503 lines
21 KiB
HTML
503 lines
21 KiB
HTML
|
<!--startcut ======================================================= -->
|
|||
|
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 3.2//EN">
|
|||
|
<html>
|
|||
|
<head>
|
|||
|
<TITLE>The Answer Guy 31: Yggdrasil:
|
|||
|
A Breath of Life for the Root of CD Linux Distributions?</TITLE>
|
|||
|
</head>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<BODY BGCOLOR="#FFFFFF" TEXT="#000000" LINK="#0000FF" VLINK="#A000A0"
|
|||
|
ALINK="#FF0000">
|
|||
|
<!--endcut ========================================================= -->
|
|||
|
<H4>"Linux Gazette...<I>making Linux just a little more fun!</I>"
|
|||
|
</H4>
|
|||
|
<P> <hr> <P>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<!-- =============================================================== -->
|
|||
|
<H1 align="center"><A NAME="answer">
|
|||
|
<img src="../gx/dennis/qbubble.gif" alt="" border="0" align="middle">
|
|||
|
<a href="./index.html">The Answer Guy</a>
|
|||
|
<img src="../gx/dennis/bbubble.gif" alt="" border="0" align="middle">
|
|||
|
</A></H1> <BR>
|
|||
|
<H4 align="center">By James T. Dennis,
|
|||
|
<a href="mailto:linux-questions-only@ssc.com">linux-questions-only@ssc.com</a><BR>
|
|||
|
Starshine Technical Services,
|
|||
|
<A HREF="http://www.starshine.org/">http://www.starshine.org/</A> </H4>
|
|||
|
<p><hr><p>
|
|||
|
<H3><img src="../gx/dennis/qbub.gif" alt="(?)" width="50" height="28"
|
|||
|
align="left" border="0">Yggdrasil:
|
|||
|
A Breath of Life for the Root of CD Linux Distributions?</H3>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<p><strong>From Mike on Sun, 05 Jul 1998
|
|||
|
in the</strong>
|
|||
|
<a href="news:comp.unix.questions">comp.unix.questions</a>
|
|||
|
<strong>newsgroup</strong></p>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<p><strong>
|
|||
|
What do you know about
|
|||
|
<a http://www.yggdrasil.com/">Yggdrasil</a> linux distribution?
|
|||
|
They purport
|
|||
|
significant advances in OS/SOFTWARE/DOCUMENTATION not achieved by
|
|||
|
others. Is it real or make believe or worthy of mention? I was
|
|||
|
impressed by what I read, however I am not all knowing but just
|
|||
|
researching linux to find the best distribution/version to begin
|
|||
|
learning yet have an os that is versatile enough to keep using once
|
|||
|
abilities exceed beginner/amateur. Mike
|
|||
|
</strong></p>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<blockquote><img src="../gx/dennis/bbub.gif" alt="(!)" width="50" height="28"
|
|||
|
align="left" border="0">
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Yggdrasil's ``Plug and Play'' Linux was the first CD-ROM
|
|||
|
distribution ever produced. They also developed and released
|
|||
|
the first CDR recording software that was available under
|
|||
|
Linux. Yggdrasil was also one of the earliest companies to
|
|||
|
compile, print and bind "dead tree" versions of the LDP (Linux
|
|||
|
Documentation Project). Back near the beginning of 1997 they
|
|||
|
released an 8-CD set of Linux archives (not including their
|
|||
|
own distribution). They are the only company that I know of
|
|||
|
which has produced a video documentary on using Linux.
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Adam Richter, founder of Yggdrasil, is still active in the
|
|||
|
community. He frequently shows up and local user group
|
|||
|
meetings (<A HREF="http://www.svlug.org">http://www.svlug.org</A>)
|
|||
|
and he occasionally
|
|||
|
participates in discussions on the 'Linux-kernel' mailing
|
|||
|
list. In fact I saw him at the "midnight rally" that the
|
|||
|
SVLUG and some other bay area Linux enthusiasts hosted in
|
|||
|
front of Fry's and CompUSA on the night that Microsoft
|
|||
|
officially shipped Win '98(*).
