summaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorjkh <jkh@FreeBSD.org>1996-12-17 22:57:56 +0000
committerjkh <jkh@FreeBSD.org>1996-12-17 22:57:56 +0000
commit0fb809dcd8ffda668758da30e793acaad1e6039f (patch)
treed3802fd178bc706fadb27f9e1d28a24c75bfa5b3
parentd98e22235510b6a46a3ac74bf71b7366f6ca22b2 (diff)
downloadFreeBSD-src-0fb809dcd8ffda668758da30e793acaad1e6039f.zip
FreeBSD-src-0fb809dcd8ffda668758da30e793acaad1e6039f.tar.gz
Make some much-needed revisions to the history section.
-rw-r--r--share/doc/handbook/history.sgml54
1 files changed, 25 insertions, 29 deletions
diff --git a/share/doc/handbook/history.sgml b/share/doc/handbook/history.sgml
index a492e1a..87bcf7f92 100644
--- a/share/doc/handbook/history.sgml
+++ b/share/doc/handbook/history.sgml
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-<!-- $Id: history.sgml,v 1.15 1996/08/21 07:28:45 asami Exp $ -->
+<!-- $Id: history.sgml,v 1.16 1996/09/09 01:56:58 jkh Exp $ -->
<!-- The FreeBSD Documentation Project -->
<sect><heading>A brief history of FreeBSD<label id="history"></heading>
@@ -48,7 +48,7 @@ released in December of 1993. This was based on the 4.3BSD-Lite
success for a first offering, and we followed it with the highly successful
FreeBSD 1.1 release in May of 1994.
-Around this time, some rather unexpected storm clouds formed on our
+Around this time, some rather unexpected storm clouds formed on the
horizon as Novell and U.C. Berkeley settled their long-running lawsuit
over the legal status of the Berkeley Net/2 tape. A condition of that
settlement was U.C. Berkeley's concession that large parts of Net/2
@@ -56,38 +56,34 @@ were "encumbered" code and the property of Novell, who had in turn acquired
it from AT&amp;T some time previously. What Berkeley got in return was
Novell's "blessing" that the 4.4BSD-Lite release, when it was finally
released, would be declared unencumbered and all existing Net/2 users
-would be strongly encouraged to switch. This included us, and we were
-given until the end of July 1994 to stop shipping our own Net/2 based
-product. Under the terms of that agreement, we were allowed one
-last release before the deadline and that became FreeBSD 1.1.5.1, the
-culmination of our year's work with Net/2 and generally considered by
-many to be a significant project milestone for stability and general
-performance..
+would be strongly encouraged to switch. This included FreeBSD, and the
+project was given until the end of July 1994 to stop shipping its own
+Net/2 based product. Under the terms of that agreement, the project
+was allowed one last release before the deadline, that release being
+FreeBSD 1.1.5.1.
-We then set about the arduous task of literally re-inventing ourselves
-with a completely new and rather incomplete set of 4.4BSD-Lite bits. The
+FreeBSD then set about the arduous task of literally re-inventing itself
+from a completely new and rather incomplete set of 4.4BSD-Lite bits. The
"Lite" releases were light in part because Berkeley's CSRG had removed
large chunks of code required for actually constructing a bootable running
system (due to various legal requirements) and the fact that the Intel
-port of 4.4 was highly incomplete. It took us until December of 1994
-to make this transition, and in January of 1995 we
-released FreeBSD 2.0 to the net and on CDROM. Despite being still
-more than a little rough around the edges, the release was a
-significant success and has since been followed by the more robust and
-easier to install FreeBSD 2.0.5 release in June of 1995.
+port of 4.4 was highly incomplete. It took the project until December of 1994
+to make this transition, and in January of 1995 it released FreeBSD 2.0 to
+the net and on CDROM. Despite being still more than a little rough around
+the edges, the release was a significant success and was followed by the more
+robust and easier to install FreeBSD 2.0.5 release in June of 1995.
<em>Where to from here?</em>
-We just released FreeBSD 2.1.5 in August of 1996, and it appears to be
-doing well enough for us that one last release along the -stable
-branch, 2.1.6, is merited. This is scheduled for release some time in
-November.
+We released FreeBSD 2.1.5 in August of 1996, and it appeared to be
+popular enough among the ISP and commercial communities that one last
+release along the 2.1-stable branch, was merited. This was FreeBSD 2.1.6,
+released in December 1996, and capped the end of mainstream development
+on 2.1-stable. Now in maintenance mode, only security enhancements and other
+critical bug fixes will be done on this branch.
-2.2, our development branch where long term projects for everything
-from NFS v3 to PCCARD support is currently taking place, will continue
-to have snapshot releases made of it right up until initial 2.2 code
-freeze, which is scheduled for January of 1997.
-
-We also intend to focus on any remaining areas of weakness, like
-documentation or missing drivers, and steadily increase the overall
-quality and feature set of the system well into 1997 and beyond.
+FreeBSD 2.2 is now on a release branch and heading for its first full
+debut in January, 1997. Long term development projects for everything
+from SMP to DEC ALPHA support will continue to take place in the
+3.0-current branch, which departed from 2.2 in October of 1996.
+SNAPshot releases of 3.0 are expected to resume in early 1997.
OpenPOWER on IntegriCloud