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A wide variety of documentation is available for FreeBSD, on this web site, on other web sites, and available over the counter.
All the documentation on this site can be downloaded in a variety of different formats (HTML, Postscript, PDF, and more) and compression schemes (GZip, BZip2, Zip) from the FreeBSD FTP site.
This documentation is provided and maintained by the FreeBSD Documentation Project, and we are always looking for people to contribute new documentation and maintain existing documentation.
The FreeBSD
FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions, and answers, covering all
aspects of FreeBSD.
The FreeBSD
Handbook
A constantly evolving, comprehensive resource for FreeBSD
users.
The
FreeBSD Developer's Handbook
For people who want to develop software for FreeBSD (and not
just people who are developing FreeBSD itself).
Chapter 2
of "The Design and Implementation of the 4.4BSD Operating
System"
Donated by Addison-Wesley, provides a design overview of 4.4BSD,
from which FreeBSD was originally derived.
Chapter
8 of "The FreeBSD Corporate Networker's Guide"
Donated by Addison-Wesley, provides an in-depth look at using
FreeBSD to provide printing services to Windows, NT, and Novell
hosts.
The Pedantic
PPP Primer
Everything you need to know about configuring PPP on
FreeBSD.
The Porter's
+ The Porter's
Handbook The FreeBSD
Documentation Project Primer for New Contributors The
Committer's Guide The
List of FreeBSD Contributors Dialup
firewalling with FreeBSD Creating
a diskless X server Filtering
Bridges Fonts and
FreeBSD Formatting
media on FreeBSD How
to get the best results from the FreeBSD-questions mailing list An MH
Primer Using
FreeBSD with other operating systems FreeBSD
First Steps Programming Tools on FreeBSD PXE booting
FreeBSD Serial
and UART devices FreeBSD
and Solid State Devices Storage Devices Design
elements of the FreeBSD VM system Zip-drives
and FreeBSD 4.4BSD Documents: This is a
hypertext version of the 4.4BSD documents from
/usr/share/doc, where you will find the
documents on a FreeBSD machine (if you install the doc
distribution). Info Documents: This is a
hypertext version of the Info documents from
/usr/share/info, where you will find
the Info documents on a FreeBSD machine (if you install the info
distribution). Various independent efforts have also produced a great deal of useful
information about FreeBSD. A Comprehensive Guide
to FreeBSD - an attempt at a more readable, "book-like"
tutorial explaining the FreeBSD Operating System. Intended for
people new to both FreeBSD and UNIX. Currently a work in
progress. Computer Bits, an
Internet online magazine, has, since March 1996, been running an
excellent series of FreeBSD related articles in their column titled
The Network Community, by
Ted Mittelstaedt. These articles cover everything from setting up
a
FreeBSD based mail server to doing Network
Address Translation for other hosts. Kirk McKusick, one
of the original architects of BSD at U.C. Berkeley, teaches two 4.4BSD Kernel
Internals courses using FreeBSD. For those unable to attend
the courses in person, a video tape series is also now
available. FreeBSD How-To's for
the Lazy and Hopeless is another somewhat more light-hearted
attempt to provide more readable "how-to" style information on
setting up and configuring FreeBSD. The
Linux+FreeBSD mini-HOWTO describes how to use
Linux and FreeBSD on the same system. It introduces FreeBSD and
discusses how the two operating systems can cooperate, e.g. by
sharing swap space. The
Open
Directory Project offers an excellent selection of links for
FreeBSD, including a list of
prominent
users which can be helpful for marketing purposes. Articles in the press about FreeBSD. The FreeBSD project's current statement about its Year 2000
compatibility. A monthly (sometimes bi-weekly) newsletter announcing recent
developments in the FreeBSD arena. Subscribe to freebsd-announce to
receive this newsletter via e-mail. If you like digging your fingers into source code, here is a hypertext
version of the FreeBSD kernel source. This is brought to you
courtesy of Warren
Toomey. The industry leader in BSD news. A monthly collection of easy to read (we hope)
articles written by FreeBSD users and administrators just like you. Like FreeBSD itself, this documentation is the product of a volunteer
effort. The goals of the project are outlined here, as are the
procedures for submitting corrections and new material. The FreeBSD Diary is a collection of how-to entries aimed at UNIX
novices. The aim is to provide a set of step-by-step guides to
installing and configuring various ports.
Essential reading if you plan on providing a port of a third
party piece of software.
Everything you need to know in order to start contributing to the
FreeBSD Documentation Project.Articles
Introductory information for FreeBSD committers.
A list of organizations and individuals who have helped
enhance FreeBSD.
How to set up a firewall using PPP and ipfw over a dialup link
with dynamically assigned IP addresses.
How to create a diskless X server.
Configuring firewalls and filtering on FreeBSD hosts acting as
bridges rather than routers.
A description of the various font technologies in FreeBSD, and
how to use them with different programs.
How to slice, partition, and format fixed and removable media on
FreeBSD.
Tips and tricks to help you maximize the chances of getting
useful information from the -questions mailing list.
An introduction to using the MH mail reader on
FreeBSD.
How to install FreeBSD alongside one or more different operating
systems on the same computer.
For people coming to FreeBSD and Unix for the first
time.
This document has moved into The
Developer's Handbook.
How to create an Intel PXE server using FreeBSD, and how to
configure a FreeBSD client to boot from a PXE server.
Detailed information about the use of serial ports on FreeBSD,
including several multi-port serial cards.
The use of solid state disk devices in FreeBSD.
Detailed information about using storage devices with FreeBSD,
including ESDI disks, and SCSI disks, tape drives, and CDROM
drives.
An easy to follow description of the design of the FreeBSD
virtual memory system.
How to format, mount, and use an Iomega Zip (SCSI, IDE, or
parallel) Drive on FreeBSD.Manual pages
Other documentation
On other web sites
Books
Articles
Links
In the real world...
FreeBSD in the Press
Additional resources
Year 2000 Compatibility
BSD Real-Quick (TM) Newsletter
The
Source Code
Daemon News
The FreeBSD 'zine
The FreeBSD
Diary