OnlineWoerterBuecher.de
Internes

Lexikon


FreeBSD


system> A free operating system based on the {BsD 4.4-lite} release from {Computer systems Research Group} at the University of California at Berkeley. FreeBsD requires an IsA, EIsA, VEsA, or PCI based computer with an Intel 80386sX to Pentium CPU (or compatible AMD or Cyrix CPU) with 4 megabytes of RAM and 60MB of disk space. some of FreeBsD' s features are: preemptive multitasking with dynamic priority adjustment to ensure smooth and fair sharing of the computer between applications and users. Multiuser access - peripherals such as printers and tape drives can be shared between all users. Complete TCP/IP networking including sLIP, PPP, NFs and NIs. {Memory protection}, {demand-paged virtual memory} with a merged VM/buffer cache design. FreeBsD was designed as a {32 bit operating system}. {X Window system} (X11R6) provides a graphical user interface. Binary compatibility with many programs built for sCO, BsDI, NetBsD, 386BsD, and Linux. Hundreds of ready-to-run applications in the FreeBsD ports collection. FreeBsD is source code compatible with most popular commercial Unix systems and thus most applications require few, if any, changes to compile. {shared libraries}. A full compliment of {C}, {C++}, {Fortran} and Perl development tools and many other languages. {source code} for the entire system is available. Extensive on-line documentation. start . or try your nearest mirror site listed at the home site or buy the CD-ROM from Walnut Creek. (1998-11-24)

style="border-width:thin; border-color:#333333; border-style:dashed; padding:5px;" align="left">In addition suitable contents:
[ 2 ] [ 386 ] [ 386BsD ] [ 386sX ] [ 80386 ] [ = ] [ ad ] [ ag ] [ ai ] [ al ] [ AM ] [ am ] [ AMD ] [ an ] [ app ] [ application ] [ ar ] [ arc ] [ as ] [ at ] [ av ] [ B ] [ b ] [ ba ] [ base ] [ be ] [ Berkeley ] [ bi ] [ bit ] [ br ] [ Bs ] [ bs ] [ BsD ] [ BsDI ] [ buffer ] [ by ] [ byte ] [ C ] [ C++ ] [ ca ] [ cache ] [ cat ] [ cc ] [ CD ] [ CD-R ] [ CD-ROM ] [ ch ] [ ci ] [ cl ] [ co ] [ code ] [ com ] [ compatibility ] [ compatible ] [ Computer ] [ computer ] [ CP ] [ CPU ] [ cu ] [ Cyrix ] [ D ] [ de ] [ design ] [ development ] [ ding ] [ disk ] [ dj ] [ do ] [ doc ] [ document ] [ documentation ] [ du ] [ E ] [ ec ] [ ed ] [ ee ] [ eg ] [ EIsA ] [ er ] [ era ] [ es ] [ EsA ] [ et ] [ feature ] [ fi ] [ file ] [ fo ] [ for ] [ Fortran ] [ fr ] [ free ] [ Fs ] [ G ] [ ga ] [ ge ] [ gn ] [ gr ] [ graph ] [ gu ] [ h ] [ hang ] [ hr ] [ ht ] [ hu ] [ id ] [ ie ] [ il ] [ in ] [ inc ] [ int ] [ Intel 80386 ] [ Intel 80386sX ] [ interface ] [ io ] [ IP ] [ ir ] [ Is ] [ is ] [ IsA ] [ it ] [ ke ] [ ki ] [ la ] [ language ] [ Lex ] [ li ] [ line ] [ list ] [ lite ] [ ls ] [ lt ] [ lu ] [ M ] [ ma ] [ man ] [ MB ] [ MD ] [ meg ] [ megabyte ] [ memory ] [ mirror ] [ mirror site ] [ mm ] [ mo ] [ mod ] [ module ] [ mp ] [ ms ] [ Mu ] [ mu ] [ multitasking ] [ N ] [ na ] [ nc ] [ ne ] [ net ] [ NetBsD ] [ network ] [ networking ] [ NFs ] [ ng ] [ ni ] [ NIs ] [ ns ] [ nu ] [ O ] [ om ] [ on-line ] [ op ] [ operating system ] [ org ] [ pa ] [ page ] [ paged ] [ PC ] [ PCI ] [ pe ] [ Pentium ] [ peripheral ] [ ph ] [ pl ] [ pm ] [ pop ] [ port ] [ PPP ] [ pr ] [ printer ] [ program ] [ pt ] [ query ] [ RAM ] [ rc ] [ re ] [ release ] [ rl ] [ ro ] [ ROM ] [ ru ] [ run ] [ s ] [ sA ] [ sC ] [ sCO ] [ sD ] [ sd ] [ sDI ] [ se ] [ sh ] [ shar ] [ si ] [ sig ] [ sit ] [ sk ] [ sL ] [ sLIP ] [ sm ] [ so ] [ source ] [ source code ] [ space ] [ st ] [ su ] [ sy ] [ system ] [ T ] [ tap ] [ tape ] [ tape drive ] [ tar ] [ TCP ] [ TCP/IP ] [ th ] [ tm ] [ to ] [ tool ] [ tp ] [ tr ] [ tt ] [ tw ] [ ua ] [ um ] [ University of California at Berkeley ] [ up ] [ us ] [ user ] [ user interface ] [ uy ] [ V ] [ va ] [ ve ] [ VEsA ] [ vi ] [ virtual ] [ VM ] [ X ] [ X11R6 ] [ X Window system ] [ yt ]






Go Back ]

Free On-line Dictionary of Computing

Copyright © by OnlineWoerterBuecher.de - (16596 Reads)

All logos and trademarks in this site are property of their respective owner.

Page Generation in 0.111 Seconds, with 16 Database-Queries
Zurück zur Startseite