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1The actual order form follows the descriptions of media contents.
2
3Most of this file is excerpted from the draft of the June 1995 GNU's Bulletin.
4The Order Form itself is accurate, but the information in the other articles
5is not completely updated.  You can ask gnu@prep.ai.mit.edu for the complete
6June, 1995 Order From to get up-to-date information.
7
8Please send suggestions for improvements to gnu@prep.ai.mit.edu or the postal
9address at the end of the order form.  Thank You.
10
11---------------------------------------------------------------------
12
13
14FSF Order Form with Descriptions                preliminary, June 1995
15
16
17
18Free Software Foundation, Inc.        Telephone: +1-617-542-5942
1959 Temple Place - Suite 330           Fax: (including Japan) +1-617-542-2652
20Boston, MA  02111-1307                Free Dial Fax (in Japan):
21USA                                                   0031-13-2473 (KDD)
22Electronic mail: `gnu@prep.ai.mit.edu'                0066-3382-0158 (IDC)
23
24
25There are some sections (e.g. ``Forthcoming GNUs'' and ``How to Get GNU
26Software'') which are not in this Order Form file.  If you wish to see them,
27ask gnu@prep.ai.mit.edu for the complete June, 1995 GNU's Bulletin.
28
29
30Table of Contents
31-----------------
32
33        Donations Translate Into Free Software
34        Cygnus Matches Donations!
35        Free Software Redistributors Donate
36        Help from Free Software Companies
37        (not included) Major Changes in GNU Software and Documentation (not
38                included as it was not done when this file was assembled).
39        GNU Documentation
40        GNU Software            (not completely up to date)
41        Program/Package Cross Reference  (not completely up to date)
42        Tapes
43           Languages Tape       (version numbers not completely up to date)
44           Lisps and Emacs Tape (version numbers not completely up to date)
45           Utilities Tape       (version numbers not completely up to date)
46           Scheme Tape
47           X11 Tapes
48           Berkeley 4.4BSD-Lite Tape
49           VMS Emacs and VMS Compiler Tapes
50        CD-ROMs
51           Pricing of the GNU CD-ROMs
52           MS-DOS CD-ROM
53           Debian GNU/Linux CD-ROM
54           Compiler Tools Binaries CD-ROM
55           Source Code CD-ROMs
56              June 1995 Source Code CD-ROM (version numbers not completely up
57                                            to date)
58              May 1994 Source Code CD-ROM
59              November 1993 Source Code CD-ROM
60        MS-DOS Diskettes
61           DJGPP Diskettes      (version numbers not completely up to date)
62           Emacs Diskettes      (version numbers not completely up to date)
63           Selected Utilities Diskettes    (not completely up to date)
64           Windows Diskette
65        Tape & CD-ROM Subscription Service
66        The Deluxe Distribution
67        FSF T-shirt
68        Free Software Foundation Order Form
69
70
71
72Donations Translate Into Free Software
73**************************************
74
75If you appreciate Emacs, GNU CC, Ghostscript, and other free software, you
76may wish to help us make sure there is more in the future--remember,
77*donations translate into more free software!*
78
79Your donation to us is tax-deductible in the United States.  We gladly accept
80*any* currency, although the U.S. dollar is the most convenient.
81m{No Value For "ergegrafkludge"} If your employer has a matching gifts
82program for charitable donations, please arrange to: add the FSF to the list
83of organizations for your employer's matching gifts program; and have your
84donation matched (note *Note Cygnus Matches Donations!::), if you do not
85know, please ask your personnel department.   Circle amount you are donating,
86cut out this form, and send it with your donation to:
87        Free Software Foundation
88        59 Temple Place -- Suite 330
89        Boston, MA  02111-1307
90        USA
91
92        $500     $250     $100     $50     other $________
93
94        Other currency:________
95
96
97You can charge a donation to any of Carte Blanche, Diner's Club, JCB,
98Mastercard, Visa, or American Express.  Charges may also be faxed to
99+1-617-492-9057.  Individuals in Japan who are unable to place international
100calls may use the "free dial" numbers: 0031-13-2473 (KDD) and
1010066-3382-0158 (IDC).
