystem
-swapsize <size> - set diskless swapsize in Kbytes
-diskboot - boot from disk
-autoboot - continue boot process
-trans <on|off> - turn transceiver on|off
-flags [bcdhsv] - set boot flags
-
-
-A typical completely diskless cfg file might contain:
-
-rootfs 192.1.2.3:/rootfs/myclient
-swapfs 192.1.2.3:/swapfs
-swapsize 20000
-hostname myclient.mydomain
-
-
-A cfg file for a machine with local swap might contain:
-
-rootfs 192.1.2.3:/rootfs/myclient
-hostname myclient.mydomain
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Ensure that your NFS server has exported the root
-(and swap if applicable) filesystems to your client,
-and that the client has root access to these
-filesystems
-
-A typical /etc/exports file on FreeBSD might
-look like:
-
-/rootfs/myclient -maproot=0:0 myclient.mydomain
-/swapfs -maproot=0:0 myclient.mydomain
-
-
-
-And on HP-UX:
-
-/rootfs/myclient -root=myclient.mydomain
-/swapfs -root=myclient.mydomain
-
-
-
-
-
-
-If you are swapping over NFS (completely diskless
-configuration) create a swap file for your client
-using dd. If your swapfs command has the
-arguments /swapfs and the size 20000 as in the
-example above, the swapfile for myclient will be called
-/swapfs/swap.X.X.X.X where X.X.X.X
-is the client's IP addr, eg:
-
-# dd if=/dev/zero of=/swapfs/swap.192.1.2.4 bs=1k count=20000
-
-
-
-Also, the client's swap space might contain sensitive
-information once swapping starts, so make sure to
-restrict read and write access to this file to prevent
-unauthorized access:
-
-# chmod 0600 /swapfs/swap.192.1.2.4
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Unpack the root filesystem in the directory the
-client will use for its root filesystem
-(/rootfs/myclient in the example above).
-
-
-
-
- On HP-UX systems: The server should be
-running HP-UX 9.04 or later for HP9000/800 series
-machines. Prior versions do not allow the
-creation of device files over NFS.
-
-
-
-
- When extracting /dev in
-/rootfs/myclient, beware that some
-systems (HPUX) will not create device files that
-FreeBSD is happy with. You may have to go to
-single user mode on the first bootup (press
-control-c during the bootup phase), cd
-/dev and do a "sh ./MAKEDEV
-all" from the client to fix this.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Run netboot.com on the client or make an EPROM
-from the netboot.rom file
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Using Shared / and /usr filesystems
-
-At present there isn't an officially sanctioned way of
-doing this, although I have been using a shared /usr
-filesystem and individual / filesystems for each client.
-If anyone has any suggestions on how to do this cleanly,
-please let me and/or the &a.core; know.
-
-
-
-
-Compiling netboot for specific setups
-
-Netboot can be compiled to support NE1000/2000 cards by
-changing the configuration in
-/sys/i386/boot/netboot/Makefile. See the
-comments at the top of this file.
-
-
-
-
-
-ISDN
-
-Last modified by &a.wlloyd;.
-
-A good resource for information on ISDN technology and hardware is
-Dan Kegel's ISDN Page.
-
-A quick simple roadmap to ISDN follows:
-
-
-
-If you live in Europe I suggest you investigate the ISDN card
-section.
-
-
-
-
-If you are planning to use ISDN primarily to connect to the
-Internet with an Internet Provider on a dialup non-dedicated basis, I
-suggest you look into Terminal Adapters. This will give you the most
-flexibility, with the fewest problems, if you change providers.
-
-
-
-
-If you are connecting two lans together, or connecting to the
-Internet with a dedicated ISDN connection, I suggest you consider the
-stand alone router/bridge option.
-
-
-
-
-
-Cost is a significant factor in determining what solution you will
-choose. The following options are listed from least expensive to most
-expensive.
-
-
-
-ISDN Cards
-
-Original Contribution by &a.hm;.
-
-This section is really only relevant to European ISDN users. The
-cards supported are not yet(?) available for North American ISDN
-standards.
-
-You should be aware that this code is largely under development.
-Specifically, drivers have only been written for two manufacturers
-cards.
-
-PC ISDN cards support the full bandwidth of ISDN, 128Kbs. These
-cards are often the least expensive type of ISDN equipment.
-
-Under FreeBSD 2.1.0 and 2.1.5, there is early unfinished ISDN code
-under /usr/src/gnu/isdn. This code is out of date and should not be
-used. If you want to go this route, get the bisdn stuff. This code
-has been removed from the main source tree starting with FreeBSD 2.2.
-
-There is the bisdn ISDN package available from
-hub.freebsd.org
-supporting FreeBSD 2.1R, FreeBSD-current and NetBSD.
-The latest source can be found on the above mentioned ftp server under
-directory isdn as file bisdn-097.tar.gz.
-
-There are drivers for the following cards:
-
-
-
-Currently all (passive) Teles cards and their clones are supported
-for the EuroISDN (DSS1) and 1TR6 protocols.
-
-
-
-Dr. Neuhaus - Niccy 1016
-
-
-
-
-
-There are several limitations with the bisdn stuff. Specifically the
-following features usually associated with ISDN are not supported.
-
-
-
-
-
-No PPP support, only raw hdlc. This means you cannot connect to most
-standalone routers.
-
-
-
-Bridging Control Protocol not supported.
-
-
-
-Multiple cards are not supported.
-
-
-
-No bandwidth on demand.
-
-
-
-No channel bundling.
-
-
-
-
-
-A majordomo maintained mailing list is available.
-To join the list, send mail to &a.majordomo; and specify:
-subscribe freebsd-isdn
-
-In the body of your message.
-
-
-
-
-ISDN Terminal Adapters
-
-Terminal adapters(TA), are to ISDN what modems are to regular phone
-lines.
-
-Most TA's use the standard hayes modem AT command set, and can be
-used as a drop in replacement for a modem.
-
-A TA will operate basically the same as a modem except connection and
-throughput speeds will be much faster than your old modem. You will
-need to configure exactly the same as for a
-modem setup. Make sure you set your serial speed as high as possible.
-
-The main advantage of using a TA to connect to an Internet Provider is
-that you can do Dynamic PPP. As IP address space becomes more and more
-scarce, most providers are not willing to provide you with a static IP
-anymore. Most standalone routers are not able to accommodate dynamic IP
-allocation.
-
-TA's completely rely on the PPP daemon that you are running for their
-features and stability of connection. This allows you to upgrade easily
-from using a modem to ISDN on a FreeBSD machine, if you already have PPP
-setup. However, at the same time any problems you experienced with the
-PPP program and are going to persist.
-
-If you want maximum stability, use the kernel
-option, not the user-land .
-
-The following TA's are know to work with FreeBSD.
-
-
-
-
-
-Motorola BitSurfer and Bitsurfer Pro
-
-
-
-Adtran
-
-
-
-
-
-Most other TA's will probably work as well, TA vendors try to make sure
-their product can accept most of the standard modem AT command set.
-
-The real problem with external TA's is like modems you need a good
-serial card in your computer.
-
-You should read the section in the
-handbook for a detailed understanding of serial devices, and the
-differences between asynchronous and synchronous serial ports.
-
-A TA running off a standard PC serial port (asynchronous) limits you to
-115.2Kbs, even though you have a 128Kbs connection. To fully utilize
-the 128Kbs that ISDN is capable of, you must move the TA to a
-synchronous serial card.
-
-Do not be fooled into buying an internal TA and thinking you have
-avoided the synchronous/asynchronous issue. Internal TA's simply have a
-standard PC serial port chip built into them. All this will do, is save
-you having to buy another serial cable, and find another empty
-electrical socket.
-
-A synchronous card with a TA is at least as fast as a standalone router,
-and with a simple 386 FreeBSD box driving it, probably more flexible.
-
-The choice of sync/TA vs standalone router is largely a religious
-issue. There has been some discussion of this in the mailing lists. I
-suggest you search the archives for the complete discussion.
-
-
-
-
-Standalone ISDN Bridges/Routers
-
-ISDN bridges or routers are not at all specific to FreeBSD or any
-other operating system. For a more complete description of routing and
-bridging technology, please refer to a Networking reference book.
-
-In the context of this page, I will use router and bridge
-interchangeably.
-
-As the cost of low end ISDN routers/bridges comes down, it will
-likely become a more and more popular choice. An ISDN router is a small
-box that plugs directly into your local Ethernet network(or card), and
-manages its own connection to the other bridge/router. It has all the
-software to do PPP and other protocols built in.
-
-A router will allow you much faster throughput that a standard TA, since
-it will be using a full synchronous ISDN connection.
-
-The main problem with ISDN routers and bridges is that interoperability
-between manufacturers can still be a problem. If you are planning to
-connect to an Internet provider, I recommend that you discuss your needs
-with them.
-
-If you are planning to connect two lan segments together, ie: home
-lan to the office lan, this is the simplest lowest maintenance
-solution. Since you are buying the equipment for both sides of the
-connection you can be assured that the link will work.
-
-For example to connect a home computer or branch office network to a
-head office network the following setup could be used.
-
-Branch office or Home network
-
-Network is 10 Base T Ethernet. Connect router to network cable with
-AUI/10BT transceiver, if necessary.
-
-
----Sun workstation
-|
----FreeBSD box
-|
----Windows 95 (Do not admit to owning it)
-|
-Standalone router
- |
-ISDN BRI line
-
-If your home/branch office is only one computer you can use a twisted
-pair crossover cable to connect to the standalone router directly.
-
-Head office or other lan
-
-Network is Twisted Pair Ethernet.
- -------Novell Server
- | H |
- | ---Sun
- | |
- | U ---FreeBSD
- | |
- | ---Windows 95
- | B |
- |___---Standalone router
- |
- ISDN BRI line
-
-
-One large advantage of most routers/bridges is that they allow you to
-have 2 SEPARATE INDEPENDENT PPP connections to 2 separate sites at the
-SAME time. This is not supported on most TA's, except for
-specific(expensive) models that have two serial ports. Do not confuse
-this with channel bonding, MPP etc.
-
-This can be very useful feature, for example if you have an dedicated
-internet ISDN connection at your office and would like to tap into it,
-but don't want to get another ISDN line at work. A router at the office
-location can manage a dedicated B channel connection (64Kbs) to the
-internet, as well as a use the other B channel for a separate data connection.
-The second B channel can be used for dialin, dialout or dynamically
-bond(MPP etc.) with the first B channel for more bandwidth.
-
-An Ethernet bridge will also allow you to transmit more than just
-IP traffic, you can also send IPX/SPX or whatever other protocols you
-use.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Electronic Mail
-
-Contributed by &a.wlloyd;.
-
- Electronic Mail configuration is the subject of many books. If you plan on doing anything beyond setting up one mailhost for your network, you need industrial strength help.
-
-Some parts of E-Mail configuration are controlled in the Domain Name System (DNS). If you are going to run your own own DNS server check out /etc/namedb and ' man -k named ' for more information.
-
-
-
-Basic Information
-
-These are the major programs involved in an E-Mail exchange.
-A mailhost is a server that is responsible for delivering and receiving all email for your host, and possibly your network.
-
-
-
-User program
-
- This is a program like elm, pine, mail , or something more sophisticated like a WWW browser. This program will simply pass off all e-mail transactions to the local mailhost , either by calling sendmail or delivering it over TCP.
-
-
-
-
-Mailhost Server Daemon
-
- Usually this program is sendmail or smail running in the background. Turn it off or change the command line options in /etc/rc.conf
-(or, prior to FreeBSD 2.2.2, /etc/sysconfig). It is best to leave it on, unless you have a specific reason to want it off. Example: You are building a .
-
-You should be aware that sendmail is a potential weak link in a secure site. Some versions of sendmail have known security problems.
-
- sendmail does two jobs. It looks after delivering and receiving mail.
-
-If sendmail needs to deliver mail off your site it will look up in the DNS to determine the actual host that will receive mail for the destination.
-
- If it is acting as a delivery agent sendmail will take the message from the local queue and deliver it across the Internet to another sendmail on the receivers computer.
-
-
-
-
-DNS - Name Service
-
-The Domain Name System and its daemon named , contain the database mapping hostname to IP address, and hostname to mailhost. The IP address is specified in an "A" record. The "MX" record specifies the mailhost that will receive mail for you. If you do not have a "MX" record mail for your hostname, the mail will be delivered to your host directly.
-
-Unless you are running your own DNS server, you will not be able to change any information in the DNS yourself. If you are using an Internet Provider, speak to them.
-
-
-
-
-POP Servers
-
- This program gets the mail from your mailbox and gives it to your browser. If you want to run a POP server on your computer, you will need to do 2 things.
-
-
-
-Get pop software from the Ports collection that can be found in /usr/ports
-or packages collection. This handbook section has a complete reference on the system.
-
-
-
-Modify /etc/inetd.conf to load the POP server.
-
-
-
-
-
-The pop program will have instructions with it. Read them.
-
-
-
-
-
-Configuration
-
-
-
-Basic
-
-As your FreeBSD system comes "out of the box"[TM], you should be able to send E-mail to external hosts as long as you have /etc/resolv.conf setup or are running a name server.
-If you want to have mail for your host delivered to your specific host,there are two methods:
-
-- Run a name server ( man -k named ) and have your own domain smallminingco.com
-
-- Get mail delivered to the current DNS name for your host. Ie: dorm6.ahouse.school.edu
-
-No matter what option you choose, to have mail delivered directly to your host, you must be a full Internet host. You must have a permanent IP address. IE: NO dynamic PPP. If you are behind a firewall, the firewall must be passing on smtp traffic to you. From /etc/services
-smtp 25/tcp mail #Simple Mail Transfer
-
-If you want to receive mail at your host itself, you must make sure that the DNS MX entry points to your host address, or there is no MX entry for your DNS name.
-
-Try this
-newbsdbox# hostname
-newbsdbox.freebsd.org
-newbsdbox# host newbsdbox.freebsd.org
-newbsdbox.freebsd.org has address 204.216.27.xx
-
-
-If that is all that comes out for your machine, mail directory to root@newbsdbox.freebsd.org will work no problems.
-
-If instead, you have this
-newbsdbox# host newbsdbox.freebsd.org
-newbsdbox.FreeBSD.org has address 204.216.27.xx
-newbsdbox.FreeBSD.org mail is handled (pri=10) by freefall.FreeBSD.org
-
-All mail sent to your host directly will end up on freefall, under the same username.
-
-This information is setup in your domain name server. This should be the same host that is listed as your primary nameserver in /etc/resolv.conf
-
-The DNS record that carries mail routing information is the Mail eXchange entry. If no MX entry exists, mail will be delivered directly to the host by way of the Address record.
-
-The MX entry for freefall.freebsd.org at one time.
- freefall MX 30 mail.crl.net
- freefall MX 40 agora.rdrop.com
- freefall HINFO Pentium FreeBSD
- freefall MX 10 freefall.FreeBSD.org
- freefall MX 20 who.cdrom.com
- freefall A 204.216.27.xx
- freefall CNAME www.FreeBSD.org
-
-
-Freefall has many MX entries. The lowest MX number gets the mail in the end. The others will queue mail temporarily, if freefall is busy or down.
-
-Alternate MX sites should have separate connections to the Internet, to be most useful. An Internet Provider or other friendly site can provide this service.
-
-dig, nslookup, and host are your friends.
-
-
-
-
-Mail for your Domain (Network).
-
-To setup up a network mailhost, you need to direct the mail from arriving at all the workstations. In other words, you want to hijack all mail for *.smallminingco.com and divert it to one machine, your mailhost.
-
-The network users on their workstations will most likely pick up their mail over POP or telnet.
-
-A user account with the SAME USERNAME should exist on both machines. Please use adduser to do this as required. If you set the shell to /nonexistent the user will not be allowed to login.
-
-The mailhost that you will be using must be designated the Mail eXchange for each workstation. This must be arranged in DNS (ie BIND, named). Please refer to a Networking book for in-depth information.
-
-You basically need to add these lines in your DNS server.
-pc24.smallminingco.com A xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx ; Workstation ip
- MX 10 smtp.smallminingco.com ; Your mailhost
-
-
-You cannot do this yourself unless you are running a DNS server. If you do not want to run a DNS server, get somebody else like your Internet Provider to do it.
-
-This will redirect mail for the workstation to the Mail eXchange host. It does not matter what machine the A record points to, the mail will be sent to the MX host.
-
-This feature is used to implement Virtual E-Mail Hosting.
-
-Example
-
-I have a customer with domain foo.bar and I want all mail for foo.bar to be sent to my machine smtp.smalliap.com. You must make an entry in your DNS server like:
-
-foo.bar MX 10 smtp.smalliap.com ; your mailhost
-
-The A record is not needed if you only want E-Mail for the domain. IE: Don't expect ping foo.bar to work unless an Address record for foo.bar exists as well.
-
-On the mailhost that actually accepts mail for final delivery to a mailbox, sendmail must be told what hosts it will be accepting mail for.
-
-Add pc24.smallminingco.com to /etc/sendmail.cw (if you are using FEATURE(use_cw_file)), or add a "Cw myhost.smalliap.com" line to /etc/sendmail.cf
-
-If you plan on doing anything serious with sendmail you should install the sendmail source. The source has plenty of documentation with it. You will find information on getting sendmail source from .
-
-
-
-
- Setting up UUCP.
-
-Stolen from the FAQ.
-
-The sendmail configuration that ships with FreeBSD is
-suited for sites that connect directly to the Internet.
-Sites that wish to exchange their mail via UUCP must install
-another sendmail configuration file.
-
-Tweaking /etc/sendmail.cf manually is considered
-something for purists. Sendmail version 8 comes with a
-new approach of generating config files via some m4
-preprocessing, where the actual hand-crafted configuration
-is on a higher abstraction level. You should use the
-configuration files under
-
-
- /usr/src/usr.sbin/sendmail/cf
-
-
-If you did not install your system with full sources,
-the sendmail config stuff has been
-broken out into a separate source distribution tarball just
-for you. Assuming you have your CD-ROM mounted, do:
-
-
- cd /usr/src
- tar -xvzf /cdrom/dists/src/ssmailcf.aa
-
-
-Do not panic, this is only a few hundred kilobytes in size.
-The file README in the cf directory can
-serve as a basic introduction to m4 configuration.
-
-For UUCP delivery, you are best advised to use the
-mailertable feature. This constitutes a database
-that sendmail can use to base its routing decision upon.
-
-First, you have to create your .mc file. The
-directory /usr/src/usr.sbin/sendmail/cf/cf is the
-home of these files. Look around, there are already a few
-examples. Assuming you have named your file foo.mc,
-all you need to do in order to convert it into a valid
-sendmail.cf is:
-
-
- cd /usr/src/usr.sbin/sendmail/cf/cf
- make foo.cf
-
-
-If you don't have a /usr/obj hiearchy, then:
-
-
- cp foo.cf /etc/sendmail.cf
-
-
-Otherwise:
-
-
- cp /usr/obj/`pwd`/foo.cf /etc/sendmail.cf
-
-
-A typical .mc file might look like:
-
-
- include(`../m4/cf.m4')
- VERSIONID(`Your version number')
- OSTYPE(bsd4.4)
-
- FEATURE(nodns)
- FEATURE(nocanonify)
- FEATURE(mailertable)
-
- define(`UUCP_RELAY', your.uucp.relay)
- define(`UUCP_MAX_SIZE', 200000)
-
- MAILER(local)
- MAILER(smtp)
- MAILER(uucp)
-
- Cw your.alias.host.name
- Cw youruucpnodename.UUCP
-
-
-The nodns and nocanonify features will
-prevent any usage of the DNS during mail delivery. The
-UUCP_RELAY clause is needed for bizarre reasons,
-do not ask. Simply put an Internet hostname there that
-is able to handle .UUCP pseudo-domain addresses; most likely,
-you will enter the mail relay of your ISP there.
-
-Once you have this, you need this file called
-/etc/mailertable. A typical example of this
-gender again:
-
-
- #
- # makemap hash /etc/mailertable.db < /etc/mailertable
- #
- horus.interface-business.de uucp-dom:horus
- .interface-business.de uucp-dom:if-bus
- interface-business.de uucp-dom:if-bus
- .heep.sax.de smtp8:%1
- horus.UUCP uucp-dom:horus
- if-bus.UUCP uucp-dom:if-bus
- . uucp-dom:sax
-
-
-As you can see, this is part of a real-life file. The first
-three lines handle special cases where domain-addressed mail
-should not be sent out to the default route, but instead to
-some UUCP neighbor in order to ``shortcut'' the delivery
-path. The next line handles mail to the local Ethernet
-domain that can be delivered using SMTP. Finally, the UUCP
-neighbors are mentioned in the .UUCP pseudo-domain notation,
-to allow for a ``uucp-neighbor!recipient'' override of the
-default rules. The last line is always a single dot, matching
-everything else, with UUCP delivery to a UUCP neighbor that
-serves as your universal mail gateway to the world. All of
-the node names behind the uucp-dom: keyword must
-be valid UUCP neighbors, as you can verify using the
-command uuname.
-
-As a reminder that this file needs to be converted into a
-DBM database file before being usable, the command line to
-accomplish this is best placed as a comment at the top of
-the mailertable. You always have to execute this command
-each time you change your mailertable.
-
-Final hint: if you are uncertain whether some particular
-mail routing would work, remember the option to
-sendmail. It starts sendmail in address test mode;
-simply enter ``0 '', followed by the address you wish to
-test for the mail routing. The last line tells you the used
-internal mail agent, the destination host this agent will be
-called with, and the (possibly translated) address. Leave
-this mode by typing Control-D.
-
-
- j@uriah 191% sendmail -bt
- ADDRESS TEST MODE (ruleset 3 NOT automatically invoked)
- Enter <ruleset> <address>
- > 0 foo@interface-business.de
- rewrite: ruleset 0 input: foo @ interface-business . de
- ...
- rewrite: ruleset 0 returns: $# uucp-dom $@ if-bus $: foo \
- < @ interface-business . de >
- > ^D
- j@uriah 192%
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FAQ
-
-Migration from FAQ.
-
-
-
-Why do I have to use the FQDN for hosts on my site?
-
-You will probably find that the host is actually in a different
-domain; for example, if you are in foo.bar.edu and you wish to reach
-a host called ``mumble'' in the bar.edu domain, you will have to
-refer to it by the fully-qualified domain name, ``mumble.bar.edu'',
-instead of just ``mumble''.
-
-Traditionally, this was allowed by BSD BIND resolvers. However
-the current version of BIND that ships with FreeBSD
-no longer provides default abbreviations for non-fully
-qualified domain names other than the domain you are in.
-So an unqualified host mumble must either be found
-as mumble.foo.bar.edu, or it will be searched for
-in the root domain.
-
-This is different from the previous behavior, where the
-search continued across mumble.bar.edu, and
-mumble.edu. Have a look at RFC 1535 for why this
-was considered bad practice, or even a security hole.
-
-As a good workaround, you can place the line
-
-search foo.bar.edu bar.edu
-
-instead of the previous
-
-domain foo.bar.edu
-
-into your /etc/resolv.conf. However, make sure
-that the search order does not go beyond the ``boundary
-between local and public administration'', as RFC 1535
-calls it.
-
-
-
-
-Sendmail says ``mail loops back to myself''
-
-This is answered in the sendmail FAQ as follows:-
- * I am getting "Local configuration error" messages, such as:
-
- 553 relay.domain.net config error: mail loops back to myself
- 554 <user@domain.net>... Local configuration error
-
- How can I solve this problem?
-
- You have asked mail to the domain (e.g., domain.net) to be
- forwarded to a specific host (in this case, relay.domain.net)
- by using an MX record, but the relay machine does not recognize
- itself as domain.net. Add domain.net to /etc/sendmail.cw
- (if you are using FEATURE(use_cw_file)) or add "Cw domain.net"
- to /etc/sendmail.cf.
-
-
-
-The sendmail FAQ is in /usr/src/usr.sbin/sendmail
-and is recommended reading if you want to do any
-``tweaking'' of your mail setup.
-
-
-
-
-How can I do E-Mail with a dialup PPP host?
-
-You want to connect a FreeBSD box on a lan, to the Internet. The FreeBSD box will be a mail gateway for the lan. The PPP connection is non-dedicated.
-
-There are at least two way to do this.
-
-The other is to use UUCP.
-
-The key is to get a Internet site to provide secondary MX services for your domain.
-For example:
-bigco.com. MX 10 bigco.com.
- MX 20 smalliap.com.
-
-
-Only one host should be specified as the final recipient ( add ``Cw bigco.com'' in /etc/sendmail.cf on bigco.com).
-
-When the senders sendmail is trying to deliver the mail it will try to connect to you over the modem link. It will most likely time out because you are not online. Sendmail will automatically deliver it to the secondary MX site, ie your Internet provider. The secondary MX site will try every (sendmail_flags = "-bd -q15m" in /etc/rc.conf ) 15 minutes to connect to your host to deliver the mail to the primary MX site.
-
-You might wat to use something like this as a login script.
-#!/bin/sh
-# Put me in /usr/local/bin/pppbigco
-( sleep 60 ; /usr/sbin/sendmail -q ) &
-/usr/sbin/ppp -direct pppbigco
-
-If you are going to create a separate login script for a user you could use sendmail -qRbigco.com instead in the script above. This will force all mail in your queue for bigco.com to be processed immediately.
-
-A further refinement of the situation is as follows.
-
-Message stolen from the freebsd-isp mailing list.
-> we provide the secondary mx for a customer. The customer connects to
-> our services several times a day automatically to get the mails to
-> his primary mx (We do not call his site when a mail for his domains
-> arrived). Our sendmail sends the mailqueue every 30 minutes. At the
-> moment he has to stay 30 minutes online to be sure that all mail is
-> gone to the primary mx.
->
-> Is there a command that would initiate sendmail to send all the mails
-> now? The user has not root-privileges on our machine of course.
-
-In the 'privacy flags' section of sendmail.cf, there is a definition
-Opgoaway,restrictqrun
-
-Remove restrictqrun to allow non-root users to start the queue processing.
-You might also like to rearrange the MXs. We are the 1st MX for our
-customers like this, and we have defined:
-
-# If we are the best MX for a host, try directly instead of generating
-# local config error.
-OwTrue
-
-That way a remote site will deliver straight to you, without trying
-the customer connection. You then send to your customer. Only works for
-"hosts", so you need to get your customer to name their mail machine
-"customer.com" as well as "hostname.customer.com" in the DNS. Just put
-an A record in the DNS for "customer.com".
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Advanced topics
-
-
-
-The Cutting Edge: FreeBSD-current and FreeBSD-stable
-
-FreeBSD is under constant development between releases. For
-people who want to be on the cutting edge, there are several
-easy mechanisms for keeping your system in sync with the latest
-developments. Be warned: the cutting edge is not for everyone!
-This chapter will help you decide if you want to track the development
-system, or stick with one of the released versions.
-
-
-
-Staying Current with FreeBSD
-
-Contributed by &a.jkh;.
-
-
-
-What is FreeBSD-current?
-
-FreeBSD-current is, quite literally, nothing more than a daily
-snapshot of the working sources for FreeBSD. These include work in
-progress, experimental changes and transitional mechanisms that may or
-may not be present in the next official release of the software.
-While many of us compile almost daily from FreeBSD-current sources,
-there are periods of time when the sources are literally un-compilable.
-These problems are generally resolved as expeditiously as possible,
-but whether or not FreeBSD-current sources bring disaster or greatly
-desired functionality can literally be a matter of which part of any
-given 24 hour period you grabbed them in!
-
-
-
-
-Who needs FreeBSD-current?
-
-FreeBSD-current is made generally available for 3 primary interest groups:
-
-
-
- Members of the FreeBSD group who are actively working on some
-part of the source tree and for whom keeping `current' is an
-absolute requirement.
-
-
-
-
- Members of the FreeBSD group who are active testers,
-willing to spend time working through problems in order to
-ensure that FreeBSD-current remains as sane as possible. These
-are also people who wish to make topical suggestions on changes
-and the general direction of FreeBSD.
-
-
-
-
- Peripheral members of the FreeBSD (or some other) group who merely
-wish to keep an eye on things and use the current sources for
-reference purposes (e.g. for reading, not running). These
-people also make the occasional comment or contribute code.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-What is FreeBSD-current NOT?
-
-
-
-
-
- A fast-track to getting pre-release bits because you heard there is
-some cool new feature in there and you want to be the first on
-your block to have it.
-
-
-
-
- A quick way of getting bug fixes.
-
-
-
-
- In any way ``officially supported'' by us.
-
-We do our best to help people genuinely in one of the 3
-``legitimate'' FreeBSD-current categories, but we simply do not
-have the time to provide tech support for it.
-This is not because we are mean and nasty people who do not like
-helping people out (we would not even be doing FreeBSD if we were),
-it is literally because we cannot answer 400 messages a day
-and actually work on FreeBSD! I am sure that, if given
-the choice between having us answer lots of questions or continuing to
-improve FreeBSD, most of you would vote for us improving it.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Using FreeBSD-current
-
-
-
-
-
- Join the &a.current; and the &a.cvsall; .
-This is not just a good idea, it is essential.
-If you are not on the FreeBSD-current mailing list you
-will not see the comments that people are making about the
-current state of the system and thus will probably end up stumbling
-over a lot of problems that others have already found and
-solved. Even more importantly, you will miss out on
-potentially critical information (e.g. ``Yo, Everybody!
-Before you rebuild /usr/src, you must
-rebuild the kernel or your system will crash horribly!").
-
-The cvs-all mailing list will allow you to see the commit log
-entry for each change as it is made along with any pertinent
-information on possible side-effects.
-
-To join these lists, send mail to &a.majordomo; and specify:
-subscribe freebsd-current
-subscribe cvs-all
-
-In the body of your message. Optionally, you can also say `help'
-and Majordomo will send you full help on how to subscribe and
-unsubscribe to the various other mailing lists we support.
-
-
-
-
- Grab the sources from ftp.FreeBSD.ORG. You can do this in
-three ways:
-
-
-
-
- Use the facility. Unless you
-have a good TCP/IP connection at a flat rate, this is
-the way to do it.
-
-
-
-
- Use the program with
-this supfile.
-This is the second most recommended method, since it allows
-you to grab the entire collection once and then only what has
-changed from then on. Many people run cvsup from cron
-and keep their sources up-to-date automatically.
-
-
-
-
- Use ftp. The source tree for FreeBSD-current is always
-"exported" on:
-ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/FreeBSD-current
-We also use `wu-ftpd' which allows compressed/tar'd grabbing
-of whole trees. e.g. you see:
- usr.bin/lex
-
-You can do:
- ftp> cd usr.bin
- ftp> get lex.tar.Z
-
-And it will get the whole directory for you as a compressed
-tar file.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Essentially, if you need rapid on-demand access to the source and
-communications bandwidth is not a consideration, use cvsup or ftp.
-Otherwise, use CTM.
-
-
-
-
- If you are grabbing the sources to run, and not just look at,
-then grab all of current, not just selected portions. The
-reason for this is that various parts of the source depend on
-updates elsewhere, and trying to compile just a subset is almost
-guaranteed to get you into trouble.
-
-
-
-
- Before compiling current, read the Makefile in /usr/src
-carefully. You should at least run a `' the first time through as part of the upgrading
-process. Reading the &a.current; will keep you up-to-date on other
-bootstrapping procedures that sometimes become necessary as we move
-towards the next release.
-
-
-
-
- Be active! If you are running FreeBSD-current, we want to know
-what you have to say about it, especially if you have suggestions
-for enhancements or bug fixes. Suggestions with accompanying code
-are received most enthusiastically!
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Staying Stable with FreeBSD
-
-Contributed by &a.jkh;.
-
-
-
-What is FreeBSD-stable?
-
-FreeBSD-stable is our development branch for a more low-key and
-conservative set of changes intended for our next mainstream release.
-Changes of an experimental or untested nature do not go into this
-branch (see ).
-
-
-
-
-Who needs FreeBSD-stable?
-
-If you are a commercial user or someone who puts maximum stability of
-their FreeBSD system before all other concerns, you should consider tracking
-stable. This is especially true if you have installed the most
-recent release (&rel.current;-RELEASE at the time of this writing) since the stable
-branch is effectively a bug-fix stream relative to the previous release.
-
-Please note that the stable tree endeavors, above all, to
-be fully compilable and stable at all times, but we do occasionally
-make mistakes (these are still active sources with quickly-transmitted
-updates, after all). We also do our best to thoroughly test fixes in
-current before bringing them into stable, but sometimes
-our tests fail to catch every case. If something breaks for you in
-stable, please let us know immediately! (see
-next section).
-
-
-
-
-Using FreeBSD-stable
-
-
-
-
-
- Join the &a.stable; . This will
-keep you informed of build-dependencies that may appear in
-stable or any other issues requiring special attention.
-Developers will also make announcements in this mailing list when
-they are contemplating some controversial fix or update, giving
-the users a chance to respond if they have any issues to raise concerning
-the proposed change.
-
-To join this list, send mail to &a.majordomo; and say:
- subscribe freebsd-stable
-
-In the body of your message. Optionally, you can also say `help'
-and Majordomo will send you full help on how to subscribe and
-unsubscribe to the various other mailing lists we support.
-
-
-
-
- Grab the sources from ftp.FreeBSD.ORG. You can do this in
-three ways:
-
-
-
-
- Use the facility. Unless you
-have a good TCP/IP connection at a flat rate, this is
-the way to do it.
-
-
-
-
- Use the program with
-this supfile.
-This is the second most recommended method, since it allows
-you to grab the entire collection once and then only what has
-changed from then on. Many people run cvsup from cron
-to keep their sources up-to-date automatically.
-
-
-
-
- Use ftp. The source tree for FreeBSD-stable is always
-"exported" on:
-ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/FreeBSD-stable
-
-
-
-We also use `wu-ftpd' which allows compressed/tar'd grabbing
-of whole trees. e.g. you see:
- usr.bin/lex
-
-You can do:
- ftp> cd usr.bin
- ftp> get lex.tar.Z
-
-And it will get the whole directory for you as a compressed
-tar file.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Essentially, if you need rapid on-demand access to the source and
-communications bandwidth is not a consideration, use cvsup or ftp.
-Otherwise, use CTM.
-
-
-
-
- Before compiling stable, read the Makefile in /usr/src
-carefully. You should at least run a `' the first time through as part of the upgrading
-process. Reading the &a.stable; will keep you up-to-date on other
-bootstrapping procedures that sometimes become necessary as we move
-towards the next release.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Synchronizing Source Trees over the Internet
-
-Contributed by &a.jkh;.
-
-There are various ways of using an Internet (or email) connection
-to stay up-to-date with any given area of the FreeBSD project sources,
-or all areas, depending on what interests you. The primary
-services we offer are CVSup and CTM.
-
-CVSup uses the pull model of updating. The
-user (or a cron script) invokes the cvsup program, and it
-interacts with a cvsupd server somewhere to bring your files
-up to date. The updates you receive are up-to-the-minute and you get
-them when, and only when, you want them. You can easily restrict your
-updates to the specific files or directories that are of interest to
-you. Updates are generated on the fly by the server, according to
-what you have and what you want to have.
-
-CTM, on the other hand, does not interactively compare
-the sources you have with those on the master archive. Instead, a script
-which identifies changes in files since its previous run is executed several
-times a day on the master archive, any detected changes being compressed,
-stamped with a sequence-number and encoded for transmission over email
-(printable ASCII only). Once received, these "CTM deltas" can then be
-handed to the ctm_rmail(1) utility which will automatically decode, verify
-and apply the changes to the user's copy of the sources. This process is
-far more efficient than CVSup, and places less strain on our server resources
-since it is a push rather than a pull model.
-
-There are other trade-offs, of course. If you
-inadvertently wipe out portions of your archive, CVSup will detect
-and rebuild the damaged portions for you. CTM won't do this, and if
-you wipe some portion of your source tree out (and don't have it backed
-up) then you will have to start from scratch (from the most recent CVS
-"base delta") and rebuild it all.
-
-For more information on CTM and CVSup, please
-see one of the following sections:
-
-
-
-CTM
-
-Contributed by &a.phk;. Updated 19-October-1997.
-
-CTM is a method for keeping a remote directory tree in sync with a
-central one. It has been developed for usage with FreeBSD's source
-trees, though other people may find it useful for other purposes as
-time goes by. Little, if any, documentation currently exists at
-this time on the process of creating deltas, so talk to &a.phk;
-for more information should you wish to use CTM for other things.
-
-
-
-Why should I use CTM?
-
-CTM will give you a local copy of the FreeBSD source trees.
-There are a number of ``flavors'' of the tree available. Whether
-you wish to track the entire cvs tree or just one of the branches,
-CTM can provide you the information.
-If you are an active developer on FreeBSD, but have lousy
-or non-existent TCP/IP connectivity, or simply wish to have the
-changes automatically sent to you, CTM was made for you.
-You will need to obtain up to three deltas per day for the most
-active branches. However, you should consider having them sent
-by automatic email. The sizes of the updates are
-always kept as small as possible. This is typically less than 5K,
-with an occasional (one in ten) being 10-50K and every now and
-then a biggie of 100K+ or more coming around.
-
-You will also need to make yourself aware of the various caveats
-related to working directly from the development sources rather
-than a pre-packaged release. This is particularly true if you
-choose the ``current'' sources. It is recommended that
-you read .
-
-
-
-
-What do I need to use CTM?
-
-You will need two things: The ``CTM'' program and the initial
-deltas to feed it (to get up to ``current'' levels).
-
-The CTM program has been part of FreeBSD ever since version 2.0
-was released, and lives in /usr/src/usr.sbin/CTM if you
-have a copy of the source online.
-
-If you are running a pre-2.0 version of FreeBSD, you can fetch the
-current CTM sources directly from:
-
-ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/FreeBSD-current/src/usr.sbin/ctm
-
-The ``deltas'' you feed CTM can be had two ways, FTP or e-mail.
-If you have general FTP access to the Internet then the following
-FTP sites support access to CTM:
-
-ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/CTM
-
-or see section .
-
-FTP the relevant directory and fetch the README file,
-starting from there.
-
-If you may wish to get your deltas via email:
-
-Send email to &a.majordomo; to subscribe to one of the CTM
-distribution lists. ``ctm-cvs-cur'' supports the entire cvs tree.
-``ctm-src-cur'' supports the head of the development branch.
-``ctm-src-2_2'' supports the 2.2 release branch, etc.
-(If you do not know how to subscribe
-yourself using majordomo, send a message first containing the
-word ``help'' - it will send you back usage instructions.)
-
-When you begin receiving your CTM updates in the mail, you may
-use the ctm_rmail program to unpack and apply them. You
-can actually use the ctm_rmail program directly from a entry
-in /etc/aliases if you want to have the process run in a
-fully automated fashion. Check the ctm_rmail man page for more
-details.
-
-NOTE: No matter what method you use to get the CTM
-deltas, you should subscribe to the ctm-announce@FreeBSD.ORG
-mailing list. In the future, this will be the only place where
-announcements concerning the operations of the CTM system will be
-posted. Send an email to &a.majordomo; with a single
-line of ``subscribe ctm-announce'' to get added to the list.
-
-
-
-
-Starting off with CTM for the first time
-
-Before you can start using CTM deltas, you will need to get a
-to a starting point for the deltas produced subsequently to it.
-
-First you should determine what you already have. Everyone can
-start from an ``Empty'' directory. However, since the trees are
-many tens of megabytes, you should prefer to start from something
-already at hand. If you have a RELEASE CD, you can copy or extract
-an initial source from it. This will save a significant transfer
-of data.
-
-Once you identify a suitable starting point, you must use an initial
-``transition'' delta to transform your starting point into a
-CTM supported tree.
-
-You can recognize these transition deltas by the ``X'' appended
-to the number (src-cur.3210XEmpty.gz for instance).
-The designation following the ``X'' corresponds to the origin
-of your initial ``seed''. ``Empty'' is an empty directory, ``R225''
-would designate the 2.2.5 release, etc.
-As a rule a base transition from ``Empty'' is producted
-every 100 deltas. By the way, they are large! 25 to 30
-Megabytes of gzip'ed data is common for the ``XEmpty'' deltas.
-
-Once you've picked a base delta to start from, you will also need
-all deltas with higher numbers following it.
-
-
-
-
-Using CTM in your daily life
-
-To apply the deltas, simply say:
-
-cd /where/ever/you/want/the/stuff
-ctm -v -v /where/you/store/your/deltas/src-xxx.*
-
-
-
-
-CTM understands deltas which have been put through gzip,
-so you do not need to gunzip them first, this saves disk space.
-
-Unless it feels very secure about the entire process, CTM will
-not touch your tree. To verify a delta you can also use the
-``'' flag and CTM will not actually touch your tree; it will
-merely verify the integrity of the delta and see if it would apply
-cleanly to your current tree.
-
-There are other options to CTM as well, see the manual pages
-or look in the sources for more information.
-
-I would also be very happy if somebody could help with the ``user
-interface'' portions, as I have realized that I cannot make up my
-mind on what options should do what, how and when...
-
-That's really all there is to it. Every time you get a new delta,
-just run it through CTM to keep your sources up to date.
-
-Do not remove the deltas if they are hard to download again. You
-just might want to keep them around in case something bad happens.
-Even if you only have floppy disks, consider using fdwrite to
-make a copy.
-
-
-
-
-Keeping your local changes
-
-As a developer one would like to experiment with and change
-files in the source tree. CTM supports local modifications in a
-limited way: before checking for the presence of a file
-foo, it first looks for foo.ctm. If this
-file exists, CTM will operate on it instead of foo.
-
-This behaviour gives us a simple way to maintain local changes:
-simply copy the files you plan to modify to the corresponding
-file names with a .ctm suffix. Then you can freely hack
-the code, while CTM keeps the .ctm file up-to-date.
-
-
-
-
-Other interesting CTM options
-
-
-
-Finding out exactly what would be touched by an update
-
-You can determine the list of changes that CTM will make on your
-source repository using the ``'' option to CTM.
-
-This is useful if you would like to keep logs of the changes,
-pre- or post- process the modified files in any manner, or just
-are feeling a tad paranoid :-).
-
-
-
-
-Making backups before updating
-
-Sometimes you may want to backup all the files that would be changed
-by a CTM update.
-
-Specifying the ``'' option causes
-CTM to backup all files that would be touched by a given CTM
-delta to backup-file.
-
-
-
-
-Restricting the files touched by an update
-
-Sometimes you would be interested in restricting the scope of a
-given CTM update, or may be interested in extracting just a few
-files from a sequence of deltas.
-
-You can control the list of files that CTM would operate on by
-specifying filtering regular expressions using the
-``'' and ``'' options.
-
-For example, to extract an up-to-date copy of
-lib/libc/Makefile from your collection of saved CTM deltas,
-run the commands:
-
-cd /where/ever/you/want/to/extract/it/
-ctm -e '^lib/libc/Makefile' ~ctm/src-xxx.*
-
-
-
-
-For every file specified in a CTM delta, the ``'' and
-``'' options are applied in the order given on the
-command line. The file is processed by CTM only if it is
-marked as eligible after all the ``'' and
-``'' options are applied to it.
-
-
-
-
-
-Future plans for CTM
-
-Tons of them:
-
-
-
-Use some kind of authentication into the CTM system, so as to
-allow detection of spoofed CTM updates.
-
-
-
-Clean up the options to CTM, they became confusing and
-counter intuitive.
-
-
-
-
-
-The bad news is that I am very busy, so any help in doing this will
-be most welcome. And do not forget to tell me what you want also...
-
-
-
-
-Miscellaneous stuff
-
-All the ``DES infected'' (e.g. export controlled) source is not
-included. You will get the ``international'' version only. If
-sufficient interest appears, we will set up a ``sec-cur''
-sequence too.
-There is a sequence of deltas for the ports collection too,
-but interest has not been all that high yet. Tell me if you want
-an email list for that too and we will consider setting it up.
-
-
-
-
-Thanks!
-
-
-
-&a.bde;
-
-for his pointed pen and invaluable comments.
-
-
-
-
-&a.sos;
-
-
-for patience.
-
-
-
-
-Stephen McKay
-
-
-wrote ctm_[rs]mail, much appreciated.
-
-
-
-
-&a.jkh;
-
-
-for being so stubborn that I had to make it better.
-
-
-
-
-All the users
-
-
-I hope you like it...
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CVSup
-
-Contributed by &a.jdp;.
-
-
-
-Introduction
-
-CVSup is a software package for distributing and updating source
-trees from a master CVS repository on a remote server host. The
-FreeBSD sources are maintained in a CVS repository on a central
-development machine in California. With CVSup, FreeBSD users can
-easily keep their own source trees up to date.
-
-CVSup uses the so-called pull model of updating. Under the pull
-model, each client asks the server for updates, if and when they are
-wanted. The server waits passively for update requests from its
-clients. Thus all updates are instigated by the client. The server
-never sends unsolicited updates. Users must either run the CVSup client
-manually to get an update, or they must set up a cron job to run it
-automatically on a regular basis.
-
-The term "CVSup", capitalized just so, refers to the entire software
-package. Its main components are the client "cvsup" which runs on each
-user's machine, and the server "cvsupd" which runs at each of the
-FreeBSD mirror sites.
-
-As you read the FreeBSD documentation and mailing lists, you may
-see references to sup. Sup was the predecessor of CVSup,
-and it served a similar purpose. CVSup is in used in much the same
-way as sup and, in fact, uses configuration files which are
-backward-compatible with sup's. Sup is no longer used in the FreeBSD
-project, because CVSup is both faster and more flexible.
-
-
-
-
-Installation
-
-The easiest way to install CVSup if you are running FreeBSD 2.2 or
-later is to use either the port from the FreeBSD or the corresponding binary package, depending on whether you prefer to roll your
-own or not.
-
-If you are running FreeBSD-2.1.6 or 2.1.7, you unfortunately cannot use the
-binary package versions due to the fact that it requires a version of
-the C library that does not yet exist in FreeBSD-2.1.{6,7}. You can easily
-use the port, however, just as with FreeBSD 2.2. Simply unpack
-the tar file, cd to the cvsup subdirectory and type "make install".
-
-Because CVSup is written in Modula-3, both the package and the port require that the
-Modula-3 runtime libraries be installed. These are available as the
-lang/modula-3-lib port and the lang/modula-3-lib-3.6 package. If you follow the same
-directions as for cvsup, these libraries will be compiled and/or
-installed automatically when you install the CVSup port or package.
-
-The Modula-3 libraries are rather large, and fetching and compiling
-them is not an instantaneous process. For that reason, a third option
-is provided. You can get statically linked FreeBSD
-executables for CVSup from either the USA distribution site:
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsup-bin-15.3.tar.gz
-(client including GUI).
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsup.nogui-bin-15.3.tar.gz
-(client without GUI).
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsupd-bin-15.3.tar.gz
-(server).
-
-
-
-
-
-or the German mirror:
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.cs.tu-berlin.de/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsup-bin-15.3.tar.gz
-(client including GUI).
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.cs.tu-berlin.de/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsup.nogui-bin-15.3.tar.gz
-(client without GUI).
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.cs.tu-berlin.de/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsupd-bin-15.3.tar.gz
-(server).
-
-
-
-
-
-Most users will need only the client. These executables are entirely
-self-contained, and they will run on any version of FreeBSD from
-FreeBSD-2.1.0 to FreeBSD-current.
-
-In summary, your options for installing CVSup are:
-
-
-
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.2 or later: static binary, port, or package
-
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.1.6, 2.1.7: static binary or port
-
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.1.5 or earlier: static binary
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Configuration
-
-CVSup's operation is controlled by a configuration file called the
-"supfile". Beginning with FreeBSD-2.2, there are some sample supfiles
-in the directory /usr/share/examples/cvsup. These examples are also available
-from ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/FreeBSD-current/src/share/examples/cvsup/ if you are on a pre-2.2 system.
-
-The information in a supfile answers the following questions for cvsup:
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-In the following sections, we will construct a typical supfile by
-answering each of these questions in turn. First, we describe the
-overall structure of a supfile.
-
-A supfile is a text file. Comments begin with "#" and extend to
-the end of the line. Lines that are blank and lines that contain only
-comments are ignored.
-
-Each remaining line describes a set of files that the user wishes
-to receive. The line begins with the name of a "collection", a
-logical grouping of files defined by the server. The name of the
-collection tells the server which files you want. After the
-collection name come zero or more fields, separated by white space.
-These fields answer the questions listed above. There are two types
-of fields: flag fields and value fields. A flag field consists of a
-keyword standing alone, e.g., "delete" or "compress". A value field
-also begins with a keyword, but the keyword is followed without
-intervening white space by "=" and a second word. For example,
-"release=cvs" is a value field.
-
-A supfile typically specifies more than one collection to receive.
-One way to structure a supfile is to specify all of the relevant
-fields explicitly for each collection. However, that tends to make
-the supfile lines quite long, and it is inconvenient because most
-fields are the same for all of the collections in a supfile. CVSup
-provides a defaulting mechanism to avoid these problems. Lines
-beginning with the special pseudo-collection name "*default" can be
-used to set flags and values which will be used as defaults for the
-subsequent collections in the supfile. A default value can be
-overridden for an individual collection, by specifying a different
-value with the collection itself. Defaults can also be changed or
-augmented in mid-supfile by additional "*default" lines.
-
-With this background, we will now proceed to construct a supfile
-for receiving and updating the main source tree of .
-
-
-
-
-
-Which files do you want to receive?
-
-
-
-The files available via CVSup are organized into named
-groups called "collections". The collections that are available are
-described .
-In this example, we wish to receive the
-entire main source tree for the FreeBSD system. There is a single
-large collection "src-all" which will give us all of that, except the
-export-controlled cryptography support. Let us assume for this
-example that we are in the USA or Canada. Then we can get the
-cryptography code with one additional collection, "cvs-crypto".
-As a first step toward constructing our supfile, we
-simply list these collections, one per line:
-
-
- src-all
- cvs-crypto
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Which version(s) of them do you want?
-
-
-
-With CVSup, you can receive virtually any version of the sources
-that ever existed. That is possible because the cvsupd server works
-directly from the CVS repository, which contains all of the versions.
-You specify which one of them you want using the "tag=" and "date="
-value fields.
-
-
-
-WARNING: Be very careful to specify any "tag=" fields
-correctly. Some tags are valid only for certain collections of
-files. If you specify an incorrect or misspelled tag, CVSup will
-delete files which you probably do not want deleted.
-In particular, use only "tag=." for the "ports-*"
-collections.
-
-
-
-The "tag=" field names a symbolic tag in the repository. There are
-two kinds of tags, revision tags and branch tags. A revision tag
-refers to a specific revision. Its meaning stays the same from day to
-day. A branch tag, on the other hand, refers to the latest revision
-on a given line of development, at any given time. Because a branch
-tag does not refer to a specific revision, it may mean something
-different tomorrow than it means today.
-
-
-
-Here are the branch tags that users might be interested in:
-
-
-
-tag=.
-
-The main line of development, also known as FreeBSD-current.
-Note: the "." is not punctuation; it is the name of the tag.
-Valid for all collections.
-
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_2
-
-
-The line of development for FreeBSD-2.2.x, also known as
-FreeBSD-stable.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_1_0
-
-
-The line of development for FreeBSD-2.1.x - this branch
-is largely obsolete.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Here are the revision tags that users might be interested in:
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_2_6_RELEASE
-
-FreeBSD-2.2.6.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_2_5_RELEASE
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.2.5.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_2_2_RELEASE
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.2.2.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_2_1_RELEASE
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.2.1.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_2_0_RELEASE
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.2.0.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_1_7_RELEASE
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.1.7.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_1_6_1_RELEASE
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.1.6.1.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_1_6_RELEASE
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.1.6.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_1_5_RELEASE
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.1.5.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-tag=RELENG_2_1_0_RELEASE
-
-
-FreeBSD-2.1.0.
-Not valid for the ports-* collections.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-WARNING: Be very careful to type the tag name exactly as
-shown. CVSup cannot distinguish between valid and invalid tags.
-If you misspell the tag, CVSup will behave as though you had
-specified a valid tag which happens to refer to no files at all.
-It will delete your existing sources in that case.
-
-
-
-When you specify a branch tag, you normally receive the latest versions
-of the files on that line of development. If you wish to receive some
-past version, you can do so by specifying a date with the "date=" value
-field. The cvsup(1) manual page explains how to do that.
-
-
-
-For our example, we wish to receive FreeBSD-current. We add this line
-at the beginning of our supfile:
-
-
- *default tag=.
-
-
-
-
-There is an important special case that comes into play if you specify
-neither a "tag=" field nor a "date=" field. In that case, you receive
-the actual RCS files directly from the server's CVS repository, rather
-than receiving a particular version. Developers generally prefer this
-mode of operation. By maintaining a copy of the repository itself on
-their systems, they gain the ability to browse the revision histories
-and examine past versions of files. This gain is achieved at a large
-cost in terms of disk space, however.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Where do you want to get them from?
-
-
-
-We use the "host=" field to tell cvsup where to obtain its updates.
-Any of the will do,
-though you should try to select one that's near to you.
-In this example, we'll use the primary FreeBSD distribution site,
-"cvsup.FreeBSD.org":
-
-
- *default host=cvsup.FreeBSD.org
-
-
-
-
-On any particular run of cvsup, you can override this setting on the
-command line, with "-h hostname".
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Where do you want to put them on your own machine?
-
-
-
-The "prefix=" field tells cvsup where to put the files it receives.
-In this example, we will put the source files directly into our main
-source tree, "/usr/src". The "src" directory is already implicit in the
-collections we have chosen to receive, so this is the correct
-specification:
-
-
- *default prefix=/usr
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Where should cvsup maintain its status files?
-
-
-
-The cvsup client maintains certain status files in what is called
-the "base" directory. These files help CVSup to work more
-efficiently, by keeping track of which updates you have already
-received. We will use the standard base directory,
-"/usr/local/etc/cvsup":
-
-
- *default base=/usr/local/etc/cvsup
-
-
-
-
-This setting is used by default if it is not specified in the
-supfile, so we actually do not need the above line.
-
-
-
-If your base directory does not already exist, now would be a good
-time to create it. The cvsup client will refuse to run if the base
-directory does not exist.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Miscellaneous supfile settings:
-
-
-
-There is one more line of boiler plate that normally needs to be
-present in the supfile:
-
-
- *default release=cvs delete use-rel-suffix compress
-
-
-
-
-"release=cvs" indicates that the server should get its information
-out of the main FreeBSD CVS repository. This is virtually always the
-case, but there are other possibilities which are beyond the scope of
-this discussion.
-
-
-
-"delete" gives CVSup permission to delete files. You should always
-specify this, so that CVSup can keep your source tree fully up to
-date. CVSup is careful to delete only those files for which it is
-responsible. Any extra files you happen to have will be left strictly
-alone.
-
-
-
-"use-rel-suffix" is ... arcane. If you really want to know about
-it, see the cvsup(1) manual page. Otherwise, just specify it and
-do not worry about it.
-
-
-
-"compress" enables the use of gzip-style compression on the
-communication channel. If your network link is T1 speed or faster,
-you probably should not use compression. Otherwise, it helps
-substantially.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Putting it all together:
-
-
-
-Here is the entire supfile for our example:
-
-
- *default tag=.
- *default host=cvsup.FreeBSD.org
- *default prefix=/usr
- *default base=/usr/local/etc/cvsup
- *default release=cvs delete use-rel-suffix compress
- src-all
- cvs-crypto
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Running CVSup
-
-You are now ready to try an update. The command line for doing this is
-quite simple:
-
-
- cvsup supfile
-
-
-where "supfile" is of course the name of the supfile you have just created.
-Assuming you are running under X11, cvsup will display a GUI window with
-some buttons to do the usual things. Press the "go" button, and watch
-it run.
-
-Since you are updating your actual "/usr/src" tree in this example, you
-will need to run the program as root so that cvsup has the permissions
-it needs to update your files. Having just created your configuration
-file, and having never used this program before, that might
-understandably make you nervous. There is an easy way to do a trial run
-without touching your precious files. Just create an empty directory
-somewhere convenient, and name it as an extra argument on the command
-line:
-
-
- mkdir /var/tmp/dest
- cvsup supfile /var/tmp/dest
-
-
-The directory you specify will be used as the destination directory
-for all file updates. CVSup will examine your usual files in
-"/usr/src", but it will not modify or delete any of them. Any file
-updates will instead land in "/var/tmp/dest/usr/src". CVSup will also
-leave its base directory status files untouched when run this way.
-The new versions of those files will be written into the specified
-directory. As long as you have read access to "/usr/src", you do not
-even need to be root to perform this kind of trial run.
-
-If you are not running X11 or if you just do not like GUIs, you
-should add a couple of options to the command line when you run cvsup:
-
-
- cvsup -g -L 2 supfile
-
-
-The "-g" tells cvsup not to use its GUI. This is automatic if you are
-not running X11, but otherwise you have to specify it.
-
-The "-L 2" tells cvsup to print out the details of all the file updates
-it is doing. There are three levels of verbosity, from "-L 0" to "-L 2".
-The default is 0, which means total silence except for error messages.
-
-There are plenty of other options available. For a brief list of them,
-type "cvsup -H". For more detailed descriptions, see the manual page.
-
-Once you are satisfied with the way updates are working, you can arrange
-for regular runs of cvsup using cron(8). Obviously, you should not let
-cvsup use its GUI when running it from cron.
-
-
-
-
-CVSup File Collections
-
-The file collections available via CVSup are organized
-hierarchically. There are a few large collections, and they are
-divided into smaller sub-collections. Receiving a large collection
-is equivalent to receiving each of its sub-collections.
-The hierarchical relationships among collections are reflected by
-the use of indentation in the list below.
-
- The most commonly used collections are src-all,
-cvs-crypto, and ports-all. The other collections are used
-only by small groups of people for specialized purposes, and some mirror
-sites may not carry all of them.
-
-
-
-cvs-all release=cvs
-
-The main FreeBSD CVS repository, excluding the export-restricted
-cryptography code.
-
-
-
-distrib release=cvs
-
-Files related to the distribution and mirroring of FreeBSD.
-
-
-
-
-doc-all release=cvs
-
-
-Sources for the FreeBSD handbook and other documentation.
-
-
-
-
-ports-all release=cvs
-
-
-The FreeBSD ports collection.
-
-
-
-ports-archivers release=cvs
-
-Archiving tools.
-
-
-
-
-ports-astro release=cvs
-
-
-Astronomical ports.
-
-
-
-
-ports-audio release=cvs
-
-
-Sound support.
-
-
-
-
-ports-base release=cvs
-
-
-Miscellaneous files at the top of /usr/ports.
-
-
-
-
-ports-benchmarks release=cvs
-
-
-Benchmarks.
-
-
-
-
-ports-biology release=cvs
-
-
-Biology.
-
-
-
-
-ports-cad release=cvs
-
-
-Computer aided design tools.
-
-
-
-
-ports-chinese release=cvs
-
-
-Chinese language support.
-
-
-
-
-ports-comms release=cvs
-
-
-Communication software.
-
-
-
-
-ports-converters release=cvs
-
-
-character code converters.
-
-
-
-
-ports-databases release=cvs
-
-
-Databases.
-
-
-
-
-ports-devel release=cvs
-
-
-Development utilities.
-
-
-
-
-ports-editors release=cvs
-
-
-Editors.
-
-
-
-
-ports-emulators release=cvs
-
-
-Emulators for other operating systems.
-
-
-
-
-ports-games release=cvs
-
-
-Games.
-
-
-
-
-ports-german release=cvs
-
-
-German language support.
-
-
-
-
-ports-graphics release=cvs
-
-
-Graphics utilities.
-
-
-
-
-ports-japanese release=cvs
-
-
-Japanese language support.
-
-
-
-
-ports-korean release=cvs
-
-
-Korean language support.
-
-
-
-
-ports-lang release=cvs
-
-
-Programming languages.
-
-
-
-
-ports-mail release=cvs
-
-
-Mail software.
-
-
-
-
-ports-math release=cvs
-
-
-Numerical computation software.
-
-
-
-
-ports-mbone release=cvs
-
-
-MBone applications.
-
-
-
-
-ports-misc release=cvs
-
-
-Miscellaneous utilities.
-
-
-
-
-ports-net release=cvs
-
-
-Networking software.
-
-
-
-
-ports-news release=cvs
-
-
-USENET news software.
-
-
-
-
-ports-plan9 release=cvs
-
-
-Various programs from Plan9.
-
-
-
-
-ports-print release=cvs
-
-
-Printing software.
-
-
-
-
-ports-russian release=cvs
-
-
-Russian language support.
-
-
-
-
-ports-security release=cvs
-
-
-Security utilities.
-
-
-
-
-ports-shells release=cvs
-
-
-Command line shells.
-
-
-
-
-ports-sysutils release=cvs
-
-
-System utilities.
-
-
-
-
-ports-textproc release=cvs
-
-
-text processing utilities (does not include desktop publishing).
-
-
-
-
-ports-vietnamese release=cvs
-
-
-Vietnamese language support.
-
-
-
-
-ports-www release=cvs
-
-
-Software related to the World Wide Web.
-
-
-
-
-ports-x11 release=cvs
-
-
-X11 software.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-src-all release=cvs
-
-
-The main FreeBSD sources, excluding the export-restricted cryptography
-code.
-
-
-
-src-base release=cvs
-
-Miscellaneous files at the top of /usr/src.
-
-
-
-
-src-bin release=cvs
-
-
-User utilities that may be needed in single-user mode
-(/usr/src/bin).
-
-
-
-
-src-contrib release=cvs
-
-
-Utilities and libraries from outside the FreeBSD project, used
-relatively unmodified (/usr/src/contrib).
-
-
-
-
-src-etc release=cvs
-
-
-System configuration files (/usr/src/etc).
-
-
-
-
-src-games release=cvs
-
-
-Games (/usr/src/games).
-
-
-
-
-src-gnu release=cvs
-
-
-Utilities covered by the GNU Public License (/usr/src/gnu).
-
-
-
-
-src-include release=cvs
-
-
-Header files (/usr/src/include).
-
-
-
-
-src-kerberosIV release=cvs
-
-
-KerberosIV security package (/usr/src/kerberosIV).
-
-
-
-
-src-lib release=cvs
-
-
-Libraries (/usr/src/lib).
-
-
-
-
-src-libexec release=cvs
-
-
-System programs normally executed by other programs
-(/usr/src/libexec).
-
-
-
-
-src-release release=cvs
-
-
-Files required to produce a FreeBSD release (/usr/src/release).
-
-
-
-
-src-sbin release=cvs
-
-
-System utilities for single-user mode (/usr/src/sbin).
-
-
-
-
-src-share release=cvs
-
-
-Files that can be shared across multiple systems (/usr/src/share).
-
-
-
-
-src-sys release=cvs
-
-
-The kernel (/usr/src/sys).
-
-
-
-
-src-tools release=cvs
-
-
-Various tools for the maintenance of FreeBSD (/usr/src/tools).
-
-
-
-
-src-usrbin release=cvs
-
-
-User utilities (/usr/src/usr.bin).
-
-
-
-
-src-usrsbin release=cvs
-
-
-System utilities (/usr/src/usr.sbin).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-www release=cvs
-
-
-The sources for the World Wide Web data.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvs-crypto release=cvs
-
-
-The export-restricted cryptography code.
-
-
-
-src-crypto release=cvs
-
-Export-restricted utilities and libraries from outside the FreeBSD
-project, used relatively unmodified (/usr/src/crypto).
-
-
-
-
-src-eBones release=cvs
-
-
-Kerberos and DES (/usr/src/eBones).
-
-
-
-
-src-secure release=cvs
-
-
-DES (/usr/src/secure).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-distrib release=self
-
-
-The CVSup server's own configuration files. Used by CVSup mirror sites.
-
-
-
-
-gnats release=current
-
-
-The GNATS bug-tracking database.
-
-
-
-
-mail-archive release=current
-
-
-FreeBSD mailing list archive.
-
-
-
-
-www release=current
-
-
-The installed World Wide Web data. Used by WWW mirror sites.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Announcements, Questions, and Bug Reports
-
-Most FreeBSD-related discussion of CVSup takes place on the
-&a.hackers;. New versions of the software are announced there, as
-well as on the &a.announce;.
-
-Questions and bug reports should be addressed to the author of the
-program at cvsup-bugs@polstra.com.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Using make world to rebuild your system
-
-Contributed by &a.nik;.
-
-Once you have synchronised your local source tree against a particular
-version of FreeBSD (stable, current and so on) you
-must then use the source tree to rebuild the system.
-
-Currently, the best source of information on how to do that is a
-tutorial available from http://www.nothing-going-on.demon.co.uk/FreeBSD/make-world/make-world.html.
-
-A successor to this tutorial will be integrated into the handbook.
-
-
-
-
-
-Contributing to FreeBSD
-
-Contributed by &a.jkh;.
-
-So you want to contribute something to FreeBSD? That is great!
-We can always use the help, and FreeBSD is one of those systems
-that relies on the contributions of its user base in order
-to survive. Your contributions are not only appreciated, they are
-vital to FreeBSD's continued growth!
-
-Contrary to what some people might also have you believe, you do not
-need to be a hot-shot programmer or a close personal friend of the
-FreeBSD core team in order to have your contributions accepted. The
-FreeBSD Project's development is done by a large and growing number of
-international contributors whose ages and areas of technical expertise
-vary greatly, and there is always more work to be done than there are
-people available to do it.
-
-Since the FreeBSD project is responsible for an entire operating
-system environment (and its installation) rather than just a kernel or
-a few scattered utilities, our "TODO" list also spans a very wide
-range of tasks, from documentation, beta testing and presentation to
-highly specialized types of kernel development. No matter what your
-skill level, there is almost certainly something you can do to help the
-project!
-
-Commercial entities engaged in FreeBSD-related enterprises are
-also encouraged to contact us. Need a special extension to make your
-product work? You will find us receptive to your requests, given that
-they are not too outlandish. Working on a value-added product? Please
-let us know! We may be able to work cooperatively on some aspect of
-it. The free software world is challenging a lot of existing
-assumptions about how software is developed, sold, and maintained
-throughout its life cycle, and we urge you to at least give it a
-second look.
-
-
-
-What Is Needed
-
-The following list of tasks and sub-projects represents something
-of an amalgam of the various core team TODO lists and user requests
-we have collected over the last couple of months. Where possible, tasks
-have been ranked by degree of urgency. If you are interested in
-working on one of the tasks you see here, send mail to the coordinator
-listed by clicking on their names. If no coordinator has been
-appointed, maybe you would like to volunteer?
-
-
-
-High priority tasks
-
-The following tasks are considered to be urgent, usually because
-they represent something that is badly broken or sorely needed:
-
-
-
-3-stage boot issues. Overall coordination:
-&a.hackers;
-
-
-
-
-
-Autodetect memory over 64MB properly.
-
-
-
-Move userconfig (-c) into 3rd stage boot.
-
-
-
-Do WinNT compatible drive tagging so that the 3rd stage can
-provide an accurate mapping of BIOS geometries for disks.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Filesystem problems. Overall coordination:
-&a.fs;
-
-
-
-Fix the MSDOS file system.
-
-
-
-Clean up and document the nullfs filesystem code. Coordinator: &a.gibbs;
-
-
-
-Fix the union file system. Coordinator: &a.dyson;
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Implement kernel and user vm86 support. Coordinator: &a.hackers;
-
-
-
-Implement Int13 vm86 disk driver. Coordinator: &a.hackers;
-
-
-
-SCSI driver issues. Overall coordination: &a.hackers;
-
-
-
-
-
-Support tagged queuing generically. Requires a rewrite of how we do
-our command queuing, but we need this anyway to for prioritized I/O
-(CD-R writers/scanners).
-
-
-
-Better error handling (Busy status and retries).
-
-
-
-Merged Scatter-Gather list creation code.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Kernel issues. Overall coordination:
-&a.hackers;
-
-
-
-
-
-Complete the eisaconf conversion of all existing drivers.
-
-
-
-Change all interrupt routines to take a (void *) instead of
-using unit numbers.
-
-
-
-Merge EISA/PCI/ISA interrupt registration code.
-
-
-
-Split PCI/EISA/ISA probes out from drivers like bt742a.c (WIP)
-
-
-
-Fix the syscons ALT-Fn/vt switching hangs. Coordinator: &a.sos;
-
-
-
-Rewrite the Intel Etherexpress 16 driver.
-
-
-
-Merge the 3c509 and 3c590 drivers (essentially provide a PCI probe for
-ep.c).
-
-
-
-Support Adaptec 3985 (first as a simple 3 channel SCSI card)
-Coordinator: &a.gibbs;
-
-
-
-Support Advansys SCSI controller products. Coordinator: &a.gibbs;
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Medium priority tasks
-
-The following tasks need to be done, but not with any particular
-urgency:
-
-
-
-Port AFS (Andrew File System) to FreeBSD Coordinator: Alexander Seth Jones
-
-
-
-
-MCA support? This should be finalized one way or the other.
-
-
-
-Full LKM based driver support/Configuration Manager.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Devise a way to do all LKM registration without ld. This means
-some kind of symbol table in the kernel.
-
-
-
-Write a configuration manager (in the 3rd stage boot?) that probes
-your hardware in a sane manner, keeps only the LKMs required for
-your hardware, etc.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-PCMCIA/PCCARD. Coordinators: &a.nate; and &a.phk;
-
-
-
-Documentation!
-
-
-
-Reliable operation of the pcic driver (needs testing).
-
-
-
-Recognizer and handler for sio.c (mostly done).
-
-
-
-Recognizer and handler for ed.c (mostly done).
-
-
-
-Recognizer and handler for ep.c (mostly done).
-
-
-
-User-mode recognizer and handler (partially done).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Advanced Power Management. Coordinators: &a.nate; and &a.phk;
-
-
-
-APM sub-driver (mostly done).
-
-
-
-IDE/ATA disk sub-driver (partially done).
-
-
-
-syscons/pcvt sub-driver.
-
-
-
-Integration with the PCMCIA/PCCARD drivers (suspend/resume).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Low priority tasks
-
-The following tasks are purely cosmetic or represent such an
-investment of work that it is not likely that anyone will get them done
-anytime soon:
-
-The first 20 items are from Terry Lambert <terry@lambert.org>
-
-
-
-Ability to make BIOS calls from protected mode using V86 mode
-on the processor and return the results via a mapped interrupt
-IPC mechanism to the protected mode caller.
-
-
-
-
-Drivers built into the kernel that use the BIOS call mechanism
-to allow them to be independent of the actual underlying hardware
-the same way that DOS is independent of the underlying hardware.
-This includes NetWork and ASPI drivers loaded in DOS prior to
-BSD being loaded by a DOS-based loader program, which means
-potential polling, which means DOS-not-busy interrupt generation
-for V86 machines by the protected mode kernel.
-
-
-
-
-An image format that allows tagging of such drivers data and
-text areas in the default kernel executable so that that portion
-of the kernel address space may be recovered at a later time,
-after hardware specific protected mode drivers have been loaded
-and activated. This includes separation of BIOS based drivers
-from each other, since it is better to run with a BIOS based
-driver in all cases than to not run at all.
-
-
-
-
-Abstraction of the bus interface mechanism. Currently, PCMCIA,
-EISA, and PCI busses are assumed to be bridged from ISA. This
-is not something which should be assumed.
-
-
-
-
-A configuration manager that knows about PNP events, including
-power management events, insertion, extraction, and bus (PNP ISA
-and PCMCIA bridging chips) vs. card level event management.
-
-
-
-
-A topological sort mechanism for assigning reassignable addresses
-that do not collide with other reassignable and non-reassignable
-device space resource usage by fixed devices.
-
-
-
-
-A registration based mechanism for hardware services registration.
-Specifically, a device centric registration mechanism for timer
-and sound and other system critical service providers. Consider
-Timer2 and Timer0 and speaker services as one example of a single
-monolithic service provider.
-
-
-
-
-A kernel exported symbol space in the kernel data space accessible
-by an LKM loader mechanism that does relocation and symbol space
-manipulation. The intent of this interface is to support the
-ability to demand load and unload kernel modules.
-
-
-
-
-NetWare Server (protected mode ODI driver) loader and subservices
-to allow the use of ODI card drivers supplied with network cards.
-The same thing for NDIS drivers and NetWare SCSI drivers.
-
-
-
-
-An "upgrade system" option that works on Linux boxes instead
-of just previous rev FreeBSD boxes.
-
-
-
-
-Splitting of the console driver into abstraction layers, both to
-make it easier to port and to kill the X and ThinkPad and PS/2
-mouse and LED and console switching and bouncing NumLock problems
-once and for all.
-
-
-
-
-Other kernel emulation environments for other foreign drivers
-as opportunity permits. SCO and Solaris are good candidates,
-followed by UnixWare, etc.
-
-
-
-
-Processor emulation environments for execution of foreign binaries.
-This is easier than it sounds if the system call interface does not
-change much.
-
-
-
-
-Streams to allow the use of commercial streams drivers.
-
-
-
-
-Kernel multithreading (requires kernel preemption).
-
-
-
-
-Symmetric Multiprocessing with kernel preemption (requires kernel
-preemption).
-
-
-
-
-A concerted effort at support for portable computers. This is
-somewhat handled by changing PCMCIA bridging rules and power
-management event handling. But there are things like detecting
-internal vs. external display and picking a different screen
-resolution based on that fact, not spinning down the disk if
-the machine is in dock, and allowing dock-based cards to disappear
-without affecting the machines ability to boot (same issue for
-PCMCIA).
-
-
-
-
-Reorganization of the source tree for multiple platform ports.
-
-
-
-
-A "make world" that "makes the world" (rename the current one
-to "make regress" if that is all it is good for).
-
-
-
-
-A 4M (preferably smaller!) memory footprint.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Smaller tasks
-
-Most of the tasks listed in the previous sections require either a
-considerable investment of time or an in-depth knowledge of the FreeBSD
-kernel (or both). However, there are also many useful tasks which are
-suitable for "weekend hackers", or people without programming
-skills.
-
-
-
-
-
-If you run FreeBSD-current and have a good Internet connection,
-there is a machine current.freebsd.org which builds a full release
-once a day - every now and again, try and install the latest release
-from it and report any failures in the process.
-
-
-
-
-Read the freebsd-bugs mailing list. There might be a problem
-you can comment constructively on or with patches you can test. Or
-you could even try to fix one of the problems yourself.
-
-
-
-
-Read through the FAQ and Handbook periodically. If anything is
-badly explained, out of date or even just completely wrong, let us
-know. Even better, send us a fix (SGML is not difficult to learn, but
-there is no objection to ASCII submissions).
-
-
-
-
-Help translate FreeBSD documentation into your native language (if
-not already available) - just send an email to &a.doc; asking if anyone is
-working on it. Note that you are not committing yourself to translating
-every single FreeBSD document by doing this - in fact, the documentation
-most in need of translation is the installation instructions.
-
-
-
-
-Read the freebsd-questions mailing list and the newsgroup
-comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.misc occasionally (or even regularly). It can
-be very satisfying to share your expertise and help people solve their
-problems; sometimes you may even learn something new yourself! These
-forums can also be a source of ideas for things to work on.
-
-
-
-
-If you know of any bugfixes which have been successfully applied
-to -current but have not been merged into -stable after a decent
-interval (normally a couple of weeks), send the committer a polite
-reminder.
-
-
-
-
-Move contributed software to src/contrib in the source tree.
-
-
-
-
-Make sure code in src/contrib is up to date.
-
-
-
-
-Look for year 2000 bugs (and fix any you find!)
-
-
-
-
-Build the source tree (or just part of it) with extra warnings
-enabled and clean up the warnings.
-
-
-
-
-Fix warnings for ports which do deprecated things like using
-gets() or including malloc.h.
-
-
-
-
-If you have contributed any ports, send your patches back to the
-original author (this will make your life easier when they bring out
-the next version)
-
-
-
-
-Suggest further tasks for this list!
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-How to Contribute
-
-Contributions to the system generally fall into one or more of
-the following 6 categories:
-
-
-
-Bug reports and general commentary
-
-
-An idea or suggestion of general technical interest
-should be mailed to the &a.hackers;. Likewise, people with an
-interest in such things (and a tolerance for a high
-volume of mail!) may subscribe to the hackers mailing list by
-sending mail to &a.majordomo;. See
-
-for more information about this and other mailing lists.
-
-If you find a bug or are submitting a specific change, please report
-it using the send-pr(1) program or its
-WEB-based equivalent.
-Try to fill-in each field of the bug report. Unless they exceed
-65KB, include any patches directly in the report. Consider compressing
-them and using uuencode(1) if they exceed 20KB.
-
-After filing a report, you should receive confirmation along with
-a tracking number. Keep this tracking number so that you can
-update us with details about the problem by sending mail to
-bug-followup@FreeBSD.ORG. Use the number as the
-message subject, e.g. "Re: kern/3377". Additional
-information for any bug report should be submitted this way.
-
-If you do not receive confirmation in a timely fashion (3 days to
-a week, depending on your email connection) or are, for some
-reason, unable to use the send-pr(1) command,
-then you may ask someone to file it for you by sending mail
-to the &a.bugs;.
-
-
-
-
-Changes to the documentation
-
-Changes to the documentation are overseen by the &a.doc;.
-Send submissions and changes (even small ones are welcome!)
-using send-pr as described in
-.
-
-
-
-
-Changes to existing source code
-
-An addition or change to the existing source code is a somewhat trickier
-affair and depends a lot on how far out of date you are with the current
-state of the core FreeBSD development. There is a special on-going release
-of FreeBSD known as ``FreeBSD-current'' which is made available in
-a variety of ways for the convenience of developers working
-actively on the system. See for more information about getting and using
-FreeBSD-current.
-
-Working from older sources unfortunately means that your changes may
-sometimes be too obsolete or too divergent for easy re-integration into
-FreeBSD. Chances of this can be minimized somewhat by subscribing to the
-&a.announce; and the &a.current; lists, where discussions
-on the current state of the system take place.
-
-Assuming that you can manage to secure fairly up-to-date sources to base
-your changes on, the next step is to produce a set of diffs to send to the
-FreeBSD maintainers. This is done with the diff(1) command,
-with the `context diff' form being preferred. For example:
-
-diff -c oldfile newfile
-
-
-or
-
-diff -c -r olddir newdir
-
-
-would generate such a set of context diffs for the given source file
-or directory hierarchy. See the man page for diff(1) for more
-details.
-
-Once you have a set of diffs (which you may test with the
-patch(1) command), you should submit them for inclusion
-with FreeBSD. Use the send-pr(1) program as described in
-.
-Do not just send the diffs to the &a.hackers; or they will get
-lost! We greatly appreciate your submission (this is a volunteer
-project!); because we are busy, we may not be able to address it
-immediately, but it will remain in the pr database until we do.
-
-If you feel it appropriate (e.g. you have added, deleted, or
-renamed files), bundle your changes into a tar file
-and run the uuencode(1) program on it. Shar archives are
-also welcome.
-
-If your change is of a potentially sensitive nature, e.g.
-you are unsure of copyright issues governing its further distribution
-or you are simply not ready to release it without a tighter review first,
-then you should send it to &a.core; directly rather than submitting
-it with send-pr(1). The core mailing list
-reaches a much smaller group of people who do much of the
-day-to-day work on FreeBSD. Note that this group is also
-very busy and so you should only send mail to them
-where it is truly necessary.
-
-Please refer to man 9 intro and man 9 style
-for some information on coding style. We would appreciate
-it if you were at least aware of this information before
-submitting code.
-
-
-
-
-New code or major value-added packages
-
-In the rare case of a significant contribution of a large body
-work, or the addition of an important new feature to FreeBSD,
-it becomes almost always necessary to either send changes as
-uuencode'd tar files or upload them to our ftp site ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/incoming.
-
-When working with large amounts of code, the touchy subject of
-copyrights also invariably comes up. Acceptable copyrights
-for code included in FreeBSD are:
-
-
-
-
-
-The BSD copyright. This copyright is most preferred
-due to its ``no strings attached'' nature and general
-attractiveness to commercial enterprises. Far from
-discouraging such commercial use, the FreeBSD Project
-actively encourages such participation by commercial interests
-who might eventually be inclined to invest something of their own
-into FreeBSD.
-
-
-
-
-The GNU Public License, or ``GPL''. This license is not quite
-as popular with us due to the amount of extra effort demanded
-of anyone using the code for commercial purposes, but given
-the sheer quantity of GPL'd code we currently require (compiler,
-assembler, text formatter, etc) it would be silly to refuse
-additional contributions under this license. Code under the GPL
-also goes into a different part of the tree, that being
-/sys/gnu or /usr/src/gnu, and is therefore
-easily identifiable to anyone for whom the GPL presents a problem.
-
-
-
-
-
-Contributions coming under any other type of copyright must be
-carefully reviewed before their inclusion into FreeBSD will
-be considered. Contributions for which particularly restrictive
-commercial copyrights apply are generally rejected, though the
-authors are always encouraged to make such changes available
-through their own channels.
-
-To place a ``BSD-style'' copyright on your work, include the following
-text at the very beginning of every source code file you wish
-to protect, replacing the text between the `%%' with
-the appropriate information.
-
-Copyright (c) %%proper_years_here%%
- %%your_name_here%%, %%your_state%% %%your_zip%%. All rights reserved.
-
-Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
-modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
-are met:
-1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
- notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer as
- the first lines of this file unmodified.
-2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
- notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
- documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
-
-THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY %%your_name_here%% ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR
-IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES
-OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED.
-IN NO EVENT SHALL %%your_name_here%% BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT,
-INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT
-NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
-DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
-THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
-(INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF
-THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
-
- $Id$
-
-
-For your convenience, a copy of this text can be found in
-/usr/share/examples/etc/bsd-style-copyright.
-
-
-
-
-Porting an existing piece of free software
-
-Contributed by &a.jkh;, &a.gpalmer;, &a.asami; and
-&a.obrien;.28 August 1996.
-
-The porting of freely available software, while perhaps not as
-gratifying as developing your own from scratch, is still a vital part
-of FreeBSD's growth and of great usefulness to those who would not
-otherwise know where to turn for it. All ported software is organized
-into a carefully organized hierarchy known as ``the ports collection''.
-The collection enables a new user to get a quick and complete overview
-of what is available for FreeBSD in an easy-to-compile form. It also
-saves considerable space by not actually containing the majority
-of the sources being ported, but merely those differences required for
-running under FreeBSD.
-
-What follows are some guidelines for creating a new port for
-FreeBSD 3.x. The bulk of the work is done by
-/usr/share/mk/bsd.port.mk, which all port Makefiles include.
-Please refer to that file for more details on the inner workings of
-the ports collection. Even if you don't hack Makefiles daily, it is
-well commented, and you will still gain much knowledge from it.
-
-
-
-Before Starting the Port
-
-Note: Only a fraction of the overridable variables
-(${..}) are mentioned in this document. Most
-(if not all) are documented at the start of
-bsd.port.mk. This file uses a non-standard tab
-setting. Emacs and Vim should recognize the setting
-on loading the file. vi or ex can be set to
-using the correct value by typing `:set tabstop=4'
-once the file has been loaded.
-
-You may come across code that needs modifications or
-conditional compilation based upon what version of UNIX it is
-running under. If you need to make such changes to the code
-for conditional compilation, make sure you make the changes as
-general as possible so that we can back-port code to FreeBSD
-1.x systems and cross-port to other BSD systems such as 4.4BSD
-from CSRG, BSD/386, 386BSD, NetBSD, and OpenBSD.
-
-The preferred way to tell 4.3BSD/Reno (1990) and newer versions of
-the BSD code apart is by using the `BSD' macro
-defined in <sys/param.h>. Hopefully that file
-is already included; if not, add the code:
-
-
-
-#ifdef (defined(__unix__) || defined(unix)) && !defined(USG)
-#include <sys/param.h>
-#endif
-
-
-
-to the proper place in the .c file. We believe that every
-system that defines these to symbols has sys/param.h. If you find
-a system that doesn't, we would like to know. Please send
-mail to &a.ports;.
-
-Another way is to use the GNU Autoconf style of doing this:
-
-
-
-#ifdef HAVE_SYS_PARAM_H
-#include <sys/param.h>
-#endif
-
-
-
-Don't forget to add -DHAVE_SYS_PARAM_H to the CFLAGS
-in the Makefile for this method.
-
-Once you have <sys/param.h> included, you may use:
-
-
-
-#if (defined(BSD) && (BSD >= 199103))
-
-
-
-to detect if the code is being compiled on a 4.3 Net2 code
-base or newer (e.g. FreeBSD 1.x, 4.3/Reno, NetBSD 0.9, 386BSD,
-BSD/386 1.1 and below).
-
-Use:
-
-
-
-#if (defined(BSD) && (BSD >= 199306))
-
-
-
-to detect if the code is being compiled on a 4.4 code base or
-newer (e.g. FreeBSD 2.x, 4.4, NetBSD 1.0, BSD/386 2.0 or
-above).
-
-The value of the BSD macro is 199506 for the 4.4BSD-Lite2 code
-base. This is stated for informational purposes only. It should
-not be used to distinguish between version of FreeBSD based only
-on 4.4-Lite vs. versions that have merged in changes from 4.4-Lite2.
-The __FreeBSD__ macro should be used instead.
-
-Use sparingly:
-
-
-
-
-
-__FreeBSD__ is defined in all versions of
-FreeBSD. Use it if the change you are making ONLY affects
-FreeBSD. Porting gotchas like the use of
-sys_errlist[] vs strerror() are
-Berkeleyisms, not FreeBSD changes.
-
-
-
-
-In FreeBSD 2.x, __FreeBSD__ is defined to be
-2. In earlier versions, it is 1. Later
-versions will bump it to match their major version number.
-
-
-
-
-If you need to tell the difference between a FreeBSD 1.x
-system and a FreeBSD 2.x or 3.x system, usually the right answer is
-to use the BSD macros described above. If there
-actually is a FreeBSD specific change (such as special
-shared library options when using `ld') then it is
-OK to use __FreeBSD__ and `#if __FreeBSD__ >
-1' to detect a FreeBSD 2.x and later system.
-
-If you need more granularity in detecting FreeBSD systems since
-2.0-RELEASE you can use the following:
-
-
-#if __FreeBSD__ >= 2
-#include <osreldate.h>
-# if __FreeBSD_version >= 199504
- /* 2.0.5+ release specific code here */
-# endif
-#endif
-
-
-__FreeBSD_version values:
-
-2.0-RELEASE: 199411
-2.1-current's: 199501, 199503
-2.0.5-RELEASE: 199504
-2.2-current before 2.1: 199508
-2.1.0-RELEASE: 199511
-2.2-current before 2.1.5: 199512
-2.1.5-RELEASE: 199607
-2.2-current before 2.1.6: 199608
-2.1.6-RELEASE: 199612
-2.1.7-RELEASE: 199612
-2.2-RELEASE: 220000
-2.2.1-RELEASE: 220000 (yes, no change)
-2.2-STABLE after 2.2.1-RELEASE: 220000 (yes, still no change)
-2.2-STABLE after texinfo-3.9: 221001
-2.2-STABLE after top: 221002
-2.2.2-RELEASE: 222000
-2.2-STABLE after 2.2.2-RELEASE: 222001
-2.2.5-RELEASE: 225000
-2.2-STABLE after 2.2.5-RELEASE: 225001
-2.2-STABLE after ldconfig -R merge: 225002
-2.2.6-RELEASE: 226000
-2.2-STABLE after 2.2.6-RELEASE: 226001
-3.0-current before mount(2) change: 300000
-3.0-current as of Nov 1997: 300001
-
-
-(Note that 2.2-STABLE sometimes identifies itself as
-"2.2.5-STABLE" after the 2.2.5-RELEASE.)
-The pattern used to be year followed by the month, but we
-decided to change it to a more straightforward major/minor
-system starting from 2.2. This is because the parallel
-development on several branches made it infeasible to
-classify the releases simply by their real release dates.
-(Note that if you are making a port now, you don't have to
-worry about old -current's; they are listed here just for
-your reference.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-In the hundreds of ports that have been done, there have
-only been one or two cases where __FreeBSD__
-should have been used. Just because an earlier port
-screwed up and used it in the wrong place does not mean
-you should do so too.
-
-
-
-
-Quick Porting
-
-This section tells you how to do a quick port. In many
-cases, it is not enough, but we will see.
-
-First, get the original tarball and put it into
-${DISTDIR}, which defaults to
-/usr/ports/distfiles.
-
-Note: The following assumes that the software compiled
-out-of-the-box, i.e., there was absolutely no change required
-for the port to work on your FreeBSD box. If you needed to
-change something, you will have to refer to the next section
-too.
-
-
-
-Writing the Makefile
-
-The minimal Makefile would look something like this:
-
-
-
- # New ports collection makefile for: oneko
- # Version required: 1.1b
- # Date created: 5 December 1994
- # Whom: asami
- #
- # $Id$
- #
-
- DISTNAME= oneko-1.1b
- CATEGORIES= games
- MASTER_SITES= ftp://ftp.cs.columbia.edu/archives/X11R5/contrib/
-
- MAINTAINER= asami@FreeBSD.ORG
-
- USE_IMAKE= yes
-
- .include <bsd.port.mk>
-
-
-
-See if you can figure it out. Do not worry about the contents
-of the $Id$ line, it will be filled in
-automatically by CVS when the port is imported to our main
-ports tree. You can find a more detailed example in the section.
-
-
-
-
-Writing the description files
-
-There are three required description files that are
-required for any port, whether they actually package or not.
-They are COMMENT, DESCR, and
-PLIST, and reside in the pkg subdirectory.
-
-
-
-COMMENT
-
-This is the one-line description of the port. PLEASE
-do not include the package name (or version number of the
-software) in the comment.
-Here is an example:
-
-A cat chasing a mouse all over the screen.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-DESCR
-
-This is a longer description of the port. One to a few
-paragraphs concisely explaining what the port does is
-sufficient. Note: This is not a manual nor an
-in-depth description on how to use or compile the port.
-In particular, please do not just copy the README
-file here, unless, of course, it is a concise description
-of the port.
-
-It is recommended that you sign the name at the end of
-this file, as in:
-
-
-
-This is a port of oneko, in which a cat chases a poor mouse all over
-the screen.
- :
-(etc.)
-
-- Satoshi
-asami@cs.berkeley.edu
-
-
-
-
-
-
-PLIST
-
-This file lists all the files installed by the port. It
-is also called the `packing list' because the package is
-generated by packing the files listed here. The pathnames
-are relative to the installation prefix (usually
-/usr/local or /usr/X11R6). Also it is assumed
-the manpages will be compressed.
-
-Here is a small example:
-
-
-
-bin/oneko
-man/man1/oneko.1.gz
-lib/X11/app-defaults/Oneko
-lib/X11/oneko/cat1.xpm
-lib/X11/oneko/cat2.xpm
-lib/X11/oneko/mouse.xpm
-
-
-
-Refer to the pkg_create(1) man page for details
-on the packing list.
-
-
-
-
-
-Creating the checksum file
-
-Just type `make makesum'. The ports make rules
-will automatically generate the file files/md5.
-
-
-
-
-Testing the port
-
-You should make sure that the port rules do exactly what
-you want it to do, including packaging up the port. Try
-doing `make install', `make package' and
-then `make deinstall' and see if all
-the files and directories are correctly deleted. Then do a
-`pkg_add `make package-name`.tgz' and see if everything
-re-appears and works correctly. Then do another
-`make deinstall' and then `make
-reinstall; make package' to make sure you haven't
-included in the packing list any files that are not
-installed by your port.
-
-
-
-
-Submitting the port
-
-Now that you are happy with your port, the only thing
-remaining is to put it in the main FreeBSD ports tree and
-make everybody else happy about it too. To accomplish this,
-pack the necessary files (everything described in this
-section -- in particular do not include the
-original source tarball, the `work' subdirectory or
-the package) into a .tar.gz file, stick it in the
-directory
-
-ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/incoming/
-
-
-and send mail to us using send-pr(1) (please
-classify it as category `ports' and class `change-request').
-There is no need to upload the package, we will build it by
-ourselves.
-We will take a look, get back to you if necessary, and put
-it in the tree. Your name will also appear in the list of
-`Additional FreeBSD contributors' on the FreeBSD Handbook
-and other files. Isn't that great?!? :)
-
-
-
-
-
-Slow Porting
-
-Ok, so it was not that simple, and the port required some
-modifications to get it to work. In this section, we will
-explain, step by step, how to modify it to get it to work with
-the ports paradigm.
-
-
-
-How things work
-
-First, this is the sequence of events which occurs when the
-user first types `make' in your port's directory,
-and you may find that having bsd.port.mk in another
-window while you read this really helps to understand it.
-
-But do not worry if you do not really understand what
-bsd.port.mk is doing, not many people
-do... :>
-
-
-
-
-
-The fetch target is run. The fetch target is
-responsible for making sure that the tarball exists
-locally in ${DISTDIR}. If fetch cannot
-find the required files in ${DISTDIR} it
-will look up the URL ${MASTER_SITES},
-which is set in the Makefile, as well as our main ftp
-site at ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/distfiles/,
-where we put sanctioned distfiles as backup. It will then
-attempt to
-fetch the named distribution file with
-${FETCH}, assuming that the requesting
-site has direct access to the Internet. If that succeeds,
-it will save the file in ${DISTDIR} for
-future use and proceed.
-
-
-
-
-The extract target is run. It looks for your ports'
-distribution file in ${DISTDIR} (typically
-a gzip'd tarball) and unpacks it into a temporary
-subdirectory specified by ${WRKDIR}
-(defaults to work).
-
-
-
-
-The patch target is run. First, any patches defined
-in ${PATCHFILES} are applied. Second, if
-any patches are found in ${PATCHDIR}
-(defaults to the patches subdirectory), they are
-applied at this time in alphabetical order.
-
-
-
-
-The configure target is run. This can do any one of
-many different things.
-
-
-
-
-If it exists, scripts/configure is run.
-
-
-
-
-If ${HAS_CONFIGURE} or
-${GNU_CONFIGURE} is set,
-${WRKSRC}/configure is run.
-
-
-
-
-If ${USE_IMAKE} is set,
-${XMKMF} (default: `xmkmf
--a') is run.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The build target is run. This is responsible for
-descending into the ports' private working directory
-(${WRKSRC}) and building it. If
-${USE_GMAKE} is set, GNU make
-will be used, otherwise the system make will be
-used.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The above are the default actions. In addition, you can
-define targets `pre-<something>' or
-`post-<something>', or put scripts with those
-names, in the scripts subdirectory, and they will
-be run before or after the default actions are done.
-
-For example, if you have a post-extract target
-defined in your Makefile, and a file pre-build in
-the scripts subdirectory, the
-post-extract target will be called after the
-regular extraction actions, and the pre-build
-script will be executed before the default build rules are
-done. It is recommended that you use Makefile targets if
-the actions are simple enough, because it will be easier for
-someone to figure out what kind of non-default action the
-port requires.
-
-The default actions are done by the bsd.port.mk
-targets `do-<something>'. For example, the
-commands to extract a port are in the target
-`do-extract'. If you are not happy with the
-default target, you can fix it by redefining the
-`do-<something>' target in your Makefile.
-
-Note that the `main' targets (e.g., extract,
-configure, etc.) do nothing more than make sure all
-the stages up to that one is completed and call the real
-targets or scripts, and they are not intended to be
-changed. If you want to fix the extraction, fix
-do-extract, but never ever touch extract!
-
-Now that you understand what goes on when the user types
-`make', let us go through the recommended steps to
-create the perfect port.
-
-
-
-
-Getting the original sources
-
-Get the original sources (normally) as a compressed tarball
-(<foo>.tar.gz or <foo>.tar.Z)
-and copy it into ${DISTDIR}. Always use
-mainstream sources when and where you can.
-
-If you cannot find a ftp/http site that is well-connected
-to the net, or can only find sites that have irritatingly
-non-standard formats, we can `house' it ourselves by putting
-it on
-
-ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/distfiles/LOCAL_PORTS/
-
-
-as the last resort. Please refer to this location as
-${MASTER_SITE_LOCAL}. Send mail to the &a.ports;if you are not sure what to do.
-
-If your port requires some additional `patches' that are
-available on the Internet, fetch them too and put them in
-${DISTDIR}. Do not worry if they come from
-site other than where you got the main source tarball,
-we have a way to handle these situations (see the
-description of below).
-
-
-
-
-Modifying the port
-
-Unpack a copy of the tarball in a private directory and
-make whatever changes are necessary to get the port to
-compile properly under the current version of FreeBSD. Keep
-careful track of everything you do, as you will be
-automating the process shortly. Everything, including the
-deletion, addition or modification of files should be doable
-using an automated script or patch file when your port is
-finished.
-
-If your port requires significant user
-interaction/customization to compile or install, you should
-take a look at one of Larry Wall's classic Configure scripts
-and perhaps do something similar yourself. The goal of the
-new ports collection is to make each port as `plug-and-play'
-as possible for the end-user while using a minimum of disk
-space.
-
-Note: Unless explicitly stated, patch files, scripts, and
-other files you have created and contributed to the FreeBSD
-ports collection are assumed to be covered by the standard
-BSD copyright conditions.
-
-
-
-
-Patching
-
-In the preparation of the port, files that have been added
-or changed can be picked up with a recursive diff for later
-feeding to patch. Each set of patches you wish to apply
-should be collected into a file named
-`patch-<xx>' where <xx>
-denotes the sequence in which the patches will be applied --
-these are done in alphabetical order, thus
-`aa' first, `ab' second and so on. These
-files should be stored in ${PATCHDIR}, from
-where they will be automatically applied. All patches
-should be relative to ${WRKSRC} (generally
-the directory your port's tarball unpacks itself into, that
-being where the build is done). To make fixes and upgrades
-easier you should avoid having more than one patch fix the
-same file (e.g., patch-aa and patch-ab both changing
-${WRKSRC}/foobar.c).
-
-
-
-
-Configuring
-
-Include any additional customization commands to your
-configure script and save it in the
-`scripts' subdirectory. As mentioned above, you
-can also do this as Makefile targets and/or scripts with the
-name pre-configure or post-configure.
-
-
-
-
-Handling user input
-
-If your port requires user input to build, configure or
-install, then set IS_INTERACTIVE in your Makefile.
-This will allow `overnight builds' to skip your port if the
-user sets the variable BATCH in his environment
-(and if the user sets the variable INTERACTIVE,
-then only those ports requiring interaction are
-built).
-
-
-
-
-
-Configuring the Makefile
-
-Configuring the Makefile is pretty simple, and again we
-suggest that you look at existing examples before starting.
-Also, there is a in this handbook, so take a look and please follow
-the ordering of variables and sections in that template to
-make your port easier for others to read.
-
-Now, consider the following problems in sequence as you
-design your new Makefile:
-
-
-
-The original source
-
-Does it live in ${DISTDIR} as a standard
-gzip'd tarball? If so, you can go on to the next step. If
-not, you should look at overriding any of the
-${EXTRACT_CMD},
-${EXTRACT_BEFORE_ARGS},
-${EXTRACT_AFTER_ARGS},
-${EXTRACT_SUFX}, or
-${DISTFILES} variables, depending on how
-alien a format your port's distribution file is. (The most
-common case is `EXTRACT_SUFX=.tar.Z', when the
-tarball is condensed by regular compress, not gzip.)
-
-In the worst case, you can simply create your own
-`do-extract' target to override the default, though
-this should be rarely, if ever, necessary.
-
-
-
-
-DISTNAME
-
-You should set ${DISTNAME} to be the base
-name of your port. The default rules expect the
-distribution file list (${DISTFILES}) to be
-named
-${DISTNAME}${EXTRACT_SUFX}
-by default which, if it is a normal tarball, is going to be
-something like:
-
-
-foozolix-1.0.tar.gz
-
-
-for a setting of `DISTNAME=foozolix-1.0'.
-
-The default rules also expect the tarball(s) to extract into
-a subdirectory called work/${DISTNAME}, e.g.
-
-
-work/foozolix-1.0/
-
-
-
-All this behavior can be overridden, of course, it simply
-represents the most common time-saving defaults. For a port
-requiring multiple distribution files, simply set
-${DISTFILES} explicitly. If only a subset
-of ${DISTFILES} are actual extractable
-archives, then set them up in
-${EXTRACT_ONLY}, which will override the
-${DISTFILES} list when it comes to
-extraction, and the rest will be just left in
-${DISTDIR} for later use.
-
-
-
-
-CATEGORIES
-
-When a package is created, it is put under
-/usr/ports/packages/All and links are made from one
-or more subdirectories of /usr/ports/packages. The
-names of these subdirectories are specified by the variable
-${CATEGORIES}. It is intended to make life
-easier for the user when he is wading through the pile of
-packages on the ftp site or the CD-ROM. Please take a look
-at the existing categories (you can find them in the ports page) and pick the ones that are suitable for your port.
-If your port truly belongs to something that is different
-from all the existing ones, you can even create a new
-category name.
-
-
-
-
-MASTER_SITES
-
-Record the directory part of the ftp/http-URL pointing at
-the original tarball in ${MASTER_SITES}.
-Do not forget the trailing slash (/)!
-
-The make macros will try to use this specification for
-grabbing the distribution file with ${FETCH}
-if they cannot find it already on the system.
-
-It is recommended that you put multiple sites on this list,
-preferably from different continents. This will safeguard
-against wide-area network problems, and we are even planning
-to add support for automatically determining the closest
-master site and fetching from there!
-
-If the original tarball is part of one of the following
-popular archives: X-contrib, GNU, Perl CPAN, TeX CTAN, or
-Linux Sunsite, you refer to those sites in an easy compact
-form using MASTER_SITE_XCONTRIB, MASTER_SITE_GNU,
-MASTER_SITE_PERL_CPAN, MASTER_SITE_TEX_CTAN, and
-MASTER_SITE_SUNSITE. Simply set MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR to the path
-with in the archive. Here is an example:
-
-MASTER_SITES= ${MASTER_SITE_XCONTRIB}
-MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR= applications
-
-
-
-The user can also set the MASTER_SITE_* variables in
-/etc/make.conf to override our choices, and use their
-favorite mirrors of these popular archives instead.
-
-
-
-
-PATCHFILES
-
-If your port requires some additional patches that are
-available by ftp or http, set ${PATCHFILES}
-to the names of the files and ${PATCH_SITES}
-to the URL of the directory that contains them (the format
-is the same as ${MASTER_SITES}).
-
-If the patch is not relative to the top of the source tree
-(i.e., ${WKRSRC}) because it contains some
-extra pathnames, set ${PATCH_DIST_STRIP}
-accordingly. For instance, if all the pathnames in the
-patch has an extra `foozolix-1.0/' in front of the
-filenames, then set `PATCH_DIST_STRIP=-p1'.
-
-Do not worry if the patches are compressed, they will be
-decompressed automatically if the filenames end with
-`.gz' or `.Z'.
-
-If the patch is distributed with some other files, such as
-documentation, in a gzip'd tarball, you can't just use
-${PATCHFILES}. If that is the case, add the
-name and the location of the patch tarball to
-${DISTFILES} and
-${MASTER_SITES}. Then, from the
-pre-patch target, apply the patch either by running
-the patch command from there, or copying the patch file into
-the ${PATCHDIR} directory and calling it
-patch-<xx>. (Note the tarball will have been
-extracted alongside the regular source by then, so there is
-no need to explicitly extract it if it is a regular gzip'd
-or compress'd tarball.) If you do the latter, take extra
-care not to overwrite something that already exists in that
-directory. Also do not forget to add a command to remove
-the copied patch in the pre-clean target.
