article.xml revision 93244
199005Sobrien<!DOCTYPE article PUBLIC "-//FreeBSD//DTD DocBook V4.1-Based Extension//EN" [
299005Sobrien<!ENTITY % man PUBLIC "-//FreeBSD//ENTITIES DocBook Manual Page Entities//EN">
399005Sobrien%man;
499005Sobrien<!ENTITY % authors PUBLIC  "-//FreeBSD//ENTITIES DocBook Author Entities//EN">
599005Sobrien%authors;
699005Sobrien<!ENTITY % mlists PUBLIC "-//FreeBSD//ENTITIES DocBook Mailing List Entities//EN">
799005Sobrien%mlists;
899005Sobrien<!ENTITY % release PUBLIC "-//FreeBSD//ENTITIES Release Specification//EN">
999005Sobrien%release;
1099005Sobrien<!ENTITY % misc PUBLIC  "-//FreeBSD//ENTITIES DocBook Miscellaneous FreeBSD Entities//EN">
1199005Sobrien%misc;
1299005Sobrien]>
1399005Sobrien
1499005Sobrien<article>
1599005Sobrien  <articleinfo>
1699005Sobrien    <title>&os; &release.current; README</title>
1799005Sobrien
1899005Sobrien    <corpauthor>The &os; Project</corpauthor>
1999005Sobrien
2099005Sobrien    <pubdate>$FreeBSD: head/release/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/readme/article.sgml 93244 2002-03-26 20:23:53Z keramida $</pubdate>
2199005Sobrien
2299005Sobrien    <copyright>
2399005Sobrien      <year>2000</year>
2499005Sobrien      <year>2001</year>
2599005Sobrien      <year>2002</year>
2699005Sobrien      <holder role="mailto:doc@FreeBSD.org">The FreeBSD Documentation Project</holder>
2799005Sobrien    </copyright>
2899005Sobrien  </articleinfo>
29
30  <abstract>
31    <para>This document gives a brief introduction to &os;
32      &release.current;.  It includes some information on how to
33      obtain &os;, a listing of various ways to contact the &os;
34      Project, and pointers to some other sources of
35      information.</para>
36  </abstract>
37
38  <sect1>
39    <title>Introduction</title>
40
41    <para>This distribution is a &release.type; of &os; &release.current;, the
42      latest point along the &release.branch; branch.</para>
43
44    <sect2>
45      <title>About &os;</title>
46
47      <para>&os; is an operating system based on 4.4 BSD Lite for
48	Intel, AMD, Cyrix or NexGen <quote>x86</quote> based PC
49	hardware and Compaq (formerly DEC) Alpha computers.  Versions
50	for the IA64, PowerPC, and Sparc64 architectures are currently under
51	development as well.  &os; works with a wide variety of
52	peripherals and configurations and can be used for everything
53	from software development to games to Internet Service
54	Provision.</para>
55
56      <para>This release of &os; contains everything you need to run
57	such a system, including full source code for the kernel and
58	all utilities in the base distribution.  With the source
59	distribution installed, you can literally recompile the entire
60	system from scratch with one command, making it ideal for
61	students, researchers, or users who simply want to see how it
62	all works.</para>
63
64      <para>A large collection of third-party ported software (the
65	<quote>Ports Collection</quote>) is also provided to make it
66	easy to obtain and install all your favorite traditional UNIX
67	utilities for &os;.  Each <quote>port</quote> consists of a
68	set of scripts to retrieve, configure, build, and install a
69	piece of software, with a single command.  Over &os.numports;
70	ports, from editors to programming languages to graphical
71	applications, make &os; a powerful and comprehensive operating
72	environment that extends far beyond what's provided by many
73	commercial versions of UNIX.  Most ports are also available as
74	pre-compiled <quote>packages</quote>, which can be quickly
75	installed from the installation program.</para>
76    </sect2>
77
78    <sect2>
79      <title>Target Audience</title>
80
81<![ %release.type.snapshot; [
82
83      <para>This &release.type; is aimed primarily at early adopters
84	and various other users who want to get involved with the
85	ongoing development of &os;.  While the &os; development team
86	tries its best to ensure that each &release.type; works as
87	advertised, &release.branch; is very much a
88	work-in-progress.</para>
89
90      <para>The basic requirements for using this &release.type; are
91	technical proficiency with &os; and an understanding of the
92	ongoing development process of &os; &release.branch; (as
93	discussed on the &a.current;).</para>
94
95      <para>For those more interested in doing business with &os; than
96	in experimenting with new &os; technology, formal releases
97	(such as &release.prev.stable;) are frequently more appropriate.
