Page MenuHomeFreeBSD

D41963.id128393.diff
No OneTemporary

D41963.id128393.diff

diff --git a/website/content/en/advocacy/_index.adoc b/website/content/en/advocacy/_index.adoc
deleted file mode 100644
--- a/website/content/en/advocacy/_index.adoc
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,38 +0,0 @@
----
-title: "FreeBSD Advocacy Project"
-sidenav: about
----
-
-include::shared/en/urls.adoc[]
-
-= FreeBSD Advocacy Project
-
-Much of our success comes from users advocating to their friends, colleagues, and employers.
-
-This page provides links to more information to help you do this.
-
-== Web resources
-
-link:../press[FreeBSD in the press]
-
-link:../status[FreeBSD quarterly status reports]
-
-link:myths[Myths] – some of the misunderstandings about FreeBSD and other BSD projects.
-
-link:whyusefreebsd[Why] – some of the reasons that people give for choosing FreeBSD.
-
-== [#sites_using_freebsd]*Who uses it?*
-
-Organisations, products and services that make use of FreeBSD are https://freebsdfoundation.org/freebsd-project/what-is-freebsd/[shortlisted by the FreeBSD Foundation].
-
-== [#freebsd_conferences]*Conferences*
-
-https://asiabsdcon.org/[AsiaBSDCon] – the annual BSD conference held in Asia.
-
-https://www.bsdcan.org/[BSDCan] – the annual BSD conference held in Ottawa, Canada.
-
-https://www.eurobsdcon.org/[EuroBSDCon] – the annual BSD conference in Europe.
-
-== [#mailing_lists]*Mailing lists*
-
-https://lists.freebsd.org/subscription/freebsd-advocacy[freebsd-advocacy]
diff --git a/website/content/en/advocacy/myths.adoc b/website/content/en/advocacy/myths.adoc
deleted file mode 100644
--- a/website/content/en/advocacy/myths.adoc
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,206 +0,0 @@
----
-title: "FreeBSD Myths and Realities"
-sidenav: about
----
-
-include::shared/en/urls.adoc[]
-
-= FreeBSD Myths and Realities
-
-As the BSD projects (including DragonFlyBSD, FreeBSD, NetBSD, and OpenBSD) have grown in size, a number of persistent myths have grown up around them.
-Some of these are perpetuated by well meaning but misguided individuals, others by people pursuing their own agendas.
-
-This page aims to dispel those myths while remaining as dispassionate as possible.
-
-*Note:* Throughout this page, "*BSD" refers to all of the BSD Projects.
-Where a myth or response is specific to a particular project it is indicated as such.
-
-If you are aware of an omission or error on this page, please let the mailto:doc@freebsd.org[FreeBSD Documentation Project mailing list] know.
-
-== Some myths
-
-* <<closed-model,*BSD has a closed development model, it's more "Cathedral" than "Bazaar">>
-* <<own-distro,You can't make your own distributions or derivative works of *BSD>>
-* <<server,*BSD makes a great server, but a poor desktop>>
-* <<old-codebase,The *BSD codebase is old, outdated, and dying>>
-* <<bsd-war,The *BSD projects are at war with one another, splinter groups form each week>>
-* <<clustering,You can't cluster *BSD systems (parallel computing)>>
-* <<support,There's no commercial support for *BSD>>
-* <<applications,There are no applications for *BSD>>
-* <<beats,*BSD is better than (some other system)>>
-* <<beaten,(some other system) is better than *BSD>>
-
-[[closed-model]]
-=== Myth: *BSD has a closed development model, it's more "Cathedral" than "Bazaar"
-
-Eric Raymond wrote an influential paper, http://www.catb.org/~esr/writings/cathedral-bazaar/["The Cathedral and the Bazaar"] in which the Linux development model (and the model Eric used for `fetchmail`) is held up as an example of how to do "open" development.
-By contrast, the model employed by *BSD is often characterized as closed.
-
-The implicit value judgment is that "bazaar" (open) is good, and "cathedral" (closed) is bad.
-
-If anything, *BSD's development model is probably more akin to the "bazaar" that Eric describes than either Linux or `fetchmail`.
-
-Consider the following;
-
-* *All the *BSD projects:* The current, bleeding edge source code for FreeBSD, NetBSD, and OpenBSD is available for anyone to download from the Internet, 24 hours a day. You don't need to wait for someone else to roll a release.
-+
-*FreeBSD:* An installable snapshot of the current progress is made weekly. These snapshots can be installed exactly like an ordinary release, and do not require installation over an existing system.
-+
-*OpenBSD:* Installable snapshots are generated daily and if Theo thinks they are good enough, he uploads them to the mirrors.
-+
-Contrast this with Linux, where new kernel distributions are made available on an ad-hoc basis, and where the frequency of each Linux distribution release is at the whim of the individual vendor.
-+
-There's none of the Linux fanfare every time a new kernel is released, simply because for most *BSD users it is an every day event.
-* Anyone can submit patches, bug reports, documentation, and other contributions. They can do this by using a web based interface.
-+
-Pointers to this system litter the documentation.
-* Not everyone can commit code changes to the *BSD code. You need to be a _committer_ first. Typically, people are offered "commit privs" after they have made a few well-thought out submissions to the project using Bugzilla or similar.
-+
-This is identical to the Linux mechanism.
-Only one person is (notionally) allowed to change the Kernel, Linus.
-But specific areas (such as the networking code) are delegated to other people.
-+
-_Aside: Nik (nik@FreeBSD.org) is a case in point.
-After making several submissions to the FreeBSD Documentation Project and web pages, he was offered "commit privs" so that he did not have to keep bothering other committers to commit the changes.
-He never had to ask for them, they were freely given._
-
-'''
-
-[[own-distro]]
-=== Myth: You cannot make your own distributions or derivative works of *BSD
-
-You can.
-You just need to say in the documentation and source files where the code is derived from.
-Multiple derivative projects exist:
-
-* http://www.dragonflybsd.org/[DragonflyBSD] started as a code fork from FreeBSD 4.X, but it has since its own user community and development goals.
-* https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Gentoo_FreeBSD[Gentoo/FreeBSD] is an effort by the Gentoo Project to port their complete administration facilities to take advantage of the reliable FreeBSD kernel and userland. This project is purely incomplete and experimental.
-* link:{nanobsd}[NanoBSD] is another project to produce reduced versions of FreeBSD to put it on a Compact Flash card or other mass storage. It is also a part of the FreeBSD source tree, see /usr/src/tools/tools/nanobsd.
-* https://nomadbsd.org[NomadBSD] is a persistent live system for USB flash drives, based on FreeBSD. Together with automatic hardware detection and setup, it is configured to be used as a desktop system that works out of the box, but can also be used for data recovery, for educational purposes, or to test FreeBSD's hardware compatibility
-* https://www.ghostbsd.org[GhostBSD] is derived from FreeBSD, uses the GTK environment to provide a beautiful looks and comfortable experience on the modern BSD platform offering a natural and native UNIX(R) work environment.
-* https://www.midnightbsd.org[MidnightBSD] is a FreeBSD derived operating system developed with desktop users in mind. It includes all the software you'd expect for your daily tasks: mail, web browsing, word processing, gaming, and much more.
-* http://www.pfsense.com[pfSense] is an open source firewall derived from the m0n0wall firewall system with several different goals and features, such as OpenBSD's Packet Filter (PF), FreeBSD 6.1, ALTQ support for excellent packet queuing and finally an integrated package management system for extending the environment with new features.
-* https://hardenedbsd.org[HardenedBSD] was Founded in 2014 by Oliver Pinter and Shawn Webb, HardenedBSD is a security-enhanced fork of FreeBSD. The HardenedBSD Project is implementing many exploit mitigation and security technologies on top of FreeBSD.
-* https://opnsense.org[OPNsense] started as a fork of pfSense© and m0n0wall in 2014, with its first official release in January 2015. The project has evolved very quickly while still retaining familiar aspects of both m0n0wall and pfSense. A strong focus on security and code quality drives the development of the project.
-* https://www.truenas.com/[TrueNAS] is a Network Attached Storage (NAS) software that shares and protects data from modern-day threats like ransomware and malware. TrueNAS makes it easy for users and client devices to access shared data through virtually any sharing protocol.
-* https://www.xigmanas.com/[XigmaNAS] is an embedded Open Source NAS (Network-Attached Storage) distribution based on FreeBSD.
-
-Similarly to DragonflyBSD, OpenBSD was not a standalone project, it started as a spinoff from the NetBSD project, and has since evolved its own distinctive approach.
-
-'''
-
-[[server]]
-=== Myth: *BSD makes a great server, but a poor (UNIX(R)) desktop
-
-*BSD makes a great server.
-It also makes a great desktop.
-Many of the requirements for a server (responsiveness under load, stability, effective use of system resources) are the same requirements as for a desktop machine.
-
-*BSD has access to the same desktop tools (KDE, GNOME, Firefox, windowmanagers) as Linux.
-And "office" applications such as LibreOffice suite work under *BSD too.
-
-'''
-
-[[old-codebase]]
-=== Myth: The BSD codebase is old, outdated, and dying
-
-While the BSD codebase is more than forty-four years old, it is neither outdated nor dying.
-Many professional users like the stability that years of testing has provided FreeBSD.
-A detailed timeline of the FreeBSD history can be checked in the link:https://freebsdfoundation.org/freebsd/timeline/[FreeBSD Foundation timeline].
-
-link:../../features/[Technological enhancements] continue to be added to *BSD.
-
-'''
-
-[[bsd-war]]
-=== Myth: The *BSD projects are at war with one another, splinter groups form each week
-
-No.
-While occasional advocacy may get a touch heated, the *BSD flavors continue to work with one another.
-FreeBSD's Alpha port was initially heavily based on the work done by the NetBSD team.
-Both NetBSD and OpenBSD used the FreeBSD ports collection to bootstrap their own port sets.
-FreeBSD and NetBSD both integrate security fixes first discovered by the OpenBSD team.
-
-The FreeBSD and NetBSD projects separated more than twenty years ago.
-OpenBSD and DragonflyBSD are the only new BSD projects to split off in the last twenty years.
-
-'''
-
-[[clustering]]
-=== Myth: You can't cluster *BSD systems (parallel computing)
-
-The following URLs should disprove this;
-
-* https://people.FreeBSD.org/~brooks/papers/bsdcon2003/fbsdcluster/ Brooks Davis's paper about the implementation of a FreeBSD cluster with more than 300 CPU's
-* http://www.openbsd.org/faq/pf/carp.html OpenBSD's Common Address Redundancy Protocol (CARP) to build redundant clusters at the level of the firewall
-* http://pf4freebsd.love2party.net/carp.html OpenBSD's CARP ported to FreeBSD
-
-Note, that mailto:freebsd-cluster@FreeBSD.org[freebsd-cluster] mailing list is available for further discussion about clustering of FreeBSD.
-
-'''
-
-[[support]]
-=== Myth: There's no commercial support for *BSD
-
-*FreeBSD:* The link:../../commercial/consult_bycat/[FreeBSD Commercial Vendors Page] lists companies that offer commercial support for FreeBSD.
-
-The http://www.freebsdmall.com[FreeBSD Mall] also offer commercial support, along with shirts, hats, books, software, and promotional items.
-
-*OpenBSD:* The http://www.openbsd.org/support.html[OpenBSD Commercial Consulting Page] lists companies that offer commercial support for OpenBSD.
-
-'''
-
-[[applications]]
-=== Myth: There are no applications for *BSD
-
-The free software community started running on predominantly BSD systems (SunOS and similar).
-*BSD users can generally compile software written for these systems without needing to make any changes.
-
-In addition, each *BSD project uses a "ports" system to make the building of ported software much easier.
-
-*FreeBSD:* There are currently more than 30,000 applications ready to download and install in the FreeBSD ports collection.
-On i386 and AMD64, the Linux emulation layer will also run the vast majority of Linux applications.
-On the AMD64 architectures there is a compatibility layer to run 32-bit FreeBSD binaries.
-
-*NetBSD:* The Linux emulation layer will run the vast majority of i386 Linux applications, and the majority of SunOS4 applications can be run on a SPARCStation.
-
-*OpenBSD:* There are currently more than 8000 applications ready to download and install in the OpenBSD ports collection.
-The Linux emulation layer will also run the vast majority of i386 Linux applications, and the majority of SunOS4 applications can be run on a SPARCStation.
-
-Both NetBSD and OpenBSD are able to use applications in FreeBSD's ports collection with minimal effort.
-Their lower number of ported applications reflects this.
-
-It is true that most companies when porting to PC Unix will choose Linux first.
-Fortunately, *BSD's Linux emulation layer will run these programs (Acrobat, StarOffice, Mathematica, WordPerfect, Quake, Intel ICC compiler, Compaq's Alpha compiler ...) with few, if any, problems.