-
-
-
-
-MAINTAINER
-
-Set your mail-address here. Please. :)
-
-For detailed description of the responsibility of maintainers,
-refer to section.
-
-
-
-
-Dependencies
-
-Many ports depend on other ports. There are five
-variables that you can use to ensure that all the required
-bits will be on the user's machine.
-
-
-
-LIB_DEPENDS
-
-This variable specifies the shared libraries this port
-depends on. It is a list of `lib:dir' pairs
-where lib is the name of the shared library, and
-dir is the directory in which to find it in case
-it is not available. For example,
-
-LIB_DEPENDS= jpeg\\.6\\.:${PORTSDIR}/graphics/jpeg
-
-
-will check for a shared jpeg library with major version 6,
-and descend into the graphics/jpeg subdirectory
-of your ports tree to build and install it if it is not
-found.
-
-Note that the lib part is just an argument given
-to `ldconfig -r | grep', so periods should be
-escaped by two backslashes like in the example above.
-
-The dependency is checked from within the extract
-target. Also, the name of the dependency is put in to the
-package so that pkg_add will automatically
-install it if it is not on the user's system.
-
-
-
-
-RUN_DEPENDS
-
-This variable specifies executables or files this port
-depends on during run-time. It is a list of
-`path:dir' pairs where path is the name
-of the executable or file, and dir is the
-directory in which to find it in case it is not
-available. If path starts with a slash
-(/), it is treated as a file and its existence is
-tested with `test -e'; otherwise, it is assumed
-to be an executable, and `which -s' is used to
-determine if the program exists in the user's search path.
-
-For example,
-
-RUN_DEPENDS= ${PREFIX}/etc/innd:${PORTSDIR}/news/inn \
- wish:${PORTSDIR}/x11/tk
-
-
-will check if the file `/usr/local/etc/innd'
-exists, and build and install it from the
-news/inn subdirectory of the ports tree if it is
-not found. It will also see if an executable called
-`wish' is in your search path, and descend into
-the x11/tk subdirectory of your ports tree to
-build and install it if it is not found. (Note that in
-this case, `innd' is actually an executable; if
-an executable is in a place that is not expected to be in
-a normal user's search path, you should use the full
-pathname.)
-
-The dependency is checked from within the install
-target. Also, the name of the dependency is put in to the
-package so that pkg_add will automatically
-install it if it is not on the user's system.
-
-
-
-
-BUILD_DEPENDS
-
-This variable specifies executables or files this port
-requires to build. Like RUN_DEPENDS, it is a
-list of `path:dir' pairs. For example,
-
-BUILD_DEPENDS= unzip:${PORTSDIR}/archivers/unzip
-
-
-will check for an executable called `unzip', and
-descend into the archivers/unzip subdirectory of
-your ports tree to build and install it if it is not found.
-
-Note that `build' here means everything from extracting to
-compilation. The dependency is checked from within the
-extract target.
-
-
-
-
-FETCH_DEPENDS
-
-This variable specifies executables or files this port
-requires to fetch. Like the previous two, it is a list of
-`path:dir' pairs. For example,
-
-FETCH_DEPENDS= ncftp2:${PORTSDIR}/net/ncftp2
-
-
-will check for an executable called `ncftp2', and
-descend into the net/ncftp2 subdirectory of
-your ports tree to build and install it if it is not found.
-
-The dependency is checked from within the fetch
-target.
-
-
-
-
-DEPENDS
-
-If there is a dependency that does not fall into either of
-the above four categories, or your port requires to have
-the source of the other port extracted (i.e., having them
-installed is not enough), then use this variable. This is
-just a list of directories, as there is nothing to check,
-unlike the previous four.
-
-
-
-
-
-Building mechanisms
-
-If your package uses GNU make, set
-`USE_GMAKE=yes'. If your package uses GNU
-configure, set `GNU_CONFIGURE=yes'. If
-you want to give some extra arguments to GNU
-configure (other than the default
-`--prefix=${PREFIX}'),
-set those extra arguments in
-${CONFIGURE_ARGS}.
-
-If your package is an X application that creates Makefiles
-from Imakefiles using imake, then set
-`USE_IMAKE=yes'. This will cause the configure
-stage to automatically do an xmkmf -a. If the
-`' flag is a problem for your port, set
-`XMKMF=xmkmf'.
-
-If your port's source Makefile has something else than
-`all' as the main build target, set
-${ALL_TARGET} accordingly. Same goes for
-`install' and ${INSTALL_TARGET}.
-
-
-
-
-NO_INSTALL_MANPAGES
-
-If the port uses imake but does not understand the
-`install.man' target,
-`NO_INSTALL_MANPAGES=yes' should be set. In
-addition, the author of the original port should be
-shot. :>
-
-
-
-
-
-Ports that require Motif
-
-There are many programs that require a Motif library
-(available from several commercial vendors, while there is (at
-least) one effort to create a free clone) to compile. Since
-it is a popular toolkit and their licenses usually permit
-redistribution of statically linked binaries, we have made
-special provisions for handling ports that require Motif in a
-way that we can easily compile binaries linked either
-dynamically or statically.
-
-
-
-REQUIRES_MOTIF
-
-If your port requires Motif, define this variable in the
-Makefile. This will prevent people who don't own a copy of
-Motif from even attempting to build it.
-
-
-
-
-${MOTIFLIB}
-
-This variable will be set by bsd.port.mk to be the
-appropriate reference to the Motif library. Please patch
-the source to use this wherever the Motif library is
-referenced in the Makefile or Imakefile.
-
-There are two common cases:
-
-
-
-If the port refers to the Motif library as
-`' in its Makefile or Imakefile, simply
-substitute `${MOTIFLIB}' for it.
-
-
-
-
-If the port uses `XmClientLibs' in its
-Imakefile, change it to `${MOTIFLIB}
-${XTOOLLIB} ${XLIB}'.
-
-
-
-
-
-Note that ${MOTIFLIB} (usually) expands to
-`' or
-`/usr/X11R6/lib/libXm.a', so there is no need to
-add `' or `' in front.
-
-
-
-
-
-Info files
-
-The new version of texinfo (included in 2.2.2-RELEASE and
-onwards) contains a utility called `install-info' to add
-and delete entries to the `dir' file. If your port
-installs any info documents, please follow these instructions
-so your port/package will correctly update the user's
-${PREFIX}/info/dir file. (Sorry for the length
-of this section, but it is imperative to weave all the info
-files together. If done correctly, it will produce a
-beautiful listing, so please bear with me! :)
-
-First, this is what you (as a porter) need to know:
-
-
-
-% install-info --help
-install-info [OPTION]... [INFO-FILE [DIR-FILE]]
- Install INFO-FILE in the Info directory file DIR-FILE.
-
-Options:
---delete Delete existing entries in INFO-FILE;
- don't insert any new entries.
- :
---entry=TEXT Insert TEXT as an Info directory entry.
- :
---section=SEC Put this file's entries in section SEC of the directory.
- :
-
-
-
-Note that this program will not actually install
-info files; it merely inserts or deletes entries in the
-dir file.
-
-Here's a seven-step procedure to convert ports to use
-install-info. I will use editors/emacs as an
-example.
-
-
-
-
-
-Look at the texinfo sources and make a patch to insert
-@dircategory and @direntry statements to files
-that don't have them. This is part of my patch:
-
-
---- ./man/vip.texi.org Fri Jun 16 15:31:11 1995
-+++ ./man/vip.texi Tue May 20 01:28:33 1997
-@@ -2,6 +2,10 @@
-
- @setfilename ../info/vip
- @settitle VIP
-+@dircategory The Emacs editor and associated tools
-+@direntry
-+* VIP: (vip). A VI-emulation for Emacs.
-+@end direntry
-
- @iftex
- @finalout
- :
-
-
-
-
-
-The format should be self-explanatory. Many authors leave
-a dir file in the source tree that contains all the
-entries you need, so look around before you try to write
-your own. Also, make sure you look into related ports and
-make the section names and entry indentations consistent (we
-recommend that all entry text start at the 4th tab stop).
-
-
-
-Note that you can put only one info entry per file because
-of a bug in `install-info --delete' that deletes
-only the first entry if you specify multiple entries in the
-@direntry section.
-
-
-
-You can give the dir entries to install-info as
-arguments ( and ) instead of
-patching the texinfo sources. I do not think this is a good
-idea for ports because you need to duplicate the same
-information in three places (Makefile and
-@exec/@unexec of PLIST; see below). However,
-if you have a Japanese (or other multibyte encoding) info
-files, you will have to use the extra arguments to
-install-info because makeinfo can't handle those
-texinfo sources. (See Makefile and PLIST of
-japanese/skk for examples on how to do this).
-
-
-
-
-
-Go back to the port directory and do a `make clean;
-make' and verify that the info files are regenerated
-from the texinfo sources. Since the texinfo sources are
-newer than the info files, they should be rebuilt when you
-type make; but many Makefiles don't include
-correct dependencies for info files. In emacs' case, I had
-to patch the main Makefile.in so it will descend into
-the man subdirectory to rebuild the info pages.
-
-
---- ./Makefile.in.org Mon Aug 19 21:12:19 1996
-+++ ./Makefile.in Tue Apr 15 00:15:28 1997
-@@ -184,7 +184,7 @@
- # Subdirectories to make recursively. `lisp' is not included
- # because the compiled lisp files are part of the distribution
- # and you cannot remake them without installing Emacs first.
--SUBDIR = lib-src src
-+SUBDIR = lib-src src man
-
- # The makefiles of the directories in $SUBDIR.
- SUBDIR_MAKEFILES = lib-src/Makefile man/Makefile src/Makefile oldXMenu/Makefile lwlib/Makefile
---- ./man/Makefile.in.org Thu Jun 27 15:27:19 1996
-+++ ./man/Makefile.in Tue Apr 15 00:29:52 1997
-@@ -66,6 +66,7 @@
- ${srcdir}/gnu1.texi \
- ${srcdir}/glossary.texi
-
-+all: info
- info: $(INFO_TARGETS)
-
- dvi: $(DVI_TARGETS)
-
-
-
-
-
-The second hunk was necessary because the default target in
-the man subdir is called info, while the
-main Makefile wants to call all. I also deleted the
-installation of the info info file because we already
-have one with the same name in /usr/share/info
-(that patch is not shown here).
-
-
-
-
-
-If there is a place in the Makefile that is
-installing the dir file, delete it. Your port may not
-be doing it. Also, remove any commands that are otherwise
-mucking around with the dir file.
-
-
---- ./Makefile.in.org Mon Aug 19 21:12:19 1996
-+++ ./Makefile.in Mon Apr 14 23:38:07 1997
-@@ -368,14 +368,8 @@
- if [ `(cd ${srcdir}/info && /bin/pwd)` != `(cd ${infodir} && /bin/pwd)` ]; \
- then \
- (cd ${infodir}; \
-- if [ -f dir ]; then \
-- if [ ! -f dir.old ]; then mv -f dir dir.old; \
-- else mv -f dir dir.bak; fi; \
-- fi; \
- cd ${srcdir}/info ; \
-- (cd $${thisdir}; ${INSTALL_DATA} ${srcdir}/info/dir ${infodir}/dir); \
-- (cd $${thisdir}; chmod a+r ${infodir}/dir); \
- for f in ccmode* cl* dired-x* ediff* emacs* forms* gnus* info* message* mh-e* sc* vip*; do \
- (cd $${thisdir}; \
- ${INSTALL_DATA} ${srcdir}/info/$$f ${infodir}/$$f; \
- chmod a+r ${infodir}/$$f); \
-
-
-
-
-
-
-(This step is only necessary if you are modifying an
-existing port.) Take a look at pkg/PLIST and
-delete anything that is trying to patch up
-info/dir. They may be in pkg/INSTALL or
-some other file, so search extensively.
-
-
-Index: pkg/PLIST
-===================================================================
-RCS file: /usr/cvs/ports/editors/emacs/pkg/PLIST,v
-retrieving revision 1.15
-diff -u -r1.15 PLIST
---- PLIST 1997/03/04 08:04:00 1.15
-+++ PLIST 1997/04/15 06:32:12
-@@ -15,9 +15,6 @@
- man/man1/emacs.1.gz
- man/man1/etags.1.gz
- man/man1/ctags.1.gz
--@unexec cp %D/info/dir %D/info/dir.bak
--info/dir
--@unexec cp %D/info/dir.bak %D/info/dir
- info/cl
- info/cl-1
- info/cl-2
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Add a post-install target to the Makefile to create
-a dir file if it is not there. Also, call
-install-info with the installed info files.
-
-
-Index: Makefile
-===================================================================
-RCS file: /usr/cvs/ports/editors/emacs/Makefile,v
-retrieving revision 1.26
-diff -u -r1.26 Makefile
---- Makefile 1996/11/19 13:14:40 1.26
-+++ Makefile 1997/05/20 10:25:09 1.28
-@@ -20,5 +20,11 @@
- post-install:
- .for file in emacs-19.34 emacsclient etags ctags b2m
- strip ${PREFIX}/bin/${file}
- .endfor
-+ if [ ! -f ${PREFIX}/info/dir ]; then \
-+ ${SED} -ne '1,/Menu:/p' /usr/share/info/dir > ${PREFIX}/info/dir; \
-+ fi
-+.for info in emacs vip viper forms gnus mh-e cl sc dired-x ediff ccmode
-+ install-info ${PREFIX}/info/${info} ${PREFIX}/info/dir
-+.endfor
-
- .include <bsd.port.mk>
-
-
-
-
-
-Do not use anything other than /usr/share/info/dir
-and the above command to create a new info file. In fact,
-I'd add the first three lines of the above patch to
-bsd.port.mk if you (the porter) wouldn't have to do it
-in PLIST by yourself anyway.
-
-
-
-
-
-Edit PLIST and add equivalent @exec statements
-and also @unexec for pkg_delete. You do not need
-to delete info/dir with @unexec.
-
-
-Index: pkg/PLIST
-===================================================================
-RCS file: /usr/cvs/ports/editors/emacs/pkg/PLIST,v
-retrieving revision 1.15
-diff -u -r1.15 PLIST
---- PLIST 1997/03/04 08:04:00 1.15
-+++ PLIST 1997/05/20 10:25:12 1.17
-@@ -16,7 +14,15 @@
- man/man1/etags.1.gz
- man/man1/ctags.1.gz
-+@unexec install-info --delete %D/info/emacs %D/info/dir
- :
-+@unexec install-info --delete %D/info/ccmode %D/info/dir
- info/cl
- info/cl-1
-@@ -87,6 +94,18 @@
- info/viper-3
- info/viper-4
-+@exec [ -f %D/info/dir ] || sed -ne '1,/Menu:/p' /usr/share/info/dir > %D/info/dir
-+@exec install-info %D/info/emacs %D/info/dir
- :
-+@exec install-info %D/info/ccmode %D/info/dir
- libexec/emacs/19.34/i386--freebsd/cvtmail
- libexec/emacs/19.34/i386--freebsd/digest-doc
-
-
-
-
-
-Note that the `@unexec install-info --delete'
-commands have to be listed before the info files themselves
-so they can read the files. Also, the `@exec
-install-info' commands have to be after the info files
-and the @exec command that creates the the dir
-file.
-
-
-
-
-
-Test and admire your work. :) The sequence I
-recommend is: `make package', `pkg_delete', then
-`pkg_add'. Check the dir file before and after
-each step.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Licensing Problems
-
-Some software packages have restrictive licenses or can be in
-violation to the law (PKP's patent on public key crypto,
-ITAR (export of crypto software) to name just two of them).
-What we can do with them vary a lot, depending on the exact
-wordings of the respective licenses.
-
-Note that it is your responsibility as a porter to read the
-licensing terms of the software and make sure that the FreeBSD
-project will not be held accountable of violating them by
-redistributing the source or compiled binaries either via ftp
-or CD-ROM. If in doubt, please contact the &a.ports;.
-
-There are two variables you can set in the Makefile to handle
-the situations that arise frequently:
-
-
-
-
-
-If the port has a `do not sell for profit' type of
-license, set the variable NO_CDROM. We will make
-sure such ports won't go into the CD-ROM come release time.
-The distfile and package will still be available via ftp.
-
-
-
-
-If the resulting package needs to be built uniquely for
-each site, or the resulting binary package can't be distributed
-due to licensing; set the variable NO_PACKAGE.
-We will make sure such packages won't go on the ftp site, nor
-into the CD-ROM come release time. The distfile will still be
-included on both however.
-
-
-
-
-If the port has legal restrictions on who can use it
-(e.g., crypto stuff) or has a `no commercial use' license,
-set the variable RESTRICTED to be the string
-describing the reason why. For such ports, the
-distfiles/packages will not be available even from our ftp
-sites.
-
-
-
-
-
-Note: The GNU General Public License (GPL), both version 1
-and 2, should not be a problem for ports.
-
-Note: If you are a committer, make sure you update the
-ports/LEGAL file too.
-
-
-
-
-Upgrading
-
-When you notice that a port is out of date compared to the
-latest version from the original authors, first make sure you
-have the latest port. You can find them in the
-ports-current directory of the ftp mirror sites.
-
-The next step is to send a mail to the maintainer, if one is
-listed in the port's Makefile. That person may already be
-working on an upgrade, or have a reason to not upgrade the
-port right now (because of, for example, stability problems
-of the new version).
-
-If the maintainer asks you to do the upgrade or there isn't
-any such person to begin with, please make the upgrade and
-send the recursive diff (either unified or context diff is
-fine, but port committers appear to prefer unified diff more)
-of the new and old ports directories
-to us (i.e., if your modified ports directory is called
-`superedit' and the original as in our tree is
-`superedit.bak', then send us the result of `diff
--ruN superedit.bak superedit'). Please examine the output
-to make sure all the changes make sense. The best way to send
-us the diff is by including it to send-pr(1) (category
-`ports'). Please
-mention any added or deleted files in the message, as they
-have to be explicitly specified to CVS when doing a commit.
-If the diff is more than about 20KB, please compress and
-uuencode it; otherwise, just include it in as is in the PR.
-
-
-
-
-Do's and Dont's
-
-Here is a list of common do's and dont's that you encounter
-during the porting process.
-
-
-
-WRKDIR
-
-Do not leave anything valuable lying around in the
-work subdirectory, `make clean' will
-nuke it completely! If you need auxiliary files
-that are not scripts or patches, put them in the
-${FILESDIR} subdirectory (files by default)
-and use the post-extract target to
-copy them to the work subdirectory.
-
-
-
-
-Package information
-
-Do include package information, i.e. COMMENT,
-DESCR, and PLIST, in
-pkg. Note that these files are not used only for
-packaging anymore, and are mandatory now, even if
-${NO_PACKAGE} is set.
-
-
-
-
-Compress manpages, strip binaries
-
-Do compress manpages and strip binaries. If the original
-source already strips the binary, fine; otherwise, you can add a
-post-install rule to do it yourself. Here is an example:
-
- post-install:
- strip ${PREFIX}/bin/xdl
-
-
-
-Use the file command on the installed executable
-to check whether the binary is stripped or not. If it
-does not say `not stripped', it is stripped.
-
-To automagically compress the manpages, use the MAN[1-9LN]
-variables. They will check the variable
-NOMANCOMPRESS that the user can set in
-/etc/make.conf to disable man page compression.
-Place them last in the section below the
-MAINTAINER variable. Here is an example:
-
-MAN1= foo.1 bar.1
-MAN5= foo.conf.5
-MAN8= baz.8
-
-
-
-Note that this is not usually necessary with ports that are X
-applications and use Imake to build.
-
-If your port anchors its man tree somewhere other than
-PREFIX, you can use the MANPREFIX to set it.
-Also, if only manpages in certain section go in a
-non-standard place, such as many Perl modules ports, you
-can set individual man paths using
-MANsectPREFIX (where sect is one
-of 1-9, L or N).
-
-
-
-
-INSTALL_* macros
-
-Do use the macros provided in bsd.port.mk to
-ensure correct modes and ownership of files in your own
-*-install targets. They are:
-
-
-
-
-
-${INSTALL_PROGRAM} is a command to install
-binary executables.
-
-
-
-${INSTALL_SCRIPT} is a command to install
-executable scripts.
-
-
-
-${INSTALL_DATA} is a command to install
-sharable data.
-
-
-
-${INSTALL_MAN} is a command to install
-manpages and other documentation (it doesn't compress anything).
-
-
-
-
-
-These are basically the install command with all
-the appropriate flags. See below for an example on how to
-use them.
-
-
-
-
-INSTALL package script
-
-If your port needs execute commands when the binary package
-is installed with pkg_add you can do with via the pkg/INSTALL
-script. This script will automatically be added to the
-package, and will be run twice by pkg_add. The first time
-will as `INSTALL ${PKGNAME} PRE-INSTALL'
-and the second time as `INSTALL ${PKGNAME} POST-INSTALL'.
-`$2' can be tested to determine which mode
-the script is being run in.
-The `PKG_PREFIX' environmental variable will be set to
-the package installation directory. See man pkg_add(1)
-for additional information.
-Note, that this script is not run automatically if you install
-the port with `make install'. If you are depending
-on it being run, you will have to explicitly call it on your
-port's Makefile.
-
-
-
-
-REQ package script
-
-If your port needs to determine if it should install or not, you
-can create a pkg/REQ ``requirements'' script. It will be invoked
-automatically at installation/deinstallation time to determine
-whether or not installation/deinstallation should proceed.
-See man pkg_create(1) and man pkg_add(1) for
-more information.
-
-
-
-
-Install additional documentation
-
-If your software has some documentation other than the
-standard man and info pages that you think is useful for the
-user, install it under ${PREFIX}/share/doc.
-This can be done, like the previous item, in the
-post-install target.
-
-Create a new directory for your port. The directory name
-should reflect what the port is. This usually means
-${PKGNAME} minus the version part. However,
-if you think the user might want different versions of the
-port to be installed at the same time, you
-can use the whole ${PKGNAME}.
-
-Make the installation dependent to the variable
-NOPORTDOCS so that users can disable it in
-/etc/make.conf, like this:
-
- post-install:
- .if !defined(NOPORTDOCS)
- ${MKDIR} ${PREFIX}/share/doc/xv
- ${INSTALL_MAN} ${WRKSRC}/docs/xvdocs.ps ${PREFIX}/share/doc/xv
- .endif
-
-
-
-Do not forget to add them to pkg/PLIST too! (Do not
-worry about NOPORTDOCS here; there is currently no
-way for the packages to read variables from
-/etc/make.conf.)
-
-If you need to display a message to the installer, you may
-place the message in pkg/MESSAGE. This capibility
-is often useful to display additional installation steps to
-be taken after a pkg_add, or to display licensing information.
-(note: the MESSAGE file does not need to be added to pkg/PLIST).
-
-
-
-
-DIST_SUBDIR
-
-Do not let your port clutter /usr/ports/distfiles. If
-your port requires a lot of files to be
-fetched, or contains a file that has a name that might conflict
-with other ports (e.g., `Makefile'), set
-${DIST_SUBDIR} to the name of the port
-(${PKGNAME} without the version part should work
-fine). This will change ${DISTDIR} from the
-default /usr/ports/distfiles to
-/usr/ports/distfiles/${DIST_SUBDIR}, and in
-effect puts everything that is required for your port into that
-subdirectory.
-
-It will also look at the subdirectory with the same name on the
-backup master site at ftp.freebsd.org. (Setting
-${DISTDIR} explicitly in your Makefile will not
-accomplish this, so please use ${DIST_SUBDIR}.)
-
-Note this does not affect the ${MASTER_SITES}
-you define in your Makefile.
-
-
-
-
-Feedback
-
-Do send applicable changes/patches to the original
-author/maintainer for inclusion in next release of the code.
-This will only make your job that much easier for the next
-release.
-
-
-
-
-RCS strings
-
-Do not put RCS strings in patches. CVS will mangle them
-when we put the files into the ports tree, and when we check
-them out again, they will come out different and the patch
-will fail. RCS strings are surrounded by dollar
-(`$') signs, and typically start with
-`$Id' or `$RCS'.
-
-
-
-
-Recursive diff
-
-Using the recurse (`') option to diff
-to generate patches is fine, but please take a look at the
-resulting patches to make sure you don't have any
-unnecessary junk in there. In particular, diffs between two
-backup files, Makefiles when the port uses Imake or GNU
-configure, etc., are unnecessary and should be deleted.
-Also, if you had to delete a file, then you can do it in the
-post-extract target rather than as part of the
-patch. Once you are happy with the resuling diff, please
-split it up into one source file per patch file.
-
-
-
-
-PREFIX
-
-Do try to make your port install relative to
-${PREFIX}. (The value of this variable will be
-set to ${LOCALBASE} (default
-/usr/local), unless ${USE_IMAKE} or
-${USE_X11} is set, in which case it will be
-${X11BASE} (default /usr/X11R6).)
-
-Not hard-coding `/usr/local' or `/usr/X11R6'
-anywhere in the source will make the port much more flexible and
-able to cater to the needs of other sites. For X ports that use
-imake, this is automatic; otherwise, this can often be done by
-simply replacing the occurrences of `/usr/local' (or
-`/usr/X11R6' for X ports that do not use imake) in the
-various scripts/Makefiles in the port to read
-`${PREFIX}', as this variable is automatically
-passed down to every stage of the build and install processes.
-
-The variable ${PREFIX} can be reassigned in your
-Makefile or in the user's environment. However, it is strongly
-discouraged for individual ports to set this variable explicitly
-in the Makefiles. (If your port is an X port but does not use
-imake, set USE_X11=yes; this is quite different from
-setting PREFIX=/usr/X11R6.)
-
-Also, refer to programs/files from other ports with the
-variables mentioned above, not explicit pathnames. For instance,
-if your port requires a macro PAGER to be the full
-pathname of less, use the compiler flag:
--DPAGER=\"${PREFIX}/bin/less\"
- or
--DPAGER=\"${LOCALBASE}/bin/less\"
- if this is an
-X port, instead of
--DPAGER=\"/usr/local/bin/less\".
-
-This way it will have a better chance of working if the system
-administrator has moved the whole `/usr/local' tree somewhere
-else.
-
-
-
-
-Subdirectories
-
-Try to let the port put things in the right subdirectories
-of ${PREFIX}. Some ports lump everything
-and put it in the subdirectory with the port's name, which is
-incorrect. Also, many ports put everything except binaries,
-header files and manual pages in the a subdirectory of
-`lib', which does not bode well with the BSD
-paradigm. Many of the files should be moved to one of the
-following: `etc' (setup/configuration files),
-`libexec' (executables started internally),
-`sbin' (executables for superusers/managers),
-`info' (documentation for info browser) or
-`share' (architecture independent files). See man
-hier(7) for details, the rule governing
-/usr pretty much applies to /usr/local
-too. The exception are ports dealing with USENET `news'.
-They may use ${PREFIX}/news as a destination
-for their files.
-
-
-
-
-ldconfig
-
-If your port installs a shared library, add a
-post-install target to your Makefile that runs
-`/sbin/ldconfig -m' on the directory where the new
-library is installed (usually ${PREFIX}/lib)
-to register it into the shared library cache.
-
-Also, add an @exec line to your pkg/PLIST
-file so that a user who installed the package can start
-using the shared library immediately. This line should
-immediately follow the line for the shared library itself,
-as in:
-
-lib/libtcl80.so.1.0
-@exec /sbin/ldconfig -m %D/lib
-
-
-
-Never, ever, ever add a line that says
-`ldconfig' without any arguments to your Makefile
-or pkg/PLIST. This will reset the shared library cache to
-the contents of /usr/lib only, and will royally
-screw up the user's machine ("Help, xinit does not run
-anymore after I install this port!"). Anybody who does this
-will be shot and cut into 65,536 pieces by a rusty knife and
-have his liver chopped out by a bunch of crows and will
-eternally rot to death in the deepest bowels of hell (not
-necessarily in that order)....
-
-
-
-
-UIDs
-
-If your port requires a certain user ID to be on the
-installed system, let the pkg/INSTALL script call
-pw to create it automatically. Look at
-japanese/Wnn or net/cvsup-mirror for
-examples. It is customary to use UIDs in the upper 2-digit
-range (i.e., from around 50 to 99) for this purpose.
-
-Make sure you don't use a UID already used by the system or
-other ports. This is the current list of UIDs between 50
-and 99.
-
-
-
-majordom:*:54:1024:Majordomo Pseudo User:/usr/local/majordomo:/nonexistent
-cyrus:*:60:248:the cyrus mail server:/nonexistent:/nonexistent
-gnats:*:61:1:GNATS database owner:/usr/local/share/gnats/gnats-db:/bin/sh
-uucp:*:66:66:UUCP pseudo-user:/var/spool/uucppublic:/usr/libexec/uucp/uucico
-xten:*:67:67:X-10 daemon:/usr/local/xten:/nonexistent
-pop:*:68:6:Post Office Owner:/nonexistent:/nonexistent
-wnn:*:69:7:Wnn:/nonexistent:/nonexistent
-ifmail:*:70:66:Ifmail user:/nonexistent:/nonexistent
-pgsql:*:71:246:PostgreSQL pseudo-user:/usr/local/pgsql:/bin/sh
-msql:*:80:249:mSQL-2 pseudo-user:/var/db/msqldb:/bin/sh
-
-
-
-Please send a notice to &a.ports; if you submit or commit a
-port that allocates a new UID in this range so we can keep
-this list up to date.
-
-
-
-
-If you are stuck....
-
-Do look at existing examples and the bsd.port.mk
-file before asking us questions! ;)
-
-Do ask us questions if you have any trouble! Do not just
-beat your head against a wall! :)
-
-
-
-
-
-A Sample Makefile
-
-Here is a sample Makefile that you can use to create a new
-port. Make sure you remove all the extra comments (ones
-between brackets)!
-
-It is recommended that you follow this format (ordering of
-variables, empty lines between sections, etc.). Not all of
-the existing Makefiles are in this format (mostly old ones),
-but we are trying to uniformize how they look. This format is
-designed so that the most important information is easy to
-locate.
-
-
-
- [the header...just to make it easier for us to identify the ports.]
- # New ports collection makefile for: xdvi
- [the version required header should updated when upgrading a port.]
- # Version required: pl18 [things like "1.5alpha" are fine here too]
- [this is the date when the first version of this Makefile was created.
- Never change this when doing an update of the port.]
- # Date created: 26 May 1995
- [this is the person who did the original port to FreeBSD, in particular, the
- person who wrote the first version of this Makefile. Remember, this should
- not be changed when upgrading the port later.]
- # Whom: Satoshi Asami <asami@FreeBSD.ORG>
- #
- # $Id$
- [ ^^^^ This will be automatically replaced with RCS ID string by CVS
- when it is committed to our repository.]
- #
-
- [section to describe the port itself and the master site - DISTNAME
- is always first, followed by PKGNAME (if necessary), CATEGORIES,
- and then MASTER_SITES, which can be followed by MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR.
- After those, one of EXTRACT_SUFX or DISTFILES can be specified too.]
- DISTNAME= xdvi
- PKGNAME= xdvi-pl18
- CATEGORIES= print
- [do not forget the trailing slash ("/")!
- if you aren't using MASTER_SITE_* macros]
- MASTER_SITES= ${MASTER_SITE_XCONTRIB}
- MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR= applications
- [set this if the source is not in the standard ".tar.gz" form]
- EXTRACT_SUFX= .tar.Z
-
- [section for distributed patches -- can be empty]
- PATCH_SITES= ftp://ftp.sra.co.jp/pub/X11/japanese/
- PATCHFILES= xdvi-18.patch1.gz xdvi-18.patch2.gz
-
- [maintainer; *mandatory*! This is the person (preferably with commit
- privileges) who a user can contact for questions and bug reports - this
- person should be the porter or someone who can forward questions to the
- original porter reasonably promptly. If you really do not want to have
- your address here, set it to "ports@FreeBSD.ORG".]
- MAINTAINER= asami@FreeBSD.ORG
-
- [dependencies -- can be empty]
- RUN_DEPENDS= gs:${PORTSDIR}/print/ghostscript
- LIB_DEPENDS= Xpm\\.4\\.:${PORTSDIR}/graphics/xpm
-
- [this section is for other standard bsd.port.mk variables that do not
- belong to any of the above]
- [If it asks questions during configure, build, install...]
- IS_INTERACTIVE= yes
- [If it extracts to a directory other than ${DISTNAME}...]
- WRKSRC= ${WRKDIR}/xdvi-new
- [If the distributed patches were not made relative to ${WRKSRC}, you
- may need to tweak this]
- PATCH_DIST_STRIP= -p1
- [If it requires a "configure" script generated by GNU autoconf to be run]
- GNU_CONFIGURE= yes
- [If it requires GNU make, not /usr/bin/make, to build...]
- USE_GMAKE= yes
- [If it is an X application and requires "xmkmf -a" to be run...]
- USE_IMAKE= yes
- [et cetera.]
-
- [non-standard variables to be used in the rules below]
- MY_FAVORITE_RESPONSE= "yeah, right"
-
- [then the special rules, in the order they are called]
- pre-fetch:
- i go fetch something, yeah
-
- post-patch:
- i need to do something after patch, great
-
- pre-install:
- and then some more stuff before installing, wow
-
- [and then the epilogue]
- .include <bsd.port.mk>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Package Names
-
-The following are the conventions you should follow in
-naming your packages. This is to have our package directory
-easy to scan, as there are already lots and lots of packages
-and users are going to turn away if they hurt their eyes!
-
-The package name should look like
-
-
-
-[<language>-]<name>[[-]<compiled.specifics>]-<version.string.numbers>;
-
-
-
-If your ${DISTNAME} doesn't look like that,
-set ${PKGNAME} to something in that format.
-
-
-
-
-
-FreeBSD strives to support the native language of its
-users. The `<language>' part should be a two letter
-abbreviation of the natural language defined by ISO-639 if
-the port is specific to a certain language. Examples are
-`ja' for Japanese, `ru' for Russian, `vi' for Vietnamese,
-`zh' for Chinese, `ko' for Korean and `de' for German.
-
-
-
-
-The `<name>' part should be all
-lowercases, except for a really large package (with lots of
-programs in it). Things like XFree86 (yes there really is a
-package of it, check it out) and ImageMagick fall into this
-category. Otherwise, convert the name (or at least the
-first letter) to lowercase. If the software in question
-really is called that way, you can have numbers, hyphens and
-underscores in the name too (like `kinput2').
-
-
-
-
-If the port can be built with different hardcoded
-defaults (usually specified as environment variables or on
-the make command line), the
-`<compiled.specifics>' part should state the
-compiled-in defaults (the hyphen is optional). Examples are
-papersize and font units.
-
-
-
-
-The version string should be a period-separated list of
-integers and single lowercase alphabetics. The only exception
-is the string `pl' (meaning `patchlevel'), which can be used
-only when there are no major and minor version
-numbers in the software.
-
-
-
-
-
-Here are some (real) examples on how to convert a
-${DISTNAME} into a suitable
-${PKGNAME}:
-
-
-
-DISTNAME PKGNAME Reason
-mule-2.2.2 mule-2.2.2 no prob at all
-XFree86-3.1.2 XFree86-3.1.2 ditto
-EmiClock-1.0.2 emiclock-1.0.2 no uppercase names for single programs
-gmod1.4 gmod-1.4 need hyphen after `<name>'
-xmris.4.02 xmris-4.02 ditto
-rdist-1.3alpha rdist-1.3a no strings like `alpha' allowed
-es-0.9-beta1 es-0.9b1 ditto
-v3.3beta021.src tiff-3.3 what the heck was that anyway? ;)
-tvtwm tvtwm-pl11 version string always required
-piewm piewm-1.0 ditto
-xvgr-2.10pl1 xvgr-2.10.1 `pl' allowed only when no maj/minor numbers
-gawk-2.15.6 ja-gawk-2.15.6 Japanese language version
-psutils-1.13 psutils-letter-1.13 papersize hardcoded at package build time
-pkfonts pkfonts300-1.0 package for 300dpi fonts
-
-
-
-If there is absolutely no trace of version information in the
-original source and it is unlikely that the original author
-will ever release another version, just set the version string
-to `1.0' (like the piewm example above). Otherwise, ask the
-original author or use the date string (`yy.mm.dd') as the
-version.
-
-
-
-
-That is It, Folks!
-
-Boy, this sure was a long tutorial, wasn't it? Thanks for
-following us to here, really.
-
-Well, now that you know how to do a port, let us go at it and
-convert everything in the world into ports! That is the
-easiest way to start contributing to the FreeBSD Project!
-:)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Money, Hardware or Internet access
-
-We are always very happy to accept donations to further the cause of
-the FreeBSD Project and, in a volunteer effort like ours, a little can go
-a long way! Donations of hardware are also very important to expanding
-our list of supported peripherals since we generally lack the funds to
-buy such items ourselves.
-
-
-
-Donating funds
-
-While the FreeBSD Project is not a 501(C3) (non-profit) corporation and
-hence cannot offer special tax incentives for any donations made, any such
-donations will be gratefully accepted on behalf of the project by
-FreeBSD, Inc.
-
-FreeBSD, Inc. was founded in early 1995 by &a.jkh; and &a.davidg; with the
-goal of furthering the aims of the FreeBSD Project and giving it a minimal
-corporate presence. Any and all funds donated (as well as any profits
-that may eventually be realized by FreeBSD, Inc.) will be used exclusively
-to further the project's goals.
-
-Please make any checks payable to FreeBSD, Inc., sent in care of the
-following address:
-
-
-
-FreeBSD, Inc.
-c/o Jordan Hubbard
-4041 Pike Lane, suite #D.
-Concord CA, 94520
-
-[temporarily using the Walnut Creek CDROM address until a PO box can be
-opened]
-
-
-
-Wire transfers may also be sent directly to:
-
-
-
-Bank Of America
-Concord Main Office
-P.O. Box 37176
-San Francisco CA, 94137-5176
-
-Routing #: 121-000-358
-Account #: 01411-07441 (FreeBSD, Inc.)
-
-
-
-Any correspondence related to donations should be sent to
-Jordan Hubbard, either
-via email or to the FreeBSD, Inc. postal address given above.
-
-If you do not wish to be listed in our
-section, please specify this when making your donation. Thanks!
-
-
-
-
-Donating hardware
-
-Donations of hardware in any of the 3 following categories are also gladly
-accepted by the FreeBSD Project:
-
-
-
-
-
-General purpose hardware such as disk drives, memory or complete
-systems should be sent to the FreeBSD, Inc. address listed in the
-donating funds section.
-
-
-
-
-Hardware for which ongoing compliance testing is desired.
-We are currently trying to put together a testing lab of all components
-that FreeBSD supports so that proper regression testing can be done with
-each new release. We are still lacking many important pieces (network cards,
-motherboards, etc) and if you would like to make such a donation, please contact
-&a.davidg; for information on which items are still required.
-
-
-
-
-Hardware currently unsupported by FreeBSD for which you would like to
-see such support added. Please contact the &a.core; before sending
-such items as we will need to find a developer willing to take on the task
-before we can accept delivery of new hardware.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Donating Internet access
-
-We can always use new mirror sites for FTP, WWW or cvsup.
-If you would like to be such a mirror, please contact
-the FreeBSD project administrators for more information.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Donors Gallery
-
-The FreeBSD Project is indebted to the following donors and would
-like to publically thank them here!
-
-
-
-
-
-Contributors to the central server project:
-
-
-The following individuals and businesses made it possible for
-the FreeBSD Project to build a new central server machine to eventually
-replace freefall.freebsd.org by donating the following items:
-
-
-
-
-
-Ade Barkah
-and his employer, Hemisphere Online, donated a Pentium Pro (P6) 200Mhz CPU
-
-
-
-
-ASA Computers
-donated a Tyan 1662 motherboard.
-
-
-
-
-Joe McGuckin of
-ViaNet Communications
-donated a Kingston ethernet controller.
-
-
-
-
-Jack O'Neill donated an NCR 53C875 SCSI
-controller card.
-
-
-
-
-Ulf Zimmermann
-of Alameda Networks
-donated 128MB of memory, a 4 Gb disk drive
-and the case.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Direct funding:
-
-
-The following individuals and businesses have generously contributed
-direct funding to the project:
-
-
-
-
-
-Annelise Anderson
-
-
-
-
-Matt Dillon
-
-
-
-
-Epilogue Technology Corporation
-
-
-
-
-Sean Eric Fagan
-
-
-
-
-Gianmarco Giovannelli
-
-
-
-
-Josef C. Grosch
-
-
-
-
-Chuck Robey
-
-
-
-
-Kenneth P. Stox of Imaginary Landscape, LLC.
-
-
-
-
-Dmitry S. Kohmanyuk
-
-
-
-
-Laser5
-of Japan (a portion of the profits from sales of their
-various FreeBSD CD-ROMs.
-
-
-
-
-Fuki Shuppan Publishing Co. donated a portion of
-their profits from Hajimete no FreeBSD
-(FreeBSD, Getting started) to the FreeBSD and XFree86
-projects.
-
-
-
-ASCII Corp. donated a portion of
-their profits from several FreeBSD-related books to the
-FreeBSD project.
-
-
-
-Yokogawa Electric Corp has generously donated
-significant funding to the FreeBSD project.
-
-
-
-BuffNET
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Hardware contributors:
-
-
-The following individuals and businesses have generously contributed
-hardware for testing and device driver development/support:
-
-
-
-
-
-Walnut Creek CDROM for providing the Pentium P5-90 and
-486/DX2-66 EISA/VL systems that are being used for our development
-work, to say nothing of the network access and other donations of
-hardware resources.
-
-
-
-
-TRW Financial Systems, Inc. provided 130 PCs, three 68 GB
-fileservers, twelve Ethernets, two routers and an ATM
-switch for debugging the diskless code. They also keep a
-couple of FreeBSD hackers alive and busy. Thanks!
-
-
-
-
-Dermot McDonnell donated the Toshiba XM3401B CDROM drive
-currently used in freefall.
-
-
-
-
-&a.chuck; contributed his floppy tape streamer for experimental
-work.
-
-
-
-
-Larry Altneu <larry@ALR.COM>, and &a.wilko;,
-provided Wangtek and Archive QIC-02 tape drives in order to
-improve the wt driver.
-
-
-
-
-Ernst Winter <ewinter@lobo.muc.de> contributed a 2.88 MB
-floppy drive to the project. This will hopefully increase the
-pressure for rewriting the floppy disk driver. ;-)
-
-
-
-
-Tekram Technologies
-sent one each of their DC-390, DC-390U and DC-390F FAST and ULTRA
-SCSI host adapter cards for regression testing of the NCR and AMD
-drivers with their cards. They are also to be applauded for making
-driver sources for free operating systems available from their
-FTP server ftp://ftp.tekram.com/scsi/FreeBSD.
-
-
-
-
-Larry M. Augustin
-contributed not only a Symbios Sym8751S SCSI card, but also a set
-of data books, including one about the forthcoming Sym53c895 chip
-with Ultra-2 and LVD support, and the latest programming manual with
-information on how to safely use the advanced features of the latest
-Symbios SCSI chips. Thanks a lot!
-
-
-
-
-Christoph Kukulies
-donated an FX120 12 speed Mitsumi CDROM drive for IDE CDROM driver
-development.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Special contributors:
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Walnut Creek CDROM
-has donated almost more than we can say (see the
- document for more details).
-In particular, we would like to thank them for the original hardware
-used for freefall.FreeBSD.ORG, our primary development
-machine, and for thud.FreeBSD.ORG, a testing and build box.
-We are also indebted to them for funding various contributors over
-the years and providing us with unrestricted use of their T1
-connection to the Internet.
-
-
-
-The interface business GmbH, Dresden has been patiently
-supporting &a.joerg; who has often preferred FreeBSD work over
-paywork, and used to fall back to their (quite expensive) EUnet
-Internet connection whenever his private connection became too
-slow or flakey to work with it...
-
-
-
-Berkeley Software Design, Inc. has contributed their DOS emulator code to the
-remaining BSD world, which is used in the dosemu
-command.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Derived Software Contributors
-
-This software was originally derived from William
-F. Jolitz's 386BSD release 0.1, though almost none of the
-original 386BSD specific code remains. This software has
-been essentially re-implemented from the 4.4BSD-Lite
-release provided by the Computer Science Research Group
-(CSRG) at the University of California, Berkeley and
-associated academic contributors.
-
-There are also portions of NetBSD that have been integrated
-into FreeBSD as well, and we would therefore like to thank
-all the contributors to NetBSD for their work.
-
-
-
-
-Additional FreeBSD Contributors
-
-(in alphabetical order by first name):
-
-
-
-
-
-A JOSEPH KOSHY <koshy@india.hp.com>
-
-
-
-ABURAYA Ryushirou <rewsirow@ff.iij4u.or.jp>
-
-
-
-Ada T Lim <ada@bsd.org>
-
-
-
-Adam Glass <glass@postgres.berkeley.edu>
-
-
-
-Adrian T. Filipi-Martin <atf3r@agate.cs.virginia.edu>
-
-
-
-Akito Fujita <fujita@zoo.ncl.omron.co.jp>
-
-
-
-Alain Kalker <A.C.P.M.Kalker@student.utwente.nl>
-
-
-
-Alan Cox <alc@cs.rice.edu>
-
-
-
-Andreas Kohout <shanee@rabbit.augusta.de>
-
-
-
-Andreas Lohr <andreas@marvin.RoBIN.de>
-
-
-
-Andrew Gordon <andrew.gordon@net-tel.co.uk>
-
-
-
-Andrew Herbert <andrew@werple.apana.org.au>
-
-
-
-Andrew McRae <amcrae@cisco.com>
-
-
-
-Andrew Moore <alm@FreeBSD.org>
-
-
-
-Andrew Stevenson <andrew@ugh.net.au>
-
-
-
-Andrew V. Stesin <stesin@elvisti.kiev.ua>
-
-
-
-Andrey Zakhvatov <andy@icc.surw.chel.su>
-
-
-
-Andy Whitcroft <andy@sarc.city.ac.uk>
-
-
-
-Angelo Turetta <ATuretta@stylo.it>
-
-
-
-Anthony Yee-Hang Chan <yeehang@netcom.com>
-
-
-
-Ari Suutari <ari@suutari.iki.fi>
-
-
-
-Brent J. Nordquist <bjn@visi.com>
-
-
-
-Bernd Rosauer <br@schiele-ct.de>
-
-
-
-Bill Kish <kish@osf.org>
-
-
-
-&a.wlloyd;
-
-
-
-Bob Wilcox <bob@obiwan.uucp>
-
-
-
-Boyd Faulkner <faulkner@mpd.tandem.com>
-
-
-
-Brent J. Nordquist <bjn@visi.com>
-
-
-
-Brett Taylor <brett@peloton.physics.montana.edu>
-
-
-
-Brian Clapper <bmc@willscreek.com>
-
-
-
-Brian Handy <handy@lambic.space.lockheed.com>
-
-
-
-Brian Tao <taob@risc.org>
-
-
-
-Brion Moss <brion@queeg.com>
-
-
-
-Bruce Gingery <bgingery@gtcs.com>
-
-
-
-Carey Jones <mcj@acquiesce.org>
-
-
-
-Carl Fongheiser <cmf@netins.net>
-
-
-
-Charles Hannum <mycroft@ai.mit.edu>
-
-
-
-Charles Mott <cmott@srv.net>
-
-
-
-Chet Ramey <chet@odin.INS.CWRU.Edu>
-
-
-
-Chris Dabrowski < chris@vader.org>
-
-
-
-Chris G. Demetriou <cgd@postgres.berkeley.edu>
-
-
-
-Chris Shenton <cshenton@angst.it.hq.nasa.gov>
-
-
-
-Chris Stenton <jacs@gnome.co.uk>
-
-
-
-Chris Timmons <skynyrd@opus.cts.cwu.edu>
-
-
-
-Chris Torek <torek@ee.lbl.gov>
-
-
-
-Christian Gusenbauer <cg@fimp01.fim.uni-linz.ac.at>
-
-
-
-Christian Haury <Christian.Haury@sagem.fr>
-
-
-
-Christoph Robitschko <chmr@edvz.tu-graz.ac.at>
-
-
-
-Choi Jun Ho <junker@jazz.snu.ac.kr>
-
-
-
-Chuck Hein <chein@cisco.com>
-
-
-
-Conrad Sabatier <conrads@neosoft.com>
-
-
-
-Cornelis van der Laan <nils@guru.ims.uni-stuttgart.de>
-
-
-
-Craig Struble <cstruble@vt.edu>
-
-
-
-Cristian Ferretti <cfs@riemann.mat.puc.cl>
-
-
-
-Curt Mayer <curt@toad.com>
-
-
-
-Dai Ishijima <ishijima@tri.pref.osaka.jp>
-
-
-
-Dan Cross <tenser@spitfire.ecsel.psu.edu>
-
-
-
-Daniel Baker <dbaker@crash.ops.neosoft.com>
-
-
-
-Daniel M. Eischen <deischen@iworks.InterWorks.org>
-
-
-
-Daniel O'Connor <doconnor@gsoft.com.au>
-
-
-
-Danny J. Zerkel <dzerkel@feephi.phofarm.com>
-
-
-
-Dave Bodenstab <imdave@synet.net>
-
-
-
-Dave Burgess <burgess@hrd769.brooks.af.mil>
-
-
-
-Dave Chapeskie <dchapes@zeus.leitch.com>
-
-
-
-Dave Edmondson <davided@sco.com>
-
-
-
-Dave Rivers <rivers@ponds.uucp>
-
-
-
-David A. Bader <dbader@umiacs.umd.edu>
-
-
-
-David Dawes <dawes@physics.su.OZ.AU>
-
-
-
-David Holloway <daveh@gwythaint.tamis.com>
-
-
-
-David Leonard <d@scry.dstc.edu.au>
-
-
-
-Dean Huxley <dean@fsa.ca>
-
-
-
-Dirk Froemberg <dirk@hal.in-berlin.de>
-
-
-
-Dmitrij Tejblum <dima@tejblum.dnttm.rssi.ru>
-
-
-
-Dmitry Kohmanyuk <dk@farm.org>
-
-
-
-&a.whiteside;
-
-
-
-Don Yuniskis <dgy@rtd.com>
-
-
-
-Donald Burr <d_burr@ix.netcom.com>
-
-
-
-Doug Ambrisko <ambrisko@ambrisko.roble.com>
-
-
-
-Douglas Carmichael <dcarmich@mcs.com>
-
-
-
-Eiji-usagi-MATSUmoto <usagi@ruby.club.or.jp>
-
-
-
-ELISA Font Project
-
-
-
-Eric A. Griff <eagriff@global2000.net>
-
-
-
-Eric Blood <eblood@cs.unr.edu>
-
-
-
-Eric J. Chet <ejc@bazzle.com>
-
-
-
-Eric J. Schwertfeger <eric@cybernut.com>
-
-
-
-Francis M J Hsieh <mjhsieh@life.nthu.edu.tw>
-
-
-
-Frank Bartels <knarf@camelot.de>
-
-
-
-Frank Chen Hsiung Chan <frankch@waru.life.nthu.edu.tw>
-
-
-
-Frank Maclachlan <fpm@crash.cts.com>
-
-
-
-Frank Nobis <fn@trinity.radio-do.de>
-
-
-
-FUJIMOTO Kensaku <fujimoto@oscar.elec.waseda.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-FURUSAWA Kazuhisa <furusawa@com.cs.osakafu-u.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Gary A. Browning <gab10@griffcd.amdahl.com>
-
-
-
-Gary Kline <kline@thought.org>
-
-
-
-Gerard Roudier <groudier@club-internet.fr>
-
-
-
-Greg Ungerer <gerg@stallion.oz.au>
-
-
-
-Harlan Stenn <Harlan.Stenn@pfcs.com>
-
-
-
-Havard Eidnes <Havard.Eidnes@runit.sintef.no>
-
-
-
-Hideaki Ohmon <ohmon@tom.sfc.keio.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Hidekazu Kuroki <hidekazu@cs.titech.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Hidetoshi Shimokawa <simokawa@sat.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Hideyuki Suzuki <hideyuki@sat.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Hironori Ikura <hikura@kaisei.org>
-
-
-
-Holger Veit <Holger.Veit@gmd.de>
-
-
-
-Hung-Chi Chu <hcchu@r350.ee.ntu.edu.tw>
-
-
-
-Ian Vaudrey <i.vaudrey@bigfoot.com>
-
-
-
-Igor Vinokurov <igor@zynaps.ru>
-
-
-
-Ikuo Nakagawa <ikuo@isl.intec.co.jp>
-
-
-
-IMAMURA Tomoaki <tomoak-i@is.aist-nara.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Ishii Masahiro
-
-
-
- Issei Suzuki<issei@t-cnet.or.jp>
-
-
-
-Itsuro Saito <saito@miv.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-J. David Lowe <lowe@saturn5.com>
-
-
-
-J.T. Conklin <jtc@cygnus.com>
-
-
-
-James Clark <jjc@jclark.com>
-
-
-
-James da Silva <jds@cs.umd.edu> et al
-
-
-
-Janusz Kokot <janek@gaja.ipan.lublin.pl>
-
-
-
-Jason Thorpe <thorpej@nas.nasa.gov>
-
-
-
-Javier Martin Rueda <jmrueda@diatel.upm.es>
-
-
-
-Jeff Bartig <jeffb@doit.wisc.edu>
-
-
-
-Jeffrey Wheat <jeff@cetlink.net>
-
-
-
-Jian-Da Li <jdli@csie.NCTU.edu.tw>
-
-
-
-Jim Binkley <jrb@cs.pdx.edu>
-
-
-
-Jim Lowe <james@cs.uwm.edu>
-
-
-
-Jim Wilson <wilson@moria.cygnus.com>
-
-
-
-Joao Carlos Mendes Luis <jonny@coppe.ufrj.br>
-
-
-
-Joel Sutton <sutton@aardvark.apana.org.au>
-
-
-
-Johann Tonsing <jtonsing@mikom.csir.co.za>
-
-
-
-John Capo <jc@irbs.com>
-
-
-
-John Heidemann <johnh@isi.edu>
-
-
-
-John Perry <perry@vishnu.alias.net>
-
-
-
-John Polstra <jdp@polstra.com>
-
-
-
-John Rochester <jr@cs.mun.ca>
-
-
-
-Josef Karthauser <joe@uk.freebsd.org>
-
-
-
-Joseph Stein <joes@seaport.net>
-
-
-
-Josh Gilliam <josh@quick.net>
-
-
-
-Josh Tiefenbach <josh@ican.net>
-
-
-
-Juergen Lock <nox@jelal.hb.north.de>
-
-
-
-Juha Inkari <inkari@cc.hut.fi>
-
-
-
-Julian Assange <proff@suburbia.net>
-
-
-
-Julian Jenkins <kaveman@magna.com.au>
-
-
-
-Julian Stacey <jhs@freebsd.org>
-
-
-
-Junichi Satoh <junichi@jp.freebsd.org>
-
-
-
-Kapil Chowksey <kchowksey@hss.hns.com>
-
-
-
-Kazuhiko Kiriyama <kiri@kiri.toba-cmt.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Keith Bostic <bostic@bostic.com>
-
-
-
-Keith Moore
-
-
-
-Kenneth Monville <desmo@bandwidth.org>
-
-
-
-Kent Vander Velden <graphix@iastate.edu>
-
-
-
-Kirk McKusick <mckusick@mckusick.com>
-
-
-
-Kiroh HARADA <kiroh@kh.rim.or.jp>
-
-
-
-Koichi Sato <copan@ppp.fastnet.or.jp>
-
-
-
-Kostya Lukin <lukin@okbmei.msk.su>
-
-
-
-Kurt Olsen <kurto@tiny.mcs.usu.edu>
-
-
-
-Lars Koeller <Lars.Koeller@Uni-Bielefeld.DE>
-
-
-
-Lucas James <Lucas.James@ldjpc.apana.org.au>
-
-
-
-Luigi Rizzo <luigi@iet.unipi.it>
-
-
-
-Makoto MATSUSHITA <matusita@jp.freebsd.org>
-
-
-
-Manu Iyengar <iyengar@grunthos.pscwa.psca.com>
-
-
-
-Marc Frajola <marc@dev.com>
-
-
-
-Marc Ramirez <mrami@mramirez.sy.yale.edu>
-
-
-
-Marc Slemko <marcs@znep.com>
-
-
-
-Marc van Kempen <wmbfmk@urc.tue.nl>
-
-
-
-Mario Sergio Fujikawa Ferreira <lioux@gns.com.br>
-
-
-
-Mark Huizer <xaa@stack.nl>
-
-
-
-Mark J. Taylor <mtaylor@cybernet.com>
-
-
-
-Mark Krentel <krentel@rice.edu>
-
-
-
-Mark Tinguely <tinguely@plains.nodak.edu>
-<tinguely@hookie.cs.ndsu.NoDak.edu>
-
-
-
-Martin Birgmeier
-
-
-
-Martti Kuparinen <erakupa@kk.etx.ericsson.se>
-
-
-
-Masachika ISHIZUKA <ishizuka@isis.min.ntt.jp>
-
-
-
-Mats Lofkvist <mal@algonet.se>
-
-
-
-Matt Bartley <mbartley@lear35.cytex.com>
-
-
-
-Matt Thomas <thomas@lkg.dec.com>
-
-
-
-Matt White <mwhite+@CMU.EDU>
-
-
-
-Matthew Hunt <mph@pobox.com>
-
-
-
-Matthew N. Dodd <winter@jurai.net>
-
-
-
-Matthew Stein <matt@bdd.net>
-
-
-
-Maurice Castro <maurice@planet.serc.rmit.edu.au>
-
-
-
-Michael Butschky <butsch@computi.erols.com>
-
-
-
-Michael Elbel <me@FreeBSD.ORG>
-
-
-
-Michael Searle <searle@longacre.demon.co.uk>
-
-
-
-Miguel Angel Sagreras <msagre@cactus.fi.uba.ar>
-
-
-
-Mikael Hybsch <micke@dynas.se>
-
-
-
-Mikhail Teterin <mi@aldan.ziplink.net>
-
-
-
-Mike McGaughey <mmcg@cs.monash.edu.au>
-
-
-
-Mike Peck <mike@binghamton.edu>
-
-
-
-Ming-I Hseh <PA@FreeBSD.ee.Ntu.edu.TW>
-
-
-
-MITA Yoshio <mita@jp.FreeBSD.ORG>
-
-
-
-MOROHOSHI Akihiko <moro@race.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Murray Stokely <murray@cdrom.com>
-
-
-
-NAKAMURA Kazushi <nkazushi@highway.or.jp>
-
-
-
-Naoki Hamada <nao@tom-yam.or.jp>
-
-
-
-Narvi <narvi@haldjas.folklore.ee>
-
-
-
-NIIMI Satoshi <sa2c@and.or.jp>
-
-
-
-Nick Sayer <nsayer@quack.kfu.com>
-
-
-
-Nicolas Souchu <Nicolas.Souchu@prism.uvsq.fr>
-
-
-
-Nisha Talagala <nisha@cs.berkeley.edu>
-
-
-
-Nobuhiro Yasutomi <nobu@psrc.isac.co.jp>
-
-
-
-Nobuyuki Koganemaru <kogane@kces.koganemaru.co.jp>
-
-
-
-Noritaka Ishizumi <graphite@jp.FreeBSD.ORG>
-
-
-
-Oliver Fromme <oliver.fromme@heim3.tu-clausthal.de>
-
-
-
-Oliver Laumann <net@informatik.uni-bremen.de>
-
-
-
-Oliver Oberdorf <oly@world.std.com>
-
-
-
-Paul Fox <pgf@foxharp.boston.ma.us>
-
-
-
-Paul Kranenburg <pk@cs.few.eur.nl>
-
-
-
-Paul Mackerras <paulus@cs.anu.edu.au>
-
-
-
-Paulo Menezes <paulo@isr.uc.pt>
-
-
-
-Paul T. Root <proot@horton.iaces.com>
-
-
-
-Pedro Giffuni <giffunip@asme.org>
-
-
-
-Pedro A M Vazquez <vazquez@IQM.Unicamp.BR>
-
-
-
-Peter Cornelius <pc@inr.fzk.de>
-
-
-
-Peter Haight <peterh@prognet.com>
-
-
-
-Peter Hawkins <peter@rhiannon.clari.net.au>
-
-
-
-Peter Stubbs <PETERS@staidan.qld.edu.au>
-
-
-
-Pierre Beyssac <bp@fasterix.freenix.org>
-
-
-
-Phil Maker <pjm@cs.ntu.edu.au>
-
-
-
-R. Kym Horsell
-
-
-
-Randall Hopper <rhh@stealth.ct.picker.com>
-
-
-
-Richard Hwang <rhwang@bigpanda.com>
-
-
-
-Richard Seaman, Jr. <dick@tar.com>
-
-
-
-Richard Stallman <rms@gnu.ai.mit.edu>
-
-
-
-Richard Wiwatowski <rjwiwat@adelaide.on.net>
-
-
-
-Rob Mallory <rmallory@csusb.edu>
-
-
-
-Rob Shady <rls@id.net>
-
-
-
-Rob Snow <rsnow@txdirect.net>
-
-
-
-Robert Sanders <rsanders@mindspring.com>
-
-
-
-Robert Withrow <witr@rwwa.com>
-
-
-
-Ronald Kuehn <kuehn@rz.tu-clausthal.de>
-
-
-
-Roland Jesse <jesse@cs.uni-magdeburg.de>
-
-
-
-Ruslan Shevchenko <rssh@cki.ipri.kiev.ua>
-
-
-
-Samuel Lam <skl@ScalableNetwork.com>
-
-
-
-Sander Vesik <sander@haldjas.folklore.ee>
-
-
-
-Sandro Sigala <ssigala@globalnet.it>
-
-
-
-Sascha Blank <blank@fox.uni-trier.de>
-
-
-
-Sascha Wildner <swildner@channelz.GUN.de>
-
-
-
-Satoshi Taoka <taoka@infonets.hiroshima-u.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Scott Blachowicz <scott.blachowicz@seaslug.org>
-
-
-
-Scott A. Kenney <saken@rmta.ml.org>
-
-
-
-Serge V. Vakulenko <vak@zebub.msk.su>
-
-
-
-Sheldon Hearn <axl@iafrica.com>
-
-
-
-Simon Marlow <simonm@dcs.gla.ac.uk>
-
-
-
-Slaven Rezic (Tomic) <eserte@cs.tu-berlin.de>
-
-
-
-Soren Dayton <csdayton@midway.uchicago.edu>
-
-
-
-Soren Dossing <sauber@netcom.com>
-
-
-
-Stefan Moeding <moeding@bn.DeTeMobil.de>
-
-
-
-Stephane Legrand <stephane@lituus.fr>
-
-
-
-Stephen J. Roznowski <sjr@home.net>
-
-
-
-Steve Gerakines <steve2@genesis.tiac.net>
-
-
-
-Suzuki Yoshiaki <zensyo@ann.tama.kawasaki.jp>
-
-
-
-Tadashi Kumano <kumano@strl.nhk.or.jp>
-
-
-
-Taguchi Takeshi <taguchi@tohoku.iij.ad.jp>
-
-
-
-Takayuki Ariga <a00821@cc.hc.keio.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Terry Lambert <terry@lambert.org>
-
-
-
-Terry Lee <terry@uivlsi.csl.uiuc.edu>
-
-
-
-Tetsuya Furukawa <tetsuya@secom-sis.co.jp>
-
-
-
-Theo Deraadt <deraadt@fsa.ca>
-
-
-
-Thomas König <Thomas.Koenig@ciw.uni-karlsruhe.de>
-
-
-
-Þórður Ívarsson <totii@est.is>
-
-
-
-Tim Kientzle <kientzle@netcom.com>
-
-
-
-Tim Wilkinson <tim@sarc.city.ac.uk>
-
-
-
-Tom Samplonius <tom@misery.sdf.com>
-
-
-
-Torbjorn Granlund <tege@matematik.su.se>
-
-
-
-Toshihiro Kanda <candy@fct.kgc.co.jp>
-
-
-
-Trefor S. <trefor@flevel.co.uk>
-
-
-
-Ville Eerola <ve@sci.fi>
-
-
-
-Werner Griessl <werner@btp1da.phy.uni-bayreuth.de>
-
-
-
-Wes Santee <wsantee@wsantee.oz.net>
-
-
-
-Wilko Bulte <wilko@yedi.iaf.nl>
-
-
-
-Wolfgang Stanglmeier <wolf@kintaro.cologne.de>
-
-
-
-Wu Ching-hong <woju@FreeBSD.ee.Ntu.edu.TW>
-
-
-
-Yen-Shuo Su <yssu@CCCA.NCTU.edu.tw>
-
-
-
-Yoshiaki Uchikawa <yoshiaki@kt.rim.or.jp>
-
-
-
-Yoshiro Mihira <sanpei@yy.cs.keio.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Yukihiro Nakai <nakai@mlab.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
-
-
-
-Yuval Yarom <yval@cs.huji.ac.il>
-
-
-
-Yves Fonk <yves@cpcoup5.tn.tudelft.nl>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-386BSD Patch Kit Patch Contributors
-
-(in alphabetical order by first name):
-
-
-
-
-
-Adam Glass <glass@postgres.berkeley.edu>
-
-
-
-Adrian Hall <adrian@ibmpcug.co.uk>
-
-
-
-Andrey A. Chernov <ache@astral.msk.su>
-
-
-
-Andrew Herbert <andrew@werple.apana.org.au>
-
-
-
-Andrew Moore <alm@netcom.com>
-
-
-
-Andy Valencia <ajv@csd.mot.com>
-<jtk@netcom.com>
-
-
-
-Arne Henrik Juul <arnej@Lise.Unit.NO>
-
-
-
-Bakul Shah <bvs@bitblocks.com>
-
-
-
-Barry Lustig <barry@ictv.com>
-
-
-
-Bob Wilcox <bob@obiwan.uucp>
-
-
-
-Branko Lankester
-
-
-
-Brett Lymn <blymn@mulga.awadi.com.AU>
-
-
-
-Charles Hannum <mycroft@ai.mit.edu>
-
-
-
-Chris G. Demetriou <cgd@postgres.berkeley.edu>
-
-
-
-Chris Torek <torek@ee.lbl.gov>
-
-
-
-Christoph Robitschko <chmr@edvz.tu-graz.ac.at>
-
-
-
-Daniel Poirot <poirot@aio.jsc.nasa.gov>
-
-
-
-Dave Burgess <burgess@hrd769.brooks.af.mil>
-
-
-
-Dave Rivers <rivers@ponds.uucp>
-
-
-
-David Dawes <dawes@physics.su.OZ.AU>
-
-
-
-David Greenman <davidg@Root.COM>
-
-
-
-Eric J. Haug <ejh@slustl.slu.edu>
-
-
-
-Felix Gaehtgens <felix@escape.vsse.in-berlin.de>
-
-
-
-Frank Maclachlan <fpm@crash.cts.com>
-
-
-
-Gary A. Browning <gab10@griffcd.amdahl.com>
-
-
-
-Gary Howland <gary@hotlava.com>
-
-
-
-Geoff Rehmet <csgr@alpha.ru.ac.za>
-
-
-
-Goran Hammarback <goran@astro.uu.se>
-
-
-
-Guido van Rooij <guido@gvr.win.tue.nl>
-
-
-
-Guy Harris <guy@auspex.com>
-
-
-
-Havard Eidnes <Havard.Eidnes@runit.sintef.no>
-
-
-
-Herb Peyerl <hpeyerl@novatel.cuc.ab.ca>
-
-
-
-Holger Veit <Holger.Veit@gmd.de>
-
-
-
-Ishii Masahiro, R. Kym Horsell
-
-
-
-J.T. Conklin <jtc@cygnus.com>
-
-
-
-Jagane D Sundar < jagane@netcom.com >
-
-
-
-James Clark <jjc@jclark.com>
-
-
-
-James Jegers <jimj@miller.cs.uwm.edu>
-
-
-
-James W. Dolter
-
-
-
-James da Silva <jds@cs.umd.edu> et al
-
-
-
-Jay Fenlason <hack@datacube.com>
-
-
-
-Jim Wilson <wilson@moria.cygnus.com>
-
-
-
-Jörg Lohse <lohse@tech7.informatik.uni-hamburg.de>
-
-
-
-Jörg Wunsch <joerg_wunsch@uriah.heep.sax.de>
-
-
-
-John Dyson - <formerly dyson@ref.tfs.com>
-
-
-
-John Woods <jfw@eddie.mit.edu>
-
-
-
-Jordan K. Hubbard <jkh@whisker.hubbard.ie>
-
-
-
-Julian Elischer <julian@dialix.oz.au>
-
-
-
-Julian Stacey <jhs@freebsd.org>
-
-
-
-Karl Lehenbauer <karl@NeoSoft.com>
-<karl@one.neosoft.com>
-
-
-
-Keith Bostic <bostic@toe.CS.Berkeley.EDU>
-
-
-
-Ken Hughes
-
-
-
-Kent Talarico <kent@shipwreck.tsoft.net>
-
-
-
-Kevin Lahey <kml%rokkaku.UUCP@mathcs.emory.edu>
-<kml@mosquito.cis.ufl.edu>
-
-
-
-Marc Frajola <marc@dev.com>
-
-
-
-Mark Tinguely <tinguely@plains.nodak.edu>
-<tinguely@hookie.cs.ndsu.NoDak.edu>
-
-
-
-Martin Renters <martin@tdc.on.ca>
-
-
-
-Michael Clay <mclay@weareb.org>
-
-
-
-Michael Galassi <nerd@percival.rain.com>
-
-
-
-Mike Durkin <mdurkin@tsoft.sf-bay.org>
-
-
-
-Naoki Hamada <nao@tom-yam.or.jp>
-
-
-
-Nate Williams <nate@bsd.coe.montana.edu>
-
-
-
-Nick Handel <nhandel@NeoSoft.com>
-<nick@madhouse.neosoft.com>
-
-
-
-Pace Willisson <pace@blitz.com>
-
-
-
-Paul Kranenburg <pk@cs.few.eur.nl>
-
-
-
-Paul Mackerras <paulus@cs.anu.edu.au>
-
-
-
-Paul Popelka <paulp@uts.amdahl.com>
-
-
-
-Peter da Silva <peter@NeoSoft.com>
-
-
-
-Phil Sutherland <philsuth@mycroft.dialix.oz.au>
-
-
-
-Poul-Henning Kamp<phk@FreeBSD.ORG>
-
-
-
-Ralf Friedl <friedl@informatik.uni-kl.de>
-
-
-
-Rick Macklem <root@snowhite.cis.uoguelph.ca>
-
-
-
-Robert D. Thrush <rd@phoenix.aii.com>
-
-
-
-Rodney W. Grimes <rgrimes@cdrom.com>
-
-
-
-Sascha Wildner <swildner@channelz.GUN.de>
-
-
-
-Scott Burris <scott@pita.cns.ucla.edu>
-
-
-
-Scott Reynolds <scott@clmqt.marquette.mi.us>
-
-
-
-Sean Eric Fagan <sef@kithrup.com>
-
-
-
-Simon J Gerraty <sjg@melb.bull.oz.au>
-<sjg@zen.void.oz.au>
-
-
-
-Stephen McKay <syssgm@devetir.qld.gov.au>
-
-
-
-Terry Lambert <terry@icarus.weber.edu>
-
-
-
-Terry Lee <terry@uivlsi.csl.uiuc.edu>
-
-
-
-Tor Egge <Tor.Egge@idi.ntnu.no>
-
-
-
-Warren Toomey <wkt@csadfa.cs.adfa.oz.au>
-
-
-
-Wiljo Heinen <wiljo@freeside.ki.open.de>
-
-
-
-William Jolitz <withheld>
-
-
-
-Wolfgang Solfrank <ws@tools.de>
-
-
-
-Wolfgang Stanglmeier <wolf@dentaro.GUN.de>
-
-
-
-Yuval Yarom <yval@cs.huji.ac.il>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Source Tree Guidelines and Policies
-
-
-Contributed by &a.phk;.
-
-This chapter documents various guidelines and policies in force
-for the FreeBSD source tree.
-
-
-
-MAINTAINER on Makefiles
-
-
-June 1996.
-
-If a particular portion of the FreeBSD distribution is being maintained by a
-person or group of persons, they can communicate this fact to the
-world by adding a
-
-
- MAINTAINER= email-addresses
-
-
-line to the makefiles covering this portion of the source tree.
-
-The semantics of this are as follows:
-
-The maintainer owns and is responsible for that code. This means
-that he is responsible for fixing bugs and answer problem reports
-pertaining to that piece of the code, and in the case of contributed
-software, for tracking new versions, as appropriate.
-
-Changes to directories which have a maintainer defined shall be
-sent to the
-maintainer for review before being committed. Only if the maintainer does not respond
-for an unacceptable period of time, to several emails, will it be
-acceptable to commit changes without review by the maintainer.
-However, it is suggested that you try and have the changes reviewed
-by someone else if at all possible.
-
-It is of course not acceptable to add a person or group as maintainer
-unless they agree to assume this duty. On the other hand it doesn't
-have to be a committer and it can easily be a group of people.
-
-
-
-
-Contributed Software
-
-June 1996.
-
-Some parts of the FreeBSD distribution consist of software that
-is actively being maintained outside the FreeBSD project. For
-historical reasons, we call this contributed software. Some
-examples are perl, gcc and patch.
-
-Over the last couple of years, various methods have been used in
-dealing with this type of software and all have some number of
-advantages and drawbacks. No clear winner has emerged.
-
-Since this is the case, after some debate one of these methods has
-been selected as the "official" method and will be required for
-future imports of software of this kind. Furthermore, it is strongly
-suggested that existing contributed software converge on this model
-over time, as it has significant advantages over the old method,
-including the ability to easily obtain diffs relative to the
-"official" versions of the source by everyone (even without cvs
-access). This will make it significantly easier to return changes
-to the primary developers of the contributed software.
-
-Ultimately, however, it comes down to the people actually doing
-the work. If using this model is particularly unsuited to the
-package being dealt with, exceptions to these rules may be granted
-only with the approval of the core team and with the general
-consensus of the other developers. The ability to maintain the
-package in the future will be a key issue in the decisions.
-
-The Tcl embedded programming language will be used as example
-of how this model works:
-
-
-src/contrib/tcl
- contains the source as distributed by the maintainers
-of this package. Parts that are entirely not applicable for FreeBSD
-can be removed. In the case of Tcl, the "mac", "win" and "compat"
-subdirectories were eliminated before the import
-
-
-src/lib/libtcl
- contains only a "bmake style" Makefile that uses
-the standard bsd.lib.mk makefile rules to produce the library and
-install the documentation.
-
-
-src/usr.bin/tclsh
- contains only a bmake style Makefile which will
-produce and install the "tclsh" program and its associated man-pages
-using the standard bsd.prog.mk rules.
-
-
-src/tools/tools/tcl_bmake
- contains a couple of shell-scripts that can be of help
-when the tcl software needs updating. These are not part of the
-built or installed software.
-
-The important thing here is that the "src/contrib/tcl" directory
-is created according to the rules: It is supposed to contain the
-sources as distributed (on a proper CVS vendor-branch) with as few
-FreeBSD-specific changes as possible. The 'easy-import' tool on
-freefall will assist in doing the import, but if there are any
-doubts on how to go about it, it is imperative that you ask first
-and not blunder ahead and hope it "works out". CVS is not forgiving
-of import accidents and a fair amount of effort is required to back
-out major mistakes.
-
-Because of some unfortunate design limitations with CVS's vendor
-branches, it is required that "official" patches from the vendor
-be applied to the original distributed sources and the result
-re-imported onto the vendor branch again. Official patches should
-never be patched into the FreeBSD checked out version and
-"committed", as this destroys the vendor branch coherency and makes
-importing future versions rather difficult as there will be conflicts.
-
-Since many packages contain files that are meant for compatibility
-with other architectures and environments that FreeBSD, it is
-permissible to remove parts of the distribution tree that are of no interest
-to FreeBSD in order to save space. Files containing copyright
-notices and release-note kind of information applicable to the
-remaining files shall not be removed.
-
-If it seems easier, the "bmake" makefiles can be produced from the
-dist tree automatically by some utility, something which would
-hopefully make it even easier to upgrade to a new version. If this
-is done, be sure to check in such utilities (as necessary) in the
-src/tools directory along with the port itself so that it is available
-to future maintainers.
-
-In the src/contrib/tcl level directory, a file called FREEBSD-upgrade
-should be added and it should states things like:
-
-
-
-
-
- Which files have been left out
-
-
-
- Where the original distribution was obtained from and/or the official
-master site.
-
-
-
- Where to send patches back to the original authors
-
-
-
- Perhaps an overview of the FreeBSD-specific changes that have been made.
-
-
-
-
-
-However, please do not import FREEBSD-upgrade with the contributed source.
-Rather you should ``cvs add FREEBSD-upgrade ; cvs ci'' after the
-initial import. Example wording from ``src/contrib/cpio'' is below:
-
-
-This directory contains virgin sources of the original distribution files
-on a "vendor" branch. Do not, under any circumstances, attempt to upgrade
-the files in this directory via patches and a cvs commit. New versions or
-official-patch versions must be imported.
-
-For the import of GNU cpio 2.4.2, the following files were removed:
-
- INSTALL cpio.info mkdir.c
- Makefile.in cpio.texi mkinstalldirs
-
-To upgrade to a newer version of cpio, when it is available:
- 1. Unpack the new version into an empty directory.
- [Do not make ANY changes to the files.]
-
- 2. Remove the files listed above and any others that don't apply to
- FreeBSD.
-
- 3. Use the command:
- cvs import -m 'Virgin import of GNU cpio v<version>' \
- src/contrib/cpio GNU v<version>
-
- For example, to do the import of version 2.4.2, I typed:
- cvs import -m 'Virgin import of GNU v2.4.2' \
- src/contrib/cpio GNU v2.4.2
-
- 4. Follow the instructions printed out in step 3 to resolve any
- conflicts between local FreeBSD changes and the newer version.
-
-Do not, under any circumstances, deviate from this procedure.
-
-To make local changes to cpio, simply patch and commit to the main
-branch (aka HEAD). Never make local changes on the GNU branch.
-
-All local changes should be submitted to "cpio@gnu.ai.mit.edu" for
-inclusion in the next vendor release.
-
-obrien@freebsd.org - 30 March 1997
-
-
-
-
-
-Shared Libraries
-
-
-Contributed by &a.asami;, &a.peter;, and &a.obrien;.
-9 December 1996.
-
-If you are adding shared library support to a port or other piece
-of software that doesn't have one, the version numbers should
-follow these rules. Generally, the resulting numbers will have
-nothing to do with the release version of the software.
-
-The three principles of shared library building are:
-
-
-
-
-
-Start from 1.0
-
-
-
-If there is a change that is backwards compatible, bump
-minor number
-
-
-
-If there is an incompatible change, bump major number
-
-
-
-
-
-For instance, added functions and bugfixes result in the minor
-version number being bumped, while deleted functions, changed
-function call syntax etc. will force the major version number
-to change.
-
-Stick to version numbers of the form major.minor (x.y). Our dynamic
-linker does not handle version numbers of the form x.y.z well. Any
-version number after the ``y'' (ie. the third digit) is totally ignored
-when comparing shared lib version numbers to decide which library to
-link with. Given two shared libraries that differ only in the `micro'
-revision, ld.so will link with the higher one. Ie: if you link with
-libfoo.so.3.3.3, the linker only records 3.3 in the headers, and will
-link with anything starting with libfoo.so.3.(anything >= 3).(highest
-available).
-
-Note that ld.so will always use the highest "minor" revision.
-Ie: it will use libc.so.2.2 in preference to libc.so.2.0, even if the
-program was initially linked with libc.so.2.0.
-
-For non-port libraries, it is also our policy to change the
-shared library version number only once between releases. When
-you make a change to a system library that requires the version
-number to be bumped, check the Makefile's commit logs. It is the
-responsibility of the committer to ensure that the first such
-change since the release will result in the shared library version
-number in the Makefile to be updated, and any subsequent changes
-will not.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Adding New Kernel Configuration Options
-
-Contributed by &a.joerg;
-
-Note: You should be familiar with the section about before reading here.
-
-
-
-What's a Kernel Option, Anyway?
-
-The use of kernel options is basically described in the section.
-There's also an explanation of ``historic'' and ``new-style''
-options. The ultimate goal is to eventually turn all the supported
-options in the kernel into new-style ones, so for people who
-correctly did a make depend in their kernel compile directory
-after running config(8), the build process will automatically
-pick up modified options, and only recompile those files where it is
-necessary. Wiping out the old compile directory on each run of
-config(8) as it is still done now can then be eliminated again.
-
-Basically, a kernel option is nothing else than the definition of
-a C preprocessor macro for the kernel compilation process. To make
-the build truly optional, the corresponding part of the kernel
-source (or kernel .h file) must be written with the option
-concept in mind, i. e. the default must have been made overridable
-by the config option. This is usually done with something like:
-
-
-#ifndef THIS_OPTION
-#define THIS_OPTION (some_default_value)
-#endif /* THIS_OPTION */
-
-
-This way, an administrator mentioning another value for the
-option in his config file will take the default out of effect, and
-replace it with his new value. Clearly, the new value will be
-substituted into the source code during the preprocessor run, so it
-must be a valid C expression in whatever context the default value
-would have been used.
-
-It is also possible to create value-less options that simply
-enable or disable a particular piece of code by embracing it in
-
-
-#ifdef THAT_OPTION
-
-[your code here]
-
-#endif
-
-
-Simply mentioning THAT_OPTION in the config file (with or
-without any value) will then turn on the corresponding piece of
-code.
-
-People familiar with the C language will immediately recognize
-that everything could be counted as a ``config option'' where
-there is at least a single #ifdef referencing it... However,
-it's unlikely that many people would put
-
-
- options notyet,notdef
-
-
-in their config file, and then wonder why the kernel compilation
-falls over. :-)
-
-Clearly, using arbitrary names for the options makes it very
-hard to track their usage throughout the kernel source tree. That is
-the rationale behind the new-style option scheme, where each
-option goes into a separate .h file in the kernel compile
-directory, which is by convention named opt_foo.h.
-This way, the usual Makefile dependencies could be applied, and
-make can determine what needs to be recompiled once an option
-has been changed.
-
-The old-style option mechanism still has one advantage for local
-options or maybe experimental options that have a short anticipated
-lifetime: since it is easy to add a new #ifdef to the kernel
-source, this has already made it a kernel config option.
-In this case, the administrator using such an
-option is responsible himself for knowing about its implications
-(and maybe manually forcing the recompilation of parts of his
-kernel). Once the transition of all supported options has been
-done, config(8) will warn whenever an unsupported option
-appears in the config file, but it will nevertheless include it into
-the kernel Makefile.
-
-
-
-
-Now What Do I Have to Do for it?
-
-First, edit sys/conf/options (or
-sys/i386/conf/options.<arch>, e. g.
-sys/i386/conf/options.i386), and select an
-opt_foo.h file where your new option would best go
-into.
-
-If there is already something that comes close to the purpose of
-the new option, pick this. For example, options modifying the
-overall behaviour of the SCSI subsystem can go into opt_scsi.h.
-By default, simply mentioning an option in the appropriate option
-file, say FOO, implies its value will go into the
-corresponding file opt_foo.h. This can be overridden on the
-right-hand side of a rule by specifying another filename.
-
-If there is no opt_foo.h already available for
-the intended new option, invent a new name. Make it meaningful, and
-comment the new section in the
-options[.<arch>] file. config(8) will
-automagically pick up the change, and create that file next time it
-is run. Most options should go in a header file by themselves..
-
-Packing too many options into a single
-opt_foo.h will cause too many kernel files to be
-rebuilt when one of the options has been changed in the config file.
-
-Finally, find out which kernel files depend on the new option.
-Unless you have just invented your option, and it does not exist
-anywhere yet,
-
-
- find /usr/src/sys -name type f | xargs fgrep NEW_OPTION
-
-
-is your friend in finding them. Go and edit all those files, and
-add
-
-
-#include "opt_foo.h"
-
-
-on top, before all the #include <xxx.h>
-stuff. This sequence is most important as the options could
-override defaults from the regular include files, if the
-defaults are of the form
-
-
-#ifndef NEW_OPTION
-#define NEW_OPTION (something)
-#endif
-
-
-in the regular header.
-
-Adding an option that overrides something in a system header file
-(i. e., a file sitting in /usr/include/sys/) is almost
-always a mistake. opt_foo.h cannot be included
-into those files since it would break the headers more seriously,
-but if it is not included, then places that include it may get an
-inconsistent value for the option. Yes, there are precedents for
-this right now, but that does not make them more correct.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Kernel Debugging
-
-Contributed by &a.paul; and &a.joerg;
-
-
-
-Debugging a Kernel Crash Dump with KGDB
-
-Here are some instructions for getting kernel debugging
-working on a crash dump. They assume that you have enough swap
-space for a crash dump. If you have multiple swap
-partitions and the first one is too small to hold the dump,
-you can configure your kernel to use an alternate dump device
-(in the config kernel line), or
-you can specify an alternate using the dumpon(8) command.
-Dumps to non-swap devices,
-tapes for example, are currently not supported. Config your
-kernel using config -g.
-See for
-details on configuring the FreeBSD kernel.
-
-Use the dumpon(8) command to tell the kernel where to dump
-to (note that this will have to be done after configuring the
-partition in question as swap space via swapon(8)). This is
-normally arranged via /etc/rc.conf and /etc/rc.
-Alternatively, you can
-hard-code the dump device via the `dump' clause in the `config' line
-of your kernel config file. This is deprecated and should be used only if you
-want a crash dump from a kernel that crashes during booting.
-
-Note: In the following, the term `kgdb' refers
-to gdb run in `kernel debug mode'. This can be accomplished by
-either starting the gdb with the option , or by linking
-and starting it under the name kgdb. This is not being
-done by default, however, and the idea is basically deprecated since
-the GNU folks do not like their tools to behave differently when
-called by another name. This feature may well be discontinued
-in further releases.
-
-When the kernel has been built make a copy of it, say
-kernel.debug, and then run strip -d on the
-original. Install the original as normal. You may also install
-the unstripped kernel, but symbol table lookup time for some
-programs will drastically increase, and since
-the whole kernel is loaded entirely at boot time and cannot be
-swapped out later, several megabytes of
-physical memory will be wasted.
-
-If you are testing a new kernel, for example by typing the new
-kernel's name at the boot prompt, but need to boot a different
-one in order to get your system up and running again, boot it
-only into single user state using the flag at the
-boot prompt, and then perform the following steps:
-
- fsck -p
- mount -a -t ufs # so your file system for /var/crash is writable
- savecore -N /kernel.panicked /var/crash
- exit # ...to multi-user
-
-
-This instructs savecore(8) to use another kernel for symbol name
-extraction. It would otherwise default to the currently running kernel
-and most likely not do anything at all since the crash dump and the
-kernel symbols differ.
-
-Now, after a crash dump, go to /sys/compile/WHATEVER and run
-kgdb. From kgdb do:
-
- symbol-file kernel.debug
- exec-file /var/crash/kernel.0
- core-file /var/crash/vmcore.0
-
-
-and voila, you can debug the crash dump using the kernel sources
-just like you can for any other program.
-
-Here is a script log of a kgdb session illustrating the
-procedure. Long
-lines have been folded to improve readability, and the lines are
-numbered for reference. Despite this, it is a real-world error
-trace taken during the development of the pcvt console driver.
-
- 1:Script started on Fri Dec 30 23:15:22 1994
- 2:uriah # cd /sys/compile/URIAH
- 3:uriah # kgdb kernel /var/crash/vmcore.1
- 4:Reading symbol data from /usr/src/sys/compile/URIAH/kernel...done.
- 5:IdlePTD 1f3000
- 6:panic: because you said to!
- 7:current pcb at 1e3f70
- 8:Reading in symbols for ../../i386/i386/machdep.c...done.
- 9:(kgdb) where
- 10:#0 boot (arghowto=256) (../../i386/i386/machdep.c line 767)
- 11:#1 0xf0115159 in panic ()
- 12:#2 0xf01955bd in diediedie () (../../i386/i386/machdep.c line 698)
- 13:#3 0xf010185e in db_fncall ()
- 14:#4 0xf0101586 in db_command (-266509132, -266509516, -267381073)
- 15:#5 0xf0101711 in db_command_loop ()
- 16:#6 0xf01040a0 in db_trap ()
- 17:#7 0xf0192976 in kdb_trap (12, 0, -272630436, -266743723)
- 18:#8 0xf019d2eb in trap_fatal (...)
- 19:#9 0xf019ce60 in trap_pfault (...)
- 20:#10 0xf019cb2f in trap (...)
- 21:#11 0xf01932a1 in exception:calltrap ()
- 22:#12 0xf0191503 in cnopen (...)
- 23:#13 0xf0132c34 in spec_open ()
- 24:#14 0xf012d014 in vn_open ()
- 25:#15 0xf012a183 in open ()
- 26:#16 0xf019d4eb in syscall (...)
- 27:(kgdb) up 10
- 28:Reading in symbols for ../../i386/i386/trap.c...done.
- 29:#10 0xf019cb2f in trap (frame={tf_es = -260440048, tf_ds = 16, tf_\
- 30:edi = 3072, tf_esi = -266445372, tf_ebp = -272630356, tf_isp = -27\
- 31:2630396, tf_ebx = -266427884, tf_edx = 12, tf_ecx = -266427884, tf\
- 32:_eax = 64772224, tf_trapno = 12, tf_err = -272695296, tf_eip = -26\
- 33:6672343, tf_cs = -266469368, tf_eflags = 66066, tf_esp = 3072, tf_\
- 34:ss = -266427884}) (../../i386/i386/trap.c line 283)
- 35:283 (void) trap_pfault(&frame, FALSE);
- 36:(kgdb) frame frame->tf_ebp frame->tf_eip
- 37:Reading in symbols for ../../i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_drv.c...done.
- 38:#0 0xf01ae729 in pcopen (dev=3072, flag=3, mode=8192, p=(struct p\
- 39:roc *) 0xf07c0c00) (../../i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_drv.c line 403)
- 40:403 return ((*linesw[tp->t_line].l_open)(dev, tp));
- 41:(kgdb) list
- 42:398
- 43:399 tp->t_state |= TS_CARR_ON;
- 44:400 tp->t_cflag |= CLOCAL; /* cannot be a modem (:-) */
- 45:401
- 46:402 #if PCVT_NETBSD || (PCVT_FREEBSD >= 200)
- 47:403 return ((*linesw[tp->t_line].l_open)(dev, tp));
- 48:404 #else
- 49:405 return ((*linesw[tp->t_line].l_open)(dev, tp, flag));
- 50:406 #endif /* PCVT_NETBSD || (PCVT_FREEBSD >= 200) */
- 51:407 }
- 52:(kgdb) print tp
- 53:Reading in symbols for ../../i386/i386/cons.c...done.
- 54:$1 = (struct tty *) 0x1bae
- 55:(kgdb) print tp->t_line
- 56:$2 = 1767990816
- 57:(kgdb) up
- 58:#1 0xf0191503 in cnopen (dev=0x00000000, flag=3, mode=8192, p=(st\
- 59:ruct proc *) 0xf07c0c00) (../../i386/i386/cons.c line 126)
- 60: return ((*cdevsw[major(dev)].d_open)(dev, flag, mode, p));
- 61:(kgdb) up
- 62:#2 0xf0132c34 in spec_open ()
- 63:(kgdb) up
- 64:#3 0xf012d014 in vn_open ()
- 65:(kgdb) up
- 66:#4 0xf012a183 in open ()
- 67:(kgdb) up
- 68:#5 0xf019d4eb in syscall (frame={tf_es = 39, tf_ds = 39, tf_edi =\
- 69: 2158592, tf_esi = 0, tf_ebp = -272638436, tf_isp = -272629788, tf\
- 70:_ebx = 7086, tf_edx = 1, tf_ecx = 0, tf_eax = 5, tf_trapno = 582, \
- 71:tf_err = 582, tf_eip = 75749, tf_cs = 31, tf_eflags = 582, tf_esp \
- 72:= -272638456, tf_ss = 39}) (../../i386/i386/trap.c line 673)
- 73:673 error = (*callp->sy_call)(p, args, rval);
- 74:(kgdb) up
- 75:Initial frame selected; you cannot go up.
- 76:(kgdb) quit
- 77:uriah # exit
- 78:exit
- 79:
- 80:Script done on Fri Dec 30 23:18:04 1994
-
-
-Comments to the above script:
-
-
-
-line 6:
-
-This is a dump taken from within DDB (see below), hence the
-panic comment ``because you said to!'', and a rather long
-stack trace; the initial reason for going into DDB has been
-a page fault trap though.
-
-
-
-
-line 20:
-
-
-This is the location of function trap()
-in the stack trace.
-
-
-
-
-line 36:
-
-
-Force usage of a new stack frame; this is no longer
-necessary now. The stack frames are supposed to point to
-the right locations now, even in case of a trap.
-(I do not have a new core dump handy <g>, my kernel
-has not panicked for a rather long time.)
-From looking at the code in source line 403,
-there is a high probability that either the pointer
-access for ``tp'' was messed up, or the array access was
-out of bounds.
-
-
-
-
-line 52:
-
-
-The pointer looks suspicious, but happens to be a valid
-address.
-
-
-
-
-line 56:
-
-
-However, it obviously points to garbage, so we have found our
-error! (For those unfamiliar with that particular piece
-of code: tp->t_line refers to the line discipline
-of the console device here, which must be a rather small integer
-number.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Post-mortem Analysis of a Dump
-
-What do you do if a kernel dumped core but you did not expect
-it, and it is therefore not compiled using config -g?
-Not everything is lost here. Do not panic!
-
-Of course, you still need to enable crash dumps. See above
-on the options you have to specify in order to do this.
-
-Go to your kernel compile directory, and edit the line
-containing COPTFLAGS?=-O. Add the option
-there (but do not change anything on the level of
-optimization). If you do already know roughly the probable
-location of the failing piece of code (e.g., the pcvt
-driver in the example above), remove all the object files for
-this code. Rebuild the kernel. Due to the time stamp change on
-the Makefile, there will be some other object files rebuild,
-for example trap.o. With a bit of luck, the added
- option will not change anything for the generated
-code, so you will finally get a new kernel with similar code to
-the faulting one but some debugging symbols. You should at
-least verify the old and new sizes with the size(1) command. If
-there is a mismatch, you probably need to give up here.
-
-Go and examine the dump as described above. The debugging
-symbols might be incomplete for some places, as can be seen in
-the stack trace in the example above where some functions are
-displayed without line numbers and argument lists. If you need
-more debugging symbols, remove the appropriate object files and
-repeat the kgdb session until you know enough.
-
-All this is not guaranteed to work, but it will do it fine in
-most cases.
-
-
-
-
-On-line Kernel Debugging Using DDB
-
-While kgdb as an offline debugger provides a very
-high level of user interface, there are some things it cannot do.
-The most important ones being breakpointing and single-stepping
-kernel code.
-
-If you need to do low-level debugging on your kernel, there is
-an on-line debugger available called DDB. It allows to
-setting breakpoints, single-steping kernel functions, examining
-and changing kernel variables, etc. However, it cannot
-access kernel source files, and only has access to the global
-and static symbols, not to the full debug information like
-kgdb.
-
-To configure your kernel to include DDB, add the option line
-
- options DDB
-
-
-to your config file, and rebuild. (See for details on configuring the
-FreeBSD kernel. Note that if you have an older version of the
-boot blocks, your debugger symbols might not be loaded at all.
-Update the boot blocks; the recent ones load the DDB symbols
-automagically.)
-
-Once your DDB kernel is running, there are several ways to
-enter DDB. The first, and earliest way is to type the boot
-flag right at the boot prompt. The kernel will
-start up in debug mode and enter DDB prior to any device
-probing. Hence you can even debug the device
-probe/attach functions.
-
-The second scenario is a hot-key on the keyboard, usually
-Ctrl-Alt-ESC. For syscons, this can be remapped; some of
-the distributed maps do this, so watch out.
-There is an option
-available for serial consoles
-that allows the use of a serial line BREAK on the console line to
-enter DDB (``options BREAK_TO_DEBUGGER''
-in the kernel config file). It is not the default since there are a lot of
-crappy serial adapters around that gratuitously generate a
-BREAK condition, for example when pulling the cable.
-
-The third way is that any panic condition will branch to DDB if
-the kernel is configured to use it.
-For this reason, it is not wise to
-configure a kernel with DDB for a machine running unattended.
-
-The DDB commands roughly resemble some gdb commands. The first
-thing you probably need to do is to set a breakpoint:
-
- b function-name
- b address
-
-
-
-Numbers are taken hexadecimal by default, but to make them
-distinct from symbol names; hexadecimal numbers starting with the
-letters a-f need to be preceded with
-0x (this is optional for other numbers). Simple
-expressions are allowed, for example: function-name + 0x103.
-
-To continue the operation of an interrupted kernel, simply type
-
- c
-
-
-To get a stack trace, use
-
- trace
-
-
-Note that when entering DDB via a hot-key, the kernel is currently
-servicing an interrupt, so the stack trace might be not of much use
-for you.
-
-If you want to remove a breakpoint, use
-
- del
- del address-expression
-
-
-The first form will be accepted immediately after a breakpoint hit,
-and deletes the current breakpoint. The second form can remove any
-breakpoint, but you need to specify the exact address; this can be
-obtained from
-
- show b
-
-
-To single-step the kernel, try
-
- s
-
-
-This will step into functions, but you can make DDB trace them until
-the matching return statement is reached by
-
- n
-
-
-Note: this is different from gdb's `next' statement; it is like
-gdb's `finish'.
-
-To examine data from memory, use (for example):
-
- x/wx 0xf0133fe0,40
- x/hd db_symtab_space
- x/bc termbuf,10
- x/s stringbuf
-
-
-for word/halfword/byte access, and hexadecimal/decimal/character/
-string display. The number after the comma is the object count.
-To display the next 0x10 items, simply use
-
- x ,10
-
-
-Similarly, use
-
- x/ia foofunc,10
-
-
-to disassemble the first 0x10 instructions of foofunc, and display
-them along with their offset from the beginning of foofunc.
-
-To modify memory, use the write command:
-
- w/b termbuf 0xa 0xb 0
- w/w 0xf0010030 0 0
-
-
-The command modifier (b/h/w)
-specifies the size of the data to be written, the first
-following expression is the address to write to and the remainder
-is interpreted as data to write to successive memory locations.
-
-If you need to know the current registers, use
-
- show reg
-
-
-Alternatively, you can display a single register value by e.g.
-
- p $eax
-
-
-and modify it by
-
- set $eax new-value
-
-
-
-Should you need to call some kernel functions from DDB, simply
-say
-
- call func(arg1, arg2, ...)
-
-
-The return value will be printed.
-
-For a ps(1) style summary of all running processes, use
-
- ps
-
-
-
-Now you have now examined why your kernel failed, and you wish to
-reboot. Remember that, depending on the severity of previous
-malfunctioning, not all parts of the kernel might still be working
-as expected. Perform one of the following actions to shut down and
-reboot your system:
-
- call diediedie()
-
-
-
-This will cause your kernel to dump core and reboot, so you can
-later analyze the core on a higher level with kgdb. This
-command usually must be followed by another
-`continue' statement.
-There is now an alias for this: `panic'.
-
-
-
- call boot(0)
-
-
-might be a good way to cleanly shut down the running system, sync()
-all disks, and finally reboot. As long as the disk and file system
-interfaces of the kernel are not damaged, this might be a good way
-for an almost clean shutdown.
-
-
-
- call cpu_reset()
-
-
-is the final way out of disaster and almost the same as hitting
-the Big Red Button.
-
-If you need a short command summary, simply type
-
- help
-
-
-However, it is highly recommended to have a printed copy of the
-ddb(4) manual page ready for a debugging session.
-Remember that it is hard to read the on-line manual while
-single-stepping the kernel.
-
-
-
-
-On-line Kernel Debugging Using Remote GDB
-
-This feature has been supported since FreeBSD 2.2, and it's actually
-a very neat one.
-
-GDB has already supported remote debugging for a long time.
-This is done using a very simple protocol along a
-serial line. Unlike the other methods
-described above, you will need two machines for doing this. One is
-the host providing the debugging environment, including all
-the sources, and a copy of the kernel binary with all the
-symbols in it, and the other one is the target machine that
-simply runs a similar copy of the very same kernel (but stripped
-of the debugging information).
-
-You should configure the kernel in question with config -g,
-include DDB into the configuration, and compile it as usual.
-This gives a large blurb of a binary, due
-to the debugging information. Copy this kernel to the target
-machine, strip the debugging symbols off with strip -x,
-and boot it using the boot option. Connect the first
-serial line of the target machine to any serial line of the
-debugging host. Now, on the debugging machine, go to the compile
-directory of the target kernel, and start gdb:
-
-% gdb -k kernel
-GDB is free software and you are welcome to distribute copies of it
- under certain conditions; type "show copying" to see the conditions.
-There is absolutely no warranty for GDB; type "show warranty" for details.
-GDB 4.16 (i386-unknown-freebsd),
-Copyright 1996 Free Software Foundation, Inc...
-(kgdb)
-
-
-
-Initialize the remote debugging session (assuming the first serial
-port is being used) by:
-
-(kgdb) target remote /dev/cuaa0
-
-
-
-Now, on the target host (the one that entered DDB right before even starting
-the device probe), type:
-
-Debugger("Boot flags requested debugger")
-Stopped at Debugger+0x35: movb $0, edata+0x51bc
-db> gdb
-
-
-
-DDB will respond with:
-
-Next trap will enter GDB remote protocol mode
-
-
-
-Every time you type ``gdb'', the mode will be toggled between
-remote GDB and local DDB. In order to force a next trap
-immediately, simply type ``s'' (step). Your hosting GDB will
-now gain control over the target kernel:
-
-Remote debugging using /dev/cuaa0
-Debugger (msg=0xf01b0383 "Boot flags requested debugger")
- at ../../i386/i386/db_interface.c:257
-(kgdb)
-
-
-
-You can use this session almost as any other GDB session, including
-full access to the source, running it in gud-mode inside an Emacs
-window (which gives you an automatic source code display in another
-Emacs window) etc.
-
-Remote GDB can also be used to debug LKMs. First build the LKM
-with debugging symbols:
-
-# cd /usr/src/lkm/linux
-# make clean; make COPTS=-g
-
-
-
-Then install this version of the module on the target machine, load it
-and use modstat to find out where it was loaded:
-
-# linux
-# modstat
-Type Id Off Loadaddr Size Info Rev Module Name
-EXEC 0 4 f5109000 001c f510f010 1 linux_mod
-
-
-
-Take the load address of the module and add 0x20 (probably to account
-for the a.out header). This is the address that the module code was
-relocated to. Use the add-symbol-file command in GDB to tell the
-debugger about the module:
-
-(kgdb) add-symbol-file /usr/src/lkm/linux/linux_mod.o 0xf5109020
-add symbol table from file "/usr/src/lkm/linux/linux_mod.o" at
-text_addr = 0xf5109020?
