Index: head/en_US.ISO8859-1/htdocs/docproj/translations.xml
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&title;
$FreeBSD$
The FreeBSD Brazilian Portuguese Documentation Project
Web: http://doc.fug.com.br/
E-Mail: ebrandi@FreeBSD.org
- Mailing lists available
- Access the following URL
http://www.fug.com.br/mailman/listinfo/doc/
for instructions on how to subscribe to the Brazilian Portuguese
translation group's mailing list.
Posting is allowed for the members at doc@fug.com.br
- Documents available
- FAQ
- FreeBSD
Documentation Project Primer for New Contributors
- Building
Products with FreeBSD
- Contributing
to FreeBSD
- Explaining
BSD
- How
to get best results from the FreeBSD-questions mailing list
- Build
Your Own FreeBSD Update Server
- Mirroring
FreeBSD
- FreeBSD
Quickstart Guide for Linux Users
- For
People New to Both FreeBSD and &unix;
- Writing
FreeBSD Problem Reports
- Documents currently being worked on
- FreeBSD Handbook
- FreeBSD website
- FreeBSD Articles
The FreeBSD Bulgarian Documentation Project
Web: http://bg-freebsd.org/
E-Mail: freebsd-fdp@bg-freebsd.org
- Mailing list available
- Send an email to freebsd-fdp-subscribe@bg-freebsd.org.
Posting is allowed for the members at freebsd-fdp@bg-freebsd.org
- Documents available
- Documents currently being worked on
- FreeBSD Handbook
- FreeBSD website
- The Design and Implementation of 4.4BSD (sample chapter)
- Frequently Asked Questions for FreeBSD
The FreeBSD Simplified Chinese Documentation Project
E-Mail: delphij@FreeBSD.org or
ygy@FreeBSD.org
- Documents currently being worked on
- FreeBSD Website
- Handbook
The FreeBSD Traditional Chinese Documentation Project
Web: https://www.freebsd.org/zh_TW/
E-Mail: chinsan@FreeBSD.org
- USENET Newsgroup available
- We usually use tw.bbs.comp.386bsd to discuss these issue.
It can be access by the following URL:
PTT WebBBS
Google Group
and anything else which newsreader can read tw.bbs.comp.386bsd.
- Documents available
- FAQ
- Documents currently being worked on
- FreeBSD website
- Handbook
- Developers' Handbook
- Porters' Handbook
- FreeBSD Document Project Primer for New Contributors
The FreeBSD Dutch Documentation Project
E-Mail: remko@FreeBSD.org or
rene@FreeBSD.org
- Released documents
- Handbook
- Several articles
- Web page
The FreeBSD Estonian Documentation Project
Web:
http://www.bsd.ee/
The FreeBSD French Documentation Project
Email: blackend@FreeBSD.org or
gioria@FreeBSD.org
- Documents available
- FAQ
- Some articles and
tutorials
- Documents currently being worked on
- Handbook,
Web
The FreeBSD German Documentation Project
Web: German Project status page
E-Mail: de-bsd-translators@de.FreeBSD.org
IRC: Server: irc.freenode.net, Channel: #FreeBSD-Doc.de
- Documents available/being worked on:
-
Web,
developers-handbook,
FAQ,
FDP Primer,
Handbook,
porters-handbook,
some articles.
The FreeBSD Greek Documentation Project
E-mail: Giorgos Keramidas <keramida@FreeBSD.org>
E-mail: freebsd-doc-el@lists.hellug.gr
IRC: Server: eu.irc.gr, us.irc.gr, Channel: #bsddocs
- Mailing lists available
- The freebsd-doc-el is the main discussion list for the Greek
translations. The main list language is Greek, but it's also ok to write in
English.
List info:
http://lists.hellug.gr/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-doc-el
- Documents available
-
some articles and tutorials.
- Documents currently being worked on
-
Handbook,
FAQ
- Repositories of ongoing work (Mercurial)
-
Imports of the FreeBSD doc tree,
Main translation tree (doc),
Translation tree of Manolis Kiagias (doc),
Imports of the FreeBSD www tree,
Main www translation tree (www),
Translation tree of Manolis Kiagias (www).