-
-As a historical note, the first version of Netscape Navigator that ran on FreeBSD with Java support was the Linux version.
-These day you can also use a native FreeBSD version of Mozilla with a native Java plugin, all compiled conveniently from ports.
-
-'''
-
-[[beats]]
-=== Myth: *BSD is better than (insert other system)
-
-This is user opinion only.
-
-'''
-
-[[beaten]]
-=== Myth: (insert some other system) is better than *BSD
-
-This is user opinion only.
-
-'''
-
-== Contributors
-
-Members of the FreeBSD, NetBSD, and OpenBSD projects have contributed to this page;
-
-[cols="",]
-|===
-|Nik Clayton <nik@FreeBSD.org>
-|Jordan Hubbard <jkh@FreeBSD.org>
-|Ian F. Darwin <ian@DarwinSys.com>
-|Adrian Filipi-Martin <adrian@ubergeeks.com>
-|Tom Rhodes <trhodes@FreeBSD.org>
-|===
diff --git a/website/content/en/advocacy/whyusefreebsd.adoc b/website/content/en/advocacy/whyusefreebsd.adoc
deleted file mode 100644
--- a/website/content/en/advocacy/whyusefreebsd.adoc
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,82 +0,0 @@
----
-title: "FreeBSD Advocacy Project"
-sidenav: about
----
-
-= FreeBSD Advocacy Project
-
-== Why Choose FreeBSD?
-
-Why would you consider using FreeBSD? We think that there are lots of reasons. Here is a selection of reasons that some of our existing users gave for their choice of operating system.
-
-== The Community
-
-FreeBSD is a community-driven operating system despite it being to a partial degree sponsored corporately. FreeBSD has active mailing lists, forums, and IRC channels where experienced users and developers are always willing to help the less experienced.
-
-The community is largely driven by technology, not ideology, and is focused on building the best possible system and making FreeBSD as widely used as possible, not on pushing any other agendas.
-
-There is no dictator—benevolent or otherwise—for the project. The Core Team is elected and is nominally responsible for overseeing the goals of the project, but this is a very light touch. Core mediates disputes between developers, but rarely needs to take an active role in development, beyond their separate contributions as individual developers.
-
-== Stability
-
-Stability means many different things. FreeBSD very rarely crashes (and when it does it is usually due to hardware faults), but while that was a great boast a decade ago, now it is an expected feature for any operating system.
-
-Stability in FreeBSD means much more than that. It means that upgrading the system does not require upgrading the user. Configuration interfaces do change over time, but only when there is a good reason. If you learned how to use FreeBSD in 2000, most of your knowledge would still be relevant.
-
-Backwards compatibility is very important to the FreeBSD team, and any release in a major release series is expected to be able to run any code—including kernel modules—that ran on an earlier version. The entire base system is developed together, including the kernel, the core utilities, and the configuration system, so upgrades are usually painless. Included tools like mergemaster help update configuration files with little or no manual intervention.
-
-== Early Adoption and Collaboration With Other Projects
-
-FreeBSD has been one of the first adopters of the LLVM infrastructure, including the clang compiler and the libc++ stack. The entire FreeBSD system, including kernel and userspace, can build with clang, and from FreeBSD both clang and the permissively-licensed libc++ are included, giving a modern, BSD-licensed C++ stack. Several FreeBSD developers are also active contributors to LLVM, ensuring that both projects thrive together.
-
-This same collaboration works downstream, with projects like GhostBSD, MidnightBSD, NomadBSD and pfSense building on top of the FreeBSD base to provide desktop and firewall oriented distributions, respectively. These projects are not forks, they base their work on the latest version of FreeBSD and customize the system for specific uses.
-
-== Simple Configuration
-
-FreeBSD service initialization is very simple. Each service, whether part of the base system or installed from a port, comes with a script that is responsible for starting and stopping it (and often some other options). The /etc/rc.conf file contains a list of variables for enabling and configuring services. Want to enable ssh? Just add sshd_enable="YES" to your rc.conf file. This system makes it easy to see at a glance everything that will be started when your system boots.
-
-The rc system that reads this file understands dependencies between services and so can automatically launch them in parallel, or wait until one is finished before starting the things that it needs. You get all of the benefits of a modern configuration system, without a complex interface.
-
-== Ports
-
-The ports tree contains a large collection of third-party software, including older versions of some things where the userbase is divided about the benefits of upgrading, and a lot of niche programs. The chances are that anything you want to run which works on FreeBSD will be there.
-
-Unlike some other systems, FreeBSD maintains a clean division between the base system and third-party ports and packages. All third-party software goes in /usr/local, so if you want to repurpose a machine, it is trivial to simply delete all installed packages and then start installing the ones that you want.
-
-The pkg(8) tool makes working with binary packages even easier, although source installs are still supported for people who want the level of configurability that this implies.
-
-== Security
-
-Security is vital in any network-connected machine. FreeBSD provides a number of tools for ensuring that you can maintain a secure system, such as:
-
-* Jails, allowing you to run applications or entire systems in a sandbox that cannot access the rest of the system. With tools like ezjail and ZFS you can instantly create a new jail with a clone of an existing system, using a tiny amount of disk space, and run untrusted code inside it.
-* Mandatory Access Control, from the TrustedBSD project, allowing you to configure access control policies for all operating system resources.
-* Capsicum, from FreeBSD 9 onwards, allows developers to easily implement privilege separation, reducing the impact of compromised code.
-* The VuXML system for publishing vulnerabilities in ports, which integrates with tools such as pkg, so that your daily security email tells you about any known vulnerabilities in ported software.
-* Security event auditing, using the BSM standard.
-
-And, of course, all of the standard features that are expected from a modern UNIX(R) system including IPSec, SSH, and so on.
-
-== ZFS
-
-Cheap snapshots, clones, end-to-end checksums, deduplication, compression, and no need to decide partition sizes on install. Using ZFS for a few days makes going back to a more traditional volume manager painful. If you want to test something with ZFS, it is trivial to just create a snapshot and roll back if it didn't work.
-
-ZFS lets you clone an existing jail in under a second, no matter how big the jail itself is.
-
-== GEOM
-
-Even without ZFS, FreeBSD comes with a rich storage system. GEOM layers providers and consumers in arbitrary ways, allowing you to use two networked machines for high-availability storage, use your choice of RAID level, or add features like compression or encryption.
-
-== Working Sound
-
-FreeBSD 4.x introduced in-kernel sound mixing, so that multiple applications could play sound at the same time even with cheap sound cards with no hardware mixing support. FreeBSD 5.x automatically allocated new channels to applications, without any configuration.
-
-Now, FreeBSD has low-latency sound mixing with per-application volume controls and full support for the OSS 4 APIs out of the box. There is no need to configure a userspace sound daemon. The same audio APIs that were used a decade ago still work on FreeBSD, including some compatibility modes to allow applications that try to manipulate the global volume to only change their own. If you want to watch DVDs with 5.1 surround sound, just install your favourite media player and press play.
-
-== My System, How I Want It
-
-FreeBSD gives you an easy-to-use, working, UNIX(R)-like system. This base system can then be extended easily. If you want to run KDE or GNOME, then just install the metapackage for the version that you prefer. If you want a headless server, then it is equally easy to install the server tools that you want.
-
-It is easy to run the FreeBSD installer via a serial port and to configure the entire system from the terminal. It is also easy to install and use an existing desktop environment. The decisions about the kind of system you want to use are left to you.
-
-If you are deploying FreeBSD in a corporate environment, then it is very easy to customise both the base system and the set of installed packages for your specific requirements. The build system provides numerous tuneable variables allowing you to build exactly the base system that meets your needs.
diff --git a/website/content/en/developers/cvs.adoc b/website/content/en/developers/cvs.adoc
deleted file mode 100644
--- a/website/content/en/developers/cvs.adoc
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,26 +0,0 @@
----
-title: "Source code repositories"
-sidenav: developers
----
-
-= Source code repositories
-
-== Git
-
-https://git-scm.com/[Git] is the tool the FreeBSD Project uses for keeping its sources under control. Every change (with an accompanying log message explaining its purpose) is stored. It can be easily viewed from the web interface mentioned below.
-
-In December 2020, development of the base system migrated from Subversion to Git. The https://cgit.FreeBSD.org/src/[web interface] is available for browsing the repository.
-
-In December 2020, the FreeBSD Documentation Project moved from Subversion to Git. There is a https://cgit.FreeBSD.org/doc/[web interface] available for browsing the contents of the FreeBSD Documentation Project Git repository.
-
-In April 2021, the FreeBSD Ports tree has been moved from Subversion to Git. There is a https://cgit.FreeBSD.org/ports/[web interface] for browsing the repository.
-
-== Subversion
-
-https://subversion.apache.org/[Subversion] (SVN for short) is the legacy tool the FreeBSD Project used for keeping its sources under control. Every change (with an accompanying log message explaining its purpose) is stored. It can be easily viewed from the web interface mentioned below.
-
-In June 2008, development of the base system migrated from CVS to Subversion. Since December 2020, after development moved to Git, Subversion only receives translated commits from git2svn exporter in stable/11, stable/12 and supported release branches. The https://svnweb.FreeBSD.org/base/[web interface] is available for browsing the repository.
-
-In May 2012, the FreeBSD Documentation Project moved from CVS to Subversion. The doc subversion repository does not receive any further updates after the development moved from Subversion to Git since December 2020. There is a https://svnweb.FreeBSD.org/doc/[web interface] available for browsing the contents of the FreeBSD Documentation Project SVN repository.
-
-In July 2012, the FreeBSD Ports tree moved from CVS to Subversion. The ports subversion repository does not receive any further updates after the development moved from Subversion to Git since April 2021. There is a https://svnweb.FreeBSD.org/ports/[web interface] for browsing the repository.
diff --git a/website/content/en/docs/_index.adoc b/website/content/en/docs/_index.adoc
deleted file mode 100644
--- a/website/content/en/docs/_index.adoc
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,13 +0,0 @@
----
-title: "FreeBSD Documentation"
-sidenav: docs
----
-
-include::shared/en/urls.adoc[]
-
-= FreeBSD Documentation
-
-[.right]
-image::../gifs/doc.jpg[BSD daemon reading documentation,274,163]
-
-A wide variety of link:../docs/books/[documentation] is available for FreeBSD, on this web site, on other web sites, and available over the counter.
diff --git a/website/content/en/docs/books.adoc b/website/content/en/docs/books.adoc
deleted file mode 100644
--- a/website/content/en/docs/books.adoc
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,165 +0,0 @@
----
-title: "Books and Articles Online"
-sidenav: docs
----
-
-include::shared/en/urls.adoc[]
-
-= Books and Articles Online
-
-== On this site
-
-All the documentation on this site can be downloaded in a variety of different formats (HTML, Postscript, PDF, and more) and compression schemes (BZip2, Zip) from the https://download.FreeBSD.org/doc/[FreeBSD Download site].
-
-Archived copies of the FreeBSD documentation (articles, books, and textinfo manuals) are also available online at http://docs.FreeBSD.org/doc/.
-
-This documentation is provided and maintained by the link:https://www.FreeBSD.org/docproj[FreeBSD Documentation Project], and we are always looking for people to contribute new documentation and maintain existing documentation.
-
-Papers, presentations, and videos about FreeBSD are archived and catalogued on the https://papers.freebsd.org/[FreeBSD Papers] website.
-
-=== Books
-
-link:{dev-model}[A project model for the FreeBSD project] (dev-model) +
-A formal study of the organization of the FreeBSD project.
-
-link:{faq}[The FreeBSD FAQ] (faq) +
-Frequently Asked Questions, and answers, covering all aspects of FreeBSD.
-
-link:{handbook}[The FreeBSD Handbook] (handbook) +
-A constantly evolving, comprehensive resource for FreeBSD users.
-
-link:{developers-handbook}[The FreeBSD Developers' Handbook] (developers-handbook) +
-For people who want to develop software for FreeBSD (and not just people who are developing FreeBSD itself).
-
-link:{arch-handbook}[The FreeBSD Architecture Handbook] (arch-handbook) +
-For FreeBSD system developers. This book covers the architectural details of many important FreeBSD kernel subsystems.
-
-link:{porters-handbook}[The Porter's Handbook] (porters-handbook) +
-Essential reading if you plan on providing a port of a third party piece of software.
-
-link:{design-44bsd}[Chapter 2 of 'The Design and Implementation of the 4.4BSD Operating System'] (design-44bsd) +
-Donated by Addison-Wesley, provides a design overview of 4.4BSD, from which FreeBSD was originally derived.
-
-link:{fdp-primer}[The FreeBSD Documentation Project Primer for New Contributors] (fdp-primer) +
-Everything you need to know in order to start contributing to the FreeBSD Documentation Project.
-
-[[ARTICLES]]
-=== Articles
-
-link:{bsdl-gpl}[Why you should use a BSD style license for your Open Source Project] (bsdl-gpl) +
-Describes the benefits of releasing code under a BSD license.
