Date: Tue, 17 Nov 2009 22:16:33 GMT From: Rene Ladan <rene@FreeBSD.org> To: Perforce Change Reviews <perforce@FreeBSD.org> Subject: PERFORCE change 170754 for review Message-ID: <200911172216.nAHMGXsR086347@repoman.freebsd.org>
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http://p4web.freebsd.org/chv.cgi?CH=170754 Change 170754 by rene@rene_self on 2009/11/17 22:16:07 IFC Affected files ... .. //depot/projects/docproj_nl/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/mirrors/chapter.sgml#19 integrate .. //depot/projects/docproj_nl/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/virtualization/chapter.sgml#7 integrate .. //depot/projects/docproj_nl/nl_NL.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/x11/chapter.sgml#22 integrate Differences ... ==== //depot/projects/docproj_nl/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/mirrors/chapter.sgml#19 (text+ko) ==== @@ -1,7 +1,7 @@ <!-- The FreeBSD Documentation Project - $FreeBSD: doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/mirrors/chapter.sgml,v 1.468 2009/11/03 07:50:59 brueffer Exp $ + $FreeBSD: doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/mirrors/chapter.sgml,v 1.469 2009/11/17 21:47:13 bcr Exp $ --> <appendix id="mirrors"> @@ -483,7 +483,8 @@ <itemizedlist> <listitem> <para><ulink - url="http://www.csc.calpoly.edu/~dbutler/tutorials/winter96/cvs/">CVS Tutorial</ulink> from Cal Poly.</para> + url="http://users.csc.calpoly.edu/~gfisher/classes/205/handouts/cvs-basics.html">CVS Tutorial</ulink> from California + Polytechnic State University.</para> </listitem> <listitem> ==== //depot/projects/docproj_nl/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/virtualization/chapter.sgml#7 (text+ko) ==== @@ -1,7 +1,7 @@ <!-- The FreeBSD Documentation Project - $FreeBSD: doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/virtualization/chapter.sgml,v 1.21 2009/11/08 15:43:41 bcr Exp $ + $FreeBSD: doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/virtualization/chapter.sgml,v 1.22 2009/11/17 21:50:11 bcr Exp $ --> <chapter id="virtualization"> @@ -36,21 +36,21 @@ </listitem> <listitem> - <para>How to install FreeBSD on an &intel;-based &apple; &macintosh; + <para>How to install &os; on an &intel;-based &apple; &macintosh; computer.</para> </listitem> <listitem> - <para>How to install FreeBSD on Linux with <application>&xen;</application>.</para> + <para>How to install &os; on Linux with <application>&xen;</application>.</para> </listitem> <listitem> - <para>How to install FreeBSD on µsoft.windows; with + <para>How to install &os; on µsoft.windows; with <application>Virtual PC</application>.</para> </listitem> <listitem> - <para>How to tune a FreeBSD system for best performance under + <para>How to tune a &os; system for best performance under virtualization.</para> </listitem> @@ -60,11 +60,11 @@ <itemizedlist> <listitem> - <para>Understand the basics of &unix; and FreeBSD (<xref + <para>Understand the basics of &unix; and &os; (<xref linkend="basics">).</para> </listitem> - <listitem><para>Know how to install FreeBSD (<xref + <listitem><para>Know how to install &os; (<xref linkend="install">).</para></listitem> <listitem><para>Know how to set up your network connection (<xref @@ -79,25 +79,25 @@ <sect1 id="virtualization-guest"> - <title>FreeBSD as a Guest OS</title> + <title>&os; as a Guest OS</title> <sect2 id="virtualization-guest-parallels"> <title>Parallels on MacOS</title> <para><application>Parallels Desktop</application> for &mac; is a commercial software product available for &intel; based &apple; - &mac; computers running &macos; 10.4.6 or higher. FreeBSD is a + &mac; computers running &macos; 10.4.6 or higher. &os; is a fully supported guest operating system. Once <application>Parallels</application> has been installed on &macos; X, the user must configure a virtual machine and then install the desired guest operating system.