Linux Frequently Asked Questions with Answers October 4, 1998 This is the list of Frequently Asked Questions for Linux, the free Unix for just about every computer hardware platform on the planet. Originally written for 386/486/586 Intel/ISA bus machines, versions exist for Alpha, MIPS, ARM, 680x0, and PPC processors, and many others. (See the question, "What is Linux? " below.) This document should be read in conjunction with the Linux Documentation Project's HOWTO series. ("Where can I get Linux material by FTP? " and, "Where can I get the HOWTO's and other documentation? ") The INFO-SHEET and META-FAQ, which are found in the same place, als list sources of Linux information. Please look at these documents, and, "You still haven't answered my question! " before posting to a Usenet news group. You can also get Postscript, HTML, SGML, an plain ASCII versions of this document. ("Formats in which this FAQ is available. ") 1. Introduction and General Information * 1.1 What is Linux? * 1.2 Where do I start? * 1.3 What software does Linux support? * 1.4 Does Linux run on my computer? What hardware is supported? * 1.5 What ports to other processors are there? * 1.6 How much hard disk space does Linux need? * 1.7 How much memory does Linux need? * 1.8 How much memory can Linux use? * 1.9 Is Linux public domain? Copyrighted? 2. Network sources and resources. * 2.1 Where can I get the HOWTO's and other documentation? * 2.2 Where should I look on the World Wide Web for Linux stuff? * 2.3 What newsgroups are there for Linux? * 2.4 Where can I find out about Linux and the Millennium (Y2K) bug? * 2.5 Where can I get Linux material by FTP? * 2.6 I don't have FTP access. Where do I get Linux? * 2.7 I don't have Usenet access. Where do I get information? * 2.8 What mailing lists are there? * 2.9 Are the newsgroups archived anywhere? 3. Compatibility with other operating systems. * 3.1 Can Linux share my disk with DOS? OS/2? 386BSD? Win95? * 3.2 How do I access files on my DOS partition or floppy? * 3.3 Does Linux support compressed ext2 file systems? * 3.4 Can I use my Stacked/DBLSPC/etc. DOS drive? * 3.5 Can I access OS/2 HPFS partitions from Linux? * 3.6 Can Linux access Amiga file systems? * 3.7 Can Linux access BSD, SysV, etc. UFS? * 3.8 Can Linux access SMB file systems? * 3.9 Can Linux access Macintosh file systems? * 3.10 Can I run Microsoft Windows programs under Linux? * 3.11 How can I boot Linux from OS/2's Boot Manager? * 3.12 How can I share a swap partition between Linux and MS Windows? 4. Linux's handling of file systems, disks, and drives * 4.1 How can I get Linux to work with my disk? * 4.2 How can I undelete files? * 4.3 Is there a defragmenter for ext2fs etc.? * 4.4 How do I format and create a file system on a floppy? * 4.5 I get nasty messages about inodes, blocks, and the like. * 4.6 My swap area isn't working. * 4.7 How do I remove LILO so my system boots DOS again? * 4.8 Why can't I use fdformat except as root? * 4.9 My ext2fs partitions are checked each time I reboot. * 4.10 My root file system is read-only! * 4.11 I have a huge /proc/kcore! Can I delete it? * 4.12 My AHA1542C doesn't work with Linux. 5. Porting, compiling and obtaining programs * 5.1 How do I compile programs? * 5.2 How do I port XXX to Linux? * 5.3 What is ld.so and where do I get it? * 5.4 How do I upgrade the libraries withough trashing my system? * 5.5 Has anyone ported / compiled / written XXX for Linux? * 5.6 Can I use code or a compiler compiled for a 486 on my 386? * 5.7 What does gcc -O6 do? * 5.8 Where are linux/*.h and asm/*.h? * 5.9 I get errors when I try to compile the kernel. * 5.10 How do I make a shared library? * 5.11 My executables are (very) large. * 5.12 Does Linux support threads or lightweight processes? * 5.13 Where can I get `lint' for Linux? * 5.14 Where can I find kermit for Linux? 6. Solutions to common miscellaneous problems. * 6.1 free dumps core. * 6.2 My clock is very wrong. * 6.3 Setuid scripts don't seem to work. * 6.4 Free memory as reported by free keeps shrinking. * 6.5 When I add more memory, the system slows to a crawl. * 6.6 Some programs (e.g. xdm) won't let me log in. * 6.7 Some programs let me log in with no password. * 6.8 My machine runs very slowly when I run GCC / X / ... * 6.9 I can only log in as root. * 6.10 My screen is all full of weird characters instead of letters. * 6.11 I have screwed up my system and can't log in to fix it. * 6.12 I've discovered a huge security hole in rm! * 6.13 lpr(1) and/or lpd(8) don't work. * 6.14 Timestamps on files on MS-DOS partitions are set incorrectly. * 6.15 How do I get LILO to boot the vmlinux file? 7. How do I do this or find out that ... ? * 7.1 How can I get scrollback in text mode? * 7.2 How do I switch virtual consoles? How do I enable them? * 7.3 How do I set the time zone? * 7.4 What version of Linux and what machine name am I using? * 7.5 How can I enable or disable core dumps? * 7.6 How do I upgrade/recompile my kernel? * 7.7 Can I have more than 3 serial ports by sharing interrupts? * 7.8 How do I make a bootable floppy? * 7.9 How do I remap my keyboard to UK, French, etc.? * 7.10 How do I get NUM LOCK to default to on? * 7.11 How do I set (or reset) my initial terminal colors? * 7.12 How can I have more than 128Mb of swap? 8. Miscellaneous information and questions answered. * 8.1 How do I program XYZ under Linux? * 8.2 What's all this about ELF? * 8.3 What is a .gz file ? And a .tgz ? And ... ? * 8.4 What does VFS stand for? * 8.5 What is a BogoMip? * 8.6 What is the Linux Journal and where can I get it? * 8.7 What online/free periodicals exist for Linux? * 8.8 How many people use Linux? * 8.9 How should I pronounce Linux? 9. Frequently encountered error messages. * 9.1 Modprobe can't locate module, "XXX," and similar messages. * 9.2 Unknown terminal type linux and similar. * 9.3 lp1 on fire * 9.4 INET: Warning: old style ioctl... called! * 9.5 ld: unrecognized option '-m486' * 9.6 GCC says Internal compiler error. * 9.7 make says Error 139 * 9.8 shell-init: permission denied when I log in. * 9.9 No utmp entry. You must exec ... when I log in. * 9.10 Warning--bdflush not running. * 9.11 Warning: obsolete routing request made. * 9.12 EXT2-fs: warning: mounting unchecked file system. * 9.13 EXT2-fs warning: maximal count reached. * 9.14 EXT2-fs warning: checktime reached. * 9.15 df says Cannot read table of mounted file systems. * 9.16 fdisk says Partition X has different physical/logical ... * 9.17 fdisk: Partition 1 does not start on cylinder boundary. * 9.18 fdisk says partition n has an odd number of sectors. * 9.19 mtools says cannot initialize drive XYZ * 9.20 At the start of booting: Memory tight * 9.21 My syslog says `end_request: I/O error, ...'. * 9.22 You don't exist. Go away. 10. The X Window System. * 10.1 Does Linux support X Windows? * 10.2 Where can I get an XF86Config for my system? * 10.3 xterm logins show up strangely in who, finger. * 10.4 I can't get X Windows to work right. 11. Questions applicable to very out-of-date software. * 11.1 fdisk says cannot use nnn sectors of this partition. * 11.2 GCC sometimes uses huge amounts of virtual memory and thrashes. 12. How to get further assistance. * 12.1 You still haven't answered my question! * 12.2 What to put in a request for help. * 12.3 I want to mail someone about my problem. 13. Administrative information and acknowledgments. * 13.1 Feedback is invited. * 13.2 Formats in which this FAQ is available. * 13.3 Authorship and acknowledgments. * 13.4 Disclaimer and Copyright. 1. Introduction and General Information 1.1 What is Linux? Linux is the free Unix written from scratch by Linus Torvalds with assistance from a loosely-knit team of hackers from across the Internet. Linux aims towards POSIX compliance, and has all of the features you would expect of a modern, fully fledged Unix: true multitasking, virtual memory, shared libraries, demand loading, shared, copy-on-write executables, proper memory management, and TCP/IP networking. Linux runs mainly on 386/486/586-based PC's, using the hardware facilities of the 80386 processor family (TSS segments, et al.) to implement these features. Ports to other architectures are underway (See, "What ports to other processors are there? ") See the Linux INFO-SHEET for more details. ("Where can I get the HOWTO's and other documentation? ") The Linux kernel is distributed under the GNU General Public Licens ("Is Linux public domain? Copyrighted? ") 1.2 Where do I start? There are a handful of major Linux distributions. For information about them, and how they are installed, see Matthew Welsh's Installation and Getting Started, or IGS for short. It's located at the Linux Documentation Project Home Page, http://sunsite.unc.edu/LDP. There is also an Installation HOWTO on the LDP Home Page. Most of the distributions are available via anonymous FTP from vari Linux archive sites. ("Where can I get Linux material by FTP? ") There are also a large number of other releases which are distributed less globally that suit special local and national need 1.3 What software does Linux support? Linux supports GCC, Emacs, the X Window System, all the standard Un utilities, TCP/IP (including SLIP and PPP), and all of the hundreds programs that people have compiled or ported to it. There is a DOS emulator, called DOSEMU. The latest stable release i 0.98.1. The FTP archives are at ftp://ftp.dosemu.org/dosemu. The Web site is htmlurl url="http://www.dosemu.org" name="http://www.dosemu.org">. The emulator can run DOS itself and some (but not all) DOS applications. Be sure to look at the README file to determine which version you should get. Also, see the DOSEMU-HOWTO (slightly dated this point--it doesn't cover the most recent version of the program at sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/docs/HOWTO. Work has been progressing on an emulator for Microsoft Windows binaries. ("Can I run Microsoft Windows programs under Linux? ") iBCS2 (Intel Binary Compatibility Standard) emulator code for SVR4 and SVR3.2 COFF binaries can be included in the kernel as a compile-time option. There is information at tsx-11.mit.edu/pub/linux/BETA/ibcs2/README. For more information see the INFO-SHEET, which is one of the HOWTO' ("Where can I get the HOWTO's and other documentation? " and, "How do I port XXX to Linux? ") Some companies have commercial software available, including Motif. They announce their availability in comp.os.linux.announce--try searching the archives. ("Are the newsgroups archived anywhere? ") 1.4 Does Linux run on my computer? What hardware is supported? Giving Linux a try requires a machine with an Intel '386, '486, or '586 processor with at least 2Mb of RAM and a single floppy drive. do anything useful, more RAM and disk space is needed. ("How much memory does Linux need? ") VESA Local Bus and PCI are supported. MCA (IBM's proprietary bus) and ESDI hard drives are mostly support There is further information on the MCA bus and what cards Linux supports on the Micro Channel Linux Web page, http://glycerine.itsmm.uni.edu/mca. Linux runs on '386 family based laptops, with X on most of them. Th is a Web page at http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/kharker/linux-laptop/. For details of exactly which PC's, video cards, disk controllers, e work see the INFO-SHEET and the Hardware-HOWTO. (See "Where can I get the HOWTO's and other documentation? ") There is a port of Linux to the 8086, known as the Embeddable Linux Kernel Subset (ELKS). This is a 16-bit subset of the Linux kernel which will mainly be used for embedded systems. See http://www.linux.org.uk/Linux8086.html for more information. Linux will never run fully on an 8086 or '286, because it requires task-switching and memory management facilities not found on these processors. Linux supports multiprocessing with Intel MP architecture. See the file Documentation/smp.tex in the Linux kernel source code distribution. See the next question for a (probably incomplete) list of hardware platforms Linux has been ported to. 1.5 What ports to other processors are there? There is a reasonably complete list of Linux ports at http://www.ctv.es/USERS/xose/linux/linux_ports.html, and at http://www.linuxhq.com/dist-index.html. A project has been underway for a while to port Linux to suitable 68000-series based systems like Amigas and Ataris. The Linux/m68K F is located at www.clark.net/pub/lawrencc/linux/faq/faq.html. The URL of the Linux/m68k home page is www.linux-m68k. There is a linux-680x0 mailing list. ("What mailing lists are there? ") There is (or was) a FTP site for the Linux-m68k project on ftp.phil.uni-sb.de/pub/atari/linux-68k, but this address may no longer be current. Debian GNU/Linux is being ported to Alpha, Sparc, PowerPC, and ARM platforms. There are mailing lists for all of them. See http://www.debian.org/MailingLists/subscribe. One of the Linux-PPC project pages has moved recently. Its location http://www.linuxppc.org, and the archive site is ftp.linuxppc.org/linuxppc. There is a Linux-PPC support page at www.cs.nmt.edu/~linuxppc/. There you will find the kernel that is distributed with Linux. Apple now supports MkLinux development on Power Macs, based on OSF the Mach microkernel. See http://www.mklinux.apple.com. A port to the 64-bit DEC Alpha/AXP is at http://www.azstarnet.com/~axplinux/. There is a mailing list at vger.rutgers.edu. ("What mailing lists are there? ") Ralf Baechle is working on a port to the MIPS, initially for the R4 on Deskstation Tyne machines. The Linux-MIPS FTP sites are ftp.fnet.fr/linux-mips and ftp://ftp.linux.sgi.com/pub/mips-linux. Interested people may mail their questions and offers of assistance to linux@waldorf-gmbh.de. There is also a MIPS channel on the Linux Activists mail server and linux-mips mailing list. ("What mailing lists are there? ") There are currently two ports of Linux to the ARM family of processors. One of these is for the ARM3, fitted to the Acorn A5000 and it includes I/O drivers for the 82710/11 as appropriate. The ot is to the ARM610 of the Acorn RISC PC. The RISC PC port is currentl in its early to middle stages, owing to the need to rewrite much of the memory handling. The A5000 port is in restricted beta testing. release is likely soon. For more, up-to-date information, read the newsgroup comp.sys.acorn.misc. There is a FAQ at http://www.arm.uk.linux.org The Linux SPARC project is a hotbed of activity. There is a FAQ available from Jim Mintha's Linux for SPARC Processors page, http://www.geog.ubc.ca/sparclinux.html. The SPARC/Linux archives are at vger.rutgers.edu/pub/linux/Sparc. There is also a port ("Hardhat") to SGI/Indy machines. The URL is http://www.linux.sgi.com. 1.6 How much hard disk space does Linux need? About 10Mb for a very minimal installation, suitable for trying Lin and not much else. You can fit an installation that includes X into 80Mb. Installing Debian GNU/Linux takes 500Mb--1GB, including kernel source code, so space for user files, and spool areas. 