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<ul><li>Specifically he and I discussed the fact that the
|
|||
|
rally had just run out of the 500 S.u.S.E. CD's that
|
|||
|
had been donated to us for promotional purposes.
|
|||
|
He joked that he could drive over to his offices
|
|||
|
--- a couple of miles from there --- and get a case or
|
|||
|
two of old sets of the "archives" --- but also expressed
|
|||
|
the concern that they were probably a little too old to
|
|||
|
be of interest to new Linux users.
|
|||
|
</ul>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Recently (just last February --- a few months ago), he
|
|||
|
announced his experimental "Ground Zero" repository --- which
|
|||
|
is an effort to provide a comprehensive and dynamic repository
|
|||
|
of all of the available Linux packages in tarball (Slackware
|
|||
|
compatible .tar.gz), RPM (Red Hat), and .deb formats.
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Apparently Adam also has some interesting processes running
|
|||
|
at his site --- based on some custom programming he's done.
|
|||
|
It monitors certain FTP sites (and some other sites?) and
|
|||
|
automatically fetches, builds and tests new kernels (and
|
|||
|
some other packages?). I don't know the details --- but it
|
|||
|
sounds very cool.
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
One of the things I really liked about Yggdrasil's distribution
|
|||
|
was that it had an integrated source tree. You could easily
|
|||
|
find the sources for anything in the distribution (I think it
|
|||
|
included a '<tt>whence</tt>' command which was similar to the '<tt>which</tt>'
|
|||
|
command except in that it pointed you to the source code for
|
|||
|
a command, rather than just to the binary).
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I mention that in the past tense since I haven't used
|
|||
|
"Plug and Play" Linux in a number of years --- it hasn't
|
|||
|
been updated recently. In response to your note I raced
|
|||
|
over to the Yggdrasil web site
|
|||
|
(<A HREF="http://www.yggdrasil.com/">http://www.yggdrasil.com/</A>)
|
|||
|
in the hopes that they actually have a new release.
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(I keep asking Adam and he just quietly assures me not to
|
|||
|
worry about it!).
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
So, I'd like to know what you've read (and if there was a
|
|||
|
date on it).
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
As for the relative merits of Yggdrasil's "Plug and Play"
|
|||
|
vs. <a href="http://redhat.com/">Red Hat</a>,
|
|||
|
<a href="http://www.suse.com/">S.u.S.E</a>.,
|
|||
|
<a href="http://www.debian.org/">Debian</a>,
|
|||
|
<a href="http://www.caldera.com/">Caldera</a>, and the most recent
|
|||
|
<a href="http://www.slackware.org/">Slackware</a>
|
|||
|
--- it's not a fair comparison. All of these other
|
|||
|
major, general purpose distributions have been updated several
|
|||
|
times since the last "Plug and Play" release.
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
So, I cannot recommend the old Yggdrasil version except for
|
|||
|
historical (almost archealogical) purposes. That's why I want
|
|||
|
them to release a new version.
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(Meanwhile the "Ground Zero" effort is very up-to-date and
|
|||
|
completely independent of your distribution --- so you should
|
|||
|
definitely bookmark their site and check on it regularly).
|
|||
|
</blockquote>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<p><hr width="40%"></p>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<H3><img src="../gx/dennis/qbub.gif" alt="(?)" width="50" height="28"
|
|||
|
align="left" border="0">More on Distribution Preferences</H3>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<p><strong>
|
|||
|
Answerguy,
|
|||
|
What do you think of this distribution?
|
|||
|
OpenLinux Base
|
|||
|
</strong></p>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<font color="navy"><em>
|
|||
|
<p><strong>
|
|||
|
OpenLinux<75>: A complete Linux operating
|
|||
|
system with all the system tools you<6F>ll need.
|
|||
|
Plus valuable add-ons, like Netscape<70>
|
|||
|
Communicator and backup utilities.
|
|||
|
</strong></p>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<p><strong>
|
|||
|
US and Canadian orders can take advantage of a $20.00
|
|||
|
rebate from Caldera, bringing the price of OpenLinux
|
|||
|
Base to $31.95
|
|||
|
</strong></p>
|
|||
|
</em></font>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<blockquote><img src="../gx/dennis/bbub.gif" alt="(!)" width="50" height="28"
|
|||
|
align="left" border="0">
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I haven't used any of the <a href="http://www.caldera.com/">Caldera</a> distributions
|
|||
|
recently. This is a much more recent version the those
|
|||
|
that I've used. So, I don't have an informed opinion on
|
|||
|
them.