-(y or n) y
-(kgdb)
-
-
-
-You now have access to all the symbols in the LKM.
-
-
-
-
-Debugging a Console Driver
-
-Since you need a console driver to run DDB on, things are more
-complicated if the console driver itself is failing. You might
-remember the use of a serial console (either with modified boot
-blocks, or by specifying at the Boot:
-prompt), and hook up a standard
-terminal onto your first serial port. DDB works on any configured
-console driver, of course also on a serial console.
-
-
-
-
-
-Linux Emulation
-
-Contributed by &a.handy; and &a.rich;
-
-
-
-How to Install the Linux Emulator
-
-Linux emulation in FreeBSD has reached a point where it is possible
-to run a large fraction of Linux binaries in both a.out and ELF
-format. The linux emulation in the 2.1-STABLE branch is capable of
-running Linux DOOM and Mathematica; the version present in
-FreeBSD-2.2-RELEASE is vastly more capable and runs all these as well as
-Quake, Abuse, IDL, netrek for Linux and a whole host of other
-programs.
-
-There are some Linux-specific operating system features that are not
-supported on FreeBSD. Linux binaries will not work on FreeBSD if they
-use the Linux /proc filesystem (which is different from the optional
-FreeBSD /proc filesystem) or i386-specific calls, such as enabling
-virtual 8086 mode.
-
-To tell whether your kernel is configured for Linux
-compatibility simply run any Linux binary. If it
-prints the error message
-
-linux-executable: Exec format error. Wrong Architecture.
-
-
-then you do not have linux compatibility support and
-you need to configure and install a new kernel.
-
-Depending on which version of FreeBSD you are running, how you get
-Linux-emulation up will vary slightly:
-
-
-
-Installing Linux Emulation in 2.1-STABLE
-
-The GENERIC kernel in 2.1-STABLE is not configured for linux
-compatibility so you must reconfigure your kernel for it. There
-are two ways to do this: 1. linking the emulator statically in the
-kernel itself and 2. configuring your kernel to dynamically load the
-linux loadable kernel module (LKM).
-
-To enable the emulator, add the following to your configuration file
-(c.f. /sys/i386/conf/LINT):
-
-options COMPAT_LINUX
-
-
-If you want to run doom or other applications
-that need shared memory,
-also add the following.
-
-options SYSVSHM
-
-
-The linux system calls require 4.3BSD system call compatibility. So
-make sure you have the following.
-
-options "COMPAT_43"
-
-
-
-If you prefer to statically link the emulator in the kernel rather than
-use the loadable kernel module (LKM), then add
-
-options LINUX
-
-
-Then run config and install the new kernel as described in the
- section.
-
-If you decide to use the LKM you must also install the loadable
-module. A mismatch of versions between the kernel and loadable
-module can cause the kernel to crash, so the safest thing to do is to
-reinstall the LKM when you install the kernel.
-
-% cd /usr/src/lkm/linux
-% make all install
-
-
-Once you have installed the kernel and the LKM, you can invoke
-`linux' as root to load the LKM.
-
-% linux
-Linux emulator installed
-Module loaded as ID 0
-%
-
-
-To see whether the LKM is loaded, run `modstat'.
-
-% modstat
-Type Id Off Loadaddr Size Info Rev Module Name
-EXEC 0 3 f0baf000 0018 f0bb4000 1 linux_emulator
-%
-
-
-You can cause the LKM to be loaded when the system boots in either of
-two ways. In FreeBSD 2.2.1-RELEASE and 2.1-STABLE enable it in
-/etc/sysconfig
-
-linux=YES
-
-
-by changing it from NO to YES. FreeBSD 2.1 RELEASE and earlier do not
-have such a line and on those you will need to edit /etc/rc.local to
-add the following line.
-
-linux
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Installing Linux Emulation in 2.2.2-RELEASE and later
-
-It is no longer necessary to specify ``options LINUX''
-or ``options COMPAT_LINUX''. Linux emulation is done with an LKM
-(``Loadable Kernel Module'') so it can be installed on the fly without
-having to reboot. You will need the following things in your startup files,
-however:
-
-
-
- In /etc/rc.conf, you need the following line:
-
-linux_enable=YES
-
-
-
-
-
- This, in turn, triggers the following action in /etc/rc.i386:
-
-# Start the Linux binary emulation if requested.
-if [ "X${linux_enable}" = X"YES" ]; then
- echo -n ' linux'; linux > /dev/null 2>&1
-fi
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-If you want to verify it is running, modstat will do that:
-
-% modstat
-Type Id Off Loadaddr Size Info Rev Module Name
-EXEC 0 4 f09e6000 001c f09ec010 1 linux_mod
-%
-
-
-However, there have been reports that this fails on some 2.2-RELEASE and
-later systems. If for some reason you cannot load the linux
-LKM, then statically link the emulator in the kernel by adding
-
-options LINUX
-
-
-to your kernel config file. Then run config and install the new
-kernel as described in the section.
-
-
-
-
-Installing Linux Runtime Libraries
-
-
-
-Installing using the linux_lib port
-
-Most linux applications use shared libraries, so you are still not
-done until you install the shared libraries. It is possible to do
-this by hand, however, it is vastly simpler to just grab the
-linux_lib port:
-
-% cd /usr/ports-current/emulators/linux_lib
-% make all install
-
-
-
-and you should have a working linux emulator. Legend (and the mail
-archives :-) seems to hold that Linux emulation works best with
-linux binaries linked against the ZMAGIC libraries; QMAGIC libraries
-(such as those used in Slackware V2.0) may tend to give the
-Linuxulator heartburn. As of this writing (March 1996) ELF emulation
-is still in the formulative stages but seems to work pretty well. Also,
-expect some programs to complain about incorrect minor versions. In
-general this does not seem to be a problem.
-
-
-
-
-Installing libraries manually
-
-If you do not have the ``ports'' distribution, you can install the
-libraries by hand instead. You will need the Linux shared libraries
-that the program depends on and the runtime linker. Also, you will
-need to create a "shadow root" directory, /compat/linux, for Linux
-libraries on your FreeBSD system. Any shared libraries opened by
-Linux programs run under FreeBSD will look in this tree first. So, if
-a Linux program loads, for example, /lib/libc.so, FreeBSD will first
-try to open /compat/linux/lib/libc.so, and if that does not exist then
-it will try /lib/libc.so. Shared libraries should be installed in the
-shadow tree /compat/linux/lib rather than the paths that the Linux
-ld.so reports.
-
-FreeBSD-2.2-RELEASE and later works slightly differently with respect to
-/compat/linux. On -CURRENT, all files, not just libraries, are
-searched for from the ``shadow root'' /compat/linux.
-
-Generally, you will need to look for the shared libraries that Linux
-binaries depend on only the first few times that you install a Linux
-program on your FreeBSD system. After a while, you will have a sufficient
-set of Linux shared libraries on your system to be able to run newly
-imported Linux binaries without any extra work.
-
-
-
-
-How to install additional shared libraries
-
-What if you install the linux_lib port and your application still
-complains about missing shared libraries? How do you know which
-shared libraries Linux binaries need, and where to get them?
-Basically, there are 2 possibilities (when following these
-instructions: you will need to be root on your FreeBSD system to do
-the necessary installation steps).
-
-If you have access to a Linux system, see what shared libraries
-it needs, and copy them to your FreeBSD system. Example: you have
-just ftp'ed the Linux binary of Doom. Put it on the Linux
-system you have access to, and check which shared libraries it
-needs by running `ldd linuxxdoom':
-
-
-
-% ldd linuxxdoom
-libXt.so.3 (DLL Jump 3.1) => /usr/X11/lib/libXt.so.3.1.0
-libX11.so.3 (DLL Jump 3.1) => /usr/X11/lib/libX11.so.3.1.0
-libc.so.4 (DLL Jump 4.5pl26) => /lib/libc.so.4.6.29
-
-
-
-You would need to get all the files from the last column, and
-put them under /compat/linux, with the names in the first column
-as symbolic links pointing to them. This means you eventually have
-these files on your FreeBSD system:
-
-/compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libXt.so.3.1.0
-/compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libXt.so.3 -> libXt.so.3.1.0
-/compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libX11.so.3.1.0
-/compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libX11.so.3 -> libX11.so.3.1.0
-/compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4.6.29
-/compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4 -> libc.so.4.6.29
-
-
-
-Note that if you already have a Linux shared library with a
-matching major revision number to the first column of the 'ldd'
-output, you will not need to copy the file named in the last column to
-your system, the one you already have should work. It is advisable to
-copy the shared library anyway if it is a newer version, though. You
-can remove the old one, as long as you make the symbolic link point to
-the new one. So, if you have these libraries on your system:
-
-/compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4.6.27
-/compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4 -> libc.so.4.6.27
-
-
-
-and you find a new binary that claims to require a later version
-according to the output of ldd:
-
-libc.so.4 (DLL Jump 4.5pl26) -> libc.so.4.6.29
-
-
-
-If it is only one or two versions out of date in the in the trailing
-digit then do not worry about copying /lib/libc.so.4.6.29 too, because
-the program should work fine with the slightly older version.
-However, if you like you can decide to replace the libc.so anyway, and
-that should leave you with:
-
-/compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4.6.29
-/compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4 -> libc.so.4.6.29
-
-
-
-Please note that the symbolic link mechanism is only
-needed for Linux binaries. The FreeBSD runtime linker takes care of
-looking for matching major revision numbers itself and you do not need to
-worry about it.
-
-
-
-
-Configuring the ld.so -- for FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE only
-
-This section applies only to FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE and later. Those running
-2.1-STABLE should skip this section.
-
-Finally, if you run FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE you must make sure that you
-have the Linux runtime linker and its config files on your system. You
-should copy these files from the Linux system to their appropriate
-place on your FreeBSD system (to the /compat/linux tree):
-
-/compat/linux/lib/ld.so
-/compat/linux/etc/ld.so.config
-
-
-
-If you do not have access to a Linux system, you should get the
-extra files you need from various ftp sites. Information on where to
-look for the various files is appended below. For now, let us assume
-you know where to get the files.
-
-Retrieve the following files (all from the same ftp site to avoid any
-version mismatches), and install them under /compat/linux
-(i.e. /foo/bar is installed as /compat/linux/foo/bar):
-
-/sbin/ldconfig
-/usr/bin/ldd
-/lib/libc.so.x.y.z
-/lib/ld.so
-
-
-
-ldconfig and ldd do not necessarily need to be under /compat/linux;
-you can install them elsewhere in the system too. Just make sure they
-do not conflict with their FreeBSD counterparts. A good idea would be
-to install them in /usr/local/bin as ldconfig-linux and ldd-linux.
-
-Create the file /compat/linux/etc/ld.so.conf, containing the
-directories in which the Linux runtime linker should look
-for shared libs. It is a plain text file, containing a directory
-name on each line. /lib and /usr/lib are standard, you could
-add the following:
-
-/usr/X11/lib
-/usr/local/lib
-
-
-
-When a linux binary opens a library such as /lib/libc.so the
-emulator maps the name to /compat/linux/lib/libc.so internally. All
-linux libraries should be installed under /compat/linux (e.g.
-/compat/linux/lib/libc.so, /compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libX11.so, etc.)
-in order for the emulator to find them.
-
-Those running FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE should run the Linux ldconfig program.
-
-% cd /compat/linux/lib
-% /compat/linux/sbin/ldconfig
-
-
-
-Ldconfig is statically linked, so it does not need any shared
-libraries to run. It creates the file /compat/linux/etc/ld.so.cache
-which contains the names of all the shared libraries and should be rerun
-to recreate this file whenever you install additional shared
-libraries.
-
-On 2.1-STABLE do not install /compat/linux/etc/ld.so.cache or run
-ldconfig; in 2.1-STABLE the syscalls are implemented
-differently and ldconfig is not needed or used.
-
-You should now be set up for Linux binaries which only need a
-shared libc. You can test this by running the Linux ldd on
-itself. Supposing that you have it installed as ldd-linux, it should
-produce something like:
-
-% ldd-linux `which ldd-linux`
-libc.so.4 (DLL Jump 4.5pl26) => /lib/libc.so.4.6.29
-
-
-
-This being done, you are ready to install new Linux binaries.
-Whenever you install a new Linux program, you should check if it needs
-shared libraries, and if so, whether you have them installed in the
-/compat/linux tree. To do this, you run the Linux version ldd on the
-new program, and watch its output. ldd (see also the manual page for
-ldd(1)) will print a list of shared libraries that the program depends
-on, in the form majorname (jumpversion) => fullname.
-
-If it prints "not found" instead of fullname it means that you
-need an extra library. The library needed is shown in majorname
-and will be of the form libXXXX.so.N. You will need to find a
-libXXXX.so.N.mm on a Linux ftp site, and install it on your
-system. The XXXX (name) and N (major revision number) should match;
-the minor number(s) mm are less important, though it is advised to
-take the most recent version.
-
-
-
-
-
-Configuring the host name resolver
-
-If DNS does not work or you get the messages
-
-resolv+: "bind" is an invalid keyword
-resolv+: "hosts" is an invalid keyword
-
-
-
-then you need to configure a /compat/linux/etc/host.conf file
-containing:
-
-order hosts, bind
-multi on
-
-
-
-where the order here specifies that /etc/hosts is searched first and
-DNS is searched second. When /compat/linux/etc/host.conf is not
-installed linux applications find FreeBSD's /etc/host.conf and
-complain about the incompatible FreeBSD syntax. You should remove
-`bind,' if you have not configured a name-server using the
-/etc/resolv.conf file.
-
-Lastly, those who run 2.1-STABLE need to set an the
-RESOLV_HOST_CONF environment variable so that applications will know
-how to search the host tables. If you run FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE, you can
-skip this. For the /bin/csh shell use:
-
-setenv RESOLV_HOST_CONF /compat/linux/etc/host.conf
-
-
-
-For /bin/sh use:
-
-RESOLV_HOST_CONF=/compat/linux/etc/host.conf; export RESOLV_HOST_CONF
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Finding the necessary files
-
-Note: the information below is valid as of the time this document
-was written, but certain details such as names of ftp sites,
-directories and distribution names may have changed by the time you
-read this.
-
-Linux is distributed by several groups that make their own set
-of binaries that they distribute. Each distribution has its own
-name, like ``Slackware'' or ``Yggdrasil''. The distributions are
-available on a lot of ftp sites. Sometimes the files are unpacked,
-and you can get the individual files you need, but mostly they
-are stored in distribution sets, usually consisting of subdirectories
-with gzipped tar files in them. The primary ftp sites for the
-distributions are:
-sunsite.unc.edu:/pub/Linux/distributions
-tsx-11.mit.edu:/pub/linux/distributions
-
-
-Some European mirrors:
-ftp.luth.se:/pub/linux/distributions
-ftp.demon.co.uk:/pub/linux/distributions
-src.doc.ic.ac.uk:/packages/linux/distributions
-
-
-For simplicity, let us concentrate on Slackware here. This
-distribution consists of a number of subdirectories, containing
-separate packages. Normally, they are controlled by an install
-program, but you can retrieve files "by hand" too. First of all, you
-will need to look in the "contents" subdir of the distribution. You
-will find a lot of small text files here describing the contents of the
-separate packages. The fastest way to look something up is to retrieve
-all the files in the contents subdirectory, and grep through them for
-the file you need. Here is an example of a list of files that you
-might need, and in which contents-file you will find it by grepping
-through them:
-
-
-
-So, in this case, you will need the packages ldso, shlibs, xf_lib
-and oldlibs. In each of the contents-files for these packages, look
-for a line saying ``PACKAGE LOCATION'', it will tell you on which `disk'
-the package is, in our case it will tell us in which subdirectory we
-need to look. For our example, we would find the following locations:
-
-Note: The 8237 does allow two channels to
-be connected together to allow memory-to-memory DMA
-operations in a non-``fly-by'' mode, but nobody in the PC
-industry uses this scarce resource this way since it is
-faster to move data between memory locations using the
-CPU.
-
-
-
-In the PC architecture, each DMA channel is normally
-activated only when the hardware that uses a given DMA channel
-requests a transfer by asserting the DRQ line for that
-channel.
-
-
-
-A Sample DMA transfer
-
-Here is an example of the steps that occur to cause and perform
-a DMA transfer. In this example, the floppy disk
-controller (FDC) has just read a byte from a diskette and
-wants the DMA to place it in memory at location
-0x00123456. The process begins by the FDC asserting the
-DRQ2 signal (the DRQ line for DMA channel 2) to alert the DMA
-controller.
-
-The DMA controller will note that the DRQ2 signal is asserted.
-The DMA controller will then make sure that DMA channel 2
-has been programmed and is unmasked (enabled). The DMA controller
-also makes sure that none of the other DMA channels are active
-or want to be active and have a higher priority. Once these checks
-are complete, the DMA asks the CPU to release the bus so that
-the DMA may use the bus. The DMA requests the bus by
-asserting the HRQ signal which goes to the CPU.
-
-The CPU detects the HRQ signal, and will complete
-executing the current instruction. Once the processor
-has reached a state where it can release the bus, it
-will. Now all of the signals normally generated by the
-CPU (-MEMR, -MEMW, -IOR, -IOW and a few others) are
-placed in a tri-stated condition (neither high or low)
-and then the CPU asserts the HLDA signal which tells the
-DMA controller that it is now in charge of the bus.
-
-Depending on the processor, the CPU may be able to
-execute a few additional instructions now that it no
-longer has the bus, but the CPU will eventually have to
-wait when it reaches an instruction that must read
-something from memory that is not in the internal
-processor cache or pipeline.
-
-Now that the DMA ``is in charge'', the DMA activates its
--MEMR, -MEMW, -IOR, -IOW output signals, and the address
-outputs from the DMA are set to 0x3456, which will be
-used to direct the byte that is about to transferred to a
-specific memory location.
-
-The DMA will then let the device that requested the DMA
-transfer know that the transfer is commencing. This is
-done by asserting the -DACK signal, or in the case of the
-floppy disk controller, -DACK2 is asserted.
-
-The floppy disk controller is now responsible for placing
-the byte to be transferred on the bus Data lines. Unless
-the floppy controller needs more time to get the data
-byte on the bus (and if the peripheral does need more time it
-alerts the DMA via the READY signal), the DMA will wait
-one DMA clock, and then de-assert the -MEMW and -IOR
-signals so that the memory will latch and store the byte
-that was on the bus, and the FDC will know that the byte
-has been transferred.
-
-Since the DMA cycle only transfers a single byte at a
-time, the FDC now drops the DRQ2 signal, so the DMA knows that
-it is no longer needed. The DMA will de-assert the
--DACK2 signal, so that the FDC knows it must stop placing
-data on the bus.
-
-The DMA will now check to see if any of the other DMA
-channels have any work to do. If none of the channels
-have their DRQ lines asserted, the DMA controller has
-completed its work and will now tri-state the -MEMR,
--MEMW, -IOR, -IOW and address signals.
-
-Finally, the DMA will de-assert the HRQ signal. The CPU
-sees this, and de-asserts the HOLDA signal. Now the CPU
-activates its -MEMR, -MEMW, -IOR, -IOW and address lines,
-and it resumes executing instructions and accessing main
-memory and the peripherals.
-
-For a typical floppy disk sector, the above process is
-repeated 512 times, once for each byte. Each time a byte
-is transferred, the address register in the DMA is
-incremented and the counter in the DMA that shows how many
-bytes are to be transferred is decremented.
-
-When the counter reaches zero, the DMA asserts the EOP
-signal, which indicates that the counter has reached zero
-and no more data will be transferred until the DMA
-controller is reprogrammed by the CPU. This event is
-also called the Terminal Count (TC). There is only one
-EOP signal, and since only DMA channel can be active at
-any instant, the DMA channel that is currently active must
-be the DMA channel that just completed its task.
-
-If a peripheral wants to generate an interrupt when the
-transfer of a buffer is complete, it can test for its
--DACKn signal and the EOP signal both being asserted at
-the same time. When that happens, it means the DMA will not
-transfer any more information for that peripheral without
-intervention by the CPU. The peripheral can then assert
-one of the interrupt signals to get the processors'
-attention. In the PC architecture, the DMA chip itself is not
-capable of generating an interrupt. The peripheral and its
-associated hardware is responsible for generating any
-interrupt that occurs. Subsequently, it is possible to have
-a peripheral that uses DMA but does not use interrupts.
-
-It is important to understand that although the CPU
-always releases the bus to the DMA when the DMA makes the
-request, this action is invisible to both applications
-and the operating systems, except for slight changes in
-the amount of time the processor takes to execute
-instructions when the DMA is active. Subsequently, the
-processor must poll the peripheral, poll the registers in
-the DMA chip, or receive an interrupt from the peripheral
-to know for certain when a DMA transfer has completed.
-
-
-
-
-DMA Page Registers and 16Meg address space limitations
-
-You may have noticed earlier that instead of the DMA
-setting the address lines to 0x00123456 as we said
-earlier, the DMA only set 0x3456. The reason for this
-takes a bit of explaining.
-
-When the original IBM PC was designed, IBM elected to use
-both DMA and interrupt controller chips that were
-designed for use with the 8085, an 8-bit processor with
-an address space of 16 bits (64K). Since the IBM PC
-supported more than 64K of memory, something had to be
-done to allow the DMA to read or write memory locations
-above the 64K mark. What IBM did to solve this problem
-was to add an external data latch for each DMA channel that
-holds the upper bits of the address to be read to or written from.
-Whenever a DMA channel is active, the contents of that
-latch are written to the address bus and kept there until
-the DMA operation for the channel ends. IBM called these latches
-``Page Registers''.
-
-So for our example above, the DMA would put the 0x3456
-part of the address on the bus, and the Page Register for
-DMA channel 2 would put 0x0012xxxx on the bus. Together,
-these two values form the complete address in memory that
-is to be accessed.
-
-Because the Page Register latch is independent of the DMA
-chip, the area of memory to be read or written must not
-span a 64K physical boundary. For example, if the DMA accesses
-memory location 0xffff, after that transfer the DMA will then
-increment the address register and the DMA will access the next
-byte at location 0x0000, not 0x10000. The results of letting
-this happen are probably not intended.
-
-
-
-Note: ``Physical'' 64K boundaries should
-not be confused with 8086-mode 64K ``Segments'', which
-are created by mathematically adding a segment register with an
-offset register. Page Registers have no address overlap and
-are mathematically OR-ed together.
-
-
-
-To further complicate matters, the external DMA address
-latches on the PC/AT hold only eight bits, so that gives
-us 8+16=24 bits, which means that the DMA can only point
-at memory locations between 0 and 16Meg. For newer
-computers that allow more than 16Meg of memory, the standard
-PC-compatible DMA cannot access memory locations above 16Meg.
-
-To get around this restriction, operating systems will
-reserve a RAM buffer in an area below 16Meg that also does not
-span a physical 64K boundary. Then the DMA will be
-programmed to transfer data from the peripheral and into that
-buffer. Once the DMA has moved the data into this buffer,
-the operating system will then copy the data from the buffer
-to the address where the data is really supposed to be stored.
-
-When writing data from an address above 16Meg to a
-DMA-based peripheral, the data must be first copied from
-where it resides into a buffer located below 16Meg, and
-then the DMA can copy the data from the buffer to the
-hardware. In FreeBSD, these reserved buffers are called
-``Bounce Buffers''. In the MS-DOS world, they are
-sometimes called ``Smart Buffers''.
-
-
-
-Note: A new implementation of the 8237, called the
-82374, allows 16 bits of page register to be specified, allows
-access to the entire 32 bit address space, without the use of
-bounce buffers.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-DMA Operational Modes and Settings
-
-The 8237 DMA can be operated in several modes. The main
-ones are:
-
-
-
-Single
-
-A single byte (or word) is transferred.
-The DMA must release and re-acquire the bus for each
-additional byte. This is commonly-used by devices
-that cannot transfer the entire block of data
-immediately. The peripheral will request the DMA
-each time it is ready for another transfer.
-
-The standard PC-compatible floppy disk controller (NEC 765)
-only has a one-byte buffer, so it uses this mode.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Block/Demand
-
-
-Once the DMA acquires the
-system bus, an entire block of data is transferred,
-up to a maximum of 64K. If the peripheral needs
-additional time, it can assert the READY signal to
-suspend the transfer briefly. READY should not be
-used excessively, and for slow peripheral transfers,
-the Single Transfer Mode should be used instead.
-
-The difference between Block and Demand is that once a
-Block transfer is started, it runs until the transfer
-count reaches zero. DRQ only needs to be asserted
-until -DACK is asserted. Demand Mode will transfer
-one more bytes until DRQ is de-asserted, at which point the DMA
-suspends the transfer and releases the bus back to the CPU.
-When DRQ is asserted later, the transfer resumes where
-it was suspended.
-
-Older hard disk controllers used Demand Mode until
-CPU speeds increased to the point that it was more
-efficient to transfer the data using the CPU, particularly
-if the memory locations used in the transfer were above the
-16Meg mark.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Cascade
-
-
-This mechanism allows a DMA channel
-to request the bus, but then the attached peripheral
-device is responsible for placing the addressing
-information on the bus instead of the DMA. This is also
-used to implement a technique known as ``Bus Mastering''.
-
-When a DMA channel in Cascade Mode receives control
-of the bus, the DMA does not place addresses and I/O
-control signals on the bus like the DMA normally does
-when it is active. Instead, the DMA only asserts the
--DACK signal for the active DMA channel.
-
-At this point it is up to the peripheral connected to that
-DMA channel to provide address and bus control signals.
-The peripheral has complete control over the system
-bus, and can do reads and/or writes to any address
-below 16Meg. When the peripheral is finished with
-the bus, it de-asserts the DRQ line, and the DMA
-controller can then return control to the CPU or to some
-other DMA channel.
-
-Cascade Mode can be used to chain multiple DMA controllers
-together, and this is exactly what DMA Channel 4 is used
-for in the PC architecture. When a peripheral requests
-the bus on DMA channels 0, 1, 2 or 3, the slave DMA
-controller asserts HLDREQ, but this wire is actually connected
-to DRQ4 on the primary DMA controller instead of to the CPU.
-The primary DMA controller, thinking it has work to do on
-Channel 4, requests the bus from the CPU using HLDREQ signal.
-Once the CPU grants the bus to the primary DMA controller,
--DACK4 is asserted, and that wire is actually connected to
-the HLDA signal on the slave DMA controller. The slave DMA
-controller then transfers data for the DMA channel that
-requested it (0, 1, 2 or 3), or the slave DMA may grant the bus
-to a peripheral that wants to perform its own bus-mastering,
-such as a SCSI controller.
-
-Because of this wiring arrangement, only DMA channels
-0, 1, 2, 3, 5, 6 and 7 are usable with peripherals on PC/AT
-systems.
-
-
-
-Note: DMA channel 0 was reserved for
-refresh operations in early IBM PC computers, but
-is generally available for use by peripherals in
-modern systems.
-
-
-
-When a peripheral is performing Bus Mastering, it is
-important that the peripheral transmit data to or
-from memory constantly while it holds the system bus.
-If the peripheral cannot do this, it must release the
-bus frequently so that the system can perform refresh
-operations on main memory.
-
-The Dynamic RAM used in all PCs for main memory must be
-accessed frequently to keep the bits stored in the
-components "charged". Dynamic RAM essentially consists
-of millions of capacitors with each one holding one bit
-of data. These capacitors are charged with power to
-represent a "1" or drained to represent a "0". Because
-all capacitors leak, power must be added at regular intervals
-to keep the "1" values intact. The RAM chips actually handle
-the task of pumping power back into all of the appropriate
-locations in RAM, but they must be told when to do it by
-the rest of the computer so that the refresh activity won't
-interfere with the computer wanting to access RAM normally.
-If the computer is unable to refresh memory, the contents
-of memory will become corrupted in just a few milliseconds.
-
-Since memory read and write cycles ``count'' as refresh
-cycles (a dynamic RAM refresh cycle is actually an incomplete
-memory read cycle), as long as the peripheral
-controller continues reading or writing data to
-sequential memory locations, that action will refresh
-all of memory.
-
-Bus-mastering is found in some SCSI host interfaces and
-other high-performance peripheral controllers.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Autoinitialize
-
-
-This mode causes the DMA to
-perform Byte, Block or Demand transfers, but when the
-DMA transfer counter reaches zero, the counter and
-address are set back to where they were when the DMA
-channel was originally programmed. This means that
-as long as the peripheral requests transfers, they will
-be granted. It is up to the CPU to move new data
-into the fixed buffer ahead of where the DMA is about
-to transfer it when doing output operations, and read new
-data out of the buffer behind where the DMA is writing
-when doing input operations.
-
-This technique is frequently used on audio devices that
-have small or no hardware ``sample'' buffers. There is
-additional CPU overhead to manage this ``circular'' buffer,
-but in some cases this may be the only way to eliminate the
-latency that occurs when the DMA counter reaches zero
-and the DMA stops transfers until it is reprogrammed.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Programming the DMA
-
-The DMA channel that is to be programmed should always
-be ``masked'' before loading any settings. This is because
-the hardware might unexpectedly assert the DRQ for that channel,
-and the DMA might respond, even though not all of the parameters
-have been loaded or updated.
-
-Once masked, the host must specify the direction of the
-transfer (memory-to-I/O or I/O-to-memory), what mode of
-DMA operation is to be used for the transfer (Single,
-Block, Demand, Cascade, etc), and finally the address and
-length of the transfer are loaded. The length that is
-loaded is one less than the amount you expect the DMA to
-transfer. The LSB and MSB of the address and length are
-written to the same 8-bit I/O port, so another port must
-be written to first to guarantee that the DMA accepts the
-first byte as the LSB and the second byte as the MSB of
-the length and address.
-
-Then, be sure to update the Page Register, which is
-external to the DMA and is accessed through a different
-set of I/O ports.
-
-Once all the settings are ready, the DMA channel can be
-un-masked. That DMA channel is now considered to be
-``armed'', and will respond when the DRQ line for that channel
-is asserted.
-
-Refer to a hardware data book for precise programming
-details for the 8237. You will also need to refer to the
-I/O port map for the PC system, which describes where
-the DMA and Page Register ports are located. A complete
-port map table is located below.
-
-
-
-
-DMA Port Map
-
-All systems based on the IBM-PC and PC/AT have the DMA
-hardware located at the same I/O ports. The complete
-list is provided below. Ports assigned to DMA Controller
-#2 are undefined on non-AT designs.
-
-
-
-0x00 - 0x1f DMA Controller #1 (Channels 0, 1, 2 and 3)
-
-DMA Address and Count Registers
-
-
-0x00 write Channel 0 starting address
-0x00 read Channel 0 current address
-0x01 write Channel 0 starting word count
-0x01 read Channel 0 remaining word count
-
-0x02 write Channel 1 starting address
-0x02 read Channel 1 current address
-0x03 write Channel 1 starting word count
-0x03 read Channel 1 remaining word count
-
-0x04 write Channel 2 starting address
-0x04 read Channel 2 current address
-0x05 write Channel 2 starting word count
-0x05 read Channel 2 remaining word count
-
-0x06 write Channel 3 starting address
-0x06 read Channel 3 current address
-0x07 write Channel 3 starting word count
-0x07 read Channel 3 remaining word count
-
-
-DMA Command Registers
-
-
-0x08 write Command Register
-0x08 read Status Register
-0x09 write Request Register
-0x09 read -
-0x0a write Single Mask Register Bit
-0x0a read -
-0x0b write Mode Register
-0x0b read -
-0x0c write Clear LSB/MSB Flip-Flop
-0x0c read -
-0x0d write Master Clear/Reset
-0x0d read Temporary Register (not available on newer versions)
-0x0e write Clear Mask Register
-0x0e read -
-0x0f write Write All Mask Register Bits
-0x0f read Read All Mask Register Bits (only in Intel 82374)
-
-
-
-
-
-0xc0 - 0xdf DMA Controller #2 (Channels 4, 5, 6 and 7)
-
-DMA Address and Count Registers
-
-
-0xc0 write Channel 4 starting address
-0xc0 read Channel 4 current address
-0xc2 write Channel 4 starting word count
-0xc2 read Channel 4 remaining word count
-
-0xc4 write Channel 5 starting address
-0xc4 read Channel 5 current address
-0xc6 write Channel 5 starting word count
-0xc6 read Channel 5 remaining word count
-
-0xc8 write Channel 6 starting address
-0xc8 read Channel 6 current address
-0xca write Channel 6 starting word count
-0xca read Channel 6 remaining word count
-
-0xcc write Channel 7 starting address
-0xcc read Channel 7 current address
-0xce write Channel 7 starting word count
-0xce read Channel 7 remaining word count
-
-
-DMA Command Registers
-
-
-0xd0 write Command Register
-0xd0 read Status Register
-0xd2 write Request Register
-0xd2 read -
-0xd4 write Single Mask Register Bit
-0xd4 read -
-0xd6 write Mode Register
-0xd6 read -
-0xd8 write Clear LSB/MSB Flip-Flop
-0xd8 read -
-0xda write Master Clear/Reset
-0xda read Temporary Register (not present in Intel 82374)
-0xdc write Clear Mask Register
-0xdc read -
-0xde write Write All Mask Register Bits
-0xdf read Read All Mask Register Bits (only in Intel 82374)
-
-
-
-
-
-0x80 - 0x9f DMA Page Registers
-
-
-0x87 r/w Channel 0 Low byte (23-16) page Register
-0x83 r/w Channel 1 Low byte (23-16) page Register
-0x81 r/w Channel 2 Low byte (23-16) page Register
-0x82 r/w Channel 3 Low byte (23-16) page Register
-
-0x8b r/w Channel 5 Low byte (23-16) page Register
-0x89 r/w Channel 6 Low byte (23-16) page Register
-0x8a r/w Channel 7 Low byte (23-16) page Register
-0x8f r/w Low byte page Refresh
-
-
-
-
-
-0x400 - 0x4ff 82374 Enhanced DMA Registers
-
-The Intel 82374 EISA System Component (ESC) was introduced in early 1996
-and includes a DMA controller that provides a superset of 8237 functionality
-as well as other PC-compatible core peripheral components in a single
-package. This chip is targeted at both EISA and PCI platforms, and provides
-modern DMA features like scatter-gather, ring buffers as well as direct
-access by the system DMA to all 32 bits of address space.
-
-If these features are used, code should also be included to provide similar
-functionality in the previous 16 years worth of PC-compatible computers.
-For compatibility reasons, some of the 82374 registers must be programmed
-after programming the traditional 8237 registers for each
-transfer. Writing to a traditional 8237 register forces the contents
-of some of the 82374 enhanced registers to zero to provide backward
-software compatibility.
-
-
-0x401 r/w Channel 0 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
-0x403 r/w Channel 1 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
-0x405 r/w Channel 2 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
-0x407 r/w Channel 3 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
-0x4c6 r/w Channel 5 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
-0x4ca r/w Channel 6 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
-0x4ce r/w Channel 7 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
-
-0x487 r/w Channel 0 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
-0x483 r/w Channel 1 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
-0x481 r/w Channel 2 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
-0x482 r/w Channel 3 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
-0x48b r/w Channel 5 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
-0x489 r/w Channel 6 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
-0x48a r/w Channel 6 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
-0x48f r/w High byte page Refresh
-
-0x4e0 r/w Channel 0 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
-0x4e1 r/w Channel 0 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
-0x4e2 r/w Channel 0 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
-0x4e4 r/w Channel 1 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
-0x4e5 r/w Channel 1 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
-0x4e6 r/w Channel 1 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
-0x4e8 r/w Channel 2 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
-0x4e9 r/w Channel 2 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
-0x4ea r/w Channel 2 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
-0x4ec r/w Channel 3 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
-0x4ed r/w Channel 3 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
-0x4ee r/w Channel 3 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
-0x4f4 r/w Channel 5 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
-0x4f5 r/w Channel 5 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
-0x4f6 r/w Channel 5 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
-0x4f8 r/w Channel 6 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
-0x4f9 r/w Channel 6 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
-0x4fa r/w Channel 6 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
-0x4fc r/w Channel 7 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
-0x4fd r/w Channel 7 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
-0x4fe r/w Channel 7 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
-
-0x40a write Channels 0-3 Chaining Mode Register
-0x40a read Channel Interrupt Status Register
-0x4d4 write Channels 4-7 Chaining Mode Register
-0x4d4 read Chaining Mode Status
-0x40c read Chain Buffer Expiration Control Register
-
-0x410 write Channel 0 Scatter-Gather Command Register
-0x411 write Channel 1 Scatter-Gather Command Register
-0x412 write Channel 2 Scatter-Gather Command Register
-0x413 write Channel 3 Scatter-Gather Command Register
-0x415 write Channel 5 Scatter-Gather Command Register
-0x416 write Channel 6 Scatter-Gather Command Register
-0x417 write Channel 7 Scatter-Gather Command Register
-
-0x418 read Channel 0 Scatter-Gather Status Register
-0x419 read Channel 1 Scatter-Gather Status Register
-0x41a read Channel 2 Scatter-Gather Status Register
-0x41b read Channel 3 Scatter-Gather Status Register
-0x41d read Channel 5 Scatter-Gather Status Register
-0x41e read Channel 5 Scatter-Gather Status Register
-0x41f read Channel 7 Scatter-Gather Status Register
-
-0x420-0x423 r/w Channel 0 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
-0x424-0x427 r/w Channel 1 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
-0x428-0x42b r/w Channel 2 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
-0x42c-0x42f r/w Channel 3 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
-0x434-0x437 r/w Channel 5 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
-0x438-0x43b r/w Channel 6 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
-0x43c-0x43f r/w Channel 7 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Appendices
-
-
-
-Obtaining FreeBSD
-
-
-
-CD-ROM Publishers
-
-FreeBSD is available on CD-ROM from Walnut Creek CDROM:
-
-Walnut Creek CDROM
-4041 Pike Lane, Suite F
-Concord CA 94520 USA
-Phone: +1 925 674-0783
-Fax: +1 925 674-0821
-Email: info@cdrom.com
-WWW: http://www.cdrom.com/
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FTP Sites
-
-The official sources for FreeBSD are available via anonymous FTP from:
-
-ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD.
-
-
-
-Additionally, FreeBSD is available via anonymous FTP from the
-following mirror sites. If you choose to obtain FreeBSD via
-anonymous FTP, please try to use a site near you.
-
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-,
-.
-
-
-
-Argentina
-
-In case of problems, please contact the
-hostmaster
-for this domain.
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.ar.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Australia
-
-
-In case of problems, please contact the
-hostmaster
-for this domain.
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.au.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp2.au.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp3.au.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp4.au.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Brazil
-
-
-In case of problems, please contact the
-hostmaster
-for this domain.
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp2.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp3.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp4.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp5.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp6.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp7.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Canada
-
-
-In case of problems, please contact the
-hostmaster
-for this domain.
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.ca.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Czech Republic
-
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://sunsite.mff.cuni.cz/OS/FreeBSD
-Contact: jj@sunsite.mff.cuni.cz.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Denmark
-
-
-In case of problems, please contact the
-hostmaster
-for this domain.
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.dk.freeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Estonia
-
-
-In case of problems, please contact the
-hostmaster
-for this domain.
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.ee.freebsd.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Finland
-
-
-In case of problems, please contact the
-hostmaster
-for this domain.
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.fi.freebsd.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-France
-
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.ibp.fr/pub/FreeBSD
-Contact: Remy.Card@ibp.fr.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Germany
-
-
-In case of problems, please contact the
-hostmaster
-for this domain.
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.de.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp2.de.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp3.de.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp4.de.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp5.de.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp6.de.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp7.de.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Hong Kong
-
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.hk.super.net/pub/FreeBSD
-Contact: ftp-admin@HK.Super.NET.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Ireland
-
-
-In case of problems, please contact the
-hostmaster
-for this domain.
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.ie.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Israel
-
-
-In case of problems, please contact the
-hostmaster
-for this domain.
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.il.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp2.il.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Japan
-
-
-In case of problems, please contact the
-hostmaster
-for this domain.
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.jp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp2.jp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp3.jp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp4.jp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp5.jp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp6.jp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Korea
-
-
-In case of problems, please contact the
-hostmaster
-for this domain.
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.kr.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp2.kr.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Netherlands
-
-
-In case of problems, please contact the
-hostmaster
-for this domain.
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.nl.freebsd.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Poland
-
-
-In case of problems, please contact the
-hostmaster
-for this domain.
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.pl.freebsd.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Portugal
-
-
-In case of problems, please contact the
-hostmaster
-for this domain.
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.pt.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp2.pt.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Russia
-
-
-In case of problems, please contact the
-hostmaster
-for this domain.
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.ru.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp2.ru.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp3.ru.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-South Africa
-
-
-In case of problems, please contact the
-hostmaster
-for this domain.
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.za.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp2.za.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp3.za.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Slovenia
-
-
-In case of problems, please contact the
-hostmaster
-for this domain.
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.si.freebsd.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Sweden
-
-
-In case of problems, please contact the
-hostmaster
-for this domain.
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.se.freebsd.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Taiwan
-
-
-In case of problems, please contact the
-hostmaster
-for this domain.
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.tw.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp2.tw.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp3.tw.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Thailand
-
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.nectec.or.th/pub/FreeBSD
-Contact: ftpadmin@ftp.nectec.or.th.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Ukraine
-
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.ua.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-Contact: archer@lucky.net.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-UK
-
-
-In case of problems, please contact the
-hostmaster
-for this domain.
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.uk.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp2.uk.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp3.uk.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp4.uk.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-USA
-
-
-In case of problems, please contact the
-hostmaster
-for this domain.
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp2.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp3.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp4.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp5.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp6.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The latest versions of export-restricted code for FreeBSD (2.0C or later)
-(eBones and secure) are 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
-
-Hostmaster
-for this domain.
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.internat.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp2.internat.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Brazil
-
-
-Hostmaster
-for this domain.
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Finland
-
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://nic.funet.fi/pub/unix/FreeBSD/eurocrypt
-Contact: count@nic.funet.fi.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CTM Sites
-
-/FreeBSD is available via anonymous FTP from the
-following mirror sites. If you choose to obtain CTM via
-anonymous FTP, please try to use a site near you.
-
-In case of problems, please contact &a.phk;.
-
-
-
-California, Bay Area, official source
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CTM
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Germany, Trier
-
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.uni-trier.de/pub/unix/systems/BSD/FreeBSD/CTM
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-South Africa, backup server for old deltas
-
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ftp.internat.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CTM
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Taiwan/R.O.C, Chiayi
-
-
-
-
-
-
-ftp://ctm.tw.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CTM
-
-
-
-ftp://ctm2.tw.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CTM
-
-
-
-ftp://ctm3.tw.freebsd.org/pub/freebsd/CTM
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-If you did not find a mirror near to you or the mirror is incomplete,
-try
-FTP search at
-http://ftpsearch.ntnu.no/ftpsearch.
-FTP search is a great free archie server in Trondheim, Norway.
-
-
-
-
-CVSup Sites
-
- servers for FreeBSD are running at
-the following sites:
-
-
-
-Argentina
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.ar.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Australia
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.au.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Brazil
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.br.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Canada
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.ca.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Estonia
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.ee.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Finland
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.fi.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Germany
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.de.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-cvsup2.de.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-cvsup3.de.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Japan
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.jp.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-cvsup2.jp.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Netherlands
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.nl.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Norway
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.no.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Russia
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.ru.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-South Africa
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.za.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-cvsup2.za.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Taiwan
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.tw.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Ukraine
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup2.ua.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-United Kingdom
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.uk.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-USA
-
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-cvsup2.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-cvsup3.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The export-restricted code for FreeBSD (eBones and secure) is
-available via CVSup at the following international repository.
-Please use this site to get the export-restricted code, if you are
-outside the USA or Canada.
-
-
-
-South Africa
-
-
-
-
-
-cvsup.internat.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The following CVSup site is especially designed for users. Unlike the other CVSup mirrors, it is kept
-up-to-date by CTM. That means if you CVSup cvs-all with
-release=cvs from this site, you get a version of the
-repository (including the inevitable .ctm_status file)
-which is suitable for being updated using the CTM cvs-cur
-deltas. This allows users who track the entire cvs-all
-tree to go from CVSup to CTM without having to rebuild their
-repository from scratch using a fresh CTM base delta.
-
-Please note that this special feature only works for the
-cvs-all distribution with cvs as the release tag.
-CVSupping any other distribution and/or release will get you the
-specified distribution, but it will not be suitable for CTM updating.
-
-Also please note that, because the current version of CTM does
-not preserve the timestamps of files, the timestamps at this mirror
-site are not the same as those at other mirror sites. Switching
-between this site and other sites is not recommended. It will work
-correctly, but will be somewhat inefficient.
-
-
-
-Germany
-
-
-
-
-
-ctm.FreeBSD.ORG
-(maintainer)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Bibliography
-
-While the manual pages provide the definitive reference
-for individual pieces of the FreeBSD operating system,
-they are notorious for not illustrating how to put the
-pieces together to make the whole operating system run
-smoothly. For this, there is no substitute for a good
-book on UNIX system administration and a good users'
-manual.
-
-
-
-Books & Magazines Specific to FreeBSD
-
-International books & Magazines:
-
-
-
-
-
-Using FreeBSD (in Chinese).
-
-
-
-FreeBSD for PC 98'ers (in Japanese), published by SHUWA
-System Co, LTD. ISBN 4-87966-468-5 C3055 P2900E.
-
-
-
-FreeBSD (in Japanese), published by CUTT.
-ISBN 4-906391-22-2 C3055 P2400E.
-
-
-
-Complete Introduction to FreeBSD (in Japanese),
-published by Shoeisha Co., Ltd. ISBN 4-88135-473-6 P3600E.
-
-
-
-Personal UNIX Starter Kit FreeBSD (in Japanese),
-published by ASCII. ISBN 4-7561-1733-3 P3000E.
-
-
-
-FreeBSD Handbook (Japanese translation),
-published by ASCII. ISBN 4-7561-1580-2 P3800E.
-
-
-
-
-
-English language books & Magazines:
-
-
-
-
-
-The Complete FreeBSD, published by Walnut Creek CDROM.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Users' Guides
-
-
-
-
-
-Computer Systems Research Group, UC Berkeley.
-4.4BSD User's Reference Manual.
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1994.
-ISBN 1-56592-075-9
-
-
-
-Computer Systems Research Group, UC Berkeley.
-4.4BSD User's Supplementary Documents.
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1994.
-ISBN 1-56592-076-7
-
-
-
-UNIX in a Nutshell.
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1990.
-ISBN 093717520X
-
-
-
-Mui, Linda.
-What You Need To Know When You Can't Find Your UNIX
-System Administrator.
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1995.
-ISBN 1-56592-104-6
-
-
-
-Ohio State University has written
-a UNIX Introductory Course which is available online
-in HTML and postscript format.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Administrators' Guides
-
-
-
-
-
-Albitz, Paul and Liu, Cricket. DNS and
-BIND, 2nd Ed.
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1997.
-ISBN 1-56592-236-0
-
-
-
-Computer Systems Research Group, UC Berkeley.
-4.4BSD System Manager's Manual.
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1994.
-ISBN 1-56592-080-5
-
-
-
-Costales, Brian, et al.
-Sendmail, 2nd Ed. O'Reilly &
-Associates, Inc., 1997.
-ISBN 1-56592-222-0
-
-
-
-Frisch, Æleen. Essential System
-Administration, 2nd Ed. O'Reilly &
-Associates, Inc., 1995. ISBN 1-56592-127-5
-
-
-
-Hunt, Craig. TCP/IP Network Administration.
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1992.
-ISBN 0-937175-82-X
-
-
-
-Nemeth, Evi. UNIX System Administration
-Handbook. 2nd ed. Prentice Hall, 1995.
-ISBN 0131510517
-
-
-
-Stern, Hal Managing NFS and NIS
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1991.
-ISBN 0-937175-75-7
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Programmers' Guides
-
-
-
-
-
-Asente, Paul. X Window System
-Toolkit. Digital Press.
-ISBN 1-55558-051-3
-
-
-
-Computer Systems Research Group, UC Berkeley.
-4.4BSD Programmer's Reference Manual.
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1994.
-ISBN 1-56592-078-3
-
-
-
-Computer Systems Research Group, UC Berkeley.
-4.4BSD Programmer's Supplementary Documents.
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1994.
-ISBN 1-56592-079-1
-
-
-
-Ellis, Margaret A. and Stroustrup,
-Bjarne. The Annotated C++ Reference
-Manual. Addison-Wesley, 1990.
-ISBN 0-201-51459-1
-
-
-
-Harbison, Samuel P. and Steele, Guy
-L. Jr. C: A Reference Manual. 4rd ed. Prentice
-Hall, 1995. ISBN 0-13-326224-3
-
-
-
-Kernighan, Brian and Dennis M. Ritchie.
-The C Programming Language..
-PTR Prentice Hall, 1988.
-ISBN 0-13-110362-9
-
-
-
-Lehey, Greg.
-Port UNIX Software.
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1995.
-ISBN 1-56592-126-7
-
-
-
-Plauger, P. J. The Standard C
-Library. Prentice Hall, 1992.
-ISBN 0-13-131509-9
-
-
-
-Stevens, W. Richard. Advanced
-Programming in the UNIX Environment.
-Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1992
-ISBN 0-201-56317-7
-
-
-
-Stevens, W. Richard. UNIX Network
-Programming. PTR Prentice Hall, 1990.
-ISBN 0-13-949876-1
-
-
-
-Wells, Bill. "Writing Serial Drivers for UNIX".
-Dr. Dobb's Journal. 19(15), December
-1994. pp68-71, 97-99.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Operating System Internals
-
-
-
-
-
-Andleigh, Prabhat K. UNIX System Architecture.
-Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1990.
-ISBN 0-13-949843-5
-
-
-
-Jolitz, William. "Porting UNIX to the
-386". Dr. Dobb's Journal. January
-1991-July 1992.
-
-
-
-Leffler, Samuel J., Marshall Kirk McKusick,
-Michael J Karels and John Quarterman The Design and
-Implementation of the 4.3BSD UNIX Operating
-System. Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1989.
-ISBN 0-201-06196-1
-
-
-
-Leffler, Samuel J., Marshall Kirk McKusick,
-The Design and Implementation of the 4.3BSD
-UNIX Operating System: Answer Book.
-Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1991.
-ISBN 0-201-54629-9
-
-
-
-McKusick, Marshall Kirk, Keith Bostic, Michael J Karels,
-and John Quarterman. The Design and
-Implementation of the 4.4BSD Operating
-System. Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1996.
-ISBN 0-201-54979-4
-
-
-
-Stevens, W. Richard. TCP/IP Illustrated,
-Volume 1: The Protocols.
-Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1996.
-ISBN 0-201-63346-9
-
-
-
-Stevens, W. Richard. TCP/IP Illustrated,
-Volume 3: TCP for Transactions, HTTP, NNTP
-and the UNIX Domain Protocols.
-Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1996.
-ISBN 0-201-63495-3
-
-
-
-Vahalia, Uresh. UNIX Internals -- The New Frontiers.
-Prentice Hall, 1996.
-ISBN 0-13-101908-2
-
-
-
-Wright, Gary R. and W. Richard Stevens.
-TCP/IP Illustrated, Volume 2:
-The Implementation.
-Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1995.
-ISBN 0-201-63354-X
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Security Reference
-
-
-
-
-
-Cheswick, William R. and Steven M. Bellovin.
-Firewalls and Internal Security:
-Repelling the Wily Hacker.
-Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1995.
-ISBN 0-201-63357-4
-
-
-
-Garfinkel, Simson and Gene Spafford.
-Practical UNIX Security. 2nd Ed.
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1996.
-ISBN 1-56592-148-8
-
-
-
-Garfinkel, Simson.
-PGP Pretty Good Privacy
-O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1995.
-ISBN 1-56592-098-8
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Hardware Reference
-
-
-
-
-
-Anderson, Don and Tom Shanley.
-Pentium Processor System Architecture.
-2nd ed. Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1995.
-ISBN 0-201-40992-5
-
-
-
-Ferraro, Richard F. Programmer's Guide
-to the EGA, VGA, and Super VGA Cards.
-3rd ed. Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1995.
-ISBN 0-201-62490-7
-
-
-
-Shanley, Tom. 80486 System
-Architecture. 3rd ed. Reading, Mass. :
-Addison-Wesley, 1995. ISBN
-0-201-40994-1
-
-
-
-Shanley, Tom. ISA System
-Architecture. 3rd ed. Reading, Mass. :
-Addison-Wesley, 1995.
-ISBN 0-201-40996-8
-
-
-
-Shanley, Tom. PCI System
-Architecture. 3rd ed. Reading, Mass. :
-Addison-Wesley, 1995. ISBN
-0-201-40993-3
-
-
-
-Van Gilluwe, Frank. The Undocumented PC.
-Reading, Mass: Addison-Wesley Pub. Co., 1994.
-ISBN 0-201-62277-7
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-UNIX History
-
-
-
-
-
-Lion, John Lion's Commentary on UNIX, 6th Ed.
-With Source Code.
-ITP Media Group, 1996.
-ISBN 1573980137
-
-
-
-Raymond, Eric s. The New Hacker's Dictonary,
-3rd edition. MIT Press, 1996.
-ISBN 0-262-68092-0
-Also known as the
-Jargon File
-
-
-
-Salus, Peter H. A quarter century of UNIX.
-Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, Inc., 1994.
-ISBN 0-201-54777-5
-
-
-
-Simon Garfinkel, Daniel Weise, Steven Strassmann.
-The UNIX-HATERS Handbook.
-IDG Books Worldwide, Inc., 1994.
-ISBN 1-56884-203-1
-
-
-
-Don Libes, Sandy Ressler Life with UNIX - special
-edition. Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1989.
-ISBN 0-13-536657-7
-
-
-
-The BSD family tree. 1997.
-http://www.de.freebsd.org/de/ftp/unix-stammbaum
-or local on a FreeBSD-current machine.
-
-
-
-The BSD Release Announcements collection. 1997.
-http://www.de.FreeBSD.ORG/de/ftp/releases/
-
-
-
-Networked Computer Science Technical Reports Library.
-http://www.ncstrl.org/
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Magazines and Journals
-
-
-
-
-
-The C/C++ Users Journal. R&D Publications
-Inc. ISSN 1075-2838
-
-
-
-Sys Admin - The Journal for UNIX System
-Administrators Miller Freeman, Inc., ISSN 1061-2688
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Resources on the Internet
-
-Contributed by &a.jkh;.
-
-The rapid pace of FreeBSD progress makes print media impractical as a
-means of following the latest developments. Electronic resources are
-the best, if not often the only, way stay informed of the latest advances.
-Since FreeBSD is a volunteer effort, the user community itself also
-generally serves as a `technical support department' of sorts, with
-electronic mail and USENET news being the most effective way of reaching
-that community.
-
-The most important points of contact with the FreeBSD
-user community are outlined below. If you are aware of other
-resources not mentioned here, please send them to the &a.doc;so that they may also be included.
-
-
-
-Mailing lists
-
-Though many of the FreeBSD development members read USENET, we cannot
-always guarantee that we will get to your questions in a timely fashion
-(or at all) if you post them only to one of the comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.*
-groups. By addressing your questions to the appropriate mailing list
-you will reach both us and a concentrated FreeBSD audience, invariably
-assuring a better (or at least faster) response.
-
-The charters for the various lists are given at the bottom of this
-document. Please read the charter before joining or sending
-mail to any list. Most of our list subscribers now receive many hundreds
-of FreeBSD related messages every day, and by setting down charters
-and rules for proper use we are striving to keep the signal-to-noise ratio
-of the lists high. To do less would see the mailing lists ultimately fail
-as an effective communications medium for the project.
-
-Archives are kept for all of the mailing lists and can be searched
-using the FreeBSD World Wide Web server. The keyword searchable archive
-offers an excellent way of finding answers to frequently asked
-questions and should be consulted before posting a question.
-
-
-
-List summary
-
-General lists: The following are general lists which
-anyone is free to join:
-List Purpose
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-freebsd-announce Important events and project milestones
-freebsd-bugs Bug reports
-freebsd-chat Non-technical items related to the FreeBSD community
-freebsd-current Discussion concerning the use of FreeBSD-current
-freebsd-stable Discussion concerning the use of FreeBSD-stable
-freebsd-isp Issues for Internet Service Providers using FreeBSD
-freebsd-jobs FreeBSD employment and consulting opportunities
-freebsd-questions User questions
-
-
-Technical lists: The following lists are for technical discussion.
-You should read the charter for each list carefully before joining or
-sending mail to one as there are firm guidelines for their use and content.
-List Purpose
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-freebsd-afs Porting AFS to FreeBSD
-freebsd-alpha Porting FreeBSD to the Alpha
-freebsd-doc The FreeBSD Documentation project
-freebsd-emulation Emulation of other systems such as Linux/DOS/Windows
-freebsd-fs Filesystems
-freebsd-hackers General technical discussion
-freebsd-hardware General discussion of hardware for running FreeBSD
-freebsd-isdn ISDN developers
-freebsd-java Java developers and people porting JDKs to FreeBSD
-freebsd-mobile Discussions about mobile computing
-freebsd-multimedia Multimedia discussion
-freebsd-platforms Concerning ports to non-Intel architecture platforms
-freebsd-ports Discussion of the ports collection
-freebsd-scsi The SCSI subsystem
-freebsd-security Security issues
-freebsd-smp Design discussions for [A]Symmetric MultiProcessing
-freebsd-sparc Porting FreeBSD to Sparc systems.
-
-
-Limited lists: The following lists require approval from
-core@FreeBSD.ORG to join,
-though anyone is free to send messages to them which fall within the
-scope of their charters. It is also a good idea establish a presence
-in the technical lists before asking to join one of these limited lists.
-List Purpose
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-freebsd-admin Administrative issues
-freebsd-arch Architecture and design discussions
-freebsd-core FreeBSD core team
-freebsd-hubs People running mirror sites (infrastructural support)
-freebsd-install Installation development
-freebsd-security-notifications Security notifications
-freebsd-user-groups User group coordination
-
-
-CVS lists: The following lists are for people interested in
-seeing the log messages for changes to various areas of the source tree.
-They are Read-Only lists and should not have mail sent to them.
-
-
-List name Source area Area Description (source for)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-cvs-CVSROOT /usr/src/[A-Z]* Top level /usr/src file changes
-cvs-all /usr/src All changes to the tree (superset)
-cvs-bin /usr/src/bin System binaries
-cvs-etc /usr/src/etc System files
-cvs-games /usr/src/games Games
-cvs-gnu /usr/src/gnu GPL'd utilities
-cvs-include /usr/src/include Include files
-cvs-kerberosIV /usr/src/kerberosIV Kerberos encryption code
-cvs-lib /usr/src/lib System libraries
-cvs-libexec /usr/src/libexec System binaries
-cvs-ports /usr/ports Ported software
-cvs-sbin /usr/src/sbin System binaries
-cvs-share /usr/src/share System shared files
-cvs-sys /usr/src/sys Kernel
-cvs-usrbin /usr/src/usr.bin Use binaries
-cvs-usrsbin /usr/src/usr.sbin System binaries
-
-
-
-
-
-How to subscribe
-
-All mailing lists live on FreeBSD.ORG, so to post to a
-given list you simply mail to listname@FreeBSD.ORG. It
-will then be redistributed to mailing list members world-wide.
-
-To subscribe to a list, send mail to &a.majordomo; and include
-
-subscribe <listname> [<optional address>]
-
-
-In the body of your message. For example, to subscribe yourself to
-freebsd-announce, you'd do:
-
-% mail majordomo@FreeBSD.ORG
-subscribe freebsd-announce
-^D
-
-
-If you want to subscribe yourself under a different name, or submit a
-subscription request for a local mailing list (note: this is more efficient
-if you have several interested parties at one site, and highly appreciated by
-us!), you would do something like:
-
-% mail majordomo@FreeBSD.ORG
-subscribe freebsd-announce local-announce@somesite.com
-^D
-
-
-Finally, it is also possible to unsubscribe yourself from a list, get a
-list of other list members or see the list of mailing lists again by
-sending other types of control messages to majordomo. For a complete
-list of available commands, do this:
-
-% mail majordomo@FreeBSD.ORG
-help
-^D
-
-
-Again, we would like to request that you keep discussion in the technical mailing
-lists on a technical track. If you are only interested in the "high points"
-then it is suggested that you join freebsd-announce, which is intended only
-for infrequent traffic.
-
-
-
-
-List charters
-
-AllFreeBSD mailing lists have certain basic rules
-which must be adhered to by anyone using them. Failure to comply
-with these guidelines will result in two (2) written warnings from the
-FreeBSD Postmaster,
-after which, on a third offense, the poster will removed from all
-FreeBSD mailing lists and filtered from further posting to them.
-We regret that such rules and measures are necessary at all, but
-today's Internet is a pretty harsh environment, it would seem, and
-many fail to appreciate just how fragile some of its mechanisms are.
-
-Rules of the road:
-
-
-
-The topic of any posting should adhere to the basic charter of the list
-it is posted to, e.g. if the list is about technical issues then your
-posting should contain technical discussion. Ongoing irrelevant chatter
-or flaming only detracts from the value of the mailing list for everyone
-on it and will not be tolerated. For free-form discussion on no
-particular topic, the freebsd-chat mailing list is freely available and should
-be used instead.
-
-
-
-No posting should be made to more than 2 mailing lists, and only
-to 2 when a clear and obvious need to post to both lists exists.
-For most lists, there is already a great deal of subscriber overlap
-and except for the most esoteric mixes (say "-stable & -scsi"), there
-really is no reason to post to more than one list at a time.
-If a message is sent to you in such a way that multiple mailing lists
-appear on the Cc line then the cc line should also be trimmed before
-sending it out again.
-You are still responsible for your own cross-postings, no
-matter who the originator might have been.
-
-
-
-Personal attacks and profanity (in the context of an argument) are
-not allowed, and that includes users and developers alike. Gross
-breaches of netiquette, like excerpting or reposting private mail
-when permission to do so was not and would not be forthcoming,
-are frowned upon but not specifically enforced. However,
-there are also very few cases where such content would fit within the
-charter of a list and it would therefore probably rate a warning
-(or ban) on that basis alone.
-
-
-
-Advertising of non-FreeBSD related products or services is
-strictly prohibited and will result in an immediate ban if it
-is clear that the offender is advertising by spam.
-
-
-
-
-
-Individual list charters:
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-AFS
-
-Andrew File System
-This list is for discussion on porting and using AFS from CMU/Transarc
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-ADMIN
-
-
-Administrative issues
-This list is purely for discussion of freebsd.org related issues
-and to report problems or abuse of project resources. It is a closed
-list, though anyone may report a problem (with our systems!) to it.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-ANNOUNCE
-
-
-Important events / milestones
-This is the mailing list for people interested only in occasional
-announcements of significant freebsd events. This includes
-announcements about snapshots and other releases. It contains
-announcements of new FreeBSD capabilities. It may contain calls
-for volunteers etc. This is a low volume, strictly moderated mailing list.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-ARCH
-
-
-Architecture and design discussions
-This is the mailing list for people discussing FreeBSD architectural
-issues. It is a closed list, and not for general subscription.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-BUGS
-
-
-Bug reports
-This is the mailing list for reporting bugs in FreeBSD
-Whenever possible, bugs should be submitted using the "send-pr(1)"
-command or the WEB interface to it.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-CHAT
-
-
-Non technical items related to the
-FreeBSD community
-This list contains the overflow from the other lists about
-non-technical, social information. It includes discussion about
-whether Jordan looks like a toon ferret or not, whether or not to
-type in capitals, who is drinking too much coffee, where the best
-beer is brewed, who is brewing beer in their basement, and so on.
-Occasional announcements of important events (such as upcoming
-parties, weddings, births, new jobs, etc) can be made to the
-technical lists, but the follow ups should be directed to this
--chat list.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-CORE
-
-
-FreeBSD core team
-This is an internal mailing list for use by the core members.
-Messages can be sent to it when a serious FreeBSD-related matter
-requires arbitration or high-level scrutiny.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-CURRENT
-
-
-Discussions about the use of
-FreeBSD-current This is the mailing list for users
-of freebsd-current. It includes warnings about new features
-coming out in -current that will affect the users, and
-instructions on steps that must be taken to remain -current.
-Anyone running "current" must subscribe to this list.
-This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
-content is expected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-CURRENT-DIGEST
-
-
-Discussions about the use of
-FreeBSD-current This is the digest version of the
-freebsd-current mailing list. The digest consists of all
-messages sent to freebsd-current bundled together and mailed out
-as a single message. The average digest size is about 40kB.
-This list is Read-Only and should not be posted to.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-STABLE
-
-
-Discussions about the use of
-FreeBSD-stable This is the mailing list for users
-of freebsd-stable. It includes warnings about new features
-coming out in -stable that will affect the users, and
-instructions on steps that must be taken to remain -stable.
-Anyone running ``stable'' should subscribe to this list.
-This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
-content is expected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-DOC
-
-
-Documentation project
-This mailing list belongs to the FreeBSD Doc Project and is for
-the discussion of documentation related issues and projects.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-FS
-
-
-Filesystems
-Discussions concerning FreeBSD filesystems.
-This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
-content is expected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-ISDN
-
-
-ISDN Communications
-This is the mailing list for people discussing the development
-of ISDN support for FreeBSD.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-JAVA
-
-
-Java Development
-This is the mailing list for people discussing the development of
-significant Java applications for FreeBSD and the porting and maintenance
-of JDKs.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-HACKERS
-
-
-Technical discussions
-This is a forum for technical discussions related to FreeBSD. This
-is the primary technical mailing list. It
-is for individuals actively working on FreeBSD, to bring up problems
-or discuss alternative solutions. Individuals interested in
-following the technical discussion are also welcome.
-This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
-content is expected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-HACKERS-DIGEST
-
-
-Technical
-discussions This is the digest version of the
-freebsd-hackers mailing list. The digest consists of all
-messages sent to freebsd-hackers bundled together and mailed out
-as a single message. The average digest size is about 40kB.
-This list is Read-Only and should not be posted to.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-HARDWARE
-
-
-General discussion of FreeBSD
-hardware General discussion about the types of
-hardware that FreeBSD runs on, various problems and suggestions
-concerning what to buy or avoid.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-INSTALL
-
-
-Installation discussion
-This mailing list is for discussing FreeBSD installation
-development for the future releases and is closed.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-ISP
-
-
-Issues for Internet Service Providers
-This mailing list is for discussing topics relevant to Internet
-Service Providers (ISPs) using FreeBSD.
-This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
-content is expected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-MULTIMEDIA
-
-
-Multimedia discussions
-This is a forum about multimedia applications using FreeBSD.
-Discussion center around multimedia applications, their installation, their
-development and their support within FreeBSD
-This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
-content is expected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-PLATFORMS
-
-
-Porting to Non-Intel
-platforms Cross-platform freebsd issues, general
-discussion and proposals for non-Intel FreeBSD ports.
-This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
-content is expected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-PORTS
-
-
-Discussion of "ports"
-Discussions concerning FreeBSD's "ports collection" (/usr/ports), proposed
-ports, modifications to ports collection infrastructure and general
-coordination efforts.
-This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
-content is expected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-QUESTIONS
-
-
-User questions
-This is the mailing list for questions about FreeBSD. You should not
-send "how to" questions to the technical lists unless you consider the
-question to be pretty technical.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-QUESTIONS-DIGEST
-
-
-User questions
-This is the digest version of the freebsd-questions mailing list.
-The digest consists of all messages sent to freebsd-questions
-bundled together and mailed out as a single message. The average
-digest size is about 40kB.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-SCSI
-
-
-SCSI subsystem
-This is the mailing list for people working on the scsi subsystem
-for FreeBSD.
-This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
-content is expected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-SECURITY
-
-
-Security issues
-FreeBSD computer security issues (DES, Kerberos, known security holes and
-fixes, etc).
-This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
-content is expected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-SECURITY-NOTIFICATIONS
-
-
-Security Notifications
-Notifications of FreeBSD security problems and fixes. This is not
-a discussion list. The discussion list is FreeBSD-security.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FREEBSD-USER-GROUPS
-
-
-User Group Coordination List
-This is the mailing list for the coordinators from each of the
-local area Users Groups to discuss matters with each other and a
-designated individual from the Core Team. This mail list should
-be limited to meeting synopsis and coordination of projects that span
-User Groups. It is a closed list.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Usenet newsgroups
-
-In addition to two FreeBSD specific newsgroups, there
-are many others in which FreeBSD is discussed or are
-otherwise relevant to FreeBSD users. Keyword searchable archives are available for
-some of these newsgroups from courtesy of Warren Toomey
-<wkt@cs.adfa.oz.au>.
-
-
-
-BSD specific newsgroups
-
-
-
-
-
-comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.announce
-
-
-
-comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.misc
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Other Unix newsgroups of interest
-
-
-
-
-
-comp.unix
-
-
-
-comp.unix.questions
-
-
-
-comp.unix.admin
-
-
-
-comp.unix.programmer
-
-
-
-comp.unix.shell
-
-
-
-comp.unix.user-friendly
-
-
-
-comp.security.unix
-
-
-
-comp.sources.unix
-
-
-
-comp.unix.advocacy
-
-
-
-comp.unix.misc
-
-
-
-comp.os.386bsd.announc
-
-
-
-comp.os.386bsd.app
-
-
-
-comp.os.386bsd.bugs
-
-
-
-comp.os.386bsd.development
-
-
-
-comp.os.386bsd.misc
-
-
-
-comp.os.386bsd.questions
-
-
-
-comp.bugs.4bsd
-
-
-
-comp.bugs.4bsd.ucb-fixes
-
-
-
-comp.unix.bsd
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-X Window System
-
-
-
-
-
-comp.windows.x.i386unix
-
-
-
-comp.windows.x
-
-
-
-comp.windows.x.apps
-
-
-
-comp.windows.x.announce
-
-
-
-comp.windows.x.intrinsics
-
-
-
-comp.windows.x.motif
-
-
-
-comp.windows.x.pex
-
-
-
-comp.emulators.ms-windows.wine
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-World Wide Web servers
-
-
-
-
-
-http://www.FreeBSD.ORG/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.au.freebsd.org/FreeBSD/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.br.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.ca.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://sunsite.mff.cuni.cz/www.freebsd.org/.
-
-
-
-http://sunsite.auc.dk/www.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.ee.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.fi.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.de.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.ie.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.jp.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.kr.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.nl.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.pt.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.se.freebsd.org/www.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-http://www.tw.freebsd.org/freebsd.html .
-
-
-
-http://www2.ua.freebsd.org/ .
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FreeBSD Project Staff
-
-The FreeBSD Project is managed and operated by the following
-groups of people:
-
-
-
-The FreeBSD Core Team
-
-The FreeBSD core team constitutes the project's ``Board of Directors'',
-responsible for deciding the project's overall goals and direction
-as well as managing of
-the FreeBSD project landscape.
-
-(in alphabetical order by last name):
-
-
-
-
-
-&a.asami;
-
-
-
-&a.jmb;
-
-
-
-&a.ache;
-
-
-
-&a.dyson;
-
-
-
-&a.bde;
-
-
-
-&a.gibbs;
-
-
-
-&a.davidg;
-
-
-
-&a.jkh;
-
-
-
-&a.phk;
-
-
-
-&a.rich;
-
-
-
-&a.gpalmer;
-
-
-
-&a.jdp;
-
-
-
-&a.guido;
-
-
-
-&a.sos;
-
-
-
-&a.peter;
-
-
-
-&a.wollman;
-
-
-
-&a.joerg;
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The FreeBSD Developers
-
-These are the people who have commit privileges and do the engineering
-work on the FreeBSD source tree. All core team members and most
-FreeBSD Documentation project personnel are also developers.
-
-
-
-
-
-&a.mbarkah;
-
-
-
-&a.stb;
-
-
-
-&a.jb;
-
-
-
-&a.torstenb;
-
-
-
-&a.danny;
-
-
-
-&a.charnier;
-
-
-
-&a.kjc;
-
-
-
-&a.gclarkii;
-
-
-
-&a.cracauer;
-
-
-
-&a.adam;
-
-
-
-&a.dufault;
-
-
-
-&a.uhclem;
-
-
-
-&a.tegge;
-
-
-
-&a.eivind;
-
-
-
-&a.julian;
-
-
-
-&a.rse;
-
-
-
-&a.se;
-
-
-
-&a.sef;
-
-
-
-&a.fenner;
-
-
-
-&a.jfieber;
-
-
-
-&a.jfitz;
-
-
-
-&a.lars;
-
-
-
-&a.scrappy;
-
-
-
-&a.tg;
-
-
-
-&a.brandon;
-
-
-
-&a.graichen;
-
-
-
-&a.jgreco;
-
-
-
-&a.rgrimes;
-
-
-
-&a.jmg;
-
-
-
-&a.hanai;
-
-
-
-&a.ahasty;
-
-
-
-&a.jhay;
-
-
-
-&a.helbig;
-
-
-
-&a.erich;
-
-
-
-&a.hsu;
-
-
-
-&a.itojun;
-
-
-
-&a.ugen;
-
-
-
-&a.gj;
-
-
-
-&a.nsj;
-
-
-
-&a.ljo;
-
-
-
-&a.kato;
-
-
-
-&a.andreas;
-
-
-
-&a.imp;
-
-
-
-&a.smace;
-
-
-
-&a.mckay;
-
-
-
-&a.jlemon;
-
-
-
-&a.tedm;
-
-
-
-&a.amurai;
-
-
-
-&a.markm;
-
-
-
-&a.max;
-
-
-
-&a.alex;
-
-
-
-&a.davidn;
-
-
-
-&a.obrien;
-
-
-
-&a.fsmp;
-
-
-
-&a.smpatel;
-
-
-
-&a.wpaul;
-
-
-
-&a.jmacd;
-
-
-
-&a.steve;
-
-
-
-&a.mpp;
-
-
-
-&a.dfr;
-
-
-
-&a.jraynard;
-
-
-
-&a.darrenr;
-
-
-
-&a.csgr;
-
-
-
-&a.martin;
-
-
-
-&a.paul;
-
-
-
-&a.roberto;
-
-
-
-&a.chuckr;
-
-
-
-&a.dima;
-
-
-
-&a.wosch;
-
-
-
-&a.ats;
-
-
-
-&a.jseger;
-
-
-
-&a.vanilla;
-
-
-
-&a.msmith;
-
-
-
-&a.brian;
-
-
-
-&a.stark;
-
-
-
-&a.karl;
-
-
-
-&a.cwt;
-
-
-
-&a.pst;
-
-
-
-&a.hoek;
-
-
-
-&a.swallace;
-
-
-
-&a.nate;
-
-
-
-&a.yokota;
-
-
-
-&a.jmz;
-
-
-
-&a.hosokawa;
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The FreeBSD Documentation Project
-
-
-The FreeBSD Documentation Project is responsible for a
-number of different services, each service being run by an
-individual and his deputies (if any):
-
-
-
-Documentation Project Manager
-
-&a.jfieber;
-
-
-
-
-Webmaster
-
-
-&a.mbarkah;
-
-Deputy: &a.paul;
-
-
-
-
-Handbook & FAQ Editor
-
-
-&a.faq;
-
-
-
-
-Build Engineer
-
-
-&a.paul;
-
-Deputy: &a.dave;
-
-
-
-
-Mirror Manager
-
-
-&a.ulf;
-
-Deputy: &a.john;
-
-
-
-
-News Editor
-
-
-&a.nsj;
-
-Deputy: &a.john;
-
-
-
-
-Gallery and Commercial Editor
-
-
-&a.nsj;
-
-Deputy: &a.cawimm;
-
-
-
-
-Style Police & Art Director
-
-
-&a.dave;
-
-Deputy: &a.opsys;
-
-
-
-
-Database Engineer
-
-
-&a.mayo;
-
-Deputy: &a.cracauer;
-
-
-
-
-CGI Engineer
-
-
-&a.cracauer;
-
-Deputy: &a.stb;
-
-
-
-
-Bottle Washing
-
-
-&a.nsj;
-
-Drying plates: &a.nik;
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Who Is Responsible for What
-
-
-
-Principal Architect
-
-&a.davidg;
-
-
-
-
-Documentation Project Manager
-
-
-&a.jfieber;
-
-
-
-
-Internationalization
-
-
-&a.ache;
-
-
-
-
-Networking
-
-
-&a.wollman;
-
-
-
-
-Postmaster
-
-
-&a.jmb;
-
-
-
-
-Release Coordinator
-
-
-&a.jkh;
-
-
-
-
-Public Relations & Corporate Liaison
-
-
-&a.jkh;
-
-
-
-
-Security Officer
-
-
-&a.guido;
-
-
-
-
-Source Repository Managers
-
-
-Principal: &a.peter;
-Assistant: &a.jdp;
-International (Crypto): &a.markm;
-
-
-
-
-Ports Manager
-
-
-&a.asami;
-
-
-
-
-XFree86 Project, Inc. Liaison
-
-
-&a.rich;
-
-
-
-
-Usenet Support
-
-
-&a.joerg;
-
-
-
-
-GNATS Administrator
-
-
-&a.steve;
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-PGP keys
-
- In case you need to verify a signature or send encrypted
-email to one of the officers or core team members a
-number of keys are provided here for your convenience.
-
-
-
-Officers
-
-
-
-FreeBSD Security Officer <security-officer@freebsd.org>
-
-
-
-
-FreeBSD Security Officer <security-officer@freebsd.org>
-Fingerprint = 41 08 4E BB DB 41 60 71 F9 E5 0E 98 73 AF 3F 11
-
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-
-
-
-
-
-
-&a.imp;
-
-
-
-Warner Losh <imp@village.org>
- aka <imp@freebsd.org>
-Fingerprint = D4 31 FD B9 F7 90 17 E8 37 C5 E7 7F CF A6 C1 B9
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-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Core Team members
-
-
-
-&a.asami;
-
-
-
-Satoshi Asami <asami@cs.berkeley.edu>
- aka <asami@FreeBSD.ORG>
-Fingerprint = EB 3C 68 9E FB 6C EB 3F DB 2E 0F 10 8F CE 79 CA
-
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-
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-&a.peter;
-
-
-
-Peter Wemm <peter@FreeBSD.org>
- aka <peter@spinner.dialix.com>
- aka <peter@haywire.dialix.com>
- aka <peter@perth.dialix.oz.au>
-Key fingerprint = 47 05 04 CA 4C EE F8 93 F6 DB 02 92 6D F5 58 8A
-
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-
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-&a.joerg;
-
-
-
-Type Bits/KeyID Date User ID
-pub 1024/76A3F7B1 1996/04/27 Joerg Wunsch <joerg_wunsch@uriah.heep.sax.de>
- Key fingerprint = DC 47 E6 E4 FF A6 E9 8F 93 21 E0 7D F9 12 D6 4E
- Joerg Wunsch <joerg_wunsch@interface-business.de>
- Joerg Wunsch <j@uriah.heep.sax.de>
- Joerg Wunsch <j@interface-business.de>
-
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-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
+
+
+
+
+
+ If you don't have a CDROM distribution then simply download the installation boot disk image file to your hard
+ drive, being sure to tell your browser to
+ save rather than display the file.
+ Note: This disk image can only be used with
+ 1.44 megabyte 3.5 inch floppy disks.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Make the installation boot disk from the image file:
+
+
+
+
+
+ If you are using MS-DOS then download
+ fdimage.exe or get it from tools\fdimage.exe
+ on the CDROM and then run it like so:
+
+ E:\> tools\fdimage floppies\boot.flp a:
+
+ The fdimage
+ program will format the A: drive and then copy the
+ boot.flp image onto it (assuming that you're at the top
+ level of a FreeBSD distribution and the floppy images
+ live in the floppies subdirectory, as is typically the case).
+
+
+
+
+
+ If you are using a UNIX system to create the floppy image:
+
+ % dd if=boot.flp of=disk_device
+
+
+ where disk_device is the /dev
+ entry for the floppy drive. On FreeBSD systems, this
+ is /dev/rfd0 for the A: drive and
+ /dev/rfd1 for the B: drive.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ With the installation disk in the A: drive, reboot your
+ computer. You should get a boot prompt something like this:
+
+ >> FreeBSD BOOT ...
+ Usage: [[[0:][wd](0,a)]/kernel][-abcCdhrsv]
+ Use 1:sd(0,a)kernel to boot sd0 if it is BIOS drive 1
+ Use ? for file list or press Enter for defaults
+ Boot:
+
+
+ If you do not type anything, FreeBSD will automatically boot
+ with its default configuration after a delay of about
+ five seconds. As FreeBSD boots, it probes your computer
+ to determine what hardware is installed. The results of
+ this probing is displayed on the screen.
+
+
+
+
+
+ When the booting process is finished, The main FreeBSD
+ installation menu will be displayed.
+
+
+
+
+
+ If something goes wrong...
+
+ Due to limitations of the PC architecture, it is
+ impossible for probing to be 100 percent reliable. In the event
+ that your hardware is incorrectly identified, or that the
+ probing causes your computer to lock up, first check the
+ section of this installation guide to be
+ sure that your hardware is indeed supported by FreeBSD.
+
+ If your hardware is supported, reset the computer and when
+ the Boot: prompt comes up, type . This puts
+ FreeBSD into a configuration mode where you can supply
+ hints about your hardware. The FreeBSD kernel on the
+ installation disk is configured assuming that most hardware
+ devices are in their factory default configuration in terms
+ of IRQs, IO addresses and DMA channels. If your hardware
+ has been reconfigured, you will most likely need to use the
+ option at boot to tell FreeBSD where things are.
+
+ It is also possible that a probe for a device not present
+ will cause a later probe for another device that is present
+ to fail. In that case, the probes for the conflicting
+ driver(s) should be disabled.
+
+ In the configuration mode, you can:
+
+
+
+
+
+ List the device drivers installed in the kernel.
+
+
+
+ Disable device drivers for hardware not present in your
+ system.
+
+
+
+ Change the IRQ, DRQ, and IO port addresses used by a
+ device driver.
+
+
+
+
+
+ While at the config> prompt, type
+ help for more information on the available
+ commands. After adjusting the kernel to match how you have
+ your hardware configured, type quit at the
+ config> prompt to continue booting with the new
+ settings.
+
+ After FreeBSD has been installed, changes made in the
+ configuration mode will be permanent so you do not have
+ to reconfigure every time you boot. Even so, it is likely
+ that you will want to build a custom kernel to optimize the
+ performance of your system. See for more information on
+ creating custom kernels.
+
+
+
+ Supported Configurations
+
+ FreeBSD currently runs on a wide variety of ISA, VLB,
+ EISA and PCI bus based PC's, ranging from 386sx to
+ Pentium class machines (though the 386sx is not
+ recommended). Support for generic IDE or ESDI drive
+ configurations, various SCSI controller, network and
+ serial cards is also provided.
+
+ A minimum of four megabytes of RAM is required to run FreeBSD.
+ To run the X Window System, eight megabytes of RAM is the
+ recommended minimum.
+
+ Following is a list of all disk controllers and Ethernet
+ cards currently known to work with FreeBSD. Other
+ configurations may very well work, and we have simply not
+ received any indication of this.
+
+
+
+ Disk Controllers
+
+
+
+
+
+ WD1003 (any generic MFM/RLL)
+
+
+
+ WD1007 (any generic IDE/ESDI)
+
+
+
+ IDE
+
+
+
+ ATA
+
+
+
+
+ Adaptec 1505 ISA SCSI controller
+
+
+
+ Adaptec 152x series ISA SCSI controllers
+
+
+
+ Adaptec 1535 ISA SCSI controllers
+
+
+
+ Adaptec 154x series ISA SCSI controllers
+
+
+
+ Adaptec 174x series EISA SCSI controller in
+ standard and enhanced mode.
+
+
+
+ Adaptec 274x/284x/2940/2940U/3940
+ (Narrow/Wide/Twin)
+ series EISA/VLB/PCI SCSI controllers
+
+
+
+ Adaptec AIC7850 on-board SCSI controllers
+
+
+
+ Adaptec
+ AIC-6360 based boards,
+ which includes the AHA-152x and SoundBlaster SCSI
+ cards.
+
+ Note: You cannot boot from the
+ SoundBlaster cards as they have no on-board BIOS,
+ which is necessary for mapping the boot device into
+ the system BIOS I/O vectors. They are perfectly
+ usable for external tapes, CDROMs, etc, however.
+ The same goes for any other AIC-6x60 based card
+ without a boot ROM. Some systems DO have a boot
+ ROM, which is generally indicated by some sort of
+ message when the system is first powered up or
+ reset. Check your system/board documentation for
+ more details.
+
+
+
+
+ Buslogic 545S & 545c
+ Note: that Buslogic was formerly known as "Bustek".
+
+
+
+ Buslogic 445S/445c VLB SCSI controller
+
+
+
+ Buslogic 742A/747S/747c EISA SCSI controller.
+
+
+
+ Buslogic 946c PCI SCSI controller
+
+
+
+ Buslogic 956c PCI SCSI controller
+
+
+
+
+ NCR 53C810/53C815/53C825/53C860/53C875 PCI SCSI controller.
+
+
+
+ NCR5380/NCR53400 (``ProAudio Spectrum'') SCSI controller.
+
+
+
+
+ DTC 3290 EISA SCSI controller in 1542 emulation mode.
+
+
+
+
+ UltraStor 14F/24F/34F SCSI controllers.
+
+
+
+
+ Seagate ST01/02 SCSI controllers.
+
+
+
+
+ Future Domain 8xx/950 series SCSI controllers.
+
+
+
+
+ WD7000 SCSI controllers.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ With all supported SCSI controllers, full support is
+ provided for SCSI-I & SCSI-II peripherals,
+ including Disks, tape drives (including DAT) and CD ROM
+ drives.
+
+ The following CD-ROM type systems are supported at this
+ time:
+
+
+
+
+
+ SoundBlaster SCSI and ProAudio Spectrum SCSI (cd)
+
+
+
+ Mitsumi (all models) proprietary interface (mcd)
+
+
+
+ Matsushita/Panasonic (Creative)
+ CR-562/CR-563 proprietary interface (matcd)
+
+
+
+ Sony proprietary interface (scd)
+
+
+
+ ATAPI IDE interface
+ (experimental and should be considered ALPHA quality!)
+ (wcd)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Ethernet cards
+
+
+
+
+
+ Allied-Telesis AT1700 and RE2000 cards
+
+
+
+
+ SMC Elite 16 WD8013 Ethernet interface, and
+ most other WD8003E, WD8003EBT, WD8003W, WD8013W,
+ WD8003S, WD8003SBT and WD8013EBT based clones. SMC
+ Elite Ultra and 9432TX based cards are also supported.
+
+
+
+
+ DEC EtherWORKS III NICs (DE203, DE204, and DE205)
+
+
+
+ DEC EtherWORKS II NICs (DE200, DE201, DE202, and DE422)
+
+
+
+ DEC DC21040/DC21041/DC21140 based NICs:
+
+
+
+ ASUS PCI-L101-TB
+
+
+
+ Accton ENI1203
+
+
+
+ Cogent EM960PCI
+
+
+
+ Compex CPXPCI/32C
+
+
+
+ D-Link DE-530
+
+
+
+ DEC DE435
+
+
+
+ Danpex EN-9400P3
+
+
+
+ JCIS Condor JC1260
+
+
+
+ Kingston KNE100TX
+
+
+
+ Linksys EtherPCI
+
+
+
+ Mylex LNP101
+
+
+
+ SMC EtherPower 10/100 (Model 9332)
+
+
+
+ SMC EtherPower (Model 8432)
+
+
+
+ SMC EtherPower (2)
+
+
+
+ Zynx ZX314
+
+
+
+ Zynx ZX342
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ DEC FDDI (DEFPA/DEFEA) NICs
+
+
+
+
+ Fujitsu FMV-181 and FMV-182
+
+
+
+
+ Fujitsu MB86960A/MB86965A
+
+
+
+
+ Intel EtherExpress
+
+
+
+
+ Intel EtherExpress Pro/100B 100Mbit.
+
+
+
+
+ Isolan AT 4141-0 (16 bit)
+
+
+
+ Isolink 4110 (8 bit)
+
+
+
+
+ Lucent WaveLAN wireless networking interface.
+
+
+
+
+ Novell NE1000, NE2000, and NE2100 ethernet interface.
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com 3C501 cards
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com 3C503 Etherlink II
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com 3c505 Etherlink/+
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com 3C507 Etherlink 16/TP
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com 3C509, 3C579, 3C589 (PCMCIA) Etherlink III
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com 3C590, 3C595 Etherlink III
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com 3C90x cards.
+
+
+
+
+ HP PC Lan Plus (27247B and 27252A)
+
+
+
+
+ Toshiba ethernet cards
+
+
+
+
+ PCMCIA ethernet cards from IBM and National
+ Semiconductor are also supported.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Note: FreeBSD does not currently support
+ PnP (plug-n-play) features present on some ethernet
+ cards. If your card has PnP and is giving you problems,
+ try disabling its PnP features.
+
+
+
+
+ Miscellaneous devices
+
+
+
+
+
+ AST 4 port serial card using shared IRQ.
+
+
+
+
+ ARNET 8 port serial card using shared IRQ.
+
+
+
+
+ BOCA IOAT66 6 port serial card using shared IRQ.
+
+
+
+
+ BOCA 2016 16 port serial card using shared IRQ.
+
+
+
+
+ Cyclades Cyclom-y Serial Board.
+
+
+
+
+ STB 4 port card using shared IRQ.
+
+
+
+
+ SDL Communications Riscom/8 Serial Board.
+
+
+
+
+ SDL Communications RISCom/N2 and N2pci sync serial cards.
+
+
+
+
+ Digiboard Sync/570i high-speed sync serial card.
+
+
+
+
+ Decision-Computer Intl. "Eight-Serial" 8 port serial cards
+ using shared IRQ.
+
+
+
+
+ Adlib, SoundBlaster, SoundBlaster Pro,
+ ProAudioSpectrum, Gravis UltraSound, Gravis UltraSound MAX
+ and Roland MPU-401 sound cards.
+
+
+
+
+ Matrox Meteor video frame grabber.
+
+
+
+
+ Creative Labs Video spigot frame grabber.
+
+
+
+
+ Omnimedia Talisman frame grabber.
+
+
+
+
+ Brooktree BT848 chip based frame grabbers.
+
+
+
+
+ X-10 power controllers.
+
+
+
+
+ PC joystick and speaker.
+
+
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD does not currently support IBM's microchannel (MCA) bus.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Preparing for the Installation
+
+ There are a number of different methods by which FreeBSD
+ can be installed. The following describes what
+ preparation needs to be done for each type.
+
+
+
+ Before installing from CDROM
+
+ If your CDROM is of an unsupported type, then please
+ skip to .
+
+ There is not a lot of preparatory work that needs to be done to
+ successfully install from one of Walnut Creek's FreeBSD CDROMs (other
+ CDROM distributions may work as well, though we cannot say for certain
+ as we have no hand or say in how they are created). You can either
+ boot into the CD installation directly from DOS using Walnut Creek's
+ supplied ``install.bat'' batch file or you can make a boot floppy with
+ the ``makeflp.bat'' command. [NOTE: If you are running
+ FreeBSD 2.1-RELEASE and have an IDE CDROM, use the
+ inst_ide.bat or atapiflp.bat batch files instead].
+
+ For the easiest interface of all (from DOS), type
+ ``view''. This will bring up a DOS menu utility that
+ leads you through all the available options.
+
+ If you are creating the boot floppy from a UNIX machine,
+ see for examples. of how to create the boot floppy.
+
+ Once you have booted from DOS or floppy, you should then
+ be able to select CDROM as the media type in the Media
+ menu and load the entire distribution from CDROM. No
+ other types of installation media should be required.
+
+ After your system is fully installed and you have rebooted
+ from the hard disk, you can mount the CDROM at any time by
+ typing: mount /cdrom
+
+ Before removing the CD again, also note that it is necessary to first
+ type: umount /cdrom. Do not just remove it from the drive!
+
+
+
+ Special note: Before invoking the
+ installation, be sure that the CDROM is in the drive
+ so that the install probe can find it. This is also
+ true if you wish the CDROM to be added to the default
+ system configuration automatically during the install
+ (whether or not you actually use it as the
+ installation media).
+
+
+
+ Finally, if you would like people to be able to FTP
+ install FreeBSD directly from the CDROM in your
+ machine, you will find it quite easy. After the machine
+ is fully installed, you simply need to add the
+ following line to the password file (using the vipw
+ command):
+
+
+
+ ftp:*:99:99::0:0:FTP:/cdrom:/nonexistent
+
+
+
+ Anyone with network connectivity to your machine (and permission
+ to log into it) can now chose a Media type of FTP and type
+ in: ftp://your machine after picking ``Other''
+ in the ftp sites menu.
+
+
+
+
+ Before installing from Floppy
+
+ If you must install from floppy disks, either due to
+ unsupported hardware or simply because you enjoy doing
+ things the hard way, you must first prepare some
+ floppies for the install.
+
+ You will need, at minimum, as many 1.44MB or 1.2MB floppies as
+ it takes to hold all files in the bin (binary distribution)
+ directory. If you are preparing these floppies under DOS, then
+ THESE floppies *must* be formatted using the MS-DOS FORMAT
+ command. If you are using Windows, use the Windows File
+ Manager format command.
+
+ Do not trust Factory Preformatted floppies! Format
+ them again yourself, just to make sure. Many problems
+ reported by our users in the past have resulted from the use
+ of improperly formatted media, which is why I am taking such
+ special care to mention it here!
+
+ If you are creating the floppies from another FreeBSD machine,
+ a format is still not a bad idea though you do not need to put
+ a DOS filesystem on each floppy. You can use the `disklabel'
+ and `newfs' commands to put a UFS filesystem on them instead,
+ as the following sequence of commands (for a 3.5" 1.44MB floppy
+ disk) illustrates:
+
+
+
+ fdformat -f 1440 fd0.1440
+ disklabel -w -r fd0.1440 floppy3
+ newfs -t 2 -u 18 -l 1 -i 65536 /dev/rfd0
+
+ (Use "fd0.1200" and "floppy5" for 5.25" 1.2MB disks).
+
+
+
+ Then you can mount and write to them like any other file
+ system.
+
+ After you have formatted the floppies, you will need to copy
+ the files onto them. The distribution files are split into
+ chunks conveniently sized so that 5 of them will fit on a
+ conventional 1.44MB floppy. Go through all your floppies,
+ packing as many files as will fit on each one, until you have
+ got all the distributions you want packed up in this fashion.
+ Each distribution should go into a subdirectory on the
+ floppy, e.g.: a:\bin\bin.aa,
+ a:\bin\bin.ab, and so on.
+
+ Once you come to the Media screen of the install,
+ select ``Floppy'' and you will be prompted for the rest.
+
+
+
+
+ Before installing from a MS-DOS partition
+
+ To prepare for installation from an MS-DOS partition,
+ copy the files from the distribution into a directory
+ called C:\FREEBSD. The directory tree structure
+ of the CDROM must be partially reproduced within this directory
+ so we suggest using the DOS xcopy
+ command. For example, to prepare for a minimal installation of
+ FreeBSD:
+
+ C> MD C:\FREEBSD
+ C> XCOPY /S E:\BIN C:\FREEBSD\BIN\
+ C> XCOPY /S E:\MANPAGES C:\FREEBSD\MANPAGES\
+
+
+ assuming that C: is where you have free space
+ and E: is where your CDROM is mounted.
+
+ For as many `DISTS' you wish to install from MS-DOS
+ (and you have free space for), install each one under
+ C:\FREEBSD - the BIN dist is only the
+ minimal requirement.
+
+
+
+
+ Before installing from QIC/SCSI Tape
+
+ Installing from tape is probably the easiest method,
+ short of an on-line install using FTP or a CDROM
+ install. The installation program expects the files to
+ be simply tar'ed onto the tape, so after getting all of
+ the files for distribution you are interested in, simply
+ tar them onto the tape with a command like:
+
+ cd /freebsd/distdir
+ tar cvf /dev/rwt0 (or /dev/rst0) dist1 .. dist2
+
+
+
+ When you go to do the installation, you should also
+ make sure that you leave enough room in some temporary
+ directory (which you will be allowed to choose) to
+ accommodate the full contents of the tape you have
+ created. Due to the non-random access nature of tapes,
+ this method of installation requires quite a bit of
+ temporary storage. You should expect to require as
+ much temporary storage as you have stuff written on
+ tape.
+
+
+
+ Note: When going to do the
+ installation, the tape must be in the drive
+ before booting from the boot floppy. The
+ installation probe may otherwise fail to find it.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Before installing over a network
+
+ You can do network installations over 3 types of
+ communications links:
+
+ Serial port
+
+ SLIP or PPP
+
+
+
+
+ Parallel port
+
+
+ PLIP (laplink cable)
+
+
+
+
+ Ethernet
+
+
+ A
+ standard ethernet controller (includes some PCMCIA).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ SLIP support is rather primitive, and limited primarily
+ to hard-wired links, such as a serial cable running
+ between a laptop computer and another computer. The
+ link should be hard-wired as the SLIP installation
+ does not currently offer a dialing capability; that
+ facility is provided with the PPP utility, which should
+ be used in preference to SLIP whenever possible.
+
+ If you are using a modem, then PPP is almost certainly
+ your only choice. Make sure that you have your service
+ provider's information handy as you will need to know it
+ fairly soon in the installation process. You will need
+ to know how to dial your ISP using the ``AT commands''
+ specific to your modem, as the PPP dialer provides only a
+ very simple terminal emulator. If you're using PAP or
+ CHAP, you'll need to type the necessary ``set authname''
+ and ``set authkey'' commands before typing ``term''.
+ Refer to the user-ppp
+ and FAQ entries
+ for further information. If you have problems, logging can
+ be directed to the screen using the command set log
+ local ....
+
+ If a hard-wired connection to another FreeBSD (2.0R or
+ later) machine is available, you might also consider
+ installing over a ``laplink'' parallel port cable. The
+ data rate over the parallel port is much higher than
+ what is typically possible over a serial line (up to
+ 50k/sec), thus resulting in a quicker installation.
+
+ Finally, for the fastest possible network installation,
+ an ethernet adaptor is always a good choice! FreeBSD
+ supports most common PC ethernet cards, a table of
+ supported cards (and their required settings) is
+ provided in . If you are using one of the supported
+ PCMCIA ethernet cards, also be sure that it is plugged
+ in before the laptop is powered on! FreeBSD
+ does not, unfortunately, currently support hot
+ insertion of PCMCIA cards during installation.
+
+ You will also need to know your IP address on the
+ network, the netmask value for your address class,
+ and the name of your machine. Your system
+ administrator can tell you which values to use for your
+ particular network setup. If you will be referring to
+ other hosts by name rather than IP address, you will also
+ need a name server and possibly the address of a
+ gateway (if you are using PPP, it is your provider's IP
+ address) to use in talking to it. If you do not know
+ the answers to all or most of these questions, then you
+ should really probably talk to your system
+ administrator first before trying this type of
+ installation.
+
+ Once you have a network link of some sort working, the
+ installation can continue over NFS or FTP.
+
+
+
+ Preparing for NFS installation
+
+ NFS installation is fairly straight-forward: Simply
+ copy the FreeBSD distribution files you want onto a
+ server somewhere and then point the NFS media
+ selection at it.
+
+ If this server supports only ``privileged port'' access
+ (as is generally the default for Sun workstations),
+ you will need to set this option in the Options menu
+ before installation can proceed.
+
+ If you have a poor quality ethernet card which
+ suffers from very slow transfer rates, you may also
+ wish to toggle the appropriate Options flag.
+
+ In order for NFS installation to work, the server
+ must support subdir mounts, e.g., if your FreeBSD
+ &rel.current; distribution directory lives on:
+ ziggy:/usr/archive/stuff/FreeBSD Then ziggy will have
+ to allow the direct mounting of
+ /usr/archive/stuff/FreeBSD, not just /usr or
+ /usr/archive/stuff.
+
+ In FreeBSD's /etc/exports file, this is controlled by
+ the ``'' option. Other NFS servers may have
+ different conventions. If you are getting
+ `Permission Denied' messages from the server then
+ it is likely that you do not have this enabled
+ properly.
+
+
+
+
+ Preparing for FTP Installation
+
+ FTP installation may be done from any mirror site
+ containing a reasonably up-to-date version of FreeBSD
+ &rel.current;. A full menu of reasonable choices from almost
+ anywhere in the world is provided by the FTP site
+ menu.
+
+ If you are installing from some other FTP site not
+ listed in this menu, or you are having troubles
+ getting your name server configured properly, you can
+ also specify your own URL by selecting the ``Other''
+ choice in that menu. A URL can also be a direct IP
+ address, so the following would work in the absence
+ of a name server:
+
+
+
+ ftp://165.113.121.81/pub/FreeBSD/&rel.current;-RELEASE
+
+
+
+ There are two FTP installation modes you can use:
+
+
+
+ FTP Active
+
+ For all FTP transfers, use ``Active'' mode. This
+ will not work through firewalls, but will often
+ work with older ftp servers that do not support
+ passive mode. If your connection hangs with
+ passive mode (the default), try active!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FTP Passive
+
+
+ For all FTP transfers, use ``Passive'' mode. This
+ allows the user to pass through firewalls that do
+ not allow incoming connections on random port
+ addresses.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Note: Active and passive modes are
+ not the same as a `proxy' connection, where a proxy
+ FTP server is listening and forwarding FTP requests!
+
+
+
+ For a proxy FTP server, you should usually give name of
+ the server you really want as a part of the username,
+ after an @-sign. The proxy server then 'fakes' the real
+ server. An example: Say you want to install from
+ ftp.freebsd.org, using the proxy FTP server foo.bar.com,
+ listening on port 1234.
+
+ In this case, you go to the options menu, set the FTP
+ username to ftp@ftp.freebsd.org, and the password to your
+ e-mail address. As your installation media, you specify
+ FTP (or passive FTP, if the proxy support it), and the URL
+
+ ftp://foo.bar.com:1234/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+ /pub/FreeBSD from ftp.freebsd.org is proxied under
+ foo.bar.com, allowing you to install from _that_ machine
+ (which fetch the files from ftp.freebsd.org as your
+ installation requests them).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Installing FreeBSD
+
+ Once you have taken note of the appropriate
+ preinstallation steps, you should be able to install
+ FreeBSD without any further trouble.
+
+ Should this not be true, then you may wish to go back and
+ re-read the relevant preparation section above
+ for the installation media type you are trying to use,
+ perhaps there is a helpful hint there that you missed the
+ first time? If you are having hardware trouble, or
+ FreeBSD refuses to boot at all, read the Hardware Guide
+ provided on the boot floppy for a list of possible
+ solutions.
+
+ The FreeBSD boot floppy contains all the on-line
+ documentation you should need to be able to navigate
+ through an installation and if it does not then we would
+ like to know what you found most confusing. Send your
+ comments to the &a.doc;.
+ It is the objective of the
+ FreeBSD installation program (sysinstall) to be
+ self-documenting enough that painful ``step-by-step''
+ guides are no longer necessary. It may take us a little
+ while to reach that objective, but that is the objective!
