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<!-- $Id: sup.sgml,v 1.5 1995/07/07 22:25:54 jfieber Exp $ -->
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<!-- The FreeBSD Documentation Project -->
<sect><heading>SUP<label id="sup"></heading>
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<p><em>Contributed by &a.jkh; and &a.gclarkii;.</em>
SUP is a network based software update tool developed at CMU. The
purpose of this document is get the beginner up and running with sup.
<sect1><heading>Getting setup</heading>
<p>First off you will need to pick up the sup binaries. The easiest
way of doing this is to grab the sup.tgz package from:
<verb>
ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG:/pub/FreeBSD/packages/sup.tgz
</verb>
Install the sup package using pkg_add and add the following line to
your /etc/services file:
<verb>
sup 871/tcp #sup
</verb>
SUP gets the information it needs to run from a configuration file
called a supfile. This file tells sup what collections it will be updating
and/or installing and where they go. The supfile in this directory will
sup both the source and ports collection - look for the blank line seperating
the two collections; if you don't want ports, you can simply delete all the
ports entries. If you're inside the United States, you may also uncomment
the `secure' collection line to grab the DES code. If you're outside the
U.S., you should NOT sup this code from FreeBSD.ORG as this will
violate U.S. export restrictions. Simply sup everything <em>but</em> the secure
collection and then go look on braae.ru.ac.za, where it's available for
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anonymous ftp for those outside the U.S.
Any other distributions you do not wish to receive can be commented out
with a &num; at the begining of the distribution line.
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Once this is setup, you're ready to go. To start sup type:
<verb>
sup supfile
</verb>
If you wish to see what sup is doing "verbosely", give it the -v option,
like so:
<verb>
sup -v supfile
</verb>
Thats all there is to it! Remember that if you're running current,
which is what you will have if you sup, please join the freebsd-current
mailing list. You should also be sure to read <ref id="current"
name="Staying current with FreeBSD">
for important information on just what we can and cannot do for you as
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a -current user.
<sect1><heading>Description of FreeBSD SUP distributions</heading>
<p>For the main FreeBSD distribution:
<verb>
base: /usr/src/... misc files at the top of /usr/src
bin: /usr/src/bin system binaries
secure: /usr/src/secure DES Sources. U.S./Canada only!
etc: /usr/src/etc system files
games: /usr/src/games games
gnu: /usr/src/gnu sources under the GNU Public License
include: /usr/src/include include files
sys: /usr/src/sys kernel sources
lib: /usr/src/lib libraries
libexec: /usr/src/libexec more system binaries
share: /usr/src/share various shared resources
sbin: /usr/src/sbin even more system binaries
usrbin: /usr/src/usr.bin user binaries
usrsbin: /usr/src/usr.sbin that's it for the system binaries
</verb>
And for the ports collection:
<verb>
ports-base: /usr/ports/... misc files at the top of /usr/ports
ports-editors: /usr/ports/editors text editors
ports-game: /usr/ports/games games
ports-lang: /usr/ports/lang programming languages
ports-mail: /usr/ports/mail mail software
ports-math: /usr/ports/math math software
ports-net: /usr/ports/net networking software
ports-news: /usr/ports/news USENET news software
ports-print: /usr/ports/print printing software
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ports-russian: /usr/ports/russian russian software
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ports-shells: /usr/ports/shells various UN*X shells
ports-utils: /usr/ports/utils miscellaneous utilities
ports-x11: /usr/ports/x11 X11 software
</verb>