-
-link:{building-products}[Building Products with FreeBSD] (building-products) +
-How FreeBSD can help you build a better product.
-
-link:{committers-guide}[The Committer's Guide] (committers-guide) +
-Introductory information for FreeBSD committers.
-
-link:{contributing}[Contributing to FreeBSD] (contributing) +
-How to contribute to the FreeBSD Project.
-
-link:{contributors}[The List of FreeBSD Contributors] (contributors) +
-A list of organizations and individuals who have helped enhance FreeBSD.
-
-link:{cups}[CUPS on FreeBSD] (cups) +
-How to setup CUPS with FreeBSD.
-
-link:{explaining-bsd}[Explaining BSD] (explaining-bsd) +
-An answer to the question "What is BSD?"
-
-link:{filtering-bridges}[Filtering Bridges] (filtering-bridges) +
-Configuring firewalls and filtering on FreeBSD hosts acting as bridges rather than routers.
-
-link:{fonts}[Fonts and FreeBSD] (fonts) +
-A description of the various font technologies in FreeBSD, and how to use them with different programs.
-
-link:{freebsd-questions}[How to get the best results from the FreeBSD-questions mailing list] (freebsd-questions) +
-Tips and tricks to help you maximize the chances of getting useful information from the -questions mailing list.
-
-link:{freebsd-update-server}[Build Your Own FreeBSD Update Server] (freebsd-update-server) +
-Using a FreeBSD Update server allows a system administrator to perform fast updates for a number of machines from a local mirror.
-
-link:{geom-class}[Writing a GEOM Class] (geom-class) +
-A guide to GEOM internals, and writing your own class.
-
-link:{gjournal-desktop}[Implementing UFS journaling on a desktop PC] (gjournal-desktop) +
-A guide to create UFS partitions configured with journaling for desktop use.
-
-link:{hubs}[Mirroring FreeBSD] (hubs) +
-The all in one guide for mirroring the FreeBSD website, FTP servers, and more.
-
-link:{ipsec-must}[Independent Verification of IPsec Functionality in FreeBSD] (ipsec-must) +
-A method for experimentally verifying IPsec functionality.
-
-link:{ldap-auth}[LDAP Authentication] (ldap-auth) +
-A practical guide about setting up an LDAP server on FreeBSD and how to use it for authenticating users.
-
-link:{leap-seconds}[FreeBSD Support for Leap Seconds] (leap-seconds) +
-A short description of how leap seconds are handled on FreeBSD.
-
-link:{linux-emulation}[Linux emulation in FreeBSD] (linux-emulation) +
-A technical description about the internals of the Linux emulation layer in FreeBSD.
-
-link:{linux-users}[FreeBSD Quickstart Guide for Linux Users] (linux-users) +
-An introductionary guide for the users that came from Linux.
-
-link:{mailing-list-faq}[Frequently Asked Questions About The FreeBSD Mailing Lists] (mailing-list-faq) +
-How to best use the mailing lists, such as how to help avoid frequently-repeated discussions.
-
-link:{nanobsd}[Introduction to NanoBSD] (nanobsd) +
-Information about the NanoBSD tools, which can be used to create FreeBSD system images for embedded applications, suitable for use on a Compact Flash card (or other mass storage medium).
-
-link:{new-users}[FreeBSD First Steps] (new-users) +
-For people coming to FreeBSD and UNIX(R) for the first time.
-
-link:{pam}[Pluggable Authentication Modules] (pam) +
-A guide to the PAM system and modules under FreeBSD.
-
-link:{pgpkeys}[OpenPGP Keys] (pgpkeys) +
-All of the OpenPGP keys for FreeBSD.
-
-link:{port-mentor-guidelines}[Port Mentor Guidelines] (port-mentor-guidelines) +
-Guidelines for new and/or potential port mentors and mentees.
-
-link:{pr-guidelines}[FreeBSD Problem Report Handling Guidelines] (pr-guidelines) +
-Recommended practices for handling FreeBSD problem reports.
-
-link:{problem-reports}[Writing FreeBSD Problem Reports] (problem-reports) +
-How to best formulate and submit a problem report to the FreeBSD Project.
-
-link:{rc-scripting}[Practical rc.d scripting in BSD] (rc-scripting) +
-A guide to writing new rc.d scripts and understanding those already written.
-
-link:{freebsd-releng}[FreeBSD Release Engineering] (freebsd-releng) +
-Describes the approach used by the FreeBSD release engineering team to make production quality releases of the FreeBSD Operating System. It describes the tools available for those interested in producing customized FreeBSD releases for corporate rollouts or commercial productization.
-
-link:{releng}[Legacy FreeBSD Release Engineering] (releng) +
-This paper describes the approach previously used by the FreeBSD release engineering team to make production quality releases of the FreeBSD Operating System.
-
-link:{remote-install}[Remote Installation of the FreeBSD Operating System without a Remote Console] (remote-install) +
-Describes the remote installation of the FreeBSD operating system when the console of the remote system is unavailable.
-
-link:{serial-uart}[Serial and UART devices] (serial-uart) +
-Detailed information about the use of serial ports on FreeBSD, including several multi-port serial cards.
-
-link:{solid-state}[FreeBSD and Solid State Devices] (solid-state) +
-The use of solid state disk devices in FreeBSD.
-
-link:{vinum}[The vinum Volume Manager] (vinum) +
-Using gvinum to create RAID arrays.
-
-link:{vm-design}[Design elements of the FreeBSD VM system] (vm-design) +
-An easy to follow description of the design of the FreeBSD virtual memory system.
-
-link:{freebsd-src-lsp}[Use Language Servers for Development in the FreeBSD Src Tree] (freebsd-src-lsp) +
-A guide about setting up a FreeBSD src tree with language servers performing source code indexing.
-
-== Articles on other web sites
-
-Various independent efforts have also produced a great deal of useful information about FreeBSD.
-
-* Niels Jorgensen has authored an academic study on the dynamics of the FreeBSD development process: http://www.ruc.dk/~nielsj/research/publications/freebsd.pdf["Putting it All in the Trunk, Incremental Software Development in the FreeBSD Open Source Project"] [Information Systems Journal (2001) 11, 321-336].
-* mailto:mckusick@mckusick.com[Kirk McKusick], one of the original architects of BSD at U.C. Berkeley, teaches two http://www.mckusick.com/courses/[4.4BSD Kernel Internals] courses using FreeBSD. For those unable to attend the courses in person, a video tape series is also now available.
-* http://software.intel.com/sites/default/files/profiling_debugging_freebsd_kernel_321772.pdf[Profiling and Debugging the FreeBSD Kernel]
-* http://software.intel.com/sites/default/files/debugging_buffer_overruns_322486.pdf[Debugging Buffer Overruns in the FreeBSD Kernel]
-* Appendix A from the college textbook _Operating Systems Concepts_ by Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne has been made available online in http://www.wiley.com/college/silberschatz6e/0471417432/pdf/bsd.pdf[PDF format]. The appendix is dedicated to FreeBSD and offers a good introduction to FreeBSD's internals.
diff --git a/website/content/en/docs/webresources.adoc b/website/content/en/docs/webresources.adoc
deleted file mode 100644
--- a/website/content/en/docs/webresources.adoc
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,42 +0,0 @@
----
-title: "Web Resources"
-sidenav: docs
----
-
-= Web Resources
-
-== In the real world...
-
-=== link:../../press/[FreeBSD in the Press]
-
-Articles in the press about FreeBSD.
-
-== Newsgroups
-
-The following newsgroups contain discussion pertinent to FreeBSD users:
-
-* link:news:comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.announce[comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.announce] (moderated)
-* link:news:comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.misc[comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.misc]
-* link:news:comp.unix.bsd.misc[comp.unix.bsd.misc]
-
-== Additional resources
-
-=== https://www.freebsdnews.com/[FreeBSDNews.com]
-
-FreeBSDNews.com is a blog providing the latest happenings in the FreeBSD community. The articles contain a mix of aggregated news, tutorials and similar.
-
-=== https://www.bsdnow.tv/[BSD Now]
-
-BSD Now is a weekly video podcast spreading the word about the BSD family of operating systems. The show provides an overview on recent developments, but also features interviews, tutorials and help on specific issues by its listeners.
-
-=== https://bsdmag.org/[BSD MAG]
-
-BSD MAG is devoted to BSD and open source solutions, targeting both beginners and experienced users. It is available for free and published on a monthly basis.
-
-=== https://cgit.freebsd.org/src/[The Source Code]
-
-If you like digging your fingers into source code, here is a hypertext version of the FreeBSD _kernel_ source.
-
-=== https://forums.FreeBSD.org[The FreeBSD Forums]
-
-The Official FreeBSD Forums, offering a forum dedicated to FreeBSD and FreeBSD aficionados.
diff --git a/website/content/en/gnome/_index.adoc b/website/content/en/gnome/_index.adoc
deleted file mode 100644
--- a/website/content/en/gnome/_index.adoc
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,44 +0,0 @@
----
-title: "The FreeBSD GNOME Project"
-sidenav: gnome
----
-
-include::shared/en/urls.adoc[]
-
-= The FreeBSD GNOME Project
-
-== What software does the GNOME Team maintain?
-
-The GNOME Team maintains the GNOME, MATE, and Cinnamon desktop environments.
-
-== What is GNOME?
-
-GNOME is a complete graphical desktop for X, including everything from a window manager to web browsers, audio players, office programs, graphical login programs and more.
-MATE is a continuation of the old GNOME 2 desktop environment.
-Cinnamon was originally a fork of GNOME 3's gnome-shell, but grew into its own desktop environment.
-
-== How to install these desktop environments?
-
-The Desktop Environment chapter of the link:{handbook}desktop[Handbook] has information on how to install GNOME, MATE and Cinnamon
-
-== State of the port:
-
-GNOME, MATE, and Cinnamon for FreeBSD are currently fully supported.
-
-== Resources
-
-* link:https://wiki.freebsd.org/Gnome[FreeBSD GNOME's wiki page]
-* link:https://www.gnome.org/[GNOME Project]
-* link:https://foundation.gnome.org/news/[GNOME Project news]
-* link:https://developer.gnome.org/[GNOME development platform]
-* link:https://planet.gnome.org/[Planet GNOME (blogs)]
-* link:https://mate-desktop.org/[MATE Project]
-* link:https://github.com/linuxmint/Cinnamon[Cinnamon Project]
-
-== Related Projects
-
-* link:https://www.kde.org/[KDE Project]
-* link:https://freebsd.kde.org/[KDE on FreeBSD]
-* link:https://www.xfce.org/[Xfce Project]
-* link:https://wiki.freebsd.org/Xfce[Xfce on FreeBSD]
-* link:http://www.opengroup.org/cde/[CDE]
diff --git a/website/content/en/gnome/contact.adoc b/website/content/en/gnome/contact.adoc
deleted file mode 100644
--- a/website/content/en/gnome/contact.adoc
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,54 +0,0 @@
----
-title: "FreeBSD GNOME Project: Contact Us"
-sidenav: gnome
----
-
-include::shared/en/urls.adoc[]
-
-= FreeBSD GNOME Project: Contact Us
-
-== Contacts
-
-Any questions regarding GNOME on FreeBSD should be addressed to the mailto:freebsd-gnome@FreeBSD.org[freebsd-gnome] mailing list. All FreeBSD GNOME users, as well as those who wish to help improve and maintain GNOME on FreeBSD, should feel free to link:{handbook}#ERESOURCES-SUBSCRIBE[join the mailing list]. You do not have to subscribe if you just want to report a problem or ask for help -- just send your message to freebsd-gnome@FreeBSD.org.
-
-All relevant discussion should be carried out in the mailing list, unless there is a good reason for contacting one of the developers directly. The people involved in the FreeBSD GNOME Project are:
-
-image::../../gifs/gnome/gnome.png[bland]
-*Alexander Nedotsukov* (bland@FreeBSD.org) +
-IRC (FreeNode): bland
-
-image::../../gifs/gnome/gnome.png[avl]
-*Alexander Logvinov* (avl@FreeBSD.org)
-
-image::../../gifs/gnome/mezz.jpg[mezz]
-*Jeremy Messenger* (mezz@FreeBSD.org) +
-IRC (FreeNode): mezz7
-
-image::../../gifs/gnome/marcus.jpg[marcus]
-*Joe Marcus Clarke* (marcus@FreeBSD.org) +
-WWW: http://www.marcuscom.com/[www.marcuscom.com] +
-AIM: FreeBSDMarcus +
-IRC (FreeNode): FreeBSDMarcus
-
-image::../../gifs/gnome/kwm.jpg[kwm]
-*Koop Mast* (kwm@FreeBSD.org) +
-IRC (FreeNode): kwm
-
-image::../../gifs/gnome/ahze.jpg[ahze]
-*Michael Johnson* (ahze@FreeBSD.org) +
-IRC (FreeNode): ahze
-
-FreeBSD GNOME developers can also be found lurking on IRC, in #freebsd-gnome on FreeNode (irc.freenode.net).
