freebsd-dev/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO_8859-1/distributions.hlp
Jordan K. Hubbard 8bceef50c3 A large collection of patches committed from the top to make it easier
on me:

1. Mark Murray's eBones patches.
2. Joerg's German docs + fixes.
3. Various sysinstall bug fixes from me + Mark's eBones menu changes.
4. Steven G. Kargl's doc fixes.
Submitted by:	markm, joerg, jkh, kargl@troutmask.apl.washington.edu
1995-06-07 05:52:05 +00:00

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An ``X-'' prefixed before a distribution set means that the XFree86
3.1.1u1 base distribution, libraries, manual pages, SVGA server and a
set of default fonts will be selected in addition to the set itself.
If you select such a set, you will also be presented with a set of
menus for customizing the selections to your desired X Window System
setup.
N.B. All references in this document to `complete source' mean the
complete source tree minus any legally encumbered cryptography code.
The current "canned" installations are as follows:
Developer: Base ("bin") distribution, man pages, dictionary
files, profiling libraries and the complete source tree.
Kern-Developer: As above, but with only kernel sources instead of
the complete source tree.
User: The base distribution, man pages, dictionary files and
the FreeBSD 1.x and 2.0 compatibility sets.
Minimal: Only the base distribution.
Everything: The base distribution, man pages, dictionary files,
profiling libraries, the FreeBSD 1.x and the FreeBSD 2.0
compatibility libraries, the complete source tree,
games and your choice of XFree86 distribution components.
N.B. Still no cryptocraphy source code!
Custom: Allows you to modify or create your distribution set on
a piece-by-piece basis.
Reset: Clear all currently selected distributions.
---
When using Custom, most of the sub-distribution choices are fairly
obvious, though two possible exceptions may be the "commerce" and
"xperimnt" distributions:
* The "commerce" directory, as its name implies, is devoted to
commercial offerings. This includes commercial products released
under special arrangement, limited functionality demos, shareware
products (you like it, you buy it), etc.
At the time of this writing, there are unfortunately not enough
commercial offerings to justify a fully split distribution set,
so each product is available both as a subdirectory and as part
of one large archive file. If you select "commerce" from the
distributions submenus then you'll get the big file containing
the entire collection copied to your hard disk. Don't do this
unless you've got at least 10MB to devote to it!
* The "xperimnt" directory contains, not surprisingly, experimental
offerings. Unfinished (or work-in-progress) features, special
purpose drivers and packages, strange proof-of-concept stuff,
it's a mixed bag! Select this item on a distribution menu and
you'll get the whole collection (between 10 and 30MB).
If you're installing from CDROM then all of the commercial and
"experimental" offerings are also easily available in their
individual subdirectories and can be copied to hard disk at
any time.
You may also notice that certain distributions, like "des" and "krb",
are marked "NOT FOR EXPORT!" This is because it's illegal to
export them from the United States (or any other country which
considers encryption technology to be on its restricted export
list). Since breaking this law only gets the _originating_ site
(US!) in trouble, please do not load these distributions from U.S.
servers!
A number of "foreign" servers do exist for the benefit of
non-U.S. sites, one of which is "skeleton.mikom.csir.co.za".
Please get all such export restricted software from there
if you are outside the U.S., thanks!