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Date:      Fri, 19 Dec 2003 08:49:10 -0500
From:      Ken Smith <kensmith@cse.Buffalo.EDU>
To:        Jose Liang <jose@jose.idv.tw>
Cc:        freebsd-doc@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: A question about a word "userland"
Message-ID:  <20031219134910.GC5502@electra.cse.Buffalo.EDU>
In-Reply-To: <000901c3c635$3eb40f60$2e01a8c0@jose>
References:  <000901c3c635$3eb40f60$2e01a8c0@jose>

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On Fri, Dec 19, 2003 at 09:37:28PM +0800, Jose Liang wrote:

> That is about this word: userland. Well, because my English is not vary
> well, so I translate this document by some tools sometimes, but there are no
> any word about "userland". I tried to find a solution to solve this problem,
> but I didn't get any effective answer. I guess this word means "system
> environment that user's set up", Just guess! Am I wrong? Could anybody tell
> me? If I'm wrong, plese tell me what it means after all.

"userland" would be the pieces of FreeBSD that are not inside of the
kernel.  Changes to a device driver would be things that are inside
the kernel.  If the mv(1) command changed that would be a userland
change.

Does that help?

-- 
						Ken Smith
- From there to here, from here to      |       kensmith@cse.buffalo.edu
  there, funny things are everywhere.   |
                      - Theodore Geisel |



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