</para> <sect3 id="virtualization-guest-parallels-install"> - <title>Installing FreeBSD on Parallels/&macos; X</title> + <title>Installing &os; on Parallels/&macos; X</title> - <para>The first step in installing FreeBSD on &macos; + <para>The first step in installing &os; on &macos; X/<application>Parallels</application> is to create a new virtual - machine for installing FreeBSD. Select <guimenuitem>FreeBSD</guimenuitem> + machine for installing &os;. Select <guimenuitem>&os;</guimenuitem> as the <guimenu>Guest OS Type</guimenu> when prompted:</para> <mediaobject> @@ -107,9 +107,9 @@ </mediaobject> <para>And choose a reasonable amount of disk and - memory depending on your plans for this virtual FreeBSD - instance. 4GB of disk space and 512MB of RAM work well for most uses of - FreeBSD under <application>Parallels</application>:</para> + memory depending on your plans for this virtual &os; + instance. 4GB of disk space and 512MB of RAM work well for most + uses of &os; under <application>Parallels</application>:</para> <mediaobject> <imageobject> @@ -164,13 +164,13 @@ </imageobject> </mediaobject> - <para>After your FreeBSD virtual machine has been created, - you will need to install FreeBSD on it. This is best done - with an official FreeBSD CDROM or with an ISO image + <para>After your &os; virtual machine has been created, + you will need to install &os; on it. This is best done + with an official &os; CDROM or with an ISO image downloaded from an official FTP site. When you have the appropriate ISO image on your local &mac; filesystem or a CDROM in your &mac;'s CD drive, click on the disc icon in the - bottom right corner of your FreeBSD + bottom right corner of your &os; <application>Parallels</application> window. This will bring up a window that allows you to associate the CDROM drive in your virtual machine with an ISO file on @@ -183,7 +183,7 @@ </mediaobject> <para>Once you have made this association with your CDROM - source, reboot your FreeBSD virtual machine as normal by + source, reboot your &os; virtual machine as normal by clicking the reboot icon. <application>Parallels</application> will reboot with a special BIOS that first checks if you have a CDROM just as a @@ -195,7 +195,7 @@ </imageobject> </mediaobject> - <para>In this case it will find the FreeBSD installation media + <para>In this case it will find the &os; installation media and begin a normal <application>sysinstall</application> based installation as described in <xref linkend="install">. You may install, but do not attempt to configure X11 at @@ -208,7 +208,7 @@ </mediaobject> <para>When you have finished the installation, reboot - into your newly installed FreeBSD virtual machine.</para> + into your newly installed &os; virtual machine.</para> <mediaobject> <imageobject> @@ -218,9 +218,9 @@ </sect3> <sect3 id="virtualization-guest-parallels-configure"> - <title>Configuring FreeBSD on &macos; X/Parallels</title> + <title>Configuring &os; on &macos; X/Parallels</title> - <para>After FreeBSD has been successfully installed on &macos; + <para>After &os; has been successfully installed on &macos; X with <application>Parallels</application>, there are a number of configuration steps that can be taken to optimize the system for virtualized operation.</para> @@ -231,13 +231,13 @@ <para>The most important step is to reduce the <option>kern.hz</option> tunable to reduce the CPU utilization - of FreeBSD under the <application>Parallels</application> + of &os; under the <application>Parallels</application> environment. This is accomplished by adding the following line to <filename>/boot/loader.conf</filename>:</para> <programlisting>kern.hz=100</programlisting> - <para>Without this setting, an idle FreeBSD + <para>Without this setting, an idle &os; <application>Parallels</application> guest OS will use roughly 15% of the CPU of a single processor &imac;. After this change the usage will be @@ -286,13 +286,13 @@ <!-- Mar/Apr 2007 --> </sect2info> - <title>FreeBSD with &xen; on Linux</title> + <title>&os; with &xen; on Linux</title> <para>The <application>&xen;</application> hypervisor is an open source paravirtualization product which is now supported by the commercial XenSource company. Guest operating systems are known as domU domains, and the host operating system is known as dom0. - The first step in running a virtual FreeBSD instance under Linux + The first step in running a virtual &os; instance under Linux is to install <application>&xen;</application> for Linux dom0. The host operating system will be a Slackware Linux distribution.