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The MirOS Team is proud to announce the immediate release of MirOS BSD #quinquies. This release is the fifth in the stable #7 branch. It is a bug-fix relase and contains all the security and system updates since MirOS BSD #7quater.
Important: If you have already downloaded this release before January 6, please do so again. The tarballs (sans X) have been rerolled.
- Home page
- http://mirbsd.de
- Download
- http://www.mirbsd.org/MirOS/v7/bsd/
The MD5 and SHA1 checksum files have been signed with PGP. You are encouraged to check the signatures and checksums before installing.
Have a lot of fun!
The MirOS development team
Thorsten Glaser, Benny Siegert
Changes
This release contains at least the following changes since MirOS #7quater:
- Package tools removed.
To install the package tools and the other MirPorts stuff, check out the ports module from CVS and place all the files under /usr/ports. (If you only want to install binary packages, the top-level files and infrastructure/ are enough.) After that, execute the command make setup to install the necessary files. - Security fixes.
This release contains all errata until the end of December 2004. For an exact list, see the MirWiki:SevenQuaterUpdates page. - Kernel and driver fixes.
All the non-security errata that have been applied to OpenBSD 3.4-stable are included, too. These are mostly kernel fixes and driver updates.
What is MirOS?
MirOS BSD (or MirBSD) is a secure operating system derived from OpenBSD. It incorporates code from many other sources, particularly from NetBSD. These systems share a common origin - Berkeley UNIX (BSD), originally developed at the University of Berkeley. MirOS #7quinquies is available for Intel-based computers from 80486DX or 80487SX onwards. For the moment, SPARC users will have to use MirOS BSD #7quater.
The MirOS development team would like to say thanks to the Unix Research Groups at AT&T and Berkeley, the people involved in 4.4BSD, 386BSD, NetBSD™ and the OpenBSD team, as well as the various people who have contributed code and documentation (FreeBSD and ISDN4BSD, Sendmail, Apache™, X Consortium, the Free Software Foundation and the FSF Europe, to name a few).
We would also like to thank all those people who have supported MirOS in the past, including sponsoring the developers and plain downloading and using MirOS. Special thanks go to Josh "selerius" Steele from CodeFusion IS for hosting the mirbsd.bsdadvocacy.org website for about two and an half year until the death of the server, as well as Andreas "ScottyTM" Kupfer and Bastian "waldi" Blank for providing domain names for the project.
Major Differences to OpenBSD
Selected changes of the MirOS #7 line against the current (end of 2003) development version of OpenBSD include:
- Improvements in the CVS infrastructure.
- Slim base system: documentation and programmes that are considered not basic, or bloated, unnecessary or have a licence considered not free enough, have been removed or moved to the MirPorts framework to be installed later. Among these are: Kerberos IV, Kerberos V, NIS/YP, BIND 9, AFS/Arla, AMD, NLS/Locale/I18N; the C++, Fortran and Objective-C compilers of the GNU C Compiler suite 2.95.3 and everything that was licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License which declared front or back cover texts or invariant sections. Easy shortcuts have been added for people who want to rebuild their base system with SENDMAIL SASL or without sendmail, apache, the documentation, games, perl, ...
- Several GNU utilities have been replaced by their BSD UNIX® counterparts from AT&T UNIX® up to 32V which was released by Caldera International, Inc. (now known as The SCO group) in 1999 under a four-clause UCB-style open source certified licence, in order to enable the customer to do with MirOS what he wants. Among these are: Groff, BC/DC, GZip, Diff.
- Unused files (documentary, ChangeLogs, VMS and Win32 code) has been removed to speed up retrieving and updating the source tree.
- Except for the compiler for the C Language, gcc 2.95 has been removed from the base system. The C compiler is installed as pgcc(1) fall-back compiler only, to prepare the move to the GNU Compiler Collection version 3 in the next MirOS release. - The entire base system has been made compilable using the fallback compiler only. No C++ code is left.
- Since MirOS currently targets machines with an 80486DX CPU and more than 32 MiB RAM only, and in the future will run on Pentium-class machines only. The sparc version has been tested on two SPARCstation 20. The XFree86 3.3.6 subsystem, the X11R5 and any non-i386 code have been removed from the tree as a consequence.
