Linux-Misc Digest #327, Volume #24               Sun, 30 Apr 00 19:13:04 EDT

Contents:
  Linux Frequently Asked Questions with Answers (Part 6 of 6) 
([EMAIL PROTECTED])

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Crossposted-To: news.answers,comp.answers
Subject: Linux Frequently Asked Questions with Answers (Part 6 of 6)
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Sun, 30 Apr 2000 18:36:39 GMT

Archive-Name: linux/faq/part6
URL: http://www.mainmatter.com/
Reply-to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Posting-Frequency: weekly
Last-modified: 04/30/2000

   english.au or swedish.au from
   ftp.funet.fi/pub/Linux/PEOPLE/Linus/SillySounds/. If you have a sound
   card or the 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 language
   Linus uses to say, ``hello.''
   
   For the benefit of those who don't have the equipment or inclination:
   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).
     _________________________________________________________________
   
9.11. Where Is the Linux Food Page?

   It's at http://members.xoom.com/gnulix_guy/geek-gourmet/. It contains
   recipes for dishes like Fusili Chicken Marinara, Speedy Guacamole, and
   Idiot-proof pilaf, as well as hints for cooking things in a hurry. At
   the time of this writing, no recipes for penguin, though.
     _________________________________________________________________
   
9.12. Where Can I Find Out about Free Software Projects?

   The Free Software Bazaar lists current openings to do work on free
   software projects, and tells how to sponsor free software projects and
   how to make money writing free software. Its URL is
   http://www.csustan.edu/bazaar/.
     _________________________________________________________________
   
10. Frequently Encountered Error Messages

10.1. 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 <module-name> off

   And use the name of the module that appears in the error message.
   
   [J.H.M. Dassen]
     _________________________________________________________________
   
10.2. 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 these
   programs you should upgrade your terminfo package, which is part of
   ncurses.
   
   The same is true for X terminal displays. If your distribution sets
   the TERM to something strange like xterm-24-color, you can simply
   reset it to a generic value from the command line:
   
# TERM="xterm"; export TERM
     _________________________________________________________________
   
10.3. INET: Warning: old style ioctl... called!

   You are trying to use the old network configuration utilities. The new
   ones can be found on
   ftp.linux.org.uk/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.
     _________________________________________________________________
   
10.4. ld: unrecognized option '-m486'

   You have an old version of ld. Install a newer binutils package--this
   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.
     _________________________________________________________________
   
10.5. GCC says, ``Internal compiler error.''

   If the fault is repeatable (i.e., it always happens at the same place
   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 F1-i in Emacs, and select GCC from the menu) for
   details on how to report the error--make sure you have the 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.'''')
     _________________________________________________________________
   
10.6. Make Says, ``Error 139.''

   Your compiler (GCC) dumped core. You probably have a corrupted, buggy,
   or old version of GCC--get the latest release or EGCS. 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 with
   memory or disk corruption. Check that the clock rate, wait states, and
   refresh timing for your SIMMS and cache are correct (hardware manuals
   are sometimes wrong, too). If so, you may have some marginal SIMMS, or
   a faulty motherboard or hard disk or controller.
   
   Linux is a very good memory tester--much better than MS-DOS based
   memory test programs.
   
   Reportedly, some clone x87 math coprocessors can cause problems. Try
   compiling a kernel with math emulation (``How Do I Upgrade/Recompile
   My Kernel?'') no387 kernel command line flag on the LILO prompt to
   force the kernel to use math emulation, or it may be able to work and
   still use the '387, with the math emulation compiled in but mainly
   unused.
   
   More information about this problem is available on the Web at
   http://www.bitwizard.nl/sig11/.
     _________________________________________________________________
   
10.7. Shell-Init: Permission Denied when I Log in.

   Your root directory and all the directories up to your home directory
   must be readable and executable by everybody. See the manual page for
   chmod or a book on Unix for how to fix the problem.
     _________________________________________________________________
   
10.8. No Utmp Entry. You Must Exec ... when Logging 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 also be
   found in /var/adm/ or /etc/ on some older systems.
     _________________________________________________________________
   