102
103        Card type: __________________  Expiration Date: _____________
104
105        Account Number: _____________________________________________
106
107        Cardholder's Signature: _____________________________________
108
109        Name: _______________________________________________________
110
111        Street Address: _____________________________________________
112
113        City/State/Province: ________________________________________
114
115        Zip Code/Postal Code/Country: _______________________________
116
117
118
119Cygnus Matches Donations!
120*************************
121
122To encourage cash donations to the Free Software Foundation, Cygnus Support
123will continue to contribute corporate funds to FSF to accompany gifts by its
124employees, and by its customers and their employees.
125
126Donations payable to the Free Software Foundation should be sent by eligible
127persons to Cygnus Support, which will add its gifts and forward the total to
128the FSF each quarter.  The FSF will provide the contributor with a receipt to
129recognize the contribution (which is tax-deductible on U.S.  tax returns).
130For more information, please contact Cygnus:
131        Cygnus Support
132        1937 Landings Drive
133        Mountain View, CA   94043
134        USA
135
136        Telephone: 415-903-1400
137                   +1-800-Cygnus1 (-294-6871)
138        Fax:       415-903-0122
139        Electronic-Mail: `info@cygnus.com'
140        FTP: `ftp.cygnus.com'
141        WWW: `http://www.cygnus.com/'
142
143
144
145Free Software Redistributors Donate
146***********************************
147
148by Richard Stallman
149
150The Sun Users Group Deutschland and ASCII Corporation (Japan) have added
151donations to the FSF to the price of their next CD-ROM of GNU software.
152Potential purchasers will know precisely how much of the price is for the FSF
153and how much is for the redistributor.
154
155Austin Code Works, a redistributor of free software, is supporting free
156software development by giving the FSF 20% of the selling price for the GNU
157software packages they produce and sell.  The producers of the SNOW 2.1 CD
158added the words "Includes $5 donation to the FSF" to the front of their CD.
159Walnut Creek CDROM and Info Magic, two more free software redistributors, are
160also giving us a percentage of their selling price.  CQ Publishing made a
161large donation from the sales of their book about GAWK in Japanese.
162
163In the long run, the success of free software depends on how much new free
164software people develop.  Free software distribution offers an opportunity to
165raise funds for such development in an ethical way.  These redistributors
166have made use of the opportunity.  Many others let it go to waste.
167
168You can help promote free software development by convincing for-a-fee
169redistributors to contribute--either by doing development themselves, or by
170donating to development organizations (the FSF and others).
171
172The way to convince distributors to contribute is to demand and expect this
173of them.  This means choosing among distributors partly by how much they give
174to free software development.  Then you can show distributors they must
175compete to be the one who gives the most.
176
177To make this work, you must insist on numbers that you can compare, such as,
178"We will give ten dollars to the Foobar project for each disk sold." A vague
179commitment, such as "A portion of the profits is donated," doesn't give you a
180basis for comparison.  Even a precise fraction "of the profits from this
181disk" is not very meaningful, since creative accounting and unrelated
182business decisions can greatly alter what fraction of the sales price counts
183as profit.
184
185Also, press developers for firm information about what kind of development
186they do or support.  Some kinds make much more long-term difference than
187others.  For example, maintaining a separate version of a GNU program
188contributes very little; maintaining a program on behalf of the GNU Project
189contributes much.  Easy new ports contribute little, since someone else would
190surely do them; difficult ports such as adding a new CPU to the GNU compiler
191contribute more; major new features and programs contribute the most.
192
193By establishing the idea that supporting further development is "the proper
194thing to do" when distributing free software for a fee, we can assure a
195steady flow of resources for making more free software.
196
197
198
199Help from Free Software Companies
200*********************************
201
202When choosing a free software business, ask those you are considering how
203much they do to assist free software development, e.g., by contributing money
204to free software development or by writing free software improvements
205themselves for general use.  By basing your decision partially on this
206factor, you can help encourage those who profit from free software to
207contribute to its growth.
208
209These free software support companies regularly donate a part of their income
210to the Free Software Foundation to support the development of new GNU
211programs.  Listing them here is our way of thanking them.  Wingnut has made a
212pledge to donate 10% of their income to the FSF, and has also purchased
213several Deluxe Distribution packages in Japan.  (Wingnut is SRA's special GNU
214support group).  Also see *Note Cygnus Matches Donations!::.
