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As management understanding of the Year 2000 problem (aka, "The
      Millennium Bug") increases, more and more companies are demanding
      official statements from the vendors of their hardware and software as
      to how their product will handle the year 2000 date rollover.
    Organizations that use unix and unix like operating systems such as
      FreeBSD are already one step ahead of the problem.  FreeBSD will
      properly maintain time long after year 2000 passes.
    Background information
    
    (This section based on the text from the Linux Y2K compliance
	  page)
    
    As with all Unix and Unixlike operating systems, time and dates in
      FreeBSD are represented internally as the number of seconds since the
      1st of January 1970 (the Unix "epoch").  Currently, that figure is
      stored as a 32 bit integer, and will run out part way through 2038. By
      then we should (hopefully) be using a counter of 64 bits (or greater)
      which should be good until the end of the universe.
    Note that the OS being Y2K compliant will not fix errant applications
      that are not Y2K compliant.
    Note also that the OS expects to read the current date and time from
      the CMOS clock of your computer.  Not all of these devices correctly
      handle the year 2000.  You are advised to test each platform
      individually to ensure that your hardware clock behaves correctly when
      going from 1999 to 2000, and that it correctly interprets the year 2000
      as a leap year.
    What you can do
    FreeBSD will continue to properly maintain time well into the next
      century.  Third party applications, however, might not.  Your best
      defense against year 2000 issues is a good offense.  Listening to
      stories claiming the coming meltdown of the world as we know it are
      not the way to solve the millennium bug.  Nor is
      waiting until the last minute.  The FreeBSD Project recommends that your
      organization apply sound system administration principles as the
      millennium approaches.
    There are tests that you can perform to see how your system will
      respond. Set your clock to a few minutes before midnight on New Year's
      Eve and watch the system time.  Your system should display the year as
      2000 and not 1900.  If the year is displayed incorrectly, then you will
      have plenty of time to update your hardware.  Operating your
      organizations information systems under their normal daily load with the
      clock set forward can provide valuable insight into your vulnerablility
      to year 2000 issues.
    
      Important: Do not do this on a live
      production system.  You may confuse any applications you have which rely 
      on dates (billing systems, backup regimes, and so on).  Always conduct
      tests like this on development systems which can not affect any live
      data you may have.
    
    FreeBSD Year 2000 Statement
    
    
      "After extensive analysis and testing, we believe that FreeBSD is
	100% Y2K compliant.  In the unlikely event that something has been
	overlooked, we will do our best to fix it as soon as possible."
      
      David Greenman
Principal Architect, The FreeBSD
	project
    
    Fixed problems
    
    The following Y2K problems have been identified and fixed in
      FreeBSD.
    
    
      - misc/1380
- Several programs have a hardcoded 19%d in responses for the year.
	Affected programs include: yacc, ftpd, and make.  [Fixed: yacc v1.2
	1999/01/18; ftpd v1.7 1996/08/05; make v1.4 1996/10/06; fixes in
	FreeBSD-2.2 and above]
- conf/1382
- The sed script in /etc/rc.local that builds the host/kernel ID line
	for the message of the day relies on the year not going past 1999.
	[Fixed v1.21 1996/10/24; fixes in FreeBSD-2.2 and above]
- misc/3465
- The etc/namedb/make-localhost command generates the DNS serial
	number as YYMMDD. In the year 2000, this will be generated as
	1YYMMDD.  [Fixed v1.2 1997/08/11; fixes in FreeBSD-2.2.5 and
	above]
- gnu/4930 and
	  gnu/8321
- groff tmac macros have hardcoded 19 for generating some dates.
	[Fixed: tmac.e v1.3 1998/12/06; doc-common v1.10 1999/01/19; fixes in
	FreeBSD-3.1 and above]
- bin/9323
- In its obsolescent form, touch doesn't treat the two digit year
        year specification correctly.  Years in the range 00-68 are treated
        as 1900-1968 instead of 2000-2068.  [Fixed v1.7 1999/01/05; fixes in
        FreeBSD-3.1 and above]
- xntpd/parse/util/dcfd.c
- The leap year calculations for the number of days in a year, and the
	conversion of DCF77 time to seconds since the Epoch were wrong.  These
	errors affected all years.  [Fixed v1.6 1999/01/12; fixes in
	FreeBSD-3.1 and above]
- tar/getdate.y
- Function Convert() was hard-coded for two digit years in range 70-99.
	Now adjusted to allow two digit years for 1970-2069.  The function
	does not allow for century non-leap years - y2k1 alert!  [Fixed v1.4
	1999/01/12; fixes in FreeBSD-3.1 and above]
      