10.9. 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 a
   more subtle daemon (actually a pair), known as bdflush. Get
   bdflush-n.n.tar.gz from the same place as the kernel source code
   (``How Do I Upgrade/Recompile My Kernel?'') and compile and install
   it. bdflush should be started before the usual boot-time file system
   checks. It will work fine with older kernels as well, so there's no
   need to keep the old update around.
     _________________________________________________________________
   
10.10. 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?'')
     _________________________________________________________________
   
10.11. EXT2-fs: warning: mounting unchecked file system.

   You need to run e2fsck (or fsck -t ext2 if you have the fsck front end
   program) with the -a option to get it to clear the ``dirty'' flag, and
   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--this
   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/only
   to start with, check it if necessary, and then remount it read/write.
   Almost all distributions do this. If your's doesn't, read the
   documentation that comes with util-linux to find out how to do this.
   
   Note that you need to specify the -n option to mount so it won't try
   to update /etc/mtab, since the root file system is still read-only,
   and this will otherwise cause it to fail.
     _________________________________________________________________
   
10.12. 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 the
   latest version of the ext2fs utilities (e2fsprogs-0.5b.tar.gz at the
   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 using
   the tune2fs program from this package.
     _________________________________________________________________
   
10.13. EXT2-fs warning: checktime reached.

   Kernels from 1.0 onwards support checking a file system based on the
   elapsed time since the last check as well as by the number of mounts.
   Get the latest version of the ext2fs utilities. (``EXT2-fs warning:
   maximal count reached.'')
     _________________________________________________________________
   
10.14. 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 should
   be emptied or deleted at boot time (in /etc/rc.local or /etc/rc.d/*),
   using something like
   
rm -f /etc/mtab*

   Some old Linux distributions have an entry for the root partition in
   /etc/mtab made in /etc/rc* by using rdev. That is incorrect--the newer
   versions of mount do this automatically.
   
   Some old distributions also have a line in /etc/fstab that looks like:
   
/dev/sdb1   /root   ext2   defaults

   The entry for /root should read simply /.
     _________________________________________________________________
   
10.15. fdisk Says, ``Partition X has different physical/logical...''

   If the partition number (X, above) is 1, this is the same problem as
   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?'')
     _________________________________________________________________
   
10.16. 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, from
   Rik Faith's util-linux package (available on all the usual FTP sites).
   Alternatively, if you are creating a new partition 1 that starts in
   the first cylinder, you can do the following to get a partition that
   fdisk likes.
   
     * Create partition 1 in the normal way. A `p' listing will produce
       the mismatch complaint.
     * Type u to set sector mode and do p again. Copy down the number
       from the End column.
     * Delete partition 1.
     * While still in sector mode, re-create partition 1. Set the first
       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 they
   are not used if you start the first partition in track 2.
     _________________________________________________________________
   
10.17. fdisk Says Partition n Has an Odd Number of Sectors.

   The PC disk partitioning scheme works in 512-byte sectors, but Linux
   uses 1K blocks. If you have a partition with an odd number of sectors,
   the last sector is wasted. Ignore the message.
     _________________________________________________________________
   
10.18. A Mtools Utility Says It Cannot Initialize Drive XYZ.

   This means that mtools is having trouble accessing the drive. This can
   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 this
   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 on a
   hard disk partition) see How do I access files on my DOS partition or
   floppy? Note--you should never use mtools to access files on an
   msdosfs mounted partition or disk!
     _________________________________________________________________
   
10.19. At the Start of Booting: Memory tight

   This means that you have an extra-large kernel, which means that Linux
   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?'')
     _________________________________________________________________
   
10.20. 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 also
   make sure that whatever data is on the drive is backed up, and restore
   it to a non-defective hard drive.
   
   This error message may also indicate a bad connection to the drive,
   especially with home brew systems. If you install an IDE drive, always
   use new ribbon cables. It's probably is a good idea with SCSI drives,
   too.
   
   In one instance, this error also seemed to coincide with a bad ground
   between the system board and the chassis. Be sure that all electrical
   connections are clean and tight before placing the blame on the hard
   drive itself.
   
   [Peter Moulder, Theodore Ts'o]
     _________________________________________________________________
   
10.21. ``You don't exist. Go away.''