+
+ Meanwhile, you may also find the following ``typical
+ installation sequence'' to be helpful:
+
+
+
+
+
+ Boot the boot floppy. After a boot sequence
+ which can take anywhere from 30 seconds to 3
+ minutes, depending on your hardware, you should be
+ presented with a menu of initial choices. If the
+ floppy does not boot at all, or the boot hangs at some
+ stage, go read the Q&A section of the Hardware Guide
+ for possible causes.
+
+
+
+
+ Press F1. You should see some basic usage
+ instructions on the menu system and general
+ navigation. If you have not used this menu system
+ before then PLEASE read this thoroughly!
+
+
+
+
+ Select the Options item and set any special
+ preferences you may have.
+
+
+
+
+ Select a Novice, Custom or Express install, depending on
+ whether or not you would like the installation to help
+ you through a typical installation, give you a high degree of
+ control over each step of the installation or simply whizz
+ through it (using reasonable defaults when possible) as fast
+ as possible. If you have never used FreeBSD before then the
+ Novice installation method is most recommended.
+
+
+
+
+ The final configuration menu choice allows you to
+ further configure your FreeBSD installation by giving you
+ menu-driven access to various system defaults. Some
+ items, like networking, may be especially important
+ if you did a CDROM/Tape/Floppy installation and have
+ not yet configured your network interfaces (assuming
+ you have any). Properly configuring such interfaces
+ here will allow FreeBSD to come up on the network
+ when you first reboot from the hard disk.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ MS-DOS User's Questions and Answers
+
+ Many FreeBSD users wish to install FreeBSD on PCs inhabited
+ by MS-DOS. Here are some commonly asked questions about
+ installing FreeBSD on such systems.
+
+ Help! I have no space! Do I need to delete
+ everything first?
+
+ If your machine is already running MS-DOS and has little
+ or no free space available for FreeBSD's installation,
+ all is not lost! You may find the FIPS utility, provided
+ in the tools directory on the FreeBSD CDROM or
+ on the various FreeBSD ftp sites, to be quite useful.
+
+ FIPS allows you to split an existing MS-DOS partition
+ into two pieces, preserving the original partition and
+ allowing you to install onto the second free piece. You
+ first defragment your MS-DOS partition, using the DOS
+ 6.xx DEFRAG utility or the Norton Disk tools, then run
+ FIPS. It will prompt you for the rest of the information
+ it needs. Afterwards, you can reboot and install FreeBSD
+ on the new free slice. See the Distributions
+ menu for an estimation of how much free space you will need
+ for the kind of installation you want.
+
+ Can I use compressed MS-DOS filesystems from
+ FreeBSD?
+
+ No. If you are using a utility such as Stacker(tm) or
+ DoubleSpace(tm), FreeBSD will only be able to use
+ whatever portion of the filesystem you leave
+ uncompressed. The rest of the filesystem will show up as
+ one large file (the stacked/dblspaced file!). Do not
+ remove that file! You will probably regret it
+ greatly!
+
+ It is probably better to create another uncompressed
+ MS-DOS primary partition and use this for communications
+ between MS-DOS and FreeBSD.
+
+ Can I mount my MS-DOS extended partitions?
+
+ Yes. DOS extended partitions are mapped in at the end of the other
+ ``slices'' in FreeBSD, e.g. your D: drive might be /dev/sd0s5,
+ your E: drive /dev/sd0s6, and so on. This example assumes, of
+ course, that your extended partition is on SCSI drive 0. For IDE drives,
+ substitute ``wd'' for ``sd'' appropriately. You otherwise mount extended
+ partitions exactly like you would mount any other DOS drive, e.g.:
+
+
+
+ mount -t msdos /dev/sd0s5 /dos_d
+
+
+
+ Can I run MS-DOS binaries under FreeBSD?
+
+ BSDI has donated their DOS emulator to the BSD world and
+ this has been ported to FreeBSD.
+
+ There is also a (technically) nice application available in the
+ called pcemu
+ which allows you to run many basic MS-DOS text-mode binaries
+ by entirely emulating an 8088 CPU.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Unix Basics
+
+
+
+ The Online Manual
+
+ The most comprehensive documentation on FreeBSD is in
+ the form of man pages. Nearly every program
+ on the system comes with a short reference manual
+ explaining the basic operation and various arguments.
+ These manuals can be view with the
+ man command. Use of the
+ man command is simple:
+
+ mancommand
+
+
+ where command is the name of the command
+ you wish to learn about. For example, to learn more about
+ ls command type:
+
+ % man ls
+
+
+
+ The online manual is divided up into numbered
+ sections:
+
+
+
+ User commands
+
+
+
+ System calls and error numbers
+
+
+
+ Functions in the C libraries
+
+
+
+ Device drivers
+
+
+
+ File formats
+
+
+
+ Games and other diversions
+
+
+
+ Miscellaneous information
+
+
+
+ System maintenance and operation commands
+
+
+
+
+ in some cases, the same topic may appear in more than
+ one section of the on-line manual. For example, there
+ is a chmod user command and a
+ chmod() system call. In this case,
+ you can tell the man command which
+ one you want by specifying the section:
+
+ % man 1 chmod
+
+
+ which will display the manual page for the user command
+ chmod. References to a particular
+ section of the on-line manual are traditionally placed
+ in parenthesis in written documentation, so
+ chmod(1) refers to the chmod user command and chmod(2)
+ refers to the system call.
+
+ This is fine if you know the name of the command and
+ simply wish to know how to use it, but what if you cannot recall the
+ command name? You can use man to
+ search for keywords in the command descriptions by
+ using the switch:
+
+ % man -k mail
+
+
+ With this command you will be presented with a list of
+ commands that have the keyword `mail' in their
+ descriptions. This is actually functionally equivalent to
+ using the apropos command.
+
+ So, you are looking at all those fancy commands in /usr/bin but do not even have the faintest idea
+ what most of them actually do? Simply do a
+
+ % cd /usr/bin; man -f *
+
+
+ or
+
+ % cd /usr/bin; whatis *
+
+
+ which does the same thing.
+
+
+
+
+ GNU Info Files
+
+ FreeBSD includes many applications and utilities
+ produced by the Free Software Foundation (FSF). In
+ addition to man pages, these programs come with more
+ extensive hypertext documents called info
+ files which can be viewed with the info
+ command or, if you installed emacs, the info
+ mode of emacs.
+
+ To use the info(1) command, simply type:
+
+ % info
+
+ For a brief
+ introduction, type h. For a quick
+ command reference, type ?.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Installing Applications: The Ports collection
+
+ Contributed by &a.jraynard;.
+
+ The FreeBSD Ports collection allows you to compile and install a very
+ wide range of applications with a minimum of effort.
+
+ For all the hype about open standards, getting a program to work
+ on different versions of Unix in the real world can be a tedious and
+ tricky business, as anyone who has tried it will know. You may be lucky
+ enough to find that the program you want will compile cleanly on your
+ system, install itself in all the right places and run flawlessly
+ ``out of the box'', but this is unfortunately rather rare. With most
+ programs, you will find yourself doing a fair bit of head-scratching,
+ and there are quite a few programs that will result in premature
+ greying, or even chronic alopecia...
+
+ Some software distributions have attacked this problem by
+ providing configuration scripts. Some of these are very clever, but
+ they have an unfortunate tendency to triumphantly announce that your
+ system is something you have never heard of and then ask you lots of
+ questions that sound like a final exam in system-level Unix
+ programming (``Does your system's gethitlist function return a const
+ pointer to a fromboz or a pointer to a const fromboz? Do you have
+ Foonix style unacceptable exception handling? And if not, why not?'').
+
+ Fortunately, with the Ports collection, all the hard work involved
+ has already been done, and you can just type 'make install' and get a
+ working program.
+
+
+
+ Why Have a Ports Collection?
+
+ The base FreeBSD system comes with a very wide range of tools and
+ system utilities, but a lot of popular programs are not in the base
+ system, for good reasons:-
+
+
+
+
+
+ Programs that some people cannot live without and other people
+ cannot stand, such as a certain Lisp-based editor.
+
+
+
+
+ Programs which are too specialised to put in the base system
+ (CAD, databases).
+
+
+
+
+ Programs which fall into the ``I must have a look at
+ that when I get a spare minute'' category, rather than system-critical
+ ones (some languages, perhaps).
+
+
+
+
+ Programs that are far too much fun to be supplied with a serious
+ operating system like FreeBSD ;-)
+
+
+
+
+ However many programs you put in the base system, people will
+ always want more, and a line has to be drawn somewhere (otherwise
+ FreeBSD distributions would become absolutely enormous).
+
+
+
+
+
+ Obviously it would be unreasonable to expect everyone to port their
+ favourite programs by hand (not to mention a tremendous amount of
+ duplicated work), so the FreeBSD Project came up with an ingenious
+ way of using standard tools that would automate the process.
+
+ Incidentally, this is an excellent illustration of how ``the Unix way''
+ works in practice by combining a set of simple but very flexible tools
+ into something very powerful.
+
+
+
+
+ How Does the Ports Collection Work?
+
+ Programs are typically distributed on the Internet as a
+ consisting of
+ a Makefile and the source code for the program and usually
+ some instructions (which are unfortunately not always as instructive
+ as they could be), with perhaps a configuration script.
+
+ The standard scenario is that you FTP down the tarball, extract it
+ somewhere, glance through the instructions, make any changes that seem
+ necessary, run the configure script to set things up and use the standard
+ `make' program to compile and install the program from the source.
+
+ FreeBSD ports still use the tarball mechanism, but use a
+ to hold the "knowledge"
+ of how to get the program working on FreeBSD, rather than expecting the
+ user to be able to work it out. They also supply their own customised
+ , so that almost every port
+ can be built in the same way.
+
+ If you look at a port skeleton (either on your FreeBSD system or the FTP site) and expect to find all sorts of pointy-headed rocket
+ science lurking there, you may be disappointed by the one or two
+ rather unexciting-looking files and directories you find there.
+ (We will discuss in a minute how to go about ).
+
+ ``How on earth can this do anything?'' I hear you cry. ``There
+ is no source code there!''
+
+ Fear not, gentle reader, all will become clear (hopefully). Let's
+ see what happens if we try and install a port. I have chosen `ElectricFence',
+ a useful tool for developers, as the skeleton is more straightforward than
+ most.
+
+ Note if you are trying this at home, you will need to be root.
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports/devel/ElectricFence
+ # make install
+ >> Checksum OK for ElectricFence-2.0.5.tar.gz.
+ ===> Extracting for ElectricFence-2.0.5
+ ===> Patching for ElectricFence-2.0.5
+ ===> Applying FreeBSD patches for ElectricFence-2.0.5
+ ===> Configuring for ElectricFence-2.0.5
+ ===> Building for ElectricFence-2.0.5
+ [lots of compiler output...]
+ ===> Installing for ElectricFence-2.0.5
+ ===> Warning: your umask is "0002".
+ If this is not desired, set it to an appropriate value
+ and install this port again by ``make reinstall''.
+ install -c -o bin -g bin -m 444 /usr/ports/devel/ElectricFence/work/ElectricFence-2.0.5/libefence.a /usr/local/lib
+ install -c -o bin -g bin -m 444 /usr/ports/devel/ElectricFence/work/ElectricFence-2.0.5/libefence.3 /usr/local/man/man3
+ ===> Compressing manual pages for ElectricFence-2.0.5
+ ===> Registering installation for ElectricFence-2.0.5
+
+
+ To avoid confusing the issue, I have completely removed the build output.
+
+ If you tried this yourself, you may well have got something like this at
+ the start:-
+
+
+ # make install
+ >> ElectricFence-2.0.5.tar.gz doesn't seem to exist on this system.
+ >> Attempting to fetch from ftp://ftp.doc.ic.ac.uk/Mirrors/sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/devel/lang/c/.
+
+
+ The `make' program has noticed that you did not have a local copy
+ of the source code and tried to FTP it down so it could get the job
+ done. I already had the
+ source handy in my example, so it did not need to fetch it.
+
+ Let's go through this and see what the `make' program was doing.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Locate the source code If it is not available locally, try to grab it from an
+ FTP site.
+
+
+
+
+ Run a test on the
+ tarball to make sure it has not been tampered with, accidentally
+ truncated, downloaded in ASCII mode, struck by neutrinos while in transit, etc.
+
+
+
+
+ Extract the tarball into a temporary work directory.
+
+
+
+
+ Apply any needed to get
+ the source to compile and run under FreeBSD.
+
+
+
+
+ Run any configuration script required by the build process and
+ correctly answer any questions it asks.
+
+
+
+
+ (Finally!) Compile the code.
+
+
+
+
+ Install the program executable and other supporting files, man
+ pages, etc. under the /usr/local hierarchy, where they will not get mixed
+ up with system programs. This also makes sure that all the ports you
+ install will go in the same place, instead of being flung all over
+ your system.
+
+
+
+
+ Register the installation in a database. This means
+ that, if you do not like the program, you can cleanly all traces of it from your system.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Scroll up to the make output and see if you can match these steps to it.
+ And if you were not impressed before, you should be by now!
+
+
+
+
+ Getting a FreeBSD Port
+
+ There are two ways of getting hold of the FreeBSD port for a
+ program. One requires a , the other involves using an
+
+
+
+ Compiling ports from CDROM
+
+ If you answered yes to the question ``Do you want to link the ports
+ collection to your CDROM'' during the FreeBSD installation, the initial
+ setting up will already have been done for you.
+
+ If not, make sure the FreeBSD CDROM is in the drive and mounted on,
+ say, /cdrom. Then do
+
+
+ # mkdir /usr/ports
+ # cd /usr/ports
+ # ln -s /cdrom/ports/distfiles distfiles
+
+
+ to enable the ports make mechanism to find the tarballs (it expects to
+ find them in /usr/ports/distfiles, which is why we sym-linked the
+ CDROM's tarball directory to that directory).
+
+ Now, suppose you want to install the gnats program from the databases
+ directory. Here is how to do it:-
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports
+ # mkdir databases
+ # cp -R /cdrom/ports/databases/gnats databases
+ # cd databases/gnats
+ # make install
+
+
+ Or if you are a serious database user and you want to compare all the
+ ones available in the Ports collection, do
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports
+ # cp -R /cdrom/ports/databases .
+ # cd databases
+ # make install
+
+
+ (yes, that really is a dot on its own after the cp command and not a
+ mistake. It is Unix-ese for ``the current directory'')
+
+ and the ports make mechanism will automatically compile and install
+ all the ports in the databases directory for you!
+
+ If you do not like this method, here is a completely different way of
+ doing it:-
+
+ Create a "link tree" to it using the lndir(1) command that
+ comes with the XFree86 distribution. Find a location with
+ some free space, create a directory there and then cd to it. Then
+ invoke the lndir(1) command with the full pathname of the ``ports''
+ directory on the CDROM as the first argument and . (the current directory)
+ as the second. This might be, for example, something like:
+ lndir /cdrom/ports .
+
+
+ Then you can build ports directly off the CDROM by building them in the
+ link tree you have created.
+
+ Note that there are some ports for which we cannot provide the original
+ source in the CDROM due to licensing limitations. In that case,
+ you will need to look at the section on
+
+
+
+
+ Compiling ports from the Internet
+
+ If you do not have a CDROM, or you want to make sure you get the very
+ latest version of the port you want, you will need to download the
+ for the port. Now this
+ might sound like rather a fiddly job
+ full of pitfalls, but it is actually very easy.
+
+ The key to it is that the FreeBSD FTP server can create on-the-fly
+ for you. Here is how it works,
+ with the gnats program in the databases directory as an example (the
+ bits in square brackets are comments. Do not type them in if you are
+ trying this yourself!):-
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports
+ # mkdir databases
+ # cd databases
+ # ftp ftp.freebsd.org
+ [log in as `ftp' and give your email address when asked for a
+ password. Remember to use binary (also known as image) mode!]
+ > cd /pub/FreeBSD/ports/databases
+ > get gnats.tar [tars up the gnats skeleton for us]
+ > quit
+ # tar xf gnats.tar [extract the gnats skeleton]
+ # cd gnats
+ # make install [build and install gnats]
+
+
+ What happened here? We connected to the FTP server in the usual way
+ and went to its databases sub-directory. When we gave it the command
+ `get gnats.tar', the FTP server up the gnats directory for us.
+
+ We then extracted the gnats skeleton and went into the gnats directory
+ to build the port. As we explained , the make process noticed we did not have a copy of the
+ source locally, so it fetched one before extracting, patching and
+ building it.
+
+ Let's try something more ambitious now. Instead of getting a single
+ port skeleton, let's get a whole sub-directory, for example all the
+ database skeletons in the ports collection. It looks almost the same:-
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports
+ # ftp ftp.freebsd.org
+ [log in as `ftp' and give your email address when asked for a
+ password. Remember to use binary (also known as image) mode!]
+ > cd /pub/FreeBSD/ports
+ > get databases.tar [tars up the databases directory for us]
+ > quit
+ # tar xf databases.tar [extract all the database skeletons]
+ # cd databases
+ # make install [build and install all the database ports]
+
+
+ With half a dozen straightforward commands, we have now got a set of
+ database programs on our FreeBSD machine! All we did that was
+ different from getting a single port skeleton and building it was that
+ we got a whole directory at once, and compiled everything in it at
+ once. Pretty impressive, no?
+
+ If you expect to be installing many ports, it is
+ probably worth downloading all the ports directories.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Skeletons
+
+ A team of compulsive hackers who have forgotten to eat in a frantic
+ attempt to make a deadline? Something unpleasant lurking in the FreeBSD
+ attic? No, a skeleton here is a minimal framework that supplies everything
+ needed to make the ports magic work.
+
+
+
+ Makefile
+
+ The most important component of a skeleton is the Makefile. This contains
+ various statements that specify how the port should be compiled and
+ installed. Here is the Makefile for ElectricFence:-
+
+
+ # New ports collection makefile for: Electric Fence
+ # Version required: 2.0.5
+ # Date created: 13 November 1997
+ # Whom: jraynard
+ #
+ # $Id: book.sgml,v 1.2 1998-04-01 19:12:43 nik Exp $
+ #
+
+ DISTNAME= ElectricFence-2.0.5
+ CATEGORIES= devel
+ MASTER_SITES= ${MASTER_SITE_SUNSITE}
+ MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR= devel/lang/c
+
+ MAINTAINER= jraynard@freebsd.org
+
+ MAN3= libefence.3
+
+ do-install:
+ ${INSTALL_DATA} ${WRKSRC}/libefence.a ${PREFIX}/lib
+ ${INSTALL_MAN} ${WRKSRC}/libefence.3 ${PREFIX}/man/man3
+
+ .include <bsd.port.mk>
+
+
+ The lines beginning with a "#" sign are comments for the benefit
+ of human readers (as in most Unix script files).
+
+ `DISTNAME" specifies the name of the , but without the extension.
+
+ `CATEGORIES" states what kind of program this is. In this case, a
+ utility for developers.
+
+ `MASTER_SITES" is the URL(s) of the master FTP site, which is
+ used to retrieve the if it is not
+ available on the local system. This is a site which is regarded as
+ reputable, and is normally the one from which the program is officially
+ distributed (in so far as any software is "officially" distributed
+ on the Internet).
+
+ `MAINTAINER" is the email address of the person who is
+ responsible for updating the skeleton if, for example a new version
+ of the program comes out.
+
+ Skipping over the next few lines for a minute, the line
+ .include <bsd.port.mk>
+
+ says that the other statements and commands
+ needed for this port are in a standard file called
+ `bsd.port.mk". As these are the same for all ports, there is
+ no point in duplicating them all over the place, so they are kept in a
+ single standard file.
+
+ This is probably not the place to go into a detailed examination of
+ how Makefiles work; suffice it to say that the line starting with ``MAN3''
+ ensures that the ElectricFence man page is compressed after installation,
+ to help conserve your precious disk space. The original port did not
+ provide an ``install'' target, so the three lines from ``do-install''
+ ensure that the files produced by this port are placed in the correct
+ destination.
+
+
+
+
+ The files directory
+
+ The file containing the for
+ the port is called "md5", after the MD5 algorithm
+ used for ports checksums. It lives in a directory with the slightly
+ confusing name of "files".
+
+ This directory can also contain other miscellaneous files that are required
+ by the port and do not belong anywhere else.
+
+
+
+
+ The patches directory
+
+ This directory contains the needed
+ to make everything work properly under FreeBSD.
+
+
+
+
+ The pkg directory
+
+ This program contains three quite useful files:-
+
+
+
+
+
+ COMMENT - a one-line description of the program.
+
+
+
+
+ DESCR - a more detailed description.
+
+
+
+
+ PLIST - a list of all the files that will be created when the program is installed.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ What to do when a port does not work.
+
+ Oh. You can do one of four (4) things :
+
+
+
+
+
+ Fix it yourself. Technical details on how ports work can be found in
+
+
+
+
+ Gripe. This is done by e-mail *ONLY*! Send such e-mail to the &a.ports;
+ and please include the name/version of the port, where you got both the port
+ source & distfile(s) from, and what the text of the error was.
+
+
+
+
+ Forget it. This is the easiest for most - very few of the programs in
+ ports can be classified as `essential'!
+
+
+
+
+ Grab the pre-compiled package from a ftp server. The ``master'' package
+ collection is on FreeBSD's FTP server in the packages directory, though check your local mirror first, please!
+
+ These are more likely to work (on the whole) than trying to compile from
+ source and a lot faster besides! Use the pkg_add(1)
+ program to install a package file on your system.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ I Want to Make a Port!
+
+ Great! Please see the
+ for detailed instructions on how to do this.
+
+
+
+
+ Some Questions and Answers
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I thought this was going to be a discussion about modems??!
+
+
+ A. Ah. You must be thinking of the serial ports on the back of your
+ computer. We are using `port' here to mean the result of `porting' a
+ program from one version of Unix to another. (It is an unfortunate bad
+ habit of computer people to use the same word to refer to several
+ completely different things).
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I thought you were supposed to use packages to install extra
+ programs?
+
+
+ A. Yes, that is usually the quickest and easiest way of doing it.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. So why bother with ports then?
+
+
+ A. Several reasons:-
+
+
+
+
+
+ The licensing conditions on some software distributions
+ require that they be distributed as source code, not binaries.
+
+
+
+
+ Some people do not trust binary distributions. At least with
+ source code you can (in theory) read through it and look for potential
+ problems yourself.
+
+
+
+
+ If you have some local patches, you will need the source to add
+ them yourself.
+
+
+
+
+ You might have opinions on how a program should be compiled
+ that differ from the person who did the package - some people have
+ strong views on what optimisation setting should be used, whether to
+ build debug versions and then strip them or not, etc. etc.
+
+
+
+
+ Some people like having code around, so they can read it if
+ they get bored, hack around with it, borrow from it (licence terms
+ permitting, of course!) and so on.
+
+
+
+
+ If you ain't got the source, it ain't software! ;-)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. What is a patch?
+
+
+ A. A patch is a small (usually) file that specifies how to go from one
+ version of a file to another. It contains text that says, in effect,
+ things like ``delete line 23'', ``add these two lines after line 468''
+ or ``change line 197 to this''. Also known as a `diff', since it is
+ generated by a program of that name.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. What is all this about tarballs?
+
+
+ A. It is a file ending in .tar or .tar.gz (with variations like .tar.Z, or
+ even .tgz if you are trying to squeeze the names into a DOS filesystem).
+
+ Basically, it is a directory tree that has been archived into a single
+ file (.tar) and optionally compressed (.gz). This technique was originally
+ used for Tape ARchives (hence the name `tar'), but it is a
+ widely used way of distributing program source code around the
+ Internet.
+
+ You can see what files are in them, or even extract them yourself, by
+ using the standard Unix tar program, which comes with the base FreeBSD
+ system, like this:-
+
+
+ tar tvzf foobar.tar.gz # View contents of foobar.tar.gz
+ tar xzvf foobar.tar.gz # Extract contents into the current directory
+ tar tvf foobar.tar # View contents of foobar.tar
+ tar xvf foobar.tar # Extract contents into the current directory
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. And a checksum?
+
+
+ A. It is a number generated by adding up all the data in the file you
+ want to check. If any of the characters change, the checksum will no
+ longer be equal to the total, so a simple comparison will allow you to
+ spot the difference. (In practice, it is done in a more complicated way
+ to spot problems like position-swapping, which will not show up with a
+ simplistic addition).
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I did what you said for and it worked great until I tried to install the kermit
+ port:-
+
+ # make install
+ >> cku190.tar.gz doesn't seem to exist on this system.
+ >> Attempting to fetch from ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/archives/.
+
+
+ Why can it not be found? Have I got a dud CDROM?
+
+
+ A. The licensing terms for kermit do not allow us to put the tarball
+ for it on the CDROM, so you will have to fetch it by hand - sorry!
+ The reason why you got all those error messages was because you
+ were not connected to the Internet at the time. Once you have downloaded
+ it from any of the sites above, you can re-start the process (try and
+ choose the nearest site to you, though, to save your time and the
+ Internet's bandwidth).
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I did that, but when I tried to put it into /usr/ports/distfiles I
+ got some error about not having permission.
+
+
+ A. The ports mechanism looks for the tarball in /usr/ports/distfiles,
+ but you will not be able to copy anything there because it is sym-linked
+ to the CDROM, which is read-only. You can tell it to look somewhere
+ else by doing
+
+
+ DISTDIR=/where/you/put/it make install
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. Does the ports scheme only work if you have everything in
+ /usr/ports? My system administrator says I must put everything under
+ /u/people/guests/wurzburger, but it does not seem to work.
+
+
+ A. You can use the PORTSDIR and PREFIX variables to tell the ports
+ mechanism to use different directories. For instance,
+
+
+ make PORTSDIR=/u/people/guests/wurzburger/ports install
+
+
+ will compile the port in /u/people/guests/wurzburger/ports and install
+ everything under /usr/local.
+
+
+
+ make PREFIX=/u/people/guests/wurzburger/local install
+
+
+ will compile it in /usr/ports and install it in
+ /u/people/guests/wurzburger/local.
+
+ And of course
+
+
+ make PORTSDIR=.../ports PREFIX=.../local install
+
+
+ will combine the two (it is too long to fit on the page if I write it
+ in full, but I am sure you get the idea).
+
+ If you do not fancy typing all that in every time you install a port
+ (and to be honest, who would?), it is a good idea to put these variables
+ into your environment.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I do not have a FreeBSD CDROM, but I would like to have all the tarballs
+ handy on my system so I do not have to wait for a download every time I
+ install a port. Is there an easy way to get them all at once?
+
+
+ A. To get every single tarball for the ports collection, do
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports
+ # make fetch
+
+
+ For all the tarballs for a single ports directory, do
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports/directory
+ # make fetch
+
+
+ and for just one port - well, I think you have guessed already.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I know it is probably faster to fetch the tarballs from one of the
+ FreeBSD mirror sites close by. Is there any way to tell the port to
+ fetch them from servers other than ones listed in the MASTER_SITES?
+
+
+ A. Yes. If you know, for example, ftp.FreeBSD.ORG is much closer than
+ sites listed in MASTER_SITES, do as following example.
+ # cd /usr/ports/directory
+ # make MASTER_SITE_OVERRIDE=ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/distfiles/ fetch
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I want to know what files make is going to need before it tries to
+ pull them down.
+
+
+ A. 'make fetch-list' will display a list of the files needed for a port.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. Is there any way to stop the port from compiling? I want to do some
+ hacking on the source before I install it, but it is a bit tiresome having
+ to watch it and hit control-C every time.
+
+
+ A. Doing 'make extract' will stop it after it has fetched and
+ extracted the source code.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I am trying to make my own port and I want to be able to stop it
+ compiling until I have had a chance to see if my patches worked properly.
+ Is there something like 'make extract', but for patches?
+
+
+ A. Yep, 'make patch' is what you want. You will probably find the
+ PATCH_DEBUG option useful as well. And by the way, thank you for
+ your efforts!
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I have heard that some compiler options can cause bugs. Is this true?
+ How can I make sure that I compile ports with the right settings?
+
+
+ A. Yes, with version 2.6.3 of gcc (the version shipped with FreeBSD
+ 2.1.0 and 2.1.5), the -O2 option could result in buggy code unless you
+ used the -fno-strength-reduce option as well. (Most of the ports don't
+ use -O2). You should be able to specify the compiler options
+ used by something like
+
+
+ make CFLAGS='-O2 -fno-strength-reduce' install
+
+
+ or by editing /etc/make.conf, but unfortunately not all ports respect
+ this. The surest way is to do 'make configure', then go into the
+ source directory and inspect the Makefiles by hand, but this can get
+ tedious if the source has lots of sub-directories, each with their own
+ Makefiles.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. There are so many ports it is hard to find the one I want. Is there a
+ list anywhere of what ports are available?
+
+
+ A. Look in the INDEX file in /usr/ports.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I went to install the 'foo' port but the system suddenly stopped
+ compiling it and starting compiling the 'bar' port. What's going on?
+
+
+ A. The 'foo' port needs something that is supplied with 'bar' - for
+ instance, if 'foo' uses graphics, 'bar' might have a library with
+ useful graphics processing routines. Or 'bar' might be a tool that is
+ needed to compile the 'foo' port.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I installed the grizzle program from the ports and frankly it is a
+ complete waste of disk space. I want to delete it but I do not know
+ where it put all the files. Any clues?
+
+
+ A. No problem, just do
+
+
+ pkg_delete grizzle-6.5
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. Hang on a minute, you have to know the version number to use that
+ command. You do not seriously expect me to remember that, do you??
+
+
+ A. Not at all, you can find it out by doing
+
+
+ pkg_info -a | grep grizzle
+
+
+ And it will tell you:-
+
+
+ Information for grizzle-6.5:
+ grizzle-6.5 - the combined piano tutorial, LOGO interpreter and shoot 'em up arcade game.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. Talking of disk space, the ports directory seems to be taking up
+ an awful lot of room. Is it safe to go in there and delete things?
+
+
+ A. Yes, if you have installed the program and are fairly certain you
+ will not need the source again, there is no point in keeping it hanging
+ around. The best way to do this is
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports
+ # make clean
+
+
+ which will go through all the ports subdirectories and delete
+ everything except the skeletons for each port.
+
+
+
+ Q. I tried that and it still left all those tarballs or whatever you
+ called them in the distfiles directory. Can I delete those as well?
+
+
+ A. Yes, if you are sure you have finished with them, those can go as
+ well.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I like having lots and lots of programs to play with. Is there any
+ way of installing all the ports in one go?
+
+
+ A. Just do
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports
+ # make install
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. OK, I tried that, but I thought it would take a very long time so I
+ went to bed and left it to get on with it. When I looked at the
+ computer this morning, it had only done three and a half ports. Did
+ something go wrong?
+
+
+ A. No, the problem is that some of the ports need to ask you questions
+ that we cannot answer for you (eg ``Do you want to print on A4 or US
+ letter sized paper?'') and they need to have someone on hand to answer
+ them.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. I really do not want to spend all day staring at the monitor. Any
+ better ideas?
+
+
+ A. OK, do this before you go to bed/work/the local park:-
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports
+ # make -DBATCH install
+
+
+ This will install every port that does not require user
+ input. Then, when you come back, do
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports
+ # make -DIS_INTERACTIVE install
+
+
+ to finish the job.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. At work, we are using frobble, which is in your ports collection,
+ but we have altered it quite a bit to get it to do what we need. Is
+ there any way of making our own packages, so we can distribute it more
+ easily around our sites?
+
+
+ A. No problem, assuming you know how to make patches for your changes:-
+
+
+ # cd /usr/ports/somewhere/frobble
+ # make extract
+ # cd work/frobble-2.8
+ [Apply your patches]
+ # cd ../..
+ # make package
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Q. This ports stuff is really clever. I am desperate to find out how
+ you did it. What is the secret?
+
+
+ A. Nothing secret about it at all, just look at the bsd.ports.mk and
+ bsd.ports.subdir.mk files in your makefiles directory.
+ (Note: readers with an aversion to intricate shell-scripts are advised
+ not to follow this link...)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ System Administration
+
+
+
+ Configuring the FreeBSD Kernel
+
+ Contributed by &a.jehamby;.6 October 1995.
+
+ This large section of the handbook discusses the basics of
+ building your own custom kernel for FreeBSD. This section
+ is appropriate for both novice system administrators and
+ those with advanced Unix experience.
+
+
+
+ Why Build a Custom Kernel?
+
+ Building a custom kernel is one of the most important
+ rites of passage every Unix system administrator must
+ endure. This process, while time-consuming, will provide
+ many benefits to your FreeBSD system. Unlike the GENERIC
+ kernel, which must support every possible SCSI and
+ network card, along with tons of other rarely used
+ hardware support, a custom kernel only contains support
+ for your PC's hardware. This has a number of
+ benefits:
+
+
+
+
+
+ It will take less time to boot because it does not
+ have to spend time probing for hardware which you
+ do not have.
+
+
+
+
+ A custom kernel often uses less memory, which is
+ important because the kernel is the one process which
+ must always be present in memory, and so all of that
+ unused code ties up pages of RAM that your programs
+ would otherwise be able to use. Therefore, on a
+ system with limited RAM, building a custom kernel is
+ of critical importance.
+
+
+
+
+ Finally, there are several kernel options which
+ you can tune to fit your needs, and device driver
+ support for things like sound cards which you can
+ include in your kernel but are not present
+ in the GENERIC kernel.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Building and Installing a Custom Kernel
+
+ First, let us take a quick tour of the kernel build
+ directory. All directories mentioned will be relative to
+ the main /usr/src/sys directory, which is also
+ accessible through /sys. There are a number of
+ subdirectories here representing different parts of the
+ kernel, but the most important, for our purposes, are
+ i386/conf, where you will edit your custom
+ kernel configuration, and compile, which is the
+ staging area where your kernel will be built. Notice the
+ logical organization of the directory tree, with each
+ supported device, filesystem, and option in its own
+ subdirectory. Also, anything inside the i386
+ directory deals with PC hardware only, while everything
+ outside the i386 directory is common to all
+ platforms which FreeBSD could potentially be ported to.
+
+
+
+ Note: If there is not a
+ /usr/src/sys directory on your system, then the
+ kernel source has not been been installed. Follow the
+ instructions for installing packages to add this package
+ to your system.
+
+
+
+ Next, move to the i386/conf directory and copy
+ the GENERIC configuration file to the name you want to
+ give your kernel. For example:
+
+ # cd /usr/src/sys/i386/conf
+ # cp GENERIC MYKERNEL
+
+
+ Traditionally, this name is in all capital letters and,
+ if you are maintaining multiple FreeBSD machines with
+ different hardware, it is a good idea to name it after
+ your machine's hostname. We will call it MYKERNEL for
+ the purpose of this example.
+
+
+
+ Note: You must execute these and all of the
+ following commands under the root account or you will get
+ ``permission denied'' errors.
+
+
+
+ Now, edit MYKERNEL with your favorite text editor. If
+ you are just starting out, the only editor available will
+ probably be vi, which is too complex to explain
+ here, but is covered well in many books in the . Feel free to change the
+ comment lines at the top to reflect your configuration or the
+ changes you have made to differentiate it from GENERIC.
+
+ If you have build a kernel under SunOS or some other BSD
+ operating system, much of this file will be very familiar
+ to you. If you are coming from some other operating
+ system such as DOS, on the other hand, the GENERIC
+ configuration file might seem overwhelming to you, so
+ follow the descriptions in the
+ section slowly and carefully.
+
+
+
+ Note: If you are trying to upgrade your kernel from an
+ older version of FreeBSD, you will probably have to get a new
+ version of config(8) from the same place you got the new
+ kernel sources. It is located in /usr/src/usr.sbin, so
+ you will need to download those sources as well. Re-build and install
+ it before running the next commands.
+
+
+
+ When you are finished, type the following to compile and
+ install your kernel:
+
+ # /usr/sbin/config MYKERNEL
+ # cd ../../compile/MYKERNEL
+ # make depend
+ # make
+ # make install
+
+
+ The new kernel will be copied to the root directory as
+ /kernel and the old kernel will be moved to
+ /kernel.old. Now, shutdown the system and
+ reboot to use your kernel. In case something goes wrong,
+ there are some instructions at the end of this
+ document. Be sure to read the section which explains how
+ to recover in case your new kernel .
+
+
+
+ Note: If you have added any new devices (such
+ as sound cards) you may have to add some to your
+ /dev directory before you can use them.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The Configuration File
+
+ The general format of a configuration file is quite simple.
+ Each line contains a keyword and one or more arguments. For
+ simplicity, most lines only contain one argument. Anything
+ following a # is considered a comment and ignored.
+ The following sections describe each keyword, generally in the
+ order they are listed in GENERIC, although some related
+ keywords have been grouped together in a single section (such
+ as Networking) even though they are actually scattered
+ throughout the GENERIC file.
+ An exhaustive list of options and more detailed explanations
+ of the device lines is present in the LINT configuration file,
+ located in the same directory as GENERIC. If you are in doubt
+ as to the purpose or necessity of a line, check first in LINT.
+
+ The kernel is currently being moved to a better organization
+ of the option handling. Traditionally, each option in the
+ config file was simply converted into a switch
+ for the CFLAGS line of the kernel Makefile. Naturally,
+ this caused a creeping optionism, with nobody really knowing
+ which option has been referenced in what files.
+
+ In the new scheme, every #ifdef that is intended to
+ be dependent upon an option gets this option out of an
+ opt_foo.h declaration file created in the
+ compile directory by config. The list of valid options
+ for config lives in two files: options that do not
+ depend on the architecture are listed in
+ /sys/conf/options, architecture-dependent ones
+ in /sys/arch/conf/options.arch,
+ with arch being for example i386.
+
+
+
+ Mandatory Keywords
+
+ These keywords are required in every kernel you build.
+
+
+
+ machine ``i386''
+
+
+
+ The first keyword is machine, which,
+ since FreeBSD only runs on Intel 386 and compatible
+ chips, is i386.
+
+
+
+ Note: that any keyword which
+ contains numbers used as text must be enclosed in
+ quotation marks, otherwise config gets
+ confused and thinks you mean the actual number
+ 386.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cpu ``cpu_type''
+
+
+
+
+ The next keyword is cpu, which includes
+ support for each CPU supported by FreeBSD. The
+ possible values of cpu_type
+ include:
+
+
+
+ I386_CPU
+
+
+
+ I486_CPU
+
+
+
+ I586_CPU
+
+
+
+ I686_CPU
+
+
+
+
+ and multiple instances of the cpu line may
+ be present with different values of
+ cpu_type as are present in the
+ GENERIC kernel. For a custom kernel, it is best to
+ specify only the cpu you have. If, for example,
+ you have an Intel Pentium, use I586_CPU
+ for cpu_type.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ ident machine_name
+
+
+
+
+ Next, we have ident, which is the
+ identification of the kernel. You should change
+ this from GENERIC to whatever you named your
+ kernel, in this example, MYKERNEL. The value you
+ put in ident will print when you boot up
+ the kernel, so it is useful to give a kernel a
+ different name if you want to keep it separate from
+ your usual kernel (if you want to build an
+ experimental kernel, for example). Note that, as
+ with machine and cpu, enclose
+ your kernel's name in quotation marks if it
+ contains any numbers.
+
+ Since this name is passed to the C compiler as a
+ switch, do not use names like DEBUG, or something that could be confused
+ with another machine or CPU name, like vax.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ maxusers number
+
+
+
+
+ This file sets the size of a number of important
+ system tables. This number is supposed to be
+ roughly equal to the number of simultaneous users
+ you expect to have on your machine. However, under
+ normal circumstances, you will want to set
+ maxusers to at least four, especially if
+ you are using the X Window System or compiling software. The
+ reason is that the most important table set by
+ maxusers is the maximum number of
+ processes, which is set to 20 + 16 *
+ maxusers, so if you set maxusers
+ to one, then you can only have 36 simultaneous
+ processes, including the 18 or so that the system
+ starts up at boot time, and the 15 or so you will
+ probably create when you start the X Window System. Even a
+ simple task like reading a man page will
+ start up nine processes to filter, decompress, and
+ view it. Setting maxusers to 4 will allow
+ you to have up to 84 simultaneous processes, which
+ should be enough for anyone. If, however, you see
+ the dreaded ``proc table full'' error when trying
+ to start another program, or are running a server
+ with a large number of simultaneous users (like
+ Walnut Creek CDROM's FTP site), you can always
+ increase this number and rebuild.
+
+
+
+ Note:maxuser does
+ not limit the number of users which can
+ log into your machine. It simply sets various
+ table sizes to reasonable values considering the
+ maximum number of users you will likely have on
+ your system and how many processes each of them
+ will be running. One keyword which
+ does limit the number of simultaneous
+ remote logins is .
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ config kernel_name root on root_device
+
+
+
+
+ This line specifies the location and name of the
+ kernel. Traditionally the kernel is called
+ vmunix but in FreeBSD, it is aptly named
+ kernel. You should always use
+ kernel for kernel_name because
+ changing it will render numerous system utilities
+ inoperative. The second part of the line specifies
+ the disk and partition where the root filesystem
+ and kernel can be found. Typically this will be
+ wd0 for systems with non-SCSI drives, or
+ sd0 for systems with SCSI drives.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ General Options
+
+ These lines provide kernel support for various
+ filesystems and other options.
+
+
+
+ options MATH_EMULATE
+
+
+
+ This line allows the kernel to simulate a math
+ co-processor if your computer does not have one (386
+ or 486SX). If you have a Pentium, a 486DX, or a
+ 386 or 486SX with a separate 387 or 487 chip, you
+ can comment this line out.
+
+
+
+ Note: The normal math co-processor
+ emulation routines that come with FreeBSD are
+ not very accurate. If you do not have a
+ math co-processor, and you need the best accuracy,
+ I recommend that you change this option to
+ GPL_MATH_EMULATE to use the superior GNU
+ math support, which is not included by default
+ for licensing reasons.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options ``COMPAT_43''
+
+
+
+
+ Compatibility with 4.3BSD. Leave this in; some
+ programs will act strangely if you comment this
+ out.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options BOUNCE_BUFFERS
+
+
+
+
+ ISA devices and EISA devices operating in an ISA
+ compatibility mode can only perform DMA (Direct
+ Memory Access) to memory below 16 megabytes. This
+ option enables such devices to work in systems with
+ more than 16 megabytes of memory.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options UCONSOLE
+
+
+
+
+ Allow users to grab the console, useful for X
+ Windows. For example, you can create a console
+ xterm by typing xterm -C, which will
+ display any `write', `talk', and other messages you
+ receive, as well as any console messages sent by the
+ kernel.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options SYSVSHM
+
+
+
+
+ This option
+ provides for System V shared memory. The most
+ common use of this is the XSHM extension in X
+ Windows, which many graphics-intensive programs
+ (such as the movie player XAnim, and Linux DOOM)
+ will automatically take advantage of for extra
+ speed. If you use the X Window System, you will definitely
+ want to include this.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options SYSVSEM
+
+
+
+
+ Support for System V
+ semaphores. Less commonly used but only adds a few
+ hundred bytes to the kernel.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options SYSVMSG
+
+
+
+
+ Support for System V
+ messages. Again, only adds a few hundred bytes to
+ the kernel.
+
+
+
+ Note: The ipcs(1) command will
+ tell will list any processes using each of
+ these System V facilities.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Filesystem Options
+
+ These options add support for various filesystems.
+ You must include at least one of these to support the
+ device you boot from; typically this will be
+ FFS if you boot from a hard drive, or
+ NFS if you are booting a diskless workstation
+ from Ethernet. You can include other commonly-used
+ filesystems in the kernel, but feel free to comment out
+ support for filesystems you use less often (perhaps the
+ MS-DOS filesystem?), since they will be dynamically
+ loaded from the Loadable Kernel Module directory
+ /lkm the first time you mount a partition of
+ that type.
+
+
+
+ options FFS
+
+
+
+ The basic hard drive
+ filesystem; leave it in if you boot from the hard
+ disk.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options NFS
+
+
+
+
+ Network Filesystem. Unless
+ you plan to mount partitions from a Unix file
+ server over Ethernet, you can comment this out.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options MSDOSFS
+
+
+
+
+ MS-DOS Filesystem. Unless
+ you plan to mount a DOS formatted hard drive
+ partition at boot time, you can safely comment this
+ out. It will be automatically loaded the first
+ time you mount a DOS partition, as described above.
+ Also, the excellent mtools software (in
+ the ports collection) allows you to access DOS
+ floppies without having to mount and unmount them
+ (and does not require MSDOSFS at all).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options ``CD9660''
+
+
+
+
+ ISO 9660 filesystem for
+ CD-ROMs. Comment it out if you do not have a
+ CD-ROM drive or only mount data CD's occasionally
+ (since it will be dynamically loaded the first time
+ you mount a data CD). Audio CD's do not need this
+ filesystem.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options PROCFS
+
+
+
+
+ Process filesystem. This
+ is a pretend filesystem mounted on /proc which
+ allows programs like ps(1) to give you
+ more information on what processes are running.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options MFS
+
+
+
+
+ Memory-mapped file system.
+ This is basically a RAM disk for fast storage of
+ temporary files, useful if you have a lot of swap
+ space that you want to take advantage of. A
+ perfect place to mount an MFS partition is on the
+ /tmp directory, since many programs store
+ temporary data here. To mount an MFS RAM disk on
+ /tmp, add the following line to
+ /etc/fstab and then reboot or type
+ mount /tmp:
+
+ /dev/wd1s2b /tmp mfs rw 0 0
+
+
+
+
+
+ Note: Replace the /dev/wd1s2b
+ with the name of your swap partition, which will
+ be listed in your /etc/fstab as follows:
+
+ /dev/wd1s2b none swap sw 0 0
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Note: Also, the MFS filesystem
+ can not be dynamically loaded, so you
+ must compile it into your kernel if you
+ want to experiment with it.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options "EXT2FS"
+
+
+
+
+ Linux's native file system.
+ With ext2fs support you are able to read and write to Linux
+ partitions. This is useful if you dual-boot FreeBSD and Linux
+ and want to share data between the two systems.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options QUOTA
+
+
+
+
+ Enable disk quotas. If you
+ have a public access system, and do not want users
+ to be able to overflow the /home
+ partition, you can establish disk quotas for each
+ user. Refer to the
+
+ section for more information.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Basic Controllers and Devices
+
+ These sections describe the basic disk, tape, and
+ CD-ROM controllers supported by FreeBSD. There are
+ separate sections for controllers and cards.
+
+
+
+ controller isa0
+
+
+
+ All PC's supported by
+ FreeBSD have one of these. If you have an IBM PS/2
+ (Micro Channel Architecture), then you cannot run
+ FreeBSD at this time.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller pci0
+
+
+
+
+ Include this if you have a
+ PCI motherboard. This enables auto-detection of
+ PCI cards and gatewaying from the PCI to the ISA
+ bus.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller fdc0
+
+
+
+
+ Floppy drive controller:
+ fd0 is the ``A:'' floppy drive, and
+ fd1 is the ``B:'' drive. ft0 is
+ a QIC-80 tape drive attached to the floppy
+ controller. Comment out any lines corresponding to
+ devices you do not have.
+
+
+
+ Note: QIC-80 tape support requires a
+ separate filter program called ft(8), see
+ the manual page for details.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller wdc0
+
+
+
+
+ This is the primary IDE
+ controller. wd0 and wd1 are the
+ master and slave hard drive, respectively.
+ wdc1 is a secondary IDE controller where
+ you might have a third or fourth hard drive, or an
+ IDE CD-ROM. Comment out the lines which do not
+ apply (if you have a SCSI hard drive, you will
+ probably want to comment out all six lines, for
+ example).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device wcd0
+
+
+
+
+ This device
+ provides IDE CD-ROM support. Be sure to leave
+ wdc0 uncommented, and wdc1 if you have
+ more than one IDE controller and your CD-ROM is on
+ the second one card. To use this, you must
+ also include the line options ATAPI.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device npx0 at isa? port ``IO_NPX'' irq 13 vector npxintr
+
+
+
+
+ npx0 is the interface to the floating point math
+ unit in FreeBSD, either the hardware co-processor or the
+ software math emulator. It is NOT optional.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device wt0 at isa? port 0x300 bio irq 5 drq 1 vector wtintr
+
+
+
+
+ Wangtek and Archive
+ QIC-02/QIC-36 tape drive support
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Proprietary CD-ROM support
+
+
+
+
+ The following
+ drivers are for the so-called proprietary
+ CD-ROM drives. These drives have their own
+ controller card or might plug into a sound card
+ such as the SoundBlaster 16. They are not
+ IDE or SCSI. Most older single-speed and
+ double-speed CD-ROMs use these interfaces, while
+ newer quad-speeds are likely to be or .
+
+
+
+ device mcd0 at isa? port 0x300 bio irq 10 vector mcdintr
+
+
+
+ Mitsumi CD-ROM (LU002,
+ LU005, FX001D).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device scd0 at isa? port 0x230 bio
+
+
+
+
+ Sony CD-ROM (CDU31, CDU33A).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller matcd0 at isa? port ? bio
+
+
+
+
+ Matsushita/Panasonic CD-ROM (sold by Creative
+ Labs for SoundBlaster).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ SCSI Device Support
+
+ This section describes the various SCSI controllers
+ and devices supported by FreeBSD.
+
+
+
+ SCSI Controllers
+
+
+
+ The next ten or so lines include support for
+ different kinds of SCSI controllers. Comment out
+ all except for the one(s) you have:
+
+
+
+ controller bt0 at isa? port ``IO_BT0'' bio irq ? vector btintr
+
+
+
+ Most Buslogic controllers
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller uha0 at isa? port ``IO_UHA0'' bio irq ? drq 5 vector uhaintr
+
+
+
+
+ UltraStor 14F and 34F
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller ahc0
+
+
+
+
+ Adaptec 274x/284x/294x
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller ahb0 at isa? bio irq ? vector ahbintr
+
+
+
+
+ Adaptec 174x
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller aha0 at isa? port ``IO_AHA0'' bio irq ? drq 5 vector ahaintr
+
+
+
+
+ Adaptec 154x
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller aic0 at isa? port 0x340 bio irq 11 vector aicintr
+
+
+
+
+ Adaptec 152x and sound cards using Adaptec AIC-6360 (slow!)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller nca0 at isa? port 0x1f88 bio irq 10 vector ncaintr
+
+
+
+
+ ProAudioSpectrum cards using NCR 5380 or Trantor T130
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller sea0 at isa? bio irq 5 iomem 0xc8000 iosiz 0x2000 vector seaintr
+
+
+
+
+ Seagate ST01/02 8 bit controller (slow!)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller wds0 at isa? port 0x350 bio irq 15 drq 6 vector wdsintr
+
+
+
+
+ Western Digital WD7000 controller
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller ncr0
+
+
+
+
+ NCR 53C810, 53C815, 53C825, 53C860, 53C875 PCI SCSI controller
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options ``SCSI_DELAY=15''
+
+
+
+
+ This causes the
+ kernel to pause 15 seconds before probing each SCSI
+ device in your system. If you only have IDE hard
+ drives, you can ignore this, otherwise you will
+ probably want to lower this number, perhaps to 5
+ seconds, to speed up booting. Of course if you do
+ this, and FreeBSD has trouble recognizing your SCSI
+ devices, you will have to raise it back up.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ controller scbus0
+
+
+
+
+ If you have any SCSI
+ controllers, this line provides generic SCSI
+ support. If you do not have SCSI, you can comment
+ this, and the following three lines, out.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device sd0
+
+
+
+
+ Support for SCSI hard
+ drives.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device st0
+
+
+
+
+ Support for SCSI tape
+ drives.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device cd0
+
+
+
+
+ Support for SCSI CD-ROM
+ drives.
+
+
+
+ Note that the number 0 in the above entries
+ is slightly misleading: all these devices are
+ automatically configured as they are found, regardless
+ of how many of them are hooked up to the SCSI bus(es),
+ and which target IDs they have.
+
+ If you want to ``wire down'' specific target IDs to
+ particular devices, refer to the appropriate section
+ of the LINT kernel config file.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Console, Bus Mouse, and X Server Support
+
+ You must choose one of these two console types, and, if you plan
+ to use the X Window System with the vt220 console, enable the
+ XSERVER option and optionally, a bus mouse or PS/2 mouse device.
+
+
+
+ device sc0 at isa? port ``IO_KBD' tty irq 1 vector scintr
+
+
+
+ sc0 is the default
+ console driver, which resembles an SCO console.
+ Since most full-screen programs access the console
+ through a terminal database library like
+ termcap, it should not matter much whether
+ you use this or vt0, the VT220 compatible
+ console driver. When you log in, set your TERM
+ variable to ``scoansi'' if full-screen programs
+ have trouble running under this console.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device vt0 at isa? port ``IO_KBD'' tty irq 1 vector pcrint
+
+
+
+
+ This is a VT220-compatible
+ console driver, backwards compatible to VT100/102.
+ It works well on some laptops which have hardware
+ incompatibilities with sc0. Also, set
+ your TERM variable to ``vt100'' or ``vt220'' when
+ you log in. This driver might also prove useful
+ when connecting to a large number of different
+ machines over the network, where the termcap
+ or terminfo entries for the sc0
+ device are often not available -- ``vt100'' should be
+ available on virtually any platform.
+
+
+
+ options ``PCVT_FREEBSD=210''
+
+
+
+ Required
+ with the vt0 console driver.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options XSERVER
+
+
+
+
+ Only applicable with the vt0 console driver.
+ This includes code
+ required to run the XFree86 X Window
+ Server under the vt0 console driver.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device mse0 at isa? port 0x23c tty irq 5 vector ms
+
+
+
+
+ Use this device if you have a Logitech or
+ ATI InPort bus mouse card.
+
+
+
+ Note: If you have a serial mouse,
+ ignore these two lines, and instead, make sure
+ the appropriate port is enabled (probably
+ COM1).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device psm0 at isa? port ``IO_KBD'' conflicts tty irq 12 vector psmintr
+
+
+
+
+ Use this device if your
+ mouse plugs into the PS/2 mouse port.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Serial and Parallel Ports
+
+ Nearly all systems have these. If you are attaching a
+ printer to one of these ports, the section of the handbook is very
+ useful. If you are using modem, provides extensive detail on
+ serial port configuration for use with such devices.
+
+
+
+ device sio0 at isa? port ``IO_COM1'' tty irq 4 vector siointr
+
+
+
+ sio0
+ through sio3 are the four serial ports
+ referred to as COM1 through COM4 in the MS-DOS
+ world. Note that if you have an internal modem on
+ COM4 and a serial port at COM2 you will have to
+ change the IRQ of the modem to 2 (for obscure
+ technical reasons IRQ 2 = IRQ 9) in order to access
+ it from FreeBSD. If you have a multiport serial
+ card, check the manual page for sio(4) for
+ more information on the proper values for these
+ lines. Some video cards (notably
+ those based on S3 chips) use IO addresses of the
+ form 0x*2e8, and since many cheap serial
+ cards do not fully decode the 16-bit IO address
+ space, they clash with these cards, making the
+ COM4 port practically unavailable.
+
+ Each serial port is required to have a unique
+ IRQ (unless you are using one of the multiport cards
+ where shared interrupts are supported), so the default
+ IRQs for COM3 and COM4 cannot be used.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device lpt0 at isa? port? tty irq 7 vector lptintr
+
+
+
+
+ lpt0 through lpt2
+ are the three printer ports you could conceivably
+ have. Most people just have one, though, so feel
+ free to comment out the other two lines if you do
+ not have them.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Networking
+
+ FreeBSD, as with Unix in general, places a
+ big emphasis on networking. Therefore, even
+ if you do not have an Ethernet card, pay attention to
+ the mandatory options and the dial-up networking
+ support.
+
+
+
+ options INET
+
+ Networking support. Leave it in even if you do not plan
+ to be connected to a network. Most programs require at least
+ loopback networking (i.e. making network connections within your
+ PC) so this is essentially mandatory.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Ethernet cards
+
+
+
+
+ The next lines enable support for various Ethernet
+ cards. If you do not have a network card, you can
+ comment out all of these lines. Otherwise, you will
+ want to leave in support for your particular
+ Ethernet card(s):
+
+
+
+ device de0
+
+
+
+ Ethernet adapters based on Digital Equipment DC21040,
+ DC21041 or DC21140 chips
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device fxp0
+
+
+
+
+ Intel EtherExpress Pro/100B
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device vx0
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com 3C590 and 3C595 (buggy)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device cx0 at isa? port 0x240 net irq 15 drq 7 vector cxintr
+
+
+
+
+ Cronyx/Sigma multiport
+ sync/async (with Cisco or PPP framing)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device ed0 at isa? port 0x280 net irq 5 iomem 0xd8000 vector edintr
+
+
+
+
+ Western Digital and SMC 80xx and 8216; Novell NE1000
+ and NE2000; 3Com 3C503; HP PC Lan Plus (HP27247B and HP27252A)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device el0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 9 vector elintr
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com 3C501 (slow!)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device eg0 at isa? port 0x310 net irq 5 vector egintr
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com 3C505
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device ep0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 10 vector epintr
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com 3C509 (buggy)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device fe0 at isa? port 0x240 net irq ? vector feintr
+
+
+
+
+ Fujitsu MB86960A/MB86965A Ethernet
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device fea0 at isa? net irq ? vector feaintr
+
+
+
+
+ DEC DEFEA EISA FDDI adapter
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device ie0 at isa? port 0x360 net irq 7 iomem 0xd0000 vector ieintr
+
+
+
+
+ AT&T StarLAN 10 and EN100; 3Com 3C507;
+ unknown NI5210
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device ix0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 10 iomem 0xd0000 iosiz 32768 vector ixintr
+
+
+
+
+ Intel EtherExpress 16
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device le0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 5 iomem 0xd0000 vector le_intr
+
+
+
+
+ Digital Equipment EtherWorks 2 and EtherWorks
+ 3 (DEPCA, DE100, DE101, DE200, DE201, DE202,
+ DE203, DE204, DE205, DE422)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device lnc0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 10 drq 0 vector lncintr
+
+
+
+
+ Lance/PCnet cards (Isolan, Novell NE2100,
+ NE32-VL)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device ze0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 5 iomem 0xd8000 vector zeintr
+
+
+
+
+ IBM/National Semiconductor PCMCIA ethernet
+ controller.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device zp0 at isa? port 0x300 net irq 10 iomem 0xd8000 vector zpintr
+
+
+
+
+ 3Com PCMCIA Etherlink III
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Note: With certain cards (notably the
+ NE2000) you will have to change the port and/or IRQ
+ since there is no ``standard'' location for these
+ cards.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device loop
+
+
+
+
+ loop is the
+ generic loopback device for TCP/IP. If you telnet
+ or FTP to localhost
+ (a.k.a. 127.0.0.1) it will come back at
+ you through this pseudo-device. Mandatory.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device ether
+
+
+
+
+ ether is only
+ needed if you have an Ethernet card and includes
+ generic Ethernet protocol code.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device sl number
+
+
+
+
+ sl is for SLIP (Serial Line Internet
+ Protocol) support. This has been almost entirely
+ supplanted by PPP, which is easier to set up,
+ better suited for modem-to-modem connections, as
+ well as more powerful. The number after
+ sl specifies how many simultaneous SLIP
+ sessions to support. This handbook has more
+ information on setting up a SLIP or .
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device ppp number
+
+
+
+
+ ppp is for kernel-mode PPP (Point-to-Point
+ Protocol) support for dial-up Internet connections.
+ There is also version of PPP implemented as a user
+ application that uses the tun and offers
+ more flexibility and features such as demand
+ dialing. If you still want to use this PPP driver,
+ read the
+ section of the handbook. As with the sl
+ device, number specifies how many
+ simultaneous PPP connections to support.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device tun number
+
+
+
+
+ tun is used by the user-mode PPP software.
+ This program is easy to set up and very fast. It
+ also has special features such as automatic
+ dial-on-demand. The number after tun
+ specifies the number of simultaneous PPP sessions
+ to support. See the section of the handbook for
+ more information.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device bpfilter number
+
+
+
+
+ Berkeley packet filter. This pseudo-device allows
+ network interfaces to be placed in promiscuous
+ mode, capturing every packet on a broadcast network
+ (e.g. an ethernet). These packets can be captured
+ to disk and/or examined with the
+ tcpdump(1) program. Note that
+ implementation of this capability can seriously
+ compromise your overall network security.
+ The number after bpfilter is the number of
+ interfaces that can be examined
+ simultaneously. Optional, not recommended except
+ for those who are fully aware of the potential
+ pitfalls. Not all network cards support this
+ capability.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Sound cards
+
+ This is the first section containing lines that are
+ not in the GENERIC kernel. To include sound card
+ support, you will have to copy the appropriate lines from
+ the LINT kernel (which contains support for
+ every device) as follows:
+
+
+
+ controller snd0
+
+
+
+ Generic sound driver code.
+ Required for all of the following sound cards
+ except pca.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device pas0 at isa? port 0x388 irq 10 drq 6 vector pasintr
+
+
+
+
+ ProAudioSpectrum digital audio and MIDI.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device sb0 at isa? port 0x220 irq 7 conflicts drq 1 vector sbintr
+
+
+
+
+ SoundBlaster digital audio.
+
+
+
+ Note: If your SoundBlaster is on a
+ different IRQ (such as 5), change irq 7
+ to, for example, irq 5 and remove the
+ conflicts keyword. Also, you must add
+ the line: options ``SBC_IRQ=5''
+
+ Note: If your SB16 is on a different
+ 16-bit DMA channel (such as 6 or 7), change the
+ drq 5 keyword appropriately, and then
+ add the line: options
+ "SB16_DMA=6"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device sbmidi0 at isa? port 0x330
+
+
+
+
+ SoundBlaster 16 MIDI interface. If you have a
+ SoundBlaster 16, you must include this line, or the
+ kernel will not compile.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device gus0 at isa? port 0x220 irq 10 drq 1 vector gusintr
+
+
+
+
+ Gravis Ultrasound.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device mss0 at isa? port 0x530 irq 10 drq 1 vector adintr
+
+
+
+
+ Microsoft Sound System.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device opl0 at isa? port 0x388 conflicts
+
+
+
+
+ AdLib FM-synthesis audio. Include this line for
+ AdLib, SoundBlaster, and ProAudioSpectrum users, if
+ you want to play MIDI songs with a program such as
+ playmidi (in the ports collection).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device mpu0 at isa? port 0x330 irq 6 drq 0
+
+
+
+
+ Roland MPU-401 stand-alone card.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device uart0 at isa? port 0x330 irq 5 vector ``m6850intr''
+
+
+
+
+ Stand-alone 6850 UART for MIDI.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ device pca0 at isa? port ``IO_TIMER1'' tty
+
+
+
+
+ Digital audio through PC speaker. This is going to
+ be very poor sound quality and quite CPU-intensive,
+ so you have been warned (but it does not require a
+ sound card).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Note: There is some additional
+ documentation in
+ /usr/src/sys/i386/isa/sound/sound.doc.
+ Also, if you add any of these devices, be sure to
+ create the sound .
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Pseudo-devices
+
+ Pseudo-device drivers are parts of the kernel that act
+ like device drivers but do not correspond to any actual
+ hardware in the machine. The
+ pseudo-devices are in that section, while the remainder
+ are here.
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device gzip
+
+
+
+ gzip allows you to run FreeBSD programs
+ that have been compressed with gzip. The
+ programs in /stand are compressed so it
+ is a good idea to have this option in your kernel.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device log
+
+
+
+
+ log is used for logging of kernel error
+ messages. Mandatory.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device pty number
+
+
+
+
+ pty is a ``pseudo-terminal'' or simulated
+ login port. It is used by incoming telnet
+ and rlogin sessions, xterm, and some other
+ applications such as emacs. The number
+ indicates the number of ptys to create.
+ If you need more than GENERIC default of 16
+ simultaneous xterm windows and/or remote logins, be
+ sure to increase this number accordingly, up to a
+ maximum of 64.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device snp number
+
+
+
+
+ Snoop device. This pseudo-device allows one
+ terminal session to watch another using the
+ watch(8) command. Note that
+ implementation of this capability has important
+ security and privacy implications. The
+ number after snp is the total number of
+ simultaneous snoop sessions. Optional.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device vn
+
+
+
+
+ Vnode driver. Allows a file to be treated as a
+ device after being set up with the
+ vnconfig(8) command. This driver can be
+ useful for manipulating floppy disk images and
+ using a file as a swap device (e.g. an MS Windows
+ swap file). Optional.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device ccd number
+
+
+
+
+ Concatenated disks. This pseudo-device allows you to
+ concatenate multiple disk partitions into one large
+ ``meta''-disk. The number after ccd is the
+ total number of concatenated disks (not total number of
+ disks that can be concatenated) that can be created.
+ (See ccd(4) and ccdconfig(8) man pages
+ for more details.) Optional.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Joystick, PC Speaker, Miscellaneous
+
+ This section describes some miscellaneous hardware
+ devices supported by FreeBSD. Note that none of these
+ lines are included in the GENERIC kernel, you will have
+ to copy them from this handbook or the LINT kernel
+ (which contains support for every device):
+
+
+
+ device joy0 at isa? port ``IO_GAME''
+
+
+
+ PC joystick device.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device speaker
+
+
+
+
+ Supports IBM BASIC-style noises through the PC
+ speaker. Some fun programs which use this are
+ /usr/sbin/spkrtest, which is a shell
+ script that plays some simple songs, and
+ /usr/games/piano which lets you play songs
+ using the keyboard as a simple piano (this file
+ only exists if you have installed the games
+ package). Also, the excellent text role-playing
+ game NetHack (in the ports collection) can be
+ configured to use this device to play songs when
+ you play musical instruments in the game.
+
+
+
+ See also the device.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Making Device Nodes
+
+ Almost every device in the kernel has a corresponding
+ ``node'' entry in the /dev directory. These
+ nodes look like regular files, but are actually special
+ entries into the kernel which programs use to access the
+ device. The shell script /dev/MAKEDEV, which is
+ executed when you first install the operating system,
+ creates nearly all of the device nodes supported.
+ However, it does not create all of them, so when
+ you add support for a new device, it pays to make sure
+ that the appropriate entries are in this directory, and
+ if not, add them. Here is a simple example:
+
+ Suppose you add the IDE CD-ROM support to the kernel.
+ The line to add is:
+
+ controller wcd0
+
+
+ This means that you should look for some entries that
+ start with wcd0 in the /dev directory,
+ possibly followed by a letter, such as `c', or preceded
+ by the letter 'r', which means a `raw' device. It turns
+ out that those files are not there, so I must change to
+ the /dev directory and type:
+
+ # sh MAKEDEV wcd0
+
+
+ When this script finishes, you will find that there are
+ now wcd0c and rwcd0c entries in
+ /dev so you know that it executed correctly.
+
+ For sound cards, the command:
+
+ # sh MAKEDEV snd0
+
+
+ creates the appropriate entries. Note: when creating device
+ nodes for devices such as sound cards, if other people have
+ access to your machine, it may be desirable to
+ protect the devices from outside access by adding them to the
+ /etc/fbtab file. See man fbtab for
+ more information.
+
+ Follow this simple procedure for any other non-GENERIC
+ devices which do not have entries.
+
+
+
+ Note: All SCSI controllers use the same set
+ of /dev entries, so you do not need to create
+ these. Also, network cards and SLIP/PPP pseudo-devices
+ do not have entries in /dev at all, so you do
+ not have to worry about these either.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ If Something Goes Wrong
+
+ There are four categories of trouble that can occur when
+ building a custom kernel. They are:
+
+
+
+ Config command fails
+
+
+
+ If the config
+ command fails when you give it your kernel
+ description, you have probably made a simple error
+ somewhere. Fortunately, config will print
+ the line number that it had trouble with, so you can
+ quickly skip to it with vi. For example, if
+ you see:
+
+ config: line 17: syntax error
+
+
+ you can skip to the problem in vi by typing
+ ``17G'' in command mode. Make sure the keyword is
+ typed correctly, by comparing it to the GENERIC
+ kernel or another reference.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Make command fails
+
+
+
+
+ If the make
+ command fails, it usually signals an error in your
+ kernel description, but not severe enough for
+ config to catch it. Again, look over your
+ configuration, and if you still cannot resolve the
+ problem, send mail to the &a.questions; with your kernel
+ configuration, and it should be diagnosed very
+ quickly.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Kernel will not boot
+
+
+
+
+ If your new kernel
+ does not boot, or fails to recognize your devices,
+ do not panic! Fortunately, BSD has an excellent
+ mechanism for recovering from incompatible kernels.
+ Simply type the name of the kernel you want to boot
+ from (i.e. ``kernel.old'') at the FreeBSD boot
+ prompt instead of pressing return. When
+ reconfiguring a kernel, it is always a good idea to
+ keep a kernel that is known to work on hand.
+
+ After booting with a good kernel you can check over
+ your configuration file and try to build it again.
+ One helpful resource is the
+ /var/log/messages file which records, among
+ other things, all of the kernel messages from every
+ successful boot. Also, the dmesg(8) command
+ will print the kernel messages from the current boot.
+
+
+
+ Note: If you are having trouble building
+ a kernel, make sure to keep a GENERIC, or some
+ other kernel that is known to work on hand as a
+ different name that will not get erased on the next
+ build. You cannot rely on kernel.old
+ because when installing a new kernel,
+ kernel.old is overwritten with the last
+ installed kernel which may be non-functional.
+ Also, as soon as possible, move the working kernel
+ to the proper ``kernel'' location or commands such
+ as ps(1) will not work properly. The
+ proper command to ``unlock'' the kernel file that
+ make installs (in order to move another
+ kernel back permanently) is:
+
+ # chflags noschg /kernel
+
+
+ And, if you want to ``lock'' your new kernel into place, or any file
+ for that matter, so that it cannot be moved or tampered with:
+
+ # chflags schg /kernel
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Kernel works, but ps does not work any more!
+
+
+
+
+ If you have installed a different version
+ of the kernel from the one that the system utilities
+ have been built with, for example, an experimental
+ ``2.2.0'' kernel on a 2.1.0-RELEASE system, many
+ system-status commands like ps(1) and
+ vmstat(8) will not work any more. You must
+ recompile the libkvm library as well as
+ these utilities. This is one reason it is not
+ normally a good idea to use a different version of
+ the kernel from the rest of the operating system.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Security
+
+
+
+ DES, MD5, and Crypt
+
+ Contributed by &a.wollman;24 September 1995.
+
+ In order to protect the security of passwords on UN*X systems from
+ being easily exposed, passwords have traditionally been scrambled in
+ some way. Starting with Bell Labs' Seventh Edition Unix, passwords
+ were encrypted using what the security people call a ``one-way hash
+ function''. That is to say, the password is transformed in such a way
+ that the original password cannot be regained except by brute-force
+ searching the space of possible passwords. Unfortunately, the only
+ secure method that was available to the AT&T researchers at the
+ time was based on DES, the Data Encryption Standard. This causes only
+ minimal difficulty for commercial vendors, but is a serious problem
+ for an operating system like FreeBSD where all the source code is
+ freely available, because national governments in many places like to
+ place restrictions on cross-border transport of DES and other
+ encryption software.
+
+ So, the FreeBSD team was faced with a dilemma: how could we provide
+ compatibility with all those UNIX systems out there while still not
+ running afoul of the law? We decided to take a dual-track approach:
+ we would make distributions which contained only a non-regulated
+ password scrambler, and then provide as a separate add-on library the
+ DES-based password hash. The password-scrambling function was moved
+ out of the C library to a separate library, called `libcrypt'
+ because the name of the C function to implement it is
+ `crypt'. In FreeBSD 1.x and some pre-release 2.0 snapshots,
+ the non-regulated scrambler uses an insecure function written by Nate
+ Williams; in subsequent releases this was replaced by a mechanism
+ using the RSA Data Security, Inc., MD5 one-way hash function. Because
+ neither of these functions involve encryption, they are believed to be
+ exportable from the US and importable into many other countries.
+
+ Meanwhile, work was also underway on the DES-based password hash
+ function. First, a version of the `crypt' function which was
+ written outside the US was imported, thus synchronizing the US and
+ non-US code. Then, the library was modified and split into two; the
+ DES `libcrypt' contains only the code involved in performing
+ the one-way password hash, and a separate `libcipher' was
+ created with the entry points to actually perform encryption. The
+ code was partitioned in this way to make it easier to get an export
+ license for the compiled library.
+
+
+
+ Recognizing your `crypt' mechanism
+
+ It is fairly easy to recognize whether a particular password
+ string was created using the DES- or MD5-based hash function.
+ MD5 password strings always begin with the characters
+ `$1$'. DES password strings do not have
+ any particular identifying characteristics, but they are shorter
+ than MD5 passwords, and are coded in a 64-character alphabet
+ which does not include the `$' character, so a
+ relatively short string which doesn't begin with a dollar sign is
+ very likely a DES password.
+
+ Determining which library is being used on your system is fairly
+ easy for most programs, except for those like `init' which
+ are statically linked. (For those programs, the only way is to try
+ them on a known password and see if it works.) Programs which use
+ `crypt' are linked against `libcrypt', which for
+ each type of library is a symbolic link to the appropriate
+ implementation. For example, on a system using the DES versions:
+
+
+
+ $ cd /usr/lib
+ $ ls -l /usr/lib/libcrypt*
+ lrwxr-xr-x 1 bin bin 13 Sep 5 12:50 libcrypt.a -> libdescrypt.a
+ lrwxr-xr-x 1 bin bin 18 Sep 5 12:50 libcrypt.so.2.0 -> libdescrypt.so.2.0
+ lrwxr-xr-x 1 bin bin 15 Sep 5 12:50 libcrypt_p.a -> libdescrypt_p.a
+
+
+
+ On a system using the MD5-based libraries, the same links will be
+ present, but the target will be `libscrypt' rather than
+ `libdescrypt'.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ S/Key
+
+ Contributed by &a.wollman;25 September 1995.
+
+ S/Key is a one-time password scheme based on a one-way hash function
+ (in our version, this is MD4 for compatibility; other versions have
+ used MD5 and DES-MAC). S/Key has been a standard part of all FreeBSD
+ distributions since version 1.1.5, and is also implemented on a large
+ and growing number of other systems. S/Key is a registered trademark
+ of Bell Communications Research, Inc.
+
+ There are three different sorts of passwords which we will talk about
+ in the discussion below. The first is your usual UNIX-style or Kerberos
+ password; we will call this a ``UNIX password''. The second sort is the
+ one-time password which is generated by the S/Key `key' program and
+ accepted by the `keyinit' program and the login prompt; we will call
+ this a ``one-time password''. The final sort of password is the
+ secret password which you give to the `key' program (and sometimes the
+ `keyinit' program) which it uses to generate one-time passwords; we will
+ call it a ``secret password'' or just unqualified ``password''.
+
+ The secret password does not necessarily have anything to do with your
+ UNIX password (while they can be the same, this is not recommended).
+ While UNIX passwords are limited to eight characters in length, your
+ S/Key secret password can be as long as you like; I use seven-word
+ phrases. In general, the S/Key system operates completely
+ independently of the UNIX password system.
+
+ There are in addition two other sorts of data involved in the S/Key
+ system; one is called the ``seed'' or (confusingly) ``key'', and
+ consists of two letters and five digits, and the other is the
+ ``iteration count'' and is a number between 100 and 1. S/Key
+ constructs a one-time password from these components by concatenating
+ the seed and the secret password, then applying a one-way hash (the
+ RSA Data Security, Inc., MD4 secure hash function) iteration-count
+ times, and turning the result into six short English words. The
+ `login' and `su' programs keep track of the last one-time
+ password used, and the user is authenticated if the hash of the
+ user-provided password is equal to the previous password. Because a
+ one-way hash function is used, it is not possible to generate future
+ one-time passwords having overheard one which was successfully used;
+ the iteration count is decremented after each successful login to keep
+ the user and login program in sync. (When you get the iteration count
+ down to 1, it is time to reinitialize S/Key.)
+
+ There are four programs involved in the S/Key system which we will
+ discuss below. The `key' program accepts an iteration count, a
+ seed, and a secret password, and generates a one-time password. The
+ `keyinit' program is used to initialized S/Key, and to change
+ passwords, iteration counts, or seeds; it takes either a secret
+ password, or an iteration count, seed, and one-time password. The
+ `keyinfo' program examines the /etc/skeykeys file and
+ prints out the invoking user's current iteration count and seed.
+ Finally, the `login' and `su' programs contain the necessary
+ logic to accept S/Key one-time passwords for authentication. The
+ `login' program is also capable of disallowing the use of UNIX
+ passwords on connections coming from specified addresses.
+
+ There are four different sorts of operations we will cover. The first
+ is using the `keyinit' program over a secure connection to set up
+ S/Key for the first time, or to change your password or seed. The
+ second operation is using the `keyinit' program over an insecure
+ connection, in conjunction with the `key' program over a secure
+ connection, to do the same. The third is using the `key' program to
+ log in over an insecure connection. The fourth is using the `key'
+ program to generate a number of keys which can be written down or
+ printed out to carry with you when going to some location without
+ secure connections to anywhere (like at a conference).
+
+
+
+ Secure connection initialization
+
+ To initialize S/Key, change your password, or change your seed while
+ logged in over a secure connection (e.g., on the console of a machine),
+ use the `keyinit' command without any parameters while logged in as
+ yourself:
+
+
+
+ $ keyinit
+ Updating wollman: ) these will not appear if you
+ Old key: ha73895 ) have not used S/Key before
+ Reminder - Only use this method if you are directly connected.
+ If you are using telnet or rlogin exit with no password and use keyinit -s.
+ Enter secret password: ) I typed my pass phrase here
+ Again secret password: ) I typed it again
+
+ ID wollman s/key is 99 ha73896 ) discussed below
+ SAG HAS FONT GOUT FATE BOOM )
+
+
+
+ There is a lot of information here. At the `Enter secret password:'
+ prompt, you should enter some password or phrase (I use phrases of
+ minimum seven words) which will be needed to generate login keys. The
+ line starting `ID' gives the parameters of your particular S/Key
+ instance: your login name, the iteration count, and seed. When
+ logging in with S/Key, the system will remember these parameters and
+ present them back to you so you do not have to remember them. The last
+ line gives the particular one-time password which corresponds to those
+ parameters and your secret password; if you were to re-login
+ immediately, this one-time password is the one you would use.
+
+
+
+
+ Insecure connection initialization
+
+ To initialize S/Key or change your password or seed over an insecure
+ connection, you will need to already have a secure connection to some
+ place where you can run the `key' program; this might be in the form
+ of a desk accessory on a Macintosh, or a shell prompt on a machine you
+ trust (we will show the latter). You will also need to make up an
+ iteration count (100 is probably a good value), and you may make up
+ your own seed or use a randomly-generated one. Over on the insecure
+ connection (to the machine you are initializing), use the `keyinit -s'
+ command:
+
+
+
+ $ keyinit -s
+ Updating wollman:
+ Old key: kh94741
+ Reminder you need the 6 English words from the skey command.
+ Enter sequence count from 1 to 9999: 100 ) I typed this
+ Enter new key [default kh94742]:
+ s/key 100 kh94742
+
+
+
+ To accept the default seed (which the `keyinit' program confusingly
+ calls a `key'), press return. Then move over to your secure
+ connection or S/Key desk accessory, and give it the same parameters:
+
+
+
+ $ key 100 kh94742
+ Reminder - Do not use this program while logged in via telnet or rlogin.
+ Enter secret password: ) I typed my secret password
+ HULL NAY YANG TREE TOUT VETO
+
+
+
+ Now switch back over to the insecure connection, and copy the one-time
+ password generated by `key' over to the `keyinit' program:
+
+
+
+ s/key access password: HULL NAY YANG TREE TOUT VETO
+
+ ID wollman s/key is 100 kh94742
+ HULL NAY YANG TREE TOUT VETO
+
+
+
+ The rest of the description from the previous section applies here as
+ well.
+
+
+
+
+ Diversion: a login prompt
+
+ Before explaining how to generate one-time passwords, we should go
+ over an S/Key login prompt:
+
+
+
+ $ telnet himalia
+ Trying 18.26.0.186...
+ Connected to himalia.lcs.mit.edu.
+ Escape character is '^]'.
+ s/key 92 hi52030
+ Password:
+
+
+
+ Note that, before prompting for a password, the login program
+ prints out the iteration number and seed which you will need in order
+ to generate the appropriate key. You will also find a useful feature
+ (not shown here): if you press return at the password prompt, the
+ login program will turn echo on, so you can see what you are typing.
+ This can be extremely useful if you are attempting to type in an S/Key
+ by hand, such as from a printout.
+
+ If this machine were configured to disallow UNIX passwords over a
+ connection from my machine, the prompt would have also included the
+ annotation `(s/key required)', indicating that only S/Key one-time
+ passwords will be accepted.
+
+
+
+
+ Generating a single one-time password
+
+ Now, to generate the one-time password needed to answer this login
+ prompt, we use a trusted machine and the `key' program. (There are
+ versions of the `key' program from DOS and Windows machines, and there
+ is an S/Key desk accessory for Macintosh computers as well.) The
+ command-line `key' program takes as its parameters the iteration count
+ and seed; you can cut-and-paste right from the login prompt starting
+ at ``key'' to the end of the line. Thus:
+
+
+
+ $ key 92 hi52030 ) pasted from previous section
+ Reminder - Do not use this program while logged in via telnet or rlogin.
+ Enter secret password: ) I typed my secret password
+ ADEN BED WOLF HAW HOT STUN
+
+
+
+ And in the other window:
+
+
+
+ s/key 92 hi52030 ) from previous section
+ Password:
+ (turning echo on)
+ Password:ADEN BED WOLF HAW HOT STUN
+ Last login: Wed Jun 28 15:31:00 from halloran-eldar.l
+ [etc.]
+
+
+
+ This is the easiest mechanism if you have a trusted machine.
+ There is a Java S/Key key applet,
+ The Java OTP Calculator,
+ that you can download and run locally on any Java supporting brower.
+
+
+
+
+ Generating multiple one-time passwords
+
+ Sometimes we have to go places where no trusted machines or
+ connections are available. In this case, it is possible to use the
+ `key' command to generate a number of one-time passwords in the same
+ command; these can then be printed out. For example:
+
+
+
+ $ key -n 25 57 zz99999
+ Reminder - Do not use this program while logged in via telnet or rlogin.
+ Enter secret password:
+ 33: WALT THY MALI DARN NIT HEAD
+ 34: ASK RICE BEAU GINA DOUR STAG
+ [...]
+ 56: AMOS BOWL LUG FAT CAIN INCH
+ 57: GROW HAYS TUN DISH CAR BALM
+
+
+
+ The `' requests twenty-five keys in sequence; the `57' indicates
+ the ending iteration number; and the rest is as before. Note that
+ these are printed out in reverse order of eventual use. If you are
+ really paranoid, you might want to write the results down by hand;
+ otherwise you can cut-and-paste into `lpr'. Note that each line shows
+ both the iteration count and the one-time password; you may still find
+ it handy to scratch off passwords as you use them.
+
+
+
+
+ Restricting use of UNIX passwords
+
+ The configuration file /etc/skey.access can be used to
+ configure restrictions on the use of UNIX passwords based on the host
+ name, user name, terminal port, or IP address of a login session. The
+ complete format of the file is documented in the skey.access(5)
+ manual page; there are also some security cautions there which should
+ be read before depending on this file for security.
+
+ If there is no /etc/skey.access file (which is the default
+ state as FreeBSD is shipped), then all users will be allowed to use
+ UNIX passwords. If the file exists, however, then all users will be
+ required to use S/Key unless explicitly permitted to do otherwise by
+ configuration statements in the skey.access file. In all cases,
+ UNIX passwords are permitted on the console.
+
+ Here is a sample configuration file which illustrates the three most
+ common sorts of configuration statements:
+
+
+
+ permit internet 18.26.0.0 255.255.0.0
+ permit user jrl
+ permit port ttyd0
+
+
+
+ The first line (`permit internet') allows users whose IP source
+ address (which is vulnerable to spoofing) matches the specified value
+ and mask, to use UNIX passwords. This should not be considered a
+ security mechanism, but rather, a means to remind authorized users
+ that they are using an insecure network and need to use S/Key for
+ authentication.
+
+ The second line (`permit user') allows the specified user to
+ use UNIX passwords at any time. Generally speaking, this should only
+ be used for people who are either unable to use the `key'
+ program, like those with dumb terminals, or those who are uneducable.
+
+ The third line (`permit port') allows all users logging in on
+ the specified terminal line to use UNIX passwords; this would be used
+ for dial-ups.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Kerberos
+
+ Contributed by &a.markm; (based on contribution by &a.md;).
+
+ Kerberos is a network add-on system/protocol that allows users to
+ authenticate themselves through the services of a secure server.
+ Services such as remote login, remote copy, secure inter-system
+ file copying and other high-risk tasks are made considerably safer
+ and more controllable.
+
+ The following instructions can be used as a guide on how to
+ set up Kerberos as distributed for FreeBSD. However, you should refer
+ to the relevant manual pages for a complete description.
+
+ In FreeBSD, the Kerberos is not that from the original 4.4BSD-Lite,
+ distribution, but eBones, which had been previously ported to
+ FreeBSD 1.1.5.1, and was sourced from outside the USA/Canada,
+ and is thus available to system owners outside those countries.
+
+ For those needing to get a legal foreign distribution of this
+ software, please DO NOT get it from a USA or Canada site.
+ You will get that site in big trouble! A legal copy of this is
+ available from skeleton.mikom.csir.co.za, which is in South
+ Africa.
+
+
+
+ Creating the initial database
+
+ This is done on the Kerberos server only. First make sure that you
+ do not have any old Kerberos databases around. You should change to the
+ directory /etc/kerberosIV and check that only the following
+ files are present:
+
+
+
+ grunt# cd /etc/kerberosIV
+ grunt# ls
+ README krb.conf krb.realms
+
+
+
+ If any additional files (such as principal.* or
+ master_key) exist, then use the kdb_destroy
+ command to destroy the old Kerberos database, of if Kerberos
+ is not running, simply delete the extra files with rm.
+
+ You should now edit the krb.conf and krb.realms
+ files to define your Kerberos realm. In this case the realm will
+ be GRONDAR.ZA and the server is grunt.grondar.za.
+ We edit or create the krb.conf file:
+
+
+
+ grunt# cat krb.conf
+ GRONDAR.ZA
+ GRONDAR.ZA grunt.grondar.za admin server
+ CS.BERKELEY.EDU okeeffe.berkeley.edu
+ ATHENA.MIT.EDU kerberos.mit.edu
+ ATHENA.MIT.EDU kerberos-1.mit.edu
+ ATHENA.MIT.EDU kerberos-2.mit.edu
+ ATHENA.MIT.EDU kerberos-3.mit.edu
+ LCS.MIT.EDU kerberos.lcs.mit.edu
+ TELECOM.MIT.EDU bitsy.mit.edu
+ ARC.NASA.GOV trident.arc.nasa.gov
+
+
+
+ In this case, the other realms do not need to be there.
+ They are here as an example of how a machine may be made aware
+ of multiple realms. You may wish to not include them for simplicity.
+
+ The first line names the realm in which this system works. The other
+ lines contain realm/host entries. The first item on a line is a realm,
+ and the second is a host in that realm that is acting as a ``key
+ distribution centre''. The words ``admin server'' following a hosts
+ name means that host also provides an administrative database server.
+ For further explanation of these terms, please consult the Kerberos
+ man pages.
+
+ Now we have to add grunt.grondar.za to the GRONDAR.ZA
+ realm and also add an entry to put all hosts in the .grondar.za
+ domain in the GRONDAR.ZA realm. The krb.realms file
+ would be updated as follows:
+
+
+
+ grunt# cat krb.realms
+ grunt.grondar.za GRONDAR.ZA
+ .grondar.za GRONDAR.ZA
+ .berkeley.edu CS.BERKELEY.EDU
+ .MIT.EDU ATHENA.MIT.EDU
+ .mit.edu ATHENA.MIT.EDU
+
+
+
+ Again, the other realms do not need to be there.
+ They are here as an example of how a machine may be made aware
+ of multiple realms. You may wish to remove them to simplify things.
+
+ The first line puts the specific system into the named
+ realm. The rest of the lines show how to default systems of a
+ particular subdomain to a named realm.
+
+ Now we are ready to create the database. This only needs to run on
+ the Kerberos server (or Key Distribution Centre). Issue the
+ kdb_init command to do this:
+
+
+
+ grunt# kdb_init
+ Realm name [default ATHENA.MIT.EDU ]: GRONDAR.ZA
+ You will be prompted for the database Master Password.
+ It is important that you NOT FORGET this password.
+
+ Enter Kerberos master key:
+
+
+
+ Now we have to save the key so that servers on the local
+ machine can pick it up. Use the kstash command to
+ do this.
+
+
+
+ grunt# kstash
+
+ Enter Kerberos master key:
+
+ Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
+
+ Master key entered. BEWARE!
+
+
+
+ This saves the encrypted master password in
+ /etc/kerberosIV/master_key.
+
+
+
+
+ Making it all run
+
+ Two principals need to be added to the database for each
+ system that will be secured with Kerberos. Their names are
+ kpasswd and rcmd These two principals are
+ made for each system, with the instance being the name of the
+ individual system.
+
+ These daemons, kpasswd and rcmd allow other systems
+ to change Kerberos passwords and run commands like rcp,
+ rlogin and rsh.
+
+ Now let's add these entries:
+
+
+
+ grunt# kdb_edit
+ Opening database...
+
+ Enter Kerberos master key:
+
+ Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
+
+ Master key entered. BEWARE!
+ Previous or default values are in [brackets] ,
+ enter return to leave the same, or new value.
+
+ Principal name: passwd
+ Instance: grunt
+
+ <Not found>, Create [y] ? y
+
+ Principal: passwd, Instance: grunt, kdc_key_ver: 1
+ New Password: <---- enter RANDOM here
+ Verifying password
+
+ New Password: <---- enter RANDOM here
+
+ Random password [y] ? y
+
+ Principal's new key version = 1
+ Expiration date (enter yyyy-mm-dd) [ 2000-01-01 ] ?
+ Max ticket lifetime (*5 minutes) [ 255 ] ?
+ Attributes [ 0 ] ?
+ Edit O.K.
+ Principal name: rcmd
+ Instance: grunt
+
+ <Not found>, Create [y] ?
+
+ Principal: rcmd, Instance: grunt, kdc_key_ver: 1
+ New Password: <---- enter RANDOM here
+ Verifying password
+
+ New Password: <---- enter RANDOM here
+
+ Random password [y] ?
+
+ Principal's new key version = 1
+ Expiration date (enter yyyy-mm-dd) [ 2000-01-01 ] ?
+ Max ticket lifetime (*5 minutes) [ 255 ] ?
+ Attributes [ 0 ] ?
+ Edit O.K.
+ Principal name: <---- null entry here will cause an exit
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Creating the server file
+
+ We now have to extract all the instances which define the services
+ on each machine. For this we use the ext_srvtab command.
+ This will create a file which must be copied or moved by secure
+ means to each Kerberos client's /etc/kerberosIV directory. This
+ file must be present on each server and client, and is crucial to the
+ operation of Kerberos.
+
+
+
+ grunt# ext_srvtab grunt
+
+ Enter Kerberos master key:
+
+ Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
+
+ Master key entered. BEWARE!
+ Generating 'grunt-new-srvtab'....
+
+
+
+ Now, this command only generates a temporary file
+ which must be renamed to srvtab so that all the
+ server can pick it up. Use the mv command to move it
+ into place on the original system:
+
+
+
+ grunt# mv grunt-new-srvtab srvtab
+
+
+
+ If the file is for a client system, and the network is not
+ deemed safe, then copy the <client>-new-srvtab to
+ removable media and transport it by secure physical means. Be
+ sure to rename it to srvtab in the client's
+ /etc/kerberosIV directory, and make sure it is mode 600:
+
+
+
+ grumble# mv grumble-new-srvtab srvtab
+ grumble# chmod 600 srvtab
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Populating the database
+
+ We now have to add some user entries into the database.
+ First let's create an entry for the user jane. Use
+ the kdb_edit command to do this:
+
+
+
+ grunt# kdb_edit
+ Opening database...
+
+ Enter Kerberos master key:
+
+ Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
+
+ Master key entered. BEWARE!
+ Previous or default values are in [brackets] ,
+ enter return to leave the same, or new value.
+
+ Principal name: jane
+ Instance:
+
+ <Not found>, Create [y] ? y
+
+ Principal: jane, Instance: , kdc_key_ver: 1
+ New Password: <---- enter a secure password here
+ Verifying password
+
+ New Password: <---- re-enter the password here
+
+ Principal's new key version = 1
+ Expiration date (enter yyyy-mm-dd) [ 2000-01-01 ] ?
+ Max ticket lifetime (*5 minutes) [ 255 ] ?
+ Attributes [ 0 ] ?
+ Edit O.K.
+ Principal name: <---- null entry here will cause an exit
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Testing it all out
+
+ First we have to start the Kerberos daemons. NOTE that if you have
+ correctly edited your /etc/rc.conf then this will happen
+ automatically when you reboot. This is only necessary on the Kerberos
+ server. Kerberos clients will automagically get what they need from
+ the /etc/kerberosIV directory.
+
+
+
+ grunt# kerberos &
+ grunt# Kerberos server starting
+ Sleep forever on error
+ Log file is /var/log/kerberos.log
+ Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
+
+ Master key entered. BEWARE!
+
+ Current Kerberos master key version is 1
+ Local realm: GRONDAR.ZA
+ grunt# kadmind -n &
+ grunt# KADM Server KADM0.0A initializing
+ Please do not use 'kill -9' to kill this job, use a
+ regular kill instead
+
+ Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
+
+ Master key entered. BEWARE!
+
+
+
+ Now we can try using the kinit command to get a ticket for
+ the id jane that we created above:
+
+
+
+ grunt$ kinit jane
+ MIT Project Athena (grunt.grondar.za)
+ Kerberos Initialization for "jane"
+ Password:
+
+
+
+ Try listing the tokens using klist to see if we really have them:
+
+
+
+ grunt$ klist
+ Ticket file: /tmp/tkt245
+ Principal: jane@GRONDAR.ZA
+
+ Issued Expires Principal
+ Apr 30 11:23:22 Apr 30 19:23:22 krbtgt.GRONDAR.ZA@GRONDAR.ZA
+
+
+
+ Now try changing the password using passwd to check if the
+ kpasswd daemon can get authorization to the Kerberos database:
+
+
+
+ grunt$ passwd
+ realm GRONDAR.ZA
+ Old password for jane:
+ New Password for jane:
+ Verifying password
+ New Password for jane:
+ Password changed.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Adding su privileges
+
+ Kerberos allows us to give each user who needs root
+ privileges their own separatesupassword. We
+ could now add an id which is authorized to su to root.
+ This is controlled by having an instance of root associated
+ with a principal. Using kdb_edit we can create the entry
+ jane.root in the Kerberos database:
+
+
+
+ grunt# kdb_edit
+ Opening database...
+
+ Enter Kerberos master key:
+
+ Current Kerberos master key version is 1.
+
+ Master key entered. BEWARE!
+ Previous or default values are in [brackets] ,
+ enter return to leave the same, or new value.
+
+ Principal name: jane
+ Instance: root
+
+ <Not found>, Create [y] ? y
+
+ Principal: jane, Instance: root, kdc_key_ver: 1
+ New Password: <---- enter a SECURE password here
+ Verifying password
+
+ New Password: <---- re-enter the password here
+
+ Principal's new key version = 1
+ Expiration date (enter yyyy-mm-dd) [ 2000-01-01 ] ?
+ Max ticket lifetime (*5 minutes) [ 255 ] ? 12 <--- Keep this short!
+ Attributes [ 0 ] ?
+ Edit O.K.
+ Principal name: <---- null entry here will cause an exit
+
+
+
+ Now try getting tokens for it to make sure it works:
+
+
+
+ grunt# kinit jane.root
+ MIT Project Athena (grunt.grondar.za)
+ Kerberos Initialization for "jane.root"
+ Password:
+
+
+
+
+ Now we need to add the user to root's .klogin file:
+
+
+
+ grunt# cat /root/.klogin
+ jane.root@GRONDAR.ZA
+
+
+
+ Now try doing the su:
+
+
+
+ [jane@grunt 10407] su
+ Password:
+ grunt#
+
+
+
+
+ and take a look at what tokens we have:
+
+
+
+ grunt# klist
+ Ticket file: /tmp/tkt_root_245
+ Principal: jane.root@GRONDAR.ZA
+
+ Issued Expires Principal
+ May 2 20:43:12 May 3 04:43:12 krbtgt.GRONDAR.ZA@GRONDAR.ZA
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Using other commands
+
+ In an earlier example, we created a principal called jane
+ with an instance root. This was based on a user with the
+ same name as the principal, and this is a Kerberos default; that a
+ <principal>.<instance> of the form
+ <username>.root will allow that
+ <username> to su to root if the necessary
+ entries are in the .klogin file in root's home
+ directory:
+
+
+
+ grunt# cat /root/.klogin
+ jane.root@GRONDAR.ZA
+
+
+
+ Likewise, if a user has in their own home directory lines of the
+ form:
+
+
+
+ [jane@grunt 10543] cat ~/.klogin
+ jane@GRONDAR.ZA
+ jack@GRONDAR.ZA
+
+
+
+ This allows anyone in the GRONDAR.ZA realm who has
+ authenticated themselves to jane or jack (via
+ kinit, see above) access to rlogin to jane's
+ account or files on this system (grunt) via rlogin,
+ rsh or rcp.
+
+ For example, Jane now logs into another system, using Kerberos:
+
+
+
+ [jane@grumble 573] kinit
+ MIT Project Athena (grunt.grondar.za)
+ Password:
+ [jane@grumble 574] rlogin grunt
+ Last login: Mon May 1 21:14:47 from grumble
+ Copyright (c) 1980, 1983, 1986, 1988, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994
+ The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
+
+ FreeBSD BUILT-19950429 (GR386) #0: Sat Apr 29 17:50:09 SAT 1995
+
+ [jane@grunt 10567]
+
+
+
+ Or Jack logs into Jane's account on the same machine (Jane having set up
+ the .klogin file as above, and the person in charge of Kerberos
+ having set up principal jack with a null instance:
+
+
+
+ [jack@grumble 573] kinit
+ [jack@grumble 574] rlogin grunt -l jane
+ MIT Project Athena (grunt.grondar.za)
+ Password:
+ Last login: Mon May 1 21:16:55 from grumble
+ Copyright (c) 1980, 1983, 1986, 1988, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994
+ The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
+
+ FreeBSD BUILT-19950429 (GR386) #0: Sat Apr 29 17:50:09 SAT 1995
+
+ [jane@grunt 10578]
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Firewalls
+
+ Contributed by &a.gpalmer; and &a.alex;.
+
+ Firewalls are an area of increasing interest for people who are
+ connected to the Internet, and are even finding applications on
+ private networks to provide enhanced security. This section will
+ hopefully explain what firewalls are, how to use them, and how to use
+ the facilities provided in the FreeBSD kernel to implement them.
+
+
+
+ Note: People often think that having a firewall between
+ your companies internal network and the ``Big Bad Internet'' will
+ solve all your security problems. It may help, but a poorly setup
+ firewall system is more of a security risk than not having one at all.
+ A firewall can only add another layer of security to your systems, but
+ they will not be able to stop a really determined hacker from
+ penetrating your internal network. If you let internal security lapse
+ because you believe your firewall to be impenetrable, you have just
+ made the hackers job that bit easier.
+
+
+
+
+
+ What is a firewall?
+
+ There are currently two distinct types of firewalls in common
+ use on the Internet today. The first type is more properly called
+ a packet filtering router, where the kernel on a
+ multi-homed machine chooses whether to forward or block packets
+ based on a set of rules. The second type, known as proxy
+ servers, rely on daemons to provide authentication and to
+ forward packets, possibly on a multi-homed machine which has
+ kernel packet forwarding disabled.
+
+ Sometimes sites combine the two types of firewalls, so that only a
+ certain machine (known as a bastion host) is allowed to send
+ packets through a packet filtering router onto an internal
+ network. Proxy services are run on the bastion host, which are
+ generally more secure than normal authentication mechanisms.
+
+ FreeBSD comes with a kernel packet filter (known as IPFW),
+ which is what the rest of this section will concentrate on. Proxy
+ servers can be built on FreeBSD from third party software, but there
+ is such a variety of proxy servers available that it would be
+ impossible to cover them in this document.
+
+
+
+ Packet filtering routers
+
+ A router is a machine which forwards packets between two or more
+ networks. A packet filtering router has an extra piece of code in its
+ kernel, which compares each packet to a list of rules before deciding
+ if it should be forwarded or not. Most modern IP routing software has
+ packet filtering code in it, which defaults to forwarding all
+ packets. To enable the filters, you need to define a set of rules for
+ the filtering code, so that it can decide if the packet should be
+ allowed to pass or not.
+
+ To decide if a packet should be passed on or not, the code looks
+ through its set of rules for a rule which matches the contents of
+ this packets headers. Once a match is found, the rule action is
+ obeyed. The rule action could be to drop the packet, to forward the
+ packet, or even to send an ICMP message back to the originator. Only
+ the first match counts, as the rules are searched in order. Hence, the
+ list of rules can be referred to as a ``rule chain''.
+
+ The packet matching criteria varies depending on the software used,
+ but typically you can specify rules which depend on the source IP
+ address of the packet, the destination IP address, the source port
+ number, the destination port number (for protocols which support
+ ports), or even the packet type (UDP, TCP, ICMP, etc).
+
+
+
+
+ Proxy servers
+
+ Proxy servers are machines which have had the normal system daemons
+ (telnetd, ftpd, etc) replaced with special servers. These servers are
+ called proxy servers as they normally only allow onward
+ connections to be made. This enables you to run (for example) a proxy
+ telnet server on your firewall host, and people can telnet in to your
+ firewall from the outside, go through some authentication mechanism,
+ and then gain access to the internal network (alternatively, proxy
+ servers can be used for signals coming from the internal network and
+ heading out).
+
+ Proxy servers are normally more secure than normal servers, and
+ often have a wider variety of authentication mechanisms available,
+ including ``one-shot'' password systems so that even if someone
+ manages to discover what password you used, they will not be able to use
+ it to gain access to your systems as the password instantly
+ expires. As they do not actually give users access to the host machine,
+ it becomes a lot more difficult for someone to install backdoors
+ around your security system.
+
+ Proxy servers often have ways of restricting access further, so
+ that only certain hosts can gain access to the servers, and often they
+ can be set up so that you can limit which users can talk to which
+ destination machine. Again, what facilities are available depends
+ largely on what proxy software you choose.
+
+
+
+
+
+ What does IPFW allow me to do?
+
+ IPFW, the software supplied with FreeBSD, is a packet
+ filtering and accounting system which resides in the kernel, and has a
+ user-land control utility, ipfw(8). Together, they
+ allow you to define and query the rules currently used by the kernel
+ in its routing decisions.
+
+ There are two related parts to IPFW. The firewall section
+ allows you to perform packet filtering. There is also an IP accounting
+ section which allows you to track usage of your router, based on
+ similar rules to the firewall section. This allows you to see (for
+ example) how much traffic your router is getting from a certain
+ machine, or how much WWW (World Wide Web) traffic it is forwarding.