- This eliminates potential bug sources in the base system and improves system stability as well as performance.
- The Apache web server has been updated to the latest 1.3 release and comes with integrated support for the IPv6 Internet Protocol.
- GNU libiberty has been updated to latest code from GCC 3.3.1 and GNU binutils 2.14. The GNU binutils used in-tree have been updated to 2.14.
- The popular X11 Window Manager evilwm(1) has been updated to the latest version and enhanced. It is installed by default, although the OpenBSD fvwm(1) environment is still enabled bt default.
- The licence for distributing the BSD dæmon and the Linux penguin has been obtained, so these pictures were not removed from XFree86.
- The popular web browser lynx(1) has been updated to the latest development snapshot and fixed; some fixes and enhancements have been submitted upstream and even integrated.
- All of the in-tree GNU software has common scripts such as a top-level master configure, install-sh, mkinstalldirs (from BSD) and friends moved to ${GNUSYSTEM_AUX_DIR} at a central place in the tree.
- The i386 MBR (master boot record) and PBR (first-stage boot loader / partition boot record) code has been rewritten from scratch using the GNU assembler's new intel_syntax,noprefix mode. Thus it documents said mode now, because the GNU documentation is inaccurate and partially wrong.
- The i386 boot code (MBR, PBR, /boot) has been extended by support for LBA and single-sector CHS access mode, thus supporting drives larger than 8 Gigabyte as well as Soekris systems and other computers with an old or broken BIOS.
- The i386 MBR code has an optional (enabled by default) boot manager integrated
which facilitates booting the default partition, a chosen primary partition
on the first hard disc, or chaining to the first floppy drive. After a
time-out of 10 seconds it boots the default partition.
The non-bootmanager MBR code can be installed by executing: - Network-bootable bsd.rd.net kernel for SPARC, eliminating the need for more than a RARP and TFTP dæmon on the source side.
- Support for nearly everything the GENERIC kernel supports on the CD-ROM (bsd.rd) installation kernel to facilitate using it as a chroot(2) rescue and emergency system.
- Installation support using FAT, ext2, ext3, UFS1 ffs, NTFS, HTTP, FTP, NFS as source medium. Support for PPP with kernel-mode pppd(8) on the 1440Ki floppy, and PPP with user-mode ppp(8) supporting ISDN SyncPPP and HDLC, PPP, PPPoE, PPPoA on the 2880Ki floppy/CD-ROM. Integrated support for setting up a RAID root system and installing to it.
- Own set of boot floppies, kernel structured like GENERIC.
- Support for disabling fsck(8) for ffs filesystems with softdep enabled (default in the MirOS installer) in /etc/fstab. Includes automatic sorting of the fstab file implemented in korn shell.
- Regular synchronization of the base system and MirPorts with OpenBSD.
- Highly improved set of shell script infrastructure using security features of the Korn shell which is /bin/sh in MirOS. Automatic discovery of IDE hard disc drives which need their write cache disabled.
- Import of enhancements from NetBSD, FreeBSD and MicroBSD:
- Improvements for the ELF executable format from NetBSD, leading to support for recent Wine (MS Windows®) emulators.
- Full ISDN BRI (64k*2) and PRI (T1-1536kbps and E1-2048kbps) support (no PRI/PMX device drivers yet) and isdnd(8) userland tool from NetBSD, but with unsafe string functions such as sprintf(3) removed and replaced by their safe counterparts (snprintf(3), strlcpy/strlcat(3)).
- Privacy improvements: root can forbid "ps a" and "ps e" (show all users the processes of all users, or the environment attached to a process)
- Allow mknod(2) to succeed within a chroot(2) unless disabled in the kernel configuration. This allows much cleaner release builds.
- The CTM package, growfs(8) and ffsinfo(8), as well as some minor files from FreeBSD.
- Improved wtf(1) originated from NetBSD wtf(6) with a huge acronyme database in two languages.
- Always initialize variables in the kernel to 0 (from MicroBSD).
- Integrated tinyirc and ssfe programmes (GNU) and dict (NPL) in the base system, facilitating easy support in the Freenode or OFTC IRC network. Replaced unsafe string functions in these with safe counterparts.
- host(1) including a nslookup fallback compatibility script from the audited (prior) OpenBSD BIND4 versions.