   This is not a viral infection. It comes from programs like write,
   talk, and wall, if your invoking UID doesn't correspond to a valid
   user (probably due to /etc/passwd being corrupted), or if the session
   (pseudoterminal, specifically) you're using isn't properly registered
   in the utmp file (probably because you invoked it in a funny way).
     _________________________________________________________________
   
11. The X Window System

11.1. Does Linux Support X?

   Yes. Linux uses XFree86 (the current version is 4.0, which is based on
   X11R6). You need to have a video card which is supported by XFree86.
   See the XFree86 HOWTO for more details. Most Linux distributions
   nowadays come with an X installation. However, you can install or
   upgrade your own, from "ftp://metalab.unc.edu/pub/Linux/X11/Xfree86-*"
   and its mirror sites, or from http://www.xfree86.org/.
     _________________________________________________________________
   
11.2. How Do I Get the X Window System to Work?

   The answers to this question can, and do, fill entire books. If the
   installation program wasn't able to configure the X server correctly,
   Linux will most likely try to start the X display, fail, and drop back
   into text-only terminal mode.
   
   First and foremost, make certain that you have provided, as closely as
   possible, the correct information to the installation program of your
   video hardware: the video card and monitor. Some installation programs
   can correctly guess a ``least common denominator'' screen
   configuration, like a 640-by-480 VESA-standard display, but there are
   many possible video hardware configurations that may not be able to
   display this standard.
   
   The X Window System configuration file is called (usually)
   /etc/XF86Config, /etc/X11/XF86Config, or
   /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/XF86Config.
   
   If you need to manually configure the X server, there are several
   possible methods:
   
     * Try to use the XF86Setup program, which can help identify the
       correct X server and monitor timings for the video hardware.
     * Make sure that the X server has the correct options. If you log in
       as the superuser, you should be able to use X --probeonly to get a
       listing of the video card chipset, memory, and any special
       graphics features. Also, refer to the manual page for the X
       server. (E.g.; man X) Also, try running the X server and
       redirecting the standard error output to a file so you can
       determine what error messages the server is generating; e.g., X
       2>x.error.
     * With that information, you should be able to safely refer to one
       of the references provided by the Linux Documentation Project.
       ("Where can I get the HOWTO's and other documentation? ") There
       are several HOWTO's on the subject, including a HOWTO to calculate
       video timings manually if necessary. Also, the Installation and
       Getting Started guide has a chapter with a step-by-step guide to
       writing a XF86Config file.
       
   Also, make sure that the problem really is an incorrect XF86Config
   file, not something else like the window manager failing to start. If
   the X server is working correctly, you should be able to move the
   mouse cursor on the screen, and pressing Ctrl-Alt-Backspace will shut
   down the X server and return to the shell prompt in one of the virtual
   terminals.
     _________________________________________________________________
   
11.3. Where Can I Get a Ready-Made XF86Config for My System?

   If you can't seem to get X working using the guidelines above, refer
   to the 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 by hand, or using the
   XF86Setup utility. Read the instructions that came with XFree86, in
   /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/etc. The file you probably need to 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 clock 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. If you have a laptop, look at the Linux Laptop Web page
   (``How Do I Know If My Notebook Runs Linux?'') Many of the
   installation notes also have the XF86Config file for the display. If
   you have a desktop machine, there are a few sample XF86Config files at
   ftp://metalab.unc.edu/. Refer also to the XFree86 FAQ
   http://www.xfree.org/FAQ/ and the monitor timings list
   http://www.xfree.org/#resources/, and in the /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/
   directory of your X distribution.
     _________________________________________________________________
   
11.4. What Desktop Environments Run on Linux?

   Linux with XFree86 supports the KDE, GNOME, and commercial CDE desktop
   environments, and extended window managers like WindowMaker. Each uses
   a different set of libraries and provides varying degrees of MS
   Windows-like look and feel.
   
   Information on KDE is available from http://www.kde.org/. The KDE
   environment uses the Qt graphics libraries, available from
   http://www.qt.org/. The desktop uses its own window manager, kwm, and
   provides a MS Windows-like look and feel.
   
   The GNOME home page is http://www.gnome.org/. The environment uses the
   free GTK libraries, available from http://www.gtk.org/, and the
   Enlightenment window manager, available from
   http://www.enlightenment.org/.
   
   The commercial CDE environment uses the Motif libraries and window
   manager, mwm. It is available from various commercial vendors. A free
   version of Motif, called LessTiF, is available from
   http://www.lesstif.org/.
   