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Since you just asked about Yggdrasil yesterday I'm wondering
|
|||
|
if this is a pattern. I hope you aren't going to send me
|
|||
|
of these every day.
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
My opinion about Caldera <em>Standard</em> is that it is the best
|
|||
|
choice for a site that has existing Netware servers or
|
|||
|
clients. It was also the first distribution that was
|
|||
|
supported by WordPerfect for Linux. There are a number of
|
|||
|
other commercial software companies that work with Caldera
|
|||
|
for releasing Linux versions of their product.
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If the Caldera Base includes a copy of
|
|||
|
<a href="http://www.stardivision.com/">Star</a>Office (as your
|
|||
|
press release says it does) than that is a very good reason
|
|||
|
to try it. (The installation of StarOffice that I have from
|
|||
|
an early 4.0 CD is very unstable --- it dies quickly and
|
|||
|
horribly under my
|
|||
|
<a href="http://www.suse.com/">S.u.S.E.</a> 5.1 system.
|
|||
|
I've heard that that
|
|||
|
there are new libraries and releases that fix that --- but I
|
|||
|
haven't been particularly motivated to go get them since I
|
|||
|
still mostly live in text consoles).
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
StarOffice is a very promising product --- and the competition
|
|||
|
between it Corel Office, and Applixware should be
|
|||
|
interesting. The most important feature of either is to
|
|||
|
provide me with stable, reliable access to MS Office .DOC and
|
|||
|
.XLS files. The first one to successfully do that with MS
|
|||
|
Office '97 wins my vote. (Since that is one of the few
|
|||
|
reasons for me to get out of a text console and into X --- the
|
|||
|
others being Netscape Navigator (when I need something that
|
|||
|
just doesn't look right in Lynx), 'xfig' (to draw diagrams for
|
|||
|
the book that I'm working on), and 'xdvi', and 'gv' (to
|
|||
|
preview the LaTeX and dvips output for same).
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
At the same time I recognize the potential of these office
|
|||
|
suites (and some others). As these get better we see Linux as
|
|||
|
a more serious contender on the desktops of home and corporate
|
|||
|
users. According to some surveys we're already winning against NT
|
|||
|
in a number of server categories (including web, mail, DNS, and
|
|||
|
SMB/<a href="http://samba.anu.edu.au/">Samba</a>). We've gained a
|
|||
|
lot of ground in the technical and scientific workstation market
|
|||
|
(although the push to get EDA and CAD/CAM suites ported is just barely
|
|||
|
started). But all the "mom's" and "pop's" out there that have
|
|||
|
their college kids buying systems for them need something a
|
|||
|
bit less intimidating than 'emacs' and 'vi' --- and TeX and
|
|||
|
friends.
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<a href="http://www.kde.org/">KDE</a> and
|
|||
|
<a href="http://www.gnome.org/">GNOME</a>
|
|||
|
will provide the main interface and many of the
|
|||
|
toys and widgets. StarOffice,
|
|||
|
<a href="http://www.applix.com/">Applix</a>ware,
|
|||
|
<a href="http://www.corel.com/">Corel</a> Office, SIAG,
|
|||
|
LyX, Wingz, Xess, and others are all vying to provide the
|
|||
|
main user applications.
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(I personally think we'll also need multi-media GUI "Welcome to
|
|||
|
Linux/XFree86/KDE" and "Welcome to Linux/XFree86/GNOME"
|
|||
|
interactive tutorials --- with sound, music, via, and a
|
|||
|
dancing, talking Tux. I want a system I can install on a
|
|||
|
box and send to my Mom!).