1.7 How much memory does Linux need? At least 4MB, and then you will need to use special installation procedures until the disk swap space is installed. Linux will run comfortably in 4MB of RAM, although X Windows Apps will run slowly because they need to swap out to disk. Some recent applications, like Netscape, require 64MB of physical memory. 1.8 How much memory can Linux use? A number of people have asked how to address more than 64 MB of memory, which is the default upper limit. Place the following in yo lilo.conf file: append="mem=XXM" Where "XX" is the amount of memory, specified as megabytes; for example, '128M'. For further details, see the lilo manual page. 1.9 Is Linux public domain? Copyrighted? The Linux kernel copyright belongs to Linus Torvalds. He has placed under the GNU General Public License, which basically means that yo may freely copy, change, and distribute it, but you may not impose restrictions on further distribution, and you must make the source code available. This is not the same as Public Domain. See the Copyright FAQ, rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/law/copyright, for details. Full details are in the file COPYING in the Linux kernel sources (probably in /usr/src/linux on your system). The licenses of the utilities and programs which come with the installations vary. Much of the code is from the GNU Project at the Free Software Foundation, and is also under the GPL. Note that discussion about the merits or otherwise of the GPL shoul be posted to the news group gnu.misc.discuss, and not to the comp.os.linux hierarchy. 2. Network sources and resources. 2.1 Where can I get the HOWTO's and other documentation? Look in the following places, and the sites that mirror them. * ftp.funet.fi : /pub/OS/Linux/doc/HOWTO * tsx-11.mit.edu : /pub/linux/docs/HOWTO * sunsite.unc.edu : /pub/Linux/docs/HOWTO For a complete list of Linux FTP sites, see, "Where can I get Linux material by FTP? " If you don't have access to FTP, try the FTP-by-mail servers at ftpmail@decwrl.dec.com, ftpmail@doc.ic.ac.uk, or ftp-mailer@informatik.tu-muenchen.de. A complete list of HOWTO's and Mini-HOWTO's is available in the fil HOWTO-INDEX in the docs/HOWTO directory at the FTP sites, and on th Web at http://sunsite.unc.edu/LDP/HOWTO/HOWTO-INDEX.html, but here is a (possibly incomplete) list: AX25-HOWTO Access-HOWTO Assembly-HOWTO Benchmarking-HOWTO BootPrompt-HOWTO Bootdisk-HOWTO CD-Writing-HOWTO CDROM-HOWTO Chinese-HOWTO Commercial-HOWTO Consultants-HOWTO Cyrillic-HOWTO DNS-HOWTO DOS-to-Linux-HOWTO DOSEMU-HOWTO Danish-HOWTO Distribution-HOWTO ELF-HOWTO Emacspeak-HOWTO Ethernet-HOWTO Finnish-HOWTO Firewall-HOWTO Ftape-HOWTO GCC-HOWTO German-HOWTO HAM-HOWTO HOWTO-INDEX Hardware-HOWTO Hebrew-HOWTO IPX-HOWTO ISP-Hookup-HOWTO Installation-HOWTO Intranet-Server-HOWTO Italian-HOWTO Java-CGI-HOWTO Kernel-HOWTO Keyboard-and-Console-HOWTO MGR-HOWTO MILO-HOWTO Mail-HOWTO NET-3-HOWTO NFS-HOWTO NIS-HOWTO News-HOWTO Optical-Disk-HOWTO PCI-HOWTO PCMCIA-HOWTO PPP-HOWTO Pilot-HOWTO Polish-HOWTO Printing-HOWTO Printing-Usage-HOWTO RPM-HOWTO Reading-List-HOWTO SCSI-HOWTO SCSI-Programming-HOWTO SMB-HOWTO Serial-HOWTO Serial-Programming-HOWTO Shadow-Password-HOWTO Slovenian-HOWTO Sound-HOWTO Sound-Playing-HOWTO Spanish-HOWTO TeTeX-HOWTO Thai-HOWTO Tips-HOWTO UMSDOS-HOWTO UPS-HOWTO UUCP-HOWTO User-Group-HOWTO VAR-HOWTO VMS-to-Linux-HOWTO XFree86-HOWTO XFree86-Video-Timings-HOWTO 3-Button-Mouse The following Mini-HOWTO's are available from http://sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/HOWTO/mini: ADSM-Backup AI-Alife Advocacy Backup-With-MSDOS Battery-Powered Boca BogoMips Bridge Bridge+Firewall Clock Colour-ls Comeau-C++ DHCPd Dial-On-Demand Diald Dip+SLiRP+CSLIP Diskless Dynamic-IP-Hacks Ext2fs-Undeletion GTEK-BBS-550 HTML-Validation IO-Port-Programming IP-Alias IP-Masquerade IP-Subnetworking JE Jaz-Drive Kerneld Key-Setup LBX Large-Disk Linux+DOS+Win95 Linux+DOS+Win95+OS2 Linux+NT-Loader Linux+OS2+DOS Linux+Win95 Loadlin+Win95 Locales MIDI+SB Mail-Queue Mail2News Man-Page Multiple-Disks-Layout Multiple-Ethernet NFS-Root NFS-Root-Client Netscape+Proxy Offline-Mailing Online-Support PLIP PPP-over-minicom Pager Partition Print2Win Process-Accounting Proxy-ARP Public-Web-Browser Qmail+MH Quota RCS Remote-Boot Remote-X-Apps SLIP+proxyARP SLIP-PPP-Emulator Sendmail+UUCP Software-Building Software-RAID Soundblaster-16 Soundblaster-AWE64 StarOffice Swap-Space Term-Firewall Tiny-News Token-Ring Upgrade VPN Virtual-wu-ftpd Visual-Bell Win95+Win+Linux Windows-Modem-Sharing WordPerfect X-Big-Cursor XFree86-XInside Xterm-Title Xterminal ZIP-Drive ZIP-Install In addition, translations of the HOWTO's are available from sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/docs/HOWTO/translations and mirrors worldwide. Translations in the following languages are available: Chinese (zh) Croatian(hr) French (fr) German (de) Hellenic (el) Indonesian (id) Italian (it) Japanese (jp) Korean (ko) Polish (pl) Spanish (es) Slovenian (sl) Swedish (sv) Turkish (tr) The HOWTO's are also on the Web, at the Linux Documentation Project Home Page, http://sunsite.unc.edu/LDP. More of these documents are always in preparation. Please get in to with Timothy Bynum, tjbynum@sunsite.unc.edu, the HOWTO coordinator, if you are interested in writing one. The file sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/HOWTO/HOWTO-INDEX contains guidelines for writing a HOWTO. He has a Web page that lists current HOWTO updates and additions at wallybox.cei.net/~tjbynum/HOWTO/projects. The Guide Series produced by the Linux Documentation Project is available from http://sunsite.unc.edu/LDP. Please read them if you are new to Unix and Linux. Here is a list of those available so far: * The Linux Documentation Project Manifesto, by Matt Welsh. * Installation and Getting Started Guide, by Matt Welsh. * The Linux Kernel, by David Rusling. * The Network Administrator's Guide, by Olaf Kirch. * The Linux Programmer's Guide, by Sven Goldt, Sven van der Meer, Scott Burkett, and Matt Welsh. * The Linux System Administrator's Guide, Version 0.5, by Lars Wirzenius. In addition, there is a FAQ for Linux kernel developers at http://www.tux.org/html/. 2.2 Where should I look on the World Wide Web for Linux stuff? Two Web pages in particular provide good starting point for general Linux information: Linux International's Home Page, at http://www.li.org, and the Linux Online's Linux Home Page at http://www.linux.org/. Both of these pages provide links to other sites, information about general information, distributions, new software, documentation, an news. Greg Hankins, gregh@cc.gatech.edu, maintains the Linux Documentation Project Home Page, at http://sunsite.unc.edu/LDP. This page refers to all of the HOWTO's and FAQ's, both those which available in HTML (WWW) format, and those which aren't. 2.3 What newsgroups are there for Linux? Comp.os.linux.announce is the moderated announcements group; you should read this if you intend to use Linux: it contains informatio about software updates, new ports, user group meetings, and commerc products. It is the ONLY newsgroup that may carry commercial postin Submissions for that group should be e-mailed to linux-announce@news.ornl.gov. comp.os.linux.announce, however, is not archived on DejaNews or Alt Vista. The only archive for the news group seems to be www.iki.fi/mjr/linux/cola.html. [Axel Boldt] Also worth reading are the following other groups in the comp.os.linux.* hierarchy--you may find many common problems too recent for the documentation but are answered in the newsgroups. comp.os.linux.setup comp.os.linux.hardware comp.os.linux.networking comp.os.linux.x comp.os.linux.development.apps comp.os.linux.development.system comp.os.linux.advocacy comp.os.linux.misc Remember that Linux is POSIX compatible, and most all of the materi in comp.unix.* and comp.windows.x.* groups will be relevant. Apart from hardware considerations, and some obscure or very technical low-level issues, you'll find that these groups are good places to start. Please read "You still haven't answered my question! " before posting. Cross posting between different comp.os.linux.* groups is rarely a good idea. There may well be Linux groups local to your institution or area--check there first. See also "I don't have Usenet access. Where do I get information? " Other regional and local newsgroups also exist--you may find the traffic more manageable there. The French Linux newsgroup is fr.comp.os.linux. The German one is de.comp.os.linux. In Australia, try aus.computers.linux. In Croatia there is hr.comp.linux. In Ital there is it.comp.linux. 2.4 Where can I find out about Linux and the Millennium (Y2K) bug? The Debian/GNU Linux people have a statement on their Web site at http://www.debian.org Essentially, Linux uses libraries that store dates as 32-bit intege which count the seconds since 1970. This counter will not overflow until the year 2038, by which time the library programmers will (hopefully) have upgraded the system software to store dates as 64- integers. This, of course, does not mean that applications are not susceptibl to the millennium bug, if they do not use the standard library routines. The Free Software Foundation has a Web page about Y2K issues in GNU software at http://www.fsf.org/software/year2000.html There is also a Usenet newsgroup, comp.software.year-2000, for gene discussion of Y2K issues. 2.5 Where can I get Linux material by FTP? There are three main archive sites for Linux: * ftp.funet.fi (Finland) : /pub/OS/Linux * sunsite.unc.edu (US) : /pub/Linux * tsx-11.mit.edu (US) : /pub/linux The best place to get the Linux kernel is ftp.cs.helsinki.fi/pub/Linux_Kernel. Linus Torvalds uploads the most recent kernel versions to this site. Of the U.S. distributions, Debian GNU/Linux is available at ftp.debian.org/pub/debian. Red Hat Linux's home site is ftp.redhat.com, and Linux Slackware's is ftp.cdrom.com. The contents of these sites is mirrored (copied, usually approximat daily) by a number of other sites. Please use a site close to you-- will be faster for you and easier on the network. * ftp.sun.ac.za/pub/linux/sunsite/ (South Africa) * ftp.is.co.za/linux/sunsite/ (South Africa) * ftp.cs.cuhk.hk/pub/Linux/ (Hong Kong) * ftp.cs.cuhk.hk/pub/Linux/ (Hong Kong) * ftp.spin.ad.jp/pub/linux/sunsite.unc.edu/ (Japan) * ftp.nuri.net/pub/Linux/ (Korea) * ftp.jaring.my/pub/Linux/ (Malaysia) * ftp.nus.sg/pub/unix/Linux/ (Singapore) * ftp.nectec.or.th/pub/mirrors/linux/ (Thailand) * mirror.aarnet.edu.au/pub/linux/ (Australia) * sunsite.anu.edu.au/pub/linux/ (Australia) * ftp.monash.edu.au/pub/linux/ (Australia) * ftp.univie.ac.at/systems/linux/sunsite/ (Austria) * ftp.fi.muni.cz/pub/UNIX/linux/ (Czech Republic) * ftp://sunsite.fri.uni-lj.si/pub/linux/ (Slovenia) * ftp.funet.fi/pub/Linux/sunsite/ (Finland) * ftp.univ-angers.fr/pub/Linux/ (France) * ftp.iut-bm.univ-fcomte.fr (France) * ftp.ibp.fr/pub/linux/sunsite/ (France) * ftp.loria.fr/pub/linux/sunsite/ (France) * ftp.dfv.rwth-aachen.de/pub/linux/sunsite/ (Germany) * ftp.germany.eu.net/pub/os/Linux/Mirror.SunSITE/ (Germany) * ftp.tu-dresden.de/pub/Linux/sunsite/ (Germany) * ftp.uni-erlangen.de/pub/Linux/MIRROR.sunsite/ (Germany) * ftp.gwdg.de/pub/linux/mirrors/sunsite/ (Germany) * ftp.rz.uni-karlsruhe.de/pub/linux/mirror.sunsite/ (Germany) * ftp.ba-mannheim.de/pub/linux/mirror.sunsite/ (Germany) * ftp.uni-paderborn.de/pub/Mirrors/sunsite.unc.edu/ (Germany) * ftp.uni-rostock.de/Linux/sunsite/ (Germany) * tp.rus.uni-stuttgart.de/pub/unix/systems/linux/MIRROR.sunsite / (Germany) * ftp.uni-tuebingen.de/pub/linux/Mirror.sunsite/ (Germany) * ftp.rz.uni-ulm.de/pub/mirrors/linux/sunsite/ (Germany) * ftp.kfki.hu/pub/linux/ (Hungary) * linux.italnet.it/pub/Linux/ (Italy) * ftp.unina.it/pub/linux/sunsite/ (Italy) * giotto.unipd.it/pub/unix/Linux/ (Italy) * cnuce-arch.cnr.it/pub/Linux/ (Italy) * ftp.flashnet.it/mirror2/sunsite.unc.edu/ (Italy) * ftp.nijenrode.nl/pub/linux/sunsite.unc-mirror/ (Netherlands) * ftp.LeidenUniv.nl/pub/linux/sunsite/ (Netherlands) * ftp.nvg.unit.no/pub/linux/sunsite/ (Norway) * ftp://sunsite.icm.edu.pl/pub/Linux/sunsite.unc.edu/ (Poland) * ftp.rediris.es/software/os/linux/sunsite/ (Spain) * sunsite.rediris.es/software/linux/ (Spain) * ftp.cs.us.es/pub/Linux/sunsite-mirror/ (Spain) * ftp.etse.urv.es/pub/mirror/linux/ (Spain) * ftp.etsimo.uniovi.es/pub/linux/ (Spain) * ftp.luna.gui.es/pub/linux.new/ (Spain) * ftp.switch.ch/mirror/linux/ (Switzerland) * ftp.metu.edu.tr/pub/linux/sunsite/ (Turkey) * unix.hensa.ac.uk/mirrors/sunsite/pub/Linux/ (UK) * ftp.maths.warwick.ac.uk/mirrors/linux/sunsite.unc-mirror/ (UK) * ftp.idiscover.co.uk/pub/Linux/sunsite.unc-mirror/ (UK) * sunsite.doc.ic.ac.uk/packages/linux/sunsite.unc-mirror/ (UK) * ftp.dungeon.com/pub/linux/sunsite-mirror/ (UK) * ftp.io.org/pub/mirrors/linux/sunsite/ (Canada) * ftp.cc.gatech.edu/pub/linux/ (US) * ftp.cdrom.com/pub/linux/sunsite/ (US) * ftp.siriuscc.com/pub/Linux/Sunsite/ (US) * ftp.engr.uark.edu/pub/linux/sunsite/ (US) * ftp.infomagic.com/pub/mirrors/linux/sunsite/ (US) * linux.if.usp.br/pub/mirror/sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/ (Brazil) * farofa.ime.usp.br/pub/linux/ (Brazil) Not all of these mirror all of the other "source" sites, and some have material not available on the "source" sites. 