   WindowMaker, http://www.windowmaker.org/ is a window manager that has
   many desktop environment-like features. It provides support for
   GNUstep, http://www.gnustep.org/ a clone of the commercial NeXTStep
   environment.
     _________________________________________________________________
   
11.5. 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.
     _________________________________________________________________
   
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 long,
   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 it's
   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 mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED].
   
   Read the appropriate Linux Documentation Project books--see (``Where
   Can I Get the HOWTO's and Other Documentation?'')
   
   If you're a Unix or Linux newbie, read the FAQ for
   comp.unix.questions, news.announces.newusers, 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 FAQ's, like all
   FAQ's, be found on rtfm.mit.edu in /pub/usenet/news.answers/ (the
   mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] can send you these files, if you
   don't have FTP access). There are mirrors of rtfm's FAQ archives on
   various sites--check the Introduction to *.answers posting, posted, or
   look in news-answers/introduction in the directory above.
   
   Check the relevant HOWTO for the subject in question, if there is one,
   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 Linux.
   
   Read the documentation. Check the manual pages (type man man if you
   don't know about manual pages. Also try man -k subject and apropos
   subject --they often list useful and relevant manual pages.
   
   Check the Info documentation (type F1-i, i.e. the F1 function key
   followed by ``i'' 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--it 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, should you post to the
   appropriate comp.os.linux.* newsgroup. Make sure you 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 E-mail. Making a complete posting will greatly increase the
   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 personal
   E-mail 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 the
       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, or
       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 you
       observed. A transcript of an example session is a good way to show
       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,''
       and the shared library version by typing ``ls -l /lib/libc*.''
     * 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 the
   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.
   
   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't
   just concatenate the replies you got--summarize. Putting the word
   ``SUMMARY'' in your summary's Subject line is also a good idea.
   Consider 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 your
   posting.
   
   Remember that you should not post E-mail sent to you personally
   without 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 component
   is causing you difficulty. If you have a contact point for your Linux
   distribution, you should use it.
   
   Please put everything in your E-mail message that you would put in a
   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 likely asking for help from unpaid volunteers, so you have no
   right to expect an answer.
     _________________________________________________________________
   
13. Acknowledgments and Administrivia

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. My E-mail address
   is mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED].
   
   If you wish to refer to a question in the FAQ, it's better for me if
   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 Wide
   Web page, Postscript, and as a USENET news posting.
   
   HTML is generated from SGML source using the Jade DSSSL interpreter by
   James Clark. Text versions are generated using lynx, which is part of
   most Linux distributions. Hard-copy versions are further formatted
   with JadeTeX, by Sebastian Rahtz.
   
   The Usenet version is posted regularly to news.answers, comp.answers,
   and comp.os.linux.misc. It is archived at
   ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet-by-hierarchy/comp/os/linux/misc/.
   
   If you would like to receive the archived version of the FAQ by
   E-mail, send the following in the body of an E-mail message to
   mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]:
   
send faqs/linux/faq

   Text, HTML, and SGML versions are available from the Linux archives at
   metalab.unc.edu, and from http://www.linuxdoc.org/, but they may be
   out of date, owing to lack of time on the LDP maintainers' parts.
   
   The up-to-date text and HTML versions are available at
   http://www.mainmatter.com and directly from the FAQ maintainer,
   mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED].
     _________________________________________________________________
   
13.3. Authorship and Acknowledgments.

   This FAQ is compiled and maintained by Robert Kiesling,
   mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED], 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 Hankins
   the former Linux Documentation Project HOWTO maintainer, Lars
   Wirzenius and Mikko Rauhala, the former and current moderators of
   comp.os.linux.announce, Marc-Michel Corsini, who 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.

   Linux Frequently Asked Questions with Answers may be reproduced and
   distributed in its entirety (including this authorship, copyright, and
   permission notice), provided that no charge is made for the document
   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.
   
   These conditions are in addition to the regular LDP distribution
   license, at http://www.linuxdoc.org/manifesto.html/
   
   Exceptions to these rules may be granted. I would be happy to answer
   any questions regarding this copyright. E-mail me at
   mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]. As the license below says, these
   restrictions are here to protect the contributors, not to restrict you
   as educators and learners.

-- 

<a href="coffee://localhost/cream/">stop</a>   http://www.mainmatter.com/




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