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Full Discussion: 386BSD - Where can I find it
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers 386BSD - Where can I find it Post 2039 by Hodapp on Sunday 15th of April 2001 01:49:18 PM
Old 04-15-2001
Question

I'm looking for a copy of 386BSD Unix... I know it's a free operating system, but the homepage is nonexistent, and I can't find it anywhere. It's free, so it shouldn't be that hard. Can anyone help me with this? In a couple downloadable files or packages, rather than in a huge messy FTP directory, would be most preferable. But at this stage, anything will do.
Mostly, I was looking for a free BSD Unix that would run on my older computer [486DX-33, 24 MB RAM, about 200 MB disk space that I could reserve to a partition for Unix]. I don't know of FreeBSD or BSDi or OpenBSD or NetBSD or whatever would run on it.

Thanks....
 

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BACKUP(8)						      System Manager's Manual							 BACKUP(8)

NAME
backup - backup files SYNOPSIS
backup [-djmnorstvz] dir1 dir2 OPTIONS
-d At top level, only directories are backed up -j Do not copy junk: *.Z, *.bak, a.out, core, etc -m If device full, prompt for new diskette -n Do not backup top-level directories -o Do not copy *.o files -r Restore files -s Do not copy *.s files -t Preserve creation times -v Verbose; list files being backed up -z Compress the files on the backup medium EXAMPLES
backup -mz . /f0 # Backup current directory compressed backup /bin /usr/bin # Backup bin from RAM disk to hard disk DESCRIPTION
Backup (recursively) backs up the contents of a given directory and its subdirectories to another part of the file system. It has two typ- ical uses. First, some portion of the file system can be backed up onto 1 or more diskettes. When a diskette fills up, the user is prompted for a new one. The backups are in the form of mountable file systems. Second, a directory on RAM disk can be backed up onto hard disk. If the target directory is empty, the entire source directory is copied there, optionally compressed to save space. If the target directory is an old backup, only those files in the target directory that are older than similar names in the source directory are replaced. Backup uses times for this purpose, like make. Calling Backup as Restore is equivalent to using the -r option; this replaces newer files in the target directory with older files from the source directory, uncompressing them if necessary. The target directory con- tents are thus returned to some previous state. SEE ALSO
tar(1). BACKUP(8)
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