From cgd@agate.berkeley.edu Sat May 14 01:50:48 1994 Path: sran230.sra.co.jp!sranhd.sra.co.jp!sranha.sra.co.jp!news.iij.ad.jp!uunet!MathWorks.Com!news.duke.edu!news-feed-1.peachnet.edu!emory!swrinde!ihnp4.ucsd.edu!agate!agate!usenet From: cgd@agate.berkeley.edu (Chris G. Demetriou) Newsgroups: comp.os.386bsd.announce Subject: Announcing FreeBSD 1.1 RELEASE Followup-To: poster Date: 6 May 1994 13:41:32 -0700 Organization: Walnut Creek CD-ROM Lines: 187 Approved: 386bsd-announce-request@agate.berkeley.edu Message-ID: <2qea1s$mk7@agate.berkeley.edu> NNTP-Posting-Host: agate.berkeley.edu Keywords: FreeBSD release Cc: The FreeBSD team is very pleased to announce FreeBSD 1.1 Release, our second full distribution of the FreeBSD Operating System. FreeBSD 1.1 represents a milestone in our free software efforts, both technically and legally. For quite some time, the future of BSD has been somewhat in doubt due to the UCB/USL lawsuit, and all Net/2 derived distributions have rested on uncertain legal ground. With the resolution of the lawsuit, and subsequent clarification and agreements >from USL on our distribution terms, we can bring you this distribution without legal ambiguity, and with clear plans for a fully unencumbered future. Technically, FreeBSD 1.1 offers much over FreeBSD 1.0.2. Here are some of the more significant new features added since 1.0.2: o The Virtual Memory system has undergone very significant improvement. Performance on "low memory" (4MB) machines should now be quite reasonable, and interactive performance on all machine types has been vastly improved. o "Sun style" shared libraries. o Support for QIC-40 and QIC-80 tapes. o Much better floppy support (can format floppies, use different densities easily, etc). o The Mitsumi CD-ROM is now fully supported. o More ethernet cards supported (WD8013W, WD8003W, WD8003EB, 3C509, Toshiba, SMC Ultra). o Ability to boot FreeBSD machines diskless from a fileserver. o SYSV IPC, messaging, and semaphore support. o Support for Yellow Pages. o /proc filesystem. o New SCSI system. o Support for primitive Windows emulation (WINE). o Many many user suggested enhancements for improving system messages, debugging support, documentation, etc. o Too many bug fixes and miscellaneous enhancements to mention. Much more detail on all of this is provided in the file `/usr/src/sys/doc/Changes', which you are encouraged to examine. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS --------------------- Q. WHAT IS THE FUTURE OF FREEBSD? A. Due to our agreements with USL, and the new legal clarification of Net/2's status, FreeBSD 1.1 will be the LAST Net/2 based release of FreeBSD. Subsequent releases of FreeBSD will based on the BSD 4.4 LITE code, with all future releases of FreeBSD being completely `unencumbered'. We have been allowed to distribute FreeBSD 1.1 as one last `encumbered but legal' distribution, and users may continue to use it freely until our next release. Those interested in producing new distributions of FreeBSD, commercial or otherwise, should, however, consult with both us and USL before taking any such action (this does not include merely making the standard release available by ftp or otherwise non-commercially on the net). We would nonetheless advise that anyone considering such things wait for our next release, since it will be possible to redistribute it with no stipulations on redistribution (commercial or otherwise) whatsoever. People who are interested in knowing more about (or, even better, participating in) the process of moving to 4.4 LITE are encouraged to write to us at: freebsd-hackers@freefall.cdrom.com We would also like to take this opportunity to encourage all interested parties, both private and corporate, to join us in helping to make FreeBSD the kind of robust, standards-driven, highly featureful and (above all) freely available operating system we feel the UNIX world needs to make UNIX a truly open solution for the future. The 4.4 LITE integration task ahead of us promises great rewards but will also require significant effort. Since we are an all-volunteer effort, your assistance is not only highly appreciated, but very necessary to the future success of FreeBSD. Please contact us! Those with code or programmer time to offer (especially in the commercial sector) are most strongly encouraged. Q. HOW DO I UPGRADE FROM 1.0.2? A. Given that 1.1 represents a MAJOR upgrade over 1.0, we cannot provide a binary upgrade strategy (it would be larger than the entire release!) and must regrettably make the same stipulation that the "big boys" do, namely, `please back up your user files and reinstall.' That said, if you've got space for the _source distribution_ then you can skip grabbing the 1.1 binary distribution altogether and simply use the upgrade script provided to fully upgrade to 1.1 from source. This is the easiest way of going about it if you've got the disk space to spare. If you've installed an earlier BETA or GAMMA release of FreeBSD 1.1, it's a significantly easier upgrade and source patches are (or will be shortly) provided on network sites where FreeBSD 1.1 is distributed. Q. WHERE CAN I OBTAIN FREEBSD FROM THE NET? A. As always, you may grab the release from: freebsd.cdrom.com:~ftp/pub/FreeBSD/FreeBSD-1.1-RELEASE However, I'd like to STRONGLY urge you to look on one of the mirror sites first! Our poor machine is sitting at the end of a T1 line and tends to bog down rather badly when too many folks try to ftp to it at the same time. The FreeBSD release is being mirrored at the following locations, and if you don't see the RELEASE bits there yet, please allow some time to elapse for the mirror to properly grab it and try again. FREEBSD MIRROR SITES -------------------- Country Site/Directory/Maintainer ======= ========================================================= Austria ftp.tu-graz.ac.at:/pub/FreeBSD Finland ftp.funet.fi:/pub/unix/FreeBSD France ftp.ibp.fr:/pub/FreeBSD Germany ftp.informatik.tu-muenchen.de:/pub/comp/os/bsd/FreeBSD Germany ftp.uni-duisburg.de:/pub/unix/FreeBSD Germany gil.physik.rwth-aachen.de:/pub/FreeBSD Hong Kong ftp.cs.cuhk.hk:/pub/FreeBSD Israel orgchem.weizmann.ac.il:/pub/FreeBSD Netherlands ftp.nl.net:/pub/os/FreeBSD Russia ftp.kiae.su:/FreeBSD UK src.doc.ic.ac.uk:/packages/FreeBSD USA gatekeeper.dec.com:/pub/BSD/FreeBSD USA freebsd.uml.edu:/FreeBSD USA wuarchive.wustl.edu:/systems/unix/FreeBSD You will also want to grab a copy of the new FAQ, the most up-to-date copy of which is always in: freebsd.cdrom.com:~ftp/pub/FreeBSD/FAQ This contains very useful information about our mailing lists, hardware supported and a host of other things. As always, we hope you enjoy FreeBSD as much as we have enjoyed producing it! The FreeBSD Team