-
-The FreeBSD GNOME team alumni are:
-
-* mailto:adamw@FreeBSD.org[Adam Weinberger]
-* mailto:ade@FreeBSD.org[Ade Lovett]
-* mailto:dima@FreeBSD.org[Dima Ruban]
-* mailto:eivind@FreeBSD.org[Eivind Eklund]
-* Jean-Yves Lefort
-* mailto:olgeni@FreeBSD.org[Jimmy Olgeni]
-* mailto:jseger@FreeBSD.org[Justin M. Seger]
-* mailto:sobomax@FreeBSD.org[Maxim Sobolev]
-* mailto:pav@FreeBSD.org[Pav Lucistnik]
-* mailto:vanilla@FreeBSD.org[Vanilla I. Shu]
diff --git a/website/content/en/gnome/screenshots.adoc b/website/content/en/gnome/screenshots.adoc
deleted file mode 100644
--- a/website/content/en/gnome/screenshots.adoc
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,23 +0,0 @@
----
-title: "FreeBSD GNOME Project: Screenshots"
-sidenav: gnome
----
-
-= FreeBSD GNOME Project: Screenshots
-
-Here are some examples of GNOME running on FreeBSD.
-Click on the thumbnails below to see a larger image.
-
-////
-Newer GNOME versions go at the top; newer screenshots go at the top.
-////
-
-== GNOME 42
-
-.FreeBSD 13.1 running Gnome 42 by orhankur
-image::../../gifs/gnome/gnome42-0.png[alt=FreeBSD 13.1 running Gnome 42 by orhankur, link=../../gifs/gnome/gnome42-0.png, width=100%, height=100%]
-
-== GNOME 41
-
-.FreeBSD 13.0 running Gnome 41.1 by donniep
-image::../../gifs/gnome/gnome41-1.png[alt=FreeBSD 13.0 running Gnome 41.1 by donniep, link=../../gifs/gnome/gnome41-1.png, width=100%, height=100%]
diff --git a/website/content/en/ipv6/_index.adoc b/website/content/en/ipv6/_index.adoc
deleted file mode 100644
--- a/website/content/en/ipv6/_index.adoc
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,69 +0,0 @@
----
-title: "IPv6 in FreeBSD"
-sidenav: developers
----
-
-include::shared/authors.adoc[]
-
-////
-Copyright (c) 2011 The FreeBSD Foundation
- All rights reserved.
-
- This documentation was written by Bjoern Zeeb under sponsorship from
- the FreeBSD Foundation.
-
- Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
- modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
- are met:
- 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
- notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
- 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
- notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
- documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
-
- THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND
- ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
- IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
- ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
- FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
- DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
- OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
- HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
- LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
- OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
- SUCH DAMAGE.
-////
-
-= IPv6 in FreeBSD
-
-== Category Navigation
-
-* link:.[IPv6 in FreeBSD]
-* link:w6l[World IPv6 Launch]
-* link:w6d[World IPv6 Day]
-** link:w6d-www-stats[www stats]
-
-== Introduction
-
-FreeBSD has shipped tightly integrated IPv6 support for over a decade, with the FreeBSD 4.0 in 2000 the first release to include "out-of-the-box" IPv6 support. These web pages document on-going IPv6 development in the FreeBSD community, including participation in IPv6 World Day 2011.
-
-== Latest news
-
-* *January 12, 2012*: 9.0-RELEASE no-IPv4 support (IPv6-only) snapshots available. For more details and download links see https://wiki.freebsd.org/IPv6Only[IPv6Only wiki page].
-* *December 15, 2011*: 9.0-RC3 no-IPv4 support (IPv6-only) snapshots available. For more details and download links see https://wiki.freebsd.org/IPv6Only[IPv6Only wiki page].
-* *August 3, 2011*: 9.0-BETA1 IPv6-only snapshots available. For more details and download links see https://wiki.freebsd.org/IPv6Only[IPv6Only wiki page].
-* *June 9, 2011*: Thanks to everyone having joined us for World IPv6 Day. We have some (unspectacular) link:w6d-www-stats[statistics of www.freebsd.org] starting 12 hours before and running until 12 hours after the event for you.
-* *June 7, 2011*: New set of IPv6-only snapshots uploaded. Now with RFC 6106 DNS search list and nameserver support in man:rtsol[8] and man:rtsold[8], also when installing. Read more about the snapshots link:ipv6only[here] and find download links and netinstall documentation https://wiki.freebsd.org/IPv6Only[on the wiki].
-* *June 6, 2011*: The FreeBSD Foundation and iXsystems announced today their commitment to support the efforts of World IPv6 Day to accelerate global IPv6 deployment. Read the http://www.prweb.com/releases/2011/6/prweb8529718.htm[entire press release] and find more information on FreeBSD and World IPv6 Day link:w6d[here].
-* *June 6, 2011*: New set of IPv6-only snapshots uploaded. Read more about the snapshots link:ipv6only[here] and find download links https://wiki.freebsd.org/IPv6Only[here].
-* *June 6, 2011*: {hrs-name} https://cgit.freebsd.org/src/commit/usr.sbin/rtadvd?id=db82af41db538fba5938d8585b2e2e2c206affb6[commits] http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc6106.txt[RFC 6106] "IPv6 Router Advertisement Options for DNS Configuration" (RDNSS and DNSSL) support.
-
-== IPv6 in FreeBSD
-
-FreeBSD is a widely used, open source operating system whose network stack has been the foundation for decades of research, as well as a reference implementation of IPv6 (developed by the http://www.kame.net/[KAME] project). FreeBSD first shipped IPv6 support in March 2000 as part of FreeBSD link:../releases/[4.0-Release].
-
-== IPv6 and the FreeBSD Project
-
-The FreeBSD Project has been an early adopter and active participant in the IPv6 community. With the help of the community, we have been serving releases from IPv6-enabled servers since May 2003 and FreeBSD's website, mailing lists, and developer infrastructure have been IPv6 enabled since 2007.
-
-FreeBSD is used by critical Internet infrastructure such as root name servers, routers, firewalls and some of the world's busiest and most reliable web sites as well as embedded into many products all in the need for the best IPv6 support. To read more about some companies using the FreeBSD operating system in their products, see the https://www.freebsdfoundation.org/testimonials.shtml[FreeBSD Foundation Testimonials] page.
diff --git a/website/content/en/ipv6/w6d-www-stats.adoc b/website/content/en/ipv6/w6d-www-stats.adoc
deleted file mode 100644
--- a/website/content/en/ipv6/w6d-www-stats.adoc
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,50 +0,0 @@
----
-title: "Page hits per minute and address family on www.freebsd.org"
-sidenav: developers
----
-
-////
-Copyright (c) 2011 The FreeBSD Foundation
- All rights reserved.
-
- This documentation was written by Bjoern Zeeb under sponsorship from
- the FreeBSD Foundation.
-
- Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
- modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
- are met:
- 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
- notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
- 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
- notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
- documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
-
- THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND
- ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
- IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
- ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
- FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
- DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
- OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
- HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
- LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
- OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
- SUCH DAMAGE.
-////
-
-= Page hits per minute and address family on www.freebsd.org
-
-== Category Navigation
-
-* link:..[IPv6 in FreeBSD]
-* link:../w6l[World IPv6 Launch]
-* link:../w6d[World IPv6 Day]
-** link:.[www stats]
-
-== IPv6 hits from 2011-06-07 12:00 to 2011-06-09 11:59
-
-link:../../gifs/ipv6/w6d-www-stats-v6-large.png[image:../../gifs/ipv6/w6d-www-stats-v6.png[IPv6 hits from 2011-06-07 12:00 to 2011-06-09 11:59]]
-
-== IPv4 and IPv6 hits from 2011-06-07 12:00 to 2011-06-09 11:59
-
-link:../../gifs/ipv6/w6d-www-stats-large.png[image:../../gifs/ipv6/w6d-www-stats.png[IPv4 and IPv6 hits from 2011-06-07 12:00 to 2011-06-09 11:59]]
diff --git a/website/content/en/ipv6/w6d.adoc b/website/content/en/ipv6/w6d.adoc
deleted file mode 100644
--- a/website/content/en/ipv6/w6d.adoc
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,100 +0,0 @@
----
-title: "FreeBSD and World IPv6 Day"
-sidenav: developers
----
-
-include::shared/en/urls.adoc[]
-
-////
-Copyright (c) 2011 The FreeBSD Foundation
- All rights reserved.
-
- This documentation was written by Bjoern Zeeb under sponsorship from
- the FreeBSD Foundation.
-
- Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
- modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
- are met:
- 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
- notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
- 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
- notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
- documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
-
- THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND
- ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
- IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
- ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
- FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
- DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
- OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
- HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
- LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
- OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
- SUCH DAMAGE.
-////
-
-= FreeBSD and World IPv6 Day
-
-[.right]
-image:../../gifs/ipv6/IPv6-badge-blue-256-trans.png[ISOC World IPv6 Day badge: blue]
-
-== Category Navigation
-
-* link:..[IPv6 in FreeBSD]
-* link:../w6l[World IPv6 Launch]
-* link:.[World IPv6 Day]
-** link:../w6d-www-stats[www stats]
-
-== About World IPv6 Day
-
-While Internet Protocol version 6 is in fact more than 15 years old, World IPv6 Day, a 24 hour test flight day on *8 June 2011* has motivated a lot of different organizations to get ready for IPv6, or improve their already existent IPv6 support. Major content providers will enable IPv6 for their websites that day, network operators and hosting companies have been working to provide IPv6 to their customers and operating system vendors like FreeBSD have been improving IPv6 support. You can find more information about World IPv6 Day on The Internet Society's web page http://www.worldipv6day.org/[www.worldipv6day.org].
-
-== You and FreeBSD on World IPv6 Day
-
-What is special about that day for FreeBSD you might wonder? Indeed, with the help of the community, FreeBSD has been serving releases on IPv6 since 2003. We have our major infrastructure like https://www.freebsd.org/[www.freebsd.org] IPv6 enabled since 2007. FreeBSD itself has been supporting IPv6 since the 4.0 Release for over a decade now, using the http://www.kame.net/[KAME] based reference implementation.
-
-Nonetheless there are things we can do during that day:
-
-* help promoting IPv6.
-During the day there might be a lot more IPv6 users suddenly, and some people are expecting significantly more traffic. A lot of FreeBSD servers are out there actively using IPv6, some people have put FreeBSD into their networking products, but only few tell us. We would love to hear about your FreeBSD IPv6 experiences on World IPv6 Day.
-* help you in case of problems.
-Obviously if you will run into problems you might want help immediately for the one day test flight. We will more closely monitor the https://lists.freebsd.org/subscription/freebsd-net[FreeBSD networking mailing list], as well as being around on IRC in #freebsd-w6d on EFNet to answer your questions. In case you will file an IPv6 related link:../../support/bugreports/[bug report], you may want to tag it with `[ip6]`.
-* working on improving your IPv6 experience.
-As we get your questions and feedback we will take notes to further improve IPv6 support in FreeBSD. There might not be an immediate change but rest assured that your feedback will not be lost.
-
-Join us for World IPv6 Day, spread the word, to help improving IPv6 support in FreeBSD even further!
-
-== FAQ
-
-=== What is this IPv6 thing?
-
-Please see the link:{handbook}#network-ipv6[chapter on IPv6] in the FreeBSD link:{handbook}[Handbook] for an explanation.
-
-=== Do you provide IPv6 connectivity?
-
-FreeBSD is an operating system, not an Internet Service Provider. There are multiple ways to connect to an IPv6 network with FreeBSD however:
-
-* direct configuration on an (Ethernet) interface,
-* ppp and IPV6CP by user space ppp or some ports, and
-* various tunnel brokers we support out of base or ports
-
-to just name a few. +
-Please see the link:{handbook}#network-ipv6[chapter on IPv6] in the FreeBSD link:{handbook}[Handbook] for more information.
-
-=== I have problems getting IPv6 to work on FreeBSD. Can you help?
-
-Most likely. If our documentation did not help you, contact us. See the previous section on how to best do that during World IPv6 Day.
-
-=== Why is IPv6 not enabled by default?
-
-IPv6 has a mandatory link-local address. In times where many people are also using FreeBSD on their mobile computers and joining random networks the services they started would be accessible by other people on the same network. This may also happen if they only started the services for IPv4 and are not aware of IPv6 at all, do not have tcp-wrappers or a firewall in place. To not put people at risk, IPv6 is disabled by default on FreeBSD. +
-However we already provide support for you to configure it from our installer and it will automatically start to work as soon as you configure an interface for stateless address auto-configuration (SLAAC) or with a static IPv6 address as it has been available in all default configurations we have been shipping since 4.0 Release.