215
216        Wingnut Project
217        Software Research Associates, Inc.
218        1-1-1 Hirakawa-cho, Chiyoda-ku
219        Tokyo 102, Japan
220
221        Phone:  (+81-3)3234-2611
222        Fax:    (+81-3)3942-5174
223        E-mail: `info-wingnut@sra.co.jp'
224
225
226
227GNU Documentation
228*****************
229
230GNU is dedicated to having quality, easy-to-use online and printed
231documentation.  GNU manuals are intended to explain underlying concepts,
232describe how to use all the features of each program, and give examples of
233command use.  GNU manuals are distributed as Texinfo source files, which
234yield both typeset hardcopy via the TeX document formatting system, and online
235hypertext display via the menu-driven Info system.  Source for these manuals
236comes with our software; here we list the manuals that we publish as printed
237books as well; see the *note Free Software Foundation Order Form::..
238
239Most GNU manuals are bound as soft cover books with "lay-flat" bindings.
240This allows you to open them so they lie flat on a table without creasing the
241binding.  These books have an inner cloth spine and an outer cardboard cover
242that will not break or crease as an ordinary paperback will.  Currently, the
243`GDB', `Emacs', `Emacs Lisp Reference', `GAWK', `Make', `Bison', and `Texinfo'
244manuals have this binding.  The other GNU manuals also lie flat when opened,
245using a GBC or Wire-O binding.  All of our manuals are 7in by 9.25in except
246the 8.5in by 11in `Calc' manual.
247
248The edition number of the manual and version number of the program listed
249after each manual's name were current at the time this Bulletin was published.
250
251`Debugging with GDB' (Edition 4.12 for Version 4.14) tells how to use the GNU
252Debugger, run your program under debugger control, examine and alter data,
253modify a program's flow of control, and use GDB through GNU Emacs.
254
255The `Emacs Manual' (11th Edition for Version 19.29) describes editing with
256GNU Emacs.  It explains advanced features, including outline mode and regular
257expression search; how to use special modes for programming in languages like
258C++ and TeX; how to use the `tags' utility; how to compile and correct code;
259how to make your own keybindings; and other elementary customizations.
260
261`Programming in Emacs Lisp, An Introduction' (Edition 1.03 for Version 19.29)
262is an elementary introduction to programming in Emacs Lisp.  It is written
263for people who are not necessarily interested in programming, but who do want
264to customize or extend their computing environment.   It tells how to write
265programs that find files; switchbuffers; use searches, conditionals, loops,
266and recursion; how to write Emacs initialization files; and how to run the
267Emacs Lisp debuggers.  If you read the text in GNU Emacs under Info mode, you
268can run the sample programs directly.
269
270The `GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual' (Edition 2.4 for Version 19.29) covers
271this programming language in depth, including data types, control structures,
272functions, macros, syntax tables, searching/matching, modes, windows,
273keymaps, byte compilation, and the operating system interface.
274
275The `GAWK Manual' (Edition 0.16 for Version 2.16) tells how to use the GNU
276implementation of `awk'.  It is written for those who have never used `awk'
277and describes the features of this powerful string and record manipulation
278language.
279
280The `Make Manual' (Edition 0.46 for Version 3.72) describes GNU `make', a
281program used to rebuild parts of other programs.  The manual tells how to
282write "makefiles", which specify how a program is to be compiled and how its
283files depend on each other.  Included are an introductory chapter for novice
284users and a section about automatically generated dependencies.
285
286The `Flex Manual' (Edition 1.03 for Version 2.3.7) teaches you to write a
287lexical scanner definition for the `flex' program to create a C++ or C-coded
288scanner that recognizes the patterns defined.  You need no prior knowledge of
289scanners.
290
291The `Bison Manual' (December 1993 Edition for Version 1.23) teaches you how
292to write context-free grammars for the Bison program that convert into
293C-coded parsers.  You need no prior knowledge of parser generators.