- fetch/http.c
- The HTTP protocol includes an obsolete date format which uses a
	two-digit year.  Previous versions of fetch would interpret all such
	dates in the 1900s; subsequent to this revision, the pivot described
	in RFC
	  2068 is employed, which causes two-digit years to be interpreted
	as always belonging to the current century unless they would be 50 or
	more years in the future.  Since the HTTP servers which use this
	obsolete format are no longer widespread, this is not expected to have
	a significant impact.  [Fixed v1.24 1999/01/15; fixes in FreeBSD-3.1
	and above]
- misc/9500
- The `edithook' script in the CVSROOT directory uses a raw tm_year
	and will therefore display 01/01/100 for 2000-JAN-01.  [Fixed v1.2
	1999/01/17; not relevant to FreeBSD releases]
- bin/9501
- Several cvs contrib files are not Y2K compliant.  The log.pl and
	sccs2rcs.csh scripts prepend `19' to the year resulting in a display
	of 19100 for 2000.  The log_accum.pl script uses a two digit year in
	one place and in another place assumes that the tm_year is year within
	century rather than years since 1900.  [Fixed: log.pl v1.2 1999/01/15;
	sccs2rcs.csh v1.3 1999/01/15; fixes in FreeBSD-3.1 and above]
- bin/9502
- The groff number register `yr' is assigned from a (struct
	tm).tm_year and therefore represents the number of years since 1900,
	not the year within the century (see definition in troff/input.cc).
	[Fixed, now set mod 100, troff/input.cc V1.2 1999/06/03; fixed
	in FreeBSD-3.3]
- bin/9503
- PicoBSD's simple_httpd uses a raw tm_year and will therefore display
	01/01/100 for 2000-JAN-01.  [Fixed v1.2 1999/01/16; fixes in
	FreeBSD-3.1 and above]
- bin/9505
- Adduser uses a raw tm_year and will therefore display 100/01/01 for
	2000-JAN-01.  [Fixed v1.42 1999/01/15; fixes in FreeBSD-3.1 and
	above]
- bin/9506
- Cron uses a raw tm_year and will therefore display 100 for 2000.
	[Fixed v1.7 1999/01/16; fixes in FreeBSD-3.1 and above]
- bin/9507
- tcpslice(8) uses a raw tm_year and will therefore display
	100y01m01d... for 2000-JAN-01.  For compatibility, use a two-digit
	year until 2000.[Fixed v1.8 1999/01/20; fixes in FreeBSD-3.1 and
	above]
- bin/14472
- Date command does not take thousand/hundred digits. [Fixed v1.31 1999/11/10]
	
- misc/14511
- Chpass has a problem using 00 for expiration year.
	
- bin/15852 and
	  gnu/16045 and
	  bin/16207
	  
- Groff predefined \*(DT [\*(td] string has Y2K bug. [Fixed with import of
        version 1.15 2000/01/12]
	
- bin/15872
- at(1) has a problem with valid time specifications if tm_year is 100,
        reports `garbled time'.
	