</para> @@ -367,9 +367,9 @@ </sect3> <sect3> - <title>FreeBSD 7-CURRENT domU</title> + <title>&os; 7-CURRENT domU</title> - <para>Download the FreeBSD domU kernel for <application>&xen; 3.0</application> and + <para>Download the &os; domU kernel for <application>&xen; 3.0</application> and disk image from <ulink url="http://www.fsmware.com/">http://www.fsmware.com/</ulink></para> @@ -580,11 +580,11 @@ system.</para> <sect3 id="virtualization-guest-virtualpc-install"> - <title>Installing FreeBSD on Virtual PC/µsoft.windows;</title> + <title>Installing &os; on Virtual PC/µsoft.windows;</title> - <para>The first step in installing FreeBSD on µsoft.windows; + <para>The first step in installing &os; on µsoft.windows; /<application>Virtual PC</application> is to create a new virtual - machine for installing FreeBSD. Select <guimenuitem>Create a + machine for installing &os;. Select <guimenuitem>Create a virtual machine</guimenuitem> when prompted:</para> <mediaobject> @@ -609,9 +609,9 @@ </mediaobject> <para>Then, choose a reasonable amount of disk and - memory depending on your plans for this virtual FreeBSD - instance. 4GB of disk space and 512MB of RAM work well for most uses of - FreeBSD under <application>Virtual PC</application>:</para> + memory depending on your plans for this virtual &os; + instance. 4GB of disk space and 512MB of RAM work well for most + uses of &os; under <application>Virtual PC</application>:</para> <mediaobject> <imageobject> @@ -633,7 +633,7 @@ </imageobject> </mediaobject> - <para>Select your FreeBSD virtual machine and click + <para>Select your &os; virtual machine and click <guimenu>Settings</guimenu>, then set the type of networking and a network interface:</para> @@ -649,12 +649,12 @@ </imageobject> </mediaobject> - <para>After your FreeBSD virtual machine has been created, - you will need to install FreeBSD on it. This is best done - with an official FreeBSD CDROM or with an ISO image + <para>After your &os; virtual machine has been created, + you will need to install &os; on it. This is best done + with an official &os; CDROM or with an ISO image downloaded from an official FTP site. When you have the appropriate ISO image on your local &windows; filesystem or a - CDROM in your CD drive, double click on your FreeBSD + CDROM in your CD drive, double click on your &os; virtual machine to boot. Then, click <guimenu>CD</guimenu> and choose <guimenu>Capture ISO Image...</guimenu> on <application>Virtual PC</application> window. This @@ -675,7 +675,7 @@ </mediaobject> <para>Once you have made this association with your CDROM - source, reboot your FreeBSD virtual machine as normal by + source, reboot your &os; virtual machine as normal by clicking the <guimenu>Action</guimenu> and <guimenu>Reset</guimenu>. <application>Virtual PC</application> will reboot with a special BIOS that first checks if you have a @@ -687,7 +687,7 @@ </imageobject> </mediaobject> - <para>In this case it will find the FreeBSD installation media + <para>In this case it will find the &os; installation media and begin a normal <application>sysinstall</application> based installation as described in <xref linkend="install">. You may install, but do not attempt to configure X11 at @@ -701,7 +701,7 @@ <para>When you have finished the installation, remember to eject CDROM or release ISO image. Finally, reboot into your newly - installed FreeBSD virtual machine.</para> + installed &os; virtual machine.</para> <mediaobject> <imageobject> @@ -711,9 +711,9 @@ </sect3> <sect3 id="virtualization-guest-virtualpc-configure"> - <title>Configuring FreeBSD on µsoft.windows;/Virtual PC</title> + <title>Configuring &os; on µsoft.windows;/Virtual PC</title> - <para>After FreeBSD has been successfully installed on + <para>After &os; has been successfully installed on µsoft.windows; with <application>Virtual PC</application>, there are a number of configuration steps that can be taken to optimize the system for virtualized operation.