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<html>
<! $FreeBSD$ >
<body>
<h1><center>Lists of supported hardware configurations.</center></h1>
<p>Below you will find supported configurations for each of the flavors of
PicoBSD as of version @VER@, as well as the lists of programs included.</p>
<h3>Dialup version:</h3>
<ul>
<li>minimum 386SX CPU (either Intel, AMD, Cyrix etc - doesn't matter),
</li>
<li>minimum 8MB of RAM (some people reported success
stories with 4MB only, but I certainly don't recommend it)
</li>
<li>a modem (for Internet connection using PPP protocol), either internal or
external, connected to COM1-COM4. NOTE: COM3 and COM4 are disabled by default
- you have to explicitly enable them in UserConfig.
</li>
<li>an Ethernet card for LAN connection:
<ul>
<li> ed - default settings: port 0x280, irq 10, iomem 0xd8000
<p>NE2000 compatible ISA and PCI cards, most SMC and 3C503</p>
</li>
<li> ep - default settings: port 0x300, irq 10,
<p>3C509 ISA card</p>
</li>
<li> ie - default settings: port 0x300, irq 10, iomem 0xd0000
<p>Intel EtherExpress ISA, StarLan, 3C507</p>
</li>
<li> le - default settings: port 0x300, irq 5, iomem 0xd0000
<p>DEC EtherWorks 2 and 3</p>
</li>
<li> lnc - default settings: port 0x280, irq 10, iomem 0xd0000
<p>Lance/PCNet</p>
</li>
<li> de - DEC21040-based PCI cards,
</li>
<li> fxp - Intel EtherExpress Pro/100B PCI card
</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>10 virtual consoles plus console utilities (vidcontrol, kbdcontrol)
</li>
<li>basic networking tools: ifconfig, route, ping, ns (mini-netstat),
traceroute
</li>
<li>basic remote access tools: telnet, ftp and SSH
</li>
<li>basic OS tools: shell, mount (FreeBSD, DOS, Linux), umount, ps, kill, vm
(mini-vmstat), fsck, df, etc..
</li>
<li>editable configuration (/etc directory and kernel configuration)
</li>
<li>simple editor ee
</li>
<li>simple help system for people new to FreeBSD
</li>
</ul>
<h3>Router-like version:</h3>
<ul>
<li>minimum 386SX CPU,
</li>
<li>minimum 10 MB of RAM (8MB for basic setup)
</li>
<li>support for PPP protocol on dialup/leased lines (using ijppp)
</li>
<li>support for several types of Ethernet cards (two of each kind) - see above
for descriptions: ed, ie, ep, de, fxp, lnc
</li>
<li>network daemons: routing daemon (routed), inetd, telnetd.
</li>
<li>IP Firewall and NAT daemon (natd).
</li>
<li>more OS utilities, including: syslogd, mount_nfs, network logins via
telnet
</li>
<li>this version doesn't include: ssh, ftp
</li>
</ul>
<h3>Router version:</h3>
<ul>
<li>minimum 386SX CPU,
</li>
<li>minimum 4 MB of RAM (6MB for running some additional daemons)
</li>
<li>support for PPP protocol on dialup/leased lines (using kernel ppp)
</li>
<li>support for several types of Ethernet cards - see above
for descriptions: ed, ie, ep, de, fxp, lnc
</li>
<li>custom init(8), which includes also a simple command-line interface,
and its own way to configure the system on startup.
</li>
<li>IP Firewall and NAT daemon (natd - it requires additional portion of RAM).
</li>
<li>very few OS tools, except those absolutely necessary,
</li>
</ul>
<p>There's also the fourth version, which can serve as a dialin server - I hope
you'll find it as a cheap yet reliable alternative to commercial communication
servers :-)) This work is still in progress, and
<A HREF="beta.html">I need some people to test</a> the early
dial-in server version.</p>
<hr>
<i>Last modified:
@DATE@
</i>
</body>
</html>
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