- misc/16238
- KerberosIV install does not work properly because there is a hard-wired
	expiration date of 12/31/99 in the Kerberos source for the ticket
	granter. [Fixed v1.24 1999/09/19]
	
Problematic applications
    
      - ports/7681
- TkDesk 1.0 uses a hardcoded 19 in the file listing window.  A file
	with a date > 2000 is displayed with a year looking like "191xx"
	where xx is the last two numbers of the real date.  This bug has been
	fixed in version 1.1.  [Port updated 1998/10/10; fixes in FreeBSD-3.0
	and above]
- ports/9295
- INN 1.7.2 suffers from 2 Y2K related problems.  One occurs when
	pulling news (-f option to nntpget) and the other relates to the
	Expire header with relative dates past 2000.  [Both INN ports upgraded
	to INN 2.2 1999/05/02; fixes in FreeBSD-3.2 and above]
- ports/9298
- Knews suffers from 2 Y2K related problems.  One occurs during the
	generation of the NNTP NEWGROUPS command.  The other occurs because
	knews doesn't think that 2000 is a leap year.  Both are fixed in
	knews-1.0b.1.  [Port updated 1999/01/07; fixes in FreeBSD-3.1 and
	above]
- ports/9300
- Nntp-t5 suffers from a Y2K problem during the generation of the
	NEWNEWS command.  [Port patched 1999/01/05; fixes in FreeBSD-3.1 and
	above]
- ports/11144
- The tiff port has a hardcoded 19xx.  While this is in the contrib
	section (for converting Sun rasterfile format to TIFF), and not
	installed by default, this should be patched.  [Port patched
	1999/04/18, followed by upgrade 1999/05/11; fixes in FreeBSD-3.2 and
	above]
- ports/11145
- The dgs port suffers from the same TIFF related problem as the tiff
	port.  [contrib routine for converting Sun rasterfiles to TIFF] [Port
	patched 1999/04/18; fixes in FreeBSD-3.2 and above]
- ports/13694
- The slurp port has a problem generating a correctly formatted host file
      name when tm_year is greater than 100. [Port patched 1999/10/27; fixes
      in FreeBSD-3.3-STABLE and above]
- ports/15477
- wwwstat port has a hardcoded 19.
	
- ports/15789
- proftpd has a minor Y2K problem. [Port patched 1999/12/22]
	
- ports/15820
- sendfile has a problem not setting the atime and mtime properly
	for files sent after year 1999.
	
- ports/15854
- dclock uses localtime and in particular the references to
	tm_year do not take into account the year 2000. [Port patched 2000/01/04]
	
- ports/15868
- The reporting function of hylafax (xferstats) is not y2k compatible.
	[Port patched 2000/01/24]
	
- ports/15926
- A y2k bug in leafnode+ 2.9 considers incoming news articles with the 
	(arguably bogus) Date: header like `Wed, 05 Jan 00 15:01:40 GMT'
	to be too old, so these incoming articles are dropped. [Fixed by upgrading
	port to version 2.10 2000/01/24]
	
- ports/16062
- Japanese e2ps port has hardcoded 19. [Port patched 2000/01/24]
	
- ports/16073
- nntp port 1.5.11.5 has Y2K related problems.
	[Port upgraded to version 1.5.12.2 2000/01/12]
	
- ports/16167
- This is a bug-fix release that corrects a y2k bug in INN 2.2.1 that will show
	up in the NEWNEWS and NEWGROUPS commands after 2000-01-01 00:00:00 when
	the date specified to the command is before 2000-01-01 00:00:00.
	[Port upgraded to version 2.2.2 2000/01/28]
	
- NetHack 3.2.2 and earlier versions are not Y2K compliant (the score file
	used 2 digit years and will be corrupted if added to in the year 2000).
	[Port updated to version 3.2.3 2000/01/05]
	
- Japanese mnews port has Y2K problems.
	[Port updated to version 1.22 1999/12/26]
	
More information
    
    If you have further questions about FreeBSD's year 2000 compliance, or
      you have discovered an application running under FreeBSD that is not Y2K 
      compliant, please contact the project at freebsd-bugs@FreeBSD.ORG.
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