Archive for the ‘BSD’ Category
Wednesday, February 27th, 2008
"The Complete FreeBSD'' includes standard printing features such as:
Text of varied size and font to indicate specific meanings. This ASCII versionmcan't reproduce them. This will make it very hard to read. See the discussion on page xxxii to see how much difference this makes.
Illustrations such as screen images. I have ...
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Wednesday, February 27th, 2008
"The Complete FreeBSD'' includes standard printing features such as:
Text of varied size and font to indicate specific meanings. This ASCII versionmcan't reproduce them. This will make it very hard to read. See the discussion on page xxxii to see how much difference this makes.
Illustrations such as screen images. I have ...
Posted in BSD | No Comments »
Thursday, December 27th, 2007
FreeBSD is a high-performance operating system derived from the Berkeley Software Distribution, or BSD, the version of UNIX developed at the University of California at Berkeley between 1975 and 1993. FreeBSD is not a UNIX clone. Historically and technically, it has greater rights than UNIX System V to be called ...
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Friday, July 20th, 2007
Synopsis
FreeBSD is provided with a text-based, easy to use installation program called Sysinstall. This is the default installation program for FreeBSD, although vendors are free to provide their own installation suite if they wish. This chapter describes how to use Sysinstall to install FreeBSD.
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Friday, July 20th, 2007
Packet Filter (from here on referred to as PF) is OpenBSD's system for filtering TCP/IP traffic and doing Network Address Translation. PF is also capable of normalizing and conditioning TCP/IP traffic and providing bandwidth control and packet prioritization. PF has been a part of the GENERIC OpenBSD kernel since OpenBSD ...
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Tuesday, July 17th, 2007
This FAQ is supplemental documentation to the man pages, available both in the installed system and online. The FAQ covers the active release of OpenBSD, currently v3.5. There are likely features and changes to features in the development version (-current) version
of OpenBSD that are not covered in this FAQ.
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Monday, July 16th, 2007
This guide describes the installation and the configuration of the NetBSD operating system. It addresses mainly people coming from other operating systems in hope of being useful for the solution of the many small problems found when one starts using a new tool. This guide is not a Unix tutorial: ...
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Monday, July 16th, 2007
Introduction
Welcome to Absolute BSD! This book is a one-stop shop for new UNIX administrators who want to build, configure, and manage dedicated FreeBSD servers. It will also be useful for those folks who want to run FreeBSD on their desktop or combined desktop/server systems.
By the time you finish this book, ...
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