+
+ As a result of the way that IPFW is designed, you can use
+ IPFW on non-router machines to perform packet filtering on
+ incoming and outgoing connections. This is a special case of the more
+ general use of IPFW, and the same commands and techniques
+ should be used in this situation.
+
+
+
+
+ Enabling IPFW on FreeBSD
+
+ As the main part of the IPFW system lives in the kernel, you will
+ need to add one or more options to your kernel configuration
+ file, depending on what facilities you want, and recompile your kernel. See
+ for more
+ details on how to recompile your kernel.
+
+ There are currently three kernel configuration options
+ relevant to IPFW:
+
+
+
+ options IPFIREWALL
+
+ Compiles into the kernel the code for packet
+ filtering.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options IPFIREWALL_VERBOSE
+
+
+ Enables code to allow logging of
+ packets through syslogd(8). Without this option, even if you
+ specify that packets should be logged in the filter rules, nothing
+ will happen.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ options IPFIREWALL_VERBOSE_LIMIT=10
+
+
+ Limits the number of
+ packets logged through syslogd(8) on a per entry basis.
+ You may wish to use this option in hostile environments in which
+ you want to log firewall activity, but do not want to be open to
+ a denial of service attack via syslog flooding.
+
+
+
+ When a chain entry reaches the packet limit specified, logging
+ is turned off for that particular entry. To resume logging, you
+ will need to reset the associated counter using the ipfw(8)
+ utility:
+
+
+
+ ipfw zero 4500
+
+
+
+ Where 4500 is the chain entry you wish to continue logging.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Previous versions of FreeBSD contained an IPFIREWALL_ACCT
+ option. This is now obsolete as the firewall code automatically
+ includes accounting facilities.
+
+
+
+
+ Configuring IPFW
+
+ The configuration of the IPFW software is done through the
+ ipfw(8) utility. The syntax for this command looks
+ quite complicated, but it is relatively simple once you understand
+ its structure.
+
+ There are currently four different command categories used by the
+ utility: addition/deletion, listing, flushing, and clearing.
+ Addition/deletion is used to build the rules that control how packets
+ are accepted, rejected, and logged. Listing is used to examine the
+ contents of your rule set (otherwise known as the chain) and packet
+ counters (accounting). Flushing is used to remove all entries from
+ the chain. Clearing is used to zero out one or more accounting
+ entries.
+
+
+
+ Altering the IPFW rules
+
+ The syntax for this form of the command is:
+
+ ipfw [-N] command [index]
+ action [log] protocoladdresses
+ [options]
+
+
+
+ There is one valid flag when using this form of the command:
+
+
+
+ -N
+
+ Resolve addresses and service names in output.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The command given can be shortened to the shortest unique
+ form. The valid commands are:
+
+
+
+ add
+
+ Add an entry to the firewall/accounting rule list
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ delete
+
+
+ Delete an entry from the firewall/accounting rule list
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Previous versions of IPFW used separate firewall and
+ accounting entries. The present version provides packet accounting
+ with each firewall entry.
+
+ If an index value is supplied, it used to place the entry
+ at a specific point in the chain. Otherwise, the entry is placed at
+ the end of the chain at an index 100 greater than the last chain
+ entry (this does not include the default policy, rule 65535, deny).
+
+ The log option causes matching rules to be output to the
+ system console if the kernel was compiled with IPFIREWALL_VERBOSE.
+
+ Valid actions are:
+
+
+
+ reject
+
+ Drop the packet, and send an ICMP host or port
+ unreachable (as appropriate) packet to the source.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ allow
+
+
+ Pass the packet on as normal. (aliases: pass and
+ accept)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ deny
+
+
+ Drop the packet. The source is not notified via an ICMP
+ message (thus it appears that the packet never arrived at the
+ destination).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ count
+
+
+ Update packet counters but do not allow/deny the packet
+ based on this rule. The search continues with the next chain entry.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Each action will be recognized by the shortest unambiguous
+ prefix.
+
+ The protocols which can be specified are:
+
+
+
+ all
+
+ Matches any IP packet
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ icmp
+
+
+ Matches ICMP packets
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ tcp
+
+
+ Matches TCP packets
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ udp
+
+
+ Matches UDP packets
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The address specification is:
+
+ from <address/mask>[port] to
+ <address/mask>[port] [via <interface>]
+
+
+
+ You can only specify port in conjunction with
+ protocols which support ports (UDP and TCP).
+
+ The via is optional and may specify the IP address or
+ domain name of a local IP interface, or an interface name (e.g.
+ ed0) to match only packets coming through this interface.
+ Interface unit numbers can be specified with an optional wildcard.
+ For example, ppp* would match all kernel PPP interfaces.
+
+ The syntax used to specify an <address/mask> is:
+
+ <address>
+
+
+ or
+
+ <address>/mask-bits
+
+
+ or
+
+ <address>:mask-pattern
+
+
+
+ A valid hostname may be specified in place of the IP
+ address. mask-bits is a decimal number representing how many
+ bits in the address mask should be set. e.g. specifying
+
+ 192.216.222.1/24
+
+
+ will create a mask which will allow any address in a class C subnet
+ (in this case, 192.216.222) to be matched. mask-pattern is an IP
+ address which will be logically AND'ed with the address given. The
+ keyword any may be used to specify ``any IP address''.
+
+ The port numbers to be blocked are specified as:
+
+ port[,port[,port[...]]]
+
+
+ to specify either a single port or a list of ports, or
+
+ port-port
+
+
+ to specify a range of ports. You may also combine a single range with a
+ list, but the range must always be specified first.
+
+ The options available are:
+
+
+
+ frag
+
+ Matches if the packet is not the first fragment of the datagram.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ in
+
+
+ Matches if the packet is on the way in.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ out
+
+
+ Matches if the packet is on the way out.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ ipoptions spec
+
+
+ Matches if the IP header contains the
+ comma separated list of options specified in spec. The
+ supported list of IP options are: ssrr (strict source route),
+ lsrr (loose source route), rr (record packet route),
+ and ts (timestamp). The absence of a particular option may
+ be denoted with a leading '!'.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ established
+
+
+ Matches if the packet is part of an already established
+ TCP connection (i.e. it has the RST or ACK bits set). You can optimize
+ the performance of the firewall by placing established rules
+ early in the chain.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ setup
+
+
+ Matches if the packet is an attempt to establish a TCP connection
+ (the SYN bit set is set but the ACK bit is not).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ tcpflags flags
+
+
+ Matches if the TCP header contains
+ the comma separated list of flags. The supported flags
+ are fin, syn, rst, psh, ack,
+ and urg. The absence of a particular flag may be indicated
+ by a leading '!'.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ icmptypes types
+
+
+ Matches if the ICMP type is present in
+ the list types. The list may be specified as any combination
+ of ranges and/or individual types separated by commas. Commonly used
+ ICMP types are: 0 echo reply (ping reply), 5
+ redirect, 8 echo request (ping request), and 11
+ time exceeded (used to indicate TTL expiration as with
+ traceroute(8)).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Listing the IPFW rules
+
+ The syntax for this form of the command is:
+
+ ipfw [-atN] l
+
+
+
+ There are three valid flags when using this form of the command:
+
+
+
+ -a
+
+ While listing, show counter values. This option is the only
+ way to see accounting counters.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ -t
+
+
+ Display the last match times for each chain entry. The time
+ listing is incompatible with the input syntax used by the
+ ipfw(8) utility.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ -N
+
+
+ Attempt to resolve given addresses and service names.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Flushing the IPFW rules
+
+ The syntax for flushing the chain is:
+
+ ipfw flush
+
+
+
+ This causes all entries in the firewall chain to be removed except
+ the fixed default policy enforced by the kernel (index 65535). Use
+ caution when flushing rules, the default deny policy will leave your
+ system cut off from the network until allow entries are added to the
+ chain.
+
+
+
+
+ Clearing the IPFW packet counters
+
+ The syntax for clearing one or more packet counters is:
+
+ ipfw zero [index]
+
+
+
+ When used without an index argument, all packet counters
+ are cleared. If an index is supplied, the clearing operation
+ only affects a specific chain entry.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Example commands for ipfw
+
+ This command will deny all packets from the host
+ evil.hacker.org to the telnet port of the host
+ nice.people.org by being forwarded by the router:
+
+
+
+ ipfw add deny tcp from evil.hacker.org to nice.people.org 23
+
+
+
+ The next example denies and logs any TCP traffic from the entire
+ hacker.org network (a class C) to the nice.people.org
+ machine (any port).
+
+
+
+ ipfw add deny log tcp from evil.hacker.org/24 to nice.people.org
+
+
+
+ If you do not want people sending X sessions to your internal network
+ (a subnet of a class C), the following command will do the necessary
+ filtering:
+
+
+
+ ipfw add deny tcp from any to my.org/28 6000 setup
+
+
+
+ To see the accounting records:
+
+ ipfw -a list
+
+
+ or in the short form
+
+ ipfw -a l
+
+
+ You can also see the last time a chain entry was matched with
+
+ ipfw -at l
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Building a packet filtering firewall
+
+
+
+ Note: The following suggestions are just that:
+ suggestions. The requirements of each firewall are different and I
+ cannot tell you how to build a firewall to meet your particular
+ requirements.
+
+
+
+ When initially setting up your firewall, unless you have a test
+ bench setup where you can configure your firewall host in a controlled
+ environment, I strongly recommend you use the logging version of the
+ commands and enable logging in the kernel. This will allow you to
+ quickly identify problem areas and cure them without too much
+ disruption. Even after the initial setup phase is complete, I
+ recommend using the logging for of `deny' as it allows tracing of
+ possible attacks and also modification of the firewall rules if your
+ requirements alter.
+
+
+
+ Note: If you use the logging versions of the
+ accept command, it can generate large amounts
+ of log data as one log line will be generated for every packet
+ that passes through the firewall, so large ftp/http transfers,
+ etc, will really slow the system down. It also increases the
+ latencies on those packets as it requires more work to be done by
+ the kernel before the packet can be passed on. syslogd with also
+ start using up a lot more processor time as it logs all the extra
+ data to disk, and it could quite easily fill the partition
+ /var/log is located on.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Synchronous Serial Transmission
+
+ Synchronous serial transmission requires that the sender and
+ receiver share a clock with one another, or that the sender provide
+ a strobe or other timing signal so that the receiver knows when to
+ "read" the next bit of the data. In most forms of serial
+ Synchronous communication, if there is no data available at a given
+ instant to transmit, a fill character must be sent instead so that
+ data is always being transmitted. Synchronous communication is
+ usually more efficient because only data bits are transmitted
+ between sender and receiver, and synchronous communication can be
+ more more costly if extra wiring and circuits are required to
+ share a clock signal between the sender and receiver.
+
+ A form of Synchronous transmission is used with printers and
+ fixed disk devices in that the data is sent on one set of wires
+ while a clock or strobe is sent on a different wire. Printers and
+ fixed disk devices are not normally serial devices because most
+ fixed disk interface standards send an entire word of data for each
+ clock or strobe signal by using a separate wire for each bit of the
+ word. In the PC industry, these are known as Parallel devices.
+
+ The standard serial communications hardware in the PC does not
+ support Synchronous operations. This mode is described here for
+ comparison purposes only.
+
+
+
+
+ Asynchronous Serial Transmission
+
+ Asynchronous transmission allows data to be transmitted without
+ the sender having to send a clock signal to the receiver. Instead,
+ the sender and receiver must agree on timing parameters in advance
+ and special bits are added to each word which are used to
+ synchronize the sending and receiving units.
+
+ When a word is given to the UART for Asynchronous transmissions,
+ a bit called the "Start Bit" is added to the beginning of each word
+ that is to be transmitted. The Start Bit is used to alert the
+ receiver that a word of data is about to be sent, and to force the
+ clock in the receiver into synchronization with the clock in the
+ transmitter. These two clocks must be accurate enough to not
+ have the frequency drift by more than 10% during the transmission
+ of the remaining bits in the word. (This requirement was set in
+ the days of mechanical teleprinters and is easily met by modern
+ electronic equipment.)
+
+ After the Start Bit, the individual bits of the word of data are
+ sent, with the Least Significant Bit (LSB) being sent first. Each
+ bit in the transmission is transmitted for exactly the same
+ amount of time as all of the other bits, and the receiver "looks"
+ at the wire at approximately halfway through the period assigned
+ to each bit to determine if the bit is a "1" or a "0". For example,
+ if it takes two seconds to send each bit, the receiver will examine
+ the signal to determine if it is a "1" or a "0" after one second
+ has passed, then it will wait two seconds and then examine the value
+ of the next bit, and so on.
+
+ The sender does not know when the receiver has "looked" at the
+ value of the bit. The sender only knows when the clock says to
+ begin transmitting the next bit of the word.
+
+ When the entire data word has been sent, the transmitter may add
+ a Parity Bit that the transmitter generates. The Parity Bit may
+ be used by the receiver to perform simple error checking. Then at
+ least one Stop Bit is sent by the transmitter.
+
+ When the receiver has received all of the bits in the data word,
+ it may check for the Parity Bits (both sender and receiver must
+ agree on whether a Parity Bit is to be used), and then the receiver
+ looks for a Stop Bit. If the Stop Bit does not appear when it is
+ supposed to, the UART considers the entire word to be garbled and
+ will report a Framing Error to the host processor when the data
+ word is read. The usual cause of a Framing Error is that the sender
+ and receiver clocks were not running at the same speed, or that
+ the signal was interrupted.
+
+ Regardless of whether the data was received correctly or not, the
+ UART automatically discards the Start, Parity and Stop bits. If the
+ sender and receiver are configured identically, these bits are not
+ passed to the host.
+
+ If another word is ready for transmission, the Start Bit for the new
+ word can be sent as soon as the Stop Bit for the previous
+ word has been sent.
+
+ Because asynchronous data is "self synchronizing", if there is no
+ data to transmit, the transmission line can be idle.
+
+
+
+
+ Other UART Functions
+
+ In addition to the basic job of converting data from parallel to
+ serial for transmission and from serial to parallel on reception,
+ a UART will usually provide additional circuits for signals that
+ can be used to indicate the state of the transmission media, and
+ to regulate the flow of data in the event that the remote device
+ is not prepared to accept more data. For example, when the
+ device connected to the UART is a modem, the modem may report the
+ presence of a carrier on the phone line while the computer may be
+ able to instruct the modem to reset itself or to not take calls
+ by asserting or deasserting one more more of these extra signals.
+ The function of each of these additional signals is defined in
+ the EIA RS232-C standard.
+
+
+
+
+ The RS232-C and V.24 Standards
+
+ In most computer systems, the UART is connected to circuitry that
+ generates signals that comply with the EIA RS232-C specification.
+ There is also a CCITT standard named V.24 that mirrors the
+ specifications included in RS232-C.
+
+
+
+ RS232-C Bit Assignments (Marks and Spaces)
+
+ In RS232-C, a value of "1" is called a "Mark" and a value of "0"
+ is called a "Space". When a communication line is idle, the line
+ is said to be "Marking", or transmitting continuous "1" values.
+
+ The Start bit always has a value of "0" (a Space). The Stop Bit
+ always has a value of "1" (a Mark). This means that there will
+ always be a Mark (1) to Space (0) transition on the line at the
+ start of every word, even when multiple word are
+ transmitted back to back. This guarantees that sender and
+ receiver can resynchronize their clocks regardless of the content
+ of the data bits that are being transmitted.
+
+ The idle time between Stop and Start bits does not have
+ to be an exact multiple (including zero) of the bit rate of the
+ communication link, but most UARTs are designed this way for
+ simplicity.
+
+ In RS232-C, the "Marking" signal (a "1") is represented by a voltage
+ between -2 VDC and -12 VDC, and a "Spacing" signal (a "0") is
+ represented by a voltage between 0 and +12 VDC. The transmitter
+ is supposed to send +12 VDC or -12 VDC, and the receiver is supposed
+ to allow for some voltage loss in long cables. Some transmitters
+ in low power devices (like portable computers) sometimes use only
+ +5 VDC and -5 VDC, but these values are still acceptable to a
+ RS232-C receiver, provided that the cable lengths are short.
+
+
+
+
+ RS232-C Break Signal
+
+ RS232-C also specifies a signal called a "Break", which is caused
+ by sending continuous Spacing values (no Start or Stop bits). When
+ there is no electricity present on the data circuit, the line is
+ considered to be sending "Break".
+
+ The "Break" signal must be of a duration longer than the time
+ it takes to send a complete byte plus Start, Stop and Parity bits.
+ Most UARTs can distinguish between a Framing Error and a
+ Break, but if the UART cannot do this, the Framing Error detection
+ can be used to identify Breaks.
+
+ In the days of teleprinters, when numerous printers around the
+ country were wired in series (such as news services), any unit
+ could cause a "Break" by temporarily opening the entire circuit
+ so that no current flowed. This was used to allow a location with
+ urgent news to interrupt some other location that was currently
+ sending information.
+
+ In modern systems there are two types of Break signals. If the
+ Break is longer than 1.6 seconds, it is considered a "Modem Break",
+ and some modems can be programmed to terminate the conversation and
+ go on-hook or enter the modems' command mode when the modem detects
+ this signal. If the Break is smaller than 1.6 seconds, it signifies
+ a Data Break and it is up to the remote computer to respond to
+ this signal. Sometimes this form of Break is used as an Attention
+ or Interrupt signal and sometimes is accepted as a substitute for
+ the ASCII CONTROL-C character.
+
+ Marks and Spaces are also equivalent to "Holes" and "No Holes"
+ in paper tape systems.
+
+ Note that Breaks cannot be generated from paper tape or from any
+ other byte value, since bytes are always sent with Start and Stop
+ bit. The UART is usually capable of generating the continuous
+ Spacing signal in response to a special command from the host
+ processor.
+
+
+
+
+ RS232-C DTE and DCE Devices
+
+ The RS232-C specification defines two types of equipment: the Data
+ Terminal Equipment (DTE) and the Data Carrier Equipment (DCE).
+ Usually, the DTE device is the terminal (or computer), and the DCE
+ is a modem. Across the phone line at the other end of a
+ conversation, the receiving modem is also a DCE device and the
+ computer that is connected to that modem is a DTE device. The DCE
+ device receives signals on the pins that the DTE device transmits on,
+ and vice versa.
+
+ When two devices that are both DTE or both DCE must be connected
+ together without a modem or a similar media translater between them,
+ a NULL modem must be used. The NULL modem electrically re-arranges
+ the cabling so that the transmitter output is connected to the
+ receiver input on the other device, and vice versa. Similar
+ translations are performed on all of the control signals so that
+ each device will see what it thinks are DCE (or DTE) signals from
+ the other device.
+
+ The number of signals generated by the DTE and DCE devices are
+ not symmetrical. The DTE device generates fewer signals for
+ the DCE device than the DTE device receives from the DCE.
+
+
+
+
+ RS232-C Pin Assignments
+
+ The EIA RS232-C specification (and the ITU equivalent, V.24) calls
+ for a twenty-five pin connector (usually a DB25) and defines the
+ purpose of most of the pins in that connector.
+
+ In the IBM Personal Computer and similar systems, a subset of
+ RS232-C signals are provided via nine pin connectors (DB9).
+ The signals that are not included on the PC connector deal mainly
+ with synchronous operation, and this transmission mode is not
+ supported by the UART that IBM selected for use in the IBM PC.
+
+ Depending on the computer manufacturer, a DB25, a DB9, or
+ both types of connector may be used for RS232-C communications.
+ (The IBM PC also uses a DB25 connector for the parallel printer
+ interface which causes some confusion.)
+
+ Below is a table of the RS232-C signal assignments in the DB25
+ and DB9 connectors.
+
+
+ DB25 DB9 EIA CCITT Common Signal Description
+ RS232-C IBM PC Circuit Circuit Name Source
+ Pin Pin Symbol Symbol
+
+ 1 - AA 101 PG/FG --- Frame/Protective Ground
+ 2 3 BA 103 TD DTE Transmit Data
+ 3 2 BB 104 RD DCE Receive Data
+ 4 7 CA 105 RTS DTE Request to Send
+ 5 8 CB 106 CTS DCE Clear to Send
+ 6 6 CC 107 DSR DCE Data Set Ready
+ 7 5 AV 102 SG/GND --- Signal Ground
+ 8 1 CF 109 DCD/CD DCE Data Carrier Detect
+ 9 - - - - - Reserved for Test
+ 10 - - - - - Reserved for Test
+ 11 - - - - - Unassigned
+ 12 - CI 122 SRLSD DCE Sec. Recv. Line Signal Detector
+ 13 - SCB 121 SCTS DCE Secondary Clear To Send
+ 14 - SBA 118 STD DTE Secondary Transmit Data
+ 15 - DB 114 TSET DCE Trans. Sig. Element Timing
+ 16 - SBB 119 SRD DCE Secondary Received Data
+ 17 - DD 115 RSET DCE Receiver Signal Element Timing
+ 18 - - 141 LOOP DTE Local Loopback
+ 19 - SCA 120 SRS DTE Secondary Request to Send
+ 20 4 CD 108.2 DTR DTE Data Terminal Ready
+ 21 - - - RDL DTE Remote Digital Loopback
+ 22 9 CE 125 RI DCE Ring Indicator
+ 23 - CH 111 DSRS DTE Data Signal Rate Selector
+ 24 - DA 113 TSET DTE Trans. Sig. Element Timing
+ 25 - - 142 - DCE Test Mode
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Bits, Baud and Symbols
+
+ Baud is a measurement of transmission speed in asynchronous
+ communication. Because of advances in modem communication
+ technology, this term is frequently misused when describing
+ the data rates in newer devices.
+
+ Traditionally, a Baud Rate represents the number of bits that are
+ actually being sent over the media, not the amount of data
+ that is actually moved from one DTE device to the other. The
+ Baud count includes the overhead bits Start, Stop and Parity
+ that are generated by the sending UART and removed by the
+ receiving UART. This means that seven-bit words of data
+ actually take 10 bits to be completely transmitted.
+ Therefore, a modem capable of moving 300 bits per second from one
+ place to another can normally only move 30 7-bit words if
+ Parity is used and one Start and Stop bit are present.
+
+ If 8-bit data words are used and Parity bits are also used, the
+ data rate falls to 27.27 words per second, because it now
+ takes 11 bits to send the eight-bit words, and the modem still
+ only sends 300 bits per second.
+
+ The formula for converting bytes per second into a baud rate
+ and vice versa was simple until error-correcting modems
+ came along. These modems receive the serial stream of bits
+ from the UART in the host computer (even when internal modems
+ are used the data is still frequently serialized) and converts
+ the bits back into bytes. These bytes are then combined into
+ packets and sent over the phone line using a Synchronous
+ transmission method. This means that the Stop, Start, and Parity
+ bits added by the UART in the DTE (the computer) were removed by
+ the modem before transmission by the sending modem. When these
+ bytes are received by the remote modem, the remote modem adds
+ Start, Stop and Parity bits to the words, converts them to a
+ serial format and then sends them to the receiving UART in the remote
+ computer, who then strips the Start, Stop and Parity bits.
+
+ The reason all these extra conversions are done is so that the
+ two modems can perform error correction, which means that the
+ receiving modem is able to ask the sending modem to resend a
+ block of data that was not received with the correct checksum.
+ This checking is handled by the modems, and the DTE devices are
+ usually unaware that the process is occurring.
+
+ By striping the Start, Stop and Parity bits, the additional bits of
+ data that the two modems must share between themselves to perform
+ error-correction are mostly concealed from the effective
+ transmission rate seen by the sending and receiving DTE equipment.
+ For example, if a modem sends ten 7-bit words to another modem
+ without including the Start, Stop and Parity bits, the sending
+ modem will be able to add 30 bits of its own information that
+ the receiving modem can use to do error-correction without
+ impacting the transmission speed of the real data.
+
+ The use of the term Baud is further confused by modems that perform
+ compression. A single 8-bit word passed over the telephone
+ line might represent a dozen words that were transmitted to
+ the sending modem. The receiving modem will expand the data back
+ to its original content and pass that data to the receiving DTE.
+
+ Modern modems also include buffers that allow the rate that
+ bits move across the phone line (DCE to DCE) to be a different speed
+ than the speed that the bits move between the DTE and DCE on both
+ ends of the conversation. Normally the speed between the DTE and
+ DCE is higher than the DCE to DCE speed because of the use of
+ compression by the modems.
+
+ Because the number of bits needed to describe a byte varied
+ during the trip between the two machines plus the differing
+ bits-per-seconds speeds that are used present on the DTE-DCE and
+ DCE-DCE links, the usage of the term Baud to describe the
+ overall communication speed causes problems and can misrepresent
+ the true transmission speed. So Bits Per Second (bps) is the correct
+ term to use to describe the transmission rate seen at the
+ DCE to DCE interface and Baud or Bits Per Second are acceptable
+ terms to use when a connection is made between two systems with a
+ wired connection, or if a modem is in use that is not performing
+ error-correction or compression.
+
+ Modern high speed modems (2400, 9600, 14,400, and 19,200bps) in
+ reality still operate at or below 2400 baud, or more accurately,
+ 2400 Symbols per second. High speed modem are able to encode more
+ bits of data into each Symbol using a technique called Constellation
+ Stuffing, which is why the effective bits per second rate of the
+ modem is higher, but the modem continues to operate within the
+ limited audio bandwidth that the telephone system provides.
+ Modems operating at 28,800 and higher speeds have variable Symbol
+ rates, but the technique is the same.
+
+
+
+
+ The IBM Personal Computer UART
+
+ Starting with the original IBM Personal Computer, IBM selected
+ the National Semiconductor INS8250 UART for use in the IBM PC
+ Parallel/Serial Adapter. Subsequent generations of compatible
+ computers from IBM and other vendors continued to use the INS8250
+ or improved versions of the National Semiconductor UART family.
+
+
+
+ National Semiconductor UART Family Tree
+
+ There have been several versions and subsequent generations of
+ the INS8250 UART. Each major version is described below.
+
+
+ INS8250 -> INS8250B
+ \
+ \
+ \-> INS8250A -> INS82C50A
+ \
+ \
+ \-> NS16450 -> NS16C450
+ \
+ \
+ \-> NS16550 -> NS16550A -> PC16550D
+
+
+
+
+ INS8250
+
+ This part was used in the original IBM PC and
+ IBM PC/XT. The original name for this part was the INS8250 ACE
+ (Asynchronous Communications Element) and it is made from NMOS
+ technology.
+
+ The 8250 uses eight I/O ports and has a one-byte send and
+ a one-byte receive buffer. This original UART has several
+ race conditions and other flaws. The original IBM BIOS
+ includes code to work around these flaws, but this made
+ the BIOS dependent on the flaws being present, so subsequent
+ parts like the 8250A, 16450 or 16550 could not be used in
+ the original IBM PC or IBM PC/XT.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ INS8250-B
+
+
+ This is the slower speed of the INS8250 made
+ from NMOS technology. It contains the same problems as the original
+ INS8250.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ INS8250A
+
+
+ An improved version of the INS8250 using XMOS
+ technology with various functional flaws corrected. The INS8250A
+ was used initially in PC clone computers by vendors who used
+ "clean" BIOS designs. Because of the corrections in the chip, this
+ part could not be used with a BIOS compatible with the INS8250
+ or INS8250B.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ INS82C50A
+
+
+ This is a CMOS version (low power consumption)
+ of the INS8250A and has similar functional characteristics.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ NS16450
+
+
+ Same as NS8250A with improvements so it can be
+ used with faster CPU bus designs. IBM used this part in the IBM AT
+ and updated the IBM BIOS to no longer rely on the bugs in the
+ INS8250.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ NS16C450
+
+
+ This is a CMOS version (low power consumption)
+ of the NS16450.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ NS16550
+
+
+ Same as NS16450 with a 16-byte send and receive
+ buffer but the buffer design was flawed and could not be reliably
+ be used.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ NS16550A
+
+
+ Same as NS16550 with the buffer flaws corrected.
+ The 16550A and its successors have become the most popular UART
+ design in the PC industry, mainly due it its ability to reliably
+ handle higher data rates on operating systems with sluggish interrupt
+ response times.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ NS16C552
+
+
+ This component consists of two NS16C550A CMOS
+ UARTs in a single package.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ PC16550D
+
+
+ Same as NS16550A with subtle flaws corrected. This
+ is revision D of the 16550 family and is the latest design available
+ from National Semiconductor.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The NS16550AF and the PC16550D are the same thing
+
+ National reorganized their part numbering system a few years ago,
+ and the NS16550AFN no longer exists by that name. (If you
+ have a NS16550AFN, look at the date code on the part, which is a
+ four digit number that usually starts with a nine. The first two
+ digits of the number are the year, and the last two digits are the
+ week in that year when the part was packaged. If you have a
+ NS16550AFN, it is probably a few years old.)
+
+ The new numbers are like PC16550DV, with minor differences in the
+ suffix letters depending on the package material and its shape.
+ (A description of the numbering system can be found below.)
+
+ It is important to understand that in some stores, you may pay
+ $15(US) for a NS16550AFN made in 1990 and in the next bin are the
+ new PC16550DN parts with minor fixes that National has made since the
+ AFN part was in production, the PC16550DN was probably made in the
+ past six months and it costs half (as low as $5(US) in volume) as
+ much as the NS16550AFN because they are readily available.
+
+ As the supply of NS16550AFN chips continues to shrink, the price will
+ probably continue to increase until more people discover and accept
+ that the PC16550DN really has the same function as the old part
+ number.
+
+
+
+
+ National Semiconductor Part Numbering System
+
+ The older NSnnnnnrqp part numbers are now of the
+ format PCnnnnnrgp.
+
+ The "r" is the revision field. The current revision of
+ the 16550 from National Semiconductor is "D".
+
+ The "p" is the package-type field. The types are:
+ "F" QFP (quad flat pack) L lead type
+ "N" DIP (dual inline package) through hole straight lead type
+ "V" LPCC (lead plastic chip carrier) J lead type
+
+
+ The "g" is the product grade field. If an "I" precedes
+ the package-type letter, it indicates an "industrial" grade part,
+ which has higher specs than a standard part but not as high as
+ Military Specification (Milspec) component. This is an optional field.
+
+ So what we used to call a NS16550AFN (DIP Package) is now called a
+ PC16550DN or PC16550DIN.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Other Vendors and Similar UARTs
+
+ Over the years, the 8250, 8250A, 16450 and 16550 have been licensed
+ or copied by other chip vendors. In the case of the 8250, 8250A
+ and 16450, the exact circuit (the "megacell") was licensed to many
+ vendors, including Western Digital and Intel. Other vendors
+ reverse-engineered the part or produced emulations that had similar
+ behavior.
+
+ In internal modems, the modem designer will frequently emulate the
+ 8250A/16450 with the modem microprocessor, and the emulated UART will
+ frequently have a hidden buffer consisting of several hundred bytes.
+ Because of the size of the buffer, these emulations can be as
+ reliable as a 16550A in their ability to handle high speed data.
+ However, most operating systems will still report that
+ the UART is only a 8250A or 16450, and may not make effective use
+ of the extra buffering present in the emulated UART unless special
+ drivers are used.
+
+ Some modem makers are driven by market forces to abandon a design
+ that has hundreds of bytes of buffer and instead use a 16550A UART
+ so that the product will compare favorably in market comparisons
+ even though the effective performance may be lowered by this action.
+
+ A common misconception is that all parts with "16550A" written on
+ them are identical in performance. There are differences, and in
+ some cases, outright flaws in most of these 16550A clones.
+
+ When the NS16550 was developed, the National Semiconductor obtained
+ several patents on the design and they also limited licensing, making
+ it harder for other vendors to provide a chip with similar features.
+ Because of the patents, reverse-engineered designs and emulations
+ had to avoid infringing the claims covered by the patents.
+ Subsequently, these copies almost never perform exactly the same as
+ the NS16550A or PC16550D, which are the parts most computer and
+ modem makers want to buy but are sometimes unwilling to pay the
+ price required to get the genuine part.
+
+ Some of the differences in the clone 16550A parts are unimportant,
+ while others can prevent the device from being used at all with a
+ given operating system or driver. These differences may show up
+ when using other drivers, or when particular combinations of events
+ occur that were not well tested or considered in the Windows driver.
+ This is because most modem vendors and 16550-clone makers use the
+ Microsoft drivers from Windows for Workgroups 3.11 and the Microsoft
+ MSD utility as the primary tests for compatibility with the
+ NS16550A. This over-simplistic criteria means that if a different
+ operating system is used, problems could appear due to subtle
+ differences between the clones and genuine components.
+
+ National Semiconductor has made available a program named COMTEST
+ that performs compatibility tests independent of any OS drivers.
+ It should be remembered that the purpose of this type of program is
+ to demonstrate the flaws in the products of the competition, so the
+ program will report major as well as extremely subtle differences in
+ behavior in the part being tested.
+
+ In a series of tests performed by the author of this document in
+ 1994, components made by National Semiconductor, TI, StarTech, and
+ CMD as well as megacells and emulations embedded in internal modems
+ were tested with COMTEST. A difference count for some of these
+ components is listed below. Because these tests were performed in
+ 1994, they may not reflect the current performance of the given
+ product from a vendor.
+
+ It should be noted that COMTEST normally aborts when an excessive
+ number or certain types of problems have been detected. As part of
+ this testing, COMTEST was modified so that it would not abort no
+ matter how many differences were encountered.
+
+
+ Vendor Part number Errors aka "differences" reported
+ National (PC16550DV) 0 *
+
+ National (NS16550AFN) 0
+
+ National (NS16C552V) 0 *
+
+ TI (TL16550AFN) 3
+
+ CMD (16C550PE) 19
+
+ StarTech (ST16C550J) 23
+
+ Rockwell reference modem
+ with internal 16550 or an
+ emulation (RC144DPi/C3000-25) 117
+
+ Sierra modem with an internal
+ 16550 (SC11951/SC11351) 91
+
+
+ It is important to understand that a simple count of differences
+ from COMTEST does not reveal a lot about what differences are
+ important and which are not. For example, about half of the
+ differences reported in the two modems listed above that have
+ internal UARTs were caused by the clone UARTs not supporting
+ five- and six-bit character modes. The real 16550, 16450, and
+ 8250 UARTs all support these modes and COMTEST checks the
+ functionality of these modes so over fifty differences are
+ reported. However, almost no modern modem supports five- or
+ six-bit characters, particularly those with error-correction
+ and compression capabilities. This means that the differences
+ related to five- and six-bit character modes can be discounted.
+
+ Many of the differences COMTEST reports have to do with timing. In
+ many of the clone designs, when the host reads from one port, the
+ status bits in some other port may not update in the same amount
+ of time (some faster, some slower) as a real NS16550AFN
+ and COMTEST looks for these differences. This means that the number
+ of differences can be misleading in that one device may only have
+ one or two differences but they are extremely serious, and some
+ other device that updates the status registers faster or slower
+ than the reference part (that would probably never affect the
+ operation of a properly written driver) could have dozens of
+ differences reported.
+
+ * To date, the author of this document has not found any non-National
+ parts that report zero differences using the COMTEST program. It
+ should also be noted that National has had five versions of the
+ 16550 over the years and the newest parts behave a bit differently
+ than the classic NS16550AFN that is considered the benchmark for
+ functionality. COMTEST appears to turn a blind eye to the
+ differences within the National product line and reports no errors
+ on the National parts (except for the original 16550) even when
+ there are official erratas that describe bugs in the A, B and C
+ revisions of the parts, so this bias in COMTEST must be taken into
+ account.
+
+ COMTEST can be used as a screening tool to alert the administrator
+ to the presence of potentially incompatible components
+ that might cause problems or have to be handled as a special case.
+
+ If you run COMTEST on a 16550 that is in a modem or a modem is
+ attached to the serial port, you need to first issue a ATE0&W
+ command to the modem so that the modem will not echo any of the test
+ characters. If you forget to do this, COMTEST will report at least
+ this one difference:
+
+ This is a user process PPP software package. Normally, PPP is
+ implemented as a part of the kernel (e.g. as managed by pppd) and
+ it is thus somewhat hard to debug and/or modify its behavior. However,
+ in this implementation PPP is done as a user process with the help of
+ the tunnel device driver (tun).
+
+
+
+ In essence, this means that rather than running a PPP daemon, the ppp
+ program can be run as and when desired. No PPP interface needs to be
+ compiled into the kernel, as the program can use the generic tunnel
+ device to get data into and out of the kernel.
+
+ From here on out, user ppp will be referred to simply as ppp unless a
+ distinction needs to be made between it and any other PPP client/server
+ software such as pppd. Unless otherwise stated, all commands in this
+ section should be executed as root.
+
+
+
+ Before you start
+
+ This document assumes you are in roughly this position:
+
+ You have an account with an Internet Service Provider (ISP) which lets you
+ use PPP. Further, you have a modem (or other device) connected and
+ configured correctly which allows you to connect to your ISP.
+
+ You are going to need the following information to hand:
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Your ISPs phone number(s).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Your login name and password. This can be either a regular
+ unix style login/password pair, or a PPP PAP or CHAP
+ login/password pair.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The IP address of your ISP's gateway. The gateway is the
+ machine to which you will connect and will
+ be set up as your default route. If your ISP hasn't
+ given you this number, don't worry. We can make one up and
+ your ISP's PPP server will tell us when we connect.
+
+ This number is known from now on as HISADDR.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Your ISP's netmask setting. Again, if your ISP hasn't given
+ you this information, you can safely use a netmask of
+ 255.255.255.0.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The IP addresses of one or more nameservers. Normally, you
+ will be given two IP numbers. You MUST have this
+ information unless you run your own nameserver.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ If your ISP allocates you a static IP address and hostname
+ then you will need this information too. If not, you will need
+ to know from what range of IP addresses your allocated IP address
+ will belong. If you haven't been given this range, don't worry.
+ You can configure PPP to accept any IP number (as explained later).
+
+
+
+
+
+ If you do not have any of the required information, contact your ISP
+ and make sure they provide it to you.
+
+
+
+
+ Building a ppp ready kernel
+
+ As the description states, ``ppp'' uses the kernel ``tun'' device.
+ It is necessary to make sure that your kernel has support for this
+ device compiled in.
+
+ To check this, go to your kernel compile directory (/sys/i386/conf
+ or /sys/pc98/conf) and examine your kernel configuration file.
+ It needs to have the line
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device tun 1
+
+
+
+ in it somewhere. The stock GENERIC kernel has this as standard, so
+ if you have not installed a custom kernel or you do not have a /sys
+ directory, you do not have to change anything.
+
+ If your kernel configuration file does not have this line in it, or
+ you need to configure more than one tun device (for example, if
+ you are setting up a server and could have 16 dialup ppp connections
+ at any one time then you will need to use ``16'' instead of ``1''),
+ then you should add the line, re-compile, re-install and boot the new
+ kernel. Please refer to the
+
+ section for more information on kernel configuration.
+
+ You can check how many tunnel devices your current kernel has by
+ typing the following:
+
+
+
+ # ifconfig -a
+ tun0: flags=8051<UP,POINTOPOINT,RUNNING,MULTICAST> mtu 1500
+ inet 200.10.100.1 --> 203.10.100.24 netmask 0xffffffff
+ tun1: flags=8050<POINTOPOINT,RUNNING,MULTICAST> mtu 576
+ tun2: flags=8051<UP,POINTOPOINT,RUNNING,MULTICAST> mtu 1500
+ inet 203.10.100.1 --> 203.10.100.20 netmask 0xffffffff
+ tun3: flags=8050<POINTOPOINT,RUNNING,MULTICAST> mtu 1500
+
+
+
+ which in this case shows four tunnel devices, two of which are
+ currently configured and being used.
+
+ If you have a kernel without the tun device, and you can not
+ rebuild it for some reason, all is not lost. You should be
+ able to dynamically load the code. Refer to the appropriate
+ modload(8) and lkm(4) pages for further details.
+
+ You may also wish to take this opportunity to configure a firewall.
+ Details can be found in the
+ section.
+
+
+
+
+ Check the tun device
+
+ Most users will only require one ``tun'' device (tun0). If you have
+ used more (i.e., a number other than `1' in the pseudo-device line
+ in the kernel configuration file) then alter all references to ``tun0''
+ below to reflect whichever device number you are using.
+
+ The easiest way to make sure that the tun0 device is configured correctly
+ is to re-make it. To do this, execute the following commands:
+
+
+
+ # cd /dev
+ # ./MAKEDEV tun0
+
+
+
+ If you require 16 tunnel devices in your kernel, you will need to
+ create more than just tun0:
+
+
+
+ # cd /dev
+ # ./MAKEDEV tun15
+
+
+
+ Also, to confirm that the kernel is configured correctly,
+ the following command should give the indicated output:
+
+
+
+ $ ifconfig tun0
+ tun0: flags=8050<POINTOPOINT,RUNNING,MULTICAST> mtu 1500
+ $
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Name Resolution Configuration
+
+ The resolver is the part of the system that turns IP addresses
+ into hostnames and vice versa. It can be configured to look for
+ maps that describe IP to hostname mappings in one of two places.
+ The first is a file called /etc/hosts (man 5 hosts).
+ The second is the Internet Domain Name Service (DNS), a distributed
+ data base, the discussion of which is beyond the scope of this document.
+
+ This section describes briefly how to configure your resolver.
+
+ The resolver is a set of system calls that do the name mappings, but
+ you have to tell them where to find their information. You do
+ this by first editing the file /etc/host.conf. Do
+ not call this file /etc/hosts.conf (note the extra
+ ``s'') as the results can be confusing.
+
+
+
+ Edit the /etc/host.conf file
+
+ This file should contain the following two lines:
+
+
+
+ hosts
+ bind
+
+
+ which instructs the resolver to first look in the file
+ /etc/hosts, and then to consult the DNS if the
+ name was not found.
+
+
+
+
+ Edit the /etc/hosts(5) file
+
+ This file should contain the IP addresses and names of machines on your
+ network. At a bare minimum it should contain entries for the machine
+ which will be running ppp. Assuming that your machine is called
+ foo.bar.com with the IP address 10.0.0.1, /etc/hosts should
+ contain:
+
+
+
+ 127.0.0.1 localhost
+ 10.0.0.1 foo.bar.com foo
+
+
+
+ The first line defines the alias ``localhost'' as a synonym for the
+ current machine. Regardless of your own IP address, the IP address for
+ this line should always be 127.0.0.1. The second line maps the name
+ ``foo.bar.com'' (and the shorthand ``foo'') to the IP address 10.0.0.1.
+
+ If your provider allocates you a static IP address and name, then use
+ these in place of the 10.0.0.1 entry.
+
+
+
+
+ Edit the /etc/resolv.conf file
+
+ /etc/resolv.conf tells the resolver how to behave. If you are
+ running your own DNS, you may leave this file empty. Normally, you will
+ need to enter the following line(s):
+
+
+
+ nameserver x.x.x.x
+ nameserver y.y.y.y
+ domain bar.com
+
+
+
+ The x.x.x.x and y.y.y.y addresses are those given
+ to you by your ISP. Add as many ``nameserver'' lines as your ISP
+ provides. The ``domain'' line defaults to your hostname's domain, and
+ is probably unnecessary. Refer to the resolv.conf manual page for details
+ of other possible entries in this file.
+
+
+
+
+
+ PPP Configuration
+
+ Both user ppp and pppd (the kernel level implementation of PPP)
+ use configuration files located in the /etc/ppp directory.
+ The sample configuration files provided are a good reference for
+ user ppp, so don't delete them.
+
+ Configuring ppp requires that you edit a number of files, depending
+ on your requirements. What you put in them depends to some extent
+ on whether your ISP allocates IP addresses statically (i.e., you get
+ given one IP address, and always use that one) or dynamically (i.e.,
+ your IP address can be different for each PPP session).
+
+
+
+ PPP and Static IP addresses
+
+
+ You will need to create a configuration file called
+ /etc/ppp/ppp.conf. It should look similar to the example
+ below. Note that lines that end in a ``:'' start in the first column,
+ all other lines should be indented as shown using spaces or tabs.
+
+
+
+ 1 default:
+ 2 set device /dev/cuaa0
+ 3 set speed 115200
+ 4 set dial "ABORT BUSY ABORT NO\\sCARRIER TIMEOUT 5 \"\" ATE1Q0 OK-AT-OK
+ \\dATDT\\T TIMEOUT 40 CONNECT"
+ 5 provider:
+ 6 set phone "(0123) 456 7890"
+ 7 set login "TIMEOUT 10 gin:-BREAK-gin: foo word: bar col: ppp"
+ 8 set timeout 300
+ 9 deny lqr
+ 10 set ifaddr x.x.x.x y.y.y.y
+ 11 delete ALL
+ 12 add 0 0 HISADDR
+
+
+ Do not include the line numbers, they are just for reference in
+ this discussion.
+
+
+
+ Line 1:
+
+ Identifies the default entry. Commands in this entry are
+ executed automatically when ppp is run.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 2:
+
+
+ Identifies the device to which the modem is connected.
+ COM1: is /dev/cuaa0 and COM2: is /dev/cuaa1.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 3:
+
+
+ Sets the speed you want to connect at. If 115200 doesn't
+ work (it should with any reasonably new modem), try 38400
+ instead.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 4:
+
+
+ The dial string. User ppp uses an expect-send syntax similar
+ to the chat(8) program. Refer to the manual page
+ for information on the features of this language.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 5:
+
+
+ Identifies an entry for a provider called ``provider''.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 6:
+
+
+ Sets the phone number for this provider. Multiple phone
+ numbers may be specified using the ``:'' or ``|'' character as
+ a separator. The difference between these spearators is
+ described in the ppp manual page. To summarize, if you want
+ to rotate through the numbers, use the ``:''. If you want to
+ always attempt to dial the first number first and only use
+ the other numbers if the first number fails, use the ``|''.
+ Always quote the entire set of phone numbers as shown.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 7:
+
+
+ The login string is of the same chat-like syntax as the dial
+ string. In this example, the string works for a service whose
+ login session looks like this:
+
+
+
+ J. Random Provider
+ login: foo
+ password: bar
+ protocol: ppp
+
+
+
+ You will need to alter this script to suit your own needs.
+ If you're using PAP or CHAP, there will be no login at this
+ point, so your login string can be left blank. See
+
+ for further details.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 8:
+
+
+ Sets the default timeout (in seconds) for the connection.
+ Here, the connection will be closed automatically after
+ 300 seconds of inactivity. If you never want to timeout,
+ set this value to zero.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 9:
+
+
+ Ppp can be configured to exchange Link Quality Report (LQR)
+ packets. These packets describe how good the physical link
+ is. Ppp's LQR strategy is to close the connection when a
+ number of these packets are missed. This is useful when
+ you have a direct serial link to another machine and the
+ DSR modem signal is not available to indicate that the line
+ is up. When data saturates the line, LQR packets are
+ sometimes ``missed'', causing ppp to close the connection
+ prematurely. Refusing to negotiate lqr is sometimes prudent
+ (if you are going through a modem) as it avoids this whole
+ mess. By default, ppp will not attempt to negotiate LQR,
+ but will accept LQR negotiation from the peer.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 10:
+
+
+ Sets the interface addresses. The string x.x.x.x should be
+ replaced by the IP address that your provider has allocated
+ to you. The string y.y.y.y should be replaced by the IP
+ address that your ISP indicated for their gateway (the
+ machine to which you connect). If your ISP hasn't given you
+ a gateway address, use 10.0.0.2/0. If you need to
+ use a ``guessed'' address, make sure that you create an entry
+ in /etc/ppp/ppp.linkup as per the instructions for
+ .
+ If this line is omitted, ppp cannot run in or
+ mode.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 11:
+
+
+ Deletes all existing routing table entries for the acquired
+ tun device. This should not normally be necessary, but will
+ make sure that PPP is starting with a clean bill of health.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 12:
+
+
+ Adds a default route to your ISPs gateway. The special
+ word HISADDR is replaced with the gateway address
+ specified on line 9. It is important that this line appears
+ after line 9, otherwise HISADDR will not yet be
+ initialized.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ It is not necessary to add an entry to ppp.linkup when you have
+ a static IP address as your routing table entries are already correct
+ before you connect. You may however wish to create an entry to invoke
+ programs after connection. This is explained later with the sendmail
+ example.
+
+ Example configuration files can be found in the /etc/ppp
+ directory.
+
+
+
+
+ PPP and Dynamic IP addresses
+
+
+ If your service provider does not assign static IP numbers,
+ ppp can be configured to negotiate the local and
+ remote addresses. This is done by "guessing" an IP number
+ and allowing ppp to set it up correctly using the IP Configuration
+ Protocol (IPCP) after connecting. The ppp.conf configuration
+ is the same as , with the following change:
+
+
+
+ 10 set ifaddr 10.0.0.1/0 10.0.0.2/0 255.255.255.0
+
+
+
+ Again, do not include the line numbers, they are just for reference in
+ this discussion. Indentation of at least one space is required.
+
+
+
+ Line 10:
+
+ The number after the ``/'' character is the number of bits of
+ the address that ppp will insist on. You may wish to use
+ IP numbers more appropriate to your circumstances, but the
+ above example will almost always work. If it fails, you may
+ be able to defeat some broken ppp implementations by
+ supplying an additional 0.0.0.0 argument:
+
+
+
+ set ifaddr 10.0.0.1/0 10.0.0.2/0 255.255.255.0 0.0.0.0
+
+
+
+ This tells ppp to negotiate using address 0.0.0.0
+ rather than 10.0.0.1. Do not use 0.0.0.0/0
+ as the first argument to set ifaddr as it prevents
+ ppp from setting up an initial route in and
+ mode.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ You will also need to create an entry in /etc/ppp/ppp.linkup.
+ Ppp.linkup is used after a connection has been established. At
+ this point, ppp will know what IP addresses should really be
+ used. The following entry will delete the existing bogus routes, and
+ create correct ones:
+
+
+
+ 1 provider:
+ 2 delete ALL
+ 3 add 0 0 HISADDR
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 1:
+
+ On establishing a connection, ppp will look for an entry in
+ ppp.linkup according to the following rules: First,
+ try to match the same label as we used in ppp.conf.
+ If that fails, look for an entry for the IP number of our
+ gateway. This entry is a four-octet IP style label. If
+ we still haven't found an entry, look for the MYADDR
+ entry.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 2:
+
+
+ This line tells ppp to delete all existing routes for the
+ acquired tun interface (except the direct route entry).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 3:
+
+
+ This line tells ppp to add a default route that points to
+ HISADDR. HISADDR will be replaced with
+ the IP number of the gateway as negotiated in the IPCP.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ See the pmdemand entry in the files /etc/ppp/ppp.conf.sample and
+ /etc/ppp/ppp.linkup.sample for a detailed example.
+
+
+
+
+ Receiving incoming calls with PPP
+
+ This section describes setting up ppp in a server role.
+
+ When you configure ppp to receive incoming calls, you
+ must decide whether you wish to forward packets for just
+ ppp connections, for all interfaces, or not at all.
+ To forward for just ppp connections, include the line
+
+
+
+ enable proxy
+
+
+
+ in your ppp.conf file. If you wish to forward packets on all
+ interfaces, use the
+
+
+
+ gateway=YES
+
+
+
+ option in /etc/rc.conf (this file used to be called
+ /etc/sysconfig).
+
+
+
+ Which getty?
+
+
+ provides a good description on enabling dialup services using getty.
+
+ An alternative to getty is
+ mgetty,
+ a smarter version of getty designed with dialup lines in mind.
+
+ The advantages of using mgetty is that it actively talks to
+ modems, meaning if port is turned off in /etc/ttys then
+ your modem won't answer the phone.
+
+ Later versions of mgetty (from 0.99beta onwards) also support the
+ automatic detection of PPP streams, allowing your clients script-less
+ access to your server.
+
+ Refer to for more
+ information on mgetty.
+
+
+
+
+ PPP permissions
+
+ PPP must normally be run as user id 0. If however you wish to allow
+ ppp to run in server mode as a normal user by executing ppp as described
+ below, that user must be given permission to run ppp by adding them to
+ the network group in /etc/group.
+
+
+
+
+ Setting up a PPP shell for dynamic-IP users
+
+ Create a file called /etc/ppp/ppp-shell containing the
+ following:
+
+
+
+ #!/bin/sh
+ IDENT=`echo $0 | sed -e 's/^.*-\(.*\)$/\1/'`
+ CALLEDAS="$IDENT"
+ TTY=`tty`
+
+ if [ x$IDENT = xdialup ]; then
+ IDENT=`basename $TTY`
+ fi
+
+ echo "PPP for $CALLEDAS on $TTY"
+ echo "Starting PPP for $IDENT"
+
+ exec /usr/sbin/ppp -direct $IDENT
+
+
+
+ This script should be executable. Now make a symbolic link called
+ ppp-dialup to this script using the following commands:
+
+
+
+ # ln -s /etc/ppp/ppp-shell /etc/ppp/ppp-dialup
+
+
+
+ You should use this script as the shell for all your dialup
+ ppp users. This is an example from /etc/password
+ for a dialup PPP user with username pchilds. (remember don't directly
+ edit the password file, use vipw)
+
+
+
+ pchilds:*:1011:300:Peter Childs PPP:/home/ppp:/etc/ppp/ppp-dialup
+
+
+
+ Create a /home/ppp directory that is world readable
+ containing the following 0 byte files
+
+
+
+ -r--r--r-- 1 root wheel 0 May 27 02:23 .hushlogin
+ -r--r--r-- 1 root wheel 0 May 27 02:22 .rhosts
+
+
+
+ which prevents /etc/motd from being displayed.
+
+
+
+
+ Setting up a PPP shell for static-IP users
+
+ Create the ppp-shell file as above and for each account with
+ statically assigned IPs create a symbolic link to ppp-shell.
+
+ For example, if you have three dialup customers fred, sam, and mary,
+ that you route class C networks for, you would type the following:
+
+
+
+ # ln -s /etc/ppp/ppp-shell /etc/ppp/ppp-fred
+ # ln -s /etc/ppp/ppp-shell /etc/ppp/ppp-sam
+ # ln -s /etc/ppp/ppp-shell /etc/ppp/ppp-mary
+
+
+
+ Each of these users dialup accounts should have their shell set
+ to the symbolic link created above. (ie. mary's shell should be
+ /etc/ppp/ppp-mary).
+
+
+
+
+ Setting up ppp.conf for dynamic-IP users
+
+ The /etc/ppp/ppp.conf file should contain something along
+ the lines of
+
+
+
+ default:
+ set debug phase lcp chat
+ set timeout 0
+
+ ttyd0:
+ set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.100.20 255.255.255.255
+ enable proxy
+
+ ttyd1:
+ set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.100.21 255.255.255.255
+ enable proxy
+
+
+
+ Note the indenting is important.
+
+ The default: section is loaded for each session. For each
+ dialup line enabled in /etc/ttys create an entry similar
+ to the one for ttyd0: above. Each line should get a unique
+ IP from your pool of ip address for dynamic users.
+
+
+
+
+ Setting up ppp.conf for static-IP users
+
+ Along with the contents of the sample /etc/ppp/ppp.conf
+ above you should add a section for each of the statically assigned
+ dialup users. We will continue with our fred, sam, and mary example.
+
+
+
+ fred:
+ set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.101.1 255.255.255.255
+
+ sam:
+ set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.102.1 255.255.255.255
+
+ mary:
+ set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.103.1 255.255.255.255
+
+
+
+ The file /etc/ppp/ppp.linkup should also contain routing
+ information for each static IP user if required. The line below
+ would add a route for the 203.14.101.0 class C via
+ the client's ppp link.
+
+
+
+ fred:
+ add 203.14.101.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 HISADDR
+
+ sam:
+ add 203.14.102.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 HISADDR
+
+ mary:
+ add 203.14.103.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 HISADDR
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ More on mgetty, AutoPPP, and MS extensions
+
+
+
+ Mgetty and AutoPPP
+
+
+ Configuring and compiling mgetty with the AUTO_PPP option enabled
+ allows mgetty to detect the LCP phase of PPP connections and automatically
+ spawn off a ppp shell. However, since the default login/password sequence
+ does not occur it is necessary to authenticate users using either PAP
+ or CHAP.
+
+ This section assumes the user has successfully configured, compiled, and
+ installed a version of mgetty with the AUTO_PPP option (v0.99beta or later)
+
+ Make sure your /usr/local/etc/mgetty+sendfax/login.config file
+ has the following in it:
+
+
+
+ /AutoPPP/ - - /etc/ppp/ppp-pap-dialup
+
+
+
+ This will tell mgetty to run the ppp-pap-dialup script for
+ detected PPP connections.
+
+ Create a file called /etc/ppp/ppp-pap-dialup containing the
+ following (the file should be executable):
+
+
+
+ #!/bin/sh
+ TTY=`tty`
+ IDENT=`basename $TTY`
+ exec /usr/sbin/ppp -direct pap$IDENT
+
+
+
+ For each dialup line enabled in /etc/ttys create a corresponding
+ entry in /etc/ppp/ppp.conf. This will happily co-exist with
+ the definitions we created above.
+
+
+
+ papttyd0:
+ enable pap
+ set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.100.20 255.255.255.255
+ enable proxy
+
+ papttyd1:
+ enable pap
+ set ifaddr 203.14.100.1 203.14.100.21 255.255.255.255
+ enable proxy
+
+
+
+ Each user logging in with this method will need to have a username/password
+ in /etc/ppp/ppp.secret file, or alternatively add the
+
+
+
+ enable passwdauth
+
+
+
+ option to authenticate users via pap from the /etc/passwordd
+ file. (*)
+
+ (*) Note this option only available in 2.2-961014-SNAP or later, or by
+ getting the updated ppp code for 2.1.x. (see MS extensions below for details)
+
+
+
+
+ MS extentions
+
+ From 2.2-961014-SNAP onwards it is possible to allow the automatic
+ negotiation of DNS and NetBIOS name servers with clients supporting
+ this feature (namely Win95/NT clients). See RFC1877 for more details
+ on the protocol.
+
+ An example of enabling these extensions in your
+ /etc/ppp/ppp.conf file is illustrated below.
+
+
+
+ default:
+ set debug phase lcp chat
+ set timeout 0
+ enable msext
+ set ns 203.14.100.1 203.14.100.2
+ set nbns 203.14.100.5
+
+
+
+ This will tell the clients the primary and secondary
+ name server addresses, and a netbios nameserver host.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ PAP and CHAP authentication
+
+
+ Some ISPs set their system up so that the authentication part of
+ your connection is done using either of the PAP or CHAP authentication
+ mechanisms. If this is the case, your ISP will not give a login:
+ prompt when you connect, but will start talking PPP immediately.
+
+ PAP is less secure than CHAP, but security is not normally an issue
+ here as passwords, although being sent as plain text with PAP, are being
+ transmitted down a serial line only. There's not much room for hackers
+ to "eavesdrop".
+
+ Referring back to the or sections, the following alterations
+ must be made:
+
+
+
+ 7 set login
+ .....
+ 13 set authname MyUserName
+ 14 set authkey MyPassword
+
+
+
+ As always, do not include the line numbers, they are just for reference
+ in this discussion. Indentation of at least one space is required.
+
+
+
+ Line 7:
+
+ Your ISP will not normally require that you log into the
+ server if you're using PAP or CHAP. You must therefore
+ disable your "set login" string.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Line 13:
+
+
+ This line specifies your PAP/CHAP user name. You will need
+ to insert the correct value for MyUserName.
+
+
+
+
+ Line 14:
+
+
+ This line specifies your PAP/CHAP password. You will need
+ to insert the correct value for MyPassword.
+ You may want to add an additional line
+
+ 15 accept PAP
+
+
+ or
+
+ 15 accept CHAP
+
+
+ to make it obvious that this is the intention, but PAP
+ and CHAP are accepted by default.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ NOTE: Your authkey will be logged if you have
+ command logging turned on (set log +command). Care should be
+ taken when deciding the ppp log file permissions.
+
+
+
+
+ Changing your ppp configuration on the fly
+
+ It is possible to talk to the ppp program while it is running in
+ the background, but only if a suitable password has been set up.
+
+ By default, ppp will listen to a TCP port of 3000 + tunno,
+ where tunno is the number of the tun device acquired, however,
+ if a password for the local machine is not set up in
+ /etc/ppp/ppp.secret, no server connection will be created.
+ To set your password, put the following line in
+ /etc/ppp/ppp.secret:
+
+
+
+ foo MyPassword
+
+
+
+ where foo is your local hostname (run hostname -s to
+ determine the correct name), and MyPassword is the unencrypted
+ password that you wish to use. /etc/ppp/ppp.secret should
+ NOT be accessable by anyone without user id 0. This means that
+ /, /etc and /etc/ppp should not be writable,
+ and ppp.secret should be owned by user id 0 and have permissions
+ 0600.
+
+ It is also possible to select a specific port number or to have ppp listen
+ to a local unix domain socket rather than to a TCP socket. Refer to the
+ set socket command in manual page for further details.
+
+ Once a socket has been set up, the pppctl(8) program may be used
+ in scripts that wish to manipulate the running program.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Final system configuration
+
+
+ You now have PPP configured, but there are a few more things to
+ do before it is ready to work. They all involve editing the
+ /etc/rc.conf file (was /etc/sysconfig).
+
+ Working from the top down in this file, make sure the ``hostname='' line
+ is set, e.g.:
+
+
+
+ hostname=foo.bar.com
+
+
+
+ If your ISP has supplied you with a static IP address and name, it's
+ probably best that you use this name as your host name.
+
+ Look for the network_interfaces variable. If you want to configure
+ your system to dial your ISP on demand, make sure the tun0 device is
+ added to the list, otherwise remove it.
+
+
+
+ network_interfaces="lo0 tun0"
+ ifconfig_tun0=
+
+
+
+ Note, the ifconfig_tun0 variable should be empty, and
+ a file called /etc/start_if.tun0 should be created. This file
+ should contain the line
+
+
+
+ ppp -auto mysystem
+
+
+
+ This script is executed at network configuration time, starting
+ your ppp daemon in automatic mode. If you have a LAN for which
+ this machine is a gateway, you may also wish to use the
+ switch. Refer to the manual page for further
+ details.
+
+ Set the router program to ``NO'' with the line
+
+
+
+ router_enable=NO (/etc/rc.conf)
+ router=NO (/etc/sysconfig)
+
+
+
+ It is important that the routed daemon is not started
+ (it's started by default) as routed tends to delete the default
+ routing table entries created by ppp.
+
+ It is probably worth your while ensuring that the ``sendmail_flags'' line
+ does not include the ``-q'' option, otherwise sendmail will attempt to do
+ a network lookup every now and then, possibly causing your machine to dial
+ out. You may try:
+
+
+
+ sendmail_flags="-bd"
+
+
+
+ The upshot of this is that you must force sendmail to re-examine the
+ mail queue whenever the ppp link is up by typing:
+
+
+
+ # /usr/sbin/sendmail -q
+
+
+
+ You may wish to use the !bg command in ppp.linkup to do this
+ automatically:
+
+
+
+ 1 provider:
+ 2 delete ALL
+ 3 add 0 0 HISADDR
+ 4 !bg sendmail -bd -q30m
+
+
+
+ If you don't like this, it is possible to set up a "dfilter" to block
+ SMTP traffic. Refer to the sample files for further details.
+
+ All that is left is to reboot the machine.
+
+ After rebooting, you can now either type
+
+
+
+ # ppp
+
+
+
+ and then ``dial provider'' to start the PPP session, or, if you
+ want ppp to establish sessions automatically when there is outbound
+ traffic (and you haven't created the start_if.tun0 script), type
+
+
+
+ # ppp -auto provider
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Summary
+
+ To recap, the following steps are necessary when setting up ppp
+ for the first time:
+
+ Client side:
+
+
+
+
+
+ Ensure that the tun device is built into your kernel.
+
+
+
+ Ensure that the tunX device file is available in the
+ /dev directory.
+
+
+
+ Create an entry in /etc/ppp/ppp.conf. The
+ pmdemand example should suffice for most
+ ISPs.
+
+
+
+ If you have a dynamic IP address, create an entry in
+ /etc/ppp/ppp.linkup.
+
+
+
+ Update your /etc/rc.conf (or sysconfig) file.
+
+
+
+ Create a start_if.tun0 script if you require demand
+ dialing.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Server side:
+
+
+
+ Ensure that the tun device is built into your kernel.
+
+
+
+ Ensure that the tunX device file is available in the
+ /dev directory.
+
+
+
+ Create an entry in /etc/passwd (using the vipw(8)
+ program).
+
+
+
+ Create a profile in this users home directory that
+ runs ``ppp -direct direct-server'' or similar.
+
+
+
+ Create an entry in /etc/ppp/ppp.conf. The
+ direct-server example should suffice.
+
+
+
+ Create an entry in /etc/ppp/ppp.linkup.
+
+
+
+ Update your /etc/rc.conf (or sysconfig) file.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Acknowledgments
+
+ This section of the handbook was last updated on Sun Sep 7, 1997
+ by &a.brian;
+
+ Thanks to the following for their input, comments & suggestions:
+
+ &a.nik;
+
+ &a.dirkvangulik;
+
+ &a.pjc;
+
+
+
+
+
+ Setting up Kernel PPP
+
+ Contributed by &a.gena;.
+
+ Before you start setting up PPP on your machine make
+ sure that pppd is located in /usr/sbin and directory /etc/ppp
+ exists.
+
+ pppd can work in two modes:
+
+
+
+ as a "client" , i.e. you want to connect your machine to outside
+ world via PPP serial connection or modem line.
+
+
+
+
+ as a "server" , i.e. your machine is located on the network and
+ used to connect other computers using PPP.
+
+
+
+
+ In both cases you will need to set up an options file (/etc/ppp/options
+ or ~/.ppprc if you have more then one user on your machine that uses
+ PPP).
+
+ You also will need some modem/serial software ( preferably kermit )
+ so you can dial and establish connection with remote host.
+
+
+
+ Working as a PPP client
+
+ I used the following /etc/ppp/options to connect to CISCO terminal
+ server PPP line.
+ crtscts # enable hardware flow control
+ modem # modem control line
+ noipdefault # remote PPP server must supply your IP address.
+ # if the remote host doesn't send your IP during IPCP
+ # negotiation , remove this option
+ passive # wait for LCP packets
+ domain ppp.foo.com # put your domain name here
+
+ :<remote_ip> # put the IP of remote PPP host here
+ # it will be used to route packets via PPP link
+ # if you didn't specified the noipdefault option
+ # change this line to <local_ip>:<remote_ip>
+
+ defaultroute # put this if you want that PPP server will be your
+ # default router
+
+
+ To connect:
+
+
+
+ Dial to the remote host using kermit ( or other modem program )
+ enter your user name and password ( or whatever is needed to enable PPP
+ on the remote host )
+
+
+
+
+ Exit kermit. ( without hanging up the line )
+
+
+
+
+ enter:
+ /usr/src/usr.sbin/pppd.new/pppd /dev/tty01 19200
+
+ ( put the appropriate speed and device name )
+
+
+
+
+
+ Now your computer is connected with PPP. If the connection fails for some
+ reasons you can add the "debug" option to the /etc/ppp/options file
+ and check messages on the console to track the problem
+
+ Following /etc/ppp/pppup script will make all 3 stages automatically:
+ #!/bin/sh
+ ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep
+ pid=`ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
+ if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
+ echo 'killing pppd, PID=' ${pid}
+ kill ${pid}
+ fi
+ ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep
+ pid=`ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
+ if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
+ echo 'killing kermit, PID=' ${pid}
+ kill -9 ${pid}
+ fi
+
+ ifconfig ppp0 down
+ ifconfig ppp0 delete
+
+ kermit -y /etc/ppp/kermit.dial
+ pppd /dev/tty01 19200
+
+
+ /etc/ppp/kermit.dial is kermit script that dials and makes all
+ necessary authorization on the remote host.
+ ( Example of such script is attached to the end of this document )
+
+ Use the following /etc/ppp/pppdown script to disconnect the PPP line:
+ #!/bin/sh
+ pid=`ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
+ if [ X${pid} != "X" ] ; then
+ echo 'killing pppd, PID=' ${pid}
+ kill -TERM ${pid}
+ fi
+
+ ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep
+ pid=`ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
+ if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
+ echo 'killing kermit, PID=' ${pid}
+ kill -9 ${pid}
+ fi
+
+ /sbin/ifconfig ppp0 down
+ /sbin/ifconfig ppp0 delete
+ kermit -y /etc/ppp/kermit.hup
+ /etc/ppp/ppptest
+
+
+ Check if PPP is still running (/usr/etc/ppp/ppptest):
+ #!/bin/sh
+ pid=`ps ax| grep pppd |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
+ if [ X${pid} != "X" ] ; then
+ echo 'pppd running: PID=' ${pid-NONE}
+ else
+ echo 'No pppd running.'
+ fi
+ set -x
+ netstat -n -I ppp0
+ ifconfig ppp0
+
+
+ Hangs up modem line (/etc/ppp/kermit.hup):
+ set line /dev/tty01 ; put your modem device here
+ set speed 19200
+ set file type binary
+ set file names literal
+ set win 8
+ set rec pack 1024
+ set send pack 1024
+ set block 3
+ set term bytesize 8
+ set command bytesize 8
+ set flow none
+
+ pau 1
+ out +++
+ inp 5 OK
+ out ATH0\13
+ echo \13
+ exit
+
+
+ Here is an alternate method using chat instead of
+ kermit.
+
+ Contributed by &a.rhuff;.
+
+ The following two files are sufficient to accomplish a pppd
+ connection.
+
+ /etc/ppp/options:
+ /dev/cuaa1 115200
+
+ crtscts # enable hardware flow control
+ modem # modem control line
+ connect "/usr/bin/chat -f /etc/ppp/login.chat.script"
+ noipdefault # remote PPP server must supply your IP address.
+ # if the remote host doesn't send your IP during
+ # IPCP negotiation, remove this option
+ passive # wait for LCP packets
+ domain <your.domain> # put your domain name here
+
+ : # put the IP of remote PPP host here
+ # it will be used to route packets via PPP link
+ # if you didn't specified the noipdefault option
+ # change this line to <local_ip>:<remote_ip>
+
+ defaultroute # put this if you want that PPP server will be
+ # your default router
+
+
+ /etc/ppp/login.chat.script:
+
+ (This should actually go into a single line.)
+
+
+ ABORT BUSY ABORT 'NO CARRIER' "" AT OK ATDT<phone.number>
+ CONNECT "" TIMEOUT 10 ogin:-\\r-ogin: <login-id>
+ TIMEOUT 5 sword: <password>
+
+
+ Once these are installed and modified correctly, all you need to
+ do is
+
+ pppd.
+
+ This sample based primarily on information provided by: Trev Roydhouse
+ <Trev.Roydhouse@f401.n711.z3.fidonet.org> and used by
+ permission.
+
+
+
+
+ Working as a PPP server
+
+ /etc/ppp/options:
+ crtscts # Hardware flow control
+ netmask 255.255.255.0 # netmask ( not required )
+ 192.114.208.20:192.114.208.165 # ip's of local and remote hosts
+ # local ip must be different from one
+ # you assigned to the ethernet ( or other )
+ # interface on your machine.
+ # remote IP is ip address that will be
+ # assigned to the remote machine
+ domain ppp.foo.com # your domain
+ passive # wait for LCP
+ modem # modem line
+
+
+ Following /etc/ppp/pppserv script will enable ppp server on your
+ machine
+ #!/bin/sh
+ ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep
+ pid=`ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
+ if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
+ echo 'killing pppd, PID=' ${pid}
+ kill ${pid}
+ fi
+ ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep
+ pid=`ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
+ if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
+ echo 'killing kermit, PID=' ${pid}
+ kill -9 ${pid}
+ fi
+
+ # reset ppp interface
+ ifconfig ppp0 down
+ ifconfig ppp0 delete
+
+ # enable autoanswer mode
+ kermit -y /etc/ppp/kermit.ans
+
+ # run ppp
+ pppd /dev/tty01 19200
+
+
+ Use this /etc/ppp/pppservdown script to stop ppp server:
+ #!/bin/sh
+ ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep
+ pid=`ps ax |grep pppd |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
+ if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
+ echo 'killing pppd, PID=' ${pid}
+ kill ${pid}
+ fi
+ ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep
+ pid=`ps ax |grep kermit |grep -v grep|awk '{print $1;}'`
+ if [ "X${pid}" != "X" ] ; then
+ echo 'killing kermit, PID=' ${pid}
+ kill -9 ${pid}
+ fi
+ ifconfig ppp0 down
+ ifconfig ppp0 delete
+
+ kermit -y /etc/ppp/kermit.noans
+
+
+ Following kermit script will enable/disable autoanswer mode
+ on your modem (/etc/ppp/kermit.ans):
+ set line /dev/tty01
+ set speed 19200
+ set file type binary
+ set file names literal
+ set win 8
+ set rec pack 1024
+ set send pack 1024
+ set block 3
+ set term bytesize 8
+ set command bytesize 8
+ set flow none
+
+ pau 1
+ out +++
+ inp 5 OK
+ out ATH0\13
+ inp 5 OK
+ echo \13
+ out ATS0=1\13 ; change this to out ATS0=0\13 if you want to disable
+ ; autoanswer mod
+ inp 5 OK
+ echo \13
+ exit
+
+
+ This /etc/ppp/kermit.dial script is used for dialing and authorizing
+ on remote host. You will need to customize it for your needs.
+ Put your login and password in this script , also you will need
+ to change input statement depending on responses from your modem
+ and remote host.
+ ;
+ ; put the com line attached to the modem here:
+ ;
+ set line /dev/tty01
+ ;
+ ; put the modem speed here:
+ ;
+ set speed 19200
+ set file type binary ; full 8 bit file xfer
+ set file names literal
+ set win 8
+ set rec pack 1024
+ set send pack 1024
+ set block 3
+ set term bytesize 8
+ set command bytesize 8
+ set flow none
+ set modem hayes
+ set dial hangup off
+ set carrier auto ; Then SET CARRIER if necessary,
+ set dial display on ; Then SET DIAL if necessary,
+ set input echo on
+ set input timeout proceed
+ set input case ignore
+ def \%x 0 ; login prompt counter
+ goto slhup
+
+ :slcmd ; put the modem in command mode
+ echo Put the modem in command mode.
+ clear ; Clear unread characters from input buffer
+ pause 1
+ output +++ ; hayes escape sequence
+ input 1 OK\13\10 ; wait for OK
+ if success goto slhup
+ output \13
+ pause 1
+ output at\13
+ input 1 OK\13\10
+ if fail goto slcmd ; if modem doesn't answer OK, try again
+
+ :slhup ; hang up the phone
+ clear ; Clear unread characters from input buffer
+ pause 1
+ echo Hanging up the phone.
+ output ath0\13 ; hayes command for on hook
+ input 2 OK\13\10
+ if fail goto slcmd ; if no OK answer, put modem in command mode
+
+ :sldial ; dial the number
+ pause 1
+ echo Dialing.
+ output atdt9,550311\13\10 ; put phone number here
+ assign \%x 0 ; zero the time counter
+
+ :look
+ clear ; Clear unread characters from input buffer
+ increment \%x ; Count the seconds
+ input 1 {CONNECT }
+ if success goto sllogin
+ reinput 1 {NO CARRIER\13\10}
+ if success goto sldial
+ reinput 1 {NO DIALTONE\13\10}
+ if success goto slnodial
+ reinput 1 {\255}
+ if success goto slhup
+ reinput 1 {\127}
+ if success goto slhup
+ if < \%x 60 goto look
+ else goto slhup
+
+ :sllogin ; login
+ assign \%x 0 ; zero the time counter
+ pause 1
+ echo Looking for login prompt.
+
+ :slloop
+ increment \%x ; Count the seconds
+ clear ; Clear unread characters from input buffer
+ output \13
+ ;
+ ; put your expected login prompt here:
+ ;
+ input 1 {Username: }
+ if success goto sluid
+ reinput 1 {\255}
+ if success goto slhup
+ reinput 1 {\127}
+ if success goto slhup
+ if < \%x 10 goto slloop ; try 10 times to get a login prompt
+ else goto slhup ; hang up and start again if 10 failures
+
+ :sluid
+ ;
+ ; put your userid here:
+ ;
+ output ppp-login\13
+ input 1 {Password: }
+ ;
+ ; put your password here:
+ ;
+ output ppp-password\13
+ input 1 {Entering SLIP mode.}
+ echo
+ quit
+
+ :slnodial
+ echo \7No dialtone. Check the telephone line!\7
+ exit 1
+
+ ; local variables:
+ ; mode: csh
+ ; comment-start: "; "
+ ; comment-start-skip: "; "
+ ; end:
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Setting up a SLIP Client
+
+ Contributed by &a.asami;8 Aug 1995.
+
+ The following is one way to set up a FreeBSD machine for SLIP on a
+ static host network. For dynamic hostname assignments (i.e., your
+ address changes each time you dial up), you probably need to do
+ something much fancier.
+
+ First, determine which serial port your modem is connected to. I have
+ a symbolic link /dev/modem -> cuaa1, and only use the modem name in my
+ configuration files. It can become quite cumbersome when you need to
+ fix a bunch of files in /etc and .kermrc's all over the system! (Note
+ that /dev/cuaa0 is COM1, cuaa1 is COM2, etc.)
+
+ Make sure you have
+ pseudo-device sl 1
+
+ in your kernel's config file. It is included in the GENERIC kernel,
+ so this will not be a problem unless you deleted it.
+
+
+
+ Things you have to do only once
+
+
+
+
+
+ Add your home machine, the gateway and nameservers to your
+ /etc/hosts file. Mine looks like this:
+ 127.0.0.1 localhost loghost
+ 136.152.64.181 silvia.HIP.Berkeley.EDU silvia.HIP silvia
+
+ 136.152.64.1 inr-3.Berkeley.EDU inr-3 slip-gateway
+ 128.32.136.9 ns1.Berkeley.edu ns1
+ 128.32.136.12 ns2.Berkeley.edu ns2
+
+ By the way, silvia is the name of the car that I had when I was
+ back in Japan (it is called 2?0SX here in U.S.).
+
+
+
+
+ Make sure you have "hosts" before "bind" in your /etc/host.conf.
+ Otherwise, funny things may happen.
+
+
+
+
+ Edit the file /etc/rc.conf. Note that you should edit
+ the file /etc/sysconfig instead if you are running FreeBSD
+ previous to version 2.2.2.
+
+
+
+ Set your hostname by editing the line that says:
+ hostname=myname.my.domain
+
+ You should give it your full Internet hostname.
+
+
+
+
+ Add sl0 to the list of network interfaces by changing the line
+ that says:
+ network_interfaces="lo0"
+
+ to:
+ network_interfaces="lo0 sl0"
+
+
+
+
+
+ Set the startup flags of sl0 by adding a line:
+ ifconfig_sl0="inet ${hostname} slip-gateway netmask 0xffffff00 up"
+
+
+
+
+
+ Designate the default router by changing the line:
+ defaultrouter=NO
+
+ to:
+ defaultrouter=slip-gateway
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Make a file /etc/resolv.conf which contains:
+ domain HIP.Berkeley.EDU
+ nameserver 128.32.136.9
+ nameserver 128.32.136.12
+
+ As you can see, these set up the nameserver hosts. Of course, the
+ actual domain names and addresses depend on your environment.
+
+
+
+
+ Set the password for root and toor (and any other accounts that
+ does not have a password). Use passwd, do not edit the /etc/passwd
+ or /etc/master.passwd files!
+
+
+
+
+ Reboot your machine and make sure it comes up with the correct
+ hostname.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Making a SLIP connection
+
+
+
+
+
+ Dial up, type "slip" at the prompt, enter your machine name and
+ password. The things you need to enter depends on your
+ environment. I use kermit, with a script like this:
+ # kermit setup
+ set modem hayes
+ set line /dev/modem
+ set speed 115200
+ set parity none
+ set flow rts/cts
+ set terminal bytesize 8
+ set file type binary
+ # The next macro will dial up and login
+ define slip dial 643-9600, input 10 =>, if failure stop, -
+ output slip\x0d, input 10 Username:, if failure stop, -
+ output silvia\x0d, input 10 Password:, if failure stop, -
+ output ***\x0d, echo \x0aCONNECTED\x0a
+
+ (of course, you have to change the hostname and password to fit
+ yours). Then you can just type "slip" from the kermit prompt to
+ get connected.
+
+ Note: leaving your password in plain text anywhere in the
+ filesystem is generally a BAD idea. Do it at your own risk. I am
+ just too lazy.
+
+
+
+
+ Leave the kermit there (you can suspend it by "z") and as root,
+ type
+ slattach -h -c -s 115200 /dev/modem
+
+ if you are able to "ping" hosts on the other side of the router,
+ you are connected! If it does not work, you might want to try "-a"
+ instead of "-c" as an argument to slattach.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ How to shutdown the connection
+
+ Type "kill -INT `cat /var/run/slattach.modem.pid`" (as root) to
+ kill slattach. Then go back to kermit ("fg" if you suspended it)
+ and exit from it ("q").
+
+ The slattach man page says you have to use "ifconfig sl0 down" to
+ mark the interface down, but this does not seem to make any
+ difference for me. ("ifconfig sl0" reports the same thing.)
+
+ Some times, your modem might refuse to drop the carrier (mine
+ often does). In that case, simply start kermit and quit it again.
+ It usually goes out on the second try.
+
+
+
+
+ Troubleshooting
+
+ If it does not work, feel free to ask me. The things that people
+ tripped over so far:
+
+
+
+ Not using "-c" or "-a" in slattach (I have no idea why this can be
+ fatal, but adding this flag solved the problem for at least one
+ person)
+
+
+
+
+ Using "s10" instead of "sl0" (might be hard to see the difference on
+ some fonts).
+
+
+
+
+ Try "ifconfig sl0" to see your interface status. I get:
+ silvia# ifconfig sl0
+ sl0: flags=10<POINTOPOINT>
+ inet 136.152.64.181 --> 136.152.64.1 netmask ffffff00
+
+
+
+
+
+ Also, netstat -r will give the routing table, in case you get
+ the "no route to host" messages from ping. Mine looks like:
+ silvia# netstat -r
+ Routing tables
+ Destination Gateway Flags Refs Use IfaceMTU Rtt
+ Netmasks:
+ (root node)
+ (root node)
+
+ Route Tree for Protocol Family inet:
+ (root node) =>
+ default inr-3.Berkeley.EDU UG 8 224515 sl0 - -
+ localhost.Berkel localhost.Berkeley UH 5 42127 lo0 - 0.438
+ inr-3.Berkeley.E silvia.HIP.Berkele UH 1 0 sl0 - -
+ silvia.HIP.Berke localhost.Berkeley UGH 34 47641234 lo0 - 0.438
+ (root node)
+
+ (this is after transferring a bunch of files, your numbers should be
+ smaller).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Setting up a SLIP Server
+
+ Contributed by &a.ghelmer;.
+ v1.0, 15 May 1995.
+
+ This document provides suggestions for setting up SLIP Server services
+ on a FreeBSD system, which typically means configuring your system to
+ automatically startup connections upon login for remote SLIP clients.
+ The author has written this document based on his experience;
+ however, as your system and needs may be different, this document may
+ not answer all of your questions, and the author cannot be responsible
+ if you damage your system or lose data due to attempting to follow the
+ suggestions here.
+
+ This guide was originally written for SLIP Server services on a
+ FreeBSD 1.x system. It has been modified to reflect changes in the
+ pathnames and the removal of the SLIP interface compression flags in
+ early versions of FreeBSD 2.X, which appear to be the only major
+ changes between FreeBSD versions. If you do encounter mistakes in
+ this document, please email the author with enough information to
+ help correct the problem.
+
+
+
+ Prerequisites
+
+ This document is very technical in nature, so background knowledge is
+ required. It is assumed that you are familiar with the TCP/IP network
+ protocol, and in particular, network and node addressing, network
+ address masks, subnetting, routing, and routing protocols, such as
+ RIP. Configuring SLIP services on a dial-up server requires a
+ knowledge of these concepts, and if you are not familiar with them,
+ please read a copy of either Craig Hunt's TCP/IP Network
+ Administration published by O'Reilly & Associates, Inc. (ISBN
+ Number 0-937175-82-X), or Douglas Comer's books on the TCP/IP
+ protocol.
+
+ It is further assumed that you have already setup your modem(s) and
+ configured the appropriate system files to allow logins through your
+ modems. If you have not prepared your system for this yet, please see
+ the tutorial for configuring dialup services; if you have a World-Wide
+ Web browser available, browse the list of tutorials at
+ http://www.freebsd.org/; otherwise, check the place
+ where you found this document for a document named dialup.txt or
+ something similar. You may also want to check the manual pages for
+ sio(4) for information on the serial port device driver and
+ ttys(5), gettytab(5), getty(8), & init(8) for
+ information relevant to configuring the system to accept logins on
+ modems, and perhaps stty(1) for information on setting serial
+ port parameters [such as clocal for directly-connected
+ serial interfaces].
+
+
+
+
+ Quick Overview
+
+ In its typical configuration, using FreeBSD as a SLIP server works as
+ follows: a SLIP user dials up your FreeBSD SLIP Server system and logs
+ in with a special SLIP login ID that uses /usr/sbin/sliplogin
+ as the special user's shell. The sliplogin program browses the
+ file /etc/sliphome/slip.hosts to find a matching line for
+ the special user, and if it finds a match, connects the serial line to
+ an available SLIP interface and then runs the shell script
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.login to configure the SLIP interface.
+
+
+
+ An Example of a SLIP Server Login
+
+ For example, if a SLIP user ID were Shelmerg, Shelmerg's
+ entry in /etc/master.passwd would look something like this
+ (except it would be all on one line):
+
+
+
+ Shelmerg:password:1964:89::0:0:Guy Helmer - SLIP:
+ /usr/users/Shelmerg:/usr/sbin/sliplogin
+
+
+
+ and, when Shelmerg logs in, sliplogin will search
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.hosts for a line that had a matching user
+ ID; for example, there may be a line in
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.hosts that reads:
+
+
+
+ Shelmerg dc-slip sl-helmer 0xfffffc00 autocomp
+
+
+
+ sliplogin will find that matching line, hook the serial line into
+ the next available SLIP interface, and then execute
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.login like this:
+
+
+
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.login 0 19200 Shelmerg dc-slip sl-helmer 0xfffffc00 autocomp
+
+
+
+ If all goes well, /etc/sliphome/slip.login will issue an
+ ifconfig for the SLIP interface to which sliplogin
+ attached itself (slip interface 0, in the above example, which was the
+ first parameter in the list given to slip.login) to set the
+ local IP address (dc-slip), remote IP address
+ (sl-helmer), network mask for the SLIP interface
+ (0xfffffc00), and any additional flags (autocomp).
+ If something goes wrong, sliplogin usually logs good
+ informational messages via the daemon syslog facility, which usually
+ goes into /var/log/messages (see the manual pages for
+ syslogd(8) and syslog.conf(5), and perhaps check
+ /etc/syslog.conf to see to which files syslogd is
+ logging).
+
+ OK, enough of the examples -- let us dive into setting up the system.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Kernel Configuration
+
+ FreeBSD's default kernels usually come with two SLIP interfaces
+ defined (sl0 and sl1); you can use netstat
+ -i to see whether these interfaces are defined in your kernel.
+
+ Sample output from netstat -i:
+
+
+
+ Name Mtu Network Address Ipkts Ierrs Opkts Oerrs Coll
+ ed0 1500 <Link>0.0.c0.2c.5f.4a 291311 0 174209 0 133
+ ed0 1500 138.247.224 ivory 291311 0 174209 0 133
+ lo0 65535 <Link> 79 0 79 0 0
+ lo0 65535 loop localhost 79 0 79 0 0
+ sl0* 296 <Link> 0 0 0 0 0
+ sl1* 296 <Link> 0 0 0 0 0
+
+
+
+ The sl0 and sl1 interfaces shown in netstat
+ -i's output indicate that there are two SLIP interfaces built
+ into the kernel. (The asterisks after the sl0 and
+ sl1 indicate that the interfaces are ``down''.)
+
+ However, FreeBSD's default kernels do not come configured to forward
+ packets (ie, your FreeBSD machine will not act as a router) due to
+ Internet RFC requirements for Internet hosts (see RFC's 1009
+ [Requirements for Internet Gateways], 1122
+ [Requirements for Internet Hosts -- Communication Layers],
+ and perhaps 1127 [A Perspective on the Host Requirements
+ RFCs]), so if you want your FreeBSD SLIP Server to act as a
+ router, you will have to edit the /etc/rc.conf file (called
+ /etc/sysconfig in FreeBSD releases prior to 2.2.2) and change
+ the setting of the gateway variable to YES. If you
+ have an older system which predates even the /etc/sysconfig
+ file, then add the following command:
+ sysctl -w net.inet.ip.forwarding = 1
+
+ to your /etc/rc.local file.
+
+ You will then need to reboot for the new settings to take effect.
+
+ You will notice that near the end of the default kernel configuration
+ file (/sys/i386/conf/GENERIC) is a line that reads:
+
+
+
+ pseudo-device sl 2
+
+
+
+ which is the line that defines the number of SLIP devices available in
+ the kernel; the number at the end of the line is the maximum number of
+ SLIP connections that may be operating simultaneously.
+
+ Please refer to
+ for help in reconfiguring your kernel.
+
+
+
+
+ Sliplogin Configuration
+
+ As mentioned earlier, there are three files in the
+ /etc/sliphome directory that are part of the configuration
+ for /usr/sbin/sliplogin (see sliplogin(8) for the
+ actual manual page for sliplogin): slip.hosts, which
+ defines the SLIP users & their associated IP addresses;
+ slip.login, which usually just configures the SLIP interface;
+ and (optionally) slip.logout, which undoes
+ slip.login's effects when the serial connection is
+ terminated.
+
+
+
+ slip.hosts Configuration
+
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.hosts contains lines which have at least
+ four items, separated by whitespace:
+
+
+
+
+
+ SLIP user's login ID
+
+
+
+ Local address (local to the SLIP server) of the SLIP link
+
+
+
+ Remote address of the SLIP link
+
+
+
+ Network mask
+
+
+
+
+
+ The local and remote addresses may be host names (resolved to IP
+ addresses by /etc/hosts or by the domain name service,
+ depending on your specifications in /etc/host.conf), and I
+ believe the network mask may be a name that can be resolved by a
+ lookup into /etc/networks. On a sample system,
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.hosts looks like this:
+
+
+
+ ----- begin /etc/sliphome/slip.hosts -----
+ #
+ # login local-addr remote-addr mask opt1 opt2
+ # (normal,compress,noicmp)
+ #
+ Shelmerg dc-slip sl-helmerg 0xfffffc00 autocomp
+ ----- end /etc/sliphome/slip.hosts ------
+
+
+
+ At the end of the line is one or more of the options.
+
+
+
+
+
+ normal - no header compression
+
+
+
+ compress - compress headers
+
+
+
+ autocomp - compress headers if the remote end allows it
+
+
+
+ noicmp - disable ICMP packets (so any ``ping'' packets will be
+ dropped instead of using up your bandwidth)
+
+
+
+
+
+ Note that sliplogin under early releases of FreeBSD 2 ignored
+ the options that FreeBSD 1.x recognized, so the options
+ normal, compress, autocomp, and noicmp had no effect
+ until support was added in FreeBSD 2.2 (unless your slip.login script
+ included code to make use of the flags).
+
+ Your choice of local and remote addresses for your SLIP links depends
+ on whether you are going to dedicate a TCP/IP subnet or if you are
+ going to use ``proxy ARP'' on your SLIP server (it is not ``true''
+ proxy ARP, but that is the terminology used in this document to
+ describe it). If you are not sure which method to select or how to
+ assign IP addresses, please refer to the TCP/IP books referenced in
+ the section and/or consult your IP network manager.
+
+ If you are going to use a separate subnet for your SLIP clients, you
+ will need to allocate the subnet number out of your assigned IP
+ network number and assign each of your SLIP client's IP numbers out of
+ that subnet. Then, you will probably either need to configure a
+ static route to the SLIP subnet via your SLIP server on your nearest
+ IP router, or install gated on your FreeBSD SLIP server and
+ configure it to talk the appropriate routing protocols to your other
+ routers to inform them about your SLIP server's route to the SLIP
+ subnet.
+
+ Otherwise, if you will use the ``proxy ARP'' method, you will need to
+ assign your SLIP client's IP addresses out of your SLIP server's
+ Ethernet subnet, and you will also need to adjust your
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.login and
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.logout scripts to use arp(8) to
+ manage the proxy-ARP entries in the SLIP server's ARP table.
+
+
+
+
+ slip.login Configuration
+
+ The typical /etc/sliphome/slip.login file looks like this:
+
+
+
+ ----- begin /etc/sliphome/slip.login -----
+ #!/bin/sh -
+ #
+ # @(#)slip.login 5.1 (Berkeley) 7/1/90
+
+ #
+ # generic login file for a slip line. sliplogin invokes this with
+ # the parameters:
+ # 1 2 3 4 5 6 7-n
+ # slipunit ttyspeed loginname local-addr remote-addr mask opt-args
+ #
+ /sbin/ifconfig sl$1 inet $4 $5 netmask $6
+ ----- end /etc/sliphome/slip.login -----
+
+
+
+ This slip.login file merely ifconfig's the appropriate SLIP
+ interface with the local and remote addresses and network mask of the
+ SLIP interface.
+
+ If you have decided to use the ``proxy ARP'' method (instead of using
+ a separate subnet for your SLIP clients), your
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.login file will need to look something
+ like this:
+
+
+
+ ----- begin /etc/sliphome/slip.login for "proxy ARP" -----
+ #!/bin/sh -
+ #
+ # @(#)slip.login 5.1 (Berkeley) 7/1/90
+
+ #
+ # generic login file for a slip line. sliplogin invokes this with
+ # the parameters:
+ # 1 2 3 4 5 6 7-n
+ # slipunit ttyspeed loginname local-addr remote-addr mask opt-args
+ #
+ /sbin/ifconfig sl$1 inet $4 $5 netmask $6
+ # Answer ARP requests for the SLIP client with our Ethernet addr
+ /usr/sbin/arp -s $5 00:11:22:33:44:55 pub
+ ----- end /etc/sliphome/slip.login for "proxy ARP" -----
+
+
+
+ The additional line in this slip.login, arp -s $5
+ 00:11:22:33:44:55 pub, creates an ARP entry in the SLIP server's
+ ARP table. This ARP entry causes the SLIP server to respond with the
+ SLIP server's Ethernet MAC address whenever a another IP node on the
+ Ethernet asks to speak to the SLIP client's IP address.
+
+ When using the example above, be sure to replace the Ethernet MAC
+ address (00:11:22:33:44:55) with the MAC address of your
+ system's Ethernet card, or your ``proxy ARP'' will definitely not work!
+ You can discover your SLIP server's Ethernet MAC address by looking at
+ the results of running netstat -i; the second line of the output
+ should look something like:
+
+
+
+ ed0 1500 <Link>0.2.c1.28.5f.4a 191923 0 129457 0 116
+ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+
+
+
+ which indicates that this particular system's Ethernet MAC address is
+ 00:02:c1:28:5f:4a -- the periods in the Ethernet MAC address
+ given by netstat -i must be changed to colons and leading zeros
+ should be added to each single-digit hexadecimal number to convert the
+ address into the form that arp(8) desires; see the manual page on
+ arp(8) for complete information on usage.
+
+ Note that when you create /etc/sliphome/slip.login and
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.logout, the ``execute'' bit (ie,
+ chmod 755 /etc/sliphome/slip.login
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.logout) must be set, or sliplogin
+ will be unable to execute it.
+
+
+
+
+ slip.logout Configuration
+
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.logout is not strictly needed (unless you
+ are implementing ``proxy ARP''), but if you decide to create it, this
+ is an example of a basic slip.logout script:
+
+
+
+ ----- begin /etc/sliphome/slip.logout -----
+ #!/bin/sh -
+ #
+ # slip.logout
+
+ #
+ # logout file for a slip line. sliplogin invokes this with
+ # the parameters:
+ # 1 2 3 4 5 6 7-n
+ # slipunit ttyspeed loginname local-addr remote-addr mask opt-args
+ #
+ /sbin/ifconfig sl$1 down
+ ----- end /etc/sliphome/slip.logout -----
+
+
+
+ If you are using ``proxy ARP'', you will want to have
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.logout remove the ARP entry for the SLIP
+ client:
+
+
+
+ ----- begin /etc/sliphome/slip.logout for "proxy ARP" -----
+ #!/bin/sh -
+ #
+ # @(#)slip.logout
+
+ #
+ # logout file for a slip line. sliplogin invokes this with
+ # the parameters:
+ # 1 2 3 4 5 6 7-n
+ # slipunit ttyspeed loginname local-addr remote-addr mask opt-args
+ #
+ /sbin/ifconfig sl$1 down
+ # Quit answering ARP requests for the SLIP client
+ /usr/sbin/arp -d $5
+ ----- end /etc/sliphome/slip.logout for "proxy ARP" -----
+
+
+
+ The arp -d $5 removes the ARP entry that the ``proxy ARP''
+ slip.login added when the SLIP client logged in.
+
+ It bears repeating: make sure /etc/sliphome/slip.logout has
+ the execute bit set for after you create it (ie, chmod 755
+ /etc/sliphome/slip.logout).
+
+
+
+
+
+ Routing Considerations
+
+ If you are not using the ``proxy ARP'' method for routing packets
+ between your SLIP clients and the rest of your network (and perhaps
+ the Internet), you will probably either have to add static routes to
+ your closest default router(s) to route your SLIP client subnet via
+ your SLIP server, or you will probably need to install and configure
+ gated on your FreeBSD SLIP server so that it will tell your
+ routers via appropriate routing protocols about your SLIP subnet.
+
+
+
+ Static Routes
+
+ Adding static routes to your nearest default routers can be
+ troublesome (or impossible, if you do not have authority to do so...).
+ If you have a multiple-router network in your organization, some
+ routers, such as Cisco and Proteon, may not only need to be configured
+ with the static route to the SLIP subnet, but also need to be told
+ which static routes to tell other routers about, so some expertise and
+ troubleshooting/tweaking may be necessary to get static-route-based
+ routing to work.
+
+
+
+
+ Running gated
+
+ An alternative to the headaches of static routes is to install
+ gated on your FreeBSD SLIP server and configure it to use the
+ appropriate routing protocols (RIP/OSPF/BGP/EGP) to tell other routers
+ about your SLIP subnet. You can use gated from the
+ or retrieve and build it yourself
+ from the GateD anonymous ftp site;
+ I believe the current version as of this writing
+ is gated-R3_5Alpha_8.tar.Z, which includes support for
+ FreeBSD ``out-of-the-box''. Complete information and documentation on
+ gated is available on the Web starting at
+ the Merit GateD Consortium.
+ Compile and install it, and
+ then write a /etc/gated.conf file to configure your gated;
+ here is a sample, similar to what the author used on a FreeBSD SLIP
+ server:
+
+
+
+ ----- begin sample /etc/gated.conf for gated version 3.5Alpha5 -----
+ #
+ # gated configuration file for dc.dsu.edu; for gated version 3.5alpha5
+ # Only broadcast RIP information for xxx.xxx.yy out the ed Ethernet interface
+ #
+ #
+ # tracing options
+ #
+ traceoptions "/var/tmp/gated.output" replace size 100k files 2 general ;
+
+ rip yes {
+ interface sl noripout noripin ;
+ interface ed ripin ripout version 1 ;
+ traceoptions route ;
+ } ;
+
+ #
+ # Turn on a bunch of tracing info for the interface to the kernel:
+ kernel {
+ traceoptions remnants request routes info interface ;
+ } ;
+
+ #
+ # Propagate the route to xxx.xxx.yy out the Ethernet interface via RIP
+ #
+
+ export proto rip interface ed {
+ proto direct {
+ xxx.xxx.yy mask 255.255.252.0 metric 1; # SLIP connections
+ } ;
+ } ;
+
+ #
+ # Accept routes from RIP via ed Ethernet interfaces
+
+ import proto rip interface ed {
+ all ;
+ } ;
+
+ ----- end sample /etc/gated.conf -----
+
+
+
+ The above sample gated.conf file broadcasts routing
+ information regarding the SLIP subnet xxx.xxx.yy via RIP onto
+ the Ethernet; if you are using a different Ethernet driver than the
+ ed driver, you will need to change the references to the ed
+ interface appropriately. This sample file also sets up tracing to
+ /var/tmp/gated.output for debugging gated's
+ activity; you can certainly turn off the tracing options if
+ gated works OK for you. You will need to change the
+ xxx.xxx.yy's into the network address of your own SLIP subnet
+ (be sure to change the net mask in the proto direct clause as
+ well).
+
+ When you get gated built and installed and create a
+ configuration file for it, you will need to run gated in place
+ of routed on your FreeBSD system; change the
+ routed/gated startup parameters in /etc/netstart as
+ appropriate for your system. Please see the manual page for
+ gated for information on gated's command-line
+ parameters.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Acknowledgments
+
+ Thanks to these people for comments and advice regarding this tutorial:
+
+
+
+ &a.wilko;
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Piero Serini
+
+
+ <Piero@Strider.Inet.IT>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Advanced Networking
+
+
+
+ Gateways and Routes
+
+ Contributed by &a.gryphon;.6 October 1995.
+
+ For one machine to be able to find another, there must be a
+ mechanism in place to describe how to get from one to the
+ other. This is called Routing. A ``route'' is a defined
+ pair of addresses: a destination and a
+ gateway. The pair indicates that if you are
+ trying to get to this destination, send along
+ through this gateway. There are three types of
+ destinations: individual hosts, subnets, and ``default''. The
+ ``default route'' is used if none of the other routes
+ apply. We will talk a little bit more about default routes
+ later on. There are also three types of gateways:
+ individual hosts, interfaces (also called ``links''), and
+ ethernet hardware addresses.
+
+
+
+ An example
+
+ To illustrate different aspects of routing, we will use
+ the following example which is the output of the command
+ netstat -r:
+
+
+
+ Destination Gateway Flags Refs Use Netif Expire
+
+ default outside-gw UGSc 37 418 ppp0
+ localhost localhost UH 0 181 lo0
+ test0 0:e0:b5:36:cf:4f UHLW 5 63288 ed0 77
+ 10.20.30.255 link#1 UHLW 1 2421
+ foobar.com link#1 UC 0 0
+ host1 0:e0:a8:37:8:1e UHLW 3 4601 lo0
+ host2 0:e0:a8:37:8:1e UHLW 0 5 lo0 =>
+ host2.foobar.com link#1 UC 0 0
+ 224 link#1 UC 0 0
+
+
+
+ The first two lines specify the default route (which we
+ will cover in the next section) and the localhost route.
+
+ The interface (Netif column) that it specifies to use
+ for localhost is lo0, also known as the
+ loopback device. This says to keep all traffic for this
+ destination internal, rather than sending it out over the
+ LAN, since it will only end up back where it started
+ anyway.
+
+ The next thing that stands out are the
+ ``0:e0:...'' addresses. These are ethernet
+ hardware addresses. FreeBSD will automatically identify any
+ hosts (test0 in the example) on the local ethernet and
+ add a route for that host, directly to it over the ethernet
+ interface, ed0. There is also a timeout
+ (Expire column) associated with this type of route,
+ which is used if we fail to hear from the host in a
+ specific amount of time. In this case the route will be
+ automatically deleted. These hosts are identified using a
+ mechanism known as RIP (Routing Information Protocol),
+ which figures out routes to local hosts based upon a
+ shortest path determination.
