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Preface
Intended
Audience
The FreeBSD newcomer will find that the first section of this book guides the user
through the FreeBSD installation process and gently introduces the concepts and
conventions that underpin UNIX®. Working through this
section requires little more than the desire to explore, and the ability to take on board
new concepts as they are introduced.
Once you have travelled this far, the second, far larger, section of the Handbook is a
comprehensive reference to all manner of topics of interest to FreeBSD system
administrators. Some of these chapters may recommend that you do some prior reading, and
this is noted in the synopsis at the beginning of each chapter.
For a list of additional sources of information, please see Appendix B.
Changes from
the First Edition
This second edition is the culmination of over two years of work by the dedicated
members of the FreeBSD Documentation Project. The following are the major changes in this
new edition:
-
A complete Index has been added.
-
All ASCII figures have been replaced by graphical diagrams.
-
A standard synopsis has been added to each chapter to give a quick summary of what
information the chapter contains, and what the reader is expected to know.
-
The content has been logically reorganized into three parts: ``Getting Started'',
``System Administration'', and ``Appendices''.
-
Chapter 2 (``Installing FreeBSD'') was completely rewritten
with many screenshots to make it much easier for new users to grasp the text.
-
Chapter 3 (``UNIX Basics'')
has been expanded to contain additional information about processes, daemons, and
signals.
-
Chapter 4 (``Installing Applications'') has been expanded to
contain additional information about binary package management.
-
Chapter 5 (``The X Window System'') has been completely
rewritten with an emphasis on using modern desktop technologies such as KDE and GNOME on XFree86™ 4.X.
-
Chapter 7 (``The FreeBSD Booting Process'') has been
expanded.
-
Chapter 13 (``Storage'') has been written from what used to
be two separate chapters on ``Disks'' and ``Backups''. We feel that the topics are easier
to comprehend when presented as a single chapter. A section on RAID (both hardware and
software) has also been added.
-
Chapter 18 (``Serial Communications'') has been
completely reorganized and updated for FreeBSD 4.X/5.X.
-
Chapter 19 (``PPP and SLIP'') has been substantially
updated.
-
Many new sections have been added to Chapter 20
(``Advanced Networking'').
-
Chapter 21 (``Electronic Mail'') has been expanded to include
more information about configuring sendmail.
-
Chapter 23 (``Linux Compatibility'') has been expanded to
include information about installing Oracle® and SAP® R/3®.
-
The following new topics are covered in this second edition:
Organization
of This Book
This book is split into three logically distinct sections. The first section, Getting Started, covers the installation
and basic usage of FreeBSD. It is expected that the reader will follow these chapters in
sequence, possibly skipping chapters covering familiar topics. The second section, System Administration, covers a broad
collection of subjects that are of interest to more advanced FreeBSD users. Each section
begins with a succinct synopsis that describes what the chapter covers and what the
reader is expected to already know. This is meant to allow the casual reader to skip
around to find chapters of interest. The third section contains appendices of reference
information.
- Chapter 1,
Introduction
-
Introduces FreeBSD to a new user. It describes the history of the FreeBSD Project, its
goals and development model.
- Chapter 2,
Installation
-
Walks a user through the entire installation process. Some advanced installation
topics, such as installing through a serial console, are also covered.
- Chapter 3, UNIX Basics
-
Covers the basic commands and functionality of the FreeBSD operating system. If you
are familiar with Linux or another flavor of UNIX then you
can probably skip this chapter.
- Chapter 4,
Installing Applications
-
Covers the installation of third-party software with both FreeBSD's innovative ``Ports
Collection'' and standard binary packages.
- Chapter 5, The X
Window System
-
Describes the X Window System in general and using XFree86 on FreeBSD in particular. Also describes common
desktop environments such as KDE and GNOME.
- Chapter
6, Configuration and Tuning
-
Describes the parameters available for system administrators to tune a FreeBSD system
for optimum performance. Also describes the various configuration files used in FreeBSD
and where to find them.
- Chapter 7, Booting
Process
-
Describes the FreeBSD boot process and explains how to control this process with
configuration options.
- Chapter 8, Users
and Basic Account Management
-
Describes the creation and manipulation of user accounts. Also discusses resource
limitations that can be set on users and other account management tasks.
- Chapter 9,
Configuring the FreeBSD Kernel
-
Explains why you might need to configure a new kernel and provides detailed
instructions for configuring, building, and installing a custom kernel.
- Chapter 10,
Security
-
Describes many different tools available to help keep your FreeBSD system secure,
including Kerberos, IPsec, OpenSSH, and network firewalls.
- Chapter 12,
Printing
-
Describes managing printers on FreeBSD, including information about banner pages,
printer accounting, and initial setup.
- Chapter 13,
Storage
-
Describes how to manage storage media and filesystems with FreeBSD. This includes
physical disks, RAID arrays, optical and tape media, memory-backed disks, and network
filesystems.