- hd(1) as variant of hexdump(1) with MS-DOS-alike display.
- Lynx SSL improvements; install a bunch of well-known X509v3 Root CA certificates for lynx and sendmail by default.
- sendmail comes with STARTTLS up and running by default using a snake-oil certificate, suggested by Thorsten Glaser and discussed with members of the Chaos Computer Club and Trash.net. Read starttls(8) to find out more!
- DRI support in the X-Window subsystem. No DRM yet, though.
- Supplied sample files: ifrOSS approved licence template to be used for newly written code in MirOS. Sample X-Window environment and OpenSSL CA configuration files.
- Much enhanced COPYRIGHT file, including a summary of all advertising clauses that have existed in the project tree. ASCII-Art of MirOS related pictures. Acknowledgement to use the BSD dæmon for the project from Marshall Kirk McKusick. Install GNU licenses by default, too.
- Infrastructure for supporting more than one underlying kernel/libc (base OS) combination which will eventually lead to MirLinux.
- Manpage fixes and enhancements, date display fixed and unified between tmac.an.old and tmac.mdoc; Makefile enhancements (make foo.E generates a preprocessed source file); what is now MirOS/MirPorts and started as OpenBSD-current-mirabilos is more than one year old! - Updated papers, USD, PSD and SMM documentation from 4.4BSD-Alpha under the Caldera license.
- Configuration files change: A lot of "dotfiles" such as ~/.ssh have been moved (for example to ~/.etc/ssh). More "local" files are supported (for example /etc/mk.conf.local, /etc/profile.local, /etc/changelist.local). More files are installed and enabled by default (for example /etc/profile, ~/.etc/ssh/known_hosts, /etc/mk.conf). Porters are suggested to fix their ports to obey to the ~/.etc/ structure, too.
- Ports tree (MirPorts subsystem) enhancements:
- "Plug-In" support for gcc 3.2.3 in /etc/mk.conf for compiling software using the MirPorts framework (but not for recompiling the base system; that's scheduled for the next MirOS release).
- New or enhanced ports, for example: djbdns (IPv6, VeriSign, fixes); Wine/WineX/XoverOffice/ReWind; CUPS; Pine; sIRC; PGP 2.6.3in; RealPlayer; mPlayer; DJB daemontools; Midnight Commander; CenterICQ; p5-Socket6 (for IPv6 sockets in perl), JOE's Own Editor v2.8, the SixXS public beta IPv6 tunnel heartbeat client, a working K Desktop Environment, version 3.2.1 and the GNU GNOME desktop suite and developer's framework, version 2.4.
- Some ports removed from OpenBSD for political or broken-ness reasons have been resurrected: ucspi-tcp, sunjdk-1.1, flashplugin for example.
- A whole lot of minor optimizations and cleanup
- Support and development via IRC and Usenet, not through ancient ICB.
- And no remote holes in the default maintainer in ONE year!
MirOS #7 is only an interim release with pentium optimizations. Other
releases of MirOS use gcc 3.x as the default compiler, with Athlon
optimizations. MirOS/x86 runs on systems with Pentium-compatible CPU and
more than 32 Mebibytes of RAM.
Despite being an interim release,
MirOS #7quinquies is - contrary to MirOS #5 - designed to provide a stable,
commercially usable codebase and long-time usability.
In order to employ the full functionality of the installer, you will have to edit files (ppp.conf, isp/isp.chat, isdnd.rc, raid0.conf are examples) with the ed(1) editor. To ease that, this manual page is included in the installation image, located as "ed.hlp" in the root directory on x86. If you do not like the bootmanager facility, choose the (u)pdate option in fdisk after starting it like fdisk -ef /nonexistent wd0. If you like installing on a CCD device, add "ccd0 on" to /var/run/dmesg.boot so the installer recognizes it. After creating and enabling RAID devices, it's recommended to run "raidctl -A yes raid0" (or -A root) and reboot, after which the installer should automatically recognize it.
If you have support inquiries or other questions, please visit the IRC
channel #mirbsd on the Freeforge network: maou.mirbsd.org or
irc.freeforge.net.
We used to be in #deutsch at OFTC: irc6.oftc.net (or irc.oftc.net for all
these people who only have IPv4 instead of full Internet access).