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<dl><dt>
|
|||
|
Getting back to your implicit question:
|
|||
|
<dd> Which Linux distribution should you try?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<dt> ... the answer is:
|
|||
|
<dd> I have no idea!
|
|||
|
</dl>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Unlike the marketeering weenies that you encounter in
|
|||
|
every magazine, and newspaper, on every TV and radio
|
|||
|
show and on billboard and busses every time you drive
|
|||
|
anywhere ... unlike them, I don't want to push a bunch
|
|||
|
of <em>features</em> on you and I have nothing to sell you
|
|||
|
(except my time --- which is pretty expensive).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
Helping someone select a Linux distribution (or anything
|
|||
|
else) is a matter of requirements analysis. What do
|
|||
|
you need? What do you want? How much are you willing to
|
|||
|
spend? (Time and money). It is quite possible that I
|
|||
|
would recommend FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, BSDI/OS, or
|
|||
|
even Win '95, NT, or MS-DOS --- <em>if</em> I understood your
|
|||
|
requirements sufficiently.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
Before you send me a list or essay on your requirements
|
|||
|
consider that the Answer Guy is time I volunteer to show
|
|||
|
my appreciation for all the work that people like Richard
|
|||
|
Stallman, Linus Torvalds, Alan Cox, Arnold Robbins, and
|
|||
|
so many others have put into the GNU project, Linux and
|
|||
|
other freeware. I try to answer questions that I think
|
|||
|
are of broad interest to many Linux users and potential
|
|||
|
Linux users. (And possibly of interest to *BSD'ers
|
|||
|
and eventually GNU HURD'ers).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
The easy answer to selecting a distribution is: pick one!
|
|||
|
Since many of them are freely distributable you might want
|
|||
|
to start with one of those. Debian and Red Hat are definitely
|
|||
|
freely accessible. I think Slackware is still available online
|
|||
|
--- and I suspect that it's perfectly O.K. to borrow a friend's
|
|||
|
copy of the CD. Walnut Creek might have exclusive rights on
|
|||
|
CD distribution of Slackware --- I don't know. I think S.u.S.E.
|
|||
|
is free for "personal" use (although it is a bit unclear my
|
|||
|
S.u.S.E. 5.2 manual says:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<blockquote><code>
|
|||
|
Copyright
|
|||
|
This work is copyrighted [sic] by S.u.S.E. GmbH and
|
|||
|
is placed under conditions of the GNU General Public
|
|||
|
License.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
You may copy it in whole or in part as long as the
|
|||
|
copies retain this copyright statement.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
</code></blockquote>
|
|||
|
... (overleaf of the title page). It's not clear whether
|
|||
|
"this work" is intended to refer to the book or to the
|
|||
|
distribution that included it. The box and CD case (4CD's)
|
|||
|
don't list any other copyright or licensing notices that I
|
|||
|
can find. The only index entry under the term "license"
|
|||
|
points that the Appendix of their manual that contains the
|
|||
|
full text of the FSF GPL. That would suggest that you can
|
|||
|
borrow my set of S.u.S.E. CD's and install it, and would
|
|||
|
even suggest that someone could start creating derivative
|
|||
|
works (other CD sets) to sell in competition with S.u.S.E.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
However, I've always been under the impression that S.u.S.E.
|
|||
|
is a commercial distribution. I purchased both of my copies
|
|||
|
for it -- 5.1 and 5.2 --- and I've purchased many copies of
|
|||
|
various Red Hat versions (the boxed set and the lower-priced
|
|||
|
archives sets). So, you might want to ask a S.u.S.E. rep
|
|||
|
before you go into production against them. However, I doubt
|
|||
|
that they'd even want you to waste their time asking if it's
|
|||
|
O.K. to install from a friend's set on an evaluation basis.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
You're clearly willing to buy some distribution once you
|
|||
|
find one you like. Personally I usually select Red Hat
|
|||
|
for my customers (after I've considered their needs) simply
|
|||
|
because Red Hat has a pretty good balance of the various
|
|||
|
factors they care about.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
Debian has more packages (slightly) -- but the last copy of
|
|||
|
dpkg that I used was very convoluted (I'm hoping to get a 2.0
|
|||
|
CD as soon as it goes out of beta). Slackware was nice when
|
|||
|
I needed it --- but most of my customers aren't interested
|
|||
|
in fussing with tarballs --- they want something with a
|
|||
|
decent package manager (one that can be operated easily
|
|||
|
from command lines as well as throught a GUI).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