-
-=== Do you have a desktop version as well?
-
-FreeBSD comes with a huge collections of link:../../ports/[ports] that allow you to install a graphical user interface and window manager of choice. FreeBSD however does not ship with a graphical desktop preconfigured. Other FreeBSD derived projects like http://www.pcbsd.org/[PC-BSD] however do an excellent job there.
-
-=== I have reported a problem but it is not fixed yet.
-
-We are sorry that this is the case. If you have submitted a link:../../support/bugreports/[bug report] it is not lost. FreeBSD is developed and maintained by a link:{contributors}[large team of individuals] and there might have been other things we worked on to improve FreeBSD.
diff --git a/website/content/en/ipv6/w6l.adoc b/website/content/en/ipv6/w6l.adoc
deleted file mode 100644
--- a/website/content/en/ipv6/w6l.adoc
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,47 +0,0 @@
----
-title: "FreeBSD and World IPv6 Launch"
-sidenav: developers
----
-
-////
-Copyright (c) 2012 Bjoern A. Zeeb
- All rights reserved.
-
- Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
- modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
- are met:
- 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
- notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
- 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
- notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
- documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
-
- THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND
- ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
- IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
- ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
- FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
- DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
- OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
- HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
- LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
- OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
- SUCH DAMAGE.
-////
-
-= FreeBSD and World IPv6 Launch
-
-== Category Navigation
-
-* link:..[IPv6 in FreeBSD]
-* link:.[World IPv6 Launch]
-* link:../w6d[World IPv6 Day]
-** link:../w6d-www-stats[www stats]
-
-== FreeBSD on World IPv6 Launch
-
-FreeBSD supported World IPv6 Day in 2011 and we continue to help to spread the word about IPv6 with World IPv6 Launch on 6 June 2012.
-
-Stay tuned for more news.
-
-Meanwhile you can find more information about World IPv6 Launch on The Internet Society's web page http://www.worldipv6launch.org/[www.worldipv6launch.org].
diff --git a/website/content/en/java/_index.adoc b/website/content/en/java/_index.adoc
deleted file mode 100644
--- a/website/content/en/java/_index.adoc
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,98 +0,0 @@
----
-title: "FreeBSD Java® Project"
-sidenav: developers
----
-
-include::shared/en/urls.adoc[]
-
-= FreeBSD Java(R) Project
-
-[.right]
-image::../gifs/j2j.gif[Jump to Java(R)]
-
-== Getting Java
-
-There are two choices of Java Development Kits on FreeBSD:
-
-=== OpenJDK
-
-The OpenJDK(R) project provides a native open-source implementation of the Java(R) SE Platform. It is available for all currently supported FreeBSD releases in the following combinations of versions (by architecture):
-
-*aarch64*: `openjdk8`, `openjdk11`, `openjdk12`, `openjdk13`
-
-*amd64*: `openjdk7`, `openjdk8`, `openjdk11`, `openjdk12`, `openjdk13`
-
-*arm6*: `openjdk8`
-
-*arm7*: `openjdk8`
-
-*i386*: `openjdk7`, `openjdk8`, `openjdk11`, `openjdk12`, `openjdk13`
-
-*powerpc*: `openjdk8`
-
-*powerpc64*: `openjdk8`, `openjdk11`, `openjdk12`, `openjdk13`
-
-OpenJDK(R) is frequently updated, and it is suggested to refer to https://cgit.freebsd.org/ports/log/java/[revision logs] for detailed release history. Additionally, one may choose to review more information at https://www.freshports.org/search.php?query=openjdk&search=go&num=10&stype=name&method=match&deleted=excludedeleted&start=1&casesensitivity=caseinsensitive[FreshPorts].
-
-To install OpenJDK(R) package use the man:pkg[7] utility or the ports system:
-
-`pkg install openjdk[version]`
-
-or
-
-`cd /usr/ports/java/openjdk[version]`
-
-`make install clean`
-
-where [version] is one of 7, 8, 11, 12, or 13. An example (`openjdk11`):
-
-`pkg install openjdk11`
-
-or
-
-`cd /usr/ports/java/openjdk11`
-
-`make install clean`
-
-=== Oracle JDK for Linux
-
-This port installs the Java Development Kit from Oracle which was built for Linux. It will run under FreeBSD using the Linux compatibility.
-
-`pkg install linux-oracle-jdk18`
-
-or
-
-`cd /usr/ports/java/linux-oracle-jdk18`
-
-`make install clean`
-
-*Note:* Please note that due to the current licensing policy the Oracle JDK on FreeBSD binaries can not be distributed and you are only permitted to use them personally. For the same reason, the sources must be fetched manually.
-
-== Documentation
-
-* link:{porters-handbook}#using-java[Creating Ports]
-
-== I want to help by...
-
-=== ... fixing bugs or adding new features
-
-The main repositories for the BSD port of OpenJDK are publically available on Github. Pull requests are welcome. You can find more information on this https://wiki.freebsd.org/Ports/openjdk_11[Wiki]
-
-=== ... testing
-
-The best thing you can do is download the latest release, install it, and try all your favorite Java applications. If they don't work, see below.
-
-=== ... reporting a bug
-
-If you find an application that does not work, or crashes, here are the steps you should follow before reporting it:
-
-. Try it again.
-. Check your settings for this application. Check to see if you made a mistake in starting it up.
-. Try it on a different platform. If you have access to a reference platform, try it there. (We need to determine if it is an application error, a Java bug, or a FreeBSD specific bug.)
-. Narrow down the problem. If it is your own code, narrow down the bug to the offending code. Otherwise, determine the steps required to reproduce the problem.
-. Notify the JDK porting team. Send email to freebsd-java@FreeBSD.org. Be sure to include the steps you have followed.
-. Finally, and most importantly, be willing to work with the team to fix the problem.
-
-=== ...writing documentation
-
-Everyone can help here. If you have a suggestion to add to the documentation, write it up and send it to freebsd-java@FreeBSD.org
diff --git a/website/content/en/logo.adoc b/website/content/en/logo.adoc
deleted file mode 100644
--- a/website/content/en/logo.adoc
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,12 +0,0 @@
----
-title: "FreeBSD Logo"
-sidenav: about
----
-
-= FreeBSD Logo
-
-== Usage Guideline
-
-FreeBSD is a registered trademark of The FreeBSD Foundation. The FreeBSD logo and The Power to Serve are trademarks of The FreeBSD Foundation.
-
-For logo image files, Trademark Usage Terms and Conditions, and more information on how to obtain permission to use the logo, please refer to the FreeBSD Project Logo page at https://www.freebsdfoundation.org/about/project/[The FreeBSD Foundation].
diff --git a/website/content/en/marketing/_index.adoc b/website/content/en/marketing/_index.adoc
deleted file mode 100644
--- a/website/content/en/marketing/_index.adoc
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,27 +0,0 @@
----
-title: "Marketing Materials"
-sidenav: about
----
-
-include::shared/en/urls.adoc[]
-
-= Marketing Materials
-
-This page contains presentations, white papers, and other marketing materials for FreeBSD.
-
-== White Papers
-
-Thinking of using FreeBSD in a project? Finding it hard to convince your boss, the CTO, the CEO? Read through these real life examples of FreeBSD successes with shipping products, then give them to the decision makers at your company.
-
-* link:{explaining-bsd}[Explaining BSD]
-* link:{building-products}[Building Products with FreeBSD]
-
-== Presentations
-
-* 28 April 2005, https://people.FreeBSD.org/~murray/presentations/20050429-msu-freebsd[FreeBSD in the Enterprise, an Introduction for Linux Users], Murray Stokely (Open Source Forum, Moscow)
-* 18 September 2002, https://people.FreeBSD.org/~murray/presentations/re-jus/index.html[FreeBSD Release Engineering], Murray Stokely (Japan Unix Society)
-* 10 June 2001, https://people.FreeBSD.org/~nik/Leeds[FreeBSD for Linux Users], Nik Clayton
-
-== Flyers
-
-* What is FreeBSD? (https://people.FreeBSD.org/~blackend/flyer-logo.pdf[PDF] | https://people.FreeBSD.org/~blackend/flyer-logo.ps[PostScript])
diff --git a/website/content/en/ports/_index.adoc b/website/content/en/ports/_index.adoc
deleted file mode 100644
--- a/website/content/en/ports/_index.adoc
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,30 +0,0 @@
----
-title: "About FreeBSD Ports"
-sidenav: ports
----
-
-include::shared/en/urls.adoc[]
-
-= About FreeBSD Ports
-
-{{< form-ports >}}
-
-'''''
-
-The FreeBSD ports and packages collections offer two simple ways for users and administrators to install over 34,000 applications, utilities or libraries.
-
-For most of those, a precompiled `package` with default options exists for each supported release, saving the user the work and time of having to compile anything at all.
-Use man:pkg-install[8] to securely download and install a package.
-For more information see link:{handbook}ports/#pkgng-intro[Using pkg for Binary Package Management].
-
-Both collections support the latest point release on the link:{faq}#stable[FreeBSD-STABLE] branches.
-In addition, the ports collection supports the link:{faq}#current[FreeBSD-CURRENT] branch.
-Older releases are not supported and may or may not work correctly with an up-to-date ports collection.
-Over time, changes to the ports collection may rely on features that are not present in older releases.
-When this occurs, patches contributed by the user community to maintain support for older releases will usually be committed.
-
-Each `port` listed here contains any patches necessary to make the original application source code compile and run on FreeBSD.
-If you download the framework for the entire list of ports by installing the link:{handbook}ports/#ports-using[ports hierarchy], you can have thousands of applications right at your fingertips.
-
-Each port's `Makefile` automatically fetches the application source code, either from a local disk or the network, unpacks it on your system, applies the patches, and compiles.
-If all went well, a simple `make install` will install the application and register it with the package system.
diff --git a/website/content/en/ports/installing.adoc b/website/content/en/ports/installing.adoc
deleted file mode 100644
--- a/website/content/en/ports/installing.adoc
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,18 +0,0 @@
----
-title: "Installing the FreeBSD Ports Collection"
-sidenav: ports
----
-
-include::shared/releases.adoc[]
-include::shared/en/urls.adoc[]
-
-= Installing the FreeBSD Ports Collection
-
-{{< form-ports >}}
-
-'''''
-
-The FreeBSD installer programs allow the Ports Collection to be installed at the same time as the operating system.
-See link:{handbook}bsdinstall[installing FreeBSD].
-
-If not initially installed, it can be added with link:{handbook}ports/#ports-using-git-method[Git].
diff --git a/website/content/en/ports/references.adoc b/website/content/en/ports/references.adoc
deleted file mode 100644
--- a/website/content/en/ports/references.adoc
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,25 +0,0 @@
----
-title: "FreeBSD Ports -- References"
-sidenav: ports
----
-
-include::shared/en/urls.adoc[]
-
-= FreeBSD Ports -- References
-
-{{< form-ports >}}
-
-'''''
-
-To start learning more about ports and packages, see link:{handbook}ports/[Installing Applications: Packages and Ports], a section of the link:{handbook}[FreeBSD Handbook].
-
-The link:{porters-handbook}[Porter's Handbook] is the master reference for both creating new ports and maintaining existing ports, including a section on link:{porters-handbook}#keeping-up[Keeping Up]. It also contains more detail about the topics below, as well as more references for further study.
-
-You may also find the following to be useful:
-
-* The archives of the https://docs.FreeBSD.org/mail/current/freebsd-ports.html[FreeBSD ports mailing list].
-* The article link:{contributing}#ports-contributing[Contributing to the FreeBSD Ports Collection].
-* https://www.FreshPorts.org[FreshPorts.org] is a valuable tool for further information about individual ports, such as current version, last checkin, and many other useful statistics. You may subscribe to a mailing list to get the latest information about your favorite ports.
-* The manual pages for man:ftp[1], man:pkg[8], and man:ports[7].
-* The link:../../portmgr/[Ports Management Team] (portmgr) pages.
-* The https://cgit.FreeBSD.org/ports/tree[Web Interface to the Source Repository] allows you to browse the files in the source repository. Changes that affect the entire port system are now documented in the https://cgit.FreeBSD.org/ports/tree/CHANGES[CHANGES] file. Changes that affect individual ports are now documented in the https://cgit.FreeBSD.org/ports/tree/UPDATING[UPDATING] file. However, the definitive answer to any question is undoubtedly to read the source code of https://cgit.FreeBSD.org/ports/tree/Mk/bsd.port.mk[bsd.port.mk], and associated files.
diff --git a/website/content/en/ports/searching.adoc b/website/content/en/ports/searching.adoc
deleted file mode 100644
--- a/website/content/en/ports/searching.adoc
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
----
-title: "Searching FreeBSD Ports"
-sidenav: ports
----
-
-= Searching FreeBSD Ports
-
-{{< form-ports >}}
-
-'''''
-
-The form above will allow you to search for ports on this site. A completed search will take you to a link:https://ports.FreeBSD.org/cgi/ports.cgi[more complete search page].