Earlier we have been in the Freenode PDPC (OPN) IRC network: http://www.freenode.net/.
From within MirOS, simply hit "tinyirc", return, "/join
#deutsch" and return; please notice that root users are banned from
using IRC for security reasons.
Another place considered a support channel for MirOS is the usenet; more
specifically comp.unix.bsd.misc or de.comp.os.unix.bsd.
The default shell is csh for historical reasons, but can be changed
to ksh - using tcsh or GNU bash is not officially supported.
If you like MirOS, feel free to support the developers with an amount of money within your choice. Please contact us by eMail if you wish to do so. We're using sponsored money mainly to improve MirOS, but also to build up a community of open source (BSD preferred) users in the local area of the head developer (Bonn, Germany) as well as via IRC. Finally, we support our upstream code feeders, mainly OpenBSD, but also others, with donations - which is why you should not directly donate to the OpenBSD project for MirOS any more.
Legal Stuff
Please read the full stuff at About MirOS.
# $MirBSD: src/share/man/man0/COPYRIGHT,v 1.27 2004/05/23 15:57:22 tg Exp $ # $OpenBSD: COPYRIGHT,v 1.2 2001/01/29 02:11:07 niklas Exp $ # @(#)COPYRIGHT 5.1 (Berkeley) 7/1/91 This is the licencing information for the MirOS and MirPorts system developed by the MirOS Project group in Europe as an OpenSource(TM) operating system. Note that the MirOS system is, due to the variety of licences used, not OSI certified Open Source software, but we believe that all our licences, for code, documentation and artwork, meet the Open Source Definition as designed by the OSI (Open Source Initiative). The MirOS Project licences their compilations under the following terms and conditions: *- * Copyright (c) 2002, 2003, 2004 * by The MirOS Project <miros-dev@mirbsd.org> * Thorsten Glaser <tg@mirbsd.org> * Benny Siegert <bsiegert@gmx.de> * * Licensee is hereby permitted to deal in this work without restric- * tion, including unlimited rights to use, publically perform, modi- * fy, merge, distribute, sell, give away or sublicence, provided the * above copyright notices, these terms and the disclaimer are retai- * ned in all redistributions, or reproduced in accompanying documen- * tation or other materials provided with binary redistributions. * * Licensor hereby provides this work "AS IS" and WITHOUT WARRANTY of * any kind, expressed or implied, to the maximum extent permitted by * applicable law, but with the warranty of being written without ma- * licious intent or gross negligence; in no event shall licensor, an * author or contributor be held liable for any damage, direct, indi- * rect or other, however caused, arising in any way out of the usage * of covered work, even if advised of the possibility of such damage. * * Maximum effort feasible has been done to verify all work which has * been added to this compilation; to the maximum extent of our know- * ledge there is no malicious code or intellectual property of third * parties in MirOS which has not been properly licenced. However we * cannot personally verify the identity of each author nor all lines * of text; thus, if something bad should happen, we would be pleased * to hear of it immediately so the work in question can instantly be * removed from the MirOS project. We (the project) disclaim any li- * ability for any piece of work licenced by others into MirOS. * * This licence agreement shall be governed in all aspects by the law * of Germany; designated place of court is Bonn, NRW, Germany. (Der * Gerichtsstand ist Bonn, NRW/Deutschland. Es gilt deutsches Recht.) *- The individual works that are compiled into this collection are co- vered by individual licence clauses. Most of these licences are re- produced below; for an additional overview of separated, but inclu- ded, third-party software, please refer to either of * /usr/share/legal/LICENCE * http://www.mirbsd.org/cvs.cgi/src/share/doc/LICENCE?cvsroot=ocvs You are required to read, understand and accept the listed licences before using the third-party software (such as Apache, Sendmail and the GNU toolchain). The MirPorts framework is a defined way to install third-party app- lications under the MirOS system (in all its flavours such as MirOS BSD and MirOS Linux), as well as other operating systems like Open- BSD and ekkoBSD. Thus, the MirPorts Framework Team consists of developers from MirOS project, as well as independent contributors to the infrastructure, and the people contributing their own ports. Many ports of MirPorts are derived from the OpenBSD ports tree which has been made freely available without a special licence; the MirPorts Framework instead is covered by a licence similar to the above - the individual ports however remain freely available. The patch files provided with some ports are usually unified diffs against third-party software which thus share their licence. If such a diff cannot be freely provided, a forward ed(1) diff is to be included in MirPorts instead. Several of the authors named below have since removed, or ceased to enforce, the third (advertising) clause; for reference, we have not removed the clause below though. Copyright 1979, 1980, 1983, 1986, 1988, 1989, 1991 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. 