2.6 I don't have FTP access. Where do I get Linux? The easiest thing is probably to find a friend with FTP access. If there is a Linux user's group near you, they may be able to help. If you have a reasonably good email connection, you could try the FTP-by-mail servers at ftpmail@ftp.sunet.se, ftpmail@garbo.uwasa.fi, or ftpmail@ftp.uni-stuttgart.de. Linux is also available via traditional mail on CD-ROM. The file sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/docs/HOWTO/Installation-HOWTO, and the file sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/docs/HOWTO/Distribution-HOWTO contain information on these distributions. 2.7 I don't have Usenet access. Where do I get information? A digest of comp.os.linux.announce is available by mailing the word "subscribe" (without the quotes) as the body of a message to linux-announce-REQUEST@news-digests.mit.edu. Subscribing to this list is a good idea, as it carries important information and documentation about Linux. Please remember to use the *-request addresses for your subscribe a unsubscribe messages; mail to the other address is posted to the ne group. 2.8 What mailing lists are there? The Linux developers now mainly use the Majordomo server at majordomo@vger.rutgers.edu. Send a message with the word "lists" (without the quotes) in the body to get a list of lists there. Add a line with the word, "help," to get the standard Majordomo help file that lists instructions for subscribing and unsubscribing to the lists. Most of the lists are used by Linux developers to talk about techni issues and future developments. These are not intended for new user questions. There is a linux-newbie list where, "no question is too stupid." Unfortunately, it seems that few experienced users read that list, it has very low volume. 2.9 Are the newsgroups archived anywhere? The Usenet Linux news groups are archived at http://www.dejanews.com, http://www.reference.com, and http://altavista.digital.com Sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/docs/linux-announce.archive contains archives of comp.os.linux.announce. These are mirrored from src.doc.ic.ac.uk/usenet, which also archives comp.os.linux, comp.os.linux.development.apps, and comp.os.linux.development.syste There is an `easy to access' archive of comp.os.linux.announce on t World Wide Web at http://www.leo.org/archiv/linux/archiv/ann_index.html which supports searching and browsing. contents 3. Compatibility with other operating systems. 3.1 Can Linux share my disk with DOS? OS/2? 386BSD? Win95? Yes. Linux uses the standard MS-DOS partitioning scheme, so it can share your disk with other operating systems. Note, however, that m other operating systems may not be exactly compatible. DOS's FDISK. and FORMAT.EXE, for example, can overwrite data in a Linux partitio because they sometimes incorrectly use partition data from the partition's boot sector rather than the partition table. In order to prevent programs from doing this, it is a good idea to zero out--under Linux--the start of a partition you created, before you use MS-DOS--or whatever--to format it. Type: $ dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/hdXY bs=512 count=1 where hdXY is the relevant partition; e.g., /dev/hda1 for the first partition of the first (IDE) disk. Linux can read and write the files on your DOS and OS/2 FAT partiti and floppies using either the DOS file system type built into the kernel or mtools. There is kernel support for the VFAT file system used by Windows 9x and Windows NT. For information about FAT32 partition support, see http://bmrc.berkeley.edu/people/chaffee/fat32.html. See, "What software does Linux support? " for details and status of the emulators for DOS, MS Windows, and System V programs. See also, "Can Linux access Amiga file systems? ", "Can Linux access Macintosh file systems? ", "Can Linux access BSD, SysV, etc., UFS? ", and "Can Linux access SMB file systems? " There are said to be NTFS drivers under development, which should support compression as a standard feature. 3.2 How do I access files on my DOS partition or floppy? Use the DOS file system, type, for example: $ mkdir /dos $ mount -t msdos -o conv=text,umask=022,uid=100,gid=100 /dev/hda3 /dos If it's a floppy, don't forget to umount it before ejecting it! You can use the conv=text/binary/auto, umask=nnn, uid=nnn, and gid= options to control the automatic line-ending conversion, permission and ownerships of the files in the DOS file system as they appear under Linux. If you mount your DOS file system by putting it in you /etc/fstab, you can record the options (comma-separated) there, instead of defaults. Alternatively, you can use mtools, available in both binary and sou form on the FTP sites. ("Where can I get Linux material by FTP? ") A kernel patch (known as the fd-patches) is available which allows floppies with nonstandard numbers of tracks and/or sectors to be us this patch is included in the 1.1 alpha testing kernel series. 3.3 Does Linux support compressed ext2 file systems? As of recently, it does. Information about them is located at http://www.netspace.net.au/~reiter/e2compr/. There is also a Web site for the e2compr patches The code is still experimental and consists of patches for the 2.0 and 2.1 kernels. F more information about the project, including the latest patches, a the address of the mailing list, look up the URL at http://debs.fuller.edu/e2compr/. [Roderich Schupp] Zlibc is a program that allows existing applications to read compressed (GNU gzip'ed) files as if they were not compressed. Look sunsite.unc.edu in /pub/Linux/libs/. The author is Alain Knuff. There is also a compressing block device driver, "DouBle," by Jean-Marc Verbavatz, which can provide on-the-fly disk compression the kernel. The source-only distribution is located at sunsite.unc. in the directory /pub/Linux/patches/diskdrives/. This driver compresses inodes and directory information as well as files, so an corruption of the file system is likely to be serious. There is also a package called tcx (Transparently Compressed Executables), which allows you to keep infrequently compressed executables compressed and only uncompress them temporarily when in use. It is located on sunsite.unc.edu in the directory /pub/Linux/utils/compress/. 3.4 Can I use my Stacked/DBLSPC/etc. DOS drive? Until recently, not very easily. You can access DOS 6.X volumes fro the DOS emulator ("What software does Linux support? "), but it's harder than accessing a normal DOS volume via the DOS kernel option, a module, or mtools. There is a recently added package, dmsdos, which reads and writes compressed file systems like DoubleSpace/DriveSpace in MS-DOS 6.x a Win95, as well as Stacker versions 3 and 4. It is available in the archives on ftp://sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/system/Filesystem/dosfs. There is a module available for the Linux kernel which can do read-only access of compressed volume. Look at sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/system/filesystems/dosfs/. 3.5 Can I access OS/2 HPFS partitions from Linux? Yes, but Linux access to HPFS partitions is read-only. HPFS file system access is available as an option when compiling the kernel o as a module. See the Documentation/filesystems/hpfs.txt file in the kernel source distribution. ("How do I upgrade/recompile my kernel? ") Then you can mount HPFS partition, using, for example: $ mkdir /hpfs $ mount -t hpfs /dev/hda5 /hpfs 3.6 Can Linux access Amiga file systems? The Linux kernel has support for the Amiga Fast File System (AFFS) version 1.3 and later, both as a compile-time option and as a modul The file Documentation/filesystems/affs.txt in the Linux kernel sou distribution has more information. See "How do I upgrade/recompile my kernel? ". Linux supports AFFS hard-drive partitions only. Floppy access is no supported due to incompatibilities between Amiga floppy controllers and PC and workstation controllers. The AFFS driver can also mount disk partitions used by the Un*x Amiga Emulator, by Bernd Schmidt. 3.7 Can Linux access BSD, SysV, etc. UFS? Recent kernels can mount (read only) the UFS file system used by System V; Coherent; Xenix; BSD; and derivatives like SunOS, FreeBSD NetBSD, and NeXTStep. UFS support is available as a kernel compile-time option and a module. See, "How do I upgrade/recompile my kernel? " 3.8 Can Linux access SMB file systems? Linux supports read/write access of Windows for Workgroups and Wind NT SMB volumes. See the file Documentation/filesystems/smbfs.txt of the Linux kernel source distribution, and "How do I upgrade/recompile my kernel? " in this FAQ. There is also a suite of programs called Samba which provide suppor for WfW networked file systems (provided they're for TCP/IP). Information is available in the README file at sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/system/network/samba/. There is a SMB Web site at samba.anu.edu.au/samba/. 3.9 Can Linux access Macintosh file systems? There is a set of user-level programs that read and write the Macintosh Hierarchical File System (HFS). It is available at sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/utils/disk-management. 3.10 Can I run Microsoft Windows programs under Linux? WINE, a MS Windows emulator for Linux, is still not ready for gener distribution. If you want to contribute to its development, look fo the status reports in the comp.emulators.ms-windows.wine newsgroup. There is also a FAQ, compiled by P. David Gardner, at sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/docs/faqs/Wine-FAQ/. In the meantime, if you need to run MS Windows programs, the best bet--seriously--is to reboot. LILO, the Linux boot loader, can boot one of several operating systems from a menu. See the LILO documentation for details. Also, LOADLIN (a DOS program to load a Linux, or other OS, kernel i one way to make Linux co-exist with DOS. LOADLIN is particularly ha when you want to install Linux on a 3rd or 4th drive on a system (o when you're adding a SCSI drive to a system with an existing IDE). In these cases, it is common for LILO's boot loader to be unable to find or load the kernel on the "other" drive. So you just create a C:\LINUX directory (or whatever), put LOADLIN in it with a copy of your kernel, and use that. LOADLIN is a VCPI compliant program. Win95 will want to, "shutdown into DOS mode," to run it (as it would with certain other DOS protected-mode programs). Earlier versions of LOADLIN sometimes required a package called REALBIOS.COM, which required a boot procedure on an (almost) blank floppy to map the REALBIOS interrupt vectors (prior to the loading any software drivers). (Current versions don't seem to ship with it and don't seem to need it). [Jim Dennis] 3.11 How can I boot Linux from OS/2's Boot Manager? 1. Create a partition using OS/2's FDISK.EXE (Not Linux's fdisk). 2. Format the partition under OS/2, either with FAT or HPFS. This so that OS/2 knows about the partition being formatted. (This s is not necessary with OS/2 `warp' 3.0.) 3. Add the partition to the Boot Manager. 4. Boot Linux, and create a file system on the partition using mkf -t ext2 or mke2fs. At this point you may, if you like, use Linu fdisk to change the code of the new partition to type 83 (Linux Native)--this may help some automated installation scripts find the right partition to use. 5. Install Linux on the partition. 6. Install LILO on the Linux partition--NOT on the master boot rec of the hard drive. This installs LILO as a second-stage boot loader on the Linux partition itself, to start up the kernel specified in the LILO configuration file. To do this, you shoul put boot = /dev/hda2 (where /dev/hda2 is the partition you want to boot from) in you /etc/lilo/config or /etc/lilo.config file. 7. Make sure that it is the Boot Manager partition that is marked active, so that you can use Boot Manager to choose what to boot There is a set of HOWTO's on the subject of multi-boot systems on t LDP Home Page, http://sunsite.unc.edu/LDP/. 