Hello Hiroki, Monday, May 8, 2006, 1:35:06 AM, you answered:
> Giorgos Keramidas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote > in <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: ke>> I would probably like seeing something like an ``Embedded FreeBSD'' ke>> chapter in the Handbook, where all available options would be listed, ke>> including NanoBSD, FreeSBIE, and the upcoming TinyBSD too. > I think it is good for us to have a document for such variants of > installation method, but I disagree with adding a chapter to Handbook > for them. This is because NanoBSD and so on are nothing but special > methods of build/installation and IMHO they are beyond the scope > of Handbook. We have even more advanced topics in Handbook than NanoBSD is. See next paragraph. > As you know, Handbook introduces a basic installation procedure > and explains several common tasks for system administrators basically > on the assumption that they are using a normally-installed FreeBSD box. > So, we include advanced topics beyond the scope such as articles/multi-os > or article/fbsd-from-scratch (both explain some special methods of > build/installation) as articles so far. In short, I think Handbook > should be organized for average sysadmins, not as an encyclopedia, > and topics like NanoBSD are too advanced. Then we can tell the same about the whole MAC and Audit chapters, since they seem a lot more advanced and tricky to me than NanoBSD. > Daniel Gerzo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote > in <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: da>> What I dislike on articles is that they are not under such view as a da>> Handbook chapters are, so they are getting outdated easier as well as da>> people often dig only in Handbook for information. > How likely sentences are getting outdated is nothing to do with > whether it is in Handbook or not, and if people often look for information > only in Handbook we should encourage them to look at the other materials > by adding pointers, for example, instead of adding all of information into > Handbook. The FreeBSD project is known as a very well documented Operating System. As far as I've been working with FreeBSD and seeking for documentation and more information about things I wanted to try out, the first place I've looked at was our great Handbok. I feel that having documentation at one place is more comfortable than googling it for XY minutes. Also if I was an avarage system administrator and I would notice a NanoBSD chapter in Handbook, I would say: "Wow, what is this? Let's see...". So there's a higher chance that more people can notice it and play with it. At least, we have some discussion about it here, the doc@ list seemed to me as it has been already dead :-) -- Sincerely, Daniel Gerzo _______________________________________________ cvs-all@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/cvs-all To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"