freebsd-skq/share/FAQ/sup.FAQ

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FreeBSD
Sup FAQ
$Id: sup.FAQ,v 1.3 1995/01/03 15:54:07 gclarkii Exp $
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.
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:
ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG:/pub/FreeBSD/packages/sup.tgz
Install the sup package using pkg_add and add the following line to
your /etc/services file:
sup 871/tcp #sup
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 *but* the secure
collection and then go look on "braae.ru.ac.za", where it's available for
anonymous ftp for those outside the U.S.
Any other distributions you do not wish to receive can be commented out
with a # at the begining of the distribution line.
Once this is setup, you're ready to go. To start sup type:
sup supfile
If you wish to see what sup is doing "verbosely", give it the -v option,
like so:
sup -v supfile
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:
ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.ORG:/pub/FreeBSD/FAQ/current-policy.FAQ
For important information on just what we can and cannot do for you as
a -current user.
Gary Clark II / Jordan Hubbard
FreeBSD maintainance persons.
----
Description of FreeBSD SUP distributions:
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
Ports:
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
ports-shells: /usr/ports/shells various UN*X shells
ports-utils: /usr/ports/utils miscellaneous utilities
ports-x11: /usr/ports/x11 X11 software