3.12 How can I share a swap partition between Linux and MS Windows? See the Mini-HOWTO on the subject. The Mini-HOWTO is currently unmaintained but is available at ftp://sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/docs/HOWTO/mini/unmaintained. contents 4. Linux's handling of file systems, disks, and drives 4.1 How can I get Linux to work with my disk? If your disk is an IDE or EIDE drive, you should read the file /usr/src/linux/drivers/block/README.ide (part of the Linux kernel source code). This README contains many helpful hints about IDE drives. Many modern IDE controllers do translation between `physica cylinders/heads/sectors, and `logical' ones. SCSI disks are accessed by linear block numbers. The BIOS invents s `logical' cylinder/head/sector fiction to support DOS. An IBM PC-compatible BIOS will usually not be able to access partitions which extend beyond 1024 logical cylinders, and will mak booting a Linux kernel from such partitions using LILO problematic best. You can still use such partitions for Linux or other operating syst that access the controller directly. It's recommend that you create at least one Linux partition entirel under the 1024 logical cylinder limit, and boot from that. The othe partitions will then be okay. Also there seems to be a bit of trouble with the newer Ultra-DMA drives. I haven't gotten the straight scoop on them--but they are becoming a very common problem at the SVLUG installfests. When you get 8 to 12 Gig drives for $200 to $300 it's no wonder. [Jim Dennis] 4.2 How can I undelete files? In general, this is very hard to do on Unices because of their multitasking nature. Undelete functionality for the ext2fs file sys is being worked on, but don't hold your breath. There are a number of packages available which instead provide new commands for deleting and copying which move deleted files into a `wastebasket' directory. The files can be recovered until cleaned o automatically by background processing. Alternatively, you can search the raw disk device which holds the f system in question. This is hard work, and you will need to be logg in as root to do this. 4.3 Is there a defragmenter for ext2fs etc.? Yes. There is defrag, a Linux file system defragmenter for ext2, Minix, and old-style ext file systems. It is available at sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/system/filesystems/defrag-0.70.tar.gz. Users of the ext2 file system can probably do without defrag, becau ext2 contains extra code to keep fragmentation reduced even in very full file systems. 4.4 How do I format and create a file system on a floppy? To format a 3.5-inch, high density floppy: $ fdformat /dev/fd0H1440 $ mkfs -t ext2 -m 0 /dev/fd0H1440 1440 For a 5.25 inch floppy, use fd0h1200 and 1200 as appropriate. For t `B' drive use fd1 instead of fd0. The -m 0 option tells mkfs.ext2 not to reserve any space on the dis for the superuser--usually the last 10% is reserved for root. The first command performs a low-level format. The second creates a empty file system. You can mount the floppy like a hard disk partit and simply cp and mv files, etc. Device naming conventions generally are the same as for other Unice They can be found in Matt Welsh's Installation and Getting Started Guide. (See "Where can I get the HOWTO's and other documentation? ") A more detailed and technical description is Linu Allocated Devices by H. Peter Anvin, hpa@zytor.com, which is included in LaTeX and ASCII form in the kernel source distribution (probably in /usr/src/kernel/Documentation), as devices.tex and devices.txt. 4.5 I get nasty messages about inodes, blocks, and the like. You may have a corrupted file system, probably caused by not shutti Linux down properly before turning off the power or resetting. You need to use a recent shutdown program to do this--for example, the included in the util-linux package, available on sunsite and tsx-11 If you're lucky, the program fsck (or e2fsck or xfsck as appropriat if you don't have the automatic fsck front-end) will be able to rep your file system. If you're unlucky, the file system is trashed, an you'll have to re-initialize it with mkfs (or mke2fs, mkxfs, etc.), and restore from a backup. NB: don't try to check a file system that's mounted read/write--thi includes the root partition, if you don't see VFS: mounted root ... read-only at boot time. 4.6 My swap area isn't working. When you boot (or enable swapping manually) you should see Adding Swap: NNNNk swap-space If you don't see any messages at all you are probably missing swapon -av (the command to enable swapping) in your /etc/rc.local or /etc/rc.d (the system startup scripts), or have forgotten to make the right entry in /etc/fstab: /dev/hda2 none swap sw for example. If you see Unable to find swap-space signature you have forgotten to run mkswap. See the manual page for details; works much like mkfs. Running, 'free' in addition to showing free memory, should display: total used free Swap: 10188 2960 7228 [Andy Jefferson] Take a look also at the Installation HOWTO for detailed instruction of how to set up a swap area. 4.7 How do I remove LILO so my system boots DOS again? Using DOS (MS-DOS 5.0 or later, or OS/2), type FDISK /MBR (which is not documented). This will restore a standard MS-DOS Master Boot Record. If you have DR-DOS 6.0, go into FDISK in the normal way and then select the `Re-write Master Boot Record' option. If you don't have MS-DOS or DR-DOS, you need to have the boot secto that LILO saved when you first installed it. You did keep that file didn't you? It's probably called boot.0301 or some such. Type dd if=boot.0301 of=/dev/hda bs=445 count=1 (or /dev/sda if you're using a SCSI disk). This may also wipe out y partition table, so beware! If you're desperate, you could use dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/hda bs=512 count=1 This will erase your partition table and boot sector completely: yo can then reformat the disk using your favorite software. But this w render the contents of your disk inaccessible--you'll lose it all unless you're an expert. Note that the DOS MBR boots whichever (single!) partition is flagge as `active'. You may need to use fdisk to set and clear the active flags on partitions appropriately. 4.8 Why can't I use fdformat except as root? The system call to format a floppy can only be done as root, regardless of the permissions of /dev/fd0*. If you want any user to able to format a floppy, try getting the fdformat2 program. This wo around the problems by being setuid to root. 4.9 My ext2fs partitions are checked each time I reboot. See "EXT2-fs: warning: mounting unchecked file system.". 4.10 My root file system is read-only! Remount it. If /etc/fstab is correct, you can simply mount -n -o remount / If /etc/fstab is wrong, you must give the device name and possibly type, too: e.g. mount -n -o remount -t ext2 /dev/hda2 / To understand how you got into this state, see, "EXT2-fs: warning: mounting unchecked file system." 4.11 I have a huge /proc/kcore! Can I delete it? None of the files in /proc are really there--they're all, "pretend, files made up by the kernel, to give you information about the syst and don't take up any hard disk space. /proc/kcore is like an `alias' for the memory in your computer. Its size is the same as the amount of RAM you have, and if you read it a file, the kernel does memory reads. 4.12 My AHA1542C doesn't work with Linux. The option to allow disks with more than 1024 cylinders is only required as a workaround for a PC-compatible BIOS misfeature and should be turned `off' under Linux. For older Linux kernels you nee to turn off most of the `advanced BIOS' options--all but the one ab scanning the bus for bootable devices. contents 5. Porting, compiling and obtaining programs 5.1 How do I compile programs? Most Linux software is written in C and compiled with the GNU C compiler. GCC is a part of every Linux distribution. The latest compiler version, documentation, and patches are on ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/. Programs that are written in C++ must be compiled with the GNU G++ compiler, which is also included in Linux distributions and availab from the same place as GCC. To build version 2.0.x kernels, you will need GCC version 2.7.2.x. Trying to build a Linux kernel with a different compiler, like GCC 2.8.x, EGCS, or PGCC, may cause problems until code dependencies of the 2.7.2.x compilers are fixed. Information on the EGCS compiler is at htmlurl url="http://egcs.cygnus.com" name="http://egcs.cygnus.com">. Note that at this time, the kernel developers are not answering bug requests for 2.0.x version kernels, but instead are concentrating o developing 2.1.x version kernels. [J.H.M. Dassen] 5.2 How do I port XXX to Linux? In general, Unix programs need very little porting. Simply follow t installation instructions. If you don't know--and don't know how to find out--the answers to some of the questions asked during the installation procedure, you can guess, but this tends to produce bu programs. In this case, you're probably better off asking someone e to do the port. If you have a BSD-ish program, you should try using -I/usr/include/ and -lbsd on the appropriate parts of the compilation lines. 5.3 What is ld.so and where do I get it? Ld.so is the dynamic library loader. Each binary using shared libraries used to have about 3K of start-up code to find and load t shared libraries. Now that code has been put in a special shared library, /lib/ld.so, where all binaries can look for it, so that it wastes less disk space, and can be upgraded more easily. Ld.so can be obtained from tsx-11.mit.edu/pub/linux/packages/GCC/ and mirror sites. The latest version at the time of writing is ld.so.1.9.5.tar.gz. /lib/ld-linux.so.1 is the same thing for ELF ("What's all this about ELF? ") and comes in the same package as the a.out loader. 5.4 How do I upgrade the libraries withough trashing my system? Note: You should always have a rescue disk set ready when you perfo this procedure, in the likely event that something goes wrong! This procedure is especially difficult if you're upgrading very old libraries like libc4. But you should be able to keep libc4 on the s system with libc5 libraries for the programs that still need them. same holds true for upgrading from libc5 to the newer-yet glibc2 libraries. The problem with upgrading dynamic libraries is that, the moment yo remove the old libraries, the utilities that you need to upgrade to the new version of the libraries don't work. There are ways around around this. One is to temporarily place a spare copy of the run ti libraries, which are in /lib/, in /usr/lib/, or /usr/local/lib/, or another directory that is listed in the /etc/ld.so.conf file. For example, when upgrading libc5 libraries, the files in /lib/ mig look something like: libc.so.5 libc.so.5.4.33 libm.so.5 libm.so.5.0.9 These are the C libraries and the math libraries. Copy them to anot directory that is listed in /etc/ld.so.conf, like /usr/lib/. cp -df /lib/libc.so.5* /usr/lib/ cp -df /lib/libm.so.5* /usr/lib/ ldconfig Be sure to run ldconfig to upgrade the library configuration. The files libc.so.5 and libm.so.5 are symbolic links to the actual library files. When you upgrade, the new links will not be created the old links are still there, unless you use the -f flag with cp. -d flag to cp will copy the symbolic link itself, and not the file points to. If you need to overwrite the link to the library directly, use the flag with ln. For example, to copy new libraries over the old ones, try this. Mak symbolic link to the new libraries first, then copy both the librar and the links to /lib/, with the following commands. ln -sf ./libm.so.5.0.48 libm.so.5 ln -sf ./libc.so.5.0.48 libc.so.5 cp -df libm.so.5* /lib cp -df libc.so.5* /lib Again, remember to run ldconfig after you copy the libraries. If you are satisfied that everything is working correctly, you can remove the temporary copies of the old libraries from /usr/lib/ or wherever you copied them. 5.5 Has anyone ported / compiled / written XXX for Linux? First, look in the Linux Software Map--it's at sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/docs/linux-software-map, and on the other FTP sites. A search engine is available on the World Wide Web http://www.boutell.com/lsm/. Check the FTP sites ("Where can I get Linux material by FTP? ") first--search the ls-lR or INDEX files for appropriate strings. Also look at the Linux Projects Map, ftp.ix.de/pub/ix/Linux/docs/Projects-Map.gz. There's a search engine for Linux FTP archives at http://lfw.linuxhq.com/ Also check out the Freshmeat Web site http://www.freshmeat.org, which is really cool. ("What online/free periodicals exist for Linux? " If you don't find anything, you could download the sources to the program yourself and compile them. See "How do I port XXX to Linux? " If it's a large package that may require some porting, pos a message to comp.os.linux.development.apps. If you compile a large-ish program, please upload it to one or more the FTP sites, and post a message to comp.os.linux.announce (submit your posting to linux-announce@news.ornl.gov). If you're looking for an application program, the chances are that someone has already written a free version. The comp.sources.wanted FAQ has instructions for finding the source code. 5.6 Can I use code or a compiler compiled for a 486 on my 386? Yes, unless it's the kernel. The -m486 option to GCC, which is used to compile binaries for x486 machines, merely changes certain optimizations. This makes for slightly larger binaries that run somewhat faster on a 486. They st work fine on a 386, though, with a small performance hit. However, from version 1.3.35 the kernel uses 486 or Pentium-specifi instructions if configured for a 486 or Pentium, thus making it unusable on a 386. GCC can be configured for a 386 or 486; the only difference is that configuring it for a 386 makes -m386 the default and configuring fo 486 makes -m486 the default. In either case, these can be overridde on a per-compilation basis or by editing /usr/lib/gcc-lib/i*-linux/n.n.n/specs. There is an Alpha version of GCC which knows how to do optimization well for the 586, but it is quite unreliable, especially at high optimization settings. The Pentium GCC can be found on tsx-11.mit.e in /pub/linux/ALPHA/pentium-gcc. I'd recommend using the ordinary 4 GCC instead; word has it that using -m386 produces code that's bett for the Pentium, or at least slightly smaller. 