Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)
Date:      Mon, 2 Feb 1998 18:32:58 -0800 (PST)
From:      Greg Lehey <grog>
To:        FreeBSD-questions@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   "The Complete FreeBSD", second edition: errata and addenda
Message-ID:  <199802030232.SAA05337@hub.freebsd.org>

next in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help









                     Errata and addenda for the Complete FreeBSD, second edition




                         Last revision: 3 February 1997

The  trouble with books is that you can't update them the way you can a web page
or any other online documentation.  The result is that most leading edge comput-
er  books  are out of date almost before they are printed.  Unfortunately, ``The
Complete FreeBSD'', published by Walnut Creek, is no exception.  The second edi-
tion has only just been published, but already a number of bugs and changes have
surfaced.

The following is a list of modifications which go beyond simple typos.  They re-
late  to  the  second  edition, formatted on 16 December 1997.  If you have this
book, please check this list.  If you have the first edition of  19  July  1996,
please  check  ftp://ftp.lemis.com/pub/cfbsd/errata-1.   This  same file is also
available via the web link http://www.lemis.com/.

This list is available in four forms:

o A    PostScript     version,     suitable     for     printing     out,     at
  ftp://ftp.lemis.com/pub/cfbsd/errata-2.ps.   See  page 222 of the book to find
  out how to print out PostScript.  If at all possible, please take  this  docu-
  ment: it's closest to the original text.

o An enhanced ASCII version at ftp://ftp.lemis.com/pub/cfbsd/errata-2.txt.  When
  viewed with more or less, this version will show some highlighting and  under-
  lining.  It's not suitable for direct viewing.

o An  ASCII-only  version at ftp://ftp.lemis.com/pub/cfbsd/errata-2.ascii.  This
  version is posted every week to the FreeBSD-questions mailing list.  Only take
  this  version  if you have real problems with PostScript: I can't be sure that
  the lack of different fonts won't confuse the meaning.

o A web version at http://www.lemis.com/errata-2.html

All these modifications have been applied to the  ongoing  source  text  of  the
book,  so if you buy a later edition, they will be in it as well.  If you find a
bug or a suspected bug in the book, please contact me (grog@FreeBSD.org).












General changes


o In a number of places, I suggest the use of the following command to find pro-
  cess information:

  $ ps aux | grep foo

  Unfortunately,  ps  is  sensitive to the column width of the terminal emulator
  upon which it is working.  This command usually works  fine  on  a  relatively
  wide  xterm,  but  if you're running on an 80-column terminal, it may truncate
  exactly the information you're looking for, so you end up  with  output.   You
  can fix that with the w option:

  $ ps waux | grep foo

  Thanks to Sue Blake <sue@welearn.com.au> for this information


Page 45:  Preparing floppies for installation

Replace  the  paragraph below the list of file names (in the middle of the page)
with:

The floppy set should contain the file bin.inf and the ones  whose  names  start
with bin. followed by two letters.  These other files are all 240640 bytes long,
except for the final one which is usually shorter.  Use the MS-DOS COPY  program
to  copy  as many files as will fit onto each disk (5 or 6) until you've got all
the distributions you want packed up in this fashion.   Copy  each  distribution
into subdirectory corresponding to the base name--for example, copy the bin dis-
tribution to the files A:\BIN\BIN.INF, A:\BIN\BIN.AA and so on.

Page 80 and 81

In a couple of examples, the FreeBSD partition is shown as type 164.  It  should
be  165.   Thanks  to  an unknown contributer for this correction (sorry, I lost
your name).

Page 140

Just before the paragraph The super user add the following paragraph:

If you do manage to lose the root password, all may not be lost.  You'll have to












reboot the machine to single user mode (see page 157), and enter:

# mount -u /             mount root file system read/write
# password root          change the password for root
Enter new password:
Enter password again:
# ^D                enter ctrl-D to continue with startup

Note  that  you  should explicitly state the name root: in single user mode, the
system doesn't have the concept of user IDs.

Page 160

Replace the text at the fourth bullet with the augmented text:

The second-level boot locates the kernel, by default the  file  /kernel  on  the
root  file system, and loads it into memory.  It prints the Boot: prompt at this
point so that you can influence this choice--see the man page on  page  579  for
more details of what you can enter at this prompt.

Page 197, first line

The text of the first full sentence reads:

The first name, up the the symbol, is the label.

In fact, it should read:

The first name, up the the | symbol, is the label.

Page 283, ``Creating the source tree''

Add a third point to what you need to know:

3.   Possibly,  the  date of the last update that you want to be included in the
     checkout.  If you specify this date, cvs ignores any more  recent  updates.
     This  option  is often useful when somebody discovers a recently introduced
     bug in -CURRENT: you check out the modules as they were before the bug  was
     introduced.   You  specify  the date with the -D option, for example -D "10
     December 1997".















Page 285, after the second example.

Add the text:

If you need to check out an older version, for example  if  there  are  problems
with the most recent version of -CURRENT, you could enter:

# cvs co  -D "10 December 1997" src/sys

This command checks out the kernel sources as of 10 December 1997.

Page 466, before the ps example

Add another bullet:

o Finally,  you  may find it convenient to let some other system handle all your
  mail delivery for you: you just send anything you  can't  deliver  locally  to
  this other host, which sendmail calls a smart host.  This is particularly con-
  venient if you send your mail with UUCP.

  To tell sendmail to use a smart host (in our case, mail.example.net), find the
  following line in sendmail.cf:

  # "Smart" relay host (may be null)
  DS

  Change it to:

  # "Smart" relay host (may be null)
  DSmail.example.net


Page 364, middle of page

Change the text from:

The  names MYADDR and HISADDR are keywords which represent the addresses at each
end of the link.  They must be written as shown, though they  may  be  in  lower
case.

to

The  names MYADDR and HISADDR are keywords which represent the addresses at each












end of the link.  They must be written as shown, though newer  versions  of  ppp
allow you to write them in lower case.

Thanks to Mark S. Reichman <mark@fang.cs.sunyit.edu> for this correction.

Page 478, ``Running Apache''

The  text  describes  the location of the server as /usr/local/www/server/httpd.
This appears to depend on where you get the port from.  Some people  report  the
file  being  at  the more likely location /usr/local/sbin/httpd (though note the
directory sbin, not bin).  Check both locations if you run into trouble.  Thanks
to Sue Blake <sue@welearn.com.au> for this information.







































Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?199802030232.SAA05337>