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diff --git a/man/man1/intro.html b/man/man1/intro.html deleted file mode 100644 index fc628e5a..00000000 --- a/man/man1/intro.html +++ /dev/null @@ -1,221 +0,0 @@ -<head> -<title>intro(1) - Plan 9 from User Space</title> -<meta content="text/html; charset=utf-8" http-equiv=Content-Type> -</head> -<body bgcolor=#ffffff> -<table border=0 cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0 width=100%> -<tr height=10><td> -<tr><td width=20><td> -<tr><td width=20><td><b>INTRO(1)</b><td align=right><b>INTRO(1)</b> -<tr><td width=20><td colspan=2> - <br> -<p><font size=+1><b>NAME </b></font><br> - -<table border=0 cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0><tr height=2><td><tr><td width=20><td> - - intro – introduction to Plan 9 from User Space<br> - -</table> -<p><font size=+1><b>DESCRIPTION </b></font><br> - -<table border=0 cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0><tr height=2><td><tr><td width=20><td> - - Plan 9 is a distributed computing environment built at Bell Labs - starting in the late 1980s. The system can be obtained from Bell - Labs at <tt><font size=+1>http://plan9.bell−labs.com/plan9</font></tt> and runs on PCs and a - variety of other platforms. Plan 9 became a convenient platform - for experimenting with new ideas, - applications, and services. - <table border=0 cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0><tr height=5><td></table> - - Plan 9 from User Space provides many of the ideas, applications, - and services from Plan 9 on Unix-like systems. It runs on FreeBSD - (x86), Linux (x86 and PowerPC), Mac OS X (PowerPC), OpenBSD (x86), - and SunOS (Sparc).<br> - <p><font size=+1><b>Commands </b></font><br> - Plan 9 from User Space expects its own directory tree, conventionally - <tt><font size=+1>/usr/local/plan9</font></tt>. When programs need to access files in the tree, - they expect the <tt><font size=+1>$PLAN9</font></tt> environment variable to contain the name - of the root of the tree. See <a href="../man1/install.html"><i>install</i>(1)</a> for details about installation. - - <table border=0 cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0><tr height=5><td></table> - - Many of the familiar Unix commands, for example <a href="../man1/cat.html"><i>cat</i>(1)</a>, <a href="../man1/ls.html"><i>ls</i>(1)</a>, - and <a href="../man1/wc.html"><i>wc</i>(1)</a>, are present, but in their Plan 9 forms: <i>cat</i> takes no - arguments, <i>ls</i> does not columnate its output when printing to a - terminal, and <i>wc</i> counts UTF characters. In some cases, the differences - are quite noticeable: <a href="../man1/grep.html"><i>grep</i>(1)</a> and <a href="../man1/sed.html"><i>sed</i>(1)</a> expect Plan 9 - regular expressions (see <a href="../man7/regexp.html"><i>regexp</i>(7)</a>), which are closest to what - Unix calls extended regular expressions. Because of these differences, - it is not recommended to put <tt><font size=+1>$PLAN9/bin</font></tt> before the usual system - <tt><font size=+1>bin</font></tt> directories in your search path. Instead, put it at the end - of your path and use the <a href="../man1/9.html"><i>9</i>(1)</a> script when you want to - invoke the Plan 9 version of a traditional Unix command. - <table border=0 cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0><tr height=5><td></table> - - Occasionally the Plan 9 programs have been changed to adapt to - Unix. <a href="../man1/Mk.html"><i>Mk</i>(1)</a> now allows mkfiles to choose their own shell, and - <a href="../man1/rc.html"><i>rc</i>(1)</a> has a <i>ulimit</i> builtin and manages <tt><font size=+1>$PATH</font></tt>. - <table border=0 cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0><tr height=5><td></table> - - Many of the graphical programs from Plan 9 are present, including - <a href="../man1/sam.html"><i>sam</i>(1)</a> and <a href="../man1/acme.html"><i>acme</i>(1)</a>. An X11 window manager <a href="../man1/rio.html"><i>rio</i>(1)</a> mimics Plan 9’s - window system, with command windows implemented by the external - program <a href="../man1/9term.html"><i>9term</i>(1)</a>. Following the style of X Windows, these programs - run in new windows rather than the one in - which they are invoked. They all take a <tt><font size=+1>−W</font></tt> option to specify the - size and placement of the new window. The argument is one of <i>width</i><tt><font size=+1>x</font></tt><i>height</i>, - <i>width</i><tt><font size=+1>x</font></tt><i>height</i><tt><font size=+1>@</font></tt><i>xmin</i><tt><font size=+1>,</font></tt><i>xmax</i>, or <i>xmin</i><tt><font size=+1>,</font></tt><i>ymin</i><tt><font size=+1>,</font></tt><i>xmax</i><tt><font size=+1>,</font></tt><i>ymax</i>. - <table border=0 cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0><tr height=5><td></table> - - The <a href="../man4/plumber.html"><i>plumber</i>(4)</a> helps to connect the various Plan 9 programs together, - and fittings like <a href="../man1/web.html"><i>web</i>(1)</a> connect it to external programs such - as web browsers; one can click on a URL in <i>acme</i> and see the page - load in <i>Firefox</i>.