5.7 What does gcc -O6 do? Currently, the same as -O2 (GCC 2.5) or -O3 (GCC 2.6, 2.7). Any num greater than that does the same thing. The Makefiles of newer kerne use -O2, and you should probably do the same. 5.8 Where are linux/*.h and asm/*.h? The files /usr/include/linux/ and /usr/include/asm/ are often soft links to the directories where the kernel headers are. They are usually under /usr/src/kernel*/. If you don't have the kernel sources, download them--see, "How do I upgrade/recompile my kernel? " Then, use rm to remove any garbage, and ln to create the links: rm -rf /usr/include/linux /usr/include/asm ln -sf /usr/src/linux/include/linux /usr/include/linux ln -sf /usr/src/linux/include/asm /usr/include/asm /usr/src/linux/include/asm/ is a symbolic link to an architecture-specific asm directory--if you have a freshly unpacked kernel source tree, you must make symlinks. You'll also find that y may need to do `make config' in a newly-unpacked kernel source tree to create linux/autoconf.h. 5.9 I get errors when I try to compile the kernel. See the previous question regarding the header files. Remember that when you apply a patch to the kernel, you must use th -p0 or -p1 option: otherwise, the patch may be misapplied. See the patch manual page for details. "ld: unrecognized option `-qmagic"' means that you should get a newer linker, from ftp://tsx-11.mit.edu/pub/linux/packages/GCC/, in the file binutils-2.8.1.0.1.bin.tar.gz. 5.10 How do I make a shared library? For ELF, gcc -fPIC -c *.c gcc -shared -Wl,-soname,libfoo.so.1 -o libfoo.so.1.0 *.o For a.out, get tools-n.nn.tar.gz from tsx-11.mit.edu, in /pub/linux/packages/GCC/src/. It comes with documentation that will tell you what to do. Note that a.out shared libraries are a very tricky business. Consider upgrading your libraries to ELF shared libraries. See the ELF HOWTO, at sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/docs/HOWTO/ 5.11 My executables are (very) large. With an ELF compiler ("What's all this about ELF? "), the most common cause of large executables is the lack of an appropriate .so library link for one of the libraries you're using. There should be link like libc.so for every library like libc.so.5.2.18. With an a.out compiler the most common cause of large executables i the -g linker (compiler) flag. This produces (as well as debugging information in the output file) a program which is statically linked--one which includes a copy of the C library instead of a dynamically linked copy. Other things worth investigating are -O and -O2, which enable optimization (check the GCC documentation), and -s (or the strip command) which strip the symbol information from the resulting bina (making debugging totally impossible). You may wish to use -N on very small executables (less than 8K with the -N), but you shouldn't do this unless you understand its performance implications, and definitely never with daemons. 5.12 Does Linux support threads or lightweight processes? As well as the Unix multiprocessing model involving heavyweight processes, which is of course part of the standard Linux kernel, th are several implementations of lightweight processes or threads. Recent kernels implement a thread model, kthreads. In addition, the are the following packages available for Linux. * GNU glibc2 for Linux has optional support for threads. The arch is available from the same place as glibc2, ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu * In sipb.mit.edu:/pub/pthread or ftp.ibp.fr:/pub/unix/threads/pthreads. Documentation isn't in t package, but is available on the World Wide Web at http://www.mit.edu:8001/people/proven/home_page.html. Newer Lin libc's contain the pthreads source. The GNU Ada compiler on sunsite.unc.edu in /pub/Linux/devel/lang/ada/gnat-3.01-linux+elf.tar.gz contains binaries made from that source code. * In ftp.cs.washington.edu:/pub/qt-001.tar.Z is QuickThreads. Mor information can be found in the technical report, available on same site as /tr/1993/05/UW-CSE-93-05-06.PS.Z. * In gummo.doc.ic.ac.uk/rex/ is lwp, a very minimal implementatio * In ftp.cs.fsu.edu:/pub/PART/, an Ada implementation. This is useful mainly because it has a lot of Postscript papers that you'll find useful in learning more about threads. This is not directly usable under Linux. Please contact the authors of the packages in question for details. 5.13 Where can I get `lint' for Linux? Roughly equivalent functionality is built into GCC. Use the -Wall option to turn on most of the useful extra warnings. See the GCC manual for more details (type control-h followed by i in Emacs and select the entry for GCC). There is a freely available program called `lclint' that does much same thing as traditional lint. The announcement and source code ar available at on larch.lcs.mit.edu in /pub/Larch/lclint/; on the Wor Wide Web, look at http://larch-www.lcs.mit.edu:8001/larch/lclint.ht 5.14 Where can I find kermit for Linux? Kermit is distributed under a non-GPL copyright that makes its term of distribution somewhat different. The sources and some binaries a available on kermit.columbia.edu. The WWW Home Page of the Columbia University Kermit project is http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/. contents 6. Solutions to common miscellaneous problems. 6.1 free dumps core. In Linux 1.3.57 and later, the format of /proc/meminfo was changed a way that the implementation of free doesn't understand. Get the latest version, from sunsite.unc.edu, in /pub/Linux/system/Status/ps/procps-0.99.tgz. 6.2 My clock is very wrong. There are two clocks in your computer. The hardware (CMOS) clock ru even when the computer is turned off, and is used when the system starts up and by DOS (if you use DOS). The ordinary system time, sh and set by "date," is maintained by the kernel while Linux is running. You can display the CMOS clock time, or set either clock from the other, with /sbin/clock program--see "man 8 clock." There are various other programs that can correct either or both clocks for system drift or transfer time across the network. Some o them may already be installed on your system. Try looking for adjti (corrects for drift), netdate, and getdate (get the time from the network), or xntp (accurate, full-featured network time daemon). 6.3 Setuid scripts don't seem to work. That's right. This feature has been disabled in the Linux kernel on purpose, because setuid scripts are almost always a security hole. Sudo and SuidPerl can provide more security that setuid scripts or binaries, especially if execute permissions are limited to a certai user ID or group ID. If you want to know why setuid scripts are a security hole, read th FAQ for comp.unix.questions. 6.4 Free memory as reported by free keeps shrinking. The "free" figure printed by free doesn't include memory used as a disk buffer cache--shown in the "buffers" column. If you want to know how much memory is really free add the "buffers" amount to "free"--newer versions of free print an extra line with this info. The disk buffer cache tends to grow soon after starting Linux up. A you load more programs and use more files, the contents get cached. will stabilize after a while. 6.5 When I add more memory, the system slows to a crawl. This is a common symptom of a failure to cache the additional memor The exact problem depends on your motherboard. Sometimes you have to enable caching of certain regions in your BIO setup. Look in the CMOS setup and see if there is an option to cach the new memory area which is currently switched off. This is apparently most common on a '486. Sometimes the RAM has to be in certain sockets to be cached. Sometimes you have to set jumpers to enable caching. Some motherboards don't cache all of the RAM if you have more RAM p amount of cache than the hardware expects. Usually a full 256K cach will solve this problem. If in doubt, check the manual. If you still can't fix it because th documentation is inadequate, you might like to post a message to comp.os.linux.hardware giving all of the details--make, model numbe date code, etc., so other Linux users can avoid it. 6.6 Some programs (e.g. xdm) won't let me log in. You are probably using non-shadow password programs and are using shadow passwords. If so, you have to get or compile a shadow password version of the programs in question. The shadow password suite can be found at tsx-11.mit.edu:/pub/linux/sources/usr.bin/shadow/. This is the sour code. The binaries are probably in linux/binaries/usr.bin/. 6.7 Some programs let me log in with no password. You probably have the same problem as in "Some programs (e.g. xdm) won't let me log in. ", with an added wrinkle. If you are using shadow passwords, you should put a letter `x' or a asterisk in the password field of /etc/passwd for each account, so that if a program doesn't know about the shadow passwords it won't think it's a passwordless account and let anyone in. 6.8 My machine runs very slowly when I run GCC / X / ... You may have too little real memory. If you have less RAM than all programs you're running at once, Linux will swap to your hard disk instead and thrash horribly. The solution in this case is to not ru so many things at once or buy more memory. You can also reclaim som memory by compiling and using a kernel with less options configured See "How do I upgrade/recompile my kernel? ". You can tell how much memory and swap you're using with the free command, or by typing: cat /proc/meminfo If your kernel is configured with a RAM disk, this is probably wast space and will cause things to go slowly. Use LILO or rdev to tell kernel not to allocate a RAM disk (see the LILO documentation or ty man rdev). 6.9 I can only log in as root. You probably have some permission problems, or you have a file /etc/nologin. In the latter case, put rm -f /etc/nologin in your /etc/rc.local or /etc/rc.d/* scripts. Otherwise, check the permissions on your shell, and any file names that appear in error messages, and also the directories that contai these files, up to and including the root directory. 6.10 My screen is all full of weird characters instead of letters. You probably sent some binary data to your screen by mistake. Type echo '\033c' to fix it. Many Linux distributions have a command, "reset," that does this. If that doesn't help, try a direct screen escape command. echo This resets the default font of a Linux console. Remember to hold d the Control key and type the letter, instead of, for example, `Ctrl-V'. The sequence echo c causes a full screen reset. If there's data left on the shell comma line after typing a binary file, press Ctrl-C a few times to restor the shell command line. [Bernhard Gabler] 6.11 I have screwed up my system and can't log in to fix it. Reboot from an emergency floppy or floppy pair. For example, the Slackware boot and root disk pair in the install subdirectory of th Slackware distribution. There are also two, do-it-yourself rescue disk creation packages in sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/system/Recovery. These are better because they have your own kernel on them, so you don't run the ris of missing devices and file systems. Get to a shell prompt and mount your hard disk with something like mount -t ext2 /dev/hda1 /mnt Then your file system is available under the directory /mnt and you can fix the problem. Remember to unmount your hard disk before rebooting (cd somewhere else first, or it will say it's busy). 6.12 I've discovered a huge security hole in rm! No you haven't. You are obviously new to Unix and need to read a go book to find out how things work. Clue: the ability to delete files under Unix depends on permission to write in that directory. 6.13 lpr(1) and/or lpd(8) don't work. First make sure that your /dev/lp* port is correctly configured. It IRQ (if any) and port address need to match the settings on the printer card. You should be able to dump a file directly to the printer. cat the_file >/dev/lp1 If lpr gives you a message like "myname@host: host not found," it may mean that the TCP/IP loopback interface, lo, isn't working properly. Loopback support is compiled into most distribution kerne Check that the interface is configured with the ifconfig command. B Internet convention, the network number is 127.0.0.0, and the local host address is 127.0.0.1. If everything is configured correctly, y should be able to telnet to your own machine and get a login prompt Make sure that /etc/hosts.lpd contains the machine's host name. If your machine has a network-aware lpd, like the one that comes wi LPRng, make sure that /etc/lpd.perms is configured correctly. Also look at the Printing-HOWTO "Where can I get the HOWTO's and other documentation? ". 6.14 Timestamps on files on MS-DOS partitions are set incorrectly. There is a bug in the program "clock" (often found in /sbin). It miscounts a time zone offset, confusing seconds with minutes or something like that. Get a recent version. 6.15 How do I get LILO to boot the vmlinux file? >From kernel versions 1.1.80 on, the compressed kernel image, which what LILO needs to find, is in arch/i386/boot/zImage. The vmlinux f in the root directory is the uncompressed kernel, and you shouldn't try to boot it. This was changed to make it easier to build kernel versions for several different processors from one source tree. contents 7. How do I do this or find out that ... ? 7.1 How can I get scrollback in text mode? With the default US keymap, you can use Shift with the PageUp and PageDown keys. (The gray ones, not the ones on the numeric keypad.) With other keymaps, look in /usr/lib/keytables. You can remap the ScrollUp and ScrollDown keys to be whatever you like. For example, remap them to the keys on an 84-key, AT keyboard. The "screen" program, http://vector.co.jp/vpack/browse/person/an010455.html provides a searchable scrollback buffer and the ability to take "snapshots" of text-mode screens. You can't increase the amount of scrollback, because it is implemen using the video memory to store the scrollback text. You may be abl to get more scrollback in each virtual console by reducing the tota number of VC's. See linux/tty.h. 7.2 How do I switch virtual consoles? How do I enable them? In text mode, press Left Alt-F1 to Alt-F12 to select the consoles t to tty12; Right Alt-F1 gives tty13 and so on. To switch out of X Windows you must press Ctrl-Alt-F1, etc; Alt-F5 or whatever will switch back. If you want to use a VC for ordinary login, it must be listed in /etc/inittab, which controls which terminals and virtual consoles h login prompts. The X Window System needs at least one free VC in or to start. 