cvs commit: www/en/advocacy myths.sgml
Marc Fonvieille
blackend at FreeBSD.org
Sun Jan 8 12:12:50 PST 2006
On Sun, Jan 08, 2006 at 06:37:47PM +0000, Pav Lucistnik wrote:
> pav 2006-01-08 18:37:47 UTC
>
> FreeBSD doc repository
>
> Modified files:
> en/advocacy myths.sgml
> Log:
> - Add more derivates
> - Fix typo (missing dot)
>
===================================================================
RCS file: /usr/local/www/cvsroot/FreeBSD/www/en/advocacy/myths.sgml,v
retrieving revision 1.29
retrieving revision 1.30
diff -u -p -r1.29 -r1.30
--- www/en/advocacy/myths.sgml 2005/12/30 13:38:53 1.29
+++ www/en/advocacy/myths.sgml 2006/01/08 18:37:47 1.30
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN" [
<!ENTITY base CDATA "..">
-<!ENTITY date "$FreeBSD: /usr/local/www/cvsroot/FreeBSD/www/en/advocacy/myths.sgml,v 1.29 2005/12/30 13:38:53 ceri Exp $">
+<!ENTITY date "$FreeBSD: /usr/local/www/cvsroot/FreeBSD/www/en/advocacy/myths.sgml,v 1.30 2006/01/08 18:37:47 pav Exp $">
<!ENTITY title "FreeBSD Advocacy Project">
<!ENTITY % navincludes SYSTEM "../includes.navabout.sgml"> %navincludes;
<!ENTITY % includes SYSTEM "../includes.sgml"> %includes;
@@ -136,23 +136,79 @@
or derivative works of *BSD</h3>
<p>You can. You just need to say in the documentation and source
- files where the code is derived from.</p>
+ files where the code is derived from. A bunch of derivative
+ projects exists:</p>
- <p>For example, PicoBSD is a tailored distribution of FreeBSD that
- fits on a floppy. It's great for turning a diskless 386 PC into a
- router or a network print server. Another popular FreeBSD derivate
- is FreeSBIE, a complete desktop running off the CD-ROM.</p>
-
- <p>The Whistle Interjet is a ``network appliance'' that acts as a
- router, web server, mailhost (and other functionality), and can be
- configured using a web browser. The underlying operating system is
- FreeBSD, and Whistle have contributed many of their code
- enhancements back to the FreeBSD project (while keeping enough of
- them proprietary that they can stay in business).</p>
-
- <p>The OpenBSD project started as a spinoff from the NetBSD project, and
- has since evolved its own distinctive approach. Similarly, DragonflyBSD
- derives from FreeBSD 4.X.</p>
+ <ul>
+ <li><p><a href="http://www.dragonflybsd.org/">
+ DragonflyBSD</a> started as a code fork from
(For style consistency) we should not wrap like this the content of
<a></a> tags.
+ FreeBSD 4.X, but it has since its own user community and
+ development goals.</p></li>
+
+ <li><p><a href="http://www.trustedbsd.org/">
+ TrustedBSD</a> provides a set of trusted operating system
+ extensions to the FreeBSD operating system, targeting the
+ Common Criteria for Information Technology Security
+ Evaluation (CC). This project is still under development,
+ and much of the code is destined to make its way back into
+ the base FreeBSD operating system, but the development
+ takes place separately.<p></li>
+
+ <li><p><a href="http://www.freesbie.org/">
+ FreeSBIE</a> is a complete desktop running off the CD-ROM.
+ It can also be installed, but extremely useful for diskless
+ computers.</p></li>
+
+ <li><p><a href="http://frenzy.org.ua/eng/">
+ Frenzy</a> is another live-CD distribution, but customized
+ for administering tasks. It contains software for hardware
+ tests, file system checks, security checks, network setup
+ and analysis.<p></li>
+
+ <li><p><a href="http://people.freebsd.org/~picobsd/picobsd.html">
+ PicoBSD</a> is a tailored distribution of FreeBSD that fits
+ on a floppy. It is great for turning diskless 386 PC into a
+ router or a network print server. It is based on FreeBSD
+ 3.x.</p></li>
+
The old text regarding PicoBSD was correct, this new one is not.
PicoBSD is not based on FreeBSD 3.X but on the source of the system used
to build it (/usr/src/release/picobsd). The provided link is outdated
(and will never be updated), a better solution would be to point on
/usr/src/release/picobsd or nothing.
+ <li><p><a href="../projects/nanobsd/">
+ NanoBSD</a> is another project to produce a reduced versions
+ of FreeBSD to put it on a Compact Flash card or other mass
+ storage.</p></li>
+
It would be interesting to mention that NanoBSD is supported by the
FreeBSD Project and is part of the base tree.
+ <li><p><a href="http://www.tinybsd.org/tinybsd">
+ TinyBSD</a> is a set of tools made up of shell scripts
+ designed to allow easy development of Embedded Systems based
+ on FreeBSD 5.x and 6.x.</p></li>
+
[...]
s/.x/.X/ for consistency.
Marc
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