98	Releases undergo a period of testing and quality assurance
99	checking to ensure high reliability and dependability.</para>
100
101]]>
102
103<![ %release.type.release; [
104
105      <para>This &release.type; of &os; is suitable for all users.  It
106	has undergone a period of testing and quality assurance
107	checking to ensure the highest reliability and
108	dependability.</para>
109
110]]>
111
112    </sect2>
113  </sect1>
114
115  <sect1>
116    <title>Obtaining &os;</title>
117
118    <para>&os; may be obtained in a variety of ways.  This section
119      focuses on those ways that are primarily useful for obtaining a
120      complete &os; distribution, rather than updating an existing
121      installation.</para>
122
123    <sect2>
124      <title>CDROM and DVD</title>
125
126      <para>&os; -RELEASE distributions may be ordered on CDROM or DVD
127	from several publishers.  This is frequently the most
128	convenient way to obtain &os; for new installations, as it
129	provides a convenient way to quickly reinstall the system if
130	necessary.  Some distributions include some of the optional,
131	precompiled <quote>packages</quote> from the &os; Ports
132	Collection.</para>
133
134      <para>A list of the CDROM and DVD publishers known to the
135	project are listed in the <ulink
136	url="http://www.FreeBSD.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/mirrors.html"><quote>Obtaining
137	FreeBSD</quote></ulink> appendix to the Handbook.</para>
138    </sect2>
139
140    <sect2>
141      <title>FTP</title>
142
143      <para>You can use FTP to retrieve &os; and any or all of its
144	optional packages from <ulink
145	url="ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.org/"></ulink>, which is the official
146	&os; release site, or any of its
147	<quote>mirrors</quote>.</para>
148
149      <para>Lists of locations that mirror &os; can be found in the
150	<ulink
151	url="http://www.FreeBSD.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/mirrors-ftp.html">FTP
152	Sites</ulink> section of the Handbook, or on the <ulink
153	url="http://www.freebsdmirrors.org/"></ulink> Web pages.
154	Finding a close (in networking terms) mirror from which to
155	download the distribution is highly recommended.</para>
156
157      <para>Additional mirror sites are always welcome.  Contact
158	<email>freebsd-admin@FreeBSD.org</email> for more details on
159	becoming an official mirror site.  You can also find useful
160        information for mirror sites at the <ulink
161        URL="http://www.FreeBSD.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/articles/hubs/">Mirroring
162        FreeBSD</ulink> article.</para>
163
164      <para>Mirrors generally contain the floppy disk images necessary
165	to begin an installation, as well as the distribution files
166	needed for the install process itself.  Many mirrors also
167	contain the ISO images necessary to create a CDROM of
168	a &os; release.</para>
169
170    </sect2>
171  </sect1>
172
173  <sect1 id="contacting">
174    <title>Contacting the &os; Project</title>
175
176    <sect2>
177      <title>Email and Mailing Lists</title>
178
179      <para>For any questions or general technical support issues,
180	please send mail to the &a.questions;.</para>
181
182      <para>If you're tracking the &release.branch; development efforts, you
183	<emphasis>must</emphasis> join the &a.current;, in order to
184	keep abreast of recent developments and changes that may
185	affect the way you use and maintain the system.</para>
186
187      <para>Being a largely-volunteer effort, the &os;
188	Project is always happy to have extra hands willing to help&mdash;there are already far more desired enhancements than
189	there is time to implement them.  To contact the developers on
190	technical matters, or with offers of help, please send mail to
191	the &a.hackers;.</para>
192
193      <para>Please note that these mailing lists can experience
194	<emphasis>significant</emphasis> amounts of traffic.  If you
195	have slow or expensive mail access, or are only interested in
196	keeping up with major &os; events, you may find it
197	preferable to subscribe instead to the &a.announce;.</para>
198
199      <para>All of the mailing lists can be freely joined by anyone
200	wishing to do so.  Send mail to &a.majordomo; and include the
201	keyword <literal>help</literal> on a line by itself somewhere
202	in the body of the message.  This will give you more
203	information on joining the various lists, accessing archives,
204	etc.  There are a number of mailing lists targeted at special
205	interest groups not mentioned here; more information can be
206	obtained either through majordomo or the <ulink
207	url="http://www.FreeBSD.org/support.html#mailing-list">mailing
208	lists section</ulink> of the &os; Web site.</para>
209
210      <important>
211	<para>Do <emphasis>not</emphasis> send email to the lists
212	  asking to be subscribed.  Use the &a.majordomo; address
213	  instead.</para>
214      </important>
215    </sect2>
216
217    <sect2>
218      <title>Submitting Problem Reports</title>
219
220      <para>Suggestions, bug reports and contributions of code are
221	always valued&mdash;please do not hesitate to report any
222	problems you may find.  Bug reports with attached fixes are of
223	course even more welcome.</para>
224
225      <para>The preferred method to submit bug reports from a machine
226	with Internet mail connectivity is to use the &man.send-pr.1;
227	command or use the Web form at <ulink
228	url="http://www.FreeBSD.org/send-pr.html">http://www.FreeBSD.org/send-pr.html</ulink>.