-
-However, if you already have the Ports Collection installed on your machine, you may also search by changing to the `/usr/ports` directory and performing `make search name=`__string__. Instead of by `name` you can search by port path (`path`), port information (`info`), maintainer (`maint`), port category (`cat`), build dependencies (`bdeps`), run dependencies (`rdeps`), the project web site (`www`), or any of these fields (`key`). Use `make quicksearch ...` to only display the port name, port directory, and one line description of the port.
-
-Another option is to visit https://www.FreshPorts.org[FreshPorts.org] and either browse the site or subscribe to the lists hosted there.
diff --git a/website/content/en/ports/updating.adoc b/website/content/en/ports/updating.adoc
deleted file mode 100644
--- a/website/content/en/ports/updating.adoc
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,20 +0,0 @@
----
-title: "Updating FreeBSD Ports"
-sidenav: ports
----
-
-include::shared/en/urls.adoc[]
-
-= Updating FreeBSD Ports
-
-{{< form-ports >}}
-
-'''''
-
-The ports listed on these web pages are continually being updated. It is strongly recommended that you refresh the entire collection together, as many ports depend on other parts of the tree, even where that might seem counterintuitive (e.g. `japanese/`.)
-
-Changes that affect the entire port system are now documented in the https://cgit.FreeBSD.org/ports/tree/CHANGES[CHANGES] file. Changes that affect individual ports are now documented in the https://cgit.FreeBSD.org/ports/tree/UPDATING[UPDATING] file.
-
-For more information about new, changed or removed ports/packages, or if you wish to search for a specific application to see if it's available as a port/package, you may use the form above; alternatively, you may wish to visit https://www.FreshPorts.org[FreshPorts.org] and either browse the site or subscribe to the lists hosted there.
-
-To learn more about installing and maintaining ports, see link:{handbook}ports/[Installing Applications: Packages and Ports], a section of the link:{handbook}[FreeBSD Handbook]; the section of the Porter's Handbook called link:{porters-handbook}#keeping-up[Keeping Up]; and the man:ports[7] manual page.
diff --git a/website/content/en/projects/mips/_index.adoc b/website/content/en/projects/mips/_index.adoc
deleted file mode 100644
--- a/website/content/en/projects/mips/_index.adoc
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,25 +0,0 @@
----
-title: "FreeBSD/MIPS Project"
-sidenav: developers
----
-
-= FreeBSD/MIPS Project
-
-== Project Goal
-
-The FreeBSD/MIPS Project is responsible for the maintenance and development of FreeBSD on platforms using MIPS processors. The port currently runs multi-user on a number of platforms and a wide variety of 32-bit and 64-bit MISP ISA processors.
-
-== Supported MIPS Platforms
-
-FreeBSD supports a broad range of MIPS-based devices, including MIPS Malta, Ubiquiti Networks Router-Station and Router-Station Pro, Cavium Octeon, NetLogicMicro/RMI XLS and XLR (XLP in progress), as well as emulated MIPS environments such as gxemul. On supporting hardware platforms, FreeBSD supports both multi-core and hardware multi-threading features. In many cases, additional accelerator functions, such as cryptographic and network offload engines, are also supported.
-
-== How to Contribute
-
-If you have code that you are interested in committing, you can send it for review to the <<mailinglist,freebsd-mips mailing list>>.
-
-== Resources and Links
-
-* The FreeBSD.org wiki's https://wiki.freebsd.org/FreeBSD/mips[FreeBSD/MIPS port] page, which includes information on building FreeBSD/mips.
-* General MIPS information is available from http://www.mips.com[MIPS Technologies, Inc.]
-* [[mailinglist]] Most discussion relating to this project takes place on the freebsd-mips@FreeBSD.org mailing list. To subscribe to the list, send a message to freebsd-mips-subscribe@FreeBSD.org.
-* http://zrouter.org/[zrouter], a FreeBSD-based MIPS router firmware build environment.
diff --git a/website/content/en/prstats/_index.adoc b/website/content/en/prstats/_index.adoc
deleted file mode 100644
--- a/website/content/en/prstats/_index.adoc
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,23 +0,0 @@
----
-title: "PR Statistics"
-sidenav: support
----
-
-= PR Statistics
-
-'''''
-
-== Go fix/close a PR!
-
-It's easy, all you have to do is to follow https://bugs.FreeBSD.org/search/[this link to the Bugzilla database], find a PR, figure out what needs done and do it.
-
-If you are a committer, you can use the web interface to close PRs.
-
-If you are not a committer, you should submit a followup containing the text :
-
-[.text-center]
-....
-This PR can be closed
-....
-
-on a line of its own, that will make it easier for a committer to deal with it later.
diff --git a/website/content/en/publish.adoc b/website/content/en/publish.adoc
deleted file mode 100644
--- a/website/content/en/publish.adoc
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,130 +0,0 @@
----
-title: "FreeBSD-related Publications"
-sidenav: about
----
-
-include::shared/en/urls.adoc[]
-
-= FreeBSD-related Publications
-
-[width="100%",cols="50%,50%",]
-|===
-|image:../gifs/daemon.gif[FreeBSD Daemon,width=80,height=76] a|
-* <<books,books>>
-* <<cdroms,optical discs>>
-* <<magazines,magazines>>
-|===
-
--- covers and descriptions (mostly archaic) appear below.
-Click any image to see a larger version.
-
-Elsewhere (less archaic):
-
-- https://papers.freebsd.org/[FreeBSD Presentations and Papers] -- the collected works of the FreeBSD community as presented at various conferences and summits
-- the link:{handbook}[FreeBSD Handbook] includes a link:{handbook}bibliography/[bibliography]
-- link:../press/[FreeBSD in the Press]
-
--- if you know of any other FreeBSD-related publication, please https://www.freebsd.org/mailto/[let us know].
-
-[[books]]
-== Books
-
-[.tblbasic]
-[width="100%",cols="20%,80%",]
-|===
-|link:../gifs/jpb.jpg[image:../gifs/jp.jpg[book cover,width=150,height=190]] |A publication from Tatsumi Hosokawa and others. Among computer books, it is a top-seller in Japan and exceeded the sales of Bill Gates' "The Road Ahead" when published (it was #2, this book was #1).
-|link:../gifs/205-jpb.jpg[image:../gifs/205-jp.jpg[book cover,width=150,height=208]] |(Japanese FreeBSD book with 2.0.5, titled "FreeBSD: Fun and easy Installation")
-|link:../gifs/pc98-jpb.jpg[image:../gifs/pc98-jp.jpg[book cover,width=150,height=194]] |(Japanese FreeBSD book with 2.0.5, titled "FreeBSD Introductory Kit")
-|link:../gifs/comp_b.jpg[image:../gifs/complete.jpg[book cover,width=150,height=228]] |This is BSDi's "The Complete FreeBSD" with installation guide, manual pages and installation CDs inside.
-|link:../gifs/twb.jpg[image:../gifs/tw.jpg[book cover,width=150,height=200]] |This book was published (early 1997) in Taiwan. Its title is "FreeBSD: introduction and applications" and the author is Jian-Da Li (aka. jdli).
-|link:../gifs/getstarb.jpg[image:../gifs/getstart.jpg[book cover,width=150,height=188]] |This is the "Getting Started with FreeBSD" from Fuki-Shuppan. Other than the standard installation guide and Japanese environment, it emphasizes system administration and low-level information (such as the boot process, etc.) FreeBSD-2.2.2R and XFree86-3.2 on CDROM. 264 pages, 3,400 yen.
-|link:../gifs/starkitb.jpg[image:../gifs/starkit.jpg[book cover,width=150,height=235]] |The "Personal Unix Starter Kit - FreeBSD" from ASCII. Includes history of UNIX(R), a guide to build a Japanese documentation processing system and how to create ports. 2.1.7.1R and XFree86-3.2 in CDROM. 384 pages, 3,000 yen.
-|link:../gifs/bsdmb.jpg[image:../gifs/bsdm.jpg[book cover,width=150,height=235]] |BSD mit Methode, M. Schulze, B. Roehrig, M. Hoelzer und andere, C&L Computer und Literatur Verlag, 1998, 850 pages. 2 CDROMs, FreeBSD 2.2.6, NetBSD 1.2.1 and 1.3.2, OpenBSD 2.2 and 2.3. DM 98,-.
-|link:../gifs/instmanb.jpg[image:../gifs/instman.jpg[book cover,width=150,height=200]] |This is the "FreeBSD Install and utilization manual" from Mainichi Communications. General introduction to FreeBSD from installation to utilization with troubleshooting under the supervision of the user group in Japan. 2.2.7-RELEASE FreeBSD(98)2.2.7-Rev01 PAO and distfiles in CDROM. 472 pages, 3,600yen.
-|link:../gifs/urmb.jpg[image:../gifs/urm.jpg[book cover,width=150,height=220]] |The "FreeBSD User's Reference Manual" from Mainichi Communications, under the supervision of "jpman project", the manual translation project by the user group in Japan. Japanese edition of the section 1 of the FreeBSD manual. 2.2.7-RELEASE FreeBSD(98)2.2.7-Rev01 and PAO in CDROM. 1,040 pages, 3,800yen.
-|link:../gifs/samb.jpg[image:../gifs/sam.jpg[book cover,width=150,height=220]] |The "FreeBSD System Administrator's Manual" from Mainichi Communications, under the supervision of "jpman project", the manual translation project by the user group in Japan. Japanese edition of the section 5 and 8 of the FreeBSD manual. 756 pages, 3,300yen.
-|link:../gifs/aboutfb.jpg[image:../gifs/aboutf.jpg[book cover,width=150,height=184]] |This is "About FreeBSD" from Youngjin.com. It is first FreeBSD book in Korea, and covers several topics from installation to Korean environment. 3.5.1-RELEASE/PAO and 4.1-RELEASE in 3 CDROMs. 788 pages, 26,000 won.
-|http://maxwell.itb.ac.id/bukudepan.jpg[image:../gifs/bukudepan.jpg[book cover,width=178,height=280]] |Onno W Purbo, Dodi Maryanto, Syahrial Hubbany, Widjil Widodo: http://maxwell.itb.ac.id/[Building Internet Server with FreeBSD] (in Indonesia Language), published by http://www.elexmedia.co.id/[Elex Media Komputindo], 2000.
-|http://www.freebsdmall.com/cgi-bin/fm/bsdhandbk[image:../gifs/bsdi-handbook.png[book cover,width=171,height=220]] |The FreeBSD Handbook 1st Edition is a comprehensive FreeBSD Tutorial and reference. It covers installation, day-to-day use of FreeBSD, and much more. April 2000, BSDi. ISBN 1-57176-241-8
-|http://www.freebsdmall.com/cgi-bin/fm/bsdcomp[image:../gifs/bsdcomp-4.2.gif[book cover,width=200,height=220]] |The Complete FreeBSD with CDs, 3rd Ed, FreeBSD 4.2. Everything you ever wanted to know about how to get your computer up and running FreeBSD. Includes 4 CDs containing the FreeBSD operating system! Released: November 2000 ISBN: 1-57176-246-9
-|http://www.freebsdmall.com/cgi-bin/fm/bsdhandbk[image:../gifs/wr-handbook-2nd.png[book cover,width=172,height=220]] |The FreeBSD Handbook 2nd Edition is a comprehensive FreeBSD Tutorial and reference. It covers installation, day-to-day use of FreeBSD, and much more. November 2001, Wind River Systems. ISBN 1-57176-303-1
-|http://www.freebsd-corp-net-guide.com[image:../gifs/fbsdcng-english.png[book cover,width=147,height=184]] |"The FreeBSD Corporate Networker's Guide" Mittelstaedt, Ted. Addison Wesley, 2000. +
-There are two printings: the first has disk 1 of FreeBSD 4.2, the second has disk 1 of FreeBSD 4.4. 400 pages. The Japanese translation was published in 2001. +
-The Networker's Guide covers integration of FreeBSD into typical corporate networks with special emphasis on interoperation with Windows 95/98/ME/NT/2K. +
-English version: 2000, Addison Wesley. ISBN 0-201-70481-1 +
-Japanese version: 2001, Pearson Education Japan. ISBN 4-89471-464-7
-|http://www.bittreepress.com/FreeBSD/introbook/[image:../gifs/fbsd-ososfypc.jpg[book cover,width=150,height=188]] |"FreeBSD, An Open-Source Operating System for Your Personal Computer", Annelise Anderson. +
-An introduction to FreeBSD for users new to both FreeBSD and UNIX. This book includes a 4.4 installation CD-ROM and covers everything you need to know about installation of the system and third-party software; getting sound, X Window, your network, and printing working; building your own kernel; and upgrading. Second Edition. December 2001, The Bit Tree Press. ISBN 0-9712045-1-9
-|http://www.AbsoluteBSD.com/[image:../gifs/abs_bsd_cov.gif[Absolute BSD book cover,width=165,height=207]] |Absolute BSD. This book discusses management of FreeBSD-based servers in high-performance enterprise environments. June 2002, http://www.nostarch.com/[No Starch Press.] ISBN 1-886411-74-3
-|link:../gifs/building_internet_servers.jpg[image:../gifs/building_internet_servers_small.jpg[book cover,width=150,height=226]] |"Building an Internet Server with FreeBSD 6" is a step-by-step guide for helping new and experienced users to FreeBSD install and configure the latest Internet server applications in a minimum of time. The guide includes descriptions of many of the Internet's most popular and widely deployed open source projects, detailed instructions on implementing each, and maintenance tasks important to an Internet server. May 2006, Lulu Press, ISBN 1411695747, 228 pages.