3. All marketing or advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software must display the following acknowledgements: * This product includes material provided by Thorsten Glaser. * This product includes software developed by Paul Kranenburg. * This product includes software developed by Christopher G. Demetriou. * This product includes software developed by the University of California, Berkeley and its contributors. * This product includes software developed by the NetBSD Foundation, Inc. and its contributors. * This product includes software developed by Michael Shalayeff. * This product includes software developed by Marc Espie for the OpenBSD Project. * This product includes software developed by the OpenBSD project. * This model includes software developed by Christos Zoulas. * This product contains software developed by Ignatios Souvatzis for the NetBSD project. * This product includes software designed by William Allen Simpson. * This product includes software developed at Ludd University of Lule. * This product includes software developed at the Information Technology Division, US Naval Research Laboratory. * This product includes software developed by Aaron Campbell. * This product includes software developed by Adam Glass. * This product includes software developed by Adam Glass and Charles M. 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Lambert. * This product includes software developed by John Brezak. * This product includes software developed by Theodore Ts'o. * This product includes software developed by Thomas Skibo. * This product includes software developed by Tobias Weingartner. * This product includes software developed by Todd Miller. * This product includes software developed by TooLs GmbH. * This product includes software developed by WIDE Project and its contributors. * This product includes software developed by Winning Strategies Inc. * This product includes software developed by Wolfgang Solfrank. * This product includes software developed by Zembu Labs Inc. * This product includes software developed by the Alice Group. * This product includes software developed by the Apache Group for use in the Apache HTTP server project. * This product includes software developed by the Computer Systems Engineering Group at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory. * This product includes software developed by the David Muir Sharnoff. * This product includes software developed by the Kungliga Tekniska Högskolan and its contributors. * This product includes software developed by the Network Research Group at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory. * This product includes software developed by the OpenSSL Project for use in the OpenSSL Toolkit. * This product includes software developed by the SMCC Technology Development Group at Sun Microsystems Inc. * This product includes software developed by the University of California, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, and its contributors. * This product includes software developed by the University of Illinois at Urbana and their contributors. * This product includes software developed for the FreeBSD project. * This product includes software developed for the NetBSD Project. * This product includes software developed for the NetBSD Project by Christopher G Demetriou. * This product includes software developed for the NetBSD Project by Christos Zoulas. * This product includes software developed for the NetBSD Project by Frank van der Linden. * This product includes software developed for the NetBSD Project by Jason Downs and Jason R. Thorpe. * This product includes software developed for the NetBSD Project by John M. Vinopal. * This product includes software developed for the NetBSD Project by Juergen Hannken-Illjes. * This product includes software developed for the NetBSD Project by Kenneth Stailey. * This product includes software developed for the NetBSD Project by Matthias Drochner. * This product includes software developed for the NetBSD Project by Perry E. Metzger. * This product includes software developed for the NetBSD Project by Scott Bartram and Frank van der Linden. * This product includes software developed for the NetBSD Project by Wasabi Systems Inc. * This product includes software developed or owned by Caldera International Inc. * This product includes software developed under OpenBSD by Per Fogelstrom. * This product includes software developed under OpenBSD by Theo de Raadt. * This product includes software developed under OpenBSD by Theo de Raadt for Willowglen Singapore. * This product includes software developed under