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Table of Contents |
by Jack Tackett
Because Linux is based on UNIX, almost any UNIX-based book provides some information on Linux. The best source for information, however, is the Linux community itself, which offers everything from updated versions of Linux to extremely active Usenet newsgroups. Linux also provides online documents through the Linux Documentation Project (LDP), which is writing a complete set of manuals for Linux. The most recent editions of this project are available via the Internet.
The following listings provide Internet FTP sites, magazines, conferences, and newsgroups from which you can gather more information about Linux.
Because Linux is a child of the Internet, you will find a great many Web sites related to Linux. In fact, Linux is a pretty popular subject on the Web. Table A.1 lists the URLs that contain most of the Linux information on the Web.
URL | Description |
---|---|
http://sunsite.unc.edu/mdw | The site for Linux information; the home of the Linux Documentation Project |
http://www.Linux.org.uk | The Web site for European Linux users |
http://www.li.org | The Linux International Web site |
http://www.redhat.com | The RedHat Linux Web site |
http://www.slackware.org | The official Web site for Slackware |
http://www.caldera.com | Calderas Web site |
http://www.linux.org | The Linux Organization Web site |
http://sunsite.unc.edu/linux-source | The Linux Source Navigator, which allows you to view Linux source code in hypertext |
http://www.yahoo.com/ Computer_and_Internet/ Operating_Systems/ Unix/Linux | The Yahoo! site pointing to many current sites |
If you have access to Usenet newsgroups, youll enjoy the following newsgroups, which provide a variety of information about Linux. Only two,comp.os.linux.announce and comp.os.linux.answers, are moderated.
See Usenet Culture, p. 661
NOTE: The original Linux-related newsgroup, comp.os.linux, no longer exists because more specific newsgroups have been created.
A newsgroup named comp.os.linux.misc serves as a catch-all for any Linux topic not suited to the other newsgroups. Also, more than 170 other Usenet newsgroups contain the word Linux. A sample of the more common Linux newsgroups are listed as follows. Go exploring!
alt.linux.sux | alt.os.linux |
alt.uu.comp.os.linux.questions | alt.os.linux.slackware |
aus.computers.linux | dc.org.linux-users |
de.comp.os.linux.hardware | de.comp.os.linux.misc |
de.comp.os.linux.networking | de.comp.os.linux.x |
de.alt.sources.linux.patches | uk.comp.os.linux |
fj.os.linux | fr.comp.os.linux |
han.sys.linux | linux.apps.bbsdev |
linux.apps.linux-bbs | linux.apps.seyon |
linux.apps.seyon.development | linux.apps.flexfax |
linux.debian | linux.debian.announce |
linux.debian.user | linux.dev.gcc |
linux.dev.680x0 | linux.dev.admin |
linux.dev.apps | linux.dev.bbs |
linux.dev.c-programming | linux.dev.config |
linux.dev.debian | linux.dev.doc |
linux.dev.fido | linux.dev.fsf |
linux.dev.fsstnd | linux.dev.ftp |
linux.dev.hams | linux.dev.ibcs2 |
linux.dev.interviews | linux.dev.japanese |
linux.dev.laptop | linux.dev.linuxbsd |
linux.dev.linuxnews | linux.dev.linuxss |
linux.dev.localbus | linux.dev.lugnuts |
linux.dev.mca | linux.dev.mgr |
linux.dev.msdos | linux.dev.net |
linux.dev.new-lists | linux.dev.newbie |
linux.dev.normal | linux.dev.nys |
linux.dev.oasg | linux.dev.oi |
linux.dev.pkg | linux.dev.ppp |
linux.dev.qag | linux.dev.scsi |
linux.dev.serial | linux.dev.seyon |
linux.dev.sound | linux.dev.standards |
linux.dev.svgalib | linux.dev.tape |
linux.dev.term | linux.dev.uucp |
linux.dev.wabi | linux.dev.word |
linux.dev.kernel | linux.dev.x11 |
linux.fido.ifmail | linux.free-widgets.announce |
linux.free-widgets.bugs | linux.free-widgets.development |
linux.local.chicago | linux.local.nova-scotia |
linux.local.silicon-valley | linux.motif.clone |
linux.new-tty | linux.news.groups |
linux.ports.alpha | linux.samba |
linux.samba.announce | linux.sdk |
linux.wine.users | linux.test |
Matt Welsh spearheads a dedicated group of Linux enthusiasts who are systematically writing a complete set of Linux manuals that are made available on the Internet. The latest versions of the documentation can be found at sunsite.unc.edu in the /pub/Linux/docs directory. You can also find earlier versions of these documents in your version of Linuxs /docs directory. The current home for the LDP is located at this address:
Available documents include the following:
The Linux HOWTO Index provides an index to all the available HOWTO documents. These HOWTO documents provide a detailed explanation of their topic. Some of the titles include the following:
See Appendix B, The Linux HOWTO Index, for a complete list of Linux HOWTO and Mini HOWTO site addresses. These files are located in the /usr/doc/faq/howto directory on your local drive. Most are archived with gzip to save disk space. To read these or other compressed files, use the zless command.
Many FAQs about Linux topics and GNU programs are shipped with Linux and can be found in the /usr/info directory.
The Linux operating system itself provides plenty of online help via the man command. To access online help, enter man followed by the topic for which you want information.
See Getting Help for Commands with man, p. 114
Linux Journal is the leading U.S. periodical devoted explicitly to Linux. You can request more information about this publication from the following address:
Youll find a great deal of up-to-date information regarding Linux on the Internet. Table A.2 lists the FTP sites that maintain Linux archives. The main archive site, located at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, is named sunsite.unc.edu.
Site Name | Directory |
---|---|
tsx-11.mit.edu | /pub/linux |
sunsite.unc.edu | /pub/Linux |
nic.funet.fi | /pub/Linux |
ftp.mcc.ac.uk | /pub/linux |
ftp.dfv.rwth-aachen.de | /pub/linux |
ftp.informatik.rwth-aachen.de | /pub/Linux |
ftp.ibp.fr | /pub/linux |
kirk.bond.edu.au | /pub/OS/Linux |
ftp.uu.net | /systems/unix/linux |
wuarchive.wustl.edu | /systems/linux |
ftp.win.tue.nl | /pub/linux |
ftp.stack.nl | /pub/Linux |
ftp.ibr.cs.tu-bs.de | /pub/os/linux |
ftp.denet.dk | /pub/OS/Linux |
See Using FTP for Remote File Transfer, p. 580
InfoMagic produces the CD-ROMs enclosed with this book, and the company is gracious enough to help support the product. If your disc is damaged, please contact Que Publishing at http://www.mcp.com. If youve exhausted the resources above, contact InfoMagics support at support@infomagic.com.
So you think that Linux is the greatest thing to come along in quite some time, and you want to help develop future releases. Well, youre in luck. An active set of mailing lists on the Internet is devoted to various topics and issues surrounding Linux development. This is a multichannel mailing list, meaning that messages on different topics are sent to different groups of people. You must subscribe to each channel that youre interested in. If you think you want to get involved in a Linux development project, you can get more information by sending an e-mail message to
with lists in the body to get a list of the lists there. Add a line with help in the body to get the standard Majordomo help file, which has instructions for subscribing and unsubscribing.
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