- Chapter 14,
Vinum
-
Describes how to use Vinum, a logical volume manager which provides device-independent
logical disks, and software RAID-0, RAID-1 and RAID-5.
- Chapter 15,
Localization
-
Describes how to use FreeBSD in languages other than English. Covers both system and
application level localization.
- Chapter 16,
Desktop Applications
-
Lists some common desktop applications, such as web browsers and productivity suites,
and describes how to install them on FreeBSD.
- Chapter 17,
Multimedia
-
Shows how to set up sound and video playback support for your system. Also describes
some sample audio and video applications.
- Chapter 18,
Serial Communications
-
Explains how to connect terminals and modems to your FreeBSD system for both dial in
and dial out connections.
- Chapter
19, PPP and SLIP
-
Describes how to use PPP, SLIP, or PPP over Ethernet to connect to remote systems with
FreeBSD.
- Chapter
20, Advanced Networking
-
Describes many networking topics, including sharing an Internet connection with other
computers on your LAN, using network filesystems, sharing account information via NIS,
setting up a name server, and much more.
- Chapter 21,
Electronic Mail
-
Explains the different components of an email server and dives into simple
configuration topics for the most popular mail server software: sendmail.
- Chapter
22, The Cutting Edge
-
Explains the differences between FreeBSD-STABLE, FreeBSD-CURRENT, and FreeBSD
releases. Describes which users would benefit from tracking a development system and
outlines that process.
- Chapter 23,
Linux Binary Compatibility
-
Describes the Linux compatibility features of FreeBSD. Also provides detailed
installation instructions for many popular Linux applications such as Oracle, SAP R/3, and Mathematica®.
- Appendix A,
Obtaining FreeBSD
-
Lists different sources for obtaining FreeBSD media on CDROM or DVD as well as
different sites on the Internet that allow you to download and install FreeBSD.
- Appendix
B, Bibliography
-
This book touches on many different subjects that may leave you hungry for a more
detailed explanation. The bibliography lists many excellent books that are referenced in
the text.
- Appendix C,
Resources on the Internet
-
Describes the many forums available for FreeBSD users to post questions and engage in
technical conversations about FreeBSD.
- Appendix D, PGP
Keys
-
Lists the PGP fingerprints of several FreeBSD Developers.
Conventions used in
this book
To provide a consistent and easy to read text, several conventions are followed
throughout the book.
Typographic Conventions
- Italic
-
An italic font is used for
filenames, URLs, emphasized text, and the first usage of technical terms.
- Monospace
-
A monospaced font is used for error messages, commands,
environment variables, names of ports, hostnames, user names, group names, device names,
variables, and code fragments.
- Bold
-
A bold font is used for applications, commands, and
keys.
User Input
Keys are shown in bold to stand out from other text. Key
combinations that are meant to be typed simultaneously are shown with `+' between the keys, such as:
Ctrl+Alt+Del
Meaning the user should type the Ctrl, Alt,and Del keys at the same time.
Keys that are meant to be typed in sequence will be separated with commas, for
example:
Ctrl+X, Ctrl+S
Would mean that the user is expected to type the Ctrl and X keys simultaneously and then to type the Ctrl
and S keys simultaneously.
Examples
Examples starting with E:\> indicate a MS-DOS® command. Unless otherwise noted, these commands may
be executed from a ``Command Prompt'' window in a modern Microsoft® Windows®
environment.
E:\> tools\fdimage floppies\kern.flp A:
Examples starting with # indicate a command that must be
invoked as the superuser in FreeBSD. You can login as root to
type the command, or login as your normal account and use su(1) to gain
superuser privileges.
# dd if=kern.flp of=/dev/fd0
Examples starting with % indicate a command that should be
invoked from a normal user account. Unless otherwise noted, C-shell syntax is used for
setting environment variables and other shell commands.
% top
Acknowledgments
The book you are holding represents the efforts of many hundreds of people around the
world. Whether they sent in fixes for typos, or submitted complete chapters, all the
contributions have been useful.
Several companies have supported the development of this document by paying authors to
work on it full-time, paying for publication, etc. In particular, BSDi (subsequently
acquired by Wind River Systems) paid
members of the FreeBSD Documentation Project to work on improving this book full time
leading up to the publication of the first printed edition in March 2000 (ISBN
1-57176-241-8). Wind River Systems then paid several additional authors to make a number
of improvements to the print-output infrastructure and to add additional chapters to the
text. This work culminated in the publication of the second printed edition in November
2001 (ISBN 1-57176-303-1).
This, and other documents, can be downloaded from ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.org/pub/FreeBSD/doc/.
For questions about FreeBSD, read the documentation before contacting <questions@FreeBSD.org>.
For questions about this documentation, e-mail <doc@FreeBSD.org>.
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