294
295`Using and Porting GNU CC' (September 1994 Edition for Version 2.6) tells how
296to run, install, and port the GNU C Compiler to new systems.  It lists new
297features and incompatibilities of GCC, but people not familiar with C will
298still need a good reference on the C programming language.  It also covers
299G++.
300
301The `Texinfo Manual' (Edition 2.20 for Version 3) explains the markup
302language used to generate both the online Info documentation and typeset
303hardcopies.  It tells you how to make tables, lists, chapters, nodes,
304indexes, cross references, how to use Texinfo mode in GNU Emacs, and how to
305catch mistakes.  This second edition describes over 50 new commands.
306
307The `Termcap Manual' (2nd Edition for Version 1.2), often described as "twice
308as much as you ever wanted to know about termcap," details the format of the
309termcap database, the definitions of terminal capabilities, and the process
310of interrogating a terminal description.  This manual is primarily for
311programmers.
312
313The `C Library Reference Manual' (Edition 0.06 for Version 1.09) describes
314most of the facilities of the GNU C library, including both what Unix calls
315"library functions" and "system calls."  We are doing limited copier runs of
316this manual until it becomes more stable.  Please send corrections and
317improvements to `bug-glibc-manual@prep.ai.mit.edu'.
318
319The `Emacs Calc Manual' (Edition 2.02 for Version 2.02) is both a tutorial
320and a reference manual.  It tells how to do ordinary arithmetic, how to use
321Calc for algebra, calculus, and other forms of mathematics, and how to extend
322Calc.
323
324
325
326GNU Software - (NOT COMPLETELY UP TO DATE)
327************
328
329All our software is available via FTP; see *Note How to Get GNU Software::.
330In addition, we offer software on various media and printed documentation:
331
332   * *Note CD-ROMs::.
333
334   * *Note Tapes::.
335
336   * *Note MS-DOS Diskettes::.
337
338   * *Note Documentation::, which includes manuals and reference cards.
339
340We welcome all bug reports sent to the appropriate electronic mailing list
341(*note Free Software Support::.).
342
343In the articles describing the contents of each medium, the version number
344listed after each program name was current when we published this Bulletin.
345When you order a distribution tape, diskette or newer CD-ROM, some of the
346programs may be newer, and therefore the version number higher.
347
348Key to cross reference:
349
350
351    BinCD
352          Binaries CD-ROM
353
354    DjgppD
355          Djgpp Diskettes
356
357    DosCD
358          MS-DOS CD-ROM
359
360    EmcsD
361          Emacs Diskettes
362
363    LspEmcT
364          Lisps/Emacs Tape
365
366    LangT
367          Languages Tape
368
369    LiteT
370          4.4BSD-Lite Tape
371
372    SchmT
373          Scheme Tape
374
375    SrcCD
376          Source CD-ROM
377
378    UtilD
379          Selected Utilities Diskettes
380
381    UtilT
382          Utilities Tape
383
384    VMSCompT
385          VMS Compiler Tape
386
387    VMSEmcsT
388          VMS Emacs Tape
389
390    WdwsD
391          Windows Diskette
392
393    X11OptT
394          X11 Optional Tape
395
396    X11ReqT
397          X11 Required Tape
398
399
400
401Configuring GNU Software:
402
403We are using a uniform scheme for configuring GNU software packages in order
404to compile them.  It uses the `Autoconf' program (see item below).  The goal
405is to have all GNU software support the same alternatives for naming machine
406and system types.   When the GNU system is complete it will be possible to
407configure and build the entire system at once, eliminating the need to
408separately configure each individual package.   The configuration scheme lets
409you specify both the host and target system to build cross-compilation tools.
410
411
412
413GNU software currently available:
414
415(For new features and coming programs, see *Note Forthcoming GNUs::.)
416
417   * `acm'         (SrcCD, UtilT)
418
419     `acm' is a LAN-oriented, multiplayer aerial combat simulation that runs
420     under the X Window System.  Players engage in air to air combat against
421     one another using heat seeking missiles and cannons.  We are working on
422     more accurate simulation of real airplane flight characteristics.