The FreeBSD Hungarian Documentation Project
Web: https://www.freebsd.org/hu/docproj/hungarian.html
E-Mail: gabor@FreeBSD.org
- Documents available
-
Web,
some articles,
Handbook,
FAQ,
FDP Primer.
The FreeBSD Italian Documentation Project
Web: https://people.freebsd.org/~madpilot/ItalianTranslation/
E-Mail: madpilot@freebsd.org
- Documents available
- Handbook
- Documents currently being worked on
- Handbook
- Git repository
- GitHub
The FreeBSD Japanese Documentation Project
Web: http://www.jp.FreeBSD.org/doc-jp/
E-Mail: doc-jp@jp.FreeBSD.org
- Documents available
-
Handbook,
FAQ,
Web,
FreeBSD NewsLetter Issue #2
- Documents currently being worked on
-
FreeBSD Tutorials
The FreeBSD Korean Documentation Project
Web: https://wiki.kr.freebsd.org
E-Mail: doc@kr.FreeBSD.org
- Documents currently being worked on
- Handbook
The FreeBSD Mongolian Documentation Project
E-Mail:
ganbold@micom.mng.net,
natsag2000@yahoo.com,
admin@mnbsd.org
The FreeBSD Polish Documentation Project
E-Mail: bsd@therek.net
- Documents available
- Some tutorials
- Documents currently being worked on
- Handbook
The FreeBSD Russian Documentation Project
- Documents available
- FAQ
- WWW
- Other documents list
- Documents currently being worked on
- Handbook
The FreeBSD Spanish Documentation Project
Web: https://www.FreeBSD.org/es/
E-Mail: carlavilla@FreeBSD.org
- Documents available
- FAQ
- Handbook
- Articles
The FreeBSD Turkish Documentation Project
Web: http://www.enderunix.org/ftdp/
E-Mail: ofsen@enderunix.org
- Mailing lists available
- To subscribe to the ftdp mailing list see the project's
web page or send a blank e-mail to ftpd-subscribe@lists.enderunix.org.
- Documents available
- Other documents list
- Documents currently being worked on
- FDP-Primer
+
+
+The FreeBSD Farsi/Persian Documentation Project
+Web: Iran BSD User Group
+E-Mail: kfv@irbug.org
FreeBSD Documentation Project Home
Index: head/en_US.ISO8859-1/htdocs/projects/projects.xml
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--- head/en_US.ISO8859-1/htdocs/projects/projects.xml (revision 54057)
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]>
&title;
$FreeBSD$
In addition to the mainstream development path of FreeBSD, a number
of developer groups are working on the cutting edge to expand
FreeBSD's range of applications in new directions. Follow the links
below to learn more about these exciting projects.
If you feel that a project is missing, please send the URL and a short
description (3-10 lines) to
www@FreeBSD.org.
In addition, some of these projects regularly submit status reports,
which can be viewed on the status
reports page.
Documentation
Applications
- &java; on FreeBSD:
This contains information on where to obtain the latest &jdk; for
FreeBSD, how to install and run it, and a list of &java; software that
you may find interesting.
- GNOME on FreeBSD:
This contains information on where to obtain the latest GNOME for
FreeBSD, how to install and run it, latest project news and
updates, FAQ covering FreeBSD-specific GNOME issues, application
porting guidelines and much more.
- KDE on FreeBSD:
This contains links to the latest KDE releases for FreeBSD, as well as
documentation and tutorials about how to install and run KDE on
FreeBSD. Project news and a FreeBSD-specific FAQ are also
available.
-
Mono on FreeBSD:
Here you can find information about the state of Mono and C# for FreeBSD.
-
OpenOffice.org on FreeBSD:
Information about the various OpenOffice.org ports.
- FreeBSD Ports Collection:
The FreeBSD Ports Collection provides an easy way to compile and
install a wide range of applications with a minimum amount of effort.