Under RH it's pretty simple to write a script to poll an
|
|||
|
internal FTP site for package updates and automatically apply
|
|||
|
any of them that appear. (I think there's a package called
|
|||
|
'rpmwatch' floating around some 'contrib' directories somewhere
|
|||
|
that does precisely that). I haven't looked at RH 5.1 yet.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
S.u.S.E. and Caldera both use the RPM format.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
S.u.S.E. includes more packages that the last couple RH CD's
|
|||
|
I used (4.2 and 5.0). It seems to have a pretty good
|
|||
|
installation interface though I have mixed feelings about
|
|||
|
their interpretation of the SysV init scripts. They have a
|
|||
|
large shell script named /etc/rc.config (mine is about 770
|
|||
|
lines long --- of which about 500 are comments). This file
|
|||
|
contains a long list of shell variables and values. You
|
|||
|
can edit this file by hand or you can use YaST (Yet another
|
|||
|
Setup Tool) which is their curses based system's administration
|
|||
|
interface. The idea is that the other scripts all "source"
|
|||
|
this one file and use the variables that apply to their
|
|||
|
operation.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
On the one hand this is very nice. Concievably I could
|
|||
|
create a particular installation profile (which they support
|
|||
|
via their installation interface), install the system,
|
|||
|
configure it via YaST and put it into production.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
Let's assume I use the 'chattr +i +d' (immutable and no-dump)
|
|||
|
flags on all the files that came with the distribution and
|
|||
|
unset them as a pair whenever I change any of them; this would
|
|||
|
allow me to use the 'dump' program and <em>never</em> backup files
|
|||
|
that were from the initial installation off of the CD). This
|
|||
|
is for a "data+config" backup strategy.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
If I've stored the rescue floppy they created, and the
|
|||
|
rc.config file --- I should be able to restore the whole
|
|||
|
system to its configuration with just my installation
|
|||
|
CD's, my rescue diskette, and the rc.config file. (Naturally,
|
|||
|
I'll have to restore all my data as well).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
Another nice thing is that I might be able to create
|
|||
|
a little script to generate new rc.config files from a
|
|||
|
master form and a couple of other data files. If I have
|
|||
|
<em>lots</em> of new machine trickling in I might have a few
|
|||
|
files that contain lists of IP addresses, hostnames,
|
|||
|
NIS domain names, shared printers, and other local (LAN)
|
|||
|
data. I might conceivably be able to generate a new custom
|
|||
|
rc.config file for each new box and automate even more
|
|||
|
of the deployment.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
Under other distributions I have to mess with over a dozen
|
|||
|
separate files. Unfortunately it's not that easy even under
|
|||
|
S.u.S.E. If you use NFS you really want to use NIS or synchronize
|
|||
|
the 'passwd' and 'group' files across your systems (since
|
|||
|
maintaining ugidd maps is not scaleable and NFS relies on
|
|||
|
the uid/gid values to determine access and permissions.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
None of the distributions I've seen prompt me for a
|
|||
|
passwd/group file set prior to installation. So, if I use
|
|||
|
Red Hat on one system and S.u.S.E. on another (I do)
|
|||
|
--- there will be some base files that differ between them
|
|||
|
(most of the uid's created by most of the distributions
|
|||
|
<em>do</em> match -- there were only a couple that I had to
|
|||
|
run through a "masschown" script). (Distribution Dudes!:
|
|||
|
This is my enhancement plea for the month! Please let me
|
|||
|
hand you a passwd/group file set --- from floppy or over
|
|||
|
ftp/nfs/http --- and use that to map the ownership as you
|
|||
|
install).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
These days, for large sites, I recommend creating one
|
|||
|
"template" installation one a typical box, cutting that whole
|
|||
|
installation to tape or CDR after configuration but <em>before</em>
|
|||
|
any <em>use</em> (data). Now you can do all new system installations
|
|||
|
as "restores" from your backups. You can also take that
|
|||
|
opportunity to make sure that your recovery plans, rescue
|
|||
|
diskettes and backup media are all in working order. One
|
|||
|
reason I recommend that is that it takes me about
|
|||
|
four hours to fix various permissions and configurations
|
|||
|
(hosts.allow, hosts.deny, etc) after I've completed a new
|
|||
|
installation.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
One final note about choosing a distribution: don't just
|
|||
|
ask me. I'm only one person. I've only used about a half
|
|||
|
dozen Linux distributions (some of which no longer exist!).