229	<quote>Problem Reports</quote> (PRs) submitted in this way
230	will be filed and their progress tracked; the &os; developers
231	will do their best to respond to all reported bugs as soon as
232	possible.  <ulink
233	url="http://www.FreeBSD.org/cgi/query-pr-summary.cgi">A list
234	of all active PRs</ulink> is available on the &os; Web site;
235	this list is useful to see what potential problems other users
236	have encountered.</para>
237
238      <para>Note that &man.send-pr.1; itself is a shell script that
239	should be easy to move even onto a non-&os; system.  Using
240	this interface is highly preferred.  If, for some reason, you
241	are unable to use &man.send-pr.1; to submit a bug report, you
242	can try to send it to the &a.bugs;.</para>
243
244      <para>For more information, <ulink
245	url="http://www.FreeBSD.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/articles/problem-reports/"><quote>Writing
246	FreeBSD Problem Reports</quote></ulink>, available on the &os; Web
247	site, has a number of helpful hints on writing and submitting
248	effective problem reports.</para>
249    </sect2>
250  </sect1>
251
252  <sect1>
253    <title>Further Reading</title>
254
255    <para>There are many sources of information about &os;; some are
256      included with this distribution, while others are available
257      on-line or in print versions.</para>
258
259    <sect2 id="release-docs">
260      <title>Release Documentation</title>
261
262      <para>A number of other files provide more specific information
263	about this &release.type; distribution.  These files are
264	provided in various formats.  Most distributions will include
265	both ASCII text (<filename>.TXT</filename>) and HTML
266	(<filename>.HTM</filename>) renditions.  Some distributions
267	may also include other formats such as PostScript
268	(<filename>.PS</filename>) or Portable Document Format
269	(<filename>.PDF</filename>).
270
271	<itemizedlist>
272	  <listitem>
273	    <para><filename>README.TXT</filename>: This file, which
274	      gives some general information about &os; as well as
275	      some cursory notes about obtaining a
276	      distribution.</para>
277	  </listitem>
278
279	  <listitem>
280	    <para><filename>RELNOTES.TXT</filename>: The release
281	      notes, showing what's new and different in &os;
282	      &release.current; compared to the previous release (&os;
283	      &release.prev;).</para>
284	  </listitem>
285
286	  <listitem>
287	    <para><filename>HARDWARE.TXT</filename>: The hardware
288	      compatibility list, showing devices with which &os; has
289	      been tested and is known to work.</para>
290	  </listitem>
291
292	  <listitem>
293	    <para><filename>INSTALL.TXT</filename>: Installation
294	      instructions for installing &os; from its distribution
295	      media.</para>
296	  </listitem>
297
298	  <listitem>
299	    <para><filename>ERRATA.TXT</filename>: Release errata.
