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This book describes the released versions of FreeBSD for Intel and Alpha processors. Current support for SPARC 64 processors is changing too fast for it to be practical to give details specific to this processor, but nearly everything in this book also applies to SPARC 64. | 2 April 2003 17 00 47 The Complete FreeBSD introduction.mm page 1 In this chapter How to use this book FreeBSD features Licensing conditions A little history Other free UNIX-like operating systems FreeBSD system documentation Other documentation on FreeBSD The FreeBSD community Mailing lists The Berkeley daemon Introduction FreeBSD is a free operating system derived from AT T s UNIX operating system.1 It runs on the following platforms Computers based on the Intel i386 CPU architecture including the 386 486 and Pentium families of processors and compatible CPUs from AMD and Cyrix. The Compaq Digital Alpha processor. 64 bit SPARC machines from Sun Microsystems. In addition significant development efforts are going towards porting FreeBSD to other hardware notably the Intel 64 bit architecture and the IBM Motorola PowerPC architecture. This book describes the released versions of FreeBSD for Intel and Alpha processors. Current support for SPARC 64 processors is changing too fast for it to be practical to give details specific to this processor but nearly everything in this book also applies to SPARC 64. 1. FreeBSD no longer contains any AT T proprietary code so it may be distributed freely. See page 7 for more details. introduction.mm v v4.22 2003 04 02 06 36 16 1 2 April 2003 17 00 47 The Complete FreeBSD . tools tmac.Mn page 2 The Complete FreeBSD 2 How to use this book This book is intended for a number of different audiences. It attempts to present the material without too many forward references. It contains the following parts 1. The first part Chapters 1 to 6 tells you how to install FreeBSD and what to do if things go wrong. 2. Chapters 7 to 15 introduce you to life with FreeBSD including setting up optional features and system administration. 3. Chapters 16 to 27 introduce you to FreeBSD s rich network support. 4. Finally Chapters 28 to 33 look at system administration topics that build on all the preceding material. In more detail we ll discuss the .