|
|||
|
Don't just go to the newsgroups and mailings lists and ask
|
|||
|
"Which is best?"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<br><br>
|
|||
|
Ask questions that relate to your situation: Will you be
|
|||
|
integrating this into a Novell network? Do you have friends
|
|||
|
or family that will be working on your Linux box? Do any of
|
|||
|
them have experience with a Linux distribution? Do any of them
|
|||
|
use some other form of Unix (free or otherwise)? Do you have
|
|||
|
any particular applications preferences? Is system security
|
|||
|
a concern? What are the risk profiles that are acceptable to
|
|||
|
you? What is your native language (German speakers will probably
|
|||
|
be much happier with the German S.u.S.E. or the DLD (?)
|
|||
|
distributions, Japanese users seem to prefer FreeBSD, the French
|
|||
|
have their own distribution, etc.)?
|
|||
|
</blockquote>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<!--================================================================-->
|
|||
|
<P> <hr> <P>
|
|||
|
<H5 align="center"><a href="http://www.linuxgazette.com/copying.html"
|
|||
|
>Copyright ©</a> 1998, James T. Dennis <BR>
|
|||
|
Published in <I>Linux Gazette</I> Issue 31 August 1998</H5>
|
|||
|
<P> <hr> <P>
|
|||
|
<!--================================================================-->
|
|||
|
<table width="98%"><tr valign="center" align="center">
|
|||
|
<td rowspan="3"><A HREF="./lg_answer31.html"><IMG
|
|||
|
SRC="../gx/dennis/answernew.gif"
|
|||
|
ALT="[ Answer Guy Index ]"></A></td>
|
|||
|
<td><A HREF="tag_backup.html">backup</A></td>
|
|||
|
<td><A HREF="tag_uidgid.html">uidgid</A></td>
|
|||
|
<td><A HREF="tag_connect.html">connect</A></td>
|
|||
|
<td><A HREF="tag_95slow.html">95slow</A></td>
|
|||
|
<td><A HREF="tag_badblock.html">badblock</A></td>
|
|||
|
<td><A HREF="tag_trident.html">trident</A></td>
|
|||
|
<td><A HREF="tag_sound.html">sound</A></td>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
</tr><tr valign="center" align="center">
|
|||
|
<td><A HREF="tag_kernel.html">kernel</A></td>
|
|||
|
<td><A HREF="tag_solprint.html">solprint</A></td>
|
|||
|
<td><A HREF="tag_idescsi.html">idescsi</A></td>
|
|||
|
<td><A HREF="tag_distrib.html">distrib</A></td>
|
|||
|
<td><A HREF="tag_modem.html">modem</A></td>
|
|||
|
<td><A HREF="tag_NDS.html">NDS</a></td>
|
|||
|
<td><A HREF="tag_rpm.html">rpm</A></td>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
</tr><tr valign="center" align="center">
|
|||
|
<td><A HREF="tag_guy.html">guy</A></td>
|
|||
|
<td><A HREF="tag_maildns.html">maildns</A></td>
|
|||
|
<td><A HREF="tag_memleak.html">memleak</a></td>
|
|||
|
<td><A HREF="tag_multihead.html">multihead</A></td>
|
|||
|
<td><A HREF="tag_cdr.html">cdr</A></td>
|
|||
|
</tr></table>
|
|||
|
<P> <hr> <P>
|
|||
|
<!--================================================================-->
|
|||
|
<A HREF="./index.html"><IMG SRC="../gx/indexnew.gif"
|
|||
|
ALT="[ Table Of Contents ]"></A>
|
|||
|
<A HREF="../index.html"><IMG SRC="../gx/homenew.gif"
|
|||
|
ALT="[ Front Page ]"></A>
|
|||
|
<A HREF="lg_bytes31.html"><IMG SRC="../gx/back2.gif"
|
|||
|
ALT="[ Previous Section ]"></A>
|
|||
|
<A HREF="./searls.html"><IMG SRC="../gx/fwd.gif"
|
|||
|
ALT="[ Next Section ]"></A>
|
|||
|
<!--startcut ======================================================= -->
|
|||
|
</body>
|
|||
|
</html>
|
|||
|
<!--endcut ========================================================= -->
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|