+
+ FreeBSD will also add subnet routes for the local subnet
+ (10.20.30.255 is the broadcast address for the subnet
+ 10.20.30, and foobar.com is the domain name
+ associated with that subnet). The designation link#1
+ refers to the first ethernet card in the machine. You will
+ notice no additional interface is specified for those.
+
+ Both of these groups (local network hosts and local
+ subnets) have their routes automatically configured by a
+ daemon called routed. If this is not run, then only
+ routes which are statically defined (ie. entered
+ explicitly) will exist.
+
+ The host1 line refers to our host, which it knows by
+ ethernet address. Since we are the sending host, FreeBSD
+ knows to use the loopback interface (lo0) rather than
+ sending it out over the ethernet interface.
+
+ The two host2 lines are an example of what happens
+ when we use an ifconfig alias (see the section of ethernet
+ for reasons why we would do this). The =>
+ symbol after the lo0 interface says that not only are
+ we using the loopback (since this is address also refers to
+ the local host), but specifically it is an alias. Such
+ routes only show up on the host that supports the alias;
+ all other hosts on the local network will simply have a
+ link#1 line for such.
+
+ The final line (destination subnet 224) deals with
+ MultiCasting, which will be covered in a another section.
+
+ The other column that we should talk about are the
+ Flags. Each route has different attributes that are
+ described in the column. Below is a short table of some of
+ these flags and their meanings:
+
+
+
+ U
+
+ Up: The route is active.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ H
+
+
+ Host: The route destination is a single host.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ G
+
+
+ Gateway: Send anything for this destination
+ on to this remote system, which will figure out from
+ there where to send it.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ S
+
+
+ Static: This route was configured manually,
+ not automatically generated by the system.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ C
+
+
+ Clone: Generates a new route based upon this
+ route for machines we connect to. This type of route is
+ normally used for local networks.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ W
+
+
+ WasCloned Indicated a route that was
+ auto-configured based upon a local area network (Clone)
+ route.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ L
+
+
+ Link: Route involves references to ethernet
+ hardware.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Default routes
+
+ When the local system needs to make a connection to
+ remote host, it checks the routing table to determine if
+ a known path exists. If the remote host falls into a
+ subnet that we know how to reach (Cloned routes), then
+ the system checks to see if it can connect along that
+ interface.
+
+ If all known paths fail, the system has one last option:
+ the default route. This route is a special type
+ of gateway route (usually the only one present in the
+ system), and is always marked with a ``c'' in
+ the flags field. For hosts on a local area network, this
+ gateway is set to whatever machine has a direct
+ connection to the outside world (whether via PPP link, or
+ your hardware device attached to a dedicated data line).
+
+ If you are configuring the default route for a machine
+ which itself is functioning as the gateway to the outside
+ world, then the default route will be the gateway machine
+ at your Internet Service Provider's (ISP) site.
+
+ Let us look at an example of default routes. This is a
+ common configuration:
+
+ [Local2] <--ether--> [Local1] <--PPP--> [ISP-Serv] <--ether--> [T1-GW]
+
+
+
+ The hosts Local1 and Local2 are at your
+ site, with the formed being your PPP connection to your
+ ISP's Terminal Server. Your ISP has a local network at
+ their site, which has, among other things, the server
+ where you connect and a hardware device (T1-GW) attached
+ to the ISP's Internet feed.
+
+ The default routes for each of your machines will be:
+
+
+
+ host default gateway interface
+ ---- --------------- ---------
+ Local2 Local1 ethernet
+ Local1 T1-GW PPP
+
+
+
+ A common question is ``Why (or how) would we set the
+ T1-GW to be the default gateway for Local1, rather than
+ the ISP server it is connected to?''.
+
+ Remember, since the PPP interface is using an address on
+ the ISP's local network for your side of the connection,
+ routes for any other machines on the ISP's local network
+ will be automatically generated. Hence, you will already
+ know how to reach the T1-GW machine, so there is no need
+ for the intermediate step of sending traffic to the ISP
+ server.
+
+ As a final note, it is common to use the address ``...1''
+ as the gateway address for your local network. So (using
+ the same example), if your local class-C address space
+ was 10.20.30 and your ISP was using 10.9.9 then the
+ default routes would be:
+
+
+
+ Local2 (10.20.30.2) --> Local1 (10.20.30.1)
+ Local1 (10.20.30.1, 10.9.9.30) --> T1-GW (10.9.9.1)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Dual homed hosts
+
+ There is one other type of configuration that we should
+ cover, and that is a host that sits on two different
+ networks. Technically, any machine functioning as a
+ gateway (in the example above, using a PPP connection)
+ counts as a dual-homed host. But the term is really only
+ used to refer to a machine that sits on two local-area
+ networks.
+
+ In one case, the machine as two ethernet cards, each
+ having an address on the separate subnets. Alternately,
+ the machine may only have one ethernet card, and be using
+ ifconfig aliasing. The former is used if two physically
+ separate ethernet networks are in use, the latter if
+ there is one physical network segment, but two logically
+ separate subnets.
+
+ Either way, routing tables are set up so that each subnet
+ knows that this machine is the defined gateway (inbound
+ route) to the other subnet. This configuration, with the
+ machine acting as a Bridge between the two subnets, is
+ often used when we need to implement packet filtering or
+ firewall security in either or both directions.
+
+
+
+
+ Routing propagation
+
+ We have already talked about how we define our routes to
+ the outside world, but not about how the outside world
+ finds us.
+
+ We already know that routing tables can be set up so that
+ all traffic for a particular address space (in our
+ examples, a class-C subnet) can be sent to a particular
+ host on that network, which will forward the packets
+ inbound.
+
+ When you get an address space assigned to your site, your
+ service provider will set up their routing tables so that
+ all traffic for your subnet will be sent down your PPP
+ link to your site. But how do sites across the country
+ know to send to your ISP?
+
+ There is a system (much like the distributed DNS
+ information) that keeps track of all assigned
+ address-spaces, and defines their point of connection to
+ the Internet Backbone. The ``Backbone'' are the main
+ trunk lines that carry Internet traffic across the
+ country, and around the world. Each backbone machine has
+ a copy of a master set of tables, which direct traffic
+ for a particular network to a specific backbone carrier,
+ and from there down the chain of service providers until
+ it reaches your network.
+
+ It is the task of your service provider to advertise to
+ the backbone sites that they are the point of connection
+ (and thus the path inward) for your site. This is known
+ as route propagation.
+
+
+
+
+ Troubleshooting
+
+ Sometimes, there is a problem with routing propagation,
+ and some sites are unable to connect to you. Perhaps the
+ most useful command for trying to figure out where a
+ routing is breaking down is the traceroute(8)
+ command. It is equally useful if you cannot seem to make
+ a connection to a remote machine (ie. ping(8)
+ fails).
+
+ The traceroute(8) command is run with the name
+ of the remote host you are trying to connect to. It will
+ show the gateway hosts along the path of the attempt,
+ eventually either reaching the target host, or
+ terminating because of a lack of connection.
+
+ For more information, see the manual page for
+ traceroute(8).
+
+
+
+
+
+ NFS
+
+ Contributed by &a.jlind;.
+
+ Certain Ethernet adapters for ISA PC systems have limitations which
+ can lead to serious network problems, particularly with NFS. This
+ difficulty is not specific to FreeBSD, but FreeBSD systems are affected
+ by it.
+
+ The problem nearly always occurs when (FreeBSD) PC systems are networked
+ with high-performance workstations, such as those made by Silicon Graphics,
+ Inc., and Sun Microsystems, Inc. The NFS mount will work fine, and some
+ operations may succeed, but suddenly the server will seem to become
+ unresponsive to the client, even though requests to and from other systems
+ continue to be processed. This happens to the client system, whether the
+ client is the FreeBSD system or the workstation. On many systems, there is
+ no way to shut down the client gracefully once this problem has manifested
+ itself. The only solution is often to reset the client, because the NFS
+ situation cannot be resolved.
+
+ Though the "correct" solution is to get a higher performance and capacity
+ Ethernet adapter for the FreeBSD system, there is a simple workaround that
+ will allow satisfactory operation. If the FreeBSD system is the SERVER,
+ include the option "-w=1024" on the mount from the client. If the
+ FreeBSD system is the CLIENT, then mount the NFS file system with the
+ option "-r=1024". These options may be specified using the fourth
+ field of the fstab entry on the client for automatic mounts, or by using
+ the "-o" parameter of the mount command for manual mounts.
+
+ It should be noted that there is a different problem,
+ sometimes mistaken for this one,
+ when the NFS servers and clients are on different networks.
+ If that is the case, make CERTAIN that your routers are routing the
+ necessary UDP information, or you will not get anywhere, no matter
+ what else you are doing.
+
+ In the following examples, "fastws" is the host (interface) name of a
+ high-performance workstation, and "freebox" is the host (interface) name of
+ a FreeBSD system with a lower-performance Ethernet adapter. Also,
+ "/sharedfs" will be the exported NFS filesystem (see "man exports"), and
+ "/project" will be the mount point on the client for the exported file
+ system. In all cases, note that additional options, such as "hard" or
+ "soft" and "bg" may be desirable in your application.
+
+ Examples for the FreeBSD system ("freebox") as the client:
+ in /etc/fstab on freebox:
+ fastws:/sharedfs /project nfs rw,-r=1024 0 0
+ as a manual mount command on freebox:
+ mount -t nfs -o -r=1024 fastws:/sharedfs /project
+
+ Examples for the FreeBSD system as the server:
+ in /etc/fstab on fastws:
+ freebox:/sharedfs /project nfs rw,-w=1024 0 0
+ as a manual mount command on fastws:
+ mount -t nfs -o -w=1024 freebox:/sharedfs /project
+
+ Nearly any 16-bit Ethernet adapter will allow operation without the above
+ restrictions on the read or write size.
+
+ For anyone who cares, here is what happens when the failure occurs, which
+ also explains why it is unrecoverable. NFS typically works with a "block"
+ size of 8k (though it may do fragments of smaller sizes). Since the maximum
+ Ethernet packet is around 1500 bytes, the NFS "block" gets split into
+ multiple Ethernet packets, even though it is still a single unit to the
+ upper-level code, and must be received, assembled, and ACKNOWLEDGED as a
+ unit. The high-performance workstations can pump out the packets which
+ comprise the NFS unit one right after the other, just as close together as
+ the standard allows. On the smaller, lower capacity cards, the later
+ packets overrun the earlier packets of the same unit before they can be
+ transferred to the host and the unit as a whole cannot be reconstructed or
+ acknowledged. As a result, the workstation will time out and try again,
+ but it will try again with the entire 8K unit, and the process will be
+ repeated, ad infinitum.
+
+ By keeping the unit size below the Ethernet packet size limitation, we
+ ensure that any complete Ethernet packet received can be acknowledged
+ individually, avoiding the deadlock situation.
+
+ Overruns may still occur when a high-performance workstations is slamming
+ data out to a PC system, but with the better cards, such overruns are
+ not guaranteed on NFS "units". When an overrun occurs, the units affected
+ will be retransmitted, and there will be a fair chance that they will be
+ received, assembled, and acknowledged.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Diskless Operation
+
+ Contributed by &a.martin;.
+
+ netboot.com/netboot.rom allow you to boot your
+ FreeBSD machine over the network and run FreeBSD without
+ having a disk on your client. Under 2.0 it is now
+ possible to have local swap. Swapping over NFS is also
+ still supported.
+
+ Supported Ethernet cards include: Western Digital/SMC
+ 8003, 8013, 8216 and compatibles; NE1000/NE2000 and
+ compatibles (requires recompile)
+
+
+
+ Setup Instructions
+
+
+
+
+
+ Find a machine that will be your server. This
+ machine will require enough disk space to hold the
+ FreeBSD 2.0 binaries and have bootp, tftp and NFS
+ services available.
+
+ Tested machines:
+
+
+
+ HP9000/8xx running HP-UX 9.04 or later (pre
+ 9.04 doesn't work)
+
+
+
+ Sun/Solaris 2.3. (you may need to get
+ bootp)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Set up a bootp server to provide the client with
+ IP, gateway, netmask.
+
+ diskless:\
+ :ht=ether:\
+ :ha=0000c01f848a:\
+ :sm=255.255.255.0:\
+ :hn:\
+ :ds=192.1.2.3:\
+ :ip=192.1.2.4:\
+ :gw=192.1.2.5:\
+ :vm=rfc1048:
+
+
+
+
+
+ Set up a TFTP server (on same machine as bootp
+ server) to provide booting information to client.
+ The name of this file is cfg.X.X.X.X (or
+ /tftpboot/cfg.X.X.X.X, it will try both)
+ where X.X.X.X is the IP address of the
+ client. The contents of this file can be any valid
+ netboot commands. Under 2.0, netboot has the
+ following commands:
+
+ help - print help list
+ ip <X.X.X.X> - print/set client's IP address
+ server <X.X.X.X> - print/set bootp/tftp server address
+ netmask <X.X.X.X> - print/set netmask
+ hostname <name> - print/set hostname
+ kernel <name> - print/set kernel name
+ rootfs <ip:/fs> - print/set root filesystem
+ swapfs <ip:/fs> - print/set swap filesystem
+ swapsize <size> - set diskless swapsize in Kbytes
+ diskboot - boot from disk
+ autoboot - continue boot process
+ trans <on|off> - turn transceiver on|off
+ flags [bcdhsv] - set boot flags
+
+
+ A typical completely diskless cfg file might contain:
+
+ rootfs 192.1.2.3:/rootfs/myclient
+ swapfs 192.1.2.3:/swapfs
+ swapsize 20000
+ hostname myclient.mydomain
+
+
+ A cfg file for a machine with local swap might contain:
+
+ rootfs 192.1.2.3:/rootfs/myclient
+ hostname myclient.mydomain
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Ensure that your NFS server has exported the root
+ (and swap if applicable) filesystems to your client,
+ and that the client has root access to these
+ filesystems
+
+ A typical /etc/exports file on FreeBSD might
+ look like:
+
+ /rootfs/myclient -maproot=0:0 myclient.mydomain
+ /swapfs -maproot=0:0 myclient.mydomain
+
+
+
+ And on HP-UX:
+
+ /rootfs/myclient -root=myclient.mydomain
+ /swapfs -root=myclient.mydomain
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ If you are swapping over NFS (completely diskless
+ configuration) create a swap file for your client
+ using dd. If your swapfs command has the
+ arguments /swapfs and the size 20000 as in the
+ example above, the swapfile for myclient will be called
+ /swapfs/swap.X.X.X.X where X.X.X.X
+ is the client's IP addr, eg:
+
+ # dd if=/dev/zero of=/swapfs/swap.192.1.2.4 bs=1k count=20000
+
+
+
+ Also, the client's swap space might contain sensitive
+ information once swapping starts, so make sure to
+ restrict read and write access to this file to prevent
+ unauthorized access:
+
+ # chmod 0600 /swapfs/swap.192.1.2.4
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Unpack the root filesystem in the directory the
+ client will use for its root filesystem
+ (/rootfs/myclient in the example above).
+
+
+
+
+ On HP-UX systems: The server should be
+ running HP-UX 9.04 or later for HP9000/800 series
+ machines. Prior versions do not allow the
+ creation of device files over NFS.
+
+
+
+
+ When extracting /dev in
+ /rootfs/myclient, beware that some
+ systems (HPUX) will not create device files that
+ FreeBSD is happy with. You may have to go to
+ single user mode on the first bootup (press
+ control-c during the bootup phase), cd
+ /dev and do a "sh ./MAKEDEV
+ all" from the client to fix this.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Run netboot.com on the client or make an EPROM
+ from the netboot.rom file
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Using Shared / and /usr filesystems
+
+ At present there isn't an officially sanctioned way of
+ doing this, although I have been using a shared /usr
+ filesystem and individual / filesystems for each client.
+ If anyone has any suggestions on how to do this cleanly,
+ please let me and/or the &a.core; know.
+
+
+
+
+ Compiling netboot for specific setups
+
+ Netboot can be compiled to support NE1000/2000 cards by
+ changing the configuration in
+ /sys/i386/boot/netboot/Makefile. See the
+ comments at the top of this file.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ISDN
+
+ Last modified by &a.wlloyd;.
+
+ A good resource for information on ISDN technology and hardware is
+ Dan Kegel's ISDN Page.
+
+ A quick simple roadmap to ISDN follows:
+
+
+
+ If you live in Europe I suggest you investigate the ISDN card
+ section.
+
+
+
+
+ If you are planning to use ISDN primarily to connect to the
+ Internet with an Internet Provider on a dialup non-dedicated basis, I
+ suggest you look into Terminal Adapters. This will give you the most
+ flexibility, with the fewest problems, if you change providers.
+
+
+
+
+ If you are connecting two lans together, or connecting to the
+ Internet with a dedicated ISDN connection, I suggest you consider the
+ stand alone router/bridge option.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Cost is a significant factor in determining what solution you will
+ choose. The following options are listed from least expensive to most
+ expensive.
+
+
+
+ ISDN Cards
+
+ Original Contribution by &a.hm;.
+
+ This section is really only relevant to European ISDN users. The
+ cards supported are not yet(?) available for North American ISDN
+ standards.
+
+ You should be aware that this code is largely under development.
+ Specifically, drivers have only been written for two manufacturers
+ cards.
+
+ PC ISDN cards support the full bandwidth of ISDN, 128Kbs. These
+ cards are often the least expensive type of ISDN equipment.
+
+ Under FreeBSD 2.1.0 and 2.1.5, there is early unfinished ISDN code
+ under /usr/src/gnu/isdn. This code is out of date and should not be
+ used. If you want to go this route, get the bisdn stuff. This code
+ has been removed from the main source tree starting with FreeBSD 2.2.
+
+ There is the bisdn ISDN package available from
+ hub.freebsd.org
+ supporting FreeBSD 2.1R, FreeBSD-current and NetBSD.
+ The latest source can be found on the above mentioned ftp server under
+ directory isdn as file bisdn-097.tar.gz.
+
+ There are drivers for the following cards:
+
+
+
+ Currently all (passive) Teles cards and their clones are supported
+ for the EuroISDN (DSS1) and 1TR6 protocols.
+
+
+
+ Dr. Neuhaus - Niccy 1016
+
+
+
+
+
+ There are several limitations with the bisdn stuff. Specifically the
+ following features usually associated with ISDN are not supported.
+
+
+
+
+
+ No PPP support, only raw hdlc. This means you cannot connect to most
+ standalone routers.
+
+
+
+ Bridging Control Protocol not supported.
+
+
+
+ Multiple cards are not supported.
+
+
+
+ No bandwidth on demand.
+
+
+
+ No channel bundling.
+
+
+
+
+
+ A majordomo maintained mailing list is available.
+ To join the list, send mail to &a.majordomo; and specify:
+ subscribe freebsd-isdn
+
+ In the body of your message.
+
+
+
+
+ ISDN Terminal Adapters
+
+ Terminal adapters(TA), are to ISDN what modems are to regular phone
+ lines.
+
+ Most TA's use the standard hayes modem AT command set, and can be
+ used as a drop in replacement for a modem.
+
+ A TA will operate basically the same as a modem except connection and
+ throughput speeds will be much faster than your old modem. You will
+ need to configure exactly the same as for a
+ modem setup. Make sure you set your serial speed as high as possible.
+
+ The main advantage of using a TA to connect to an Internet Provider is
+ that you can do Dynamic PPP. As IP address space becomes more and more
+ scarce, most providers are not willing to provide you with a static IP
+ anymore. Most standalone routers are not able to accommodate dynamic IP
+ allocation.
+
+ TA's completely rely on the PPP daemon that you are running for their
+ features and stability of connection. This allows you to upgrade easily
+ from using a modem to ISDN on a FreeBSD machine, if you already have PPP
+ setup. However, at the same time any problems you experienced with the
+ PPP program and are going to persist.
+
+ If you want maximum stability, use the kernel
+ option, not the user-land .
+
+ The following TA's are know to work with FreeBSD.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Motorola BitSurfer and Bitsurfer Pro
+
+
+
+ Adtran
+
+
+
+
+
+ Most other TA's will probably work as well, TA vendors try to make sure
+ their product can accept most of the standard modem AT command set.
+
+ The real problem with external TA's is like modems you need a good
+ serial card in your computer.
+
+ You should read the section in the
+ handbook for a detailed understanding of serial devices, and the
+ differences between asynchronous and synchronous serial ports.
+
+ A TA running off a standard PC serial port (asynchronous) limits you to
+ 115.2Kbs, even though you have a 128Kbs connection. To fully utilize
+ the 128Kbs that ISDN is capable of, you must move the TA to a
+ synchronous serial card.
+
+ Do not be fooled into buying an internal TA and thinking you have
+ avoided the synchronous/asynchronous issue. Internal TA's simply have a
+ standard PC serial port chip built into them. All this will do, is save
+ you having to buy another serial cable, and find another empty
+ electrical socket.
+
+ A synchronous card with a TA is at least as fast as a standalone router,
+ and with a simple 386 FreeBSD box driving it, probably more flexible.
+
+ The choice of sync/TA vs standalone router is largely a religious
+ issue. There has been some discussion of this in the mailing lists. I
+ suggest you search the archives for the complete discussion.
+
+
+
+
+ Standalone ISDN Bridges/Routers
+
+ ISDN bridges or routers are not at all specific to FreeBSD or any
+ other operating system. For a more complete description of routing and
+ bridging technology, please refer to a Networking reference book.
+
+ In the context of this page, I will use router and bridge
+ interchangeably.
+
+ As the cost of low end ISDN routers/bridges comes down, it will
+ likely become a more and more popular choice. An ISDN router is a small
+ box that plugs directly into your local Ethernet network(or card), and
+ manages its own connection to the other bridge/router. It has all the
+ software to do PPP and other protocols built in.
+
+ A router will allow you much faster throughput that a standard TA, since
+ it will be using a full synchronous ISDN connection.
+
+ The main problem with ISDN routers and bridges is that interoperability
+ between manufacturers can still be a problem. If you are planning to
+ connect to an Internet provider, I recommend that you discuss your needs
+ with them.
+
+ If you are planning to connect two lan segments together, ie: home
+ lan to the office lan, this is the simplest lowest maintenance
+ solution. Since you are buying the equipment for both sides of the
+ connection you can be assured that the link will work.
+
+ For example to connect a home computer or branch office network to a
+ head office network the following setup could be used.
+
+ Branch office or Home network
+
+ Network is 10 Base T Ethernet. Connect router to network cable with
+ AUI/10BT transceiver, if necessary.
+
+
+ ---Sun workstation
+ |
+ ---FreeBSD box
+ |
+ ---Windows 95 (Do not admit to owning it)
+ |
+ Standalone router
+ |
+ ISDN BRI line
+
+ If your home/branch office is only one computer you can use a twisted
+ pair crossover cable to connect to the standalone router directly.
+
+ Head office or other lan
+
+ Network is Twisted Pair Ethernet.
+ -------Novell Server
+ | H |
+ | ---Sun
+ | |
+ | U ---FreeBSD
+ | |
+ | ---Windows 95
+ | B |
+ |___---Standalone router
+ |
+ ISDN BRI line
+
+
+ One large advantage of most routers/bridges is that they allow you to
+ have 2 SEPARATE INDEPENDENT PPP connections to 2 separate sites at the
+ SAME time. This is not supported on most TA's, except for
+ specific(expensive) models that have two serial ports. Do not confuse
+ this with channel bonding, MPP etc.
+
+ This can be very useful feature, for example if you have an dedicated
+ internet ISDN connection at your office and would like to tap into it,
+ but don't want to get another ISDN line at work. A router at the office
+ location can manage a dedicated B channel connection (64Kbs) to the
+ internet, as well as a use the other B channel for a separate data connection.
+ The second B channel can be used for dialin, dialout or dynamically
+ bond(MPP etc.) with the first B channel for more bandwidth.
+
+ An Ethernet bridge will also allow you to transmit more than just
+ IP traffic, you can also send IPX/SPX or whatever other protocols you
+ use.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Electronic Mail
+
+ Contributed by &a.wlloyd;.
+
+ Electronic Mail configuration is the subject of many books. If you plan on doing anything beyond setting up one mailhost for your network, you need industrial strength help.
+
+ Some parts of E-Mail configuration are controlled in the Domain Name System (DNS). If you are going to run your own own DNS server check out /etc/namedb and ' man -k named ' for more information.
+
+
+
+ Basic Information
+
+ These are the major programs involved in an E-Mail exchange.
+ A mailhost is a server that is responsible for delivering and receiving all email for your host, and possibly your network.
+
+
+
+ User program
+
+ This is a program like elm, pine, mail , or something more sophisticated like a WWW browser. This program will simply pass off all e-mail transactions to the local mailhost , either by calling sendmail or delivering it over TCP.
+
+
+
+
+ Mailhost Server Daemon
+
+ Usually this program is sendmail or smail running in the background. Turn it off or change the command line options in /etc/rc.conf
+ (or, prior to FreeBSD 2.2.2, /etc/sysconfig). It is best to leave it on, unless you have a specific reason to want it off. Example: You are building a .
+
+ You should be aware that sendmail is a potential weak link in a secure site. Some versions of sendmail have known security problems.
+
+ sendmail does two jobs. It looks after delivering and receiving mail.
+
+ If sendmail needs to deliver mail off your site it will look up in the DNS to determine the actual host that will receive mail for the destination.
+
+ If it is acting as a delivery agent sendmail will take the message from the local queue and deliver it across the Internet to another sendmail on the receivers computer.
+
+
+
+
+ DNS - Name Service
+
+ The Domain Name System and its daemon named , contain the database mapping hostname to IP address, and hostname to mailhost. The IP address is specified in an "A" record. The "MX" record specifies the mailhost that will receive mail for you. If you do not have a "MX" record mail for your hostname, the mail will be delivered to your host directly.
+
+ Unless you are running your own DNS server, you will not be able to change any information in the DNS yourself. If you are using an Internet Provider, speak to them.
+
+
+
+
+ POP Servers
+
+ This program gets the mail from your mailbox and gives it to your browser. If you want to run a POP server on your computer, you will need to do 2 things.
+
+
+
+ Get pop software from the Ports collection that can be found in /usr/ports
+ or packages collection. This handbook section has a complete reference on the system.
+
+
+
+ Modify /etc/inetd.conf to load the POP server.
+
+
+
+
+
+ The pop program will have instructions with it. Read them.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Configuration
+
+
+
+ Basic
+
+ As your FreeBSD system comes "out of the box"[TM], you should be able to send E-mail to external hosts as long as you have /etc/resolv.conf setup or are running a name server.
+ If you want to have mail for your host delivered to your specific host,there are two methods:
+
+ - Run a name server ( man -k named ) and have your own domain smallminingco.com
+
+ - Get mail delivered to the current DNS name for your host. Ie: dorm6.ahouse.school.edu
+
+ No matter what option you choose, to have mail delivered directly to your host, you must be a full Internet host. You must have a permanent IP address. IE: NO dynamic PPP. If you are behind a firewall, the firewall must be passing on smtp traffic to you. From /etc/services
+ smtp 25/tcp mail #Simple Mail Transfer
+
+ If you want to receive mail at your host itself, you must make sure that the DNS MX entry points to your host address, or there is no MX entry for your DNS name.
+
+ Try this
+ newbsdbox# hostname
+ newbsdbox.freebsd.org
+ newbsdbox# host newbsdbox.freebsd.org
+ newbsdbox.freebsd.org has address 204.216.27.xx
+
+
+ If that is all that comes out for your machine, mail directory to root@newbsdbox.freebsd.org will work no problems.
+
+ If instead, you have this
+ newbsdbox# host newbsdbox.freebsd.org
+ newbsdbox.FreeBSD.org has address 204.216.27.xx
+ newbsdbox.FreeBSD.org mail is handled (pri=10) by freefall.FreeBSD.org
+
+ All mail sent to your host directly will end up on freefall, under the same username.
+
+ This information is setup in your domain name server. This should be the same host that is listed as your primary nameserver in /etc/resolv.conf
+
+ The DNS record that carries mail routing information is the Mail eXchange entry. If no MX entry exists, mail will be delivered directly to the host by way of the Address record.
+
+ The MX entry for freefall.freebsd.org at one time.
+ freefall MX 30 mail.crl.net
+ freefall MX 40 agora.rdrop.com
+ freefall HINFO Pentium FreeBSD
+ freefall MX 10 freefall.FreeBSD.org
+ freefall MX 20 who.cdrom.com
+ freefall A 204.216.27.xx
+ freefall CNAME www.FreeBSD.org
+
+
+ Freefall has many MX entries. The lowest MX number gets the mail in the end. The others will queue mail temporarily, if freefall is busy or down.
+
+ Alternate MX sites should have separate connections to the Internet, to be most useful. An Internet Provider or other friendly site can provide this service.
+
+ dig, nslookup, and host are your friends.
+
+
+
+
+ Mail for your Domain (Network).
+
+ To setup up a network mailhost, you need to direct the mail from arriving at all the workstations. In other words, you want to hijack all mail for *.smallminingco.com and divert it to one machine, your mailhost.
+
+ The network users on their workstations will most likely pick up their mail over POP or telnet.
+
+ A user account with the SAME USERNAME should exist on both machines. Please use adduser to do this as required. If you set the shell to /nonexistent the user will not be allowed to login.
+
+ The mailhost that you will be using must be designated the Mail eXchange for each workstation. This must be arranged in DNS (ie BIND, named). Please refer to a Networking book for in-depth information.
+
+ You basically need to add these lines in your DNS server.
+ pc24.smallminingco.com A xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx ; Workstation ip
+ MX 10 smtp.smallminingco.com ; Your mailhost
+
+
+ You cannot do this yourself unless you are running a DNS server. If you do not want to run a DNS server, get somebody else like your Internet Provider to do it.
+
+ This will redirect mail for the workstation to the Mail eXchange host. It does not matter what machine the A record points to, the mail will be sent to the MX host.
+
+ This feature is used to implement Virtual E-Mail Hosting.
+
+ Example
+
+ I have a customer with domain foo.bar and I want all mail for foo.bar to be sent to my machine smtp.smalliap.com. You must make an entry in your DNS server like:
+
+ foo.bar MX 10 smtp.smalliap.com ; your mailhost
+
+ The A record is not needed if you only want E-Mail for the domain. IE: Don't expect ping foo.bar to work unless an Address record for foo.bar exists as well.
+
+ On the mailhost that actually accepts mail for final delivery to a mailbox, sendmail must be told what hosts it will be accepting mail for.
+
+ Add pc24.smallminingco.com to /etc/sendmail.cw (if you are using FEATURE(use_cw_file)), or add a "Cw myhost.smalliap.com" line to /etc/sendmail.cf
+
+ If you plan on doing anything serious with sendmail you should install the sendmail source. The source has plenty of documentation with it. You will find information on getting sendmail source from .
+
+
+
+
+ Setting up UUCP.
+
+ Stolen from the FAQ.
+
+ The sendmail configuration that ships with FreeBSD is
+ suited for sites that connect directly to the Internet.
+ Sites that wish to exchange their mail via UUCP must install
+ another sendmail configuration file.
+
+ Tweaking /etc/sendmail.cf manually is considered
+ something for purists. Sendmail version 8 comes with a
+ new approach of generating config files via some m4
+ preprocessing, where the actual hand-crafted configuration
+ is on a higher abstraction level. You should use the
+ configuration files under
+
+
+ /usr/src/usr.sbin/sendmail/cf
+
+
+ If you did not install your system with full sources,
+ the sendmail config stuff has been
+ broken out into a separate source distribution tarball just
+ for you. Assuming you have your CD-ROM mounted, do:
+
+
+ cd /usr/src
+ tar -xvzf /cdrom/dists/src/ssmailcf.aa
+
+
+ Do not panic, this is only a few hundred kilobytes in size.
+ The file README in the cf directory can
+ serve as a basic introduction to m4 configuration.
+
+ For UUCP delivery, you are best advised to use the
+ mailertable feature. This constitutes a database
+ that sendmail can use to base its routing decision upon.
+
+ First, you have to create your .mc file. The
+ directory /usr/src/usr.sbin/sendmail/cf/cf is the
+ home of these files. Look around, there are already a few
+ examples. Assuming you have named your file foo.mc,
+ all you need to do in order to convert it into a valid
+ sendmail.cf is:
+
+
+ cd /usr/src/usr.sbin/sendmail/cf/cf
+ make foo.cf
+
+
+ If you don't have a /usr/obj hiearchy, then:
+
+
+ cp foo.cf /etc/sendmail.cf
+
+
+ Otherwise:
+
+
+ cp /usr/obj/`pwd`/foo.cf /etc/sendmail.cf
+
+
+ A typical .mc file might look like:
+
+
+ include(`../m4/cf.m4')
+ VERSIONID(`Your version number')
+ OSTYPE(bsd4.4)
+
+ FEATURE(nodns)
+ FEATURE(nocanonify)
+ FEATURE(mailertable)
+
+ define(`UUCP_RELAY', your.uucp.relay)
+ define(`UUCP_MAX_SIZE', 200000)
+
+ MAILER(local)
+ MAILER(smtp)
+ MAILER(uucp)
+
+ Cw your.alias.host.name
+ Cw youruucpnodename.UUCP
+
+
+ The nodns and nocanonify features will
+ prevent any usage of the DNS during mail delivery. The
+ UUCP_RELAY clause is needed for bizarre reasons,
+ do not ask. Simply put an Internet hostname there that
+ is able to handle .UUCP pseudo-domain addresses; most likely,
+ you will enter the mail relay of your ISP there.
+
+ Once you have this, you need this file called
+ /etc/mailertable. A typical example of this
+ gender again:
+
+
+ #
+ # makemap hash /etc/mailertable.db < /etc/mailertable
+ #
+ horus.interface-business.de uucp-dom:horus
+ .interface-business.de uucp-dom:if-bus
+ interface-business.de uucp-dom:if-bus
+ .heep.sax.de smtp8:%1
+ horus.UUCP uucp-dom:horus
+ if-bus.UUCP uucp-dom:if-bus
+ . uucp-dom:sax
+
+
+ As you can see, this is part of a real-life file. The first
+ three lines handle special cases where domain-addressed mail
+ should not be sent out to the default route, but instead to
+ some UUCP neighbor in order to ``shortcut'' the delivery
+ path. The next line handles mail to the local Ethernet
+ domain that can be delivered using SMTP. Finally, the UUCP
+ neighbors are mentioned in the .UUCP pseudo-domain notation,
+ to allow for a ``uucp-neighbor!recipient'' override of the
+ default rules. The last line is always a single dot, matching
+ everything else, with UUCP delivery to a UUCP neighbor that
+ serves as your universal mail gateway to the world. All of
+ the node names behind the uucp-dom: keyword must
+ be valid UUCP neighbors, as you can verify using the
+ command uuname.
+
+ As a reminder that this file needs to be converted into a
+ DBM database file before being usable, the command line to
+ accomplish this is best placed as a comment at the top of
+ the mailertable. You always have to execute this command
+ each time you change your mailertable.
+
+ Final hint: if you are uncertain whether some particular
+ mail routing would work, remember the option to
+ sendmail. It starts sendmail in address test mode;
+ simply enter ``0 '', followed by the address you wish to
+ test for the mail routing. The last line tells you the used
+ internal mail agent, the destination host this agent will be
+ called with, and the (possibly translated) address. Leave
+ this mode by typing Control-D.
+
+
+ j@uriah 191% sendmail -bt
+ ADDRESS TEST MODE (ruleset 3 NOT automatically invoked)
+ Enter <ruleset> <address>
+ > 0 foo@interface-business.de
+ rewrite: ruleset 0 input: foo @ interface-business . de
+ ...
+ rewrite: ruleset 0 returns: $# uucp-dom $@ if-bus $: foo \
+ < @ interface-business . de >
+ > ^D
+ j@uriah 192%
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FAQ
+
+ Migration from FAQ.
+
+
+
+ Why do I have to use the FQDN for hosts on my site?
+
+ You will probably find that the host is actually in a different
+ domain; for example, if you are in foo.bar.edu and you wish to reach
+ a host called ``mumble'' in the bar.edu domain, you will have to
+ refer to it by the fully-qualified domain name, ``mumble.bar.edu'',
+ instead of just ``mumble''.
+
+ Traditionally, this was allowed by BSD BIND resolvers. However
+ the current version of BIND that ships with FreeBSD
+ no longer provides default abbreviations for non-fully
+ qualified domain names other than the domain you are in.
+ So an unqualified host mumble must either be found
+ as mumble.foo.bar.edu, or it will be searched for
+ in the root domain.
+
+ This is different from the previous behavior, where the
+ search continued across mumble.bar.edu, and
+ mumble.edu. Have a look at RFC 1535 for why this
+ was considered bad practice, or even a security hole.
+
+ As a good workaround, you can place the line
+
+ search foo.bar.edu bar.edu
+
+ instead of the previous
+
+ domain foo.bar.edu
+
+ into your /etc/resolv.conf. However, make sure
+ that the search order does not go beyond the ``boundary
+ between local and public administration'', as RFC 1535
+ calls it.
+
+
+
+
+ Sendmail says ``mail loops back to myself''
+
+ This is answered in the sendmail FAQ as follows:-
+ * I am getting "Local configuration error" messages, such as:
+
+ 553 relay.domain.net config error: mail loops back to myself
+ 554 <user@domain.net>... Local configuration error
+
+ How can I solve this problem?
+
+ You have asked mail to the domain (e.g., domain.net) to be
+ forwarded to a specific host (in this case, relay.domain.net)
+ by using an MX record, but the relay machine does not recognize
+ itself as domain.net. Add domain.net to /etc/sendmail.cw
+ (if you are using FEATURE(use_cw_file)) or add "Cw domain.net"
+ to /etc/sendmail.cf.
+
+
+
+ The sendmail FAQ is in /usr/src/usr.sbin/sendmail
+ and is recommended reading if you want to do any
+ ``tweaking'' of your mail setup.
+
+
+
+
+ How can I do E-Mail with a dialup PPP host?
+
+ You want to connect a FreeBSD box on a lan, to the Internet. The FreeBSD box will be a mail gateway for the lan. The PPP connection is non-dedicated.
+
+ There are at least two way to do this.
+
+ The other is to use UUCP.
+
+ The key is to get a Internet site to provide secondary MX services for your domain.
+ For example:
+ bigco.com. MX 10 bigco.com.
+ MX 20 smalliap.com.
+
+
+ Only one host should be specified as the final recipient ( add ``Cw bigco.com'' in /etc/sendmail.cf on bigco.com).
+
+ When the senders sendmail is trying to deliver the mail it will try to connect to you over the modem link. It will most likely time out because you are not online. Sendmail will automatically deliver it to the secondary MX site, ie your Internet provider. The secondary MX site will try every (sendmail_flags = "-bd -q15m" in /etc/rc.conf ) 15 minutes to connect to your host to deliver the mail to the primary MX site.
+
+ You might wat to use something like this as a login script.
+ #!/bin/sh
+ # Put me in /usr/local/bin/pppbigco
+ ( sleep 60 ; /usr/sbin/sendmail -q ) &
+ /usr/sbin/ppp -direct pppbigco
+
+ If you are going to create a separate login script for a user you could use sendmail -qRbigco.com instead in the script above. This will force all mail in your queue for bigco.com to be processed immediately.
+
+ A further refinement of the situation is as follows.
+
+ Message stolen from the freebsd-isp mailing list.
+ > we provide the secondary mx for a customer. The customer connects to
+ > our services several times a day automatically to get the mails to
+ > his primary mx (We do not call his site when a mail for his domains
+ > arrived). Our sendmail sends the mailqueue every 30 minutes. At the
+ > moment he has to stay 30 minutes online to be sure that all mail is
+ > gone to the primary mx.
+ >
+ > Is there a command that would initiate sendmail to send all the mails
+ > now? The user has not root-privileges on our machine of course.
+
+ In the 'privacy flags' section of sendmail.cf, there is a definition
+ Opgoaway,restrictqrun
+
+ Remove restrictqrun to allow non-root users to start the queue processing.
+ You might also like to rearrange the MXs. We are the 1st MX for our
+ customers like this, and we have defined:
+
+ # If we are the best MX for a host, try directly instead of generating
+ # local config error.
+ OwTrue
+
+ That way a remote site will deliver straight to you, without trying
+ the customer connection. You then send to your customer. Only works for
+ "hosts", so you need to get your customer to name their mail machine
+ "customer.com" as well as "hostname.customer.com" in the DNS. Just put
+ an A record in the DNS for "customer.com".
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Advanced topics
+
+
+
+ The Cutting Edge: FreeBSD-current and FreeBSD-stable
+
+ FreeBSD is under constant development between releases. For
+ people who want to be on the cutting edge, there are several
+ easy mechanisms for keeping your system in sync with the latest
+ developments. Be warned: the cutting edge is not for everyone!
+ This chapter will help you decide if you want to track the development
+ system, or stick with one of the released versions.
+
+
+
+ Staying Current with FreeBSD
+
+ Contributed by &a.jkh;.
+
+
+
+ What is FreeBSD-current?
+
+ FreeBSD-current is, quite literally, nothing more than a daily
+ snapshot of the working sources for FreeBSD. These include work in
+ progress, experimental changes and transitional mechanisms that may or
+ may not be present in the next official release of the software.
+ While many of us compile almost daily from FreeBSD-current sources,
+ there are periods of time when the sources are literally un-compilable.
+ These problems are generally resolved as expeditiously as possible,
+ but whether or not FreeBSD-current sources bring disaster or greatly
+ desired functionality can literally be a matter of which part of any
+ given 24 hour period you grabbed them in!
+
+
+
+
+ Who needs FreeBSD-current?
+
+ FreeBSD-current is made generally available for 3 primary interest groups:
+
+
+
+ Members of the FreeBSD group who are actively working on some
+ part of the source tree and for whom keeping `current' is an
+ absolute requirement.
+
+
+
+
+ Members of the FreeBSD group who are active testers,
+ willing to spend time working through problems in order to
+ ensure that FreeBSD-current remains as sane as possible. These
+ are also people who wish to make topical suggestions on changes
+ and the general direction of FreeBSD.
+
+
+
+
+ Peripheral members of the FreeBSD (or some other) group who merely
+ wish to keep an eye on things and use the current sources for
+ reference purposes (e.g. for reading, not running). These
+ people also make the occasional comment or contribute code.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ What is FreeBSD-current NOT?
+
+
+
+
+
+ A fast-track to getting pre-release bits because you heard there is
+ some cool new feature in there and you want to be the first on
+ your block to have it.
+
+
+
+
+ A quick way of getting bug fixes.
+
+
+
+
+ In any way ``officially supported'' by us.
+
+ We do our best to help people genuinely in one of the 3
+ ``legitimate'' FreeBSD-current categories, but we simply do not
+ have the time to provide tech support for it.
+ This is not because we are mean and nasty people who do not like
+ helping people out (we would not even be doing FreeBSD if we were),
+ it is literally because we cannot answer 400 messages a day
+ and actually work on FreeBSD! I am sure that, if given
+ the choice between having us answer lots of questions or continuing to
+ improve FreeBSD, most of you would vote for us improving it.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Using FreeBSD-current
+
+
+
+
+
+ Join the &a.current; and the &a.cvsall; .
+ This is not just a good idea, it is essential.
+ If you are not on the FreeBSD-current mailing list you
+ will not see the comments that people are making about the
+ current state of the system and thus will probably end up stumbling
+ over a lot of problems that others have already found and
+ solved. Even more importantly, you will miss out on
+ potentially critical information (e.g. ``Yo, Everybody!
+ Before you rebuild /usr/src, you must
+ rebuild the kernel or your system will crash horribly!").
+
+ The cvs-all mailing list will allow you to see the commit log
+ entry for each change as it is made along with any pertinent
+ information on possible side-effects.
+
+ To join these lists, send mail to &a.majordomo; and specify:
+ subscribe freebsd-current
+ subscribe cvs-all
+
+ In the body of your message. Optionally, you can also say `help'
+ and Majordomo will send you full help on how to subscribe and
+ unsubscribe to the various other mailing lists we support.
+
+
+
+
+ Grab the sources from ftp.FreeBSD.ORG. You can do this in
+ three ways:
+
+
+
+
+ Use the facility. Unless you
+ have a good TCP/IP connection at a flat rate, this is
+ the way to do it.
+
+
+
+
+ Use the program with
+ this supfile.
+ This is the second most recommended method, since it allows
+ you to grab the entire collection once and then only what has
+ changed from then on. Many people run cvsup from cron
+ and keep their sources up-to-date automatically.
+
+
+
+
+ Use ftp. The source tree for FreeBSD-current is always
+ "exported" on:
+ ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/FreeBSD-current
+ We also use `wu-ftpd' which allows compressed/tar'd grabbing
+ of whole trees. e.g. you see:
+ usr.bin/lex
+
+ You can do:
+ ftp> cd usr.bin
+ ftp> get lex.tar.Z
+
+ And it will get the whole directory for you as a compressed
+ tar file.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Essentially, if you need rapid on-demand access to the source and
+ communications bandwidth is not a consideration, use cvsup or ftp.
+ Otherwise, use CTM.
+
+
+
+
+ If you are grabbing the sources to run, and not just look at,
+ then grab all of current, not just selected portions. The
+ reason for this is that various parts of the source depend on
+ updates elsewhere, and trying to compile just a subset is almost
+ guaranteed to get you into trouble.
+
+
+
+
+ Before compiling current, read the Makefile in /usr/src
+ carefully. You should at least run a `' the first time through as part of the upgrading
+ process. Reading the &a.current; will keep you up-to-date on other
+ bootstrapping procedures that sometimes become necessary as we move
+ towards the next release.
+
+
+
+
+ Be active! If you are running FreeBSD-current, we want to know
+ what you have to say about it, especially if you have suggestions
+ for enhancements or bug fixes. Suggestions with accompanying code
+ are received most enthusiastically!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Staying Stable with FreeBSD
+
+ Contributed by &a.jkh;.
+
+
+
+ What is FreeBSD-stable?
+
+ FreeBSD-stable is our development branch for a more low-key and
+ conservative set of changes intended for our next mainstream release.
+ Changes of an experimental or untested nature do not go into this
+ branch (see ).
+
+
+
+
+ Who needs FreeBSD-stable?
+
+ If you are a commercial user or someone who puts maximum stability of
+ their FreeBSD system before all other concerns, you should consider tracking
+ stable. This is especially true if you have installed the most
+ recent release (&rel.current;-RELEASE at the time of this writing) since the stable
+ branch is effectively a bug-fix stream relative to the previous release.
+
+ Please note that the stable tree endeavors, above all, to
+ be fully compilable and stable at all times, but we do occasionally
+ make mistakes (these are still active sources with quickly-transmitted
+ updates, after all). We also do our best to thoroughly test fixes in
+ current before bringing them into stable, but sometimes
+ our tests fail to catch every case. If something breaks for you in
+ stable, please let us know immediately! (see
+ next section).
+
+
+
+
+ Using FreeBSD-stable
+
+
+
+
+
+ Join the &a.stable; . This will
+ keep you informed of build-dependencies that may appear in
+ stable or any other issues requiring special attention.
+ Developers will also make announcements in this mailing list when
+ they are contemplating some controversial fix or update, giving
+ the users a chance to respond if they have any issues to raise concerning
+ the proposed change.
+
+ To join this list, send mail to &a.majordomo; and say:
+ subscribe freebsd-stable
+
+ In the body of your message. Optionally, you can also say `help'
+ and Majordomo will send you full help on how to subscribe and
+ unsubscribe to the various other mailing lists we support.
+
+
+
+
+ Grab the sources from ftp.FreeBSD.ORG. You can do this in
+ three ways:
+
+
+
+
+ Use the facility. Unless you
+ have a good TCP/IP connection at a flat rate, this is
+ the way to do it.
+
+
+
+
+ Use the program with
+ this supfile.
+ This is the second most recommended method, since it allows
+ you to grab the entire collection once and then only what has
+ changed from then on. Many people run cvsup from cron
+ to keep their sources up-to-date automatically.
+
+
+
+
+ Use ftp. The source tree for FreeBSD-stable is always
+ "exported" on:
+ ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/FreeBSD-stable
+
+
+
+ We also use `wu-ftpd' which allows compressed/tar'd grabbing
+ of whole trees. e.g. you see:
+ usr.bin/lex
+
+ You can do:
+ ftp> cd usr.bin
+ ftp> get lex.tar.Z
+
+ And it will get the whole directory for you as a compressed
+ tar file.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Essentially, if you need rapid on-demand access to the source and
+ communications bandwidth is not a consideration, use cvsup or ftp.
+ Otherwise, use CTM.
+
+
+
+
+ Before compiling stable, read the Makefile in /usr/src
+ carefully. You should at least run a `' the first time through as part of the upgrading
+ process. Reading the &a.stable; will keep you up-to-date on other
+ bootstrapping procedures that sometimes become necessary as we move
+ towards the next release.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Synchronizing Source Trees over the Internet
+
+ Contributed by &a.jkh;.
+
+ There are various ways of using an Internet (or email) connection
+ to stay up-to-date with any given area of the FreeBSD project sources,
+ or all areas, depending on what interests you. The primary
+ services we offer are CVSup and CTM.
+
+ CVSup uses the pull model of updating. The
+ user (or a cron script) invokes the cvsup program, and it
+ interacts with a cvsupd server somewhere to bring your files
+ up to date. The updates you receive are up-to-the-minute and you get
+ them when, and only when, you want them. You can easily restrict your
+ updates to the specific files or directories that are of interest to
+ you. Updates are generated on the fly by the server, according to
+ what you have and what you want to have.
+
+ CTM, on the other hand, does not interactively compare
+ the sources you have with those on the master archive. Instead, a script
+ which identifies changes in files since its previous run is executed several
+ times a day on the master archive, any detected changes being compressed,
+ stamped with a sequence-number and encoded for transmission over email
+ (printable ASCII only). Once received, these "CTM deltas" can then be
+ handed to the ctm_rmail(1) utility which will automatically decode, verify
+ and apply the changes to the user's copy of the sources. This process is
+ far more efficient than CVSup, and places less strain on our server resources
+ since it is a push rather than a pull model.
+
+ There are other trade-offs, of course. If you
+ inadvertently wipe out portions of your archive, CVSup will detect
+ and rebuild the damaged portions for you. CTM won't do this, and if
+ you wipe some portion of your source tree out (and don't have it backed
+ up) then you will have to start from scratch (from the most recent CVS
+ "base delta") and rebuild it all.
+
+ For more information on CTM and CVSup, please
+ see one of the following sections:
+
+
+
+ CTM
+
+ Contributed by &a.phk;. Updated 19-October-1997.
+
+ CTM is a method for keeping a remote directory tree in sync with a
+ central one. It has been developed for usage with FreeBSD's source
+ trees, though other people may find it useful for other purposes as
+ time goes by. Little, if any, documentation currently exists at
+ this time on the process of creating deltas, so talk to &a.phk;
+ for more information should you wish to use CTM for other things.
+
+
+
+ Why should I use CTM?
+
+ CTM will give you a local copy of the FreeBSD source trees.
+ There are a number of ``flavors'' of the tree available. Whether
+ you wish to track the entire cvs tree or just one of the branches,
+ CTM can provide you the information.
+ If you are an active developer on FreeBSD, but have lousy
+ or non-existent TCP/IP connectivity, or simply wish to have the
+ changes automatically sent to you, CTM was made for you.
+ You will need to obtain up to three deltas per day for the most
+ active branches. However, you should consider having them sent
+ by automatic email. The sizes of the updates are
+ always kept as small as possible. This is typically less than 5K,
+ with an occasional (one in ten) being 10-50K and every now and
+ then a biggie of 100K+ or more coming around.
+
+ You will also need to make yourself aware of the various caveats
+ related to working directly from the development sources rather
+ than a pre-packaged release. This is particularly true if you
+ choose the ``current'' sources. It is recommended that
+ you read .
+
+
+
+
+ What do I need to use CTM?
+
+ You will need two things: The ``CTM'' program and the initial
+ deltas to feed it (to get up to ``current'' levels).
+
+ The CTM program has been part of FreeBSD ever since version 2.0
+ was released, and lives in /usr/src/usr.sbin/CTM if you
+ have a copy of the source online.
+
+ If you are running a pre-2.0 version of FreeBSD, you can fetch the
+ current CTM sources directly from:
+
+ ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/FreeBSD-current/src/usr.sbin/ctm
+
+ The ``deltas'' you feed CTM can be had two ways, FTP or e-mail.
+ If you have general FTP access to the Internet then the following
+ FTP sites support access to CTM:
+
+ ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/CTM
+
+ or see section .
+
+ FTP the relevant directory and fetch the README file,
+ starting from there.
+
+ If you may wish to get your deltas via email:
+
+ Send email to &a.majordomo; to subscribe to one of the CTM
+ distribution lists. ``ctm-cvs-cur'' supports the entire cvs tree.
+ ``ctm-src-cur'' supports the head of the development branch.
+ ``ctm-src-2_2'' supports the 2.2 release branch, etc.
+ (If you do not know how to subscribe
+ yourself using majordomo, send a message first containing the
+ word ``help'' - it will send you back usage instructions.)
+
+ When you begin receiving your CTM updates in the mail, you may
+ use the ctm_rmail program to unpack and apply them. You
+ can actually use the ctm_rmail program directly from a entry
+ in /etc/aliases if you want to have the process run in a
+ fully automated fashion. Check the ctm_rmail man page for more
+ details.
+
+ NOTE: No matter what method you use to get the CTM
+ deltas, you should subscribe to the ctm-announce@FreeBSD.ORG
+ mailing list. In the future, this will be the only place where
+ announcements concerning the operations of the CTM system will be
+ posted. Send an email to &a.majordomo; with a single
+ line of ``subscribe ctm-announce'' to get added to the list.
+
+
+
+
+ Starting off with CTM for the first time
+
+ Before you can start using CTM deltas, you will need to get a
+ to a starting point for the deltas produced subsequently to it.
+
+ First you should determine what you already have. Everyone can
+ start from an ``Empty'' directory. However, since the trees are
+ many tens of megabytes, you should prefer to start from something
+ already at hand. If you have a RELEASE CD, you can copy or extract
+ an initial source from it. This will save a significant transfer
+ of data.
+
+ Once you identify a suitable starting point, you must use an initial
+ ``transition'' delta to transform your starting point into a
+ CTM supported tree.
+
+ You can recognize these transition deltas by the ``X'' appended
+ to the number (src-cur.3210XEmpty.gz for instance).
+ The designation following the ``X'' corresponds to the origin
+ of your initial ``seed''. ``Empty'' is an empty directory, ``R225''
+ would designate the 2.2.5 release, etc.
+ As a rule a base transition from ``Empty'' is producted
+ every 100 deltas. By the way, they are large! 25 to 30
+ Megabytes of gzip'ed data is common for the ``XEmpty'' deltas.
+
+ Once you've picked a base delta to start from, you will also need
+ all deltas with higher numbers following it.
+
+
+
+
+ Using CTM in your daily life
+
+ To apply the deltas, simply say:
+
+ cd /where/ever/you/want/the/stuff
+ ctm -v -v /where/you/store/your/deltas/src-xxx.*
+
+
+
+
+ CTM understands deltas which have been put through gzip,
+ so you do not need to gunzip them first, this saves disk space.
+
+ Unless it feels very secure about the entire process, CTM will
+ not touch your tree. To verify a delta you can also use the
+ ``'' flag and CTM will not actually touch your tree; it will
+ merely verify the integrity of the delta and see if it would apply
+ cleanly to your current tree.
+
+ There are other options to CTM as well, see the manual pages
+ or look in the sources for more information.
+
+ I would also be very happy if somebody could help with the ``user
+ interface'' portions, as I have realized that I cannot make up my
+ mind on what options should do what, how and when...
+
+ That's really all there is to it. Every time you get a new delta,
+ just run it through CTM to keep your sources up to date.
+
+ Do not remove the deltas if they are hard to download again. You
+ just might want to keep them around in case something bad happens.
+ Even if you only have floppy disks, consider using fdwrite to
+ make a copy.
+
+
+
+
+ Keeping your local changes
+
+ As a developer one would like to experiment with and change
+ files in the source tree. CTM supports local modifications in a
+ limited way: before checking for the presence of a file
+ foo, it first looks for foo.ctm. If this
+ file exists, CTM will operate on it instead of foo.
+
+ This behaviour gives us a simple way to maintain local changes:
+ simply copy the files you plan to modify to the corresponding
+ file names with a .ctm suffix. Then you can freely hack
+ the code, while CTM keeps the .ctm file up-to-date.
+
+
+
+
+ Other interesting CTM options
+
+
+
+ Finding out exactly what would be touched by an update
+
+ You can determine the list of changes that CTM will make on your
+ source repository using the ``'' option to CTM.
+
+ This is useful if you would like to keep logs of the changes,
+ pre- or post- process the modified files in any manner, or just
+ are feeling a tad paranoid :-).
+
+
+
+
+ Making backups before updating
+
+ Sometimes you may want to backup all the files that would be changed
+ by a CTM update.
+
+ Specifying the ``'' option causes
+ CTM to backup all files that would be touched by a given CTM
+ delta to backup-file.
+
+
+
+
+ Restricting the files touched by an update
+
+ Sometimes you would be interested in restricting the scope of a
+ given CTM update, or may be interested in extracting just a few
+ files from a sequence of deltas.
+
+ You can control the list of files that CTM would operate on by
+ specifying filtering regular expressions using the
+ ``'' and ``'' options.
+
+ For example, to extract an up-to-date copy of
+ lib/libc/Makefile from your collection of saved CTM deltas,
+ run the commands:
+
+ cd /where/ever/you/want/to/extract/it/
+ ctm -e '^lib/libc/Makefile' ~ctm/src-xxx.*
+
+
+
+
+ For every file specified in a CTM delta, the ``'' and
+ ``'' options are applied in the order given on the
+ command line. The file is processed by CTM only if it is
+ marked as eligible after all the ``'' and
+ ``'' options are applied to it.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Future plans for CTM
+
+ Tons of them:
+
+
+
+ Use some kind of authentication into the CTM system, so as to
+ allow detection of spoofed CTM updates.
+
+
+
+ Clean up the options to CTM, they became confusing and
+ counter intuitive.
+
+
+
+
+
+ The bad news is that I am very busy, so any help in doing this will
+ be most welcome. And do not forget to tell me what you want also...
+
+
+
+
+ Miscellaneous stuff
+
+ All the ``DES infected'' (e.g. export controlled) source is not
+ included. You will get the ``international'' version only. If
+ sufficient interest appears, we will set up a ``sec-cur''
+ sequence too.
+ There is a sequence of deltas for the ports collection too,
+ but interest has not been all that high yet. Tell me if you want
+ an email list for that too and we will consider setting it up.
+
+
+
+
+ Thanks!
+
+
+
+ &a.bde;
+
+ for his pointed pen and invaluable comments.
+
+
+
+
+ &a.sos;
+
+
+ for patience.
+
+
+
+
+ Stephen McKay
+
+
+ wrote ctm_[rs]mail, much appreciated.
+
+
+
+
+ &a.jkh;
+
+
+ for being so stubborn that I had to make it better.
+
+
+
+
+ All the users
+
+
+ I hope you like it...
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ CVSup
+
+ Contributed by &a.jdp;.
+
+
+
+ Introduction
+
+ CVSup is a software package for distributing and updating source
+ trees from a master CVS repository on a remote server host. The
+ FreeBSD sources are maintained in a CVS repository on a central
+ development machine in California. With CVSup, FreeBSD users can
+ easily keep their own source trees up to date.
+
+ CVSup uses the so-called pull model of updating. Under the pull
+ model, each client asks the server for updates, if and when they are
+ wanted. The server waits passively for update requests from its
+ clients. Thus all updates are instigated by the client. The server
+ never sends unsolicited updates. Users must either run the CVSup client
+ manually to get an update, or they must set up a cron job to run it
+ automatically on a regular basis.
+
+ The term "CVSup", capitalized just so, refers to the entire software
+ package. Its main components are the client "cvsup" which runs on each
+ user's machine, and the server "cvsupd" which runs at each of the
+ FreeBSD mirror sites.
+
+ As you read the FreeBSD documentation and mailing lists, you may
+ see references to sup. Sup was the predecessor of CVSup,
+ and it served a similar purpose. CVSup is in used in much the same
+ way as sup and, in fact, uses configuration files which are
+ backward-compatible with sup's. Sup is no longer used in the FreeBSD
+ project, because CVSup is both faster and more flexible.
+
+
+
+
+ Installation
+
+ The easiest way to install CVSup if you are running FreeBSD 2.2 or
+ later is to use either the port from the FreeBSD or the corresponding binary package, depending on whether you prefer to roll your
+ own or not.
+
+ If you are running FreeBSD-2.1.6 or 2.1.7, you unfortunately cannot use the
+ binary package versions due to the fact that it requires a version of
+ the C library that does not yet exist in FreeBSD-2.1.{6,7}. You can easily
+ use the port, however, just as with FreeBSD 2.2. Simply unpack
+ the tar file, cd to the cvsup subdirectory and type "make install".
+
+ Because CVSup is written in Modula-3, both the package and the port require that the
+ Modula-3 runtime libraries be installed. These are available as the
+ lang/modula-3-lib port and the lang/modula-3-lib-3.6 package. If you follow the same
+ directions as for cvsup, these libraries will be compiled and/or
+ installed automatically when you install the CVSup port or package.
+
+ The Modula-3 libraries are rather large, and fetching and compiling
+ them is not an instantaneous process. For that reason, a third option
+ is provided. You can get statically linked FreeBSD
+ executables for CVSup from either the USA distribution site:
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsup-bin-15.3.tar.gz
+ (client including GUI).
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsup.nogui-bin-15.3.tar.gz
+ (client without GUI).
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsupd-bin-15.3.tar.gz
+ (server).
+
+
+
+
+
+ or the German mirror:
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.cs.tu-berlin.de/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsup-bin-15.3.tar.gz
+ (client including GUI).
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.cs.tu-berlin.de/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsup.nogui-bin-15.3.tar.gz
+ (client without GUI).
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.cs.tu-berlin.de/pub/FreeBSD/CVSup/cvsupd-bin-15.3.tar.gz
+ (server).
+
+
+
+
+
+ Most users will need only the client. These executables are entirely
+ self-contained, and they will run on any version of FreeBSD from
+ FreeBSD-2.1.0 to FreeBSD-current.
+
+ In summary, your options for installing CVSup are:
+
+
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.2 or later: static binary, port, or package
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.1.6, 2.1.7: static binary or port
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.1.5 or earlier: static binary
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Configuration
+
+ CVSup's operation is controlled by a configuration file called the
+ "supfile". Beginning with FreeBSD-2.2, there are some sample supfiles
+ in the directory /usr/share/examples/cvsup. These examples are also available
+ from ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/FreeBSD-current/src/share/examples/cvsup/ if you are on a pre-2.2 system.
+
+ The information in a supfile answers the following questions for cvsup:
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ In the following sections, we will construct a typical supfile by
+ answering each of these questions in turn. First, we describe the
+ overall structure of a supfile.
+
+ A supfile is a text file. Comments begin with "#" and extend to
+ the end of the line. Lines that are blank and lines that contain only
+ comments are ignored.
+
+ Each remaining line describes a set of files that the user wishes
+ to receive. The line begins with the name of a "collection", a
+ logical grouping of files defined by the server. The name of the
+ collection tells the server which files you want. After the
+ collection name come zero or more fields, separated by white space.
+ These fields answer the questions listed above. There are two types
+ of fields: flag fields and value fields. A flag field consists of a
+ keyword standing alone, e.g., "delete" or "compress". A value field
+ also begins with a keyword, but the keyword is followed without
+ intervening white space by "=" and a second word. For example,
+ "release=cvs" is a value field.
+
+ A supfile typically specifies more than one collection to receive.
+ One way to structure a supfile is to specify all of the relevant
+ fields explicitly for each collection. However, that tends to make
+ the supfile lines quite long, and it is inconvenient because most
+ fields are the same for all of the collections in a supfile. CVSup
+ provides a defaulting mechanism to avoid these problems. Lines
+ beginning with the special pseudo-collection name "*default" can be
+ used to set flags and values which will be used as defaults for the
+ subsequent collections in the supfile. A default value can be
+ overridden for an individual collection, by specifying a different
+ value with the collection itself. Defaults can also be changed or
+ augmented in mid-supfile by additional "*default" lines.
+
+ With this background, we will now proceed to construct a supfile
+ for receiving and updating the main source tree of .
+
+
+
+
+
+ Which files do you want to receive?
+
+
+
+ The files available via CVSup are organized into named
+ groups called "collections". The collections that are available are
+ described .
+ In this example, we wish to receive the
+ entire main source tree for the FreeBSD system. There is a single
+ large collection "src-all" which will give us all of that, except the
+ export-controlled cryptography support. Let us assume for this
+ example that we are in the USA or Canada. Then we can get the
+ cryptography code with one additional collection, "cvs-crypto".
+ As a first step toward constructing our supfile, we
+ simply list these collections, one per line:
+
+
+ src-all
+ cvs-crypto
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Which version(s) of them do you want?
+
+
+
+ With CVSup, you can receive virtually any version of the sources
+ that ever existed. That is possible because the cvsupd server works
+ directly from the CVS repository, which contains all of the versions.
+ You specify which one of them you want using the "tag=" and "date="
+ value fields.
+
+
+
+ WARNING: Be very careful to specify any "tag=" fields
+ correctly. Some tags are valid only for certain collections of
+ files. If you specify an incorrect or misspelled tag, CVSup will
+ delete files which you probably do not want deleted.
+ In particular, use only "tag=." for the "ports-*"
+ collections.
+
+
+
+ The "tag=" field names a symbolic tag in the repository. There are
+ two kinds of tags, revision tags and branch tags. A revision tag
+ refers to a specific revision. Its meaning stays the same from day to
+ day. A branch tag, on the other hand, refers to the latest revision
+ on a given line of development, at any given time. Because a branch
+ tag does not refer to a specific revision, it may mean something
+ different tomorrow than it means today.
+
+
+
+ Here are the branch tags that users might be interested in:
+
+
+
+ tag=.
+
+ The main line of development, also known as FreeBSD-current.
+ Note: the "." is not punctuation; it is the name of the tag.
+ Valid for all collections.
+
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_2
+
+
+ The line of development for FreeBSD-2.2.x, also known as
+ FreeBSD-stable.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_1_0
+
+
+ The line of development for FreeBSD-2.1.x - this branch
+ is largely obsolete.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Here are the revision tags that users might be interested in:
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_2_6_RELEASE
+
+ FreeBSD-2.2.6.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_2_5_RELEASE
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.2.5.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_2_2_RELEASE
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.2.2.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_2_1_RELEASE
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.2.1.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_2_0_RELEASE
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.2.0.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_1_7_RELEASE
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.1.7.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_1_6_1_RELEASE
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.1.6.1.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_1_6_RELEASE
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.1.6.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_1_5_RELEASE
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.1.5.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+ tag=RELENG_2_1_0_RELEASE
+
+
+ FreeBSD-2.1.0.
+ Not valid for the ports-* collections.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ WARNING: Be very careful to type the tag name exactly as
+ shown. CVSup cannot distinguish between valid and invalid tags.
+ If you misspell the tag, CVSup will behave as though you had
+ specified a valid tag which happens to refer to no files at all.
+ It will delete your existing sources in that case.
+
+
+
+ When you specify a branch tag, you normally receive the latest versions
+ of the files on that line of development. If you wish to receive some
+ past version, you can do so by specifying a date with the "date=" value
+ field. The cvsup(1) manual page explains how to do that.
+
+
+
+ For our example, we wish to receive FreeBSD-current. We add this line
+ at the beginning of our supfile:
+
+
+ *default tag=.
+
+
+
+
+ There is an important special case that comes into play if you specify
+ neither a "tag=" field nor a "date=" field. In that case, you receive
+ the actual RCS files directly from the server's CVS repository, rather
+ than receiving a particular version. Developers generally prefer this
+ mode of operation. By maintaining a copy of the repository itself on
+ their systems, they gain the ability to browse the revision histories
+ and examine past versions of files. This gain is achieved at a large
+ cost in terms of disk space, however.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Where do you want to get them from?
+
+
+
+ We use the "host=" field to tell cvsup where to obtain its updates.
+ Any of the will do,
+ though you should try to select one that's near to you.
+ In this example, we'll use the primary FreeBSD distribution site,
+ "cvsup.FreeBSD.org":
+
+
+ *default host=cvsup.FreeBSD.org
+
+
+
+
+ On any particular run of cvsup, you can override this setting on the
+ command line, with "-h hostname".
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Where do you want to put them on your own machine?
+
+
+
+ The "prefix=" field tells cvsup where to put the files it receives.
+ In this example, we will put the source files directly into our main
+ source tree, "/usr/src". The "src" directory is already implicit in the
+ collections we have chosen to receive, so this is the correct
+ specification:
+
+
+ *default prefix=/usr
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Where should cvsup maintain its status files?
+
+
+
+ The cvsup client maintains certain status files in what is called
+ the "base" directory. These files help CVSup to work more
+ efficiently, by keeping track of which updates you have already
+ received. We will use the standard base directory,
+ "/usr/local/etc/cvsup":
+
+
+ *default base=/usr/local/etc/cvsup
+
+
+
+
+ This setting is used by default if it is not specified in the
+ supfile, so we actually do not need the above line.
+
+
+
+ If your base directory does not already exist, now would be a good
+ time to create it. The cvsup client will refuse to run if the base
+ directory does not exist.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Miscellaneous supfile settings:
+
+
+
+ There is one more line of boiler plate that normally needs to be
+ present in the supfile:
+
+
+ *default release=cvs delete use-rel-suffix compress
+
+
+
+
+ "release=cvs" indicates that the server should get its information
+ out of the main FreeBSD CVS repository. This is virtually always the
+ case, but there are other possibilities which are beyond the scope of
+ this discussion.
+
+
+
+ "delete" gives CVSup permission to delete files. You should always
+ specify this, so that CVSup can keep your source tree fully up to
+ date. CVSup is careful to delete only those files for which it is
+ responsible. Any extra files you happen to have will be left strictly
+ alone.
+
+
+
+ "use-rel-suffix" is ... arcane. If you really want to know about
+ it, see the cvsup(1) manual page. Otherwise, just specify it and
+ do not worry about it.
+
+
+
+ "compress" enables the use of gzip-style compression on the
+ communication channel. If your network link is T1 speed or faster,
+ you probably should not use compression. Otherwise, it helps
+ substantially.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Putting it all together:
+
+
+
+ Here is the entire supfile for our example:
+
+
+ *default tag=.
+ *default host=cvsup.FreeBSD.org
+ *default prefix=/usr
+ *default base=/usr/local/etc/cvsup
+ *default release=cvs delete use-rel-suffix compress
+ src-all
+ cvs-crypto
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Running CVSup
+
+ You are now ready to try an update. The command line for doing this is
+ quite simple:
+
+
+ cvsup supfile
+
+
+ where "supfile" is of course the name of the supfile you have just created.
+ Assuming you are running under X11, cvsup will display a GUI window with
+ some buttons to do the usual things. Press the "go" button, and watch
+ it run.
+
+ Since you are updating your actual "/usr/src" tree in this example, you
+ will need to run the program as root so that cvsup has the permissions
+ it needs to update your files. Having just created your configuration
+ file, and having never used this program before, that might
+ understandably make you nervous. There is an easy way to do a trial run
+ without touching your precious files. Just create an empty directory
+ somewhere convenient, and name it as an extra argument on the command
+ line:
+
+
+ mkdir /var/tmp/dest
+ cvsup supfile /var/tmp/dest
+
+
+ The directory you specify will be used as the destination directory
+ for all file updates. CVSup will examine your usual files in
+ "/usr/src", but it will not modify or delete any of them. Any file
+ updates will instead land in "/var/tmp/dest/usr/src". CVSup will also
+ leave its base directory status files untouched when run this way.
+ The new versions of those files will be written into the specified
+ directory. As long as you have read access to "/usr/src", you do not
+ even need to be root to perform this kind of trial run.
+
+ If you are not running X11 or if you just do not like GUIs, you
+ should add a couple of options to the command line when you run cvsup:
+
+
+ cvsup -g -L 2 supfile
+
+
+ The "-g" tells cvsup not to use its GUI. This is automatic if you are
+ not running X11, but otherwise you have to specify it.
+
+ The "-L 2" tells cvsup to print out the details of all the file updates
+ it is doing. There are three levels of verbosity, from "-L 0" to "-L 2".
+ The default is 0, which means total silence except for error messages.
+
+ There are plenty of other options available. For a brief list of them,
+ type "cvsup -H". For more detailed descriptions, see the manual page.
+
+ Once you are satisfied with the way updates are working, you can arrange
+ for regular runs of cvsup using cron(8). Obviously, you should not let
+ cvsup use its GUI when running it from cron.
+
+
+
+
+ CVSup File Collections
+
+ The file collections available via CVSup are organized
+ hierarchically. There are a few large collections, and they are
+ divided into smaller sub-collections. Receiving a large collection
+ is equivalent to receiving each of its sub-collections.
+ The hierarchical relationships among collections are reflected by
+ the use of indentation in the list below.
+
+ The most commonly used collections are src-all,
+ cvs-crypto, and ports-all. The other collections are used
+ only by small groups of people for specialized purposes, and some mirror
+ sites may not carry all of them.
+
+
+
+ cvs-all release=cvs
+
+ The main FreeBSD CVS repository, excluding the export-restricted
+ cryptography code.
+
+
+
+ distrib release=cvs
+
+ Files related to the distribution and mirroring of FreeBSD.
+
+
+
+
+ doc-all release=cvs
+
+
+ Sources for the FreeBSD handbook and other documentation.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-all release=cvs
+
+
+ The FreeBSD ports collection.
+
+
+
+ ports-archivers release=cvs
+
+ Archiving tools.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-astro release=cvs
+
+
+ Astronomical ports.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-audio release=cvs
+
+
+ Sound support.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-base release=cvs
+
+
+ Miscellaneous files at the top of /usr/ports.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-benchmarks release=cvs
+
+
+ Benchmarks.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-biology release=cvs
+
+
+ Biology.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-cad release=cvs
+
+
+ Computer aided design tools.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-chinese release=cvs
+
+
+ Chinese language support.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-comms release=cvs
+
+
+ Communication software.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-converters release=cvs
+
+
+ character code converters.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-databases release=cvs
+
+
+ Databases.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-devel release=cvs
+
+
+ Development utilities.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-editors release=cvs
+
+
+ Editors.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-emulators release=cvs
+
+
+ Emulators for other operating systems.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-games release=cvs
+
+
+ Games.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-german release=cvs
+
+
+ German language support.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-graphics release=cvs
+
+
+ Graphics utilities.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-japanese release=cvs
+
+
+ Japanese language support.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-korean release=cvs
+
+
+ Korean language support.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-lang release=cvs
+
+
+ Programming languages.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-mail release=cvs
+
+
+ Mail software.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-math release=cvs
+
+
+ Numerical computation software.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-mbone release=cvs
+
+
+ MBone applications.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-misc release=cvs
+
+
+ Miscellaneous utilities.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-net release=cvs
+
+
+ Networking software.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-news release=cvs
+
+
+ USENET news software.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-plan9 release=cvs
+
+
+ Various programs from Plan9.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-print release=cvs
+
+
+ Printing software.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-russian release=cvs
+
+
+ Russian language support.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-security release=cvs
+
+
+ Security utilities.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-shells release=cvs
+
+
+ Command line shells.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-sysutils release=cvs
+
+
+ System utilities.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-textproc release=cvs
+
+
+ text processing utilities (does not include desktop publishing).
+
+
+
+
+ ports-vietnamese release=cvs
+
+
+ Vietnamese language support.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-www release=cvs
+
+
+ Software related to the World Wide Web.
+
+
+
+
+ ports-x11 release=cvs
+
+
+ X11 software.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ src-all release=cvs
+
+
+ The main FreeBSD sources, excluding the export-restricted cryptography
+ code.
+
+
+
+ src-base release=cvs
+
+ Miscellaneous files at the top of /usr/src.
+
+
+
+
+ src-bin release=cvs
+
+
+ User utilities that may be needed in single-user mode
+ (/usr/src/bin).
+
+
+
+
+ src-contrib release=cvs
+
+
+ Utilities and libraries from outside the FreeBSD project, used
+ relatively unmodified (/usr/src/contrib).
+
+
+
+
+ src-etc release=cvs
+
+
+ System configuration files (/usr/src/etc).
+
+
+
+
+ src-games release=cvs
+
+
+ Games (/usr/src/games).
+
+
+
+
+ src-gnu release=cvs
+
+
+ Utilities covered by the GNU Public License (/usr/src/gnu).
+
+
+
+
+ src-include release=cvs
+
+
+ Header files (/usr/src/include).
+
+
+
+
+ src-kerberosIV release=cvs
+
+
+ KerberosIV security package (/usr/src/kerberosIV).
+
+
+
+
+ src-lib release=cvs
+
+
+ Libraries (/usr/src/lib).
+
+
+
+
+ src-libexec release=cvs
+
+
+ System programs normally executed by other programs
+ (/usr/src/libexec).
+
+
+
+
+ src-release release=cvs
+
+
+ Files required to produce a FreeBSD release (/usr/src/release).
+
+
+
+
+ src-sbin release=cvs
+
+
+ System utilities for single-user mode (/usr/src/sbin).
+
+
+
+
+ src-share release=cvs
+
+
+ Files that can be shared across multiple systems (/usr/src/share).
+
+
+
+
+ src-sys release=cvs
+
+
+ The kernel (/usr/src/sys).
+
+
+
+
+ src-tools release=cvs
+
+
+ Various tools for the maintenance of FreeBSD (/usr/src/tools).
+
+
+
+
+ src-usrbin release=cvs
+
+
+ User utilities (/usr/src/usr.bin).
+
+
+
+
+ src-usrsbin release=cvs
+
+
+ System utilities (/usr/src/usr.sbin).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ www release=cvs
+
+
+ The sources for the World Wide Web data.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvs-crypto release=cvs
+
+
+ The export-restricted cryptography code.
+
+
+
+ src-crypto release=cvs
+
+ Export-restricted utilities and libraries from outside the FreeBSD
+ project, used relatively unmodified (/usr/src/crypto).
+
+
+
+
+ src-eBones release=cvs
+
+
+ Kerberos and DES (/usr/src/eBones).
+
+
+
+
+ src-secure release=cvs
+
+
+ DES (/usr/src/secure).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ distrib release=self
+
+
+ The CVSup server's own configuration files. Used by CVSup mirror sites.
+
+
+
+
+ gnats release=current
+
+
+ The GNATS bug-tracking database.
+
+
+
+
+ mail-archive release=current
+
+
+ FreeBSD mailing list archive.
+
+
+
+
+ www release=current
+
+
+ The installed World Wide Web data. Used by WWW mirror sites.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Announcements, Questions, and Bug Reports
+
+ Most FreeBSD-related discussion of CVSup takes place on the
+ &a.hackers;. New versions of the software are announced there, as
+ well as on the &a.announce;.
+
+ Questions and bug reports should be addressed to the author of the
+ program at cvsup-bugs@polstra.com.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Using make world to rebuild your system
+
+ Contributed by &a.nik;.
+
+ Once you have synchronised your local source tree against a particular
+ version of FreeBSD (stable, current and so on) you
+ must then use the source tree to rebuild the system.
+
+ Currently, the best source of information on how to do that is a
+ tutorial available from http://www.nothing-going-on.demon.co.uk/FreeBSD/make-world/make-world.html.
+
+ A successor to this tutorial will be integrated into the handbook.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Contributing to FreeBSD
+
+ Contributed by &a.jkh;.
+
+ So you want to contribute something to FreeBSD? That is great!
+ We can always use the help, and FreeBSD is one of those systems
+ that relies on the contributions of its user base in order
+ to survive. Your contributions are not only appreciated, they are
+ vital to FreeBSD's continued growth!
+
+ Contrary to what some people might also have you believe, you do not
+ need to be a hot-shot programmer or a close personal friend of the
+ FreeBSD core team in order to have your contributions accepted. The
+ FreeBSD Project's development is done by a large and growing number of
+ international contributors whose ages and areas of technical expertise
+ vary greatly, and there is always more work to be done than there are
+ people available to do it.
+
+ Since the FreeBSD project is responsible for an entire operating
+ system environment (and its installation) rather than just a kernel or
+ a few scattered utilities, our "TODO" list also spans a very wide
+ range of tasks, from documentation, beta testing and presentation to
+ highly specialized types of kernel development. No matter what your
+ skill level, there is almost certainly something you can do to help the
+ project!
+
+ Commercial entities engaged in FreeBSD-related enterprises are
+ also encouraged to contact us. Need a special extension to make your
+ product work? You will find us receptive to your requests, given that
+ they are not too outlandish. Working on a value-added product? Please
+ let us know! We may be able to work cooperatively on some aspect of
+ it. The free software world is challenging a lot of existing
+ assumptions about how software is developed, sold, and maintained
+ throughout its life cycle, and we urge you to at least give it a
+ second look.
+
+
+
+ What Is Needed
+
+ The following list of tasks and sub-projects represents something
+ of an amalgam of the various core team TODO lists and user requests
+ we have collected over the last couple of months. Where possible, tasks
+ have been ranked by degree of urgency. If you are interested in
+ working on one of the tasks you see here, send mail to the coordinator
+ listed by clicking on their names. If no coordinator has been
+ appointed, maybe you would like to volunteer?
+
+
+
+ High priority tasks
+
+ The following tasks are considered to be urgent, usually because
+ they represent something that is badly broken or sorely needed:
+
+
+
+ 3-stage boot issues. Overall coordination:
+ &a.hackers;
+
+
+
+
+
+ Autodetect memory over 64MB properly.
+
+
+
+ Move userconfig (-c) into 3rd stage boot.
+
+
+
+ Do WinNT compatible drive tagging so that the 3rd stage can
+ provide an accurate mapping of BIOS geometries for disks.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Filesystem problems. Overall coordination:
+ &a.fs;
+
+
+
+ Fix the MSDOS file system.
+
+
+
+ Clean up and document the nullfs filesystem code. Coordinator: &a.gibbs;
+
+
+
+ Fix the union file system. Coordinator: &a.dyson;
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Implement kernel and user vm86 support. Coordinator: &a.hackers;
+
+
+
+ Implement Int13 vm86 disk driver. Coordinator: &a.hackers;
+
+
+
+ SCSI driver issues. Overall coordination: &a.hackers;
+
+
+
+
+
+ Support tagged queuing generically. Requires a rewrite of how we do
+ our command queuing, but we need this anyway to for prioritized I/O
+ (CD-R writers/scanners).
+
+
+
+ Better error handling (Busy status and retries).
+
+
+
+ Merged Scatter-Gather list creation code.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Kernel issues. Overall coordination:
+ &a.hackers;
+
+
+
+
+
+ Complete the eisaconf conversion of all existing drivers.
+
+
+
+ Change all interrupt routines to take a (void *) instead of
+ using unit numbers.
+
+
+
+ Merge EISA/PCI/ISA interrupt registration code.
+
+
+
+ Split PCI/EISA/ISA probes out from drivers like bt742a.c (WIP)
+
+
+
+ Fix the syscons ALT-Fn/vt switching hangs. Coordinator: &a.sos;
+
+
+
+ Rewrite the Intel Etherexpress 16 driver.
+
+
+
+ Merge the 3c509 and 3c590 drivers (essentially provide a PCI probe for
+ ep.c).
+
+
+
+ Support Adaptec 3985 (first as a simple 3 channel SCSI card)
+ Coordinator: &a.gibbs;
+
+
+
+ Support Advansys SCSI controller products. Coordinator: &a.gibbs;
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Medium priority tasks
+
+ The following tasks need to be done, but not with any particular
+ urgency:
+
+
+
+ Port AFS (Andrew File System) to FreeBSD Coordinator: Alexander Seth Jones
+
+
+
+
+ MCA support? This should be finalized one way or the other.
+
+
+
+ Full LKM based driver support/Configuration Manager.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Devise a way to do all LKM registration without ld. This means
+ some kind of symbol table in the kernel.
+
+
+
+ Write a configuration manager (in the 3rd stage boot?) that probes
+ your hardware in a sane manner, keeps only the LKMs required for
+ your hardware, etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ PCMCIA/PCCARD. Coordinators: &a.nate; and &a.phk;
+
+
+
+ Documentation!
+
+
+
+ Reliable operation of the pcic driver (needs testing).
+
+
+
+ Recognizer and handler for sio.c (mostly done).
+
+
+
+ Recognizer and handler for ed.c (mostly done).
+
+
+
+ Recognizer and handler for ep.c (mostly done).
+
+
+
+ User-mode recognizer and handler (partially done).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Advanced Power Management. Coordinators: &a.nate; and &a.phk;
+
+
+
+ APM sub-driver (mostly done).
+
+
+
+ IDE/ATA disk sub-driver (partially done).
+
+
+
+ syscons/pcvt sub-driver.
+
+
+
+ Integration with the PCMCIA/PCCARD drivers (suspend/resume).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Low priority tasks
+
+ The following tasks are purely cosmetic or represent such an
+ investment of work that it is not likely that anyone will get them done
+ anytime soon:
+
+ The first 20 items are from Terry Lambert <terry@lambert.org>
+
+
+
+ Ability to make BIOS calls from protected mode using V86 mode
+ on the processor and return the results via a mapped interrupt
+ IPC mechanism to the protected mode caller.
+
+
+
+
+ Drivers built into the kernel that use the BIOS call mechanism
+ to allow them to be independent of the actual underlying hardware
+ the same way that DOS is independent of the underlying hardware.
+ This includes NetWork and ASPI drivers loaded in DOS prior to
+ BSD being loaded by a DOS-based loader program, which means
+ potential polling, which means DOS-not-busy interrupt generation
+ for V86 machines by the protected mode kernel.
+
+
+
+
+ An image format that allows tagging of such drivers data and
+ text areas in the default kernel executable so that that portion
+ of the kernel address space may be recovered at a later time,
+ after hardware specific protected mode drivers have been loaded
+ and activated. This includes separation of BIOS based drivers
+ from each other, since it is better to run with a BIOS based
+ driver in all cases than to not run at all.
+
+
+
+
+ Abstraction of the bus interface mechanism. Currently, PCMCIA,
+ EISA, and PCI busses are assumed to be bridged from ISA. This
+ is not something which should be assumed.
+
+
+
+
+ A configuration manager that knows about PNP events, including
+ power management events, insertion, extraction, and bus (PNP ISA
+ and PCMCIA bridging chips) vs. card level event management.
+
+
+
+
+ A topological sort mechanism for assigning reassignable addresses
+ that do not collide with other reassignable and non-reassignable
+ device space resource usage by fixed devices.
+
+
+
+
+ A registration based mechanism for hardware services registration.
+ Specifically, a device centric registration mechanism for timer
+ and sound and other system critical service providers. Consider
+ Timer2 and Timer0 and speaker services as one example of a single
+ monolithic service provider.
+
+
+
+
+ A kernel exported symbol space in the kernel data space accessible
+ by an LKM loader mechanism that does relocation and symbol space
+ manipulation. The intent of this interface is to support the
+ ability to demand load and unload kernel modules.
+
+
+
+
+ NetWare Server (protected mode ODI driver) loader and subservices
+ to allow the use of ODI card drivers supplied with network cards.
+ The same thing for NDIS drivers and NetWare SCSI drivers.
+
+
+
+
+ An "upgrade system" option that works on Linux boxes instead
+ of just previous rev FreeBSD boxes.
+
+
+
+
+ Splitting of the console driver into abstraction layers, both to
+ make it easier to port and to kill the X and ThinkPad and PS/2
+ mouse and LED and console switching and bouncing NumLock problems
+ once and for all.
+
+
+
+
+ Other kernel emulation environments for other foreign drivers
+ as opportunity permits. SCO and Solaris are good candidates,
+ followed by UnixWare, etc.
+
+
+
+
+ Processor emulation environments for execution of foreign binaries.
+ This is easier than it sounds if the system call interface does not
+ change much.
+
+
+
+
+ Streams to allow the use of commercial streams drivers.
+
+
+
+
+ Kernel multithreading (requires kernel preemption).
+
+
+
+
+ Symmetric Multiprocessing with kernel preemption (requires kernel
+ preemption).
+
+
+
+
+ A concerted effort at support for portable computers. This is
+ somewhat handled by changing PCMCIA bridging rules and power
+ management event handling. But there are things like detecting
+ internal vs. external display and picking a different screen
+ resolution based on that fact, not spinning down the disk if
+ the machine is in dock, and allowing dock-based cards to disappear
+ without affecting the machines ability to boot (same issue for
+ PCMCIA).
+
+
+
+
+ Reorganization of the source tree for multiple platform ports.
+
+
+
+
+ A "make world" that "makes the world" (rename the current one
+ to "make regress" if that is all it is good for).
+
+
+
+
+ A 4M (preferably smaller!) memory footprint.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Smaller tasks
+
+ Most of the tasks listed in the previous sections require either a
+ considerable investment of time or an in-depth knowledge of the FreeBSD
+ kernel (or both). However, there are also many useful tasks which are
+ suitable for "weekend hackers", or people without programming
+ skills.
+
+
+
+
+
+ If you run FreeBSD-current and have a good Internet connection,
+ there is a machine current.freebsd.org which builds a full release
+ once a day - every now and again, try and install the latest release
+ from it and report any failures in the process.
+
+
+
+
+ Read the freebsd-bugs mailing list. There might be a problem
+ you can comment constructively on or with patches you can test. Or
+ you could even try to fix one of the problems yourself.
+
+
+
+
+ Read through the FAQ and Handbook periodically. If anything is
+ badly explained, out of date or even just completely wrong, let us
+ know. Even better, send us a fix (SGML is not difficult to learn, but
+ there is no objection to ASCII submissions).
+
+
+
+
+ Help translate FreeBSD documentation into your native language (if
+ not already available) - just send an email to &a.doc; asking if anyone is
+ working on it. Note that you are not committing yourself to translating
+ every single FreeBSD document by doing this - in fact, the documentation
+ most in need of translation is the installation instructions.
+
+
+
+
+ Read the freebsd-questions mailing list and the newsgroup
+ comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.misc occasionally (or even regularly). It can
+ be very satisfying to share your expertise and help people solve their
+ problems; sometimes you may even learn something new yourself! These
+ forums can also be a source of ideas for things to work on.
+
+
+
+
+ If you know of any bugfixes which have been successfully applied
+ to -current but have not been merged into -stable after a decent
+ interval (normally a couple of weeks), send the committer a polite
+ reminder.
+
+
+
+
+ Move contributed software to src/contrib in the source tree.
+
+
+
+
+ Make sure code in src/contrib is up to date.
+
+
+
+
+ Look for year 2000 bugs (and fix any you find!)
+
+
+
+
+ Build the source tree (or just part of it) with extra warnings
+ enabled and clean up the warnings.
+
+
+
+
+ Fix warnings for ports which do deprecated things like using
+ gets() or including malloc.h.
+
+
+
+
+ If you have contributed any ports, send your patches back to the
+ original author (this will make your life easier when they bring out
+ the next version)
+
+
+
+
+ Suggest further tasks for this list!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ How to Contribute
+
+ Contributions to the system generally fall into one or more of
+ the following 6 categories:
+
+
+
+ Bug reports and general commentary
+
+
+ An idea or suggestion of general technical interest
+ should be mailed to the &a.hackers;. Likewise, people with an
+ interest in such things (and a tolerance for a high
+ volume of mail!) may subscribe to the hackers mailing list by
+ sending mail to &a.majordomo;. See
+
+ for more information about this and other mailing lists.
+
+ If you find a bug or are submitting a specific change, please report
+ it using the send-pr(1) program or its
+ WEB-based equivalent.
+ Try to fill-in each field of the bug report. Unless they exceed
+ 65KB, include any patches directly in the report. Consider compressing
+ them and using uuencode(1) if they exceed 20KB.
+
+ After filing a report, you should receive confirmation along with
+ a tracking number. Keep this tracking number so that you can
+ update us with details about the problem by sending mail to
+ bug-followup@FreeBSD.ORG. Use the number as the
+ message subject, e.g. "Re: kern/3377". Additional
+ information for any bug report should be submitted this way.
+
+ If you do not receive confirmation in a timely fashion (3 days to
+ a week, depending on your email connection) or are, for some
+ reason, unable to use the send-pr(1) command,
+ then you may ask someone to file it for you by sending mail
+ to the &a.bugs;.
+
+
+
+
+ Changes to the documentation
+
+ Changes to the documentation are overseen by the &a.doc;.
+ Send submissions and changes (even small ones are welcome!)
+ using send-pr as described in
+ .
+
+
+
+
+ Changes to existing source code
+
+ An addition or change to the existing source code is a somewhat trickier
+ affair and depends a lot on how far out of date you are with the current
+ state of the core FreeBSD development. There is a special on-going release
+ of FreeBSD known as ``FreeBSD-current'' which is made available in
+ a variety of ways for the convenience of developers working
+ actively on the system. See for more information about getting and using
+ FreeBSD-current.
+
+ Working from older sources unfortunately means that your changes may
+ sometimes be too obsolete or too divergent for easy re-integration into
+ FreeBSD. Chances of this can be minimized somewhat by subscribing to the
+ &a.announce; and the &a.current; lists, where discussions
+ on the current state of the system take place.
+
+ Assuming that you can manage to secure fairly up-to-date sources to base
+ your changes on, the next step is to produce a set of diffs to send to the
+ FreeBSD maintainers. This is done with the diff(1) command,
+ with the `context diff' form being preferred. For example:
+
+ diff -c oldfile newfile
+
+
+ or
+
+ diff -c -r olddir newdir
+
+
+ would generate such a set of context diffs for the given source file
+ or directory hierarchy. See the man page for diff(1) for more
+ details.
+
+ Once you have a set of diffs (which you may test with the
+ patch(1) command), you should submit them for inclusion
+ with FreeBSD. Use the send-pr(1) program as described in
+ .
+ Do not just send the diffs to the &a.hackers; or they will get
+ lost! We greatly appreciate your submission (this is a volunteer
+ project!); because we are busy, we may not be able to address it
+ immediately, but it will remain in the pr database until we do.
+
+ If you feel it appropriate (e.g. you have added, deleted, or
+ renamed files), bundle your changes into a tar file
+ and run the uuencode(1) program on it. Shar archives are
+ also welcome.
+
+ If your change is of a potentially sensitive nature, e.g.
+ you are unsure of copyright issues governing its further distribution
+ or you are simply not ready to release it without a tighter review first,
+ then you should send it to &a.core; directly rather than submitting
+ it with send-pr(1). The core mailing list
+ reaches a much smaller group of people who do much of the
+ day-to-day work on FreeBSD. Note that this group is also
+ very busy and so you should only send mail to them
+ where it is truly necessary.
+
+ Please refer to man 9 intro and man 9 style
+ for some information on coding style. We would appreciate
+ it if you were at least aware of this information before
+ submitting code.
+
+
+
+
+ New code or major value-added packages
+
+ In the rare case of a significant contribution of a large body
+ work, or the addition of an important new feature to FreeBSD,
+ it becomes almost always necessary to either send changes as
+ uuencode'd tar files or upload them to our ftp site ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/incoming.
+
+ When working with large amounts of code, the touchy subject of
+ copyrights also invariably comes up. Acceptable copyrights
+ for code included in FreeBSD are:
+
+
+
+
+
+ The BSD copyright. This copyright is most preferred
+ due to its ``no strings attached'' nature and general
+ attractiveness to commercial enterprises. Far from
+ discouraging such commercial use, the FreeBSD Project
+ actively encourages such participation by commercial interests
+ who might eventually be inclined to invest something of their own
+ into FreeBSD.
+
+
+
+
+ The GNU Public License, or ``GPL''. This license is not quite
+ as popular with us due to the amount of extra effort demanded
+ of anyone using the code for commercial purposes, but given
+ the sheer quantity of GPL'd code we currently require (compiler,
+ assembler, text formatter, etc) it would be silly to refuse
+ additional contributions under this license. Code under the GPL
+ also goes into a different part of the tree, that being
+ /sys/gnu or /usr/src/gnu, and is therefore
+ easily identifiable to anyone for whom the GPL presents a problem.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Contributions coming under any other type of copyright must be
+ carefully reviewed before their inclusion into FreeBSD will
+ be considered. Contributions for which particularly restrictive
+ commercial copyrights apply are generally rejected, though the
+ authors are always encouraged to make such changes available
+ through their own channels.
+
+ To place a ``BSD-style'' copyright on your work, include the following
+ text at the very beginning of every source code file you wish
+ to protect, replacing the text between the `%%' with
+ the appropriate information.
+
+ Copyright (c) %%proper_years_here%%
+ %%your_name_here%%, %%your_state%% %%your_zip%%. All rights reserved.
+
+ Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
+ modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
+ are met:
+ 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
+ notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer as
+ the first lines of this file unmodified.
+ 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
+ notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
+ documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
+
+ THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY %%your_name_here%% ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR
+ IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES
+ OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED.
+ IN NO EVENT SHALL %%your_name_here%% BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT,
+ INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT
+ NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
+ DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
+ THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
+ (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF
+ THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
+
+ $Id$
+
+
+ For your convenience, a copy of this text can be found in
+ /usr/share/examples/etc/bsd-style-copyright.
+
+
+
+
+ Porting an existing piece of free software
+
+ Contributed by &a.jkh;, &a.gpalmer;, &a.asami; and
+ &a.obrien;.28 August 1996.
+
+ The porting of freely available software, while perhaps not as
+ gratifying as developing your own from scratch, is still a vital part
+ of FreeBSD's growth and of great usefulness to those who would not
+ otherwise know where to turn for it. All ported software is organized
+ into a carefully organized hierarchy known as ``the ports collection''.
+ The collection enables a new user to get a quick and complete overview
+ of what is available for FreeBSD in an easy-to-compile form. It also
+ saves considerable space by not actually containing the majority
+ of the sources being ported, but merely those differences required for
+ running under FreeBSD.
+
+ What follows are some guidelines for creating a new port for
+ FreeBSD 3.x. The bulk of the work is done by
+ /usr/share/mk/bsd.port.mk, which all port Makefiles include.
+ Please refer to that file for more details on the inner workings of
+ the ports collection. Even if you don't hack Makefiles daily, it is
+ well commented, and you will still gain much knowledge from it.
+
+
+
+ Before Starting the Port
+
+ Note: Only a fraction of the overridable variables
+ (${..}) are mentioned in this document. Most
+ (if not all) are documented at the start of
+ bsd.port.mk. This file uses a non-standard tab
+ setting. Emacs and Vim should recognize the setting
+ on loading the file. vi or ex can be set to
+ using the correct value by typing `:set tabstop=4'
+ once the file has been loaded.
+
+ You may come across code that needs modifications or
+ conditional compilation based upon what version of UNIX it is
+ running under. If you need to make such changes to the code
+ for conditional compilation, make sure you make the changes as
+ general as possible so that we can back-port code to FreeBSD
+ 1.x systems and cross-port to other BSD systems such as 4.4BSD
+ from CSRG, BSD/386, 386BSD, NetBSD, and OpenBSD.
+
+ The preferred way to tell 4.3BSD/Reno (1990) and newer versions of
+ the BSD code apart is by using the `BSD' macro
+ defined in <sys/param.h>. Hopefully that file
+ is already included; if not, add the code:
+
+
+
+ #ifdef (defined(__unix__) || defined(unix)) && !defined(USG)
+ #include <sys/param.h>
+ #endif
+
+
+
+ to the proper place in the .c file. We believe that every
+ system that defines these to symbols has sys/param.h. If you find
+ a system that doesn't, we would like to know. Please send
+ mail to &a.ports;.
+
+ Another way is to use the GNU Autoconf style of doing this:
+
+
+
+ #ifdef HAVE_SYS_PARAM_H
+ #include <sys/param.h>
+ #endif
+
+
+
+ Don't forget to add -DHAVE_SYS_PARAM_H to the CFLAGS
+ in the Makefile for this method.
+
+ Once you have <sys/param.h> included, you may use:
+
+
+
+ #if (defined(BSD) && (BSD >= 199103))
+
+
+
+ to detect if the code is being compiled on a 4.3 Net2 code
+ base or newer (e.g. FreeBSD 1.x, 4.3/Reno, NetBSD 0.9, 386BSD,
+ BSD/386 1.1 and below).
+
+ Use:
+
+
+
+ #if (defined(BSD) && (BSD >= 199306))
+
+
+
+ to detect if the code is being compiled on a 4.4 code base or
+ newer (e.g. FreeBSD 2.x, 4.4, NetBSD 1.0, BSD/386 2.0 or
+ above).
+
+ The value of the BSD macro is 199506 for the 4.4BSD-Lite2 code
+ base. This is stated for informational purposes only. It should
+ not be used to distinguish between version of FreeBSD based only
+ on 4.4-Lite vs. versions that have merged in changes from 4.4-Lite2.
+ The __FreeBSD__ macro should be used instead.
+
+ Use sparingly:
+
+
+
+
+
+ __FreeBSD__ is defined in all versions of
+ FreeBSD. Use it if the change you are making ONLY affects
+ FreeBSD. Porting gotchas like the use of
+ sys_errlist[] vs strerror() are
+ Berkeleyisms, not FreeBSD changes.
+
+
+
+
+ In FreeBSD 2.x, __FreeBSD__ is defined to be
+ 2. In earlier versions, it is 1. Later
+ versions will bump it to match their major version number.
+
+
+
+
+ If you need to tell the difference between a FreeBSD 1.x
+ system and a FreeBSD 2.x or 3.x system, usually the right answer is
+ to use the BSD macros described above. If there
+ actually is a FreeBSD specific change (such as special
+ shared library options when using `ld') then it is
+ OK to use __FreeBSD__ and `#if __FreeBSD__ >
+ 1' to detect a FreeBSD 2.x and later system.
+
+ If you need more granularity in detecting FreeBSD systems since
+ 2.0-RELEASE you can use the following:
+
+
+ #if __FreeBSD__ >= 2
+ #include <osreldate.h>
+ # if __FreeBSD_version >= 199504
+ /* 2.0.5+ release specific code here */
+ # endif
+ #endif
+
+
+ __FreeBSD_version values:
+
+ 2.0-RELEASE: 199411
+ 2.1-current's: 199501, 199503
+ 2.0.5-RELEASE: 199504
+ 2.2-current before 2.1: 199508
+ 2.1.0-RELEASE: 199511
+ 2.2-current before 2.1.5: 199512
+ 2.1.5-RELEASE: 199607
+ 2.2-current before 2.1.6: 199608
+ 2.1.6-RELEASE: 199612
+ 2.1.7-RELEASE: 199612
+ 2.2-RELEASE: 220000
+ 2.2.1-RELEASE: 220000 (yes, no change)
+ 2.2-STABLE after 2.2.1-RELEASE: 220000 (yes, still no change)
+ 2.2-STABLE after texinfo-3.9: 221001
+ 2.2-STABLE after top: 221002
+ 2.2.2-RELEASE: 222000
+ 2.2-STABLE after 2.2.2-RELEASE: 222001
+ 2.2.5-RELEASE: 225000
+ 2.2-STABLE after 2.2.5-RELEASE: 225001
+ 2.2-STABLE after ldconfig -R merge: 225002
+ 2.2.6-RELEASE: 226000
+ 2.2-STABLE after 2.2.6-RELEASE: 226001
+ 3.0-current before mount(2) change: 300000
+ 3.0-current as of Nov 1997: 300001
+
+
+ (Note that 2.2-STABLE sometimes identifies itself as
+ "2.2.5-STABLE" after the 2.2.5-RELEASE.)