</para> @@ -724,13 +724,13 @@ <para>The most important step is to reduce the <option>kern.hz</option> tunable to reduce the CPU utilization - of FreeBSD under the <application>Virtual PC</application> + of &os; under the <application>Virtual PC</application> environment. This is accomplished by adding the following line to <filename>/boot/loader.conf</filename>:</para> <programlisting>kern.hz=100</programlisting> - <para>Without this setting, an idle FreeBSD + <para>Without this setting, an idle &os; <application>Virtual PC</application> guest OS will use roughly 40% of the CPU of a single processor computer. After this change the usage will be @@ -772,14 +772,14 @@ <para><application>VMware Fusion</application> for &mac; is a commercial software product available for &intel; based &apple; - &mac; computers running &macos; 10.4.9 or higher. FreeBSD is a + &mac; computers running &macos; 10.4.9 or higher. &os; is a fully supported guest operating system. Once <application>VMware Fusion</application> has been installed on &macos; X, the user must configure a virtual machine and then install the desired guest operating system.</para> <sect3 id="virtualization-guest-vmware-install"> - <title>Installing FreeBSD on VMware/&macos; X</title> + <title>Installing &os; on VMware/&macos; X</title> <para>The first step is to start VMware Fusion, the Virtual Machine Library will load. Click "New" to create the VM:</para> @@ -801,8 +801,8 @@ <para>Select <guimenuitem>Other</guimenuitem> as the <guimenuitem>Operating System</guimenuitem> and - <guimenuitem>FreeBSD</guimenuitem> or - <guimenuitem>FreeBSD 64-bit</guimenuitem>, depending on if + <guimenuitem>&os;</guimenuitem> or + <guimenuitem>&os; 64-bit</guimenuitem>, depending on if you want 64-bit support, as the <guimenu>Version</guimenu> when prompted:</para> @@ -902,13 +902,13 @@ </mediaobject> <para>After you have finished modifying the settings, boot the - newly installed FreeBSD virtual machine.</para> + newly installed &os; virtual machine.</para> </sect3> <sect3 id="virtualization-guest-vmware-configure"> - <title>Configuring FreeBSD on &macos; X/VMware</title> + <title>Configuring &os; on &macos; X/VMware</title> - <para>After FreeBSD has been successfully installed on &macos; + <para>After &os; has been successfully installed on &macos; X with <application>VMware</application>, there are a number of configuration steps that can be taken to optimize the system for virtualized operation.</para> @@ -919,13 +919,13 @@ <para>The most important step is to reduce the <option>kern.hz</option> tunable to reduce the CPU utilization - of FreeBSD under the <application>VMware</application> + of &os; under the <application>VMware</application> environment. This is accomplished by adding the following line to <filename>/boot/loader.conf</filename>:</para> <programlisting>kern.hz=100</programlisting> - <para>Without this setting, an idle FreeBSD + <para>Without this setting, an idle &os; <application>VMware</application> guest OS will use roughly 15% of the CPU of a single processor &imac;. After this change the usage will be @@ -961,7 +961,7 @@ </sect1> <sect1 id="virtualization-host"> - <title>FreeBSD as a Host OS</title> + <title>&os; as a Host OS</title> <para>For a number of years, &os; was not officially supported as a host OS by any of the available virtualization solutions. Some people were ==== //depot/projects/docproj_nl/nl_NL.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/x11/chapter.sgml#22 (text+ko) ==== @@ -1,7 +1,7 @@ <!-- The FreeBSD Dutch Documentation Project - $FreeBSD: doc/nl_NL.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/x11/chapter.sgml,v 1.23 2009/11/07 21:32:41 rene Exp $ + $FreeBSD: doc/nl_NL.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/x11/chapter.sgml,v 1.24 2009/11/17 19:37:32 rene Exp $ %SOURCE% en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/x11/chapter.sgml %SRCID% 1.197 -->
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