OpenBSD for RTMX Inc. North Carolina, USA by Per Fogelstrom, Opsycon AB, Sweden. * This product includes software written by Tim Hudson. * This software is a component of 86BSD developed by William F. Jolitz, TeleMuse. * This software was developed by Holger Veit and Brian Moore for use with 86BSD and similar operating systems. * This product includes software developed by the University of California, Berkeley and its contributors, as well as Christoph Herrmann and Thomas-Henning von Kamptz. * This product includes software developed by The XFree86 Project, Inc (http://www.xfree86.org/) and its contributors. * This product includes software developed by X-Oz Technologies (http://www.x-oz.com/). * This product makes use of the FreeType Engine. 4. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software without specific prior written permission. THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. Copyright (C) Caldera International Inc. 2001-2002. All rights reserved. UNIX is a registered trademark of The Open Group in the US and other countries. Bill Broderick, Director, Licensing Services, 240 West Center Street Orem, Utah 84057, 801-765-4999 Fax 801-765-4481, January 23, 2002 Caldera International, Inc. hereby grants a fee free license that includes the rights use, modify and distribute this named source code, including creating derived binary products created from the source code. The source code for which Caldera International, Inc. grants rights are limited to the following UNIX Operating Systems that operate on the 16-Bit PDP-11 CPU and early versions of the 32-Bit UNIX Operating System, with specific exclusion of UNIX System III and UNIX System V and successor operating systems: 32-bit 32V UNIX 16 bit UNIX Versions 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers and the American National Standards Committee X3, on Information Processing Systems have given us permission to reprint portions of their documentation. In the following statement, the phrase "this text" refers to portions of the system documentation. Portions of this text are reprinted and reproduced in electronic form in the second BSD Networking Software Release, from IEEE Std 1003.1-1988, IEEE Standard Portable Operating System Interface for Computer Environments (POSIX), copyright C 1988 by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. In the event of any discrepancy between these versions and the original IEEE Standard, the original IEEE Standard is the reference document. In the following statement, the phrase "This material" refers to portions of the system documentation. This material is reproduced with permission from American National Standards Committee X3, on Information Processing Systems. Computer and Business Equipment Manufacturers Association (CBEMA), 311 First St., NW, Suite 500, Washington, DC 20001-2178. The developmental work of Programming Language C was completed by the X3J11 Technical Committee. Portions of the manual reflect system enhancements made at Berkeley and sponsored in part by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DoD), Arpa Order No. 4871 monitored by the Naval Electronics Systems Command under contract No. N00039-84-C-0089. The views and conclusions contained in these documents are those of the authors and should not be interpreted as representing official policies, either expressed or implied, of the Defense Research Projects Agency or of the US Government. Any code referring to the "AT&T" or "Western Electric" licence which has been ported from the Berkeley Software Distribution or UNIX® up to 32V is covered by a four-clause UCB-style licence folded into above. The following art has been provided by developers and users of Open Source: | . , , OpenBSD . |L /| . 4.4 Berkeley ,( ). _ . |\ _| \--+._/| . Software | \,--_ / | / ||\| Y J ) / |/| ./ Distribution /_ _ / J |)'( | ` F`.'/ /-.,-. \ -<| F __ .-< | | \ \ | / .-'. `. /-. L___ ,---------. _\O|O | | J \ < \ | | O\|.-' / MirLinux | (___)--'_ / _J \ .- \/ O | | \ |F `----------`, .______/ / '-F -<_. \ .-' `-' L__ .ooO .__, ,/ __J _ _. /gt;-' )._. |-' .-.' / \ `-|.' /_. \_| F oo| <----. ,___/ __ \ /.- . _.< /'\ <----|====)))==) \) /===== /' /.' .' `\ (\_;/) <----' `--' `.__,' | _ /L /' |/ _.-'-\ | | / \ /'J ___.---'\| \ _ /`-' \/ |\ .--' V | `. ` More art &c: ,---- \ / |/`. `-. `._) http://www.openbsd.org/ \_,-----' \ / .-.\ `-> images/newhead.jpg \________/ dugsong. VK \ ( `\ `.\ The BSD daemon is Copyright (c) 1988 by Marshall Kirk McKusick. All Rights Reserved. Individuals may use the daemon for their _______ personal use within the bounds of good taste. When reasonably /___/__/| possible, the text shown above is to be included. /___/__/|/ If you want to mass produce the daemon, for example on CDROM or |___|__|/ T-Shirts, you need permission in advance. Permission to use it MirBSD`TM may be obtained from: Marshall Kirk McKusick, 1614 Oxford St, Berkeley, CA 94709-1608, USA or at <mckusick@mckusick.com>