+ The pattern used to be year followed by the month, but we
+ decided to change it to a more straightforward major/minor
+ system starting from 2.2. This is because the parallel
+ development on several branches made it infeasible to
+ classify the releases simply by their real release dates.
+ (Note that if you are making a port now, you don't have to
+ worry about old -current's; they are listed here just for
+ your reference.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ In the hundreds of ports that have been done, there have
+ only been one or two cases where __FreeBSD__
+ should have been used. Just because an earlier port
+ screwed up and used it in the wrong place does not mean
+ you should do so too.
+
+
+
+
+ Quick Porting
+
+ This section tells you how to do a quick port. In many
+ cases, it is not enough, but we will see.
+
+ First, get the original tarball and put it into
+ ${DISTDIR}, which defaults to
+ /usr/ports/distfiles.
+
+ Note: The following assumes that the software compiled
+ out-of-the-box, i.e., there was absolutely no change required
+ for the port to work on your FreeBSD box. If you needed to
+ change something, you will have to refer to the next section
+ too.
+
+
+
+ Writing the Makefile
+
+ The minimal Makefile would look something like this:
+
+
+
+ # New ports collection makefile for: oneko
+ # Version required: 1.1b
+ # Date created: 5 December 1994
+ # Whom: asami
+ #
+ # $Id$
+ #
+
+ DISTNAME= oneko-1.1b
+ CATEGORIES= games
+ MASTER_SITES= ftp://ftp.cs.columbia.edu/archives/X11R5/contrib/
+
+ MAINTAINER= asami@FreeBSD.ORG
+
+ USE_IMAKE= yes
+
+ .include <bsd.port.mk>
+
+
+
+ See if you can figure it out. Do not worry about the contents
+ of the $Id$ line, it will be filled in
+ automatically by CVS when the port is imported to our main
+ ports tree. You can find a more detailed example in the section.
+
+
+
+
+ Writing the description files
+
+ There are three required description files that are
+ required for any port, whether they actually package or not.
+ They are COMMENT, DESCR, and
+ PLIST, and reside in the pkg subdirectory.
+
+
+
+ COMMENT
+
+ This is the one-line description of the port. PLEASE
+ do not include the package name (or version number of the
+ software) in the comment.
+ Here is an example:
+
+ A cat chasing a mouse all over the screen.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ DESCR
+
+ This is a longer description of the port. One to a few
+ paragraphs concisely explaining what the port does is
+ sufficient. Note: This is not a manual nor an
+ in-depth description on how to use or compile the port.
+ In particular, please do not just copy the README
+ file here, unless, of course, it is a concise description
+ of the port.
+
+ It is recommended that you sign the name at the end of
+ this file, as in:
+
+
+
+ This is a port of oneko, in which a cat chases a poor mouse all over
+ the screen.
+ :
+ (etc.)
+
+ - Satoshi
+ asami@cs.berkeley.edu
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ PLIST
+
+ This file lists all the files installed by the port. It
+ is also called the `packing list' because the package is
+ generated by packing the files listed here. The pathnames
+ are relative to the installation prefix (usually
+ /usr/local or /usr/X11R6). Also it is assumed
+ the manpages will be compressed.
+
+ Here is a small example:
+
+
+
+ bin/oneko
+ man/man1/oneko.1.gz
+ lib/X11/app-defaults/Oneko
+ lib/X11/oneko/cat1.xpm
+ lib/X11/oneko/cat2.xpm
+ lib/X11/oneko/mouse.xpm
+
+
+
+ Refer to the pkg_create(1) man page for details
+ on the packing list.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Creating the checksum file
+
+ Just type `make makesum'. The ports make rules
+ will automatically generate the file files/md5.
+
+
+
+
+ Testing the port
+
+ You should make sure that the port rules do exactly what
+ you want it to do, including packaging up the port. Try
+ doing `make install', `make package' and
+ then `make deinstall' and see if all
+ the files and directories are correctly deleted. Then do a
+ `pkg_add `make package-name`.tgz' and see if everything
+ re-appears and works correctly. Then do another
+ `make deinstall' and then `make
+ reinstall; make package' to make sure you haven't
+ included in the packing list any files that are not
+ installed by your port.
+
+
+
+
+ Submitting the port
+
+ Now that you are happy with your port, the only thing
+ remaining is to put it in the main FreeBSD ports tree and
+ make everybody else happy about it too. To accomplish this,
+ pack the necessary files (everything described in this
+ section -- in particular do not include the
+ original source tarball, the `work' subdirectory or
+ the package) into a .tar.gz file, stick it in the
+ directory
+
+ ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD/incoming/
+
+
+ and send mail to us using send-pr(1) (please
+ classify it as category `ports' and class `change-request').
+ There is no need to upload the package, we will build it by
+ ourselves.
+ We will take a look, get back to you if necessary, and put
+ it in the tree. Your name will also appear in the list of
+ `Additional FreeBSD contributors' on the FreeBSD Handbook
+ and other files. Isn't that great?!? :)
+
+
+
+
+
+ Slow Porting
+
+ Ok, so it was not that simple, and the port required some
+ modifications to get it to work. In this section, we will
+ explain, step by step, how to modify it to get it to work with
+ the ports paradigm.
+
+
+
+ How things work
+
+ First, this is the sequence of events which occurs when the
+ user first types `make' in your port's directory,
+ and you may find that having bsd.port.mk in another
+ window while you read this really helps to understand it.
+
+ But do not worry if you do not really understand what
+ bsd.port.mk is doing, not many people
+ do... :>
+
+
+
+
+
+ The fetch target is run. The fetch target is
+ responsible for making sure that the tarball exists
+ locally in ${DISTDIR}. If fetch cannot
+ find the required files in ${DISTDIR} it
+ will look up the URL ${MASTER_SITES},
+ which is set in the Makefile, as well as our main ftp
+ site at ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/distfiles/,
+ where we put sanctioned distfiles as backup. It will then
+ attempt to
+ fetch the named distribution file with
+ ${FETCH}, assuming that the requesting
+ site has direct access to the Internet. If that succeeds,
+ it will save the file in ${DISTDIR} for
+ future use and proceed.
+
+
+
+
+ The extract target is run. It looks for your ports'
+ distribution file in ${DISTDIR} (typically
+ a gzip'd tarball) and unpacks it into a temporary
+ subdirectory specified by ${WRKDIR}
+ (defaults to work).
+
+
+
+
+ The patch target is run. First, any patches defined
+ in ${PATCHFILES} are applied. Second, if
+ any patches are found in ${PATCHDIR}
+ (defaults to the patches subdirectory), they are
+ applied at this time in alphabetical order.
+
+
+
+
+ The configure target is run. This can do any one of
+ many different things.
+
+
+
+
+ If it exists, scripts/configure is run.
+
+
+
+
+ If ${HAS_CONFIGURE} or
+ ${GNU_CONFIGURE} is set,
+ ${WRKSRC}/configure is run.
+
+
+
+
+ If ${USE_IMAKE} is set,
+ ${XMKMF} (default: `xmkmf
+ -a') is run.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The build target is run. This is responsible for
+ descending into the ports' private working directory
+ (${WRKSRC}) and building it. If
+ ${USE_GMAKE} is set, GNU make
+ will be used, otherwise the system make will be
+ used.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The above are the default actions. In addition, you can
+ define targets `pre-<something>' or
+ `post-<something>', or put scripts with those
+ names, in the scripts subdirectory, and they will
+ be run before or after the default actions are done.
+
+ For example, if you have a post-extract target
+ defined in your Makefile, and a file pre-build in
+ the scripts subdirectory, the
+ post-extract target will be called after the
+ regular extraction actions, and the pre-build
+ script will be executed before the default build rules are
+ done. It is recommended that you use Makefile targets if
+ the actions are simple enough, because it will be easier for
+ someone to figure out what kind of non-default action the
+ port requires.
+
+ The default actions are done by the bsd.port.mk
+ targets `do-<something>'. For example, the
+ commands to extract a port are in the target
+ `do-extract'. If you are not happy with the
+ default target, you can fix it by redefining the
+ `do-<something>' target in your Makefile.
+
+ Note that the `main' targets (e.g., extract,
+ configure, etc.) do nothing more than make sure all
+ the stages up to that one is completed and call the real
+ targets or scripts, and they are not intended to be
+ changed. If you want to fix the extraction, fix
+ do-extract, but never ever touch extract!
+
+ Now that you understand what goes on when the user types
+ `make', let us go through the recommended steps to
+ create the perfect port.
+
+
+
+
+ Getting the original sources
+
+ Get the original sources (normally) as a compressed tarball
+ (<foo>.tar.gz or <foo>.tar.Z)
+ and copy it into ${DISTDIR}. Always use
+ mainstream sources when and where you can.
+
+ If you cannot find a ftp/http site that is well-connected
+ to the net, or can only find sites that have irritatingly
+ non-standard formats, we can `house' it ourselves by putting
+ it on
+
+ ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/distfiles/LOCAL_PORTS/
+
+
+ as the last resort. Please refer to this location as
+ ${MASTER_SITE_LOCAL}. Send mail to the &a.ports;if you are not sure what to do.
+
+ If your port requires some additional `patches' that are
+ available on the Internet, fetch them too and put them in
+ ${DISTDIR}. Do not worry if they come from
+ site other than where you got the main source tarball,
+ we have a way to handle these situations (see the
+ description of below).
+
+
+
+
+ Modifying the port
+
+ Unpack a copy of the tarball in a private directory and
+ make whatever changes are necessary to get the port to
+ compile properly under the current version of FreeBSD. Keep
+ careful track of everything you do, as you will be
+ automating the process shortly. Everything, including the
+ deletion, addition or modification of files should be doable
+ using an automated script or patch file when your port is
+ finished.
+
+ If your port requires significant user
+ interaction/customization to compile or install, you should
+ take a look at one of Larry Wall's classic Configure scripts
+ and perhaps do something similar yourself. The goal of the
+ new ports collection is to make each port as `plug-and-play'
+ as possible for the end-user while using a minimum of disk
+ space.
+
+ Note: Unless explicitly stated, patch files, scripts, and
+ other files you have created and contributed to the FreeBSD
+ ports collection are assumed to be covered by the standard
+ BSD copyright conditions.
+
+
+
+
+ Patching
+
+ In the preparation of the port, files that have been added
+ or changed can be picked up with a recursive diff for later
+ feeding to patch. Each set of patches you wish to apply
+ should be collected into a file named
+ `patch-<xx>' where <xx>
+ denotes the sequence in which the patches will be applied --
+ these are done in alphabetical order, thus
+ `aa' first, `ab' second and so on. These
+ files should be stored in ${PATCHDIR}, from
+ where they will be automatically applied. All patches
+ should be relative to ${WRKSRC} (generally
+ the directory your port's tarball unpacks itself into, that
+ being where the build is done). To make fixes and upgrades
+ easier you should avoid having more than one patch fix the
+ same file (e.g., patch-aa and patch-ab both changing
+ ${WRKSRC}/foobar.c).
+
+
+
+
+ Configuring
+
+ Include any additional customization commands to your
+ configure script and save it in the
+ `scripts' subdirectory. As mentioned above, you
+ can also do this as Makefile targets and/or scripts with the
+ name pre-configure or post-configure.
+
+
+
+
+ Handling user input
+
+ If your port requires user input to build, configure or
+ install, then set IS_INTERACTIVE in your Makefile.
+ This will allow `overnight builds' to skip your port if the
+ user sets the variable BATCH in his environment
+ (and if the user sets the variable INTERACTIVE,
+ then only those ports requiring interaction are
+ built).
+
+
+
+
+
+ Configuring the Makefile
+
+ Configuring the Makefile is pretty simple, and again we
+ suggest that you look at existing examples before starting.
+ Also, there is a in this handbook, so take a look and please follow
+ the ordering of variables and sections in that template to
+ make your port easier for others to read.
+
+ Now, consider the following problems in sequence as you
+ design your new Makefile:
+
+
+
+ The original source
+
+ Does it live in ${DISTDIR} as a standard
+ gzip'd tarball? If so, you can go on to the next step. If
+ not, you should look at overriding any of the
+ ${EXTRACT_CMD},
+ ${EXTRACT_BEFORE_ARGS},
+ ${EXTRACT_AFTER_ARGS},
+ ${EXTRACT_SUFX}, or
+ ${DISTFILES} variables, depending on how
+ alien a format your port's distribution file is. (The most
+ common case is `EXTRACT_SUFX=.tar.Z', when the
+ tarball is condensed by regular compress, not gzip.)
+
+ In the worst case, you can simply create your own
+ `do-extract' target to override the default, though
+ this should be rarely, if ever, necessary.
+
+
+
+
+ DISTNAME
+
+ You should set ${DISTNAME} to be the base
+ name of your port. The default rules expect the
+ distribution file list (${DISTFILES}) to be
+ named
+ ${DISTNAME}${EXTRACT_SUFX}
+ by default which, if it is a normal tarball, is going to be
+ something like:
+
+
+ foozolix-1.0.tar.gz
+
+
+ for a setting of `DISTNAME=foozolix-1.0'.
+
+ The default rules also expect the tarball(s) to extract into
+ a subdirectory called work/${DISTNAME}, e.g.
+
+
+ work/foozolix-1.0/
+
+
+
+ All this behavior can be overridden, of course, it simply
+ represents the most common time-saving defaults. For a port
+ requiring multiple distribution files, simply set
+ ${DISTFILES} explicitly. If only a subset
+ of ${DISTFILES} are actual extractable
+ archives, then set them up in
+ ${EXTRACT_ONLY}, which will override the
+ ${DISTFILES} list when it comes to
+ extraction, and the rest will be just left in
+ ${DISTDIR} for later use.
+
+
+
+
+ CATEGORIES
+
+ When a package is created, it is put under
+ /usr/ports/packages/All and links are made from one
+ or more subdirectories of /usr/ports/packages. The
+ names of these subdirectories are specified by the variable
+ ${CATEGORIES}. It is intended to make life
+ easier for the user when he is wading through the pile of
+ packages on the ftp site or the CD-ROM. Please take a look
+ at the existing categories (you can find them in the ports page) and pick the ones that are suitable for your port.
+ If your port truly belongs to something that is different
+ from all the existing ones, you can even create a new
+ category name.
+
+
+
+
+ MASTER_SITES
+
+ Record the directory part of the ftp/http-URL pointing at
+ the original tarball in ${MASTER_SITES}.
+ Do not forget the trailing slash (/)!
+
+ The make macros will try to use this specification for
+ grabbing the distribution file with ${FETCH}
+ if they cannot find it already on the system.
+
+ It is recommended that you put multiple sites on this list,
+ preferably from different continents. This will safeguard
+ against wide-area network problems, and we are even planning
+ to add support for automatically determining the closest
+ master site and fetching from there!
+
+ If the original tarball is part of one of the following
+ popular archives: X-contrib, GNU, Perl CPAN, TeX CTAN, or
+ Linux Sunsite, you refer to those sites in an easy compact
+ form using MASTER_SITE_XCONTRIB, MASTER_SITE_GNU,
+ MASTER_SITE_PERL_CPAN, MASTER_SITE_TEX_CTAN, and
+ MASTER_SITE_SUNSITE. Simply set MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR to the path
+ with in the archive. Here is an example:
+
+ MASTER_SITES= ${MASTER_SITE_XCONTRIB}
+ MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR= applications
+
+
+
+ The user can also set the MASTER_SITE_* variables in
+ /etc/make.conf to override our choices, and use their
+ favorite mirrors of these popular archives instead.
+
+
+
+
+ PATCHFILES
+
+ If your port requires some additional patches that are
+ available by ftp or http, set ${PATCHFILES}
+ to the names of the files and ${PATCH_SITES}
+ to the URL of the directory that contains them (the format
+ is the same as ${MASTER_SITES}).
+
+ If the patch is not relative to the top of the source tree
+ (i.e., ${WKRSRC}) because it contains some
+ extra pathnames, set ${PATCH_DIST_STRIP}
+ accordingly. For instance, if all the pathnames in the
+ patch has an extra `foozolix-1.0/' in front of the
+ filenames, then set `PATCH_DIST_STRIP=-p1'.
+
+ Do not worry if the patches are compressed, they will be
+ decompressed automatically if the filenames end with
+ `.gz' or `.Z'.
+
+ If the patch is distributed with some other files, such as
+ documentation, in a gzip'd tarball, you can't just use
+ ${PATCHFILES}. If that is the case, add the
+ name and the location of the patch tarball to
+ ${DISTFILES} and
+ ${MASTER_SITES}. Then, from the
+ pre-patch target, apply the patch either by running
+ the patch command from there, or copying the patch file into
+ the ${PATCHDIR} directory and calling it
+ patch-<xx>. (Note the tarball will have been
+ extracted alongside the regular source by then, so there is
+ no need to explicitly extract it if it is a regular gzip'd
+ or compress'd tarball.) If you do the latter, take extra
+ care not to overwrite something that already exists in that
+ directory. Also do not forget to add a command to remove
+ the copied patch in the pre-clean target.
+
+
+
+
+ MAINTAINER
+
+ Set your mail-address here. Please. :)
+
+ For detailed description of the responsibility of maintainers,
+ refer to section.
+
+
+
+
+ Dependencies
+
+ Many ports depend on other ports. There are five
+ variables that you can use to ensure that all the required
+ bits will be on the user's machine.
+
+
+
+ LIB_DEPENDS
+
+ This variable specifies the shared libraries this port
+ depends on. It is a list of `lib:dir' pairs
+ where lib is the name of the shared library, and
+ dir is the directory in which to find it in case
+ it is not available. For example,
+
+ LIB_DEPENDS= jpeg\\.6\\.:${PORTSDIR}/graphics/jpeg
+
+
+ will check for a shared jpeg library with major version 6,
+ and descend into the graphics/jpeg subdirectory
+ of your ports tree to build and install it if it is not
+ found.
+
+ Note that the lib part is just an argument given
+ to `ldconfig -r | grep', so periods should be
+ escaped by two backslashes like in the example above.
+
+ The dependency is checked from within the extract
+ target. Also, the name of the dependency is put in to the
+ package so that pkg_add will automatically
+ install it if it is not on the user's system.
+
+
+
+
+ RUN_DEPENDS
+
+ This variable specifies executables or files this port
+ depends on during run-time. It is a list of
+ `path:dir' pairs where path is the name
+ of the executable or file, and dir is the
+ directory in which to find it in case it is not
+ available. If path starts with a slash
+ (/), it is treated as a file and its existence is
+ tested with `test -e'; otherwise, it is assumed
+ to be an executable, and `which -s' is used to
+ determine if the program exists in the user's search path.
+
+ For example,
+
+ RUN_DEPENDS= ${PREFIX}/etc/innd:${PORTSDIR}/news/inn \
+ wish:${PORTSDIR}/x11/tk
+
+
+ will check if the file `/usr/local/etc/innd'
+ exists, and build and install it from the
+ news/inn subdirectory of the ports tree if it is
+ not found. It will also see if an executable called
+ `wish' is in your search path, and descend into
+ the x11/tk subdirectory of your ports tree to
+ build and install it if it is not found. (Note that in
+ this case, `innd' is actually an executable; if
+ an executable is in a place that is not expected to be in
+ a normal user's search path, you should use the full
+ pathname.)
+
+ The dependency is checked from within the install
+ target. Also, the name of the dependency is put in to the
+ package so that pkg_add will automatically
+ install it if it is not on the user's system.
+
+
+
+
+ BUILD_DEPENDS
+
+ This variable specifies executables or files this port
+ requires to build. Like RUN_DEPENDS, it is a
+ list of `path:dir' pairs. For example,
+
+ BUILD_DEPENDS= unzip:${PORTSDIR}/archivers/unzip
+
+
+ will check for an executable called `unzip', and
+ descend into the archivers/unzip subdirectory of
+ your ports tree to build and install it if it is not found.
+
+ Note that `build' here means everything from extracting to
+ compilation. The dependency is checked from within the
+ extract target.
+
+
+
+
+ FETCH_DEPENDS
+
+ This variable specifies executables or files this port
+ requires to fetch. Like the previous two, it is a list of
+ `path:dir' pairs. For example,
+
+ FETCH_DEPENDS= ncftp2:${PORTSDIR}/net/ncftp2
+
+
+ will check for an executable called `ncftp2', and
+ descend into the net/ncftp2 subdirectory of
+ your ports tree to build and install it if it is not found.
+
+ The dependency is checked from within the fetch
+ target.
+
+
+
+
+ DEPENDS
+
+ If there is a dependency that does not fall into either of
+ the above four categories, or your port requires to have
+ the source of the other port extracted (i.e., having them
+ installed is not enough), then use this variable. This is
+ just a list of directories, as there is nothing to check,
+ unlike the previous four.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Building mechanisms
+
+ If your package uses GNU make, set
+ `USE_GMAKE=yes'. If your package uses GNU
+ configure, set `GNU_CONFIGURE=yes'. If
+ you want to give some extra arguments to GNU
+ configure (other than the default
+ `--prefix=${PREFIX}'),
+ set those extra arguments in
+ ${CONFIGURE_ARGS}.
+
+ If your package is an X application that creates Makefiles
+ from Imakefiles using imake, then set
+ `USE_IMAKE=yes'. This will cause the configure
+ stage to automatically do an xmkmf -a. If the
+ `' flag is a problem for your port, set
+ `XMKMF=xmkmf'.
+
+ If your port's source Makefile has something else than
+ `all' as the main build target, set
+ ${ALL_TARGET} accordingly. Same goes for
+ `install' and ${INSTALL_TARGET}.
+
+
+
+
+ NO_INSTALL_MANPAGES
+
+ If the port uses imake but does not understand the
+ `install.man' target,
+ `NO_INSTALL_MANPAGES=yes' should be set. In
+ addition, the author of the original port should be
+ shot. :>
+
+
+
+
+
+ Ports that require Motif
+
+ There are many programs that require a Motif library
+ (available from several commercial vendors, while there is (at
+ least) one effort to create a free clone) to compile. Since
+ it is a popular toolkit and their licenses usually permit
+ redistribution of statically linked binaries, we have made
+ special provisions for handling ports that require Motif in a
+ way that we can easily compile binaries linked either
+ dynamically or statically.
+
+
+
+ REQUIRES_MOTIF
+
+ If your port requires Motif, define this variable in the
+ Makefile. This will prevent people who don't own a copy of
+ Motif from even attempting to build it.
+
+
+
+
+ ${MOTIFLIB}
+
+ This variable will be set by bsd.port.mk to be the
+ appropriate reference to the Motif library. Please patch
+ the source to use this wherever the Motif library is
+ referenced in the Makefile or Imakefile.
+
+ There are two common cases:
+
+
+
+ If the port refers to the Motif library as
+ `' in its Makefile or Imakefile, simply
+ substitute `${MOTIFLIB}' for it.
+
+
+
+
+ If the port uses `XmClientLibs' in its
+ Imakefile, change it to `${MOTIFLIB}
+ ${XTOOLLIB} ${XLIB}'.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Note that ${MOTIFLIB} (usually) expands to
+ `' or
+ `/usr/X11R6/lib/libXm.a', so there is no need to
+ add `' or `' in front.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Info files
+
+ The new version of texinfo (included in 2.2.2-RELEASE and
+ onwards) contains a utility called `install-info' to add
+ and delete entries to the `dir' file. If your port
+ installs any info documents, please follow these instructions
+ so your port/package will correctly update the user's
+ ${PREFIX}/info/dir file. (Sorry for the length
+ of this section, but it is imperative to weave all the info
+ files together. If done correctly, it will produce a
+ beautiful listing, so please bear with me! :)
+
+ First, this is what you (as a porter) need to know:
+
+
+
+ % install-info --help
+ install-info [OPTION]... [INFO-FILE [DIR-FILE]]
+ Install INFO-FILE in the Info directory file DIR-FILE.
+
+ Options:
+ --delete Delete existing entries in INFO-FILE;
+ don't insert any new entries.
+ :
+ --entry=TEXT Insert TEXT as an Info directory entry.
+ :
+ --section=SEC Put this file's entries in section SEC of the directory.
+ :
+
+
+
+ Note that this program will not actually install
+ info files; it merely inserts or deletes entries in the
+ dir file.
+
+ Here's a seven-step procedure to convert ports to use
+ install-info. I will use editors/emacs as an
+ example.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Look at the texinfo sources and make a patch to insert
+ @dircategory and @direntry statements to files
+ that don't have them. This is part of my patch:
+
+
+ --- ./man/vip.texi.org Fri Jun 16 15:31:11 1995
+ +++ ./man/vip.texi Tue May 20 01:28:33 1997
+ @@ -2,6 +2,10 @@
+
+ @setfilename ../info/vip
+ @settitle VIP
+ +@dircategory The Emacs editor and associated tools
+ +@direntry
+ +* VIP: (vip). A VI-emulation for Emacs.
+ +@end direntry
+
+ @iftex
+ @finalout
+ :
+
+
+
+
+
+ The format should be self-explanatory. Many authors leave
+ a dir file in the source tree that contains all the
+ entries you need, so look around before you try to write
+ your own. Also, make sure you look into related ports and
+ make the section names and entry indentations consistent (we
+ recommend that all entry text start at the 4th tab stop).
+
+
+
+ Note that you can put only one info entry per file because
+ of a bug in `install-info --delete' that deletes
+ only the first entry if you specify multiple entries in the
+ @direntry section.
+
+
+
+ You can give the dir entries to install-info as
+ arguments ( and ) instead of
+ patching the texinfo sources. I do not think this is a good
+ idea for ports because you need to duplicate the same
+ information in three places (Makefile and
+ @exec/@unexec of PLIST; see below). However,
+ if you have a Japanese (or other multibyte encoding) info
+ files, you will have to use the extra arguments to
+ install-info because makeinfo can't handle those
+ texinfo sources. (See Makefile and PLIST of
+ japanese/skk for examples on how to do this).
+
+
+
+
+
+ Go back to the port directory and do a `make clean;
+ make' and verify that the info files are regenerated
+ from the texinfo sources. Since the texinfo sources are
+ newer than the info files, they should be rebuilt when you
+ type make; but many Makefiles don't include
+ correct dependencies for info files. In emacs' case, I had
+ to patch the main Makefile.in so it will descend into
+ the man subdirectory to rebuild the info pages.
+
+
+ --- ./Makefile.in.org Mon Aug 19 21:12:19 1996
+ +++ ./Makefile.in Tue Apr 15 00:15:28 1997
+ @@ -184,7 +184,7 @@
+ # Subdirectories to make recursively. `lisp' is not included
+ # because the compiled lisp files are part of the distribution
+ # and you cannot remake them without installing Emacs first.
+ -SUBDIR = lib-src src
+ +SUBDIR = lib-src src man
+
+ # The makefiles of the directories in $SUBDIR.
+ SUBDIR_MAKEFILES = lib-src/Makefile man/Makefile src/Makefile oldXMenu/Makefile lwlib/Makefile
+ --- ./man/Makefile.in.org Thu Jun 27 15:27:19 1996
+ +++ ./man/Makefile.in Tue Apr 15 00:29:52 1997
+ @@ -66,6 +66,7 @@
+ ${srcdir}/gnu1.texi \
+ ${srcdir}/glossary.texi
+
+ +all: info
+ info: $(INFO_TARGETS)
+
+ dvi: $(DVI_TARGETS)
+
+
+
+
+
+ The second hunk was necessary because the default target in
+ the man subdir is called info, while the
+ main Makefile wants to call all. I also deleted the
+ installation of the info info file because we already
+ have one with the same name in /usr/share/info
+ (that patch is not shown here).
+
+
+
+
+
+ If there is a place in the Makefile that is
+ installing the dir file, delete it. Your port may not
+ be doing it. Also, remove any commands that are otherwise
+ mucking around with the dir file.
+
+
+ --- ./Makefile.in.org Mon Aug 19 21:12:19 1996
+ +++ ./Makefile.in Mon Apr 14 23:38:07 1997
+ @@ -368,14 +368,8 @@
+ if [ `(cd ${srcdir}/info && /bin/pwd)` != `(cd ${infodir} && /bin/pwd)` ]; \
+ then \
+ (cd ${infodir}; \
+ - if [ -f dir ]; then \
+ - if [ ! -f dir.old ]; then mv -f dir dir.old; \
+ - else mv -f dir dir.bak; fi; \
+ - fi; \
+ cd ${srcdir}/info ; \
+ - (cd $${thisdir}; ${INSTALL_DATA} ${srcdir}/info/dir ${infodir}/dir); \
+ - (cd $${thisdir}; chmod a+r ${infodir}/dir); \
+ for f in ccmode* cl* dired-x* ediff* emacs* forms* gnus* info* message* mh-e* sc* vip*; do \
+ (cd $${thisdir}; \
+ ${INSTALL_DATA} ${srcdir}/info/$$f ${infodir}/$$f; \
+ chmod a+r ${infodir}/$$f); \
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ (This step is only necessary if you are modifying an
+ existing port.) Take a look at pkg/PLIST and
+ delete anything that is trying to patch up
+ info/dir. They may be in pkg/INSTALL or
+ some other file, so search extensively.
+
+
+ Index: pkg/PLIST
+ ===================================================================
+ RCS file: /usr/cvs/ports/editors/emacs/pkg/PLIST,v
+ retrieving revision 1.15
+ diff -u -r1.15 PLIST
+ --- PLIST 1997/03/04 08:04:00 1.15
+ +++ PLIST 1997/04/15 06:32:12
+ @@ -15,9 +15,6 @@
+ man/man1/emacs.1.gz
+ man/man1/etags.1.gz
+ man/man1/ctags.1.gz
+ -@unexec cp %D/info/dir %D/info/dir.bak
+ -info/dir
+ -@unexec cp %D/info/dir.bak %D/info/dir
+ info/cl
+ info/cl-1
+ info/cl-2
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Add a post-install target to the Makefile to create
+ a dir file if it is not there. Also, call
+ install-info with the installed info files.
+
+
+ Index: Makefile
+ ===================================================================
+ RCS file: /usr/cvs/ports/editors/emacs/Makefile,v
+ retrieving revision 1.26
+ diff -u -r1.26 Makefile
+ --- Makefile 1996/11/19 13:14:40 1.26
+ +++ Makefile 1997/05/20 10:25:09 1.28
+ @@ -20,5 +20,11 @@
+ post-install:
+ .for file in emacs-19.34 emacsclient etags ctags b2m
+ strip ${PREFIX}/bin/${file}
+ .endfor
+ + if [ ! -f ${PREFIX}/info/dir ]; then \
+ + ${SED} -ne '1,/Menu:/p' /usr/share/info/dir > ${PREFIX}/info/dir; \
+ + fi
+ +.for info in emacs vip viper forms gnus mh-e cl sc dired-x ediff ccmode
+ + install-info ${PREFIX}/info/${info} ${PREFIX}/info/dir
+ +.endfor
+
+ .include <bsd.port.mk>
+
+
+
+
+
+ Do not use anything other than /usr/share/info/dir
+ and the above command to create a new info file. In fact,
+ I'd add the first three lines of the above patch to
+ bsd.port.mk if you (the porter) wouldn't have to do it
+ in PLIST by yourself anyway.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Edit PLIST and add equivalent @exec statements
+ and also @unexec for pkg_delete. You do not need
+ to delete info/dir with @unexec.
+
+
+ Index: pkg/PLIST
+ ===================================================================
+ RCS file: /usr/cvs/ports/editors/emacs/pkg/PLIST,v
+ retrieving revision 1.15
+ diff -u -r1.15 PLIST
+ --- PLIST 1997/03/04 08:04:00 1.15
+ +++ PLIST 1997/05/20 10:25:12 1.17
+ @@ -16,7 +14,15 @@
+ man/man1/etags.1.gz
+ man/man1/ctags.1.gz
+ +@unexec install-info --delete %D/info/emacs %D/info/dir
+ :
+ +@unexec install-info --delete %D/info/ccmode %D/info/dir
+ info/cl
+ info/cl-1
+ @@ -87,6 +94,18 @@
+ info/viper-3
+ info/viper-4
+ +@exec [ -f %D/info/dir ] || sed -ne '1,/Menu:/p' /usr/share/info/dir > %D/info/dir
+ +@exec install-info %D/info/emacs %D/info/dir
+ :
+ +@exec install-info %D/info/ccmode %D/info/dir
+ libexec/emacs/19.34/i386--freebsd/cvtmail
+ libexec/emacs/19.34/i386--freebsd/digest-doc
+
+
+
+
+
+ Note that the `@unexec install-info --delete'
+ commands have to be listed before the info files themselves
+ so they can read the files. Also, the `@exec
+ install-info' commands have to be after the info files
+ and the @exec command that creates the the dir
+ file.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Test and admire your work. :) The sequence I
+ recommend is: `make package', `pkg_delete', then
+ `pkg_add'. Check the dir file before and after
+ each step.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Licensing Problems
+
+ Some software packages have restrictive licenses or can be in
+ violation to the law (PKP's patent on public key crypto,
+ ITAR (export of crypto software) to name just two of them).
+ What we can do with them vary a lot, depending on the exact
+ wordings of the respective licenses.
+
+ Note that it is your responsibility as a porter to read the
+ licensing terms of the software and make sure that the FreeBSD
+ project will not be held accountable of violating them by
+ redistributing the source or compiled binaries either via ftp
+ or CD-ROM. If in doubt, please contact the &a.ports;.
+
+ There are two variables you can set in the Makefile to handle
+ the situations that arise frequently:
+
+
+
+
+
+ If the port has a `do not sell for profit' type of
+ license, set the variable NO_CDROM. We will make
+ sure such ports won't go into the CD-ROM come release time.
+ The distfile and package will still be available via ftp.
+
+
+
+
+ If the resulting package needs to be built uniquely for
+ each site, or the resulting binary package can't be distributed
+ due to licensing; set the variable NO_PACKAGE.
+ We will make sure such packages won't go on the ftp site, nor
+ into the CD-ROM come release time. The distfile will still be
+ included on both however.
+
+
+
+
+ If the port has legal restrictions on who can use it
+ (e.g., crypto stuff) or has a `no commercial use' license,
+ set the variable RESTRICTED to be the string
+ describing the reason why. For such ports, the
+ distfiles/packages will not be available even from our ftp
+ sites.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Note: The GNU General Public License (GPL), both version 1
+ and 2, should not be a problem for ports.
+
+ Note: If you are a committer, make sure you update the
+ ports/LEGAL file too.
+
+
+
+
+ Upgrading
+
+ When you notice that a port is out of date compared to the
+ latest version from the original authors, first make sure you
+ have the latest port. You can find them in the
+ ports-current directory of the ftp mirror sites.
+
+ The next step is to send a mail to the maintainer, if one is
+ listed in the port's Makefile. That person may already be
+ working on an upgrade, or have a reason to not upgrade the
+ port right now (because of, for example, stability problems
+ of the new version).
+
+ If the maintainer asks you to do the upgrade or there isn't
+ any such person to begin with, please make the upgrade and
+ send the recursive diff (either unified or context diff is
+ fine, but port committers appear to prefer unified diff more)
+ of the new and old ports directories
+ to us (i.e., if your modified ports directory is called
+ `superedit' and the original as in our tree is
+ `superedit.bak', then send us the result of `diff
+ -ruN superedit.bak superedit'). Please examine the output
+ to make sure all the changes make sense. The best way to send
+ us the diff is by including it to send-pr(1) (category
+ `ports'). Please
+ mention any added or deleted files in the message, as they
+ have to be explicitly specified to CVS when doing a commit.
+ If the diff is more than about 20KB, please compress and
+ uuencode it; otherwise, just include it in as is in the PR.
+
+
+
+
+ Do's and Dont's
+
+ Here is a list of common do's and dont's that you encounter
+ during the porting process.
+
+
+
+ WRKDIR
+
+ Do not leave anything valuable lying around in the
+ work subdirectory, `make clean' will
+ nuke it completely! If you need auxiliary files
+ that are not scripts or patches, put them in the
+ ${FILESDIR} subdirectory (files by default)
+ and use the post-extract target to
+ copy them to the work subdirectory.
+
+
+
+
+ Package information
+
+ Do include package information, i.e. COMMENT,
+ DESCR, and PLIST, in
+ pkg. Note that these files are not used only for
+ packaging anymore, and are mandatory now, even if
+ ${NO_PACKAGE} is set.
+
+
+
+
+ Compress manpages, strip binaries
+
+ Do compress manpages and strip binaries. If the original
+ source already strips the binary, fine; otherwise, you can add a
+ post-install rule to do it yourself. Here is an example:
+
+ post-install:
+ strip ${PREFIX}/bin/xdl
+
+
+
+ Use the file command on the installed executable
+ to check whether the binary is stripped or not. If it
+ does not say `not stripped', it is stripped.
+
+ To automagically compress the manpages, use the MAN[1-9LN]
+ variables. They will check the variable
+ NOMANCOMPRESS that the user can set in
+ /etc/make.conf to disable man page compression.
+ Place them last in the section below the
+ MAINTAINER variable. Here is an example:
+
+ MAN1= foo.1 bar.1
+ MAN5= foo.conf.5
+ MAN8= baz.8
+
+
+
+ Note that this is not usually necessary with ports that are X
+ applications and use Imake to build.
+
+ If your port anchors its man tree somewhere other than
+ PREFIX, you can use the MANPREFIX to set it.
+ Also, if only manpages in certain section go in a
+ non-standard place, such as many Perl modules ports, you
+ can set individual man paths using
+ MANsectPREFIX (where sect is one
+ of 1-9, L or N).
+
+
+
+
+ INSTALL_* macros
+
+ Do use the macros provided in bsd.port.mk to
+ ensure correct modes and ownership of files in your own
+ *-install targets. They are:
+
+
+
+
+
+ ${INSTALL_PROGRAM} is a command to install
+ binary executables.
+
+
+
+ ${INSTALL_SCRIPT} is a command to install
+ executable scripts.
+
+
+
+ ${INSTALL_DATA} is a command to install
+ sharable data.
+
+
+
+ ${INSTALL_MAN} is a command to install
+ manpages and other documentation (it doesn't compress anything).
+
+
+
+
+
+ These are basically the install command with all
+ the appropriate flags. See below for an example on how to
+ use them.
+
+
+
+
+ INSTALL package script
+
+ If your port needs execute commands when the binary package
+ is installed with pkg_add you can do with via the pkg/INSTALL
+ script. This script will automatically be added to the
+ package, and will be run twice by pkg_add. The first time
+ will as `INSTALL ${PKGNAME} PRE-INSTALL'
+ and the second time as `INSTALL ${PKGNAME} POST-INSTALL'.
+ `$2' can be tested to determine which mode
+ the script is being run in.
+ The `PKG_PREFIX' environmental variable will be set to
+ the package installation directory. See man pkg_add(1)
+ for additional information.
+ Note, that this script is not run automatically if you install
+ the port with `make install'. If you are depending
+ on it being run, you will have to explicitly call it on your
+ port's Makefile.
+
+
+
+
+ REQ package script
+
+ If your port needs to determine if it should install or not, you
+ can create a pkg/REQ ``requirements'' script. It will be invoked
+ automatically at installation/deinstallation time to determine
+ whether or not installation/deinstallation should proceed.
+ See man pkg_create(1) and man pkg_add(1) for
+ more information.
+
+
+
+
+ Install additional documentation
+
+ If your software has some documentation other than the
+ standard man and info pages that you think is useful for the
+ user, install it under ${PREFIX}/share/doc.
+ This can be done, like the previous item, in the
+ post-install target.
+
+ Create a new directory for your port. The directory name
+ should reflect what the port is. This usually means
+ ${PKGNAME} minus the version part. However,
+ if you think the user might want different versions of the
+ port to be installed at the same time, you
+ can use the whole ${PKGNAME}.
+
+ Make the installation dependent to the variable
+ NOPORTDOCS so that users can disable it in
+ /etc/make.conf, like this:
+
+ post-install:
+ .if !defined(NOPORTDOCS)
+ ${MKDIR} ${PREFIX}/share/doc/xv
+ ${INSTALL_MAN} ${WRKSRC}/docs/xvdocs.ps ${PREFIX}/share/doc/xv
+ .endif
+
+
+
+ Do not forget to add them to pkg/PLIST too! (Do not
+ worry about NOPORTDOCS here; there is currently no
+ way for the packages to read variables from
+ /etc/make.conf.)
+
+ If you need to display a message to the installer, you may
+ place the message in pkg/MESSAGE. This capibility
+ is often useful to display additional installation steps to
+ be taken after a pkg_add, or to display licensing information.
+ (note: the MESSAGE file does not need to be added to pkg/PLIST).
+
+
+
+
+ DIST_SUBDIR
+
+ Do not let your port clutter /usr/ports/distfiles. If
+ your port requires a lot of files to be
+ fetched, or contains a file that has a name that might conflict
+ with other ports (e.g., `Makefile'), set
+ ${DIST_SUBDIR} to the name of the port
+ (${PKGNAME} without the version part should work
+ fine). This will change ${DISTDIR} from the
+ default /usr/ports/distfiles to
+ /usr/ports/distfiles/${DIST_SUBDIR}, and in
+ effect puts everything that is required for your port into that
+ subdirectory.
+
+ It will also look at the subdirectory with the same name on the
+ backup master site at ftp.freebsd.org. (Setting
+ ${DISTDIR} explicitly in your Makefile will not
+ accomplish this, so please use ${DIST_SUBDIR}.)
+
+ Note this does not affect the ${MASTER_SITES}
+ you define in your Makefile.
+
+
+
+
+ Feedback
+
+ Do send applicable changes/patches to the original
+ author/maintainer for inclusion in next release of the code.
+ This will only make your job that much easier for the next
+ release.
+
+
+
+
+ RCS strings
+
+ Do not put RCS strings in patches. CVS will mangle them
+ when we put the files into the ports tree, and when we check
+ them out again, they will come out different and the patch
+ will fail. RCS strings are surrounded by dollar
+ (`$') signs, and typically start with
+ `$Id' or `$RCS'.
+
+
+
+
+ Recursive diff
+
+ Using the recurse (`') option to diff
+ to generate patches is fine, but please take a look at the
+ resulting patches to make sure you don't have any
+ unnecessary junk in there. In particular, diffs between two
+ backup files, Makefiles when the port uses Imake or GNU
+ configure, etc., are unnecessary and should be deleted.
+ Also, if you had to delete a file, then you can do it in the
+ post-extract target rather than as part of the
+ patch. Once you are happy with the resuling diff, please
+ split it up into one source file per patch file.
+
+
+
+
+ PREFIX
+
+ Do try to make your port install relative to
+ ${PREFIX}. (The value of this variable will be
+ set to ${LOCALBASE} (default
+ /usr/local), unless ${USE_IMAKE} or
+ ${USE_X11} is set, in which case it will be
+ ${X11BASE} (default /usr/X11R6).)
+
+ Not hard-coding `/usr/local' or `/usr/X11R6'
+ anywhere in the source will make the port much more flexible and
+ able to cater to the needs of other sites. For X ports that use
+ imake, this is automatic; otherwise, this can often be done by
+ simply replacing the occurrences of `/usr/local' (or
+ `/usr/X11R6' for X ports that do not use imake) in the
+ various scripts/Makefiles in the port to read
+ `${PREFIX}', as this variable is automatically
+ passed down to every stage of the build and install processes.
+
+ The variable ${PREFIX} can be reassigned in your
+ Makefile or in the user's environment. However, it is strongly
+ discouraged for individual ports to set this variable explicitly
+ in the Makefiles. (If your port is an X port but does not use
+ imake, set USE_X11=yes; this is quite different from
+ setting PREFIX=/usr/X11R6.)
+
+ Also, refer to programs/files from other ports with the
+ variables mentioned above, not explicit pathnames. For instance,
+ if your port requires a macro PAGER to be the full
+ pathname of less, use the compiler flag:
+ -DPAGER=\"${PREFIX}/bin/less\"
+ or
+ -DPAGER=\"${LOCALBASE}/bin/less\"
+ if this is an
+ X port, instead of
+ -DPAGER=\"/usr/local/bin/less\".
+
+ This way it will have a better chance of working if the system
+ administrator has moved the whole `/usr/local' tree somewhere
+ else.
+
+
+
+
+ Subdirectories
+
+ Try to let the port put things in the right subdirectories
+ of ${PREFIX}. Some ports lump everything
+ and put it in the subdirectory with the port's name, which is
+ incorrect. Also, many ports put everything except binaries,
+ header files and manual pages in the a subdirectory of
+ `lib', which does not bode well with the BSD
+ paradigm. Many of the files should be moved to one of the
+ following: `etc' (setup/configuration files),
+ `libexec' (executables started internally),
+ `sbin' (executables for superusers/managers),
+ `info' (documentation for info browser) or
+ `share' (architecture independent files). See man
+ hier(7) for details, the rule governing
+ /usr pretty much applies to /usr/local
+ too. The exception are ports dealing with USENET `news'.
+ They may use ${PREFIX}/news as a destination
+ for their files.
+
+
+
+
+ ldconfig
+
+ If your port installs a shared library, add a
+ post-install target to your Makefile that runs
+ `/sbin/ldconfig -m' on the directory where the new
+ library is installed (usually ${PREFIX}/lib)
+ to register it into the shared library cache.
+
+ Also, add an @exec line to your pkg/PLIST
+ file so that a user who installed the package can start
+ using the shared library immediately. This line should
+ immediately follow the line for the shared library itself,
+ as in:
+
+ lib/libtcl80.so.1.0
+ @exec /sbin/ldconfig -m %D/lib
+
+
+
+ Never, ever, ever add a line that says
+ `ldconfig' without any arguments to your Makefile
+ or pkg/PLIST. This will reset the shared library cache to
+ the contents of /usr/lib only, and will royally
+ screw up the user's machine ("Help, xinit does not run
+ anymore after I install this port!"). Anybody who does this
+ will be shot and cut into 65,536 pieces by a rusty knife and
+ have his liver chopped out by a bunch of crows and will
+ eternally rot to death in the deepest bowels of hell (not
+ necessarily in that order)....
+
+
+
+
+ UIDs
+
+ If your port requires a certain user ID to be on the
+ installed system, let the pkg/INSTALL script call
+ pw to create it automatically. Look at
+ japanese/Wnn or net/cvsup-mirror for
+ examples. It is customary to use UIDs in the upper 2-digit
+ range (i.e., from around 50 to 99) for this purpose.
+
+ Make sure you don't use a UID already used by the system or
+ other ports. This is the current list of UIDs between 50
+ and 99.
+
+
+
+ majordom:*:54:1024:Majordomo Pseudo User:/usr/local/majordomo:/nonexistent
+ cyrus:*:60:248:the cyrus mail server:/nonexistent:/nonexistent
+ gnats:*:61:1:GNATS database owner:/usr/local/share/gnats/gnats-db:/bin/sh
+ uucp:*:66:66:UUCP pseudo-user:/var/spool/uucppublic:/usr/libexec/uucp/uucico
+ xten:*:67:67:X-10 daemon:/usr/local/xten:/nonexistent
+ pop:*:68:6:Post Office Owner:/nonexistent:/nonexistent
+ wnn:*:69:7:Wnn:/nonexistent:/nonexistent
+ ifmail:*:70:66:Ifmail user:/nonexistent:/nonexistent
+ pgsql:*:71:246:PostgreSQL pseudo-user:/usr/local/pgsql:/bin/sh
+ msql:*:80:249:mSQL-2 pseudo-user:/var/db/msqldb:/bin/sh
+
+
+
+ Please send a notice to &a.ports; if you submit or commit a
+ port that allocates a new UID in this range so we can keep
+ this list up to date.
+
+
+
+
+ If you are stuck....
+
+ Do look at existing examples and the bsd.port.mk
+ file before asking us questions! ;)
+
+ Do ask us questions if you have any trouble! Do not just
+ beat your head against a wall! :)
+
+
+
+
+
+ A Sample Makefile
+
+ Here is a sample Makefile that you can use to create a new
+ port. Make sure you remove all the extra comments (ones
+ between brackets)!
+
+ It is recommended that you follow this format (ordering of
+ variables, empty lines between sections, etc.). Not all of
+ the existing Makefiles are in this format (mostly old ones),
+ but we are trying to uniformize how they look. This format is
+ designed so that the most important information is easy to
+ locate.
+
+
+
+ [the header...just to make it easier for us to identify the ports.]
+ # New ports collection makefile for: xdvi
+ [the version required header should updated when upgrading a port.]
+ # Version required: pl18 [things like "1.5alpha" are fine here too]
+ [this is the date when the first version of this Makefile was created.
+ Never change this when doing an update of the port.]
+ # Date created: 26 May 1995
+ [this is the person who did the original port to FreeBSD, in particular, the
+ person who wrote the first version of this Makefile. Remember, this should
+ not be changed when upgrading the port later.]
+ # Whom: Satoshi Asami <asami@FreeBSD.ORG>
+ #
+ # $Id$
+ [ ^^^^ This will be automatically replaced with RCS ID string by CVS
+ when it is committed to our repository.]
+ #
+
+ [section to describe the port itself and the master site - DISTNAME
+ is always first, followed by PKGNAME (if necessary), CATEGORIES,
+ and then MASTER_SITES, which can be followed by MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR.
+ After those, one of EXTRACT_SUFX or DISTFILES can be specified too.]
+ DISTNAME= xdvi
+ PKGNAME= xdvi-pl18
+ CATEGORIES= print
+ [do not forget the trailing slash ("/")!
+ if you aren't using MASTER_SITE_* macros]
+ MASTER_SITES= ${MASTER_SITE_XCONTRIB}
+ MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR= applications
+ [set this if the source is not in the standard ".tar.gz" form]
+ EXTRACT_SUFX= .tar.Z
+
+ [section for distributed patches -- can be empty]
+ PATCH_SITES= ftp://ftp.sra.co.jp/pub/X11/japanese/
+ PATCHFILES= xdvi-18.patch1.gz xdvi-18.patch2.gz
+
+ [maintainer; *mandatory*! This is the person (preferably with commit
+ privileges) who a user can contact for questions and bug reports - this
+ person should be the porter or someone who can forward questions to the
+ original porter reasonably promptly. If you really do not want to have
+ your address here, set it to "ports@FreeBSD.ORG".]
+ MAINTAINER= asami@FreeBSD.ORG
+
+ [dependencies -- can be empty]
+ RUN_DEPENDS= gs:${PORTSDIR}/print/ghostscript
+ LIB_DEPENDS= Xpm\\.4\\.:${PORTSDIR}/graphics/xpm
+
+ [this section is for other standard bsd.port.mk variables that do not
+ belong to any of the above]
+ [If it asks questions during configure, build, install...]
+ IS_INTERACTIVE= yes
+ [If it extracts to a directory other than ${DISTNAME}...]
+ WRKSRC= ${WRKDIR}/xdvi-new
+ [If the distributed patches were not made relative to ${WRKSRC}, you
+ may need to tweak this]
+ PATCH_DIST_STRIP= -p1
+ [If it requires a "configure" script generated by GNU autoconf to be run]
+ GNU_CONFIGURE= yes
+ [If it requires GNU make, not /usr/bin/make, to build...]
+ USE_GMAKE= yes
+ [If it is an X application and requires "xmkmf -a" to be run...]
+ USE_IMAKE= yes
+ [et cetera.]
+
+ [non-standard variables to be used in the rules below]
+ MY_FAVORITE_RESPONSE= "yeah, right"
+
+ [then the special rules, in the order they are called]
+ pre-fetch:
+ i go fetch something, yeah
+
+ post-patch:
+ i need to do something after patch, great
+
+ pre-install:
+ and then some more stuff before installing, wow
+
+ [and then the epilogue]
+ .include <bsd.port.mk>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Package Names
+
+ The following are the conventions you should follow in
+ naming your packages. This is to have our package directory
+ easy to scan, as there are already lots and lots of packages
+ and users are going to turn away if they hurt their eyes!
+
+ The package name should look like
+
+
+
+ [<language>-]<name>[[-]<compiled.specifics>]-<version.string.numbers>;
+
+
+
+ If your ${DISTNAME} doesn't look like that,
+ set ${PKGNAME} to something in that format.
+
+
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD strives to support the native language of its
+ users. The `<language>' part should be a two letter
+ abbreviation of the natural language defined by ISO-639 if
+ the port is specific to a certain language. Examples are
+ `ja' for Japanese, `ru' for Russian, `vi' for Vietnamese,
+ `zh' for Chinese, `ko' for Korean and `de' for German.
+
+
+
+
+ The `<name>' part should be all
+ lowercases, except for a really large package (with lots of
+ programs in it). Things like XFree86 (yes there really is a
+ package of it, check it out) and ImageMagick fall into this
+ category. Otherwise, convert the name (or at least the
+ first letter) to lowercase. If the software in question
+ really is called that way, you can have numbers, hyphens and
+ underscores in the name too (like `kinput2').
+
+
+
+
+ If the port can be built with different hardcoded
+ defaults (usually specified as environment variables or on
+ the make command line), the
+ `<compiled.specifics>' part should state the
+ compiled-in defaults (the hyphen is optional). Examples are
+ papersize and font units.
+
+
+
+
+ The version string should be a period-separated list of
+ integers and single lowercase alphabetics. The only exception
+ is the string `pl' (meaning `patchlevel'), which can be used
+ only when there are no major and minor version
+ numbers in the software.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Here are some (real) examples on how to convert a
+ ${DISTNAME} into a suitable
+ ${PKGNAME}:
+
+
+
+ DISTNAME PKGNAME Reason
+ mule-2.2.2 mule-2.2.2 no prob at all
+ XFree86-3.1.2 XFree86-3.1.2 ditto
+ EmiClock-1.0.2 emiclock-1.0.2 no uppercase names for single programs
+ gmod1.4 gmod-1.4 need hyphen after `<name>'
+ xmris.4.02 xmris-4.02 ditto
+ rdist-1.3alpha rdist-1.3a no strings like `alpha' allowed
+ es-0.9-beta1 es-0.9b1 ditto
+ v3.3beta021.src tiff-3.3 what the heck was that anyway? ;)
+ tvtwm tvtwm-pl11 version string always required
+ piewm piewm-1.0 ditto
+ xvgr-2.10pl1 xvgr-2.10.1 `pl' allowed only when no maj/minor numbers
+ gawk-2.15.6 ja-gawk-2.15.6 Japanese language version
+ psutils-1.13 psutils-letter-1.13 papersize hardcoded at package build time
+ pkfonts pkfonts300-1.0 package for 300dpi fonts
+
+
+
+ If there is absolutely no trace of version information in the
+ original source and it is unlikely that the original author
+ will ever release another version, just set the version string
+ to `1.0' (like the piewm example above). Otherwise, ask the
+ original author or use the date string (`yy.mm.dd') as the
+ version.
+
+
+
+
+ That is It, Folks!
+
+ Boy, this sure was a long tutorial, wasn't it? Thanks for
+ following us to here, really.
+
+ Well, now that you know how to do a port, let us go at it and
+ convert everything in the world into ports! That is the
+ easiest way to start contributing to the FreeBSD Project!
+ :)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Money, Hardware or Internet access
+
+ We are always very happy to accept donations to further the cause of
+ the FreeBSD Project and, in a volunteer effort like ours, a little can go
+ a long way! Donations of hardware are also very important to expanding
+ our list of supported peripherals since we generally lack the funds to
+ buy such items ourselves.
+
+
+
+ Donating funds
+
+ While the FreeBSD Project is not a 501(C3) (non-profit) corporation and
+ hence cannot offer special tax incentives for any donations made, any such
+ donations will be gratefully accepted on behalf of the project by
+ FreeBSD, Inc.
+
+ FreeBSD, Inc. was founded in early 1995 by &a.jkh; and &a.davidg; with the
+ goal of furthering the aims of the FreeBSD Project and giving it a minimal
+ corporate presence. Any and all funds donated (as well as any profits
+ that may eventually be realized by FreeBSD, Inc.) will be used exclusively
+ to further the project's goals.
+
+ Please make any checks payable to FreeBSD, Inc., sent in care of the
+ following address:
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD, Inc.
+ c/o Jordan Hubbard
+ 4041 Pike Lane, suite #D.
+ Concord CA, 94520
+
+ [temporarily using the Walnut Creek CDROM address until a PO box can be
+ opened]
+
+
+
+ Wire transfers may also be sent directly to:
+
+
+
+ Bank Of America
+ Concord Main Office
+ P.O. Box 37176
+ San Francisco CA, 94137-5176
+
+ Routing #: 121-000-358
+ Account #: 01411-07441 (FreeBSD, Inc.)
+
+
+
+ Any correspondence related to donations should be sent to
+ Jordan Hubbard, either
+ via email or to the FreeBSD, Inc. postal address given above.
+
+ If you do not wish to be listed in our
+ section, please specify this when making your donation. Thanks!
+
+
+
+
+ Donating hardware
+
+ Donations of hardware in any of the 3 following categories are also gladly
+ accepted by the FreeBSD Project:
+
+
+
+
+
+ General purpose hardware such as disk drives, memory or complete
+ systems should be sent to the FreeBSD, Inc. address listed in the
+ donating funds section.
+
+
+
+
+ Hardware for which ongoing compliance testing is desired.
+ We are currently trying to put together a testing lab of all components
+ that FreeBSD supports so that proper regression testing can be done with
+ each new release. We are still lacking many important pieces (network cards,
+ motherboards, etc) and if you would like to make such a donation, please contact
+ &a.davidg; for information on which items are still required.
+
+
+
+
+ Hardware currently unsupported by FreeBSD for which you would like to
+ see such support added. Please contact the &a.core; before sending
+ such items as we will need to find a developer willing to take on the task
+ before we can accept delivery of new hardware.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Donating Internet access
+
+ We can always use new mirror sites for FTP, WWW or cvsup.
+ If you would like to be such a mirror, please contact
+ the FreeBSD project administrators for more information.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Donors Gallery
+
+ The FreeBSD Project is indebted to the following donors and would
+ like to publically thank them here!
+
+
+
+
+
+ Contributors to the central server project:
+
+
+ The following individuals and businesses made it possible for
+ the FreeBSD Project to build a new central server machine to eventually
+ replace freefall.freebsd.org by donating the following items:
+
+
+
+
+
+ Ade Barkah
+ and his employer, Hemisphere Online, donated a Pentium Pro (P6) 200Mhz CPU
+
+
+
+
+ ASA Computers
+ donated a Tyan 1662 motherboard.
+
+
+
+
+ Joe McGuckin of
+ ViaNet Communications
+ donated a Kingston ethernet controller.
+
+
+
+
+ Jack O'Neill donated an NCR 53C875 SCSI
+ controller card.
+
+
+
+
+ Ulf Zimmermann
+ of Alameda Networks
+ donated 128MB of memory, a 4 Gb disk drive
+ and the case.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Direct funding:
+
+
+ The following individuals and businesses have generously contributed
+ direct funding to the project:
+
+
+
+
+
+ Annelise Anderson
+
+
+
+
+ Matt Dillon
+
+
+
+
+ Epilogue Technology Corporation
+
+
+
+
+ Sean Eric Fagan
+
+
+
+
+ Gianmarco Giovannelli
+
+
+
+
+ Josef C. Grosch
+
+
+
+
+ Chuck Robey
+
+
+
+
+ Kenneth P. Stox of Imaginary Landscape, LLC.
+
+
+
+
+ Dmitry S. Kohmanyuk
+
+
+
+
+ Laser5
+ of Japan (a portion of the profits from sales of their
+ various FreeBSD CD-ROMs.
+
+
+
+
+ Fuki Shuppan Publishing Co. donated a portion of
+ their profits from Hajimete no FreeBSD
+ (FreeBSD, Getting started) to the FreeBSD and XFree86
+ projects.
+
+
+
+ ASCII Corp. donated a portion of
+ their profits from several FreeBSD-related books to the
+ FreeBSD project.
+
+
+
+ Yokogawa Electric Corp has generously donated
+ significant funding to the FreeBSD project.
+
+
+
+ BuffNET
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Hardware contributors:
+
+
+ The following individuals and businesses have generously contributed
+ hardware for testing and device driver development/support:
+
+
+
+
+
+ Walnut Creek CDROM for providing the Pentium P5-90 and
+ 486/DX2-66 EISA/VL systems that are being used for our development
+ work, to say nothing of the network access and other donations of
+ hardware resources.
+
+
+
+
+ TRW Financial Systems, Inc. provided 130 PCs, three 68 GB
+ fileservers, twelve Ethernets, two routers and an ATM
+ switch for debugging the diskless code. They also keep a
+ couple of FreeBSD hackers alive and busy. Thanks!
+
+
+
+
+ Dermot McDonnell donated the Toshiba XM3401B CDROM drive
+ currently used in freefall.
+
+
+
+
+ &a.chuck; contributed his floppy tape streamer for experimental
+ work.
+
+
+
+
+ Larry Altneu <larry@ALR.COM>, and &a.wilko;,
+ provided Wangtek and Archive QIC-02 tape drives in order to
+ improve the wt driver.
+
+
+
+
+ Ernst Winter <ewinter@lobo.muc.de> contributed a 2.88 MB
+ floppy drive to the project. This will hopefully increase the
+ pressure for rewriting the floppy disk driver. ;-)
+
+
+
+
+ Tekram Technologies
+ sent one each of their DC-390, DC-390U and DC-390F FAST and ULTRA
+ SCSI host adapter cards for regression testing of the NCR and AMD
+ drivers with their cards. They are also to be applauded for making
+ driver sources for free operating systems available from their
+ FTP server ftp://ftp.tekram.com/scsi/FreeBSD.
+
+
+
+
+ Larry M. Augustin
+ contributed not only a Symbios Sym8751S SCSI card, but also a set
+ of data books, including one about the forthcoming Sym53c895 chip
+ with Ultra-2 and LVD support, and the latest programming manual with
+ information on how to safely use the advanced features of the latest
+ Symbios SCSI chips. Thanks a lot!
+
+
+
+
+ Christoph Kukulies
+ donated an FX120 12 speed Mitsumi CDROM drive for IDE CDROM driver
+ development.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Special contributors:
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Walnut Creek CDROM
+ has donated almost more than we can say (see the
+ document for more details).
+ In particular, we would like to thank them for the original hardware
+ used for freefall.FreeBSD.ORG, our primary development
+ machine, and for thud.FreeBSD.ORG, a testing and build box.
+ We are also indebted to them for funding various contributors over
+ the years and providing us with unrestricted use of their T1
+ connection to the Internet.
+
+
+
+ The interface business GmbH, Dresden has been patiently
+ supporting &a.joerg; who has often preferred FreeBSD work over
+ paywork, and used to fall back to their (quite expensive) EUnet
+ Internet connection whenever his private connection became too
+ slow or flakey to work with it...
+
+
+
+ Berkeley Software Design, Inc. has contributed their DOS emulator code to the
+ remaining BSD world, which is used in the dosemu
+ command.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Derived Software Contributors
+
+ This software was originally derived from William
+ F. Jolitz's 386BSD release 0.1, though almost none of the
+ original 386BSD specific code remains. This software has
+ been essentially re-implemented from the 4.4BSD-Lite
+ release provided by the Computer Science Research Group
+ (CSRG) at the University of California, Berkeley and
+ associated academic contributors.
+
+ There are also portions of NetBSD that have been integrated
+ into FreeBSD as well, and we would therefore like to thank
+ all the contributors to NetBSD for their work.
+
+
+
+
+ Additional FreeBSD Contributors
+
+ (in alphabetical order by first name):
+
+
+
+
+
+ A JOSEPH KOSHY <koshy@india.hp.com>
+
+
+
+ ABURAYA Ryushirou <rewsirow@ff.iij4u.or.jp>
+
+
+
+ Ada T Lim <ada@bsd.org>
+
+
+
+ Adam Glass <glass@postgres.berkeley.edu>
+
+
+
+ Adrian T. Filipi-Martin <atf3r@agate.cs.virginia.edu>
+
+
+
+ Akito Fujita <fujita@zoo.ncl.omron.co.jp>
+
+
+
+ Alain Kalker <A.C.P.M.Kalker@student.utwente.nl>
+
+
+
+ Alan Cox <alc@cs.rice.edu>
+
+
+
+ Andreas Kohout <shanee@rabbit.augusta.de>
+
+
+
+ Andreas Lohr <andreas@marvin.RoBIN.de>
+
+
+
+ Andrew Gordon <andrew.gordon@net-tel.co.uk>
+
+
+
+ Andrew Herbert <andrew@werple.apana.org.au>
+
+
+
+ Andrew McRae <amcrae@cisco.com>
+
+
+
+ Andrew Moore <alm@FreeBSD.org>
+
+
+
+ Andrew Stevenson <andrew@ugh.net.au>
+
+
+
+ Andrew V. Stesin <stesin@elvisti.kiev.ua>
+
+
+
+ Andrey Zakhvatov <andy@icc.surw.chel.su>
+
+
+
+ Andy Whitcroft <andy@sarc.city.ac.uk>
+
+
+
+ Angelo Turetta <ATuretta@stylo.it>
+
+
+
+ Anthony Yee-Hang Chan <yeehang@netcom.com>
+
+
+
+ Ari Suutari <ari@suutari.iki.fi>
+
+
+
+ Brent J. Nordquist <bjn@visi.com>
+
+
+
+ Bernd Rosauer <br@schiele-ct.de>
+
+
+
+ Bill Kish <kish@osf.org>
+
+
+
+ &a.wlloyd;
+
+
+
+ Bob Wilcox <bob@obiwan.uucp>
+
+
+
+ Boyd Faulkner <faulkner@mpd.tandem.com>
+
+
+
+ Brent J. Nordquist <bjn@visi.com>
+
+
+
+ Brett Taylor <brett@peloton.physics.montana.edu>
+
+
+
+ Brian Clapper <bmc@willscreek.com>
+
+
+
+ Brian Handy <handy@lambic.space.lockheed.com>
+
+
+
+ Brian Tao <taob@risc.org>
+
+
+
+ Brion Moss <brion@queeg.com>
+
+
+
+ Bruce Gingery <bgingery@gtcs.com>
+
+
+
+ Carey Jones <mcj@acquiesce.org>
+
+
+
+ Carl Fongheiser <cmf@netins.net>
+
+
+
+ Charles Hannum <mycroft@ai.mit.edu>
+
+
+
+ Charles Mott <cmott@srv.net>
+
+
+
+ Chet Ramey <chet@odin.INS.CWRU.Edu>
+
+
+
+ Chris Dabrowski < chris@vader.org>
+
+
+
+ Chris G. Demetriou <cgd@postgres.berkeley.edu>
+
+
+
+ Chris Shenton <cshenton@angst.it.hq.nasa.gov>
+
+
+
+ Chris Stenton <jacs@gnome.co.uk>
+
+
+
+ Chris Timmons <skynyrd@opus.cts.cwu.edu>
+
+
+
+ Chris Torek <torek@ee.lbl.gov>
+
+
+
+ Christian Gusenbauer <cg@fimp01.fim.uni-linz.ac.at>
+
+
+
+ Christian Haury <Christian.Haury@sagem.fr>
+
+
+
+ Christoph Robitschko <chmr@edvz.tu-graz.ac.at>
+
+
+
+ Choi Jun Ho <junker@jazz.snu.ac.kr>
+
+
+
+ Chuck Hein <chein@cisco.com>
+
+
+
+ Conrad Sabatier <conrads@neosoft.com>
+
+
+
+ Cornelis van der Laan <nils@guru.ims.uni-stuttgart.de>
+
+
+
+ Craig Struble <cstruble@vt.edu>
+
+
+
+ Cristian Ferretti <cfs@riemann.mat.puc.cl>
+
+
+
+ Curt Mayer <curt@toad.com>
+
+
+
+ Dai Ishijima <ishijima@tri.pref.osaka.jp>
+
+
+
+ Dan Cross <tenser@spitfire.ecsel.psu.edu>
+
+
+
+ Daniel Baker <dbaker@crash.ops.neosoft.com>
+
+
+
+ Daniel M. Eischen <deischen@iworks.InterWorks.org>
+
+
+
+ Daniel O'Connor <doconnor@gsoft.com.au>
+
+
+
+ Danny J. Zerkel <dzerkel@feephi.phofarm.com>
+
+
+
+ Dave Bodenstab <imdave@synet.net>
+
+
+
+ Dave Burgess <burgess@hrd769.brooks.af.mil>
+
+
+
+ Dave Chapeskie <dchapes@zeus.leitch.com>
+
+
+
+ Dave Edmondson <davided@sco.com>
+
+
+
+ Dave Rivers <rivers@ponds.uucp>
+
+
+
+ David A. Bader <dbader@umiacs.umd.edu>
+
+
+
+ David Dawes <dawes@physics.su.OZ.AU>
+
+
+
+ David Holloway <daveh@gwythaint.tamis.com>
+
+
+
+ David Leonard <d@scry.dstc.edu.au>
+
+
+
+ Dean Huxley <dean@fsa.ca>
+
+
+
+ Dirk Froemberg <dirk@hal.in-berlin.de>
+
+
+
+ Dmitrij Tejblum <dima@tejblum.dnttm.rssi.ru>
+
+
+
+ Dmitry Kohmanyuk <dk@farm.org>
+
+
+
+ &a.whiteside;
+
+
+
+ Don Yuniskis <dgy@rtd.com>
+
+
+
+ Donald Burr <d_burr@ix.netcom.com>
+
+
+
+ Doug Ambrisko <ambrisko@ambrisko.roble.com>
+
+
+
+ Douglas Carmichael <dcarmich@mcs.com>
+
+
+
+ Eiji-usagi-MATSUmoto <usagi@ruby.club.or.jp>
+
+
+
+ ELISA Font Project
+
+
+
+ Eric A. Griff <eagriff@global2000.net>
+
+
+
+ Eric Blood <eblood@cs.unr.edu>
+
+
+
+ Eric J. Chet <ejc@bazzle.com>
+
+
+
+ Eric J. Schwertfeger <eric@cybernut.com>
+
+
+
+ Francis M J Hsieh <mjhsieh@life.nthu.edu.tw>
+
+
+
+ Frank Bartels <knarf@camelot.de>
+
+
+
+ Frank Chen Hsiung Chan <frankch@waru.life.nthu.edu.tw>
+
+
+
+ Frank Maclachlan <fpm@crash.cts.com>
+
+
+
+ Frank Nobis <fn@trinity.radio-do.de>
+
+
+
+ FUJIMOTO Kensaku <fujimoto@oscar.elec.waseda.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ FURUSAWA Kazuhisa <furusawa@com.cs.osakafu-u.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Gary A. Browning <gab10@griffcd.amdahl.com>
+
+
+
+ Gary Kline <kline@thought.org>
+
+
+
+ Gerard Roudier <groudier@club-internet.fr>
+
+
+
+ Greg Ungerer <gerg@stallion.oz.au>
+
+
+
+ Harlan Stenn <Harlan.Stenn@pfcs.com>
+
+
+
+ Havard Eidnes <Havard.Eidnes@runit.sintef.no>
+
+
+
+ Hideaki Ohmon <ohmon@tom.sfc.keio.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Hidekazu Kuroki <hidekazu@cs.titech.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Hidetoshi Shimokawa <simokawa@sat.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Hideyuki Suzuki <hideyuki@sat.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Hironori Ikura <hikura@kaisei.org>
+
+
+
+ Holger Veit <Holger.Veit@gmd.de>
+
+
+
+ Hung-Chi Chu <hcchu@r350.ee.ntu.edu.tw>
+
+
+
+ Ian Vaudrey <i.vaudrey@bigfoot.com>
+
+
+
+ Igor Vinokurov <igor@zynaps.ru>
+
+
+
+ Ikuo Nakagawa <ikuo@isl.intec.co.jp>
+
+
+
+ IMAMURA Tomoaki <tomoak-i@is.aist-nara.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Ishii Masahiro
+
+
+
+ Issei Suzuki<issei@t-cnet.or.jp>
+
+
+
+ Itsuro Saito <saito@miv.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ J. David Lowe <lowe@saturn5.com>
+
+
+
+ J.T. Conklin <jtc@cygnus.com>
+
+
+
+ James Clark <jjc@jclark.com>
+
+
+
+ James da Silva <jds@cs.umd.edu> et al
+
+
+
+ Janusz Kokot <janek@gaja.ipan.lublin.pl>
+
+
+
+ Jason Thorpe <thorpej@nas.nasa.gov>
+
+
+
+ Javier Martin Rueda <jmrueda@diatel.upm.es>
+
+
+
+ Jeff Bartig <jeffb@doit.wisc.edu>
+
+
+
+ Jeffrey Wheat <jeff@cetlink.net>
+
+
+
+ Jian-Da Li <jdli@csie.NCTU.edu.tw>
+
+
+
+ Jim Binkley <jrb@cs.pdx.edu>
+
+
+
+ Jim Lowe <james@cs.uwm.edu>
+
+
+
+ Jim Wilson <wilson@moria.cygnus.com>
+
+
+
+ Joao Carlos Mendes Luis <jonny@coppe.ufrj.br>
+
+
+
+ Joel Sutton <sutton@aardvark.apana.org.au>
+
+
+
+ Johann Tonsing <jtonsing@mikom.csir.co.za>
+
+
+
+ John Capo <jc@irbs.com>
+
+
+
+ John Heidemann <johnh@isi.edu>
+
+
+
+ John Perry <perry@vishnu.alias.net>
+
+
+
+ John Polstra <jdp@polstra.com>
+
+
+
+ John Rochester <jr@cs.mun.ca>
+
+
+
+ Josef Karthauser <joe@uk.freebsd.org>
+
+
+
+ Joseph Stein <joes@seaport.net>
+
+
+
+ Josh Gilliam <josh@quick.net>
+
+
+
+ Josh Tiefenbach <josh@ican.net>
+
+
+
+ Juergen Lock <nox@jelal.hb.north.de>
+
+
+
+ Juha Inkari <inkari@cc.hut.fi>
+
+
+
+ Julian Assange <proff@suburbia.net>
+
+
+
+ Julian Jenkins <kaveman@magna.com.au>
+
+
+
+ Julian Stacey <jhs@freebsd.org>
+
+
+
+ Junichi Satoh <junichi@jp.freebsd.org>
+
+
+
+ Kapil Chowksey <kchowksey@hss.hns.com>
+
+
+
+ Kazuhiko Kiriyama <kiri@kiri.toba-cmt.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Keith Bostic <bostic@bostic.com>
+
+
+
+ Keith Moore
+
+
+
+ Kenneth Monville <desmo@bandwidth.org>
+
+
+
+ Kent Vander Velden <graphix@iastate.edu>
+
+
+
+ Kirk McKusick <mckusick@mckusick.com>
+
+
+
+ Kiroh HARADA <kiroh@kh.rim.or.jp>
+
+
+
+ Koichi Sato <copan@ppp.fastnet.or.jp>
+
+
+
+ Kostya Lukin <lukin@okbmei.msk.su>
+
+
+
+ Kurt Olsen <kurto@tiny.mcs.usu.edu>
+
+
+
+ Lars Koeller <Lars.Koeller@Uni-Bielefeld.DE>
+
+
+
+ Lucas James <Lucas.James@ldjpc.apana.org.au>
+
+
+
+ Luigi Rizzo <luigi@iet.unipi.it>
+
+
+
+ Makoto MATSUSHITA <matusita@jp.freebsd.org>
+
+
+
+ Manu Iyengar <iyengar@grunthos.pscwa.psca.com>
+
+
+
+ Marc Frajola <marc@dev.com>
+
+
+
+ Marc Ramirez <mrami@mramirez.sy.yale.edu>
+
+
+
+ Marc Slemko <marcs@znep.com>
+
+
+
+ Marc van Kempen <wmbfmk@urc.tue.nl>
+
+
+
+ Mario Sergio Fujikawa Ferreira <lioux@gns.com.br>
+
+
+
+ Mark Huizer <xaa@stack.nl>
+
+
+
+ Mark J. Taylor <mtaylor@cybernet.com>
+
+
+
+ Mark Krentel <krentel@rice.edu>
+
+
+
+ Mark Tinguely <tinguely@plains.nodak.edu>
+ <tinguely@hookie.cs.ndsu.NoDak.edu>
+
+
+
+ Martin Birgmeier
+
+
+
+ Martti Kuparinen <erakupa@kk.etx.ericsson.se>
+
+
+
+ Masachika ISHIZUKA <ishizuka@isis.min.ntt.jp>
+
+
+
+ Mats Lofkvist <mal@algonet.se>
+
+
+
+ Matt Bartley <mbartley@lear35.cytex.com>
+
+
+
+ Matt Thomas <thomas@lkg.dec.com>
+
+
+
+ Matt White <mwhite+@CMU.EDU>
+
+
+
+ Matthew Hunt <mph@pobox.com>
+
+
+
+ Matthew N. Dodd <winter@jurai.net>
+
+
+
+ Matthew Stein <matt@bdd.net>
+
+
+
+ Maurice Castro <maurice@planet.serc.rmit.edu.au>
+
+
+
+ Michael Butschky <butsch@computi.erols.com>
+
+
+
+ Michael Elbel <me@FreeBSD.ORG>
+
+
+
+ Michael Searle <searle@longacre.demon.co.uk>
+
+
+
+ Miguel Angel Sagreras <msagre@cactus.fi.uba.ar>
+
+
+
+ Mikael Hybsch <micke@dynas.se>
+
+
+
+ Mikhail Teterin <mi@aldan.ziplink.net>
+
+
+
+ Mike McGaughey <mmcg@cs.monash.edu.au>
+
+
+
+ Mike Peck <mike@binghamton.edu>
+
+
+
+ Ming-I Hseh <PA@FreeBSD.ee.Ntu.edu.TW>
+
+
+
+ MITA Yoshio <mita@jp.FreeBSD.ORG>
+
+
+
+ MOROHOSHI Akihiko <moro@race.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Murray Stokely <murray@cdrom.com>
+
+
+
+ NAKAMURA Kazushi <nkazushi@highway.or.jp>
+
+
+
+ Naoki Hamada <nao@tom-yam.or.jp>
+
+
+
+ Narvi <narvi@haldjas.folklore.ee>
+
+
+
+ NIIMI Satoshi <sa2c@and.or.jp>
+
+
+
+ Nick Sayer <nsayer@quack.kfu.com>
+
+
+
+ Nicolas Souchu <Nicolas.Souchu@prism.uvsq.fr>
+
+
+
+ Nisha Talagala <nisha@cs.berkeley.edu>
+
+
+
+ Nobuhiro Yasutomi <nobu@psrc.isac.co.jp>
+
+
+
+ Nobuyuki Koganemaru <kogane@kces.koganemaru.co.jp>
+
+
+
+ Noritaka Ishizumi <graphite@jp.FreeBSD.ORG>
+
+
+
+ Oliver Fromme <oliver.fromme@heim3.tu-clausthal.de>
+
+
+
+ Oliver Laumann <net@informatik.uni-bremen.de>
+
+
+
+ Oliver Oberdorf <oly@world.std.com>
+
+
+
+ Paul Fox <pgf@foxharp.boston.ma.us>
+
+
+
+ Paul Kranenburg <pk@cs.few.eur.nl>
+
+
+
+ Paul Mackerras <paulus@cs.anu.edu.au>
+
+
+
+ Paulo Menezes <paulo@isr.uc.pt>
+
+
+
+ Paul T. Root <proot@horton.iaces.com>
+
+
+
+ Pedro Giffuni <giffunip@asme.org>
+
+
+
+ Pedro A M Vazquez <vazquez@IQM.Unicamp.BR>
+
+
+
+ Peter Cornelius <pc@inr.fzk.de>
+
+
+
+ Peter Haight <peterh@prognet.com>
+
+
+
+ Peter Hawkins <peter@rhiannon.clari.net.au>
+
+
+
+ Peter Stubbs <PETERS@staidan.qld.edu.au>
+
+
+
+ Pierre Beyssac <bp@fasterix.freenix.org>
+
+
+
+ Phil Maker <pjm@cs.ntu.edu.au>
+
+
+
+ R. Kym Horsell
+
+
+
+ Randall Hopper <rhh@stealth.ct.picker.com>
+
+
+
+ Richard Hwang <rhwang@bigpanda.com>
+
+
+
+ Richard Seaman, Jr. <dick@tar.com>
+
+
+
+ Richard Stallman <rms@gnu.ai.mit.edu>
+
+
+
+ Richard Wiwatowski <rjwiwat@adelaide.on.net>
+
+
+
+ Rob Mallory <rmallory@csusb.edu>
+
+
+
+ Rob Shady <rls@id.net>
+
+
+
+ Rob Snow <rsnow@txdirect.net>
+
+
+
+ Robert Sanders <rsanders@mindspring.com>
+
+
+
+ Robert Withrow <witr@rwwa.com>
+
+
+
+ Ronald Kuehn <kuehn@rz.tu-clausthal.de>
+
+
+
+ Roland Jesse <jesse@cs.uni-magdeburg.de>
+
+
+
+ Ruslan Shevchenko <rssh@cki.ipri.kiev.ua>
+
+
+
+ Samuel Lam <skl@ScalableNetwork.com>
+
+
+
+ Sander Vesik <sander@haldjas.folklore.ee>
+
+
+
+ Sandro Sigala <ssigala@globalnet.it>
+
+
+
+ Sascha Blank <blank@fox.uni-trier.de>
+
+
+
+ Sascha Wildner <swildner@channelz.GUN.de>
+
+
+
+ Satoshi Taoka <taoka@infonets.hiroshima-u.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Scott Blachowicz <scott.blachowicz@seaslug.org>
+
+
+
+ Scott A. Kenney <saken@rmta.ml.org>
+
+
+
+ Serge V. Vakulenko <vak@zebub.msk.su>
+
+
+
+ Sheldon Hearn <axl@iafrica.com>
+
+
+
+ Simon Marlow <simonm@dcs.gla.ac.uk>
+
+
+
+ Slaven Rezic (Tomic) <eserte@cs.tu-berlin.de>
+
+
+
+ Soren Dayton <csdayton@midway.uchicago.edu>
+
+
+
+ Soren Dossing <sauber@netcom.com>
+
+
+
+ Stefan Moeding <moeding@bn.DeTeMobil.de>
+
+
+
+ Stephane Legrand <stephane@lituus.fr>
+
+
+
+ Stephen J. Roznowski <sjr@home.net>
+
+
+
+ Steve Gerakines <steve2@genesis.tiac.net>
+
+
+
+ Suzuki Yoshiaki <zensyo@ann.tama.kawasaki.jp>
+
+
+
+ Tadashi Kumano <kumano@strl.nhk.or.jp>
+
+
+
+ Taguchi Takeshi <taguchi@tohoku.iij.ad.jp>
+
+
+
+ Takayuki Ariga <a00821@cc.hc.keio.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Terry Lambert <terry@lambert.org>
+
+
+
+ Terry Lee <terry@uivlsi.csl.uiuc.edu>
+
+
+
+ Tetsuya Furukawa <tetsuya@secom-sis.co.jp>
+
+
+
+ Theo Deraadt <deraadt@fsa.ca>
+
+
+
+ Thomas König <Thomas.Koenig@ciw.uni-karlsruhe.de>
+
+
+
+ Þórður Ívarsson <totii@est.is>
+
+
+
+ Tim Kientzle <kientzle@netcom.com>
+
+
+
+ Tim Wilkinson <tim@sarc.city.ac.uk>
+
+
+
+ Tom Samplonius <tom@misery.sdf.com>
+
+
+
+ Torbjorn Granlund <tege@matematik.su.se>
+
+
+
+ Toshihiro Kanda <candy@fct.kgc.co.jp>
+
+
+
+ Trefor S. <trefor@flevel.co.uk>
+
+
+
+ Ville Eerola <ve@sci.fi>
+
+
+
+ Werner Griessl <werner@btp1da.phy.uni-bayreuth.de>
+
+
+
+ Wes Santee <wsantee@wsantee.oz.net>
+
+
+
+ Wilko Bulte <wilko@yedi.iaf.nl>
+
+
+
+ Wolfgang Stanglmeier <wolf@kintaro.cologne.de>
+
+
+
+ Wu Ching-hong <woju@FreeBSD.ee.Ntu.edu.TW>
+
+
+
+ Yen-Shuo Su <yssu@CCCA.NCTU.edu.tw>
+
+
+
+ Yoshiaki Uchikawa <yoshiaki@kt.rim.or.jp>
+
+
+
+ Yoshiro Mihira <sanpei@yy.cs.keio.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Yukihiro Nakai <nakai@mlab.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
+
+
+
+ Yuval Yarom <yval@cs.huji.ac.il>
+
+
+
+ Yves Fonk <yves@cpcoup5.tn.tudelft.nl>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ 386BSD Patch Kit Patch Contributors
+
+ (in alphabetical order by first name):
+
+
+
+
+
+ Adam Glass <glass@postgres.berkeley.edu>
+
+
+
+ Adrian Hall <adrian@ibmpcug.co.uk>
+
+
+
+ Andrey A. Chernov <ache@astral.msk.su>
+
+
+
+ Andrew Herbert <andrew@werple.apana.org.au>
+
+
+
+ Andrew Moore <alm@netcom.com>
+
+
+
+ Andy Valencia <ajv@csd.mot.com>
+ <jtk@netcom.com>
+
+
+
+ Arne Henrik Juul <arnej@Lise.Unit.NO>
+
+
+
+ Bakul Shah <bvs@bitblocks.com>
+
+
+
+ Barry Lustig <barry@ictv.com>
+
+
+
+ Bob Wilcox <bob@obiwan.uucp>
+
+
+
+ Branko Lankester
+
+
+
+ Brett Lymn <blymn@mulga.awadi.com.AU>
+
+
+
+ Charles Hannum <mycroft@ai.mit.edu>
+
+
+
+ Chris G. Demetriou <cgd@postgres.berkeley.edu>
+
+
+
+ Chris Torek <torek@ee.lbl.gov>
+
+
+
+ Christoph Robitschko <chmr@edvz.tu-graz.ac.at>
+
+
+
+ Daniel Poirot <poirot@aio.jsc.nasa.gov>
+
+
+
+ Dave Burgess <burgess@hrd769.brooks.af.mil>
+
+
+
+ Dave Rivers <rivers@ponds.uucp>
+
+
+
+ David Dawes <dawes@physics.su.OZ.AU>
+
+
+
+ David Greenman <davidg@Root.COM>
+
+
+
+ Eric J. Haug <ejh@slustl.slu.edu>
+
+
+
+ Felix Gaehtgens <felix@escape.vsse.in-berlin.de>
+
+
+
+ Frank Maclachlan <fpm@crash.cts.com>
+
+
+
+ Gary A. Browning <gab10@griffcd.amdahl.com>
+
+
+
+ Gary Howland <gary@hotlava.com>
+
+
+
+ Geoff Rehmet <csgr@alpha.ru.ac.za>
+
+
+
+ Goran Hammarback <goran@astro.uu.se>
+
+
+
+ Guido van Rooij <guido@gvr.win.tue.nl>
+
+
+
+ Guy Harris <guy@auspex.com>
+
+
+
+ Havard Eidnes <Havard.Eidnes@runit.sintef.no>
+
+
+
+ Herb Peyerl <hpeyerl@novatel.cuc.ab.ca>
+
+
+
+ Holger Veit <Holger.Veit@gmd.de>
+
+
+
+ Ishii Masahiro, R. Kym Horsell
+
+
+
+ J.T. Conklin <jtc@cygnus.com>
+
+
+
+ Jagane D Sundar < jagane@netcom.com >
+
+
+
+ James Clark <jjc@jclark.com>
+
+
+
+ James Jegers <jimj@miller.cs.uwm.edu>
+
+
+
+ James W. Dolter
+
+
+
+ James da Silva <jds@cs.umd.edu> et al
+
+
+
+ Jay Fenlason <hack@datacube.com>
+
+
+
+ Jim Wilson <wilson@moria.cygnus.com>
+
+
+
+ Jörg Lohse <lohse@tech7.informatik.uni-hamburg.de>
+
+
+
+ Jörg Wunsch <joerg_wunsch@uriah.heep.sax.de>
+
+
+
+ John Dyson - <formerly dyson@ref.tfs.com>
+
+
+
+ John Woods <jfw@eddie.mit.edu>
+
+
+
+ Jordan K. Hubbard <jkh@whisker.hubbard.ie>
+
+
+
+ Julian Elischer <julian@dialix.oz.au>
+
+
+
+ Julian Stacey <jhs@freebsd.org>
+
+
+
+ Karl Lehenbauer <karl@NeoSoft.com>
+ <karl@one.neosoft.com>
+
+
+
+ Keith Bostic <bostic@toe.CS.Berkeley.EDU>
+
+
+
+ Ken Hughes
+
+
+
+ Kent Talarico <kent@shipwreck.tsoft.net>
+
+
+
+ Kevin Lahey <kml%rokkaku.UUCP@mathcs.emory.edu>
+ <kml@mosquito.cis.ufl.edu>
+
+
+
+ Marc Frajola <marc@dev.com>
+
+
+
+ Mark Tinguely <tinguely@plains.nodak.edu>
+ <tinguely@hookie.cs.ndsu.NoDak.edu>
+
+
+
+ Martin Renters <martin@tdc.on.ca>
+
+
+
+ Michael Clay <mclay@weareb.org>
+
+
+
+ Michael Galassi <nerd@percival.rain.com>
+
+
+
+ Mike Durkin <mdurkin@tsoft.sf-bay.org>
+
+
+
+ Naoki Hamada <nao@tom-yam.or.jp>
+
+
+
+ Nate Williams <nate@bsd.coe.montana.edu>
+
+
+
+ Nick Handel <nhandel@NeoSoft.com>
+ <nick@madhouse.neosoft.com>
+
+
+
+ Pace Willisson <pace@blitz.com>
+
+
+
+ Paul Kranenburg <pk@cs.few.eur.nl>
+
+
+
+ Paul Mackerras <paulus@cs.anu.edu.au>
+
+
+
+ Paul Popelka <paulp@uts.amdahl.com>
+
+
+
+ Peter da Silva <peter@NeoSoft.com>
+
+
+
+ Phil Sutherland <philsuth@mycroft.dialix.oz.au>
+
+
+
+ Poul-Henning Kamp<phk@FreeBSD.ORG>
+
+
+
+ Ralf Friedl <friedl@informatik.uni-kl.de>
+
+
+
+ Rick Macklem <root@snowhite.cis.uoguelph.ca>
+
+
+
+ Robert D. Thrush <rd@phoenix.aii.com>
+
+
+
+ Rodney W. Grimes <rgrimes@cdrom.com>
+
+
+
+ Sascha Wildner <swildner@channelz.GUN.de>
+
+
+
+ Scott Burris <scott@pita.cns.ucla.edu>
+
+
+
+ Scott Reynolds <scott@clmqt.marquette.mi.us>
+
+
+
+ Sean Eric Fagan <sef@kithrup.com>
+
+
+
+ Simon J Gerraty <sjg@melb.bull.oz.au>
+ <sjg@zen.void.oz.au>
+
+
+
+ Stephen McKay <syssgm@devetir.qld.gov.au>
+
+
+
+ Terry Lambert <terry@icarus.weber.edu>
+
+
+
+ Terry Lee <terry@uivlsi.csl.uiuc.edu>
+
+
+
+ Tor Egge <Tor.Egge@idi.ntnu.no>
+
+
+
+ Warren Toomey <wkt@csadfa.cs.adfa.oz.au>
+
+
+
+ Wiljo Heinen <wiljo@freeside.ki.open.de>
+
+
+
+ William Jolitz <withheld>
+
+
+
+ Wolfgang Solfrank <ws@tools.de>
+
+
+
+ Wolfgang Stanglmeier <wolf@dentaro.GUN.de>
+
+
+
+ Yuval Yarom <yval@cs.huji.ac.il>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Source Tree Guidelines and Policies
+
+
+ Contributed by &a.phk;.
+
+ This chapter documents various guidelines and policies in force
+ for the FreeBSD source tree.
+
+
+
+ MAINTAINER on Makefiles
+
+
+ June 1996.
+
+ If a particular portion of the FreeBSD distribution is being maintained by a
+ person or group of persons, they can communicate this fact to the
+ world by adding a
+
+
+ MAINTAINER= email-addresses
+
+
+ line to the makefiles covering this portion of the source tree.
+
+ The semantics of this are as follows:
+
+ The maintainer owns and is responsible for that code. This means
+ that he is responsible for fixing bugs and answer problem reports
+ pertaining to that piece of the code, and in the case of contributed
+ software, for tracking new versions, as appropriate.
+
+ Changes to directories which have a maintainer defined shall be
+ sent to the
+ maintainer for review before being committed. Only if the maintainer does not respond
+ for an unacceptable period of time, to several emails, will it be
+ acceptable to commit changes without review by the maintainer.
+ However, it is suggested that you try and have the changes reviewed
+ by someone else if at all possible.
+
+ It is of course not acceptable to add a person or group as maintainer
+ unless they agree to assume this duty. On the other hand it doesn't
+ have to be a committer and it can easily be a group of people.
+
+
+
+
+ Contributed Software
+
+ June 1996.
+
+ Some parts of the FreeBSD distribution consist of software that
+ is actively being maintained outside the FreeBSD project. For
+ historical reasons, we call this contributed software. Some
+ examples are perl, gcc and patch.
+
+ Over the last couple of years, various methods have been used in
+ dealing with this type of software and all have some number of
+ advantages and drawbacks. No clear winner has emerged.
+
+ Since this is the case, after some debate one of these methods has
+ been selected as the "official" method and will be required for
+ future imports of software of this kind. Furthermore, it is strongly
+ suggested that existing contributed software converge on this model
+ over time, as it has significant advantages over the old method,
+ including the ability to easily obtain diffs relative to the
+ "official" versions of the source by everyone (even without cvs
+ access). This will make it significantly easier to return changes
+ to the primary developers of the contributed software.
+
+ Ultimately, however, it comes down to the people actually doing
+ the work. If using this model is particularly unsuited to the
+ package being dealt with, exceptions to these rules may be granted
+ only with the approval of the core team and with the general
+ consensus of the other developers. The ability to maintain the
+ package in the future will be a key issue in the decisions.
+
+ The Tcl embedded programming language will be used as example
+ of how this model works:
+
+
+ src/contrib/tcl
+ contains the source as distributed by the maintainers
+ of this package. Parts that are entirely not applicable for FreeBSD
+ can be removed. In the case of Tcl, the "mac", "win" and "compat"
+ subdirectories were eliminated before the import
+
+
+ src/lib/libtcl
+ contains only a "bmake style" Makefile that uses
+ the standard bsd.lib.mk makefile rules to produce the library and
+ install the documentation.
+
+
+ src/usr.bin/tclsh
+ contains only a bmake style Makefile which will
+ produce and install the "tclsh" program and its associated man-pages
+ using the standard bsd.prog.mk rules.
+
+
+ src/tools/tools/tcl_bmake
+ contains a couple of shell-scripts that can be of help
+ when the tcl software needs updating. These are not part of the
+ built or installed software.
+
+ The important thing here is that the "src/contrib/tcl" directory
+ is created according to the rules: It is supposed to contain the
+ sources as distributed (on a proper CVS vendor-branch) with as few
+ FreeBSD-specific changes as possible. The 'easy-import' tool on
+ freefall will assist in doing the import, but if there are any
+ doubts on how to go about it, it is imperative that you ask first
+ and not blunder ahead and hope it "works out". CVS is not forgiving
+ of import accidents and a fair amount of effort is required to back
+ out major mistakes.
+
+ Because of some unfortunate design limitations with CVS's vendor
+ branches, it is required that "official" patches from the vendor
+ be applied to the original distributed sources and the result
+ re-imported onto the vendor branch again. Official patches should
+ never be patched into the FreeBSD checked out version and
+ "committed", as this destroys the vendor branch coherency and makes
+ importing future versions rather difficult as there will be conflicts.
+
+ Since many packages contain files that are meant for compatibility
+ with other architectures and environments that FreeBSD, it is
+ permissible to remove parts of the distribution tree that are of no interest
+ to FreeBSD in order to save space. Files containing copyright
+ notices and release-note kind of information applicable to the
+ remaining files shall not be removed.
+
+ If it seems easier, the "bmake" makefiles can be produced from the
+ dist tree automatically by some utility, something which would
+ hopefully make it even easier to upgrade to a new version. If this
+ is done, be sure to check in such utilities (as necessary) in the
+ src/tools directory along with the port itself so that it is available
+ to future maintainers.
+
+ In the src/contrib/tcl level directory, a file called FREEBSD-upgrade
+ should be added and it should states things like:
+
+
+
+
+
+ Which files have been left out
+
+
+
+ Where the original distribution was obtained from and/or the official
+ master site.
+
+
+
+ Where to send patches back to the original authors
+
+
+
+ Perhaps an overview of the FreeBSD-specific changes that have been made.
+
+
+
+
+
+ However, please do not import FREEBSD-upgrade with the contributed source.
+ Rather you should ``cvs add FREEBSD-upgrade ; cvs ci'' after the
+ initial import. Example wording from ``src/contrib/cpio'' is below:
+
+
+ This directory contains virgin sources of the original distribution files
+ on a "vendor" branch. Do not, under any circumstances, attempt to upgrade
+ the files in this directory via patches and a cvs commit. New versions or
+ official-patch versions must be imported.
+
+ For the import of GNU cpio 2.4.2, the following files were removed:
+
+ INSTALL cpio.info mkdir.c
+ Makefile.in cpio.texi mkinstalldirs
+
+ To upgrade to a newer version of cpio, when it is available:
+ 1. Unpack the new version into an empty directory.
+ [Do not make ANY changes to the files.]
+
+ 2. Remove the files listed above and any others that don't apply to
+ FreeBSD.
+
+ 3. Use the command:
+ cvs import -m 'Virgin import of GNU cpio v<version>' \
+ src/contrib/cpio GNU v<version>
+
+ For example, to do the import of version 2.4.2, I typed:
+ cvs import -m 'Virgin import of GNU v2.4.2' \
+ src/contrib/cpio GNU v2.4.2
+
+ 4. Follow the instructions printed out in step 3 to resolve any
+ conflicts between local FreeBSD changes and the newer version.
+
+ Do not, under any circumstances, deviate from this procedure.
+
+ To make local changes to cpio, simply patch and commit to the main
+ branch (aka HEAD). Never make local changes on the GNU branch.
+
+ All local changes should be submitted to "cpio@gnu.ai.mit.edu" for
+ inclusion in the next vendor release.
+
+ obrien@freebsd.org - 30 March 1997
+
+
+
+
+
+ Shared Libraries
+
+
+ Contributed by &a.asami;, &a.peter;, and &a.obrien;.
+ 9 December 1996.
+
+ If you are adding shared library support to a port or other piece
+ of software that doesn't have one, the version numbers should
+ follow these rules. Generally, the resulting numbers will have
+ nothing to do with the release version of the software.
+
+ The three principles of shared library building are:
+
+
+
+
+
+ Start from 1.0
+
+
+
+ If there is a change that is backwards compatible, bump
+ minor number
+
+
+
+ If there is an incompatible change, bump major number
+
+
+
+
+
+ For instance, added functions and bugfixes result in the minor
+ version number being bumped, while deleted functions, changed
+ function call syntax etc. will force the major version number
+ to change.
+
+ Stick to version numbers of the form major.minor (x.y). Our dynamic
+ linker does not handle version numbers of the form x.y.z well. Any
+ version number after the ``y'' (ie. the third digit) is totally ignored
+ when comparing shared lib version numbers to decide which library to
+ link with. Given two shared libraries that differ only in the `micro'
+ revision, ld.so will link with the higher one. Ie: if you link with
+ libfoo.so.3.3.3, the linker only records 3.3 in the headers, and will
+ link with anything starting with libfoo.so.3.(anything >= 3).(highest
+ available).
+
+ Note that ld.so will always use the highest "minor" revision.
+ Ie: it will use libc.so.2.2 in preference to libc.so.2.0, even if the
+ program was initially linked with libc.so.2.0.
+
+ For non-port libraries, it is also our policy to change the
+ shared library version number only once between releases. When
+ you make a change to a system library that requires the version
+ number to be bumped, check the Makefile's commit logs. It is the
+ responsibility of the committer to ensure that the first such
+ change since the release will result in the shared library version
+ number in the Makefile to be updated, and any subsequent changes
+ will not.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Adding New Kernel Configuration Options
+
+ Contributed by &a.joerg;
+
+ Note: You should be familiar with the section about before reading here.
+
+
+
+ What's a Kernel Option, Anyway?
+
+ The use of kernel options is basically described in the section.
+ There's also an explanation of ``historic'' and ``new-style''
+ options. The ultimate goal is to eventually turn all the supported
+ options in the kernel into new-style ones, so for people who
+ correctly did a make depend in their kernel compile directory
+ after running config(8), the build process will automatically
+ pick up modified options, and only recompile those files where it is
+ necessary. Wiping out the old compile directory on each run of
+ config(8) as it is still done now can then be eliminated again.
+
+ Basically, a kernel option is nothing else than the definition of
+ a C preprocessor macro for the kernel compilation process. To make
+ the build truly optional, the corresponding part of the kernel
+ source (or kernel .h file) must be written with the option
+ concept in mind, i. e. the default must have been made overridable
+ by the config option. This is usually done with something like:
+
+
+ #ifndef THIS_OPTION
+ #define THIS_OPTION (some_default_value)
+ #endif /* THIS_OPTION */
+
+
+ This way, an administrator mentioning another value for the
+ option in his config file will take the default out of effect, and
+ replace it with his new value. Clearly, the new value will be
+ substituted into the source code during the preprocessor run, so it
+ must be a valid C expression in whatever context the default value
+ would have been used.
+
+ It is also possible to create value-less options that simply
+ enable or disable a particular piece of code by embracing it in
+
+
+ #ifdef THAT_OPTION
+
+ [your code here]
+
+ #endif
+
+
+ Simply mentioning THAT_OPTION in the config file (with or
+ without any value) will then turn on the corresponding piece of
+ code.
+
+ People familiar with the C language will immediately recognize
+ that everything could be counted as a ``config option'' where
+ there is at least a single #ifdef referencing it... However,
+ it's unlikely that many people would put
+
+
+ options notyet,notdef
+
+
+ in their config file, and then wonder why the kernel compilation
+ falls over. :-)
+
+ Clearly, using arbitrary names for the options makes it very
+ hard to track their usage throughout the kernel source tree. That is
+ the rationale behind the new-style option scheme, where each
+ option goes into a separate .h file in the kernel compile
+ directory, which is by convention named opt_foo.h.
+ This way, the usual Makefile dependencies could be applied, and
+ make can determine what needs to be recompiled once an option
+ has been changed.
+
+ The old-style option mechanism still has one advantage for local
+ options or maybe experimental options that have a short anticipated
+ lifetime: since it is easy to add a new #ifdef to the kernel
+ source, this has already made it a kernel config option.