A list of current ports is available along with a search mechanism
to see if a specific application exists in the Ports Collection.
- FreeBSD Ports distfiles scanner:
A list which checks the Ports Collection for unfetchable distfiles
and provides a summary for each port.
- FreshPorts: Provides the most up-to-date list of
ports and port changes. Add your favourite ports to your watch list and receive email
notification of any changes.
- PortsMon: Is a server which
checks the Ports Collection and keeps package building logs and error
logs for each port.
Storage
- Coda:
A distributed filesystem. Among its features are disconnected
operation, good security model, server replication and persistent
client side caching.
-
Journaling versus Soft Updates: Asynchronous Meta-data Protection in File Systems.
Kernel, security
- TrustedBSD:
Provides a set of trusted operating system extensions to the FreeBSD operating
system. This includes features such as fine-grained privileges (capabilities),
Access Control Lists, and Mandatory Access Control. These features are
being integrated back into the base FreeBSD distribution, as well as being
ported to other BSD-derived systems.
- Kernel
Stress Test Suite: The purpose of this stress test is to crash
the system. The stress test is composed of small test programs and
scripts. Each test targets a specific area of the kernel. The key
concept of this test suite is chaos. Each test sleeps for a random
number of seconds before it starts up in a random number of
invocations.
Device drivers
- busdma
and SMPng driver conversion: busdma provides a portable abstraction
to the Direct Memory Access (DMA) hardware primitives used by many high
performance device drivers. By using this abstraction, device driver
authors avoid adding platform-specific DMA management code, improving
the portability of drivers between hardware architectures. This page
also tracks the progress of drivers towards being SMPng-safe.
- Home Automation:
Using FreeBSD to run appliance controllers, infra-red controllers,
automated telephone systems, and more.
Architecture
- Porting FreeBSD to PowerPC® systems:
Contains information on the FreeBSD PPC port, such as mailing list
information and so on.
- Porting FreeBSD to SPARC® systems:
Contains information on the FreeBSD SPARC port including a FAQ,
some early boot code, information on SPARC processors and motherboards,
and other SPARC projects.
-
SysVR4 Emulation: This page describes an SysVR4 emulator for
FreeBSD. It is currently capable of running (or walking, in some
cases) a wide-ish variety of SysV executables taken from Solaris™/x86
2.5.1 and 2.6 systems. I have reason to believe that it will also run
SCO UnixWare and SCO OpenServer binaries.
- The OSKit:
The OSKit is a framework and a set of 31 component libraries oriented
to operating systems, together with extensive documentation. By
providing in a modular way not only most of the infrastructure
"grunge" needed by an OS, but also many higher-level components, the
OSKit's goal is to lower the barrier to entry to OS R&D and to
lower its costs. The OSKit makes it vastly easier to create a new OS,
port an existing OS to the x86 (or in the future, to other
architectures supported by the OSkit), or enhance an OS to support a
wider range of devices, filesystem formats, executable formats, or
network services. The OSKit also works well for constructing OS-related
programs, such as boot loaders or OS-level servers atop a
microkernel.
Misc
- NanoBSD:
NanoBSD is a tool designed to create a possibly reduced FreeBSD
system image, which is suited to fit on a Compact Flash card
(or other mass storage medium) in a way which is suitable for
use in appliance like applications. The FreeBSD documentation
collection includes an introductory
article about NanoBSD,
which includes useful tips about setting up, running and
using NanoBSD.
- GLOBAL:
A common source code tag system that works the same way across
diverse environments. Currently, it supports the shell command line,
the nvi editor, web browser, the emacs editor, and the elvis editor,
and the supported languages are C, Yacc, and Java.
- ACPI on FreeBSD:
+ href="wiki.freebsd.org/ACPI">ACPI on FreeBSD:
A Project created to get ACPI working smoothly on FreeBSD.
-
TestSuite: This project aims to equip FreeBSD with a
comprehensive test suite that is easy to run out of the box
and during the development of the system. The goal of the test
suite is to assist both developers and users in assessing the
quality of FreeBSD.