300	      Late-breaking, post-release information can be found in
301	      this file, which is principally applicable to releases
302	      (as opposed to snapshots).  It is important to consult
303	      this file before installing a release of &os;, as it
304	      contains the latest information on problems which have
305	      been found and fixed since the release was
306	      created.</para>
307	  </listitem>
308	</itemizedlist>
309
310	<note>
311	  <para>Several of these documents (in particular,
312	    <filename>RELNOTES.TXT</filename>,
313	    <filename>HARDWARE.TXT</filename>, and
314	    <filename>INSTALL.TXT</filename>) contain information that
315	    is specific to a particular hardware architecture.  For
316	    example, the alpha release notes contain information not
317	    applicable to the i386, and vice versa.  The architecture
318	    for which each document applies will be listed in that
319	    document's title.</para>
320	</note>
321
322      </para>
323
324      <para>These documents are generally available via the
325	Documentation menu during installation.  Once the system is
326	installed, you can revisit this menu by running the
327	&man.sysinstall.8; utility.</para>
328
329      <note>
330	<para>It is extremely important to read the errata for any
331	  given release before installing it, to learn about any
332	  <quote>late-breaking news</quote> or post-release problems.
333	  The errata file accompanying each release (most likely right
334	  next to this file) is already out of date by definition, but
335	  other copies are kept updated on the Internet and should be
336	  consulted as the <quote>current errata</quote> for this
337	  release.  These other copies of the errata are located at
338	  <ulink url="http://www.FreeBSD.org/releases/"></ulink> (as
339	  well as any sites which keep up-to-date mirrors of this
340	  location).</para>
341      </note>
342    </sect2>
343
344    <sect2>
345      <title>Manual Pages</title>
346
347      <para>As with almost all UNIX-like operating systems, &os; comes
348	with a set of on-line manual pages, accessed through the
349	&man.man.1; command or through the <ulink
350	url="http://www.FreeBSD.org/cgi/man.cgi">hypertext manual
351	pages gateway</ulink> on the &os; Web site.  In general, the
352	manual pages provide information on the different commands and
353	APIs available to the &os; user.</para>
354
355      <para>In some cases, manual pages are written to given
356	information on particular topics.  Notable examples of such
357	manual pages are &man.tuning.7; (a guide to performance tuning),
358	&man.security.7; (an introduction to &os; security), and
359	&man.style.9; (a style guide to kernel coding).</para>
360    </sect2>
361
362    <sect2>
363      <title>Books and Articles</title>
364
365      <para>Two highly-useful collections of &os;-related information,
366	maintained by the &os; Project,
367	are the &os; Handbook and &os; FAQ (Frequently Asked
368	Questions document).  On-line versions of the <ulink
369	url="http://www.FreeBSD.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/">Handbook</ulink>
370	and <ulink
371	url="http://www.FreeBSD.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/faq/">FAQ</ulink>
372	are always available from the <ulink
373	url="http://www.FreeBSD.org/docs.html">FreeBSD Documentation
374	page</ulink> or its mirrors.  If you install the
375	<filename>doc</filename> distribution set, you can use a Web
376	browser to read the Handbook and FAQ locally.</para>
377
378      <para>A number of on-line books and articles, also maintained by
379        the &os; Project, cover more-specialized, &os;-related topics.
380        This material spans a wide range of topics, from effective use
381        of the mailing lists, to dual-booting &os; with other
382        operating systems, to guidelines for new committers.  Like the
383        Handbook and FAQ, these documents are available from the &os;
384        Documentation Page or in the <filename>doc</filename>
385        distribution set.</para>
386
387      <para>A listing of other books and documents about &os; can be
388        found in the <ulink
389        url="http://www.FreeBSD.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/bibliography.html">bibliography</ulink>
390        of the &os; Handbook.  Because of &os;'s strong UNIX heritage,
391        many other articles and books written for UNIX systems are
392        applicable as well, some of which are also listed in the
393        bibliography.</para>
394    </sect2>
395  </sect1>
396
397  <sect1>
398    <title>Acknowledgments</title>
399
400    <para>&os; represents the cumulative work of many hundreds, if not
401      thousands, of individuals from around the world who have worked
402      countless hours to bring about this &release.type;.  For a
403      complete list of &os; developers and contributors, please see
404      <ulink
405      url="http://www.FreeBSD.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/articles/contributors/"><quote>Contributors
406      to FreeBSD</quote></ulink> on the &os; Web site or any of its
407      mirrors.</para>
408
409    <para>Special thanks also go to the many thousands of &os; users
410      and testers all over the world, without whom this &release.type;
411      simply would not have been possible.</para>
412  </sect1>
413</article>
414
415<!-- 
416     Local Variables:
417     mode: sgml
418     sgml-indent-data: t
419     sgml-omittag: nil
420     sgml-always-quote-attributes: t
421     End:
422-->
423