FreeBSD Handbook
The FreeBSD Documentation Project
July 1998
Welcome to FreeBSD! This handbook covers the installation and day
to day use of FreeBSD Release 2.2.8.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 FreeBSD documentation
project mailing list <freebsd-doc@FreeBSD.ORG>.
The latest version of this document is always available from the FreeBSD
World Wide Web server. It may also be downloaded in a variety of formats
and compression options from the FreeBSD
FTP server or one of the numerous mirror
sites. You may also want to Search
the Handbook.
Part 1:
Getting Started
-
1.1. FreeBSD
in a Nutshell
-
1.2. A
Brief History of FreeBSD
-
1.3. FreeBSD
Project Goals
-
1.4. The
FreeBSD Development Model
-
1.5. About
the Current Release
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2.1. Supported
Configurations
-
2.2. Preparing
for the Installation
-
2.3. Installing
FreeBSD
-
2.4. MS-DOS
User's Questions and Answers
-
3.1. The
Online Manual
-
3.2. GNU
Info Files
-
4.1. Why
Have a Ports Collection?
-
4.2. How
Does the Ports Collection Work?
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4.3. Getting
a FreeBSD Port
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4.4. Skeletons
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4.5. What
to do when a port does not work.
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4.6. Some
Questions and Answers
-
4.7. Making
a port yourself
Part 2:
System Administration
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5.1. Why
Build a Custom Kernel?
-
5.2. Building
and Installing a Custom Kernel
-
5.3. The
Configuration File
-
5.4. Making
Device Nodes
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5.5. If
Something Goes Wrong
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6.1. DES,
MD5, and Crypt
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6.2. S/Key
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6.3. Kerberos
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6.4. Firewalls
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7.1. What
the Spooler Does
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7.2. Why
You Should Use the Spooler
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7.3. Setting
Up the Spooling System
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7.4. Simple
Printer Setup
-
7.5. Using
Printers
-
7.6. Advanced
Printer Setup
-
7.7. Alternatives
to the Standard Spooler
-
7.8. Acknowledgments
-
8.1. Using
sysinstall
-
8.2. Using
command line utilities
-
8.3. *
Non-traditional Drives
-
9.1. *
What about backups to floppies?
-
9.2. Tape
Media
-
9.3. Backup
Programs
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10.1. Configuring
Your System to Enable Disk Quotas
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10.2. Setting
Quota Limits
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10.3. Checking
Quota Limits and Disk Usage
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10.4. *
Quotas over NFS
-
12.1. Resources
on the Internet
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12.2. Sample
Configurations
-
12.3. Core/Processing
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12.4. Input/Output
Devices
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12.5. Storage
Devices
-
12.6. *
Other
-
13.1. Russian
Language (KOI8-R encoding)
-
13.2. German
Language (ISO 8859-1)
Part 3:
Network Communications
-
14.1. Serial
Basics
-
14.2. Terminals
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14.3. Dialin
Service
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14.4. Dialout
Service
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15.1. Setting
up User PPP
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15.2. Setting
up Kernel PPP
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15.3. Setting
up a SLIP Client
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15.4. Setting
up a SLIP Server
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16.1. Gateways
and Routes
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16.2. NFS
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16.3. Diskless
Operation
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16.4. ISDN
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17.1. Basic
Information
-
17.2. Configuration
-
17.3. FAQ
Part 4:
Advanced topics
-
18.1. Staying
Current with FreeBSD
-
18.2. Staying
Stable with FreeBSD
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18.3. Synchronizing
Source Trees over the Internet
-
18.4. Using
make world to rebuild your system
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19.1. What
Is Needed
-
19.2. How
to Contribute
-
19.3. Donors
Gallery
-
19.4. Derived
Software Contributors
-
19.5. Additional
FreeBSD Contributors
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19.6. 386BSD
Patch Kit Patch Contributors
-
20.1. MAINTAINER
on Makefiles
-
20.2. Contributed
Software
-
20.3. Shared
Libraries
-
21.1. What's
a Kernel Option, Anyway?
-
21.2. Now
What Do I Have to Do for it?
-
22.1. Debugging
a Kernel Crash Dump with KGDB
-
22.2. Post-mortem
Analysis of a Dump
-
22.3. On-line
Kernel Debugging Using DDB
-
22.4. On-line
Kernel Debugging Using Remote GDB
-
22.5. Debugging
a Console Driver
-
23.1. How
to Install the Linux Emulator
-
23.2. How
to Install Mathematica on FreeBSD
-
24.1. The
FreeBSD Booting Process
-
24.2. PC
Memory Utilization
-
24.3. DMA:
What it Is and How it Works
Part 5:
Appendices
-
25.1. CD-ROM
Publishers
-
25.2. FTP
Sites
-
25.3. CTM
Sites
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25.4. CVSup
Sites
-
25.5. AFS
Sites
-
26.1. Books
& Magazines Specific to FreeBSD
-
26.2. Users'
Guides
-
26.3. Administrators'
Guides
-
26.4. Programmers'
Guides
-
26.5. Operating
System Internals
-
26.6. Security
Reference
-
26.7. Hardware
Reference
-
26.8. UNIX
History
-
26.9. Magazines
and Journals
-
27.1. Mailing
lists
-
27.2. Usenet
newsgroups
-
27.3. World
Wide Web servers
-
28.1. The
FreeBSD Core Team
-
28.2. The
FreeBSD Developers
-
28.3. The
FreeBSD Documentation Project
-
28.4. Who
Is Responsible for What
-
29.1. Officers
-
29.2. Core
Team members
-
29.3. Developers
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Updated January 30, 1999