Date: Wed, 17 Nov 2004 10:02:17 -0700 From: Tyler Gee <geekout@gmail.com> To: "Kevin D. Kinsey, DaleCo, S.P." <kdk@daleco.biz> Cc: freebsd-newbies@freebsd.org Subject: Re: CD's ? Message-ID: <6e01203b04111709026b1f1ad@mail.gmail.com> In-Reply-To: <419B801B.8060003@daleco.biz> References: <BAY101-F14YXI4Ht9x70001c1a1@hotmail.com> <419B801B.8060003@daleco.biz>
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I tend to install based off of the mini disc, harden the system, then cvsup and start pulling in and installing everything else. Also, I think if you are going to be installing -current, you might as well do the boot only disc and then do and FTP install, that way you are actually getting the most current -current. If you are doing a stable install you might want to just get disc1 and disc2 -wtgee On Wed, 17 Nov 2004 10:45:15 -0600, Kevin D. Kinsey, DaleCo, S.P. <kdk@daleco.biz> wrote: > Moh Bana wrote: > > > Which cd is just required to install Freebsd ... i downloaded the 5.3 > > iso's, their seems to be some confusion their 4 cd's? > > > > 2 ISO's ranging from 600mb + > > and one boot cd that is 20-30mb > > > > > > Is the freebsd with X .... that big? > > > > > > Probably not. FreeBSD without X might be 400MB+. That > said, it really depends on a lot of factors, since FBSD is > so customizable. > > Before I go on, two disclaimers. 1] newbies@ isn't > a place for technicalquestions, and 2] I don't use the > ISO's myself.... > > Now, to debug those, 1] maybe your ?? isn't so technical, and > 2] the naming scheme of the ISO's isn't that hard. > > Bootonly is what it says. A bootable CDROM with the installer, > and maybe some other stuff; but you'll need to be ready to > grab the code from another source (like via FTP). > > "miniinst" is a CD that gets you the "minimum" installation of > FreeBSD; what's called "the base system". No GUI; nothing > that's not maintained by the Project itself. You could make > an SMTP server with it, an FTP server, NTP server, a shell server, > or ... well, you can't do much else that I can think of*, but the > point is, it's FreeBSD, the system is operable, and you can add > just about anything you want from there. The CD contains the > installer, the binaries and manpages, crypto, contributed (GNU > and other) software (including the compiler), in short, everything > that's maintained by the Project itself (i.e., nothing from the ports > tree). Also, no documentation except the aforementioned manual > pages. > > "Disc 1" and "Disc 2" contain enough to get you going pretty big time. > In addition to the "base system", you can expect full source code tree, > the full ports tree, and enough tarballs in /usr/ports/distfiles to build > X, a bunch of window managers and DE's, servers of every description, > a number of programming languages, system utilities, networking tools, > games, etc., etc. > > HTH, > > Kevin Kinsey > DaleCo, S.P. > > *FreeBSD maintains Sendmail, NTP, OpenSSH, and FTPD in > the source tree, along with a bunch of other stuff. If you know > much about 'Nix-like OSes, you can get going with a minimum > install. I don't know of anyone who uses a minimum install only ... > hmm, unless it's for one of the aforementioned, or a gateway, > or a router, or a firewall .. which I seem to have forgotten in the > above. In short, the reason there's 4 CD's is because there's > a lot of flexibility in FBSD ... and probably, the reason there > aren't more is because you've gotta keep things simple > somehow ... > _______________________________________________ > freebsd-newbies@freebsd.org mailing list > http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-newbies > To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-newbies-unsubscribe@freebsd.org" >
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