423
424   * Autoconf         (SrcCD, UtilT)
425
426     Autoconf produces shell scripts which automatically configure source code
427     packages.  These scripts adapt the packages to many kinds of Unix-like
428     systems without manual user intervention.  Autoconf creates a script for
429     a package from a template file which lists the operating system features
430     which the package can use, in the form of `m4' macro calls.  Autoconf
431     requires GNU `m4' to operate, but the resulting configure scripts it
432     generates do not.
433
434     Most GNU programs now use Autoconf-generated configure scripts.
435
436   * BASH         (SrcCD, UtilT)
437
438     The GNU shell, BASH (Bourne Again SHell), is compatible with the Unix
439     `sh' and offers many extensions found in `csh' and `ksh'.  BASH has job
440     control, `csh'-style command history, and command-line editing (with
441     Emacs and `vi' modes built-in, and the ability to rebind keys) via the
442     readline library.  BASH conforms to the POSIX 1003.2 shell specification.
443
444   * `bc'         (DjgppD, DosCD, SrcCD, UtilT)
445
446     `bc' is an interactive algebraic language with arbitrary precision
447     numbers.  GNU `bc' follows the POSIX.2-1992 standard, with several
448     extensions including multi-character variable names, an `else'
449     statement, and full Boolean expressions.  The RPN calculator `dc' is now
450     distributed as part of the same package, but GNU `bc' is not implemented
451     as a `dc' preprocessor.
452
453   * BFD         (BinCD, DjggpD, DosCD, LangT, SrcCD)
454
455     The Binary File Descriptor library allows a program which operates on
456     object files (e.g., `ld' or GDB) to support many different formats in a
457     clean way.  BFD provides a portable interface, so that only BFD needs to
458     know the details of a particular format.  One result is that all
459     programs using BFD will support formats such as a.out, COFF, and ELF.
460     BFD comes with source for Texinfo documentation (not yet published on
461     paper).   Presently BFD is not distributed separately; it is included
462     with packages that use it.
463
464   * Binutils         (BinCD, DjgppD, DosCD, LangT, SrcCD)
465
466     Binutils includes the programs: `ar', `c++filt', `demangle', `gas',
467     `gprof', `ld', `nlmconv', `nm', `objcopy', `objdump', `ranlib', `size',
468     `strings', and `strip'.
469
470     Binutils Version 2 uses the BFD library.  The GNU linker `ld' emits
471     source-line numbered error messages for multiply-defined symbols and
472     undefined references.  It interprets a superset of the AT&T Linker
473     Command Language, which gives general control over where segments are
474     placed in memory.  `nlmconv' converts object files into Novell NetWare
475     Loadable Modules.  `objdump' can disassemble code for a29k, ALPHA,
476     H8/300, H8/500, HP-PA, i386, i960, m68k, m88k, MIPS, SH, SPARC, & Z8000
477     processors, and can display other data (e.g., symbols & relocations)
478     from any file format understood by BFD.
479
480   * Bison         (BinCD, DjgppD, DosCD, LangT, SrcCD, VMSCompT)
481
482     Bison is an upwardly compatible replacement for the parser generator
483     `yacc'.  Texinfo source for the `Bison Manual' and reference card are
484     included.  *Note Documentation::.
485
486     We recently decided to change the policy for using the parsers that
487     Bison generates.  It is now permitted to use Bison-generated parsers in
488     non-free programs.  *Note GNUs Flashes::.
489
490   * GNU C Library         (BinCD, LangT, SrcCD)
491
492     The GNU C library supports ANSI C-1989, POSIX 1003.1-1990 and most of the
493     functions in POSIX 1003.2-1992.  It is upwardly compatible with 4.4BSD
494     and includes many System V functions, plus GNU extensions.
495
496     The C Library will perform many functions of the Unix system calls in
497     the Hurd.  Mike Haertel has written a fast `malloc' which wastes less
498     memory than the old GNU version.  The GNU regular-expression functions
499     (`regex' and `rx') now nearly conform to the POSIX 1003.2 standard.
500
501     GNU `stdio' lets you define new kinds of streams, just by writing a few
502     C functions.  The `fmemopen' function uses this to open a stream on a
503     string, which can grow as necessary.  You can define your own `printf'
504     formats to use a C function you have written.  For example, you can
505     safely use format strings from user input to implement a `printf'-like
506     function for another programming language.  Extended `getopt' functions
507     are already used to parse options, including long options, in many GNU
508     utilities.