7.3 How do I set the time zone? Change directory to /usr/lib/zoneinfo/. Get the time zone package i you don't have this directory. The source is available as sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/system/admin/time/timesrc-1.2.tar.gz. Then make a symbolic link named localtime pointing to one of the fi in this directory (or a subdirectory), and one called posixrules pointing to localtime. For example: ln -sf US/Mountain localtime ln -sf localtime posixrules This change will take effect immediately--try date(1). The manual page for tzset describes setting the time zone. Some programs recognize the TZ environment variable, but this is not POSIX-correct. You should also make sure that your Linux kernel clock is set to th correct GMT time--type date -u and check that the correct UTC time displayed. ("My clock is very wrong. ") 7.4 What version of Linux and what machine name am I using? Type: uname -a 7.5 How can I enable or disable core dumps? By using the ulimit command in bash, the limit command in tcsh, or rlimit command in ksh. See the appropriate manual page for details. This setting affects all programs run from the shell (directly or indirectly), not the whole system. If you wish to enable or disable core dumping for all processes by default, you can change the default setting in linux/sched.h--see t definition of INIT_TASK, and look also in linux/resource.h. 7.6 How do I upgrade/recompile my kernel? See the Kernel HOWTO or the README files which come with the kernel release on ftp.cs.helsinki.fi, in /pub/Software/Linux/Kernel/ and mirrors. (See "Where can I get Linux material by FTP? ") You may already have a version of the kernel source code installed on y system, but if it is part of a standard distribution it is likely t be somewhat out of date (this is not a problem if you only want a custom configured kernel, but it probably is if you need to upgrade With newer kernels you can (and should) make all of the following targets. Don't forget that you can specify multiple targets with on command. make clean dep install modules modules_install Also remember to update the module dependencies. depmod -a Remember that to make the new kernel boot you must run LILO after copying the kernel into your root partition--the Makefile in recent kernels has a special zlilo target for this; try: make zlilo Kernel version numbers with an odd minor version (ie, 1.1.x, 1.3.x) are the testing releases; stable production kernels have even minor versions (1.0.x, 1.2.x). If you want to try the testing kernels you should probably subscribe to the linux-kernel mailing list. (See " What mailing lists are there? .") 7.7 Can I have more than 3 serial ports by sharing interrupts? Yes, but you won't be able to use simultaneously two ordinary ports which share an interrupt (without some trickery). This is a limitat of the ISA Bus architecture. See the Serial HOWTO for information about possible solutions and workarounds for this problem. 7.8 How do I make a bootable floppy? Make a file system on it with bin, etc, lib and dev directories--everything you need. Install a kernel on it and arrang to have LILO boot it from the floppy (see the LILO documentation, i lilo.u.*.ps). If you build the kernel (or tell LILO to tell the kernel) to have a RAM disk the same size as the floppy the RAM disk will be loaded at boot time and mounted as root in place of the floppy. See the Bootdisk HOWTO. 7.9 How do I remap my keyboard to UK, French, etc.? For recent kernels, get /pub/Linux/system/Keyboards/kbd-0.90.tar.gz from sunsite.unc.edu. Make sure you get the appropriate version; yo have to use the right keyboard mapping package for your kernel version. For older kernels you have to edit the top-level kernel Makefile, i /usr/src/linux. You may find more helpful information in The Linux Keyboard and Console HOWTO, by Andries Brouwer, at sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/docs/HOWTO. 7.10 How do I get NUM LOCK to default to on? Use the setleds program, for example (in /etc/rc.local or one of th /etc/rc.d/* files): for t in 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 do setleds +num < /dev/tty$t > /dev/null done Setleds is part of the kbd package ("How do I remap my keyboard to UK, French, etc.? "). Alternatively, patch your kernel. You need to arrange for KBD_DEFLE to be defined to (1 << VC_NUMLOCK) when compiling drivers/char/keyboard.c. 7.11 How do I set (or reset) my initial terminal colors? The following shell script should work for VGA consoles: for n in 1 2 4 5 6 7 8; do setterm -fore yellow -bold on -back blue -store > /dev/tty$n done Substitute your favorite colors, and use /dev/ttyS$n for serial terminals. To make sure they are reset when people log out (if they've been changed): Replace the references to "getty" (or "mingetty" or "uugetty" or whatever) in /etc/inittab with references to "/sbin/mygetty." #!/bin/sh setterm -fore yellow -bold on -back blue -store > $1 exec /sbin/mingetty $@ [Jim Dennis] 7.12 How can I have more than 128Mb of swap? Use several swap partitions or swap files--Linux supports up to 16 swap areas, each of up to 128Mb. Very old kernels only supported swap partition sizes up to 16Mb. Linux on machines with 8KB paging, like Alpha and Sparc64, support swap partition up to 512KB. The 128KB limitation comes from PAGE_SIZE*BITSPERBYTE on machines with 4KB paging, but is 512KB on machines with 8KB paging. The limit is due to the use of a single p allocation map. The file mm/swapfile.c has all of the gory details. [Peter Moulder, Gordon Weast] contents 8. Miscellaneous information and questions answered. 8.1 How do I program XYZ under Linux? Read the manuals, or a good book on Unix. Manual pages (type "man man") are usually a good source of reference information on exactly how to use a particular command or function. There is also a lot of GNU Info documentation, which is often more useful as a tutorial. Run Emacs and type C-h i, or type info info i you don't have or don't like Emacs. Note that the Emacs libc node m not exactly describe the latest Linux libc, or GNU glibc2. But the progject and LDP are always looking for volunteers to upgrade their library documentation. Anyway, between the existing Texinfo documentation, and the manual pages in sections 2 and 3, should provide enough information to get started. As with all free software, the best tutorial is the source code itself. The latest release of the Linux manual pages, a collection of usefu GNU Info documentation, and various other information related to programming Linux, can be found on sunsite.unc.edu in /pub/Linux/docs/man-pages. 8.2 What's all this about ELF? See the ELF HOWTO by Daniel Barlow--note, this is not the file move-to-elf, which is a blow-by-blow account of how to upgrade to E manually. Linux has two different formats for executables, object files, and object code libraries, known as, "ELF." (The old format is called `a.out'.) They have advantages, including better support for shared libraries and dynamic linking. Both a.out and ELF binaries can coexist on a system. However, they different shared C libraries, both of which have to be installed. If you want to find out whether your system can run ELF binaries, l in /lib for a file named, "libc.so.5." If it's there, you probably have ELF libraries. If you want to know whether your installation actually is ELF you can pick a representative program, like ls, and run file on it: -chiark:~> file /bin/ls /bin/ls: Linux/i386 impure executable (OMAGIC) - stripped valour:~> file /bin/ls /bin/ls: ELF 32-bit LSB executable, Intel 80386, version 1, stripped There is a patch to get 1.2.x to compile using the ELF compilers, a produce ELF core dumps, at tsx-11.mit.edu in /pub/packages/GCC/. Yo do not need the patch merely to run ELF binaries. 1.3.x and later d not need the patch at all. 8.3 What is a .gz file ? And a .tgz ? And ... ? .gz (and .z) files are compressed using GNU gzip. You need to use gunzip (which is a symlink to the gzip command which comes with mos Linux installations) to unpack the file. .taz and .tz are tar files (made with Unix tar) compressed using standard Unix compress. .tgz (or .tpz) is a tar file compressed with gzip. .lsm is a Linux Software Map entry, in the form of a short text fil Details about the LSM and the LSM itself are available in the docs subdirectory on sunsite.unc.edu. .deb is a Debian Binary Package - the binary package format used by the Debian GNU/Linux distribution. It is manipulated using dpkg and dpkg-deb (available on Debian systems and from ftp.debian.org). .rpm is a Red Hat RPM package, which is used in the Red Hat distribution. They can be found on ftp.redhat.com. .bz2 is a file compressed by the more recent bzip program. The "file" command can often tell you what a file is. If you find that gzip complains when you try to uncompress a gzip'e file you probably downloaded it in ASCII mode by mistake. You must download most things in binary mode--remember to type binary as a command in FTP before using, "get," to get the file. 8.4 What does VFS stand for? Virtual File System. It's the abstraction layer between the user an real file systems like ext2, Minix and MS-DOS. Among other things, job is to flush the read buffer when it detects a disk change on th floppy disk drive. VFS: Disk change detected on device 2/0 8.5 What is a BogoMip? "BogoMips" is a contraction of "Bogus MIPS." MIPS stands for (depending who you listen to) Millions of Instructions per Second, Meaningless Indication of Processor Speed. The number printed at boot time is the result of a kernel timing calibration, used for very short delay loops by some device drivers As a very rough guide, the BogoMips rating for your machine will be approximately: 386SX clock * 0.14 386DX clock * 0.18 486Cyrix/IBM clock * 0.33 486SX/DX/DX2 clock * 0.50 586 clock * 0.39 If the number is wildly lower, you may have the Turbo button or CPU speed set incorrectly, or have some kind of caching problem (as described in "When I add more memory, the system slows to a crawl. .") For values people have seen with other, rarer, chips, see the BogoM Mini-HOWTO, on sunsite.unc.edu in /pub/Linux/docs/howto/mini/BogoMips/. 8.6 What is the Linux Journal and where can I get it? The Linux Journal is a monthly magazine (printed on paper) that is available on news stands and via subscription worldwide. Email linux@ssc.com for details. Their URL is http://www.ssc.com/. 8.7 What online/free periodicals exist for Linux? There are a number of recent additions to the list of periodicals devoted to Linux. * Linux Gazette. http://www.linuxgazette.com. * Linux Weekly News. http://www.lwn.net. * Slashdot. http://www.slashdot.org. * Freshmeat. http://www.freshmeat.org. [Jim Dennis, Robert Kiesling] 8.8 How many people use Linux? Linux is freely available, and no one is required to register their copy with any central authority, so it is difficult to know. Severa businesses survive solely on selling and supporting Linux. The Linu newsgroups are some of the most heavily read on Usenet, so the numb is likely in the hundreds of thousands. Accurate numbers probably don't exist. However, one brave soul, Harald T. Alvestrand, Harald.T.Alvestrand@uninett.no, has decided to try, and asks that if you use Linux, send a message to linux-counter@uninett.no with one of the following subjects: "I use Linux at home," "I use Linux at work," or, "I use Linux at home and at work." He will also accept `third party' registrations--ask him for details. Alternatively, you can register using the WWW forms found at http://domen.uninett.no/~hta/linux/counter.html. He posts his counts to aun.uninett.no in /pub/misc/linux-counter/ o at the web page above. 8.9 How should I pronounce Linux? This is a matter of religious debate, of course! If you want to hear Linus himself say how he pronounces it, downloa english.au or swedish.au from ftp.funet.fi (in /pub/Linux/PEOPLE/Linus/SillySounds/). If you have a sound card or PC-speaker audio driver you can hear them by typing cat english.au >/dev/audio The difference isn't in the pronunciation of Linux but in the langu Linus uses to say, "hello." For the benefit of those who don't have the equipment or inclinatio Linus pronounces Linux approximately as Leenus, where the "ee" is pronounced as in "feet," but rather shorter, and the "u" is like a much shorter version of the French "eu" sound in "peur" (pronouncing it as the "u" in "put" is probably passable). contents 9. Frequently encountered error messages. 9.1 Modprobe can't locate module, "XXX," and similar messages. These types of messages mostly occur at boot time or shutdown. If modprobe, insmod, or rmmod complain about not being able to find a module, add the following to the /etc/modules.conf or /etc/modutils/aliases file, whichever is present on your system. alias off And use the name of the module that appears in the error message. [J.H.M. Dassen] 9.2 Unknown terminal type linux and similar. In early kernels the default console terminal type has changed from "console" to "linux." You must edit /etc/termcap to change the line reading: console|con80x25:\ to linux|console|con80x25:\ (there may be an additional dumb in there--if so it should be removed.) To get the editor to work you may need say TERM=console (for bash and ksh), or setenv TERM console for csh or tcsh. Some programs use /usr/lib/terminfo instead of /etc/termcap. For th programs you should upgrade your terminfo, which is part of ncurses 9.3 lp1 on fire This is a joke/traditional error message indicating that some sort error is being reported by your printer, but that the error status isn't a valid one. It may be that you have some kind of I/O or IRQ conflict-- check your cards' settings. Some people report that they get this message when their printer is switched off. Hopefully it isn't really on fire ... In newer kernels, this message reads, "lp1 reported invalid error status (on fire, eh?)" 9.4 INET: Warning: old style ioctl... called! You are trying to use the old network configuration utilities. The ones can be found on ftp.linux.org.uk in /pub/linux/Networking/PROGRAMS/NetTools/ (source only, I'm afraid). Note that they cannot be used just like the old-style programs. See the NET-2 HOWTO for instructions on how to set up the old-style networking programs correctly. Even better, see the NET-3 HOWTO and upgrade your networking software. 