-|link:../gifs/kapak.jpg[image:../gifs/kapak_sml.jpg[book cover,width=140,height=212]] |Written by the professionals of EnderUNIX and Huseyin Yuce this book is the first Turkish FreeBSD book. The book is published by http://www.acikkod.com/[acikkod] publications. Book is available for sale on http://www.acikkod.com/siparis.php[this] page. Details of the book: +
- +
-ISBN: 975-98990-0-0 +
-Published: February 2004 +
-Paperback: 504 pages +
-CD: FreeBSD 4.9 Installation CD +
-Authors: Hüseyin Yüce, İsmail Yenigül, Ömer Faruk Şen, Barış Şimşek and Murat Balaban. +
- +
-http://www.acikkod.com/pdfs/freebsd1.pdf[Table of Contents] (in Turkish)
-|http://www.eyrolles.com/Informatique/Livre/9782212114638/[image:../gifs/cahiers_adm_cov.jpg[Les cahiers de l'Admin BSD book cover,width=187,height=215]] |Les cahiers de l'Admin: BSD (the BSD sysadmin notebook), from Emmanuel Dreyfus, covers various UNIX(R) administrative topics for BSD systems. Aimed at beginners and intermediate in BSD system administration. Book in french, http://www.eyrolles.com/[Eyrolles], 2004. ISBN 2-212-11463-X
-|http://www.reedmedia.net/books/pf-book/[image:../gifs/pf_packet_filter_book_cover.jpg[The OpenBSD PF Packet Filter Book,width=95,height=142]] |The OpenBSD PF Packet Filter Book covers the PF packet filter suite, ALTQ, spamd, address translation, and more for FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, and DragonFly. August 2006, http://www.reedmedia.net/books/pf-book/[Reed Media Services]. ISBN 978-0-9790342-0-6.
-|link:../gifs/unleashed6.jpg[image:../gifs/unleashed6.jpg[FreeBSD 6 Unleashed,width=150,height=150]] |FreeBSD 6 Unleashed covers everything you need to know to use FreeBSD to its fullest potential. Jun 7, 2006, http://www.samspublishing.com/bookstore/product.asp?isbn=0768666341&rl=1[Sams]. ISBN 0-672-32875-5
-|http://www.twbsd.org/cht/book/[image:../gifs/twbsd6cover.jpg[The FreeBSD 6.0 Book,width=150,height=202]] |(Traditional Chinese FreeBSD book with 6.0) December 2005, http://www.twbsd.org/cht/book/[Drmaster]. ISBN 9-575-27878-X
-|http://www.unixinside.org/FreeBSD/[image:../gifs/freebsdro.png[Utilizare, administrare, configurare,width=150,height=202]] |This Romanian language book is a useful guide for people taking their first steps with FreeBSD. It covers installation and day-to-day operation of a FreeBSD system, and contains practical examples illustrating the use of FreeBSD's utilities. It has two case studies on configuring FreeBSD as a server and a router. 2005, Polirom Publishing House, ISBN 973-681-683-4
-|http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/8391665127[image:../gifs/rbsdc-2007-01-cover-01.jpg[The RadioBSD Crier: Issue 2007/01: Managing FreeBSD and NetBSD Firewalls,width=150,height=202]] |The "RadioBSD Crier: 2007/01" is a 24-page article on managing FreeBSD and NetBSD IPFW, IPFW2, and IP6FW firewalls.
-|http://www.reedmedia.net/books/freebsd-basics[image:../gifs/freebsd-basics-cover-front-145.png[The Best of FreeBSD Basics by Dru Lavigne,width=145,height=190]] |The Best of FreeBSD Basics by Dru Lavigne provides near 100 tutorials covering a wide range of FreeBSD and open source Unix topics. December 2007. http://www.reedmedia.net/books/freebsd-basics/[Reed Media Services]. ISBN 978-0-9790342-2-0.
-|===
-
-[[cdroms]]
-== CD-ROMs and DVDs
-
-For information about recent releases of the operating system, please see link:../releases/[Release Information].
-
-[.tblbasic]
-[width="100%",cols="20%,80%",]
-|===
-|link:../gifs/bsdiscb.jpg[image:../gifs/bsdisc.jpg[CD cover,width=150,height=141]] |This is InfoMagic's BSDisc, containing FreeBSD 2.0 and NetBSD 1.0 on a single CD. This is the only example I have which had cover art.
-|link:../gifs/wc-44lite2b.jpg[image:../gifs/wc-44lite2.jpg[CD cover,width=150,height=142]] |This is the original 4.4 BSD Lite2 release from UC Berkeley, the core technology behind much of FreeBSD.
-|link:../gifs/las512b.jpg[image:../gifs/las512.jpg[CD cover,width=150,height=171]] |The first of Laser5's "BSD" series. Contains FreeBSD-2.0.5R, NetBSD-1.0, XFree86-3.1.1 and FreeBSD(98) kernel.
-|link:../gifs/las523b.jpg[image:../gifs/las523.jpg[CD cover,width=150,height=132]] |The second of Laser5's "BSD" series. From this version, the CDs come in a standard jewel box. Contains FreeBSD-2.1R, NetBSD-1.1, XFree86-3.1.2 and 3.1.2A, and FreeBSD(98) kernel (2.0.5).
-|link:../gifs/las5b.jpg[image:../gifs/las5.jpg[CD cover,width=150,height=128]] |This is the Laser5 Japanese edition of the FreeBSD CDROM. It is a 4 CD set.
-|link:../gifs/phtb.jpg[image:../gifs/pht.jpg[CD cover,width=151,height=150]] |This is the only FreeBSD CD Pacific Hitech produced before merging their product line with that of Walnut Creek CDROM. PHT now also produces the FreeBSD/J (Japanese) CD product.
-|[#221cd]####link:../gifs/coverb.jpg[image:../gifs/cover.jpg[CD cover,width=150,height=150]] |This is the cover disc from the Korean link:#magazines[magazine]. Note the creative cover art! The CD contains the FreeBSD 2.2.1 release with some local additions.
-|link:../gifs/wc-10b.jpg[image:../gifs/wc-10.jpg[CD cover,width=150,height=143]] |This is it - the very first FreeBSD CD published! Both the FreeBSD Project and Walnut Creek CDROM were fairly young back then, and you'll probably have little difficulty in spotting the differences in production quality between then and now.
-|link:../gifs/wc-11b.jpg[image:../gifs/wc-11.jpg[CD cover,width=150,height=150]] |This was the second FreeBSD CD published by Walnut Creek CDROM and also the very last on the 1.x branch (ref USL/Novell lawsuit and settlement). The next release, FreeBSD 1.1.5, was only available on the net.
-|link:../gifs/wc-blunb.jpg[image:../gifs/wc-blun.jpg[CD cover,width=150,height=148]] |This unusual CD is something of a collector's item now given that almost all existing examples were systematically tracked down and destroyed. An artwork mishap has this CD dated for the wrong year, and on the spine "January" is also misspelled as "Jaunary", just to increase the embarrassment factor. Ah, the perils of turning in one's artwork just hours before leaving for a trade show.
-|link:../gifs/wc-200b.jpg[image:../gifs/wc-200.jpg[CD cover,width=150,height=149]] |This is the fixed-up version of the FreeBSD 2.0 CD. Note that the color scheme has even been changed in the corrected version, something unusual for a fixup and perhaps done to distance it from the earlier mistake.
-|link:../gifs/wc-205b.jpg[image:../gifs/wc-205.jpg[CD cover,width=150,height=151]] |The FreeBSD 2.0.5 release CD. This was the first CD to feature Tatsumi Hosokawa's daemon artwork.
-|link:../gifs/wc-21b.jpg[image:../gifs/wc-21.jpg[CD cover,width=150,height=149]] |The FreeBSD 2.1 release CD. This was the first CD release on the 2.1 branch (the last being 2.1.7).
-|link:../gifs/wc-215b.jpg[image:../gifs/wc-215.jpg[CD cover,width=150,height=149]] |The FreeBSD 2.1.5 release CD.
-|link:../gifs/wc-216b.jpg[image:../gifs/wc-216.jpg[CD cover,width=150,height=148]] |The FreeBSD 2.1.6 release CD.
-|link:../gifs/wc-216jpb.jpg[image:../gifs/wc-216jp.jpg[CD cover,width=150,height=150]] |The Japanese version of 2.1.6. This was the first and last Japanese localized version published by WC, responsibility for that product then transitioning to a team led by Tatsumi Hosokawa and sponsored by Pacific Hitech and Laser5.
-|link:../gifs/wc-217b.jpg[image:../gifs/wc-217.jpg[CD cover,width=150,height=149]] |The FreeBSD 2.1.7 release CD. Also the last CD released on the 2.1.x branch. Done primarily as a security fixup for 2.1.6
-|link:../gifs/wc-22snapb.jpg[image:../gifs/wc-22snap.jpg[CD cover,width=150,height=148]] |An early release SNAPshot of 2.2 (done before 2.2.1 was released).
-|link:../gifs/wc-221b.jpg[image:../gifs/wc-221.jpg[CD cover,width=150,height=148]] |The FreeBSD 2.2.1 release CD. This was the first CD on the 2.2 branch.
-|link:../gifs/wc-222b.jpg[image:../gifs/wc-222.jpg[CD cover,width=150,height=152]] |The FreeBSD 2.2.2 release CD.
-|link:../gifs/wc-30snab.jpg[image:../gifs/wc-30sna.jpg[CD cover,width=150,height=148]] |The FreeBSD 3.0 snapshot CD.
-|link:../gifs/wc-docsb.jpg[image:../gifs/wc-docs.jpg[CD cover,width=150,height=148]] |The FreeBSD mailing list and newsgroup archives, turned into HTML and semi-indexed by thread. This product ran for 2 releases and then stopped with a thud once it became obvious that there was simply too much data to deal with on one CD. Perhaps when DVD becomes more popular...
-|http://www.freebsdmall.com/cgi-bin/fm/bsdtool[image:../gifs/wc-bsdtool.gif[CD cover,width=200,height=166]] |FreeBSD Toolkit: Six disc set of resources to make your FreeBSD experience more enriching.
-|http://www.freebsdmall.com/[image:../gifs/wc-bsdalph-4.2.gif[CD cover,width=242,height=200]] |FreeBSD Alpha 4.2 - The full version of the DEC Alpha 64-bit UNIX operating system.
-|http://www.freebsdmall.com/[image:../gifs/wc-freebsd-4.2b.gif[CD cover,width=255,height=200]] |FreeBSD 4.2: The full version of the PC 32-bit UNIX operating system.
-|http://www.lob.de/[image:../gifs/lob-freebsd-4.2.gif[CD cover,width=255,height=218]] |FreeBSD 4.2 CD-ROM. Lehmanns CD-ROM Edition. January 2001, 4 CD-ROMs. Lehmanns Fachbuchhandlung. Germany. ISBN 3-931253-72-4.
-|http://www.freebsdmall.com/[image:../gifs/wr-freebsd43.png[CD cover,width=240,height=207]] |FreeBSD 4.3 RELEASE CDROM. April 2001, Wind River Systems. ISBN 1-57176-300-7.
-|http://www.freebsdmall.com/cgi-bin/fm/bsdtool[image:../gifs/wr-bsdtool-june2001.png[CD cover,width=240,height=202]] |FreeBSD Toolkit: Six disc set of resources to make your FreeBSD experience more enriching. June 2001, Wind River Systems. ISBN 1-57176-301-5.
-|link:../gifs/lob-freebsd-4.4.gif[image:../gifs/lob-freebsd-4.4.gif[CD cover,width=243,height=207]] |FreeBSD 4.4 CD-ROM. Lehmanns CD-ROM Edition. November 2001, 6 CD-ROMs in Jewelcase. http://www.lob.de/[Lehmanns Fachbuchhandlung]. Germany. ISBN 3-931253-84-8.