509
510     The C Library runs on Sun-3 (SunOS 4.1), Sun-4 (SunOS 4.1 or Solaris 2),
511     HP 9000/300 (4.3BSD), SONY News 800 (NewsOS 3 or 4), MIPS DECstation
512     (Ultrix 4), DEC Alpha (OSF/1), i386/i486 (System V, SVR4, BSD, SCO 3.2 &
513     SCO ODT 2.0), Sequent Symmetry i386 (Dynix 3) & SGI (Irix 4).  Texinfo
514     source for the `GNU C Library Reference Manual' is included (*note
515     Documentation::.); the manual is now being updated.
516
517   * GNU C++ Library         (BinCD, DjgppD, DosCD, LangT, SrcCD)
518
519     The GNU C++ library (libg++) contains an extensive collection of C++
520     `forest' classes, an IOStream library for input/output routines, and
521     support tools for use with G++.  Supported classes include: Obstacks,
522     multiple-precision Integers and Rationals, Complex numbers, arbitrary
523     length Strings, BitSets and BitStrings.   Version 2.6.2 includes the
524     initial release of the libstdc++ library.  This implements library
525     facilities defined by the forthcoming ANSI/ISO C++ standard, including
526     the Standard Template Library.
527
528   * Calc         (LspEmcT, SrcCD)
529
530     Calc (written by Dave Gillespie in Emacs Lisp) is an extensible, advanced
531     desk calculator & mathematical tool that runs as part of GNU Emacs.  You
532     can use Calc just as a simple four-function calculator, but it has many
533     more features including: choice of algebraic or RPN (stack-based) entry;
534     logarithmic, trigonometric & financial functions; arbitrary precision;
535     complex numbers; vectors; matrices; dates; times; infinities; sets;
536     algebraic simplification; differentiation & integration.  It outputs to
537     `gnuplot' & comes with source for a reference card & a Manual.  *Note
538     Documentation::.
539
540   * GNU Chess         (SrcCD, UtilT, WdwsD)
541
542     GNU Chess lets the computer play a full game of chess with you.  It runs
543     on most platforms & has dumb terminal, "curses" & X terminal interfaces.
544     The X terminal interface is based on the `xboard' program.
545     m{No Value For "ergegrafkludge"} GNU Chess implements many specialized
546     features including the null move heuristic, a hash table with aging, the
547     history heuristic (another form of the earlier killer heuristic),
548     caching of static evaluations, & a database which lets it play the first
549     several moves of the game quickly.   Recent improvements include better
550     heuristics, faster evaluation, thinking on opponent's time, a perfect
551     King and Pawn vs King endgame routine, Swedish & German language
552     support, support for more book formats, a rudimentary Bobby Fischer
553     clock, & bug fixes.   It is primarily supported by Stuart Cracraft, Chua
554     Kong Sian, & Tim Mann on behalf of the FSF.
555
556   * CLISP         (LspEmcT, SrcCD)
557
558     CLISP is a Common Lisp implementation by Bruno Haible and Michael Stoll.
559     It mostly supports the Lisp described by `Common LISP: The Language (2nd
560     edition)' and the ANSI Common Lisp standard.  CLISP includes an
561     interpreter, a byte-compiler, a large subset of CLOS, a foreign language
562     interface and, for some machines, a screen editor.  The user interface
563     language (English, German, French) is chooseable at run time.  Major
564     packages that run in CLISP include CLX & Garnet.  CLISP needs only 2 MB
565     of memory & runs on many microcomputers (including MS-DOS systems, OS/2,
566     the Atari ST, Amiga 500-4000, Acorn RISC PC) & Unix-like systems
567     (GNU/Linux, Sun4, SVR4, SGI, HP-UX, DEC Alpha, NeXTstep & others).