<br> - <p><font size=+1><b>User-level file servers </b></font><br> - In Plan 9, user-level file servers present file trees via the - Plan 9 file protocol, 9P. Processes can mount arbitrary file servers - and customize their own name spaces. These facilities are used - to connect programs. Clients interact with file servers by reading - and writing files. - <table border=0 cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0><tr height=5><td></table> - - This cannot be done directly on Unix. Instead the servers listen - for 9P connections on Unix domain sockets; clients connect to - these sockets and speak 9P directly using the <a href="../man3/9pclient.html"><i>9pclient</i>(3)</a> library. - <a href="../man4/Intro.html"><i>Intro</i>(4)</a> tells more of the story. The effect is not as clean as - on Plan 9, but it gets the job done and still provides a uniform - and - easy-to-understand mechanism. The <a href="../man1/9p.html"><i>9p</i>(1)</a> client can be used in - shell scripts or by hand to carry out simple interactions with - servers.<br> - <p><font size=+1><b>External databases </b></font><br> - Some programs rely on large databases that would be cumbersome - to include in every release. Scripts are provided that download - these databases separately. These databases can be downloaded - separately. See <tt><font size=+1>$PLAN9/dict/README</font></tt> and <tt><font size=+1>$PLAN9/sky/README</font></tt>.<br> - <p><font size=+1><b>Programming </b></font><br> - The shell scripts <i>9c</i> and <i>9l</i> (see <a href="../man1/9c.html"><i>9c</i>(1)</a>) provide a simple interface - to the underlying system compiler and linker, similar to the <i>2c</i> - and <i>2l</i> families on Plan 9. <i>9c</i> compiles source files, and <i>9l</i> links - object files into executables. When using Plan 9 libraries, <i>9l</i> - infers the correct set of libraries from the object files, so - that no <tt><font size=+1>−l - </font></tt>options are needed. - <table border=0 cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0><tr height=5><td></table> - - The only way to write multithreaded programs is to use the <a href="../man3/thread.html"><i>thread</i>(3)</a> - library. <a href="../man3/Rfork.html"><i>Rfork</i>(3)</a> exists but is not as capable as on Plan 9. There - are many unfortunate by necessary preprocessor diversions to make - Plan 9 and Unix libraries coexist. See <a href="../man3/intro.html"><i>intro</i>(3)</a> for details. - <table border=0 cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0><tr height=5><td></table> - - The debuggers <a href="../man1/acid.html"><i>acid</i>(1)</a> and <a href="../man1/db.html"><i>db</i>(1)</a> and the debugging library <a href="../man3/mach.html"><i>mach</i>(3)</a> - are works in progress. They are platform-independent, so that - x86 Linux core dumps can be inspected on PowerPC Mac OS X machines, - but they are also fairly incomplete. The x86 target is the most - mature; initial PowerPC support exists; and other - targets are unimplemented. The debuggers can only inspect, not - manipulate, target processes. Support for operating system threads - and for 64-bit architectures needs to be rethought. On x86 Linux - systems, <i>acid</i> and <i>db</i> can be relied upon to produce reasonable - stack traces (often in cases when GNU <i>gdb</i> cannot) and - dump data structures, but that it is the extent to which they - have been developed and exercised.<br> - <p><font size=+1><b>Porting programs </b></font><br> - The vast majority of the familiar Plan 9 programs have been ported, - including the Unicode-aware <a href="../man1/troff.html"><i>troff</i>(1)</a>. - <table border=0 cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0><tr height=5><td></table> - - Of the more recent additions to Plan 9, the <a href="../man1/secstore.html"><i>secstore</i>(1)</a> client - has been ported, though <i>secstored</i> has not. <a href="../man1/Vac.html"><i>Vac</i>(1)</a> has been ported, - though <i>vacfs</i> has not. <i>Factotum</i> and <i>venti</i> are in progress. - <table border=0 cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0><tr height=5><td></table> - - A backup system providing a dump file system built atop Venti - is also in progress.