-|http://www.freebsdmall.com/[image:../gifs/wr-freebsd44.png[CD cover,width=240,height=208]] |FreeBSD 4.4 RELEASE CDROM. Wind River Systems. September 2001. ISBN 1-57176-304-X.
-|http://www.freebsdmall.com/[image:../gifs/fm-freebsd45.png[CD cover,width=240,height=205]] |FreeBSD 4.5 RELEASE CDROM. February 2002, FreeBSD Mall Inc. ISBN 1-57176-306-6.
-|===
-
-[[magazines]]
-== Magazines
-
-[.tblbasic]
-[width="100%",cols="20%,80%",]
-|===
-|link:../gifs/krb.jpg[image:../gifs/kr.jpg[magazine cover,width=150,height=213]] |Cover of Korean UNIX magazine, May 1997 issue. Also included link:#221cd[FreeBSD 2.2.1] with cover CDs.
-|link:../gifs/unixuserb.jpg[image:../gifs/unixuser.jpg[magazine cover,width=150,height=199]] |UNIX User Magazine November 1996 issue. Also included FreeBSD 2.1.5 on cover CD.
-|link:../gifs/fullcourse3b.jpg[image:../gifs/fullcourse3.jpg[magazine cover,width=149,height=193]] |This is the "FreeBSD Full Course" special in April 1997's Software Design (published by Gijutsu Hyoron Sha). There are 80 pages of FreeBSD articles covering everything from installation to tracking -current.
-|link:../gifs/smart-reseller.jpg[image:../gifs/smart-reseller-small.jpg[magazine cover,width=149,height=193]] |http://www.zdnet.com/sr/stories/issue/0,4537,349576,00.html[Quality Unix for FREE], by Brett Glass in http://www.zdnet.com/sr/[Sm@rt Reseller Online] September 1998
-|link:../gifs/bsdmagazine.jpg[image:../gifs/bsdmagazine.jpg[magazine cover,width=150,height=196]] |This is the "BSD magazine" published by ASCII corporation, the world's first publication specialized in BSD. BSD magazine covers FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD and BSD/OS. The premiere issue features articles on the history of BSD, installation, and Ports/Packages; it also includes 4 CD-ROMs containing FreeBSD 3.2-RELEASE, NetBSD 1.4.1 and OpenBSD 2.5.
-|===
diff --git a/website/content/en/releng/dst_info.adoc b/website/content/en/releng/dst_info.adoc
deleted file mode 100644
--- a/website/content/en/releng/dst_info.adoc
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,20 +0,0 @@
----
-title: "Daylight Savings Time Changes for 2007"
-sidenav: developers
----
-
-= Daylight Savings Time Changes for 2007
-
-This is a summary of the information about the change in Daylight Savings Time rules and how the change affects FreeBSD releases.
-
-In 2005 several countries, including the United States of America and Canada, passed legislation changing when Daylight Savings Time begins and ends. That change takes effect in 2007. For the time zones affected by the change Daylight Savings Time will begin on March 11th (instead of April 1st) and end on November 4th (instead of October 28th).
-
-FreeBSD uses `/etc/localtime` to control the conversion of the system's internal representation of time (based on UTC) to the format appropriate for the local time zone. That file gets copied from one of the files in `/usr/share/zoneinfo` by the tzsetup(8) command, usually as part of the initial installation procedure. The change in Daylight Savings Time rules affects the files in `/usr/share/zoneinfo` for the time zones affected by the legislation passed in 2005.
-
-Of the release branches supported by the FreeBSD Security Team as of February 2007, FreeBSD-6.2 and FreeBSD-5.5 have up to date zoneinfo files. FreeBSD-6.1 has correct zoneinfo files for time zones in the United States of America but out of date zoneinfo files for some of the other countries affected (for example Canada). An Errata Notice will be released shortly to update the zoneinfo files in FreeBSD-6.1.
-
-For the development branches HEAD, RELENG_6, RELENG_5, and RELENG_4 all have the correct zoneinfo files in them.
-
-NOTE: `/etc/localtime` currently does not get updated when the cvsup/buildworld/etc system update procedures are used. If a machine was installed using one of the releases not listed above it will probably have an outdated `/etc/localtime` file. That file can be updated by running tzsetup(8).
-
-For older systems no longer under support the misc/zoneinfo port can be installed to update the `/usr/share/zoneinfo` files, followed by running tzsetup(8) to update `/etc/localtime`.
diff --git a/website/content/en/relnotes.adoc b/website/content/en/relnotes.adoc
deleted file mode 100644
--- a/website/content/en/relnotes.adoc
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,31 +0,0 @@
----
-title: "Release Documentation"
-sidenav: about
----
-
-include::shared/releases.adoc[]
-
-= Release Documentation
-
-[.right]
-image:../gifs/doc.jpg[BSD daemon reading documentation,width=274,height=163]
-
-Each distribution of FreeBSD includes several documentation files describing the particular distribution (RELEASE, SNAPSHOTs, etc.). These files typically include:
-
-* README: General introduction.
-* Release Notes: Information about changes from the previous release of FreeBSD.
-* Hardware Notes: A list of hardware devices known to work with FreeBSD.
-* Installation Instructions: A brief guide to installing FreeBSD.
-* Errata: Late-breaking news, including corrections, security advisories, and potential problems found after each release.
-
-The release notes, hardware notes, and installation instructions are customized for each architecture supported by FreeBSD.
-
-== RELEASE versions of FreeBSD
-
-The release documentation for each -RELEASE version of FreeBSD (for example, {rel122-current}-RELEASE) can be found on the link:../releases/[releases] page of the FreeBSD web site and on mirror sites.
-
-These files are located in the top-level directory of each distribution. Both HTML and text forms are usually provided.
-
-== Snapshot Versions of FreeBSD
-
-The only release notes provided on the FreeBSD website are for FreeBSD -RELEASE, not FreeBSD -STABLE or FreeBSD -CURRENT.
diff --git a/website/themes/beastie/layouts/partials/sidenav.html b/website/themes/beastie/layouts/partials/sidenav.html
--- a/website/themes/beastie/layouts/partials/sidenav.html
+++ b/website/themes/beastie/layouts/partials/sidenav.html
@@ -4,14 +4,11 @@
<li><a href={{ "about/" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "about" }}</a></li>
<li><a href={{ "features/" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "features" }}</a></li>
<li><a href={{ "applications/" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "applications" }}</a></li>
- <li><a href={{ "advocacy/" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "advocacy" }}</a></li>
- <li><a href={{ "marketing/" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "marketing" }}</a></li>
<li><a href={{ "administration/" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "administration" }}</a></li>
<li><a href={{ "news/" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "news" }}</a></li>
<li><a href={{ "events" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "events" }}</a></li>
<li><a href={{ "press" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "pressSidenav" }}</a></li>
<li><a href={{ "art" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "art" }}</a></li>
- <li><a href={{ "logo" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "logo" }}</a></li>
<li><a href={{ "donations" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "donations" }}</a></li>
<li><a href={{ "copyright" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "legalNotices" }}</a></li>
<li><a href={{ "privacy" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "privacy" }}</a></li>
@@ -35,7 +32,6 @@
<li><a href={{ printf "%s%s%s" "https://docs.FreeBSD.org/" $currentLang "/books/developers-handbook/" }}>{{ i18n "developerHandbook" }}</a></li>
<li><a href={{ printf "%s%s%s" "https://docs.FreeBSD.org/" $currentLang "/articles/committers-guide" }}>{{ i18n "committersGuide" }}</a></li>
<li><a href={{ printf "%s%s%s" "https://docs.FreeBSD.org/" $currentLang "/books/porters-handbook/" }}>{{ i18n "porterHandbook" }}</a></li>
- <li><a href={{ "developers/cvs/" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "sourceCodeRepositories" }}</a></li>
<li><a href={{ "releng" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "releng" }}</a></li>
<li><a href={{ "platforms" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "platforms" }}</a></li>
<li><a href="https://wiki.FreeBSD.org/IdeasPage">{{ i18n "ideas" }}</a></li>
@@ -49,7 +45,6 @@
<li><a href="https://man.FreeBSD.org">{{ i18n "man" }}</a></li>
<li><a href="https://papers.freebsd.org/">{{ i18n "papers" }}</a></li>
<li><a href={{ printf "%s%s%s" "https://docs.FreeBSD.org/" $currentLang "/" }}>{{ i18n "booksArticles" }}</a></li>
- <li><a href={{ "publish" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "publications" }}</a></li>
<li><a href={{ "docs/webresources/" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "webresources" }}</a></li>
<li><a href={{ "projects/newbies/" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "newbies" }}</a></li>
<li><a href={{ "docproj" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "docproj" }}</a></li>
@@ -84,24 +79,9 @@
</li>
<li><a href={{ "ports" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "portedApplications" }}</a></li>
</ul>
-{{ else if eq .sidenavType "gnome" }}
-<ul>
- <li>
- <a href={{ "gnome" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "gnome" }}</a>
- <ul>
- <li><a href={{ printf "%s%s%s" "https://docs.FreeBSD.org/" $currentLang "/books/handbook/x11/#x11-wm-gnome" }}>{{ i18n "installationInstructions" }}</a></li>
- <li><a href={{ "gnome/screenshots/" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "screenshots" }}</a></li>
- <li><a href={{ "gnome/contact/" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "contactUs" }}</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
-</ul>
{{ else if eq .sidenavType "ports" }}
<ul>
- <li><a href={{ "ports/" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "aboutPorts" }}</a></li>
- <li><a href={{ "ports/installing/" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "installing" }}</a></li>
- <li><a href={{ "ports/updating/" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "updating" }}</a></li>
- <li><a href={{ "ports/searching/" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "searching" }}</a></li>
- <li><a href={{ "ports/references/" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "moreInformation" }}</a></li>
+ <li><a href="https://ports.freebsd.org/cgi/ports.cgi">Ports</a></li>
<li><a href="https://www.freshports.org/" target="_blank">FreshPorts</a></li>
</ul>
{{ else if eq .sidenavType "support" }}
@@ -129,10 +109,7 @@
</ul>
</li>
<li>
- <a href={{ "support/bugreports/" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "bugreports" }}</a>
- <ul>
- <li><a href="https://bugs.FreeBSD.org/submit/">{{ i18n "submitPR" }}</a></li>
- </ul>
+ <li><a href="https://bugs.FreeBSD.org/submit/">{{ i18n "submitPR" }}</a></li>
</li>
<li><a href={{ "support/webresources/" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "webresources" }}</a></li>
</ul>
@@ -141,14 +118,11 @@
<li><a href={{ "about/" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "about" }}</a></li>
<li><a href={{ "features/" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "features" }}</a></li>
<li><a href={{ "applications/" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "applications" }}</a></li>
- <li><a href={{ "advocacy/" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "advocacy" }}</a></li>
- <li><a href={{ "marketing/" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "marketing" }}</a></li>
<li><a href={{ "administration/" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "administration" }}</a></li>
<li><a href={{ "news/newsflash/" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "news" }}</a></li>
<li><a href={{ "events" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "events" }}</a></li>
<li><a href={{ "press" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "pressSidenav" }}</a></li>
<li><a href={{ "art" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "art" }}</a></li>
- <li><a href={{ "logo" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "logo" }}</a></li>
<li><a href={{ "donations" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "donations" }}</a></li>
<li><a href={{ "copyright" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "legalNotices" }}</a></li>
<li><a href={{ "privacy" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "privacy" }}</a></li>
diff --git a/website/themes/beastie/layouts/partials/site-navigation.html b/website/themes/beastie/layouts/partials/site-navigation.html
--- a/website/themes/beastie/layouts/partials/site-navigation.html
+++ b/website/themes/beastie/layouts/partials/site-navigation.html
@@ -15,12 +15,6 @@
<li>
<a href={{ "features/" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "features" }}</a>
</li>
- <li>
- <a href={{ "advocacy/" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "advocacy" }}</a>
- </li>
- <li>
- <a href={{ "marketing/" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "marketing" }}</a>
- </li>
<li>
<a href={{ "privacy/" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "privacyPolicy" }}</a>
</li>
@@ -28,7 +22,7 @@
<a href={{ "projects/" | absLangURL }}>{{ i18n "projects" }}</a>
</li>
<li>
- <a href={{ "ports/" | absLangURL }} title={{ i18n "ports" }}>{{ i18n "ports" }}</a>
+ <a href="https://ports.freebsd.org/cgi/ports.cgi" title={{ i18n "ports" }}>{{ i18n "ports" }}</a>
</li>
</ul>
</li>

File Metadata

Mime Type
text/plain
Expires
Sat, Nov 23, 2:41 PM (1 h, 32 m)
Storage Engine
blob
Storage Format
Raw Data
Storage Handle
14804017
Default Alt Text
D41963.id128393.diff (101 KB)

Event Timeline