9.5 ld: unrecognized option '-m486' You have an old version of ld. Install a newer binutils package--th will contain an updated ld. Look on tsx-11.mit.edu in /pub/linux/packages/GCC/ for binutils-2.6.0.2.bin.tar.gz. 9.6 GCC says Internal compiler error. If the fault is repeatable (i.e., it always happens at the same pla in the same file--even after rebooting and trying again, using a stable kernel) you have discovered a bug in GCC. See the GCC Info documentation (type Control-h i in Emacs, and select GCC from the menu) for details on how to report the error--make sure you have th latest version, though. Note that this is probably not a Linux-specific problem. Unless you are compiling a program many other Linux users also compile, you should not post your bug report to any of the comp.os.linux groups. If the problem is not repeatable, you may be experiencing memory corruption--see make says Error 139 . 9.7 make says Error 139 Your compiler driver (gcc) dumped core. You probably have a corrupt buggy, or old version of GCC--get the latest release. Alternatively you may be running out of swap space--see My machine runs very slowly when I run GCC / X / ... . If this doesn't fix the problem, you are probably having problems w memory or disk corruption. Check that the clock rate, wait states, refresh timing for your SIMMS and cache are correct (hardware manua are sometimes wrong, too). If so, you may have some marginal SIMMS, a faulty motherboard or hard disk or controller. Linux, like any Unix, is a very good memory tester--much better tha MS-DOS based memory test programs. Reportedly, some clone x87 math coprocessors can cause problems. Tr compiling a kernel with math emulation ( How do I upgrade/recompile my kernel? .) You may need to use the "no387" kernel command line flag on the LILO prompt to force the kernel to math emulation, or it may be able to work and still use the '387, w the math emulation compiled in but mainly unused. More information about this problem is available on the Web at http://www.bitwizard.nl/sig11/. 9.8 shell-init: permission denied when I log in. Your root directory and all the directories up to your home directo must be readable and executable by everybody. See the manual page f chmod or a book on Unix for how to fix the problem. 9.9 No utmp entry. You must exec ... when I log in. Your /var/run/utmp is screwed up. You should have > /var/run/utmp in your /etc/rc.local or /etc/rc.d/*. See ("I have screwed up my system and can't log in to fix it. ") Note that the utmp may als be found in /var/adm/ or /etc/ on some older systems. 9.10 Warning--bdflush not running. Modern kernels use a better strategy for writing cached disk blocks In addition to the kernel changes, this involves replacing the old update program which used to write everything every 30 seconds with more subtle daemon (actually a pair), known as bdflush. Get bdflush-n.n.tar.gz from the same place as the kernel source cod How do I upgrade/recompile my kernel? ) and compile and install it. Bdflush should be started before the usual boot-time file syste checks. It will work fine with older kernels as well, so there's no need to keep the old update around. 9.11 Warning: obsolete routing request made. This is nothing to worry about. The message means that your version route is a little out of date, compared to the kernel. You can make the message go away by getting a new version of route from the same place as the kernel source code. ( How do I upgrade/recompile my kernel? ) 9.12 EXT2-fs: warning: mounting unchecked file system. You need to run e2fsck (or fsck -t ext2 if you have the fsck front program) with the -a option to get it to clear the `dirty' flag, an then cleanly unmount the partition during each shutdown. The easiest way to do this is to get the latest fsck, umount, and shutdown commands, available in Rik Faith's util-linux package (` Where can I get Linux material by FTP? ") You have to make sure that your /etc/rc*/ scripts use them correctly. NB: don't try to check a file system that's mounted read/write--thi includes the root partition if you don't see VFS: mounted root ... read-only at boot time. You must arrange to mount the root file system read/o to start with, check it if necessary, and then remount it read/writ Read the documentation that comes with util-linux to find out how t do this. Note that you need to specify the -n option to mount so it won't tr to update /etc/mtab, since the root file system is still read-only, and this will otherwise cause it to fail. 9.13 EXT2-fs warning: maximal count reached. This message is issued by the kernel when it mounts a file system that's marked as clean, but whose "number of mounts since check" counter has reached the predefined value. The solution is to get th latest version of the ext2fs utilities (e2fsprogs-0.5b.tar.gz at th time of writing) from the usual sites. (` Where can I get Linux material by FTP? ") The maximal number of mounts value can be examined and changed usin the tune2fs program from this package. 9.14 EXT2-fs warning: checktime reached. Kernels from 1.0 onwards support checking a file system based on th elapsed time since the last check as well as by the number of mount Get the latest version of the ext2fs utilities. "( EXT2-fs warning: maximal count reached. ") 9.15 df says Cannot read table of mounted file systems. There is probably something wrong with your /etc/mtab or /etc/fstab files. If you have a reasonably new version of mount, /etc/mtab sho be emptied or deleted at boot time (in /etc/rc.local or /etc/rc.d/* using something like rm -f /etc/mtab* Some versions of SLS have an entry for the root partition in /etc/m made in /etc/rc* by using rdev. This is incorrect--the newer versio of mount do this automatically. Other versions of SLS have a line in /etc/fstab that looks like: /dev/sdb1 /root ext2 defaults This is wrong. /root should read simply /. 9.16 fdisk says Partition X has different physical/logical ... If the partition number (X, above) is 1, this is the same problem a in "fdisk: Partition 1 does not start on cylinder boundary. " If the partition begins or ends on a cylinder numbered greater than 1024, this is because the standard DOS disk geometry information format in the partition table can't cope with cylinder numbers with more than 10 bits. You should see "How can I get Linux to work with my disk? " 9.17 fdisk: Partition 1 does not start on cylinder boundary. The version of fdisk that comes with many Linux systems creates partitions that fail its own validity checking. Unfortunately, if you've already installed your system, there's not much you can do about this, apart from copying the data off the partition, deleting and remaking it, and copying the data back. You can avoid the problem by getting the latest version of fdisk, f Rik Faith's util-linux package (available on all the usual FTP site Alternatively, if you are creating a new partition 1 that starts in the first cylinder, you can do the following to get a partition tha fdisk likes. * Create partition 1 in the normal way. A `p' listing will produc the mismatch complaint. * Type `u' to set sector mode and do `p' again. Copy down the num from the "End" column. * Delete partition 1. * While still in sector mode, re-create partition 1. Set the firs sector to match the number of sectors per track. This is the sector number in the first line of the `p' output. Set the last sector to the value you wrote down in the step above. * Type `u' to reset cylinder mode and continue with other partitions. Ignore the message about unallocated sectors--they refer to the sectors on the first track apart from the Master Boot Record, and t are not used if you start the first partition in track 2. 9.18 fdisk says partition n has an odd number of sectors. The PC disk partitioning scheme works in 512-byte sectors, but Linu uses 1K blocks. If you have a partition with an odd number of secto the last sector is wasted. Ignore the message. 9.19 mtools says cannot initialize drive XYZ This means that mtools is having trouble accessing the drive. This be due to several things. Often this is due to the permissions on floppy drive devices (/dev/fd0* and /dev/fd1*) being incorrect--the user running mtools must have the appropriate access. See the manual page for chmod for details. Most versions of mtools distributed with Linux systems (not the standard GNU version) use the contents of a file /etc/mtools to determine which devices and densities to use, in place of having th information compiled into the binary. Mistakes in this file often cause problems. There is often no documentation about this. For the easiest way to access your MS-DOS files (especially those o hard disk partition) see How do I access files on my DOS partition or floppy? Note--you should never use mtools to access fi on an msdosfs mounted partition or disk! 9.20 At the start of booting: Memory tight This means that you have an extra-large kernel, which means that Li has to do some special memory-management magic to be able to boot itself from the BIOS. It isn't related to the amount of physical memory in your machine. Ignore the message, or compile a kernel containing only the drivers and features you need. ("How do I upgrade/recompile my kernel? )" 9.21 My syslog says `end_request: I/O error, ...'. This error message, and messages like it, almost always indicate a hardware error with a hard drive. This commonly indicates a hard drive defect. The only way to avoid further data loss is to completely shut own the system. You must al make sure that whatever data is on the drive is backed up, and rest it to a non-defective hard drive. This error message may also indicate a bad connection to the drive, especially with homebrew systems. If you install an IDE drive, ALWA use new cables. It's probably is a good idea with SCSI drives, too. In one instance, this error also seemed to coincide with a bad grou between the system board and the chassis. Be sure that all electric connections are clean and tight before placing the blame on the har drive itself. [Peter Moulder, Theodore T'so] 9.22 You don't exist. Go away. This is not a viral infection :-). It comes from programs like writ talk, and wall, if your invoking UID doesn't correspond to a valid user (probably due to /etc/passwd being corrupted), or if the sessi (pseudoterminal, specifically) you're using isn't properly register in the utmp file (probably because you invoked it in a funny way). contents 10. The X Window System. 10.1 Does Linux support X Windows? Yes. Linux uses XFree86 (the current version is 3.3.2, which is bas on X11R6). You need to have a video card which is supported by XFree86. See the Linux XFree86 HOWTO for more details. Most Linux distributions nowadays come with an X installation. However, you can install or upgrade your own, from /pub/Linux/X11/Xfree86-* on sunsite.unc.edu and its mirror sites. 10.2 Where can I get an XF86Config for my system? See the Linux XFree86 HOWTO, recent versions of Installation and Getting Started, and the instructions for the XF86Setup program. The contents of the XF86Config file depend on the your exact combination of video card and monitor. It can either be configured hand, or using the XF86Setup utility. Read the instructions that ca with XFree86, in /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/etc. The file you probably need look at most is README.Config. You should not use the sample XF86Config.eg file which is included with newer versions of XFree86 verbatim, because the wrong video cl settings can damage your monitor. Please don't post to comp.os.linux.x asking for an XF86Config, and please don't answer such requests. 10.3 xterm logins show up strangely in who, finger. The xterm that comes with XFree86 2.1 and earlier doesn't correctly understand the format that Linux uses for the /var/adm/utmp file, where the system records who is logged in. It therefore doesn't set all the information correctly. The Xterms in XFree86 3.1 and later versions fix this problem. 10.4 I can't get X Windows to work right. Read the XFree86 HOWTO--note the question and answer section. Try reading comp.windows.x.i386unix--specifically read the the FAQ that group. Please don't post X Windows or XFree86 related questions to comp.os.linux.x unless they are Linux-specific. contents 11. Questions applicable to very out-of-date software. The questions in this section are only relevant to users of softwar that is at least three months old. Please let me know if you find the answer to a problem you had here as unused questions in this section will eventually disappear. (See Feedback is invited. ") 11.1 fdisk says cannot use nnn sectors of this partition. Originally Linux only supported the Minix file system, which cannot use more than 64Mb per partition. This limitation is not present in the more advanced file systems that are now available, such as ext2 (the 2nd version of the Extended File System, the `standard' Linux file system). If you intend to use ext2fs you can ignore the message. 