<br> - <p><font size=+1><b>Porting to new systems </b></font><br> - Porting the tree to new operating systems or architectures should - be straightforward, as system-specific code has been kept to a - minimum. The largest pieces of system-specific code are <tt><font size=+1><u.h></font></tt>, which - must include the right system files and set up the right integer - type definitions, and <i>libthread</i>, which must implement - spin locks, operating system thread creation, and context switching - routines. Portable implementations of these using <tt><font size=+1><pthread.h></font></tt> and - <tt><font size=+1><ucontext.h></font></tt> already exist. If your system supports them, you may - not need to write any system specific code at all. - <table border=0 cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0><tr height=5><td></table> - - There are other smaller system dependencies, such as the terminal - handling code in <a href="../man1/9term.html"><i>9term</i>(1)</a> and the implementation of <a href="../man3/getcallerpc.html"><i>getcallerpc</i>(3)</a>, - but these are usually simple and are not on the critical path - for getting the system up and running.<br> - -</table> -<p><font size=+1><b>SEE ALSO </b></font><br> - -<table border=0 cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0><tr height=2><td><tr><td width=20><td> - - The rest of this manual describes Plan 9 from User Space. Many - of the man pages have been brought from Plan 9, but they have - been updated, and others have been written from scratch. - <table border=0 cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0><tr height=5><td></table> - - The manual pages are in a Unix style tree, with names like <tt><font size=+1>$PLAN9/man/man1/cat.1</font></tt> - instead of Plan 9’s simpler <tt><font size=+1>$PLAN9/man/1/cat</font></tt>, so that the Unix - <a href="../man1/man.html"><i>man</i>(1)</a> utility can handle it. Some systems, for example Debian - Linux, deduce the man page locations from the search path, so - that adding <tt><font size=+1>$PLAN9/bin</font></tt> to - your path is sufficient to cause <tt><font size=+1>$PLAN9/man</font></tt> to be consulted for - manual pages using the system <i>man</i>. On other systems, or to look - at manual pages with the same name as a system page, invoke the - Plan 9 <i>man</i> directly, as in <tt><font size=+1>9 man cat</font></tt>. - <table border=0 cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0><tr height=5><td></table> - - The manual sections follow the Unix numbering conventions, not - the Plan 9 ones. - <table border=0 cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0><tr height=5><td></table> - - <a href="../man1">Section (1)</a> describes general publicly accessible commands. - <table border=0 cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0><tr height=5><td></table> - - <a href="../man3">Section (3)</a> describes C library functions. - <table border=0 cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0><tr height=5><td></table> - - <a href="../man4">Section (4)</a> describes user-level file servers. - <table border=0 cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0><tr height=5><td></table> - - <a href="../man7">Section (7)</a> describes file formats and protocols. (On Unix, section - (5) is technically for file formats but seems now to be used for - describing specific files.) - <table border=0 cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0><tr height=5><td></table> - - <a href="../man9">Section (9p)</a> describes the Plan 9 file protocol 9P.<br> - -</table> -<p><font size=+1><b>DIAGNOSTICS </b></font><br> - -<table border=0 cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0><tr height=2><td><tr><td width=20><td> - - In Plan 9, a program’s exit status is an arbitrary text string, - while on Unix it is an integer. Section (1) of this manual describes - commands as though they exit with string statuses. In fact, exiting - with an empty status corresponds to exiting with status 0, and - exiting with any non-empty string corresponds to exiting with - status 1. 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