+ In this case, the administrator using such an
+ option is responsible himself for knowing about its implications
+ (and maybe manually forcing the recompilation of parts of his
+ kernel). Once the transition of all supported options has been
+ done, config(8) will warn whenever an unsupported option
+ appears in the config file, but it will nevertheless include it into
+ the kernel Makefile.
+
+
+
+
+ Now What Do I Have to Do for it?
+
+ First, edit sys/conf/options (or
+ sys/i386/conf/options.<arch>, e. g.
+ sys/i386/conf/options.i386), and select an
+ opt_foo.h file where your new option would best go
+ into.
+
+ If there is already something that comes close to the purpose of
+ the new option, pick this. For example, options modifying the
+ overall behaviour of the SCSI subsystem can go into opt_scsi.h.
+ By default, simply mentioning an option in the appropriate option
+ file, say FOO, implies its value will go into the
+ corresponding file opt_foo.h. This can be overridden on the
+ right-hand side of a rule by specifying another filename.
+
+ If there is no opt_foo.h already available for
+ the intended new option, invent a new name. Make it meaningful, and
+ comment the new section in the
+ options[.<arch>] file. config(8) will
+ automagically pick up the change, and create that file next time it
+ is run. Most options should go in a header file by themselves..
+
+ Packing too many options into a single
+ opt_foo.h will cause too many kernel files to be
+ rebuilt when one of the options has been changed in the config file.
+
+ Finally, find out which kernel files depend on the new option.
+ Unless you have just invented your option, and it does not exist
+ anywhere yet,
+
+
+ find /usr/src/sys -name type f | xargs fgrep NEW_OPTION
+
+
+ is your friend in finding them. Go and edit all those files, and
+ add
+
+
+ #include "opt_foo.h"
+
+
+ on top, before all the #include <xxx.h>
+ stuff. This sequence is most important as the options could
+ override defaults from the regular include files, if the
+ defaults are of the form
+
+
+ #ifndef NEW_OPTION
+ #define NEW_OPTION (something)
+ #endif
+
+
+ in the regular header.
+
+ Adding an option that overrides something in a system header file
+ (i. e., a file sitting in /usr/include/sys/) is almost
+ always a mistake. opt_foo.h cannot be included
+ into those files since it would break the headers more seriously,
+ but if it is not included, then places that include it may get an
+ inconsistent value for the option. Yes, there are precedents for
+ this right now, but that does not make them more correct.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Kernel Debugging
+
+ Contributed by &a.paul; and &a.joerg;
+
+
+
+ Debugging a Kernel Crash Dump with KGDB
+
+ Here are some instructions for getting kernel debugging
+ working on a crash dump. They assume that you have enough swap
+ space for a crash dump. If you have multiple swap
+ partitions and the first one is too small to hold the dump,
+ you can configure your kernel to use an alternate dump device
+ (in the config kernel line), or
+ you can specify an alternate using the dumpon(8) command.
+ Dumps to non-swap devices,
+ tapes for example, are currently not supported. Config your
+ kernel using config -g.
+ See for
+ details on configuring the FreeBSD kernel.
+
+ Use the dumpon(8) command to tell the kernel where to dump
+ to (note that this will have to be done after configuring the
+ partition in question as swap space via swapon(8)). This is
+ normally arranged via /etc/rc.conf and /etc/rc.
+ Alternatively, you can
+ hard-code the dump device via the `dump' clause in the `config' line
+ of your kernel config file. This is deprecated and should be used only if you
+ want a crash dump from a kernel that crashes during booting.
+
+ Note: In the following, the term `kgdb' refers
+ to gdb run in `kernel debug mode'. This can be accomplished by
+ either starting the gdb with the option , or by linking
+ and starting it under the name kgdb. This is not being
+ done by default, however, and the idea is basically deprecated since
+ the GNU folks do not like their tools to behave differently when
+ called by another name. This feature may well be discontinued
+ in further releases.
+
+ When the kernel has been built make a copy of it, say
+ kernel.debug, and then run strip -d on the
+ original. Install the original as normal. You may also install
+ the unstripped kernel, but symbol table lookup time for some
+ programs will drastically increase, and since
+ the whole kernel is loaded entirely at boot time and cannot be
+ swapped out later, several megabytes of
+ physical memory will be wasted.
+
+ If you are testing a new kernel, for example by typing the new
+ kernel's name at the boot prompt, but need to boot a different
+ one in order to get your system up and running again, boot it
+ only into single user state using the flag at the
+ boot prompt, and then perform the following steps:
+
+ fsck -p
+ mount -a -t ufs # so your file system for /var/crash is writable
+ savecore -N /kernel.panicked /var/crash
+ exit # ...to multi-user
+
+
+ This instructs savecore(8) to use another kernel for symbol name
+ extraction. It would otherwise default to the currently running kernel
+ and most likely not do anything at all since the crash dump and the
+ kernel symbols differ.
+
+ Now, after a crash dump, go to /sys/compile/WHATEVER and run
+ kgdb. From kgdb do:
+
+ symbol-file kernel.debug
+ exec-file /var/crash/kernel.0
+ core-file /var/crash/vmcore.0
+
+
+ and voila, you can debug the crash dump using the kernel sources
+ just like you can for any other program.
+
+ Here is a script log of a kgdb session illustrating the
+ procedure. Long
+ lines have been folded to improve readability, and the lines are
+ numbered for reference. Despite this, it is a real-world error
+ trace taken during the development of the pcvt console driver.
+
+ 1:Script started on Fri Dec 30 23:15:22 1994
+ 2:uriah # cd /sys/compile/URIAH
+ 3:uriah # kgdb kernel /var/crash/vmcore.1
+ 4:Reading symbol data from /usr/src/sys/compile/URIAH/kernel...done.
+ 5:IdlePTD 1f3000
+ 6:panic: because you said to!
+ 7:current pcb at 1e3f70
+ 8:Reading in symbols for ../../i386/i386/machdep.c...done.
+ 9:(kgdb) where
+ 10:#0 boot (arghowto=256) (../../i386/i386/machdep.c line 767)
+ 11:#1 0xf0115159 in panic ()
+ 12:#2 0xf01955bd in diediedie () (../../i386/i386/machdep.c line 698)
+ 13:#3 0xf010185e in db_fncall ()
+ 14:#4 0xf0101586 in db_command (-266509132, -266509516, -267381073)
+ 15:#5 0xf0101711 in db_command_loop ()
+ 16:#6 0xf01040a0 in db_trap ()
+ 17:#7 0xf0192976 in kdb_trap (12, 0, -272630436, -266743723)
+ 18:#8 0xf019d2eb in trap_fatal (...)
+ 19:#9 0xf019ce60 in trap_pfault (...)
+ 20:#10 0xf019cb2f in trap (...)
+ 21:#11 0xf01932a1 in exception:calltrap ()
+ 22:#12 0xf0191503 in cnopen (...)
+ 23:#13 0xf0132c34 in spec_open ()
+ 24:#14 0xf012d014 in vn_open ()
+ 25:#15 0xf012a183 in open ()
+ 26:#16 0xf019d4eb in syscall (...)
+ 27:(kgdb) up 10
+ 28:Reading in symbols for ../../i386/i386/trap.c...done.
+ 29:#10 0xf019cb2f in trap (frame={tf_es = -260440048, tf_ds = 16, tf_\
+ 30:edi = 3072, tf_esi = -266445372, tf_ebp = -272630356, tf_isp = -27\
+ 31:2630396, tf_ebx = -266427884, tf_edx = 12, tf_ecx = -266427884, tf\
+ 32:_eax = 64772224, tf_trapno = 12, tf_err = -272695296, tf_eip = -26\
+ 33:6672343, tf_cs = -266469368, tf_eflags = 66066, tf_esp = 3072, tf_\
+ 34:ss = -266427884}) (../../i386/i386/trap.c line 283)
+ 35:283 (void) trap_pfault(&frame, FALSE);
+ 36:(kgdb) frame frame->tf_ebp frame->tf_eip
+ 37:Reading in symbols for ../../i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_drv.c...done.
+ 38:#0 0xf01ae729 in pcopen (dev=3072, flag=3, mode=8192, p=(struct p\
+ 39:roc *) 0xf07c0c00) (../../i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_drv.c line 403)
+ 40:403 return ((*linesw[tp->t_line].l_open)(dev, tp));
+ 41:(kgdb) list
+ 42:398
+ 43:399 tp->t_state |= TS_CARR_ON;
+ 44:400 tp->t_cflag |= CLOCAL; /* cannot be a modem (:-) */
+ 45:401
+ 46:402 #if PCVT_NETBSD || (PCVT_FREEBSD >= 200)
+ 47:403 return ((*linesw[tp->t_line].l_open)(dev, tp));
+ 48:404 #else
+ 49:405 return ((*linesw[tp->t_line].l_open)(dev, tp, flag));
+ 50:406 #endif /* PCVT_NETBSD || (PCVT_FREEBSD >= 200) */
+ 51:407 }
+ 52:(kgdb) print tp
+ 53:Reading in symbols for ../../i386/i386/cons.c...done.
+ 54:$1 = (struct tty *) 0x1bae
+ 55:(kgdb) print tp->t_line
+ 56:$2 = 1767990816
+ 57:(kgdb) up
+ 58:#1 0xf0191503 in cnopen (dev=0x00000000, flag=3, mode=8192, p=(st\
+ 59:ruct proc *) 0xf07c0c00) (../../i386/i386/cons.c line 126)
+ 60: return ((*cdevsw[major(dev)].d_open)(dev, flag, mode, p));
+ 61:(kgdb) up
+ 62:#2 0xf0132c34 in spec_open ()
+ 63:(kgdb) up
+ 64:#3 0xf012d014 in vn_open ()
+ 65:(kgdb) up
+ 66:#4 0xf012a183 in open ()
+ 67:(kgdb) up
+ 68:#5 0xf019d4eb in syscall (frame={tf_es = 39, tf_ds = 39, tf_edi =\
+ 69: 2158592, tf_esi = 0, tf_ebp = -272638436, tf_isp = -272629788, tf\
+ 70:_ebx = 7086, tf_edx = 1, tf_ecx = 0, tf_eax = 5, tf_trapno = 582, \
+ 71:tf_err = 582, tf_eip = 75749, tf_cs = 31, tf_eflags = 582, tf_esp \
+ 72:= -272638456, tf_ss = 39}) (../../i386/i386/trap.c line 673)
+ 73:673 error = (*callp->sy_call)(p, args, rval);
+ 74:(kgdb) up
+ 75:Initial frame selected; you cannot go up.
+ 76:(kgdb) quit
+ 77:uriah # exit
+ 78:exit
+ 79:
+ 80:Script done on Fri Dec 30 23:18:04 1994
+
+
+ Comments to the above script:
+
+
+
+ line 6:
+
+ This is a dump taken from within DDB (see below), hence the
+ panic comment ``because you said to!'', and a rather long
+ stack trace; the initial reason for going into DDB has been
+ a page fault trap though.
+
+
+
+
+ line 20:
+
+
+ This is the location of function trap()
+ in the stack trace.
+
+
+
+
+ line 36:
+
+
+ Force usage of a new stack frame; this is no longer
+ necessary now. The stack frames are supposed to point to
+ the right locations now, even in case of a trap.
+ (I do not have a new core dump handy <g>, my kernel
+ has not panicked for a rather long time.)
+ From looking at the code in source line 403,
+ there is a high probability that either the pointer
+ access for ``tp'' was messed up, or the array access was
+ out of bounds.
+
+
+
+
+ line 52:
+
+
+ The pointer looks suspicious, but happens to be a valid
+ address.
+
+
+
+
+ line 56:
+
+
+ However, it obviously points to garbage, so we have found our
+ error! (For those unfamiliar with that particular piece
+ of code: tp->t_line refers to the line discipline
+ of the console device here, which must be a rather small integer
+ number.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Post-mortem Analysis of a Dump
+
+ What do you do if a kernel dumped core but you did not expect
+ it, and it is therefore not compiled using config -g?
+ Not everything is lost here. Do not panic!
+
+ Of course, you still need to enable crash dumps. See above
+ on the options you have to specify in order to do this.
+
+ Go to your kernel compile directory, and edit the line
+ containing COPTFLAGS?=-O. Add the option
+ there (but do not change anything on the level of
+ optimization). If you do already know roughly the probable
+ location of the failing piece of code (e.g., the pcvt
+ driver in the example above), remove all the object files for
+ this code. Rebuild the kernel. Due to the time stamp change on
+ the Makefile, there will be some other object files rebuild,
+ for example trap.o. With a bit of luck, the added
+ option will not change anything for the generated
+ code, so you will finally get a new kernel with similar code to
+ the faulting one but some debugging symbols. You should at
+ least verify the old and new sizes with the size(1) command. If
+ there is a mismatch, you probably need to give up here.
+
+ Go and examine the dump as described above. The debugging
+ symbols might be incomplete for some places, as can be seen in
+ the stack trace in the example above where some functions are
+ displayed without line numbers and argument lists. If you need
+ more debugging symbols, remove the appropriate object files and
+ repeat the kgdb session until you know enough.
+
+ All this is not guaranteed to work, but it will do it fine in
+ most cases.
+
+
+
+
+ On-line Kernel Debugging Using DDB
+
+ While kgdb as an offline debugger provides a very
+ high level of user interface, there are some things it cannot do.
+ The most important ones being breakpointing and single-stepping
+ kernel code.
+
+ If you need to do low-level debugging on your kernel, there is
+ an on-line debugger available called DDB. It allows to
+ setting breakpoints, single-steping kernel functions, examining
+ and changing kernel variables, etc. However, it cannot
+ access kernel source files, and only has access to the global
+ and static symbols, not to the full debug information like
+ kgdb.
+
+ To configure your kernel to include DDB, add the option line
+
+ options DDB
+
+
+ to your config file, and rebuild. (See for details on configuring the
+ FreeBSD kernel. Note that if you have an older version of the
+ boot blocks, your debugger symbols might not be loaded at all.
+ Update the boot blocks; the recent ones load the DDB symbols
+ automagically.)
+
+ Once your DDB kernel is running, there are several ways to
+ enter DDB. The first, and earliest way is to type the boot
+ flag right at the boot prompt. The kernel will
+ start up in debug mode and enter DDB prior to any device
+ probing. Hence you can even debug the device
+ probe/attach functions.
+
+ The second scenario is a hot-key on the keyboard, usually
+ Ctrl-Alt-ESC. For syscons, this can be remapped; some of
+ the distributed maps do this, so watch out.
+ There is an option
+ available for serial consoles
+ that allows the use of a serial line BREAK on the console line to
+ enter DDB (``options BREAK_TO_DEBUGGER''
+ in the kernel config file). It is not the default since there are a lot of
+ crappy serial adapters around that gratuitously generate a
+ BREAK condition, for example when pulling the cable.
+
+ The third way is that any panic condition will branch to DDB if
+ the kernel is configured to use it.
+ For this reason, it is not wise to
+ configure a kernel with DDB for a machine running unattended.
+
+ The DDB commands roughly resemble some gdb commands. The first
+ thing you probably need to do is to set a breakpoint:
+
+ b function-name
+ b address
+
+
+
+ Numbers are taken hexadecimal by default, but to make them
+ distinct from symbol names; hexadecimal numbers starting with the
+ letters a-f need to be preceded with
+ 0x (this is optional for other numbers). Simple
+ expressions are allowed, for example: function-name + 0x103.
+
+ To continue the operation of an interrupted kernel, simply type
+
+ c
+
+
+ To get a stack trace, use
+
+ trace
+
+
+ Note that when entering DDB via a hot-key, the kernel is currently
+ servicing an interrupt, so the stack trace might be not of much use
+ for you.
+
+ If you want to remove a breakpoint, use
+
+ del
+ del address-expression
+
+
+ The first form will be accepted immediately after a breakpoint hit,
+ and deletes the current breakpoint. The second form can remove any
+ breakpoint, but you need to specify the exact address; this can be
+ obtained from
+
+ show b
+
+
+ To single-step the kernel, try
+
+ s
+
+
+ This will step into functions, but you can make DDB trace them until
+ the matching return statement is reached by
+
+ n
+
+
+ Note: this is different from gdb's `next' statement; it is like
+ gdb's `finish'.
+
+ To examine data from memory, use (for example):
+
+ x/wx 0xf0133fe0,40
+ x/hd db_symtab_space
+ x/bc termbuf,10
+ x/s stringbuf
+
+
+ for word/halfword/byte access, and hexadecimal/decimal/character/
+ string display. The number after the comma is the object count.
+ To display the next 0x10 items, simply use
+
+ x ,10
+
+
+ Similarly, use
+
+ x/ia foofunc,10
+
+
+ to disassemble the first 0x10 instructions of foofunc, and display
+ them along with their offset from the beginning of foofunc.
+
+ To modify memory, use the write command:
+
+ w/b termbuf 0xa 0xb 0
+ w/w 0xf0010030 0 0
+
+
+ The command modifier (b/h/w)
+ specifies the size of the data to be written, the first
+ following expression is the address to write to and the remainder
+ is interpreted as data to write to successive memory locations.
+
+ If you need to know the current registers, use
+
+ show reg
+
+
+ Alternatively, you can display a single register value by e.g.
+
+ p $eax
+
+
+ and modify it by
+
+ set $eax new-value
+
+
+
+ Should you need to call some kernel functions from DDB, simply
+ say
+
+ call func(arg1, arg2, ...)
+
+
+ The return value will be printed.
+
+ For a ps(1) style summary of all running processes, use
+
+ ps
+
+
+
+ Now you have now examined why your kernel failed, and you wish to
+ reboot. Remember that, depending on the severity of previous
+ malfunctioning, not all parts of the kernel might still be working
+ as expected. Perform one of the following actions to shut down and
+ reboot your system:
+
+ call diediedie()
+
+
+
+ This will cause your kernel to dump core and reboot, so you can
+ later analyze the core on a higher level with kgdb. This
+ command usually must be followed by another
+ `continue' statement.
+ There is now an alias for this: `panic'.
+
+
+
+ call boot(0)
+
+
+ might be a good way to cleanly shut down the running system, sync()
+ all disks, and finally reboot. As long as the disk and file system
+ interfaces of the kernel are not damaged, this might be a good way
+ for an almost clean shutdown.
+
+
+
+ call cpu_reset()
+
+
+ is the final way out of disaster and almost the same as hitting
+ the Big Red Button.
+
+ If you need a short command summary, simply type
+
+ help
+
+
+ However, it is highly recommended to have a printed copy of the
+ ddb(4) manual page ready for a debugging session.
+ Remember that it is hard to read the on-line manual while
+ single-stepping the kernel.
+
+
+
+
+ On-line Kernel Debugging Using Remote GDB
+
+ This feature has been supported since FreeBSD 2.2, and it's actually
+ a very neat one.
+
+ GDB has already supported remote debugging for a long time.
+ This is done using a very simple protocol along a
+ serial line. Unlike the other methods
+ described above, you will need two machines for doing this. One is
+ the host providing the debugging environment, including all
+ the sources, and a copy of the kernel binary with all the
+ symbols in it, and the other one is the target machine that
+ simply runs a similar copy of the very same kernel (but stripped
+ of the debugging information).
+
+ You should configure the kernel in question with config -g,
+ include DDB into the configuration, and compile it as usual.
+ This gives a large blurb of a binary, due
+ to the debugging information. Copy this kernel to the target
+ machine, strip the debugging symbols off with strip -x,
+ and boot it using the boot option. Connect the first
+ serial line of the target machine to any serial line of the
+ debugging host. Now, on the debugging machine, go to the compile
+ directory of the target kernel, and start gdb:
+
+ % gdb -k kernel
+ GDB is free software and you are welcome to distribute copies of it
+ under certain conditions; type "show copying" to see the conditions.
+ There is absolutely no warranty for GDB; type "show warranty" for details.
+ GDB 4.16 (i386-unknown-freebsd),
+ Copyright 1996 Free Software Foundation, Inc...
+ (kgdb)
+
+
+
+ Initialize the remote debugging session (assuming the first serial
+ port is being used) by:
+
+ (kgdb) target remote /dev/cuaa0
+
+
+
+ Now, on the target host (the one that entered DDB right before even starting
+ the device probe), type:
+
+ Debugger("Boot flags requested debugger")
+ Stopped at Debugger+0x35: movb $0, edata+0x51bc
+ db> gdb
+
+
+
+ DDB will respond with:
+
+ Next trap will enter GDB remote protocol mode
+
+
+
+ Every time you type ``gdb'', the mode will be toggled between
+ remote GDB and local DDB. In order to force a next trap
+ immediately, simply type ``s'' (step). Your hosting GDB will
+ now gain control over the target kernel:
+
+ Remote debugging using /dev/cuaa0
+ Debugger (msg=0xf01b0383 "Boot flags requested debugger")
+ at ../../i386/i386/db_interface.c:257
+ (kgdb)
+
+
+
+ You can use this session almost as any other GDB session, including
+ full access to the source, running it in gud-mode inside an Emacs
+ window (which gives you an automatic source code display in another
+ Emacs window) etc.
+
+ Remote GDB can also be used to debug LKMs. First build the LKM
+ with debugging symbols:
+
+ # cd /usr/src/lkm/linux
+ # make clean; make COPTS=-g
+
+
+
+ Then install this version of the module on the target machine, load it
+ and use modstat to find out where it was loaded:
+
+ # linux
+ # modstat
+ Type Id Off Loadaddr Size Info Rev Module Name
+ EXEC 0 4 f5109000 001c f510f010 1 linux_mod
+
+
+
+ Take the load address of the module and add 0x20 (probably to account
+ for the a.out header). This is the address that the module code was
+ relocated to. Use the add-symbol-file command in GDB to tell the
+ debugger about the module:
+
+ (kgdb) add-symbol-file /usr/src/lkm/linux/linux_mod.o 0xf5109020
+ add symbol table from file "/usr/src/lkm/linux/linux_mod.o" at
+ text_addr = 0xf5109020?
+ (y or n) y
+ (kgdb)
+
+
+
+ You now have access to all the symbols in the LKM.
+
+
+
+
+ Debugging a Console Driver
+
+ Since you need a console driver to run DDB on, things are more
+ complicated if the console driver itself is failing. You might
+ remember the use of a serial console (either with modified boot
+ blocks, or by specifying at the Boot:
+ prompt), and hook up a standard
+ terminal onto your first serial port. DDB works on any configured
+ console driver, of course also on a serial console.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Linux Emulation
+
+ Contributed by &a.handy; and &a.rich;
+
+
+
+ How to Install the Linux Emulator
+
+ Linux emulation in FreeBSD has reached a point where it is possible
+ to run a large fraction of Linux binaries in both a.out and ELF
+ format. The linux emulation in the 2.1-STABLE branch is capable of
+ running Linux DOOM and Mathematica; the version present in
+ FreeBSD-2.2-RELEASE is vastly more capable and runs all these as well as
+ Quake, Abuse, IDL, netrek for Linux and a whole host of other
+ programs.
+
+ There are some Linux-specific operating system features that are not
+ supported on FreeBSD. Linux binaries will not work on FreeBSD if they
+ use the Linux /proc filesystem (which is different from the optional
+ FreeBSD /proc filesystem) or i386-specific calls, such as enabling
+ virtual 8086 mode.
+
+ To tell whether your kernel is configured for Linux
+ compatibility simply run any Linux binary. If it
+ prints the error message
+
+ linux-executable: Exec format error. Wrong Architecture.
+
+
+ then you do not have linux compatibility support and
+ you need to configure and install a new kernel.
+
+ Depending on which version of FreeBSD you are running, how you get
+ Linux-emulation up will vary slightly:
+
+
+
+ Installing Linux Emulation in 2.1-STABLE
+
+ The GENERIC kernel in 2.1-STABLE is not configured for linux
+ compatibility so you must reconfigure your kernel for it. There
+ are two ways to do this: 1. linking the emulator statically in the
+ kernel itself and 2. configuring your kernel to dynamically load the
+ linux loadable kernel module (LKM).
+
+ To enable the emulator, add the following to your configuration file
+ (c.f. /sys/i386/conf/LINT):
+
+ options COMPAT_LINUX
+
+
+ If you want to run doom or other applications
+ that need shared memory,
+ also add the following.
+
+ options SYSVSHM
+
+
+ The linux system calls require 4.3BSD system call compatibility. So
+ make sure you have the following.
+
+ options "COMPAT_43"
+
+
+
+ If you prefer to statically link the emulator in the kernel rather than
+ use the loadable kernel module (LKM), then add
+
+ options LINUX
+
+
+ Then run config and install the new kernel as described in the
+ section.
+
+ If you decide to use the LKM you must also install the loadable
+ module. A mismatch of versions between the kernel and loadable
+ module can cause the kernel to crash, so the safest thing to do is to
+ reinstall the LKM when you install the kernel.
+
+ % cd /usr/src/lkm/linux
+ % make all install
+
+
+ Once you have installed the kernel and the LKM, you can invoke
+ `linux' as root to load the LKM.
+
+ % linux
+ Linux emulator installed
+ Module loaded as ID 0
+ %
+
+
+ To see whether the LKM is loaded, run `modstat'.
+
+ % modstat
+ Type Id Off Loadaddr Size Info Rev Module Name
+ EXEC 0 3 f0baf000 0018 f0bb4000 1 linux_emulator
+ %
+
+
+ You can cause the LKM to be loaded when the system boots in either of
+ two ways. In FreeBSD 2.2.1-RELEASE and 2.1-STABLE enable it in
+ /etc/sysconfig
+
+ linux=YES
+
+
+ by changing it from NO to YES. FreeBSD 2.1 RELEASE and earlier do not
+ have such a line and on those you will need to edit /etc/rc.local to
+ add the following line.
+
+ linux
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Installing Linux Emulation in 2.2.2-RELEASE and later
+
+ It is no longer necessary to specify ``options LINUX''
+ or ``options COMPAT_LINUX''. Linux emulation is done with an LKM
+ (``Loadable Kernel Module'') so it can be installed on the fly without
+ having to reboot. You will need the following things in your startup files,
+ however:
+
+
+
+ In /etc/rc.conf, you need the following line:
+
+ linux_enable=YES
+
+
+
+
+
+ This, in turn, triggers the following action in /etc/rc.i386:
+
+ # Start the Linux binary emulation if requested.
+ if [ "X${linux_enable}" = X"YES" ]; then
+ echo -n ' linux'; linux > /dev/null 2>&1
+ fi
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ If you want to verify it is running, modstat will do that:
+
+ % modstat
+ Type Id Off Loadaddr Size Info Rev Module Name
+ EXEC 0 4 f09e6000 001c f09ec010 1 linux_mod
+ %
+
+
+ However, there have been reports that this fails on some 2.2-RELEASE and
+ later systems. If for some reason you cannot load the linux
+ LKM, then statically link the emulator in the kernel by adding
+
+ options LINUX
+
+
+ to your kernel config file. Then run config and install the new
+ kernel as described in the section.
+
+
+
+
+ Installing Linux Runtime Libraries
+
+
+
+ Installing using the linux_lib port
+
+ Most linux applications use shared libraries, so you are still not
+ done until you install the shared libraries. It is possible to do
+ this by hand, however, it is vastly simpler to just grab the
+ linux_lib port:
+
+ % cd /usr/ports-current/emulators/linux_lib
+ % make all install
+
+
+
+ and you should have a working linux emulator. Legend (and the mail
+ archives :-) seems to hold that Linux emulation works best with
+ linux binaries linked against the ZMAGIC libraries; QMAGIC libraries
+ (such as those used in Slackware V2.0) may tend to give the
+ Linuxulator heartburn. As of this writing (March 1996) ELF emulation
+ is still in the formulative stages but seems to work pretty well. Also,
+ expect some programs to complain about incorrect minor versions. In
+ general this does not seem to be a problem.
+
+
+
+
+ Installing libraries manually
+
+ If you do not have the ``ports'' distribution, you can install the
+ libraries by hand instead. You will need the Linux shared libraries
+ that the program depends on and the runtime linker. Also, you will
+ need to create a "shadow root" directory, /compat/linux, for Linux
+ libraries on your FreeBSD system. Any shared libraries opened by
+ Linux programs run under FreeBSD will look in this tree first. So, if
+ a Linux program loads, for example, /lib/libc.so, FreeBSD will first
+ try to open /compat/linux/lib/libc.so, and if that does not exist then
+ it will try /lib/libc.so. Shared libraries should be installed in the
+ shadow tree /compat/linux/lib rather than the paths that the Linux
+ ld.so reports.
+
+ FreeBSD-2.2-RELEASE and later works slightly differently with respect to
+ /compat/linux. On -CURRENT, all files, not just libraries, are
+ searched for from the ``shadow root'' /compat/linux.
+
+ Generally, you will need to look for the shared libraries that Linux
+ binaries depend on only the first few times that you install a Linux
+ program on your FreeBSD system. After a while, you will have a sufficient
+ set of Linux shared libraries on your system to be able to run newly
+ imported Linux binaries without any extra work.
+
+
+
+
+ How to install additional shared libraries
+
+ What if you install the linux_lib port and your application still
+ complains about missing shared libraries? How do you know which
+ shared libraries Linux binaries need, and where to get them?
+ Basically, there are 2 possibilities (when following these
+ instructions: you will need to be root on your FreeBSD system to do
+ the necessary installation steps).
+
+ If you have access to a Linux system, see what shared libraries
+ it needs, and copy them to your FreeBSD system. Example: you have
+ just ftp'ed the Linux binary of Doom. Put it on the Linux
+ system you have access to, and check which shared libraries it
+ needs by running `ldd linuxxdoom':
+
+
+
+ % ldd linuxxdoom
+ libXt.so.3 (DLL Jump 3.1) => /usr/X11/lib/libXt.so.3.1.0
+ libX11.so.3 (DLL Jump 3.1) => /usr/X11/lib/libX11.so.3.1.0
+ libc.so.4 (DLL Jump 4.5pl26) => /lib/libc.so.4.6.29
+
+
+
+ You would need to get all the files from the last column, and
+ put them under /compat/linux, with the names in the first column
+ as symbolic links pointing to them. This means you eventually have
+ these files on your FreeBSD system:
+
+ /compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libXt.so.3.1.0
+ /compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libXt.so.3 -> libXt.so.3.1.0
+ /compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libX11.so.3.1.0
+ /compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libX11.so.3 -> libX11.so.3.1.0
+ /compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4.6.29
+ /compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4 -> libc.so.4.6.29
+
+
+
+ Note that if you already have a Linux shared library with a
+ matching major revision number to the first column of the 'ldd'
+ output, you will not need to copy the file named in the last column to
+ your system, the one you already have should work. It is advisable to
+ copy the shared library anyway if it is a newer version, though. You
+ can remove the old one, as long as you make the symbolic link point to
+ the new one. So, if you have these libraries on your system:
+
+ /compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4.6.27
+ /compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4 -> libc.so.4.6.27
+
+
+
+ and you find a new binary that claims to require a later version
+ according to the output of ldd:
+
+ libc.so.4 (DLL Jump 4.5pl26) -> libc.so.4.6.29
+
+
+
+ If it is only one or two versions out of date in the in the trailing
+ digit then do not worry about copying /lib/libc.so.4.6.29 too, because
+ the program should work fine with the slightly older version.
+ However, if you like you can decide to replace the libc.so anyway, and
+ that should leave you with:
+
+ /compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4.6.29
+ /compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4 -> libc.so.4.6.29
+
+
+
+ Please note that the symbolic link mechanism is only
+ needed for Linux binaries. The FreeBSD runtime linker takes care of
+ looking for matching major revision numbers itself and you do not need to
+ worry about it.
+
+
+
+
+ Configuring the ld.so -- for FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE only
+
+ This section applies only to FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE and later. Those running
+ 2.1-STABLE should skip this section.
+
+ Finally, if you run FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE you must make sure that you
+ have the Linux runtime linker and its config files on your system. You
+ should copy these files from the Linux system to their appropriate
+ place on your FreeBSD system (to the /compat/linux tree):
+
+ /compat/linux/lib/ld.so
+ /compat/linux/etc/ld.so.config
+
+
+
+ If you do not have access to a Linux system, you should get the
+ extra files you need from various ftp sites. Information on where to
+ look for the various files is appended below. For now, let us assume
+ you know where to get the files.
+
+ Retrieve the following files (all from the same ftp site to avoid any
+ version mismatches), and install them under /compat/linux
+ (i.e. /foo/bar is installed as /compat/linux/foo/bar):
+
+ /sbin/ldconfig
+ /usr/bin/ldd
+ /lib/libc.so.x.y.z
+ /lib/ld.so
+
+
+
+ ldconfig and ldd do not necessarily need to be under /compat/linux;
+ you can install them elsewhere in the system too. Just make sure they
+ do not conflict with their FreeBSD counterparts. A good idea would be
+ to install them in /usr/local/bin as ldconfig-linux and ldd-linux.
+
+ Create the file /compat/linux/etc/ld.so.conf, containing the
+ directories in which the Linux runtime linker should look
+ for shared libs. It is a plain text file, containing a directory
+ name on each line. /lib and /usr/lib are standard, you could
+ add the following:
+
+ /usr/X11/lib
+ /usr/local/lib
+
+
+
+ When a linux binary opens a library such as /lib/libc.so the
+ emulator maps the name to /compat/linux/lib/libc.so internally. All
+ linux libraries should be installed under /compat/linux (e.g.
+ /compat/linux/lib/libc.so, /compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libX11.so, etc.)
+ in order for the emulator to find them.
+
+ Those running FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE should run the Linux ldconfig program.
+
+ % cd /compat/linux/lib
+ % /compat/linux/sbin/ldconfig
+
+
+
+ Ldconfig is statically linked, so it does not need any shared
+ libraries to run. It creates the file /compat/linux/etc/ld.so.cache
+ which contains the names of all the shared libraries and should be rerun
+ to recreate this file whenever you install additional shared
+ libraries.
+
+ On 2.1-STABLE do not install /compat/linux/etc/ld.so.cache or run
+ ldconfig; in 2.1-STABLE the syscalls are implemented
+ differently and ldconfig is not needed or used.
+
+ You should now be set up for Linux binaries which only need a
+ shared libc. You can test this by running the Linux ldd on
+ itself. Supposing that you have it installed as ldd-linux, it should
+ produce something like:
+
+ % ldd-linux `which ldd-linux`
+ libc.so.4 (DLL Jump 4.5pl26) => /lib/libc.so.4.6.29
+
+
+
+ This being done, you are ready to install new Linux binaries.
+ Whenever you install a new Linux program, you should check if it needs
+ shared libraries, and if so, whether you have them installed in the
+ /compat/linux tree. To do this, you run the Linux version ldd on the
+ new program, and watch its output. ldd (see also the manual page for
+ ldd(1)) will print a list of shared libraries that the program depends
+ on, in the form majorname (jumpversion) => fullname.
+
+ If it prints "not found" instead of fullname it means that you
+ need an extra library. The library needed is shown in majorname
+ and will be of the form libXXXX.so.N. You will need to find a
+ libXXXX.so.N.mm on a Linux ftp site, and install it on your
+ system. The XXXX (name) and N (major revision number) should match;
+ the minor number(s) mm are less important, though it is advised to
+ take the most recent version.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Configuring the host name resolver
+
+ If DNS does not work or you get the messages
+
+ resolv+: "bind" is an invalid keyword
+ resolv+: "hosts" is an invalid keyword
+
+
+
+ then you need to configure a /compat/linux/etc/host.conf file
+ containing:
+
+ order hosts, bind
+ multi on
+
+
+
+ where the order here specifies that /etc/hosts is searched first and
+ DNS is searched second. When /compat/linux/etc/host.conf is not
+ installed linux applications find FreeBSD's /etc/host.conf and
+ complain about the incompatible FreeBSD syntax. You should remove
+ `bind,' if you have not configured a name-server using the
+ /etc/resolv.conf file.
+
+ Lastly, those who run 2.1-STABLE need to set an the
+ RESOLV_HOST_CONF environment variable so that applications will know
+ how to search the host tables. If you run FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE, you can
+ skip this. For the /bin/csh shell use:
+
+ setenv RESOLV_HOST_CONF /compat/linux/etc/host.conf
+
+
+
+ For /bin/sh use:
+
+ RESOLV_HOST_CONF=/compat/linux/etc/host.conf; export RESOLV_HOST_CONF
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Finding the necessary files
+
+ Note: the information below is valid as of the time this document
+ was written, but certain details such as names of ftp sites,
+ directories and distribution names may have changed by the time you
+ read this.
+
+ Linux is distributed by several groups that make their own set
+ of binaries that they distribute. Each distribution has its own
+ name, like ``Slackware'' or ``Yggdrasil''. The distributions are
+ available on a lot of ftp sites. Sometimes the files are unpacked,
+ and you can get the individual files you need, but mostly they
+ are stored in distribution sets, usually consisting of subdirectories
+ with gzipped tar files in them. The primary ftp sites for the
+ distributions are:
+ sunsite.unc.edu:/pub/Linux/distributions
+ tsx-11.mit.edu:/pub/linux/distributions
+
+
+ Some European mirrors:
+ ftp.luth.se:/pub/linux/distributions
+ ftp.demon.co.uk:/pub/linux/distributions
+ src.doc.ic.ac.uk:/packages/linux/distributions
+
+
+ For simplicity, let us concentrate on Slackware here. This
+ distribution consists of a number of subdirectories, containing
+ separate packages. Normally, they are controlled by an install
+ program, but you can retrieve files "by hand" too. First of all, you
+ will need to look in the "contents" subdir of the distribution. You
+ will find a lot of small text files here describing the contents of the
+ separate packages. The fastest way to look something up is to retrieve
+ all the files in the contents subdirectory, and grep through them for
+ the file you need. Here is an example of a list of files that you
+ might need, and in which contents-file you will find it by grepping
+ through them:
+
+
+
+ So, in this case, you will need the packages ldso, shlibs, xf_lib
+ and oldlibs. In each of the contents-files for these packages, look
+ for a line saying ``PACKAGE LOCATION'', it will tell you on which `disk'
+ the package is, in our case it will tell us in which subdirectory we
+ need to look. For our example, we would find the following locations:
+
+ Note: The 8237 does allow two channels to
+ be connected together to allow memory-to-memory DMA
+ operations in a non-``fly-by'' mode, but nobody in the PC
+ industry uses this scarce resource this way since it is
+ faster to move data between memory locations using the
+ CPU.
+
+
+
+ In the PC architecture, each DMA channel is normally
+ activated only when the hardware that uses a given DMA channel
+ requests a transfer by asserting the DRQ line for that
+ channel.
+
+
+
+ A Sample DMA transfer
+
+ Here is an example of the steps that occur to cause and perform
+ a DMA transfer. In this example, the floppy disk
+ controller (FDC) has just read a byte from a diskette and
+ wants the DMA to place it in memory at location
+ 0x00123456. The process begins by the FDC asserting the
+ DRQ2 signal (the DRQ line for DMA channel 2) to alert the DMA
+ controller.
+
+ The DMA controller will note that the DRQ2 signal is asserted.
+ The DMA controller will then make sure that DMA channel 2
+ has been programmed and is unmasked (enabled). The DMA controller
+ also makes sure that none of the other DMA channels are active
+ or want to be active and have a higher priority. Once these checks
+ are complete, the DMA asks the CPU to release the bus so that
+ the DMA may use the bus. The DMA requests the bus by
+ asserting the HRQ signal which goes to the CPU.
+
+ The CPU detects the HRQ signal, and will complete
+ executing the current instruction. Once the processor
+ has reached a state where it can release the bus, it
+ will. Now all of the signals normally generated by the
+ CPU (-MEMR, -MEMW, -IOR, -IOW and a few others) are
+ placed in a tri-stated condition (neither high or low)
+ and then the CPU asserts the HLDA signal which tells the
+ DMA controller that it is now in charge of the bus.
+
+ Depending on the processor, the CPU may be able to
+ execute a few additional instructions now that it no
+ longer has the bus, but the CPU will eventually have to
+ wait when it reaches an instruction that must read
+ something from memory that is not in the internal
+ processor cache or pipeline.
+
+ Now that the DMA ``is in charge'', the DMA activates its
+ -MEMR, -MEMW, -IOR, -IOW output signals, and the address
+ outputs from the DMA are set to 0x3456, which will be
+ used to direct the byte that is about to transferred to a
+ specific memory location.
+
+ The DMA will then let the device that requested the DMA
+ transfer know that the transfer is commencing. This is
+ done by asserting the -DACK signal, or in the case of the
+ floppy disk controller, -DACK2 is asserted.
+
+ The floppy disk controller is now responsible for placing
+ the byte to be transferred on the bus Data lines. Unless
+ the floppy controller needs more time to get the data
+ byte on the bus (and if the peripheral does need more time it
+ alerts the DMA via the READY signal), the DMA will wait
+ one DMA clock, and then de-assert the -MEMW and -IOR
+ signals so that the memory will latch and store the byte
+ that was on the bus, and the FDC will know that the byte
+ has been transferred.
+
+ Since the DMA cycle only transfers a single byte at a
+ time, the FDC now drops the DRQ2 signal, so the DMA knows that
+ it is no longer needed. The DMA will de-assert the
+ -DACK2 signal, so that the FDC knows it must stop placing
+ data on the bus.
+
+ The DMA will now check to see if any of the other DMA
+ channels have any work to do. If none of the channels
+ have their DRQ lines asserted, the DMA controller has
+ completed its work and will now tri-state the -MEMR,
+ -MEMW, -IOR, -IOW and address signals.
+
+ Finally, the DMA will de-assert the HRQ signal. The CPU
+ sees this, and de-asserts the HOLDA signal. Now the CPU
+ activates its -MEMR, -MEMW, -IOR, -IOW and address lines,
+ and it resumes executing instructions and accessing main
+ memory and the peripherals.
+
+ For a typical floppy disk sector, the above process is
+ repeated 512 times, once for each byte. Each time a byte
+ is transferred, the address register in the DMA is
+ incremented and the counter in the DMA that shows how many
+ bytes are to be transferred is decremented.
+
+ When the counter reaches zero, the DMA asserts the EOP
+ signal, which indicates that the counter has reached zero
+ and no more data will be transferred until the DMA
+ controller is reprogrammed by the CPU. This event is
+ also called the Terminal Count (TC). There is only one
+ EOP signal, and since only DMA channel can be active at
+ any instant, the DMA channel that is currently active must
+ be the DMA channel that just completed its task.
+
+ If a peripheral wants to generate an interrupt when the
+ transfer of a buffer is complete, it can test for its
+ -DACKn signal and the EOP signal both being asserted at
+ the same time. When that happens, it means the DMA will not
+ transfer any more information for that peripheral without
+ intervention by the CPU. The peripheral can then assert
+ one of the interrupt signals to get the processors'
+ attention. In the PC architecture, the DMA chip itself is not
+ capable of generating an interrupt. The peripheral and its
+ associated hardware is responsible for generating any
+ interrupt that occurs. Subsequently, it is possible to have
+ a peripheral that uses DMA but does not use interrupts.
+
+ It is important to understand that although the CPU
+ always releases the bus to the DMA when the DMA makes the
+ request, this action is invisible to both applications
+ and the operating systems, except for slight changes in
+ the amount of time the processor takes to execute
+ instructions when the DMA is active. Subsequently, the
+ processor must poll the peripheral, poll the registers in
+ the DMA chip, or receive an interrupt from the peripheral
+ to know for certain when a DMA transfer has completed.
+
+
+
+
+ DMA Page Registers and 16Meg address space limitations
+
+ You may have noticed earlier that instead of the DMA
+ setting the address lines to 0x00123456 as we said
+ earlier, the DMA only set 0x3456. The reason for this
+ takes a bit of explaining.
+
+ When the original IBM PC was designed, IBM elected to use
+ both DMA and interrupt controller chips that were
+ designed for use with the 8085, an 8-bit processor with
+ an address space of 16 bits (64K). Since the IBM PC
+ supported more than 64K of memory, something had to be
+ done to allow the DMA to read or write memory locations
+ above the 64K mark. What IBM did to solve this problem
+ was to add an external data latch for each DMA channel that
+ holds the upper bits of the address to be read to or written from.
+ Whenever a DMA channel is active, the contents of that
+ latch are written to the address bus and kept there until
+ the DMA operation for the channel ends. IBM called these latches
+ ``Page Registers''.
+
+ So for our example above, the DMA would put the 0x3456
+ part of the address on the bus, and the Page Register for
+ DMA channel 2 would put 0x0012xxxx on the bus. Together,
+ these two values form the complete address in memory that
+ is to be accessed.
+
+ Because the Page Register latch is independent of the DMA
+ chip, the area of memory to be read or written must not
+ span a 64K physical boundary. For example, if the DMA accesses
+ memory location 0xffff, after that transfer the DMA will then
+ increment the address register and the DMA will access the next
+ byte at location 0x0000, not 0x10000. The results of letting
+ this happen are probably not intended.
+
+
+
+ Note: ``Physical'' 64K boundaries should
+ not be confused with 8086-mode 64K ``Segments'', which
+ are created by mathematically adding a segment register with an
+ offset register. Page Registers have no address overlap and
+ are mathematically OR-ed together.
+
+
+
+ To further complicate matters, the external DMA address
+ latches on the PC/AT hold only eight bits, so that gives
+ us 8+16=24 bits, which means that the DMA can only point
+ at memory locations between 0 and 16Meg. For newer
+ computers that allow more than 16Meg of memory, the standard
+ PC-compatible DMA cannot access memory locations above 16Meg.
+
+ To get around this restriction, operating systems will
+ reserve a RAM buffer in an area below 16Meg that also does not
+ span a physical 64K boundary. Then the DMA will be
+ programmed to transfer data from the peripheral and into that
+ buffer. Once the DMA has moved the data into this buffer,
+ the operating system will then copy the data from the buffer
+ to the address where the data is really supposed to be stored.
+
+ When writing data from an address above 16Meg to a
+ DMA-based peripheral, the data must be first copied from
+ where it resides into a buffer located below 16Meg, and
+ then the DMA can copy the data from the buffer to the
+ hardware. In FreeBSD, these reserved buffers are called
+ ``Bounce Buffers''. In the MS-DOS world, they are
+ sometimes called ``Smart Buffers''.
+
+
+
+ Note: A new implementation of the 8237, called the
+ 82374, allows 16 bits of page register to be specified, allows
+ access to the entire 32 bit address space, without the use of
+ bounce buffers.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ DMA Operational Modes and Settings
+
+ The 8237 DMA can be operated in several modes. The main
+ ones are:
+
+
+
+ Single
+
+ A single byte (or word) is transferred.
+ The DMA must release and re-acquire the bus for each
+ additional byte. This is commonly-used by devices
+ that cannot transfer the entire block of data
+ immediately. The peripheral will request the DMA
+ each time it is ready for another transfer.
+
+ The standard PC-compatible floppy disk controller (NEC 765)
+ only has a one-byte buffer, so it uses this mode.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Block/Demand
+
+
+ Once the DMA acquires the
+ system bus, an entire block of data is transferred,
+ up to a maximum of 64K. If the peripheral needs
+ additional time, it can assert the READY signal to
+ suspend the transfer briefly. READY should not be
+ used excessively, and for slow peripheral transfers,
+ the Single Transfer Mode should be used instead.
+
+ The difference between Block and Demand is that once a
+ Block transfer is started, it runs until the transfer
+ count reaches zero. DRQ only needs to be asserted
+ until -DACK is asserted. Demand Mode will transfer
+ one more bytes until DRQ is de-asserted, at which point the DMA
+ suspends the transfer and releases the bus back to the CPU.
+ When DRQ is asserted later, the transfer resumes where
+ it was suspended.
+
+ Older hard disk controllers used Demand Mode until
+ CPU speeds increased to the point that it was more
+ efficient to transfer the data using the CPU, particularly
+ if the memory locations used in the transfer were above the
+ 16Meg mark.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Cascade
+
+
+ This mechanism allows a DMA channel
+ to request the bus, but then the attached peripheral
+ device is responsible for placing the addressing
+ information on the bus instead of the DMA. This is also
+ used to implement a technique known as ``Bus Mastering''.
+
+ When a DMA channel in Cascade Mode receives control
+ of the bus, the DMA does not place addresses and I/O
+ control signals on the bus like the DMA normally does
+ when it is active. Instead, the DMA only asserts the
+ -DACK signal for the active DMA channel.
+
+ At this point it is up to the peripheral connected to that
+ DMA channel to provide address and bus control signals.
+ The peripheral has complete control over the system
+ bus, and can do reads and/or writes to any address
+ below 16Meg. When the peripheral is finished with
+ the bus, it de-asserts the DRQ line, and the DMA
+ controller can then return control to the CPU or to some
+ other DMA channel.
+
+ Cascade Mode can be used to chain multiple DMA controllers
+ together, and this is exactly what DMA Channel 4 is used
+ for in the PC architecture. When a peripheral requests
+ the bus on DMA channels 0, 1, 2 or 3, the slave DMA
+ controller asserts HLDREQ, but this wire is actually connected
+ to DRQ4 on the primary DMA controller instead of to the CPU.
+ The primary DMA controller, thinking it has work to do on
+ Channel 4, requests the bus from the CPU using HLDREQ signal.
+ Once the CPU grants the bus to the primary DMA controller,
+ -DACK4 is asserted, and that wire is actually connected to
+ the HLDA signal on the slave DMA controller. The slave DMA
+ controller then transfers data for the DMA channel that
+ requested it (0, 1, 2 or 3), or the slave DMA may grant the bus
+ to a peripheral that wants to perform its own bus-mastering,
+ such as a SCSI controller.
+
+ Because of this wiring arrangement, only DMA channels
+ 0, 1, 2, 3, 5, 6 and 7 are usable with peripherals on PC/AT
+ systems.
+
+
+
+ Note: DMA channel 0 was reserved for
+ refresh operations in early IBM PC computers, but
+ is generally available for use by peripherals in
+ modern systems.
+
+
+
+ When a peripheral is performing Bus Mastering, it is
+ important that the peripheral transmit data to or
+ from memory constantly while it holds the system bus.
+ If the peripheral cannot do this, it must release the
+ bus frequently so that the system can perform refresh
+ operations on main memory.
+
+ The Dynamic RAM used in all PCs for main memory must be
+ accessed frequently to keep the bits stored in the
+ components "charged". Dynamic RAM essentially consists
+ of millions of capacitors with each one holding one bit
+ of data. These capacitors are charged with power to
+ represent a "1" or drained to represent a "0". Because
+ all capacitors leak, power must be added at regular intervals
+ to keep the "1" values intact. The RAM chips actually handle
+ the task of pumping power back into all of the appropriate
+ locations in RAM, but they must be told when to do it by
+ the rest of the computer so that the refresh activity won't
+ interfere with the computer wanting to access RAM normally.
+ If the computer is unable to refresh memory, the contents
+ of memory will become corrupted in just a few milliseconds.
+
+ Since memory read and write cycles ``count'' as refresh
+ cycles (a dynamic RAM refresh cycle is actually an incomplete
+ memory read cycle), as long as the peripheral
+ controller continues reading or writing data to
+ sequential memory locations, that action will refresh
+ all of memory.
+
+ Bus-mastering is found in some SCSI host interfaces and
+ other high-performance peripheral controllers.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Autoinitialize
+
+
+ This mode causes the DMA to
+ perform Byte, Block or Demand transfers, but when the
+ DMA transfer counter reaches zero, the counter and
+ address are set back to where they were when the DMA
+ channel was originally programmed. This means that
+ as long as the peripheral requests transfers, they will
+ be granted. It is up to the CPU to move new data
+ into the fixed buffer ahead of where the DMA is about
+ to transfer it when doing output operations, and read new
+ data out of the buffer behind where the DMA is writing
+ when doing input operations.
+
+ This technique is frequently used on audio devices that
+ have small or no hardware ``sample'' buffers. There is
+ additional CPU overhead to manage this ``circular'' buffer,
+ but in some cases this may be the only way to eliminate the
+ latency that occurs when the DMA counter reaches zero
+ and the DMA stops transfers until it is reprogrammed.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Programming the DMA
+
+ The DMA channel that is to be programmed should always
+ be ``masked'' before loading any settings. This is because
+ the hardware might unexpectedly assert the DRQ for that channel,
+ and the DMA might respond, even though not all of the parameters
+ have been loaded or updated.
+
+ Once masked, the host must specify the direction of the
+ transfer (memory-to-I/O or I/O-to-memory), what mode of
+ DMA operation is to be used for the transfer (Single,
+ Block, Demand, Cascade, etc), and finally the address and
+ length of the transfer are loaded. The length that is
+ loaded is one less than the amount you expect the DMA to
+ transfer. The LSB and MSB of the address and length are
+ written to the same 8-bit I/O port, so another port must
+ be written to first to guarantee that the DMA accepts the
+ first byte as the LSB and the second byte as the MSB of
+ the length and address.
+
+ Then, be sure to update the Page Register, which is
+ external to the DMA and is accessed through a different
+ set of I/O ports.
+
+ Once all the settings are ready, the DMA channel can be
+ un-masked. That DMA channel is now considered to be
+ ``armed'', and will respond when the DRQ line for that channel
+ is asserted.
+
+ Refer to a hardware data book for precise programming
+ details for the 8237. You will also need to refer to the
+ I/O port map for the PC system, which describes where
+ the DMA and Page Register ports are located. A complete
+ port map table is located below.
+
+
+
+
+ DMA Port Map
+
+ All systems based on the IBM-PC and PC/AT have the DMA
+ hardware located at the same I/O ports. The complete
+ list is provided below. Ports assigned to DMA Controller
+ #2 are undefined on non-AT designs.
+
+
+
+ 0x00 - 0x1f DMA Controller #1 (Channels 0, 1, 2 and 3)
+
+ DMA Address and Count Registers
+
+
+ 0x00 write Channel 0 starting address
+ 0x00 read Channel 0 current address
+ 0x01 write Channel 0 starting word count
+ 0x01 read Channel 0 remaining word count
+
+ 0x02 write Channel 1 starting address
+ 0x02 read Channel 1 current address
+ 0x03 write Channel 1 starting word count
+ 0x03 read Channel 1 remaining word count
+
+ 0x04 write Channel 2 starting address
+ 0x04 read Channel 2 current address
+ 0x05 write Channel 2 starting word count
+ 0x05 read Channel 2 remaining word count
+
+ 0x06 write Channel 3 starting address
+ 0x06 read Channel 3 current address
+ 0x07 write Channel 3 starting word count
+ 0x07 read Channel 3 remaining word count
+
+
+ DMA Command Registers
+
+
+ 0x08 write Command Register
+ 0x08 read Status Register
+ 0x09 write Request Register
+ 0x09 read -
+ 0x0a write Single Mask Register Bit
+ 0x0a read -
+ 0x0b write Mode Register
+ 0x0b read -
+ 0x0c write Clear LSB/MSB Flip-Flop
+ 0x0c read -
+ 0x0d write Master Clear/Reset
+ 0x0d read Temporary Register (not available on newer versions)
+ 0x0e write Clear Mask Register
+ 0x0e read -
+ 0x0f write Write All Mask Register Bits
+ 0x0f read Read All Mask Register Bits (only in Intel 82374)
+
+
+
+
+
+ 0xc0 - 0xdf DMA Controller #2 (Channels 4, 5, 6 and 7)
+
+ DMA Address and Count Registers
+
+
+ 0xc0 write Channel 4 starting address
+ 0xc0 read Channel 4 current address
+ 0xc2 write Channel 4 starting word count
+ 0xc2 read Channel 4 remaining word count
+
+ 0xc4 write Channel 5 starting address
+ 0xc4 read Channel 5 current address
+ 0xc6 write Channel 5 starting word count
+ 0xc6 read Channel 5 remaining word count
+
+ 0xc8 write Channel 6 starting address
+ 0xc8 read Channel 6 current address
+ 0xca write Channel 6 starting word count
+ 0xca read Channel 6 remaining word count
+
+ 0xcc write Channel 7 starting address
+ 0xcc read Channel 7 current address
+ 0xce write Channel 7 starting word count
+ 0xce read Channel 7 remaining word count
+
+
+ DMA Command Registers
+
+
+ 0xd0 write Command Register
+ 0xd0 read Status Register
+ 0xd2 write Request Register
+ 0xd2 read -
+ 0xd4 write Single Mask Register Bit
+ 0xd4 read -
+ 0xd6 write Mode Register
+ 0xd6 read -
+ 0xd8 write Clear LSB/MSB Flip-Flop
+ 0xd8 read -
+ 0xda write Master Clear/Reset
+ 0xda read Temporary Register (not present in Intel 82374)
+ 0xdc write Clear Mask Register
+ 0xdc read -
+ 0xde write Write All Mask Register Bits
+ 0xdf read Read All Mask Register Bits (only in Intel 82374)
+
+
+
+
+
+ 0x80 - 0x9f DMA Page Registers
+
+
+ 0x87 r/w Channel 0 Low byte (23-16) page Register
+ 0x83 r/w Channel 1 Low byte (23-16) page Register
+ 0x81 r/w Channel 2 Low byte (23-16) page Register
+ 0x82 r/w Channel 3 Low byte (23-16) page Register
+
+ 0x8b r/w Channel 5 Low byte (23-16) page Register
+ 0x89 r/w Channel 6 Low byte (23-16) page Register
+ 0x8a r/w Channel 7 Low byte (23-16) page Register
+ 0x8f r/w Low byte page Refresh
+
+
+
+
+
+ 0x400 - 0x4ff 82374 Enhanced DMA Registers
+
+ The Intel 82374 EISA System Component (ESC) was introduced in early 1996
+ and includes a DMA controller that provides a superset of 8237 functionality
+ as well as other PC-compatible core peripheral components in a single
+ package. This chip is targeted at both EISA and PCI platforms, and provides
+ modern DMA features like scatter-gather, ring buffers as well as direct
+ access by the system DMA to all 32 bits of address space.
+
+ If these features are used, code should also be included to provide similar
+ functionality in the previous 16 years worth of PC-compatible computers.
+ For compatibility reasons, some of the 82374 registers must be programmed
+ after programming the traditional 8237 registers for each
+ transfer. Writing to a traditional 8237 register forces the contents
+ of some of the 82374 enhanced registers to zero to provide backward
+ software compatibility.
+
+
+ 0x401 r/w Channel 0 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
+ 0x403 r/w Channel 1 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
+ 0x405 r/w Channel 2 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
+ 0x407 r/w Channel 3 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
+ 0x4c6 r/w Channel 5 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
+ 0x4ca r/w Channel 6 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
+ 0x4ce r/w Channel 7 High byte (bits 23-16) word count
+
+ 0x487 r/w Channel 0 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
+ 0x483 r/w Channel 1 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
+ 0x481 r/w Channel 2 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
+ 0x482 r/w Channel 3 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
+ 0x48b r/w Channel 5 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
+ 0x489 r/w Channel 6 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
+ 0x48a r/w Channel 6 High byte (bits 31-24) page Register
+ 0x48f r/w High byte page Refresh
+
+ 0x4e0 r/w Channel 0 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
+ 0x4e1 r/w Channel 0 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
+ 0x4e2 r/w Channel 0 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
+ 0x4e4 r/w Channel 1 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
+ 0x4e5 r/w Channel 1 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
+ 0x4e6 r/w Channel 1 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
+ 0x4e8 r/w Channel 2 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
+ 0x4e9 r/w Channel 2 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
+ 0x4ea r/w Channel 2 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
+ 0x4ec r/w Channel 3 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
+ 0x4ed r/w Channel 3 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
+ 0x4ee r/w Channel 3 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
+ 0x4f4 r/w Channel 5 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
+ 0x4f5 r/w Channel 5 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
+ 0x4f6 r/w Channel 5 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
+ 0x4f8 r/w Channel 6 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
+ 0x4f9 r/w Channel 6 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
+ 0x4fa r/w Channel 6 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
+ 0x4fc r/w Channel 7 Stop Register (bits 7-2)
+ 0x4fd r/w Channel 7 Stop Register (bits 15-8)
+ 0x4fe r/w Channel 7 Stop Register (bits 23-16)
+
+ 0x40a write Channels 0-3 Chaining Mode Register
+ 0x40a read Channel Interrupt Status Register
+ 0x4d4 write Channels 4-7 Chaining Mode Register
+ 0x4d4 read Chaining Mode Status
+ 0x40c read Chain Buffer Expiration Control Register
+
+ 0x410 write Channel 0 Scatter-Gather Command Register
+ 0x411 write Channel 1 Scatter-Gather Command Register
+ 0x412 write Channel 2 Scatter-Gather Command Register
+ 0x413 write Channel 3 Scatter-Gather Command Register
+ 0x415 write Channel 5 Scatter-Gather Command Register
+ 0x416 write Channel 6 Scatter-Gather Command Register
+ 0x417 write Channel 7 Scatter-Gather Command Register
+
+ 0x418 read Channel 0 Scatter-Gather Status Register
+ 0x419 read Channel 1 Scatter-Gather Status Register
+ 0x41a read Channel 2 Scatter-Gather Status Register
+ 0x41b read Channel 3 Scatter-Gather Status Register
+ 0x41d read Channel 5 Scatter-Gather Status Register
+ 0x41e read Channel 5 Scatter-Gather Status Register
+ 0x41f read Channel 7 Scatter-Gather Status Register
+
+ 0x420-0x423 r/w Channel 0 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
+ 0x424-0x427 r/w Channel 1 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
+ 0x428-0x42b r/w Channel 2 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
+ 0x42c-0x42f r/w Channel 3 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
+ 0x434-0x437 r/w Channel 5 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
+ 0x438-0x43b r/w Channel 6 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
+ 0x43c-0x43f r/w Channel 7 Scatter-Gather Descriptor Table Pointer Register
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Appendices
+
+
+
+ Obtaining FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ CD-ROM Publishers
+
+ FreeBSD is available on CD-ROM from Walnut Creek CDROM:
+
+ Walnut Creek CDROM
+ 4041 Pike Lane, Suite F
+ Concord CA 94520 USA
+ Phone: +1 925 674-0783
+ Fax: +1 925 674-0821
+ Email: info@cdrom.com
+ WWW: http://www.cdrom.com/
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FTP Sites
+
+ The official sources for FreeBSD are available via anonymous FTP from:
+
+ ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD.
+
+
+
+ Additionally, FreeBSD is available via anonymous FTP from the
+ following mirror sites. If you choose to obtain FreeBSD via
+ anonymous FTP, please try to use a site near you.
+
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ ,
+ .
+
+
+
+ Argentina
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.ar.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Australia
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.au.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp2.au.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp3.au.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp4.au.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Brazil
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp2.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp3.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp4.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp5.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp6.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp7.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Canada
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.ca.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Czech Republic
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://sunsite.mff.cuni.cz/OS/FreeBSD
+ Contact: jj@sunsite.mff.cuni.cz.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Denmark
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.dk.freeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Estonia
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.ee.freebsd.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Finland
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.fi.freebsd.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ France
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.ibp.fr/pub/FreeBSD
+ Contact: Remy.Card@ibp.fr.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Germany
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.de.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp2.de.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp3.de.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp4.de.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp5.de.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp6.de.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp7.de.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Hong Kong
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.hk.super.net/pub/FreeBSD
+ Contact: ftp-admin@HK.Super.NET.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Ireland
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.ie.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Israel
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.il.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp2.il.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Japan
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.jp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp2.jp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp3.jp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp4.jp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp5.jp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp6.jp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Korea
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.kr.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp2.kr.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Netherlands
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.nl.freebsd.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Poland
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.pl.freebsd.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Portugal
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.pt.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp2.pt.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Russia
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.ru.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp2.ru.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp3.ru.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ South Africa
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.za.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp2.za.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp3.za.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Slovenia
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.si.freebsd.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Sweden
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.se.freebsd.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Taiwan
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.tw.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp2.tw.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp3.tw.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Thailand
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.nectec.or.th/pub/FreeBSD
+ Contact: ftpadmin@ftp.nectec.or.th.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Ukraine
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.ua.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+ Contact: archer@lucky.net.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ UK
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.uk.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp2.uk.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp3.uk.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp4.uk.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ USA
+
+
+ In case of problems, please contact the
+ hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp2.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp3.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp4.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp5.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp6.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The latest versions of export-restricted code for FreeBSD (2.0C or later)
+ (eBones and secure) are 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
+
+ Hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.internat.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp2.internat.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Brazil
+
+
+ Hostmaster
+ for this domain.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.br.FreeBSD.ORG/pub/FreeBSD
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Finland
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://nic.funet.fi/pub/unix/FreeBSD/eurocrypt
+ Contact: count@nic.funet.fi.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ CTM Sites
+
+ /FreeBSD is available via anonymous FTP from the
+ following mirror sites. If you choose to obtain CTM via
+ anonymous FTP, please try to use a site near you.
+
+ In case of problems, please contact &a.phk;.
+
+
+
+ California, Bay Area, official source
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CTM
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Germany, Trier
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.uni-trier.de/pub/unix/systems/BSD/FreeBSD/CTM
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ South Africa, backup server for old deltas
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ftp.internat.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CTM
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Taiwan/R.O.C, Chiayi
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ ftp://ctm.tw.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CTM
+
+
+
+ ftp://ctm2.tw.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/CTM
+
+
+
+ ftp://ctm3.tw.freebsd.org/pub/freebsd/CTM
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ If you did not find a mirror near to you or the mirror is incomplete,
+ try
+ FTP search at
+ http://ftpsearch.ntnu.no/ftpsearch.
+ FTP search is a great free archie server in Trondheim, Norway.
+
+
+
+
+ CVSup Sites
+
+ servers for FreeBSD are running at
+ the following sites:
+
+
+
+ Argentina
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.ar.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Australia
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.au.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Brazil
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.br.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Canada
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.ca.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Estonia
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.ee.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Finland
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.fi.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Germany
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.de.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+ cvsup2.de.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+ cvsup3.de.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Japan
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.jp.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+ cvsup2.jp.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Netherlands
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.nl.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Norway
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.no.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Russia
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.ru.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ South Africa
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.za.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+ cvsup2.za.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Taiwan
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.tw.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Ukraine
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup2.ua.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ United Kingdom
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.uk.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ USA
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+ cvsup2.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+ cvsup3.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The export-restricted code for FreeBSD (eBones and secure) is
+ available via CVSup at the following international repository.
+ Please use this site to get the export-restricted code, if you are
+ outside the USA or Canada.
+
+
+
+ South Africa
+
+
+
+
+
+ cvsup.internat.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The following CVSup site is especially designed for users. Unlike the other CVSup mirrors, it is kept
+ up-to-date by CTM. That means if you CVSup cvs-all with
+ release=cvs from this site, you get a version of the
+ repository (including the inevitable .ctm_status file)
+ which is suitable for being updated using the CTM cvs-cur
+ deltas. This allows users who track the entire cvs-all
+ tree to go from CVSup to CTM without having to rebuild their
+ repository from scratch using a fresh CTM base delta.
+
+ Please note that this special feature only works for the
+ cvs-all distribution with cvs as the release tag.
+ CVSupping any other distribution and/or release will get you the
+ specified distribution, but it will not be suitable for CTM updating.
+
+ Also please note that, because the current version of CTM does
+ not preserve the timestamps of files, the timestamps at this mirror
+ site are not the same as those at other mirror sites. Switching
+ between this site and other sites is not recommended. It will work
+ correctly, but will be somewhat inefficient.
+
+
+
+ Germany
+
+
+
+
+
+ ctm.FreeBSD.ORG
+ (maintainer)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Bibliography
+
+ While the manual pages provide the definitive reference
+ for individual pieces of the FreeBSD operating system,
+ they are notorious for not illustrating how to put the
+ pieces together to make the whole operating system run
+ smoothly. For this, there is no substitute for a good
+ book on UNIX system administration and a good users'
+ manual.
+
+
+
+ Books & Magazines Specific to FreeBSD
+
+ International books & Magazines:
+
+
+
+
+
+ Using FreeBSD (in Chinese).
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD for PC 98'ers (in Japanese), published by SHUWA
+ System Co, LTD. ISBN 4-87966-468-5 C3055 P2900E.
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD (in Japanese), published by CUTT.
+ ISBN 4-906391-22-2 C3055 P2400E.
+
+
+
+ Complete Introduction to FreeBSD (in Japanese),
+ published by Shoeisha Co., Ltd. ISBN 4-88135-473-6 P3600E.
+
+
+
+ Personal UNIX Starter Kit FreeBSD (in Japanese),
+ published by ASCII. ISBN 4-7561-1733-3 P3000E.
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD Handbook (Japanese translation),
+ published by ASCII. ISBN 4-7561-1580-2 P3800E.
+
+
+
+
+
+ English language books & Magazines:
+
+
+
+
+
+ The Complete FreeBSD, published by Walnut Creek CDROM.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Users' Guides
+
+
+
+
+
+ Computer Systems Research Group, UC Berkeley.
+ 4.4BSD User's Reference Manual.
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1994.
+ ISBN 1-56592-075-9
+
+
+
+ Computer Systems Research Group, UC Berkeley.
+ 4.4BSD User's Supplementary Documents.
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1994.
+ ISBN 1-56592-076-7
+
+
+
+ UNIX in a Nutshell.
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1990.
+ ISBN 093717520X
+
+
+
+ Mui, Linda.
+ What You Need To Know When You Can't Find Your UNIX
+ System Administrator.
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1995.
+ ISBN 1-56592-104-6
+
+
+
+ Ohio State University has written
+ a UNIX Introductory Course which is available online
+ in HTML and postscript format.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Administrators' Guides
+
+
+
+
+
+ Albitz, Paul and Liu, Cricket. DNS and
+ BIND, 2nd Ed.
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1997.
+ ISBN 1-56592-236-0
+
+
+
+ Computer Systems Research Group, UC Berkeley.
+ 4.4BSD System Manager's Manual.
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1994.
+ ISBN 1-56592-080-5
+
+
+
+ Costales, Brian, et al.
+ Sendmail, 2nd Ed. O'Reilly &
+ Associates, Inc., 1997.
+ ISBN 1-56592-222-0
+
+
+
+ Frisch, Æleen. Essential System
+ Administration, 2nd Ed. O'Reilly &
+ Associates, Inc., 1995. ISBN 1-56592-127-5
+
+
+
+ Hunt, Craig. TCP/IP Network Administration.
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1992.
+ ISBN 0-937175-82-X
+
+
+
+ Nemeth, Evi. UNIX System Administration
+ Handbook. 2nd ed. Prentice Hall, 1995.
+ ISBN 0131510517
+
+
+
+ Stern, Hal Managing NFS and NIS
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1991.
+ ISBN 0-937175-75-7
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Programmers' Guides
+
+
+
+
+
+ Asente, Paul. X Window System
+ Toolkit. Digital Press.
+ ISBN 1-55558-051-3
+
+
+
+ Computer Systems Research Group, UC Berkeley.
+ 4.4BSD Programmer's Reference Manual.
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1994.
+ ISBN 1-56592-078-3
+
+
+
+ Computer Systems Research Group, UC Berkeley.
+ 4.4BSD Programmer's Supplementary Documents.
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1994.
+ ISBN 1-56592-079-1
+
+
+
+ Ellis, Margaret A. and Stroustrup,
+ Bjarne. The Annotated C++ Reference
+ Manual. Addison-Wesley, 1990.
+ ISBN 0-201-51459-1
+
+
+
+ Harbison, Samuel P. and Steele, Guy
+ L. Jr. C: A Reference Manual. 4rd ed. Prentice
+ Hall, 1995. ISBN 0-13-326224-3
+
+
+
+ Kernighan, Brian and Dennis M. Ritchie.
+ The C Programming Language..
+ PTR Prentice Hall, 1988.
+ ISBN 0-13-110362-9
+
+
+
+ Lehey, Greg.
+ Port UNIX Software.
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1995.
+ ISBN 1-56592-126-7
+
+
+
+ Plauger, P. J. The Standard C
+ Library. Prentice Hall, 1992.
+ ISBN 0-13-131509-9
+
+
+
+ Stevens, W. Richard. Advanced
+ Programming in the UNIX Environment.
+ Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1992
+ ISBN 0-201-56317-7
+
+
+
+ Stevens, W. Richard. UNIX Network
+ Programming. PTR Prentice Hall, 1990.
+ ISBN 0-13-949876-1
+
+
+
+ Wells, Bill. "Writing Serial Drivers for UNIX".
+ Dr. Dobb's Journal. 19(15), December
+ 1994. pp68-71, 97-99.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Operating System Internals
+
+
+
+
+
+ Andleigh, Prabhat K. UNIX System Architecture.
+ Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1990.
+ ISBN 0-13-949843-5
+
+
+
+ Jolitz, William. "Porting UNIX to the
+ 386". Dr. Dobb's Journal. January
+ 1991-July 1992.
+
+
+
+ Leffler, Samuel J., Marshall Kirk McKusick,
+ Michael J Karels and John Quarterman The Design and
+ Implementation of the 4.3BSD UNIX Operating
+ System. Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1989.
+ ISBN 0-201-06196-1
+
+
+
+ Leffler, Samuel J., Marshall Kirk McKusick,
+ The Design and Implementation of the 4.3BSD
+ UNIX Operating System: Answer Book.
+ Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1991.
+ ISBN 0-201-54629-9
+
+
+
+ McKusick, Marshall Kirk, Keith Bostic, Michael J Karels,
+ and John Quarterman. The Design and
+ Implementation of the 4.4BSD Operating
+ System. Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1996.
+ ISBN 0-201-54979-4
+
+
+
+ Stevens, W. Richard. TCP/IP Illustrated,
+ Volume 1: The Protocols.
+ Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1996.
+ ISBN 0-201-63346-9
+
+
+
+ Stevens, W. Richard. TCP/IP Illustrated,
+ Volume 3: TCP for Transactions, HTTP, NNTP
+ and the UNIX Domain Protocols.
+ Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1996.
+ ISBN 0-201-63495-3
+
+
+
+ Vahalia, Uresh. UNIX Internals -- The New Frontiers.
+ Prentice Hall, 1996.
+ ISBN 0-13-101908-2
+
+
+
+ Wright, Gary R. and W. Richard Stevens.
+ TCP/IP Illustrated, Volume 2:
+ The Implementation.
+ Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1995.
+ ISBN 0-201-63354-X
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Security Reference
+
+
+
+
+
+ Cheswick, William R. and Steven M. Bellovin.
+ Firewalls and Internal Security:
+ Repelling the Wily Hacker.
+ Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1995.
+ ISBN 0-201-63357-4
+
+
+
+ Garfinkel, Simson and Gene Spafford.
+ Practical UNIX Security. 2nd Ed.
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1996.
+ ISBN 1-56592-148-8
+
+
+
+ Garfinkel, Simson.
+ PGP Pretty Good Privacy
+ O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1995.
+ ISBN 1-56592-098-8
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Hardware Reference
+
+
+
+
+
+ Anderson, Don and Tom Shanley.
+ Pentium Processor System Architecture.
+ 2nd ed. Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1995.
+ ISBN 0-201-40992-5
+
+
+
+ Ferraro, Richard F. Programmer's Guide
+ to the EGA, VGA, and Super VGA Cards.
+ 3rd ed. Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, 1995.
+ ISBN 0-201-62490-7
+
+
+
+ Shanley, Tom. 80486 System
+ Architecture. 3rd ed. Reading, Mass. :
+ Addison-Wesley, 1995. ISBN
+ 0-201-40994-1
+
+
+
+ Shanley, Tom. ISA System
+ Architecture. 3rd ed. Reading, Mass. :
+ Addison-Wesley, 1995.
+ ISBN 0-201-40996-8
+
+
+
+ Shanley, Tom. PCI System
+ Architecture. 3rd ed. Reading, Mass. :
+ Addison-Wesley, 1995. ISBN
+ 0-201-40993-3
+
+
+
+ Van Gilluwe, Frank. The Undocumented PC.
+ Reading, Mass: Addison-Wesley Pub. Co., 1994.
+ ISBN 0-201-62277-7
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ UNIX History
+
+
+
+
+
+ Lion, John Lion's Commentary on UNIX, 6th Ed.
+ With Source Code.
+ ITP Media Group, 1996.
+ ISBN 1573980137
+
+
+
+ Raymond, Eric s. The New Hacker's Dictonary,
+ 3rd edition. MIT Press, 1996.
+ ISBN 0-262-68092-0
+ Also known as the
+ Jargon File
+
+
+
+ Salus, Peter H. A quarter century of UNIX.
+ Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, Inc., 1994.
+ ISBN 0-201-54777-5
+
+
+
+ Simon Garfinkel, Daniel Weise, Steven Strassmann.
+ The UNIX-HATERS Handbook.
+ IDG Books Worldwide, Inc., 1994.
+ ISBN 1-56884-203-1
+
+
+
+ Don Libes, Sandy Ressler Life with UNIX - special
+ edition. Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1989.
+ ISBN 0-13-536657-7
+
+
+
+ The BSD family tree. 1997.
+ http://www.de.freebsd.org/de/ftp/unix-stammbaum
+ or local on a FreeBSD-current machine.
+
+
+
+ The BSD Release Announcements collection. 1997.
+ http://www.de.FreeBSD.ORG/de/ftp/releases/
+
+
+
+ Networked Computer Science Technical Reports Library.
+ http://www.ncstrl.org/
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Magazines and Journals
+
+
+
+
+
+ The C/C++ Users Journal. R&D Publications
+ Inc. ISSN 1075-2838
+
+
+
+ Sys Admin - The Journal for UNIX System
+ Administrators Miller Freeman, Inc., ISSN 1061-2688
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Resources on the Internet
+
+ Contributed by &a.jkh;.
+
+ The rapid pace of FreeBSD progress makes print media impractical as a
+ means of following the latest developments. Electronic resources are
+ the best, if not often the only, way stay informed of the latest advances.
+ Since FreeBSD is a volunteer effort, the user community itself also
+ generally serves as a `technical support department' of sorts, with
+ electronic mail and USENET news being the most effective way of reaching
+ that community.
+
+ The most important points of contact with the FreeBSD
+ user community are outlined below. If you are aware of other
+ resources not mentioned here, please send them to the &a.doc;so that they may also be included.
+
+
+
+ Mailing lists
+
+ Though many of the FreeBSD development members read USENET, we cannot
+ always guarantee that we will get to your questions in a timely fashion
+ (or at all) if you post them only to one of the comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.*
+ groups. By addressing your questions to the appropriate mailing list
+ you will reach both us and a concentrated FreeBSD audience, invariably
+ assuring a better (or at least faster) response.
+
+ The charters for the various lists are given at the bottom of this
+ document. Please read the charter before joining or sending
+ mail to any list. Most of our list subscribers now receive many hundreds
+ of FreeBSD related messages every day, and by setting down charters
+ and rules for proper use we are striving to keep the signal-to-noise ratio
+ of the lists high. To do less would see the mailing lists ultimately fail
+ as an effective communications medium for the project.
+
+ Archives are kept for all of the mailing lists and can be searched
+ using the FreeBSD World Wide Web server. The keyword searchable archive
+ offers an excellent way of finding answers to frequently asked
+ questions and should be consulted before posting a question.
+
+
+
+ List summary
+
+ General lists: The following are general lists which
+ anyone is free to join:
+ List Purpose
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------------
+ freebsd-announce Important events and project milestones
+ freebsd-bugs Bug reports
+ freebsd-chat Non-technical items related to the FreeBSD community
+ freebsd-current Discussion concerning the use of FreeBSD-current
+ freebsd-stable Discussion concerning the use of FreeBSD-stable
+ freebsd-isp Issues for Internet Service Providers using FreeBSD
+ freebsd-jobs FreeBSD employment and consulting opportunities
+ freebsd-questions User questions
+
+
+ Technical lists: The following lists are for technical discussion.
+ You should read the charter for each list carefully before joining or
+ sending mail to one as there are firm guidelines for their use and content.
+ List Purpose
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------------
+ freebsd-afs Porting AFS to FreeBSD
+ freebsd-alpha Porting FreeBSD to the Alpha
+ freebsd-doc The FreeBSD Documentation project
+ freebsd-emulation Emulation of other systems such as Linux/DOS/Windows
+ freebsd-fs Filesystems
+ freebsd-hackers General technical discussion
+ freebsd-hardware General discussion of hardware for running FreeBSD
+ freebsd-isdn ISDN developers
+ freebsd-java Java developers and people porting JDKs to FreeBSD
+ freebsd-mobile Discussions about mobile computing
+ freebsd-multimedia Multimedia discussion
+ freebsd-platforms Concerning ports to non-Intel architecture platforms
+ freebsd-ports Discussion of the ports collection
+ freebsd-scsi The SCSI subsystem
+ freebsd-security Security issues
+ freebsd-smp Design discussions for [A]Symmetric MultiProcessing
+ freebsd-sparc Porting FreeBSD to Sparc systems.
+
+
+ Limited lists: The following lists require approval from
+ core@FreeBSD.ORG to join,
+ though anyone is free to send messages to them which fall within the
+ scope of their charters. It is also a good idea establish a presence
+ in the technical lists before asking to join one of these limited lists.
+ List Purpose
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------------
+ freebsd-admin Administrative issues
+ freebsd-arch Architecture and design discussions
+ freebsd-core FreeBSD core team
+ freebsd-hubs People running mirror sites (infrastructural support)
+ freebsd-install Installation development
+ freebsd-security-notifications Security notifications
+ freebsd-user-groups User group coordination
+
+
+ CVS lists: The following lists are for people interested in
+ seeing the log messages for changes to various areas of the source tree.
+ They are Read-Only lists and should not have mail sent to them.
+
+
+ List name Source area Area Description (source for)
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------------
+ cvs-CVSROOT /usr/src/[A-Z]* Top level /usr/src file changes
+ cvs-all /usr/src All changes to the tree (superset)
+ cvs-bin /usr/src/bin System binaries
+ cvs-etc /usr/src/etc System files
+ cvs-games /usr/src/games Games
+ cvs-gnu /usr/src/gnu GPL'd utilities
+ cvs-include /usr/src/include Include files
+ cvs-kerberosIV /usr/src/kerberosIV Kerberos encryption code
+ cvs-lib /usr/src/lib System libraries
+ cvs-libexec /usr/src/libexec System binaries
+ cvs-ports /usr/ports Ported software
+ cvs-sbin /usr/src/sbin System binaries
+ cvs-share /usr/src/share System shared files
+ cvs-sys /usr/src/sys Kernel
+ cvs-usrbin /usr/src/usr.bin Use binaries
+ cvs-usrsbin /usr/src/usr.sbin System binaries
+
+
+
+
+
+ How to subscribe
+
+ All mailing lists live on FreeBSD.ORG, so to post to a
+ given list you simply mail to listname@FreeBSD.ORG. It
+ will then be redistributed to mailing list members world-wide.
+
+ To subscribe to a list, send mail to &a.majordomo; and include
+
+ subscribe <listname> [<optional address>]
+
+
+ In the body of your message. For example, to subscribe yourself to
+ freebsd-announce, you'd do:
+
+ % mail majordomo@FreeBSD.ORG
+ subscribe freebsd-announce
+ ^D
+
+
+ If you want to subscribe yourself under a different name, or submit a
+ subscription request for a local mailing list (note: this is more efficient
+ if you have several interested parties at one site, and highly appreciated by
+ us!), you would do something like:
+
+ % mail majordomo@FreeBSD.ORG
+ subscribe freebsd-announce local-announce@somesite.com
+ ^D
+
+
+ Finally, it is also possible to unsubscribe yourself from a list, get a
+ list of other list members or see the list of mailing lists again by
+ sending other types of control messages to majordomo. For a complete
+ list of available commands, do this:
+
+ % mail majordomo@FreeBSD.ORG
+ help
+ ^D
+
+
+ Again, we would like to request that you keep discussion in the technical mailing
+ lists on a technical track. If you are only interested in the "high points"
+ then it is suggested that you join freebsd-announce, which is intended only
+ for infrequent traffic.
+
+
+
+
+ List charters
+
+ AllFreeBSD mailing lists have certain basic rules
+ which must be adhered to by anyone using them. Failure to comply
+ with these guidelines will result in two (2) written warnings from the
+ FreeBSD Postmaster,
+ after which, on a third offense, the poster will removed from all
+ FreeBSD mailing lists and filtered from further posting to them.
+ We regret that such rules and measures are necessary at all, but
+ today's Internet is a pretty harsh environment, it would seem, and
+ many fail to appreciate just how fragile some of its mechanisms are.
+
+ Rules of the road:
+
+
+
+ The topic of any posting should adhere to the basic charter of the list
+ it is posted to, e.g. if the list is about technical issues then your
+ posting should contain technical discussion. Ongoing irrelevant chatter
+ or flaming only detracts from the value of the mailing list for everyone
+ on it and will not be tolerated. For free-form discussion on no
+ particular topic, the freebsd-chat mailing list is freely available and should
+ be used instead.
+
+
+
+ No posting should be made to more than 2 mailing lists, and only
+ to 2 when a clear and obvious need to post to both lists exists.
+ For most lists, there is already a great deal of subscriber overlap
+ and except for the most esoteric mixes (say "-stable & -scsi"), there
+ really is no reason to post to more than one list at a time.
+ If a message is sent to you in such a way that multiple mailing lists
+ appear on the Cc line then the cc line should also be trimmed before
+ sending it out again.
+ You are still responsible for your own cross-postings, no
+ matter who the originator might have been.
+
+
+
+ Personal attacks and profanity (in the context of an argument) are
+ not allowed, and that includes users and developers alike. Gross
+ breaches of netiquette, like excerpting or reposting private mail
+ when permission to do so was not and would not be forthcoming,
+ are frowned upon but not specifically enforced. However,
+ there are also very few cases where such content would fit within the
+ charter of a list and it would therefore probably rate a warning
+ (or ban) on that basis alone.
+
+
+
+ Advertising of non-FreeBSD related products or services is
+ strictly prohibited and will result in an immediate ban if it
+ is clear that the offender is advertising by spam.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Individual list charters:
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-AFS
+
+ Andrew File System
+ This list is for discussion on porting and using AFS from CMU/Transarc
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-ADMIN
+
+
+ Administrative issues
+ This list is purely for discussion of freebsd.org related issues
+ and to report problems or abuse of project resources. It is a closed
+ list, though anyone may report a problem (with our systems!) to it.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-ANNOUNCE
+
+
+ Important events / milestones
+ This is the mailing list for people interested only in occasional
+ announcements of significant freebsd events. This includes
+ announcements about snapshots and other releases. It contains
+ announcements of new FreeBSD capabilities. It may contain calls
+ for volunteers etc. This is a low volume, strictly moderated mailing list.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-ARCH
+
+
+ Architecture and design discussions
+ This is the mailing list for people discussing FreeBSD architectural
+ issues. It is a closed list, and not for general subscription.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-BUGS
+
+
+ Bug reports
+ This is the mailing list for reporting bugs in FreeBSD
+ Whenever possible, bugs should be submitted using the "send-pr(1)"
+ command or the WEB interface to it.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-CHAT
+
+
+ Non technical items related to the
+ FreeBSD community
+ This list contains the overflow from the other lists about
+ non-technical, social information. It includes discussion about
+ whether Jordan looks like a toon ferret or not, whether or not to
+ type in capitals, who is drinking too much coffee, where the best
+ beer is brewed, who is brewing beer in their basement, and so on.
+ Occasional announcements of important events (such as upcoming
+ parties, weddings, births, new jobs, etc) can be made to the
+ technical lists, but the follow ups should be directed to this
+ -chat list.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-CORE
+
+
+ FreeBSD core team
+ This is an internal mailing list for use by the core members.
+ Messages can be sent to it when a serious FreeBSD-related matter
+ requires arbitration or high-level scrutiny.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-CURRENT
+
+
+ Discussions about the use of
+ FreeBSD-current This is the mailing list for users
+ of freebsd-current. It includes warnings about new features
+ coming out in -current that will affect the users, and
+ instructions on steps that must be taken to remain -current.
+ Anyone running "current" must subscribe to this list.
+ This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
+ content is expected.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-CURRENT-DIGEST
+
+
+ Discussions about the use of
+ FreeBSD-current This is the digest version of the
+ freebsd-current mailing list. The digest consists of all
+ messages sent to freebsd-current bundled together and mailed out
+ as a single message. The average digest size is about 40kB.
+ This list is Read-Only and should not be posted to.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-STABLE
+
+
+ Discussions about the use of
+ FreeBSD-stable This is the mailing list for users
+ of freebsd-stable. It includes warnings about new features
+ coming out in -stable that will affect the users, and
+ instructions on steps that must be taken to remain -stable.
+ Anyone running ``stable'' should subscribe to this list.
+ This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
+ content is expected.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-DOC
+
+
+ Documentation project
+ This mailing list belongs to the FreeBSD Doc Project and is for
+ the discussion of documentation related issues and projects.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-FS
+
+
+ Filesystems
+ Discussions concerning FreeBSD filesystems.
+ This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
+ content is expected.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-ISDN
+
+
+ ISDN Communications
+ This is the mailing list for people discussing the development
+ of ISDN support for FreeBSD.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-JAVA
+
+
+ Java Development
+ This is the mailing list for people discussing the development of
+ significant Java applications for FreeBSD and the porting and maintenance
+ of JDKs.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-HACKERS
+
+
+ Technical discussions
+ This is a forum for technical discussions related to FreeBSD. This
+ is the primary technical mailing list. It
+ is for individuals actively working on FreeBSD, to bring up problems
+ or discuss alternative solutions. Individuals interested in
+ following the technical discussion are also welcome.
+ This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
+ content is expected.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-HACKERS-DIGEST
+
+
+ Technical
+ discussions This is the digest version of the
+ freebsd-hackers mailing list. The digest consists of all
+ messages sent to freebsd-hackers bundled together and mailed out
+ as a single message. The average digest size is about 40kB.
+ This list is Read-Only and should not be posted to.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-HARDWARE
+
+
+ General discussion of FreeBSD
+ hardware General discussion about the types of
+ hardware that FreeBSD runs on, various problems and suggestions
+ concerning what to buy or avoid.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-INSTALL
+
+
+ Installation discussion
+ This mailing list is for discussing FreeBSD installation
+ development for the future releases and is closed.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-ISP
+
+
+ Issues for Internet Service Providers
+ This mailing list is for discussing topics relevant to Internet
+ Service Providers (ISPs) using FreeBSD.
+ This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
+ content is expected.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-MULTIMEDIA
+
+
+ Multimedia discussions
+ This is a forum about multimedia applications using FreeBSD.
+ Discussion center around multimedia applications, their installation, their
+ development and their support within FreeBSD
+ This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
+ content is expected.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-PLATFORMS
+
+
+ Porting to Non-Intel
+ platforms Cross-platform freebsd issues, general
+ discussion and proposals for non-Intel FreeBSD ports.
+ This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
+ content is expected.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-PORTS
+
+
+ Discussion of "ports"
+ Discussions concerning FreeBSD's "ports collection" (/usr/ports), proposed
+ ports, modifications to ports collection infrastructure and general
+ coordination efforts.
+ This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
+ content is expected.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-QUESTIONS
+
+
+ User questions
+ This is the mailing list for questions about FreeBSD. You should not
+ send "how to" questions to the technical lists unless you consider the
+ question to be pretty technical.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-QUESTIONS-DIGEST
+
+
+ User questions
+ This is the digest version of the freebsd-questions mailing list.
+ The digest consists of all messages sent to freebsd-questions
+ bundled together and mailed out as a single message. The average
+ digest size is about 40kB.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-SCSI
+
+
+ SCSI subsystem
+ This is the mailing list for people working on the scsi subsystem
+ for FreeBSD.
+ This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
+ content is expected.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-SECURITY
+
+
+ Security issues
+ FreeBSD computer security issues (DES, Kerberos, known security holes and
+ fixes, etc).
+ This is a technical mailing list for which strictly technical
+ content is expected.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-SECURITY-NOTIFICATIONS
+
+
+ Security Notifications
+ Notifications of FreeBSD security problems and fixes. This is not
+ a discussion list. The discussion list is FreeBSD-security.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FREEBSD-USER-GROUPS
+
+
+ User Group Coordination List
+ This is the mailing list for the coordinators from each of the
+ local area Users Groups to discuss matters with each other and a
+ designated individual from the Core Team. This mail list should
+ be limited to meeting synopsis and coordination of projects that span
+ User Groups. It is a closed list.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Usenet newsgroups
+
+ In addition to two FreeBSD specific newsgroups, there
+ are many others in which FreeBSD is discussed or are
+ otherwise relevant to FreeBSD users. Keyword searchable archives are available for
+ some of these newsgroups from courtesy of Warren Toomey
+ <wkt@cs.adfa.oz.au>.
+
+
+
+ BSD specific newsgroups
+
+
+
+
+
+ comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.announce
+
+
+
+ comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.misc
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Other Unix newsgroups of interest
+
+
+
+
+
+ comp.unix
+
+
+
+ comp.unix.questions
+
+
+
+ comp.unix.admin
+
+
+
+ comp.unix.programmer
+
+
+
+ comp.unix.shell
+
+
+
+ comp.unix.user-friendly
+
+
+
+ comp.security.unix
+
+
+
+ comp.sources.unix
+
+
+
+ comp.unix.advocacy
+
+
+
+ comp.unix.misc
+
+
+
+ comp.os.386bsd.announc
+
+
+
+ comp.os.386bsd.app
+
+
+
+ comp.os.386bsd.bugs
+
+
+
+ comp.os.386bsd.development
+
+
+
+ comp.os.386bsd.misc
+
+
+
+ comp.os.386bsd.questions
+
+
+
+ comp.bugs.4bsd
+
+
+
+ comp.bugs.4bsd.ucb-fixes
+
+
+
+ comp.unix.bsd
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ X Window System
+
+
+
+
+
+ comp.windows.x.i386unix
+
+
+
+ comp.windows.x
+
+
+
+ comp.windows.x.apps
+
+
+
+ comp.windows.x.announce
+
+
+
+ comp.windows.x.intrinsics
+
+
+
+ comp.windows.x.motif
+
+
+
+ comp.windows.x.pex
+
+
+
+ comp.emulators.ms-windows.wine
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ World Wide Web servers
+
+
+
+
+
+ http://www.FreeBSD.ORG/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.au.freebsd.org/FreeBSD/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.br.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.ca.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://sunsite.mff.cuni.cz/www.freebsd.org/.
+
+
+
+ http://sunsite.auc.dk/www.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.ee.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.fi.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.de.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.ie.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.jp.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.kr.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.nl.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.pt.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.se.freebsd.org/www.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+ http://www.tw.freebsd.org/freebsd.html .
+
+
+
+ http://www2.ua.freebsd.org/ .
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD Project Staff
+
+ The FreeBSD Project is managed and operated by the following
+ groups of people:
+
+
+
+ The FreeBSD Core Team
+
+ The FreeBSD core team constitutes the project's ``Board of Directors'',
+ responsible for deciding the project's overall goals and direction
+ as well as managing of
+ the FreeBSD project landscape.
+
+ (in alphabetical order by last name):
+
+
+
+
+
+ &a.asami;
+
+
+
+ &a.jmb;
+
+
+
+ &a.ache;
+
+
+
+ &a.dyson;
+
+
+
+ &a.bde;
+
+
+
+ &a.gibbs;
+
+
+
+ &a.davidg;
+
+
+
+ &a.jkh;
+
+
+
+ &a.phk;
+
+
+
+ &a.rich;
+
+
+
+ &a.gpalmer;
+
+
+
+ &a.jdp;
+
+
+
+ &a.guido;
+
+
+
+ &a.sos;
+
+
+
+ &a.peter;
+
+
+
+ &a.wollman;
+
+
+
+ &a.joerg;
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The FreeBSD Developers
+
+ These are the people who have commit privileges and do the engineering
+ work on the FreeBSD source tree. All core team members and most
+ FreeBSD Documentation project personnel are also developers.
+
+
+
+
+
+ &a.mbarkah;
+
+
+
+ &a.stb;
+
+
+
+ &a.jb;
+
+
+
+ &a.torstenb;
+
+
+
+ &a.danny;
+
+
+
+ &a.charnier;
+
+
+
+ &a.kjc;
+
+
+
+ &a.gclarkii;
+
+
+
+ &a.cracauer;
+
+
+
+ &a.adam;
+
+
+
+ &a.dufault;
+
+
+
+ &a.uhclem;
+
+
+
+ &a.tegge;
+
+
+
+ &a.eivind;
+
+
+
+ &a.julian;
+
+
+
+ &a.rse;
+
+
+
+ &a.se;
+
+
+
+ &a.sef;
+
+
+
+ &a.fenner;
+
+
+
+ &a.jfieber;
+
+
+
+ &a.jfitz;
+
+
+
+ &a.lars;
+
+
+
+ &a.scrappy;
+
+
+
+ &a.tg;
+
+
+
+ &a.brandon;
+
+
+
+ &a.graichen;
+
+
+
+ &a.jgreco;
+
+
+
+ &a.rgrimes;
+
+
+
+ &a.jmg;
+
+
+
+ &a.hanai;
+
+
+
+ &a.ahasty;
+
+
+
+ &a.jhay;
+
+
+
+ &a.helbig;
+
+
+
+ &a.erich;
+
+
+
+ &a.hsu;
+
+
+
+ &a.itojun;
+
+
+
+ &a.ugen;
+
+
+
+ &a.gj;
+
+
+
+ &a.nsj;
+
+
+
+ &a.ljo;
+
+
+
+ &a.kato;
+
+
+
+ &a.andreas;
+
+
+
+ &a.imp;
+
+
+
+ &a.smace;
+
+
+
+ &a.mckay;
+
+
+
+ &a.jlemon;
+
+
+
+ &a.tedm;
+
+
+
+ &a.amurai;
+
+
+
+ &a.markm;
+
+
+
+ &a.max;
+
+
+
+ &a.alex;
+
+
+
+ &a.davidn;
+
+
+
+ &a.obrien;
+
+
+
+ &a.fsmp;
+
+
+
+ &a.smpatel;
+
+
+
+ &a.wpaul;
+
+
+
+ &a.jmacd;
+
+
+
+ &a.steve;
+
+
+
+ &a.mpp;
+
+
+
+ &a.dfr;
+
+
+
+ &a.jraynard;
+
+
+
+ &a.darrenr;
+
+
+
+ &a.csgr;
+
+
+
+ &a.martin;
+
+
+
+ &a.paul;
+
+
+
+ &a.roberto;
+
+
+
+ &a.chuckr;
+
+
+
+ &a.dima;
+
+
+
+ &a.wosch;
+
+
+
+ &a.ats;
+
+
+
+ &a.jseger;
+
+
+
+ &a.vanilla;
+
+
+
+ &a.msmith;
+
+
+
+ &a.brian;
+
+
+
+ &a.stark;
+
+
+
+ &a.karl;
+
+
+
+ &a.cwt;
+
+
+
+ &a.pst;
+
+
+
+ &a.hoek;
+
+
+
+ &a.swallace;
+
+
+
+ &a.nate;
+
+
+
+ &a.yokota;
+
+
+
+ &a.jmz;
+
+
+
+ &a.hosokawa;
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The FreeBSD Documentation Project
+
+
+ The FreeBSD Documentation Project is responsible for a
+ number of different services, each service being run by an
+ individual and his deputies (if any):
+
+
+
+ Documentation Project Manager
+
+ &a.jfieber;
+
+
+
+
+ Webmaster
+
+
+ &a.mbarkah;
+
+ Deputy: &a.paul;
+
+
+
+
+ Handbook & FAQ Editor
+
+
+ &a.faq;
+
+
+
+
+ Build Engineer
+
+
+ &a.paul;
+
+ Deputy: &a.dave;
+
+
+
+
+ Mirror Manager
+
+
+ &a.ulf;
+
+ Deputy: &a.john;
+
+
+
+
+ News Editor
+
+
+ &a.nsj;
+
+ Deputy: &a.john;
+
+
+
+
+ Gallery and Commercial Editor
+
+
+ &a.nsj;
+
+ Deputy: &a.cawimm;
+
+
+
+
+ Style Police & Art Director
+
+
+ &a.dave;
+
+ Deputy: &a.opsys;
+
+
+
+
+ Database Engineer
+
+
+ &a.mayo;
+
+ Deputy: &a.cracauer;
+
+
+
+
+ CGI Engineer
+
+
+ &a.cracauer;
+
+ Deputy: &a.stb;
+
+
+
+
+ Bottle Washing
+
+
+ &a.nsj;
+
+ Drying plates: &a.nik;
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Who Is Responsible for What
+
+
+
+ Principal Architect
+
+ &a.davidg;
+
+
+
+
+ Documentation Project Manager
+
+
+ &a.jfieber;
+
+
+
+
+ Internationalization
+
+
+ &a.ache;
+
+
+
+
+ Networking
+
+
+ &a.wollman;
+
+
+
+
+ Postmaster
+
+
+ &a.jmb;
+
+
+
+
+ Release Coordinator
+
+
+ &a.jkh;
+
+
+
+
+ Public Relations & Corporate Liaison
+
+
+ &a.jkh;
+
+
+
+
+ Security Officer
+
+
+ &a.guido;
+
+
+
+
+ Source Repository Managers
+
+
+ Principal: &a.peter;
+ Assistant: &a.jdp;
+ International (Crypto): &a.markm;
+
+
+
+
+ Ports Manager
+
+
+ &a.asami;
+
+
+
+
+ XFree86 Project, Inc. Liaison
+
+
+ &a.rich;
+
+
+
+
+ Usenet Support
+
+
+ &a.joerg;
+
+
+
+
+ GNATS Administrator
+
+
+ &a.steve;
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ PGP keys
+
+ In case you need to verify a signature or send encrypted
+ email to one of the officers or core team members a
+ number of keys are provided here for your convenience.
+
+
+
+ Officers
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD Security Officer <security-officer@freebsd.org>
+
+
+
+
+ FreeBSD Security Officer <security-officer@freebsd.org>
+ Fingerprint = 41 08 4E BB DB 41 60 71 F9 E5 0E 98 73 AF 3F 11
+
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+ lw==
+ =ipyA
+ -----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ &a.imp;
+
+
+
+ Warner Losh <imp@village.org>
+ aka <imp@freebsd.org>
+ Fingerprint = D4 31 FD B9 F7 90 17 E8 37 C5 E7 7F CF A6 C1 B9
+ -----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
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+ =7fQV
+ -----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Core Team members
+
+
+
+ &a.asami;
+
+
+
+ Satoshi Asami <asami@cs.berkeley.edu>
+ aka <asami@FreeBSD.ORG>
+ Fingerprint = EB 3C 68 9E FB 6C EB 3F DB 2E 0F 10 8F CE 79 CA
+
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+ Peter Wemm <peter@FreeBSD.org>
+ aka <peter@spinner.dialix.com>
+ aka <peter@haywire.dialix.com>
+ aka <peter@perth.dialix.oz.au>
+ Key fingerprint = 47 05 04 CA 4C EE F8 93 F6 DB 02 92 6D F5 58 8A
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+ Type Bits/KeyID Date User ID
+ pub 1024/76A3F7B1 1996/04/27 Joerg Wunsch <joerg_wunsch@uriah.heep.sax.de>
+ Key fingerprint = DC 47 E6 E4 FF A6 E9 8F 93 21 E0 7D F9 12 D6 4E
+ Joerg Wunsch <joerg_wunsch@interface-business.de>
+ Joerg Wunsch <j@uriah.heep.sax.de>
+ Joerg Wunsch <j@interface-business.de>
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