11.2 GCC sometimes uses huge amounts of virtual memory and thrashes. Older versions of GCC had a bug which made them use lots of memory you tried to compile a program which had a large static data table it. You can either upgrade your version of GCC, or add more swap space necessary, or just wait for the program to finish compiling. contents 12. How to get further assistance. 12.1 You still haven't answered my question! Please read all of this answer before posting. I know it's a bit lo but you may be about to make a fool of yourself in front of 50,000 people and waste hundreds of hours of their time. Don't you think i worth spending some of your time to read and follow these instructions? If you think an answer is incomplete or inaccurate, please e-mail Robert Kiesling at kiesling@terracom.net. Read the appropriate Linux Documentation Project books--see " Where can I get the HOWTO's and other documentation? " If you're a Unix newbie, read the FAQ for comp.unix.questions, and those for any of the other comp.unix.* groups that may be relevant. Linux has so much in common with commercial Unices, that almost everything you read there will apply to Linux. The FAQs, like all FAQs, be found on rtfm.mit.edu in /pub/usenet/news.answers (the mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu can send you these files, if you don't have FTP access). There are mirrors of rtfm's FAQ archives on vario sites--check the Introduction to *.answers posting, posted, or look news-answers/introduction in the directory above. Check the relevant HOWTO for the subject in question, if there is o or an appropriate old style sub-FAQ document. Check the FTP sites. Try experimenting--that's the best way to get to know Unix and Linu Read the documentation. Check the manual pages (type "man man" if you don't know about manual pages. Try "man -k subject"--it often lists useful and relevant manual pages. Check the Info documentation (type C-h i, i.e. Control H followed b in Emacs). This isn't just for Emacs. For example, the GCC documentation lives here as well. There will also often be a README file with a package that gives installation and/or usage instructions. Make sure you don't have a corrupted or out-of-date copy of the program in question. If possible, download it again and re-install it--you probably made a mistake the first time. Read comp.os.linux.announce--this often contains very important information for all Linux users. General X Window System questions belong in comp.windows.x.i386unix not in comp.os.linux.x. But read the group first (including the FAQ before you post. Only if you have done all of these things and are still stuck, shou you post to the appropriate comp.os.linux.* newsgroup. Make sure yo read the next question first. "( What to put in a request for help. )" 12.2 What to put in a request for help. Please read the following advice carefully about how to write your posting or email. Making a complete posting will greatly increase t chances that an expert or fellow user reading it will have enough information and motivation to reply. This advice applies both to postings asking for advice and to perso email sent to experts and fellow users. Make sure you give full details of the problem, including: * What program, exactly, you are having problems with. Include th version number if known and say where you got it. Many standard commands tell you their version number if you give them a --version option. * Which Linux release you're using (Red Hat, Slackware, Debian, o whatever) and what version of that release. * The exact and complete text of any error messages printed. * Exactly what behavior you expected, and exactly what behavior y observed. A transcript of an example session is a good way to s this. * The contents of any configuration files used by the program in question and any related programs. * What version of the kernel and shared libraries you have installed. The kernel version can be found by typing uname -a, the shared library version by typing ls -l /lib/libc.so.4. * Details of what hardware you're running on, if it seems appropriate. You are in little danger of making your posting too long unless you include large chunks of source code or uuencoded files, so err on t side of giving too much information. Use a clear, detailed Subject line. Don't put things like `doesn't work', `Linux', `help', or `question' in it--we already know that. Save the space for the name of the program, a fragment of an error message, or summary of the unusual behavior. If you report an `unable to handle kernel paging request' message, follow the instructions in the Linux kernel sources README file for turning the numbers into something more meaningful. If you don't do this, no one who reads your post will be able to do it for you. The mapping from numbers to function names varies from one kernel to another. Put a summary paragraph at the top of your posting. At the bottom of your posting, ask for responses by email and say you'll post a summary. Back this up by using Followup-To: poster. Then, actually post the summary in a few days or a week or so. Don' just concatenate the replies you got--summarize. Putting the word SUMMARY in your summary's Subject line is also a good idea. Conside submitting the summary to comp.os.linux.announce. Make sure your posting doesn't have an inappropriate References: header line. This marks your article as part of the thread of the article referred to, which will often cause it to be junked by readers, along with the rest of a boring thread. You might like to say in your posting that you've read this FAQ and the appropriate HOWTO's--this may make people less likely to skip y posting. Remember that you should not post email sent to you personally with the sender's permission. 12.3 I want to mail someone about my problem. Try to find the author or developer of whatever program or componen is causing you difficulty. If you have a contact point for your Lin distribution, you should use it. Please put everything in your e-mail message that you would put in posting asking for help. Finally, remember that, despite the fact that most of the Linux community are very helpful and responsive to e-mailed questions, you're asking for help from unpaid volunteers, so you have no right expect an answer. 13. Administrative information and acknowledgments. 13.1 Feedback is invited. Please send me your comments on this FAQ. I accept contributions to the FAQ in any format. All contributions, comments, and corrections are gratefully received. Please send e-ma to kiesling@terracom.net. If you wish to refer to a question in the FAQ, it's better for me i you do so by the question heading, rather than number. The question numbers are generated automatically, and I don't see them in the source file I edit. I prefer comments in English to patch files--context diff is not my first language. 13.2 Formats in which this FAQ is available. This document is available as an ASCII text file, an HTML World Wid Web page, Postscript, and as a USENET news posting. All of these formats are generated from SGML source using SGML Tool and the LinuxDoc DTD. The HTML version of this FAQ is available as http://sunsite.unc.edu/LDP/ at other sites. The Usenet version is posted regularly to news.answers, comp.answer comp.os.linux.misc, and comp.os.linux.announce. It is archived at ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet-by-hierarchy/comp/os/linux/misc/. The most recent text, HTML, SGML, and Postscript versions are available from the Linux archives at sunsite.unc.edu, and from http://www.terracom.net/~kiesling 13.3 Authorship and acknowledgments. This FAQ is compiled and maintained by Robert Kiesling kiesling@ix.netcom.com, with assistance and comments from Linux activists all over the world. Special thanks are due to Matt Welsh, who moderated comp.os.linux.announce and comp.os.linux.answers, coordinated the HOWTO's and wrote substantial portions of many of them, Greg Hankin and Timothy Bynum, the former and current Linux Documentation Proje HOWTO maintainers, Lars Wirzenius and Mikko Rauhala, the former and current moderators of comp.os.linux.announce, Marc-Michel Corsini, wrote the original Linux FAQ, and Ian Jackson, the previous FAQ maintainer. Thanks also to Roman Maurer for his many updates and additions, especially with European Web sites, translations, and general miscellany. Last but not least, thanks to Linus Torvalds and the other contributors to Linux for giving us something to talk about! 13.4 Disclaimer and Copyright. Note that this document is provided `as is'. The information in it not warranted to be correct. Use it at your own risk. Linux Frequently Asked Questions with Answers is Copyright (c) 1997 1998 by Robert Kiesling kiesling@terracom.net, under the copyright of the Linux Documentation Project. The full text of the copyright is available via anonymous FTP from sunsite.unc.edu, in t directory /pub/Linux/docs/LDP, and is included below. Portions are Copyright (c) 1994, 1995, 1996 by Ian Jackson, the previous Linux FAQ maintainer. Linux Frequently Asked Questions with Answers may be reproduced and distributed in its entirety (including this authorship, copyright, permission notice), provided that no charge is made for the documen itself, without the author's consent. This includes "fair use" excerpts like reviews and advertising, and derivative works like translations. Note that this restriction is not intended to prohibit charging for the service of printing or copying the document. Exceptions to these rules may be granted. I would be happy to answe any questions regarding this copyright. E-mail me at kiesling@ix.netcom.com. As the license below says, these restrictions are here to protect the contributors, not to restrict as educators and learners. LINUX DOCUMENTATION PROJECT COPYING LICENSE Last modified 6 January 1997 The following copyright license applies to all works by the Linux Documentation Project. Please read the license carefully---it is somewhat like the GNU General Public License, but there are several conditions in it that differ from what you may be used to. If you have any questions, ple email the LDP coordinator, mdw@sunsite.unc.edu. The Linux Documentation Project manuals may be reproduced and distributed in whole or in part, subject to the following condition All Linux Documentation Project manuals are copyrighted by their respective authors. THEY ARE NOT IN THE PUBLIC DOMAIN. * The copyright notice above and this permission notice must be preserved complete on all complete or partial copies. * Any translation or derivative work of Linux Installation and Getting Started must be approved by the author in writing befor distribution. * If you distribute Linux Installation and Getting Started in par instructions for obtaining the complete version of this manual must be included, and a means for obtaining a complete version provided. * Small portions may be reproduced as illustrations for reviews o quotes in other works without this permission notice if proper citation is given. * The GNU General Public License referenced below may be reproduc under the conditions given within it. Exceptions to these rules may be granted for academic purposes: Wri to the author and ask. These restrictions are here to protect us as authors, not to restrict you as educators and learners. All source code in Linux Installation and Getting Started is placed under the General Public License, available via anonymous FTP from the GNU archive site. PUBLISHING LDP MANUALS If you're a publishing company interested in distributing any of t LDP manuals, read on. By the license given in the previous section, anyone is allowed to publish and distribute verbatim copies of the Linux Documentation Project manuals. You don't need our explicit permission for this. However, if you would like to distribute a translation or derivativ work based on any of the LDP manuals, you must obtain permission fr the author, in writing, before doing so. All translations and derivative works of LDP manuals must be placed under the Linux Documentation License given in the previous section That is, if you plan to release a translation of one of the manuals it must be freely distributable by the above terms. You may, of course, sell the LDP manuals for profit. We encourage y to do so. Keep in mind, however, that because the LDP manuals are freely distributable, anyone may photocopy or distribute printed copies free of charge, if they wish to do so. We do not require to be paid royalties for any profit earned from selling LDP manuals. However, we would like to suggest that if you sell LDP manuals for profit, that you either offer the author royalties, or donate a portion of your earnings to the author, the as a whole, or to the Linux development community. You may also wis to send one or more free copies of the LDP manual that you are distributing to the author. Your show of support for the LDP and th Linux community will be very appreciated. We would like to be informed of any plans to publish or distribute manuals, just so we know how they're becoming available. If you are publishing or planning to publish any LDP manuals, please send emai to Matt Welsh (email mdw@sunsite.unc.edu). We encourage Linux software distributors to distribute the LDP manu (such as the Installation and Getting Started Guide) with their software. The LDP manuals are intended to be used as the "official" Linux documentation, and we'd like to see mail-order distributors bundling the LDP manuals with the software. As the LDP manuals matu hopefully they will fulfill this goal more adequately. Matt Welsh, mdw@sunsite.unc.edu