568
569   * GNU Common Lisp         (LspEmcT, SrcCD)
570
571     GNU Common Lisp (GCL) has a compiler and interpreter for Common Lisp.  It
572     used to be known as Kyoto Common Lisp.  It is very portable and extremely
573     efficient on a wide class of applications.  It compares favorably in
574     performance with commercial Lisps on several large theorem-prover and
575     symbolic algebra systems.  It supports the CLtL1 specification but is
576     moving towards the proposed ANSI definition.   GCL compiles to C and
577     then uses the native optimizing C compilers (e.g., GCC).  A function
578     with a fixed number of args and one value turns into a C function of the
579     same number of args, returning one value, so GCL is maximally efficient
580     on such calls.  It has a conservative garbage collector which allows
581     great freedom for the C compiler to put Lisp values in arbitrary
582     registers.  It has a source level Lisp debugger for interpreted code,
583     with display of source code in an Emacs window.  Ita profiling tools
584     (based on the C profiling tools) count function calls and the time spent
585     in each function.  CLX works with GCL.
586
587     There is now a builtin interface with the TK widget system.  It runs in
588     a separate process so that users may monitor progress on lisp
589     computations, or interact with running computations via a windowing
590     interface.
591
592     There is also an Xlib interface via C (xgcl-2).  PCL runs with GCL (see
593     PCL item later in this article).  *Note Forthcoming GNUs::, for plans for
594     about GCL, or for recent developments.   GCL version 2.0 is released
595     under the GNU Library General Public License.
596
597   * `cpio'         (DjgppD, DosCD, SrcCD, UtilD, UtilT)
598
599     `cpio' is an alternative archive program with all the features of SVR4
600     `cpio', including support for the final POSIX 1003.1 `ustar' standard.
601     `mt', a program to position magnetic tapes, is included with `cpio'.
602
603   * CVS         (SrcCD, UtilT)
604
605     CVS, the Concurrent Version System, manages software revision and release
606     control in a multi-developer, multi-directory, multi-group environment.
607     It works best in conjunction with RCS versions 4 and above, but will
608     parse older RCS formats with the loss of CVS's fancier features.  See
609     Berliner, Brian, "CVS-II: Parallelizing Software Development,"
610     `Proceedings of the Winter 1990 USENIX Association Conference'.  To find
611     out how to get a copy of this report, contact `office@usenix.org'.
612
613   * DejaGnu         (LangT, SrcCD)
614
615     DejaGnu is a framework for testing other programs that provides a single
616     front end for all tests.  The framework's flexibility and consistency
617     makes it easy to write tests for any program.  DejaGnu comes with
618     `expect', which runs scripts to conduct dialogs with programs.
619
620   * Diffutils         (DjgppD, DosCD, SrcCD, UtilD, UtilT)
621
622     GNU `diff' compares files showing line-by-line changes in several
623     flexible formats.  It is much faster than traditional Unix versions.  The
624     Diffutils package contains `diff', `diff3', `sdiff', and `cmp'.
625
626     Recent Diffutils improvements include more consistent handling of
627     character sets, and a new `diff' option to do all input/output in
628     binary; this is useful on some non-Posix hosts.
629
630     Plans for the Diffutils package include support for internationalization
631     (e.g., error messages in Chinese), and for some non-Unix PC environments.
632
633   * DJGPP         (BinCD, DjgppD, DosCD)
634
635     DJ Delorie has ported GCC/G++ 2.6.0 (see the GCC item in this section)
636     to the i386 MS-DOS platform.  The DJGPP package also contains a 32-bit
637     80386 DOS extender with symbolic debugger; development libraries; and
638     ports of Bison, `flex', GAS, and the GNU Binutils.  Full source code is
639     provided.  It requires at least 5MB of hard disk space to install and
640     512K of RAM to use.  It supports SVGA (up to 1024x768), XMS & VDISK
641     memory allocation, `himem.sys', VCPI (e.g., QEMM, DESQview, & 386MAX),
642     and DPMI (e.g., Windows 3.x, OS/2, QEMM, & QDPMI).   Ask
643     `djgpp-request@sun.soe.clarkson.edu' to join a DJGPP users mailing list.
644
645   * `dld'         (LangT, SrcCD)
646
647     `dld' is a dynamic linker written by W. Wilson Ho.  Linking your program
648     with the `dld' library allows you to dynamically load object files into
649     the running binary.  Currently supported are VAX (Ultrix), Sun 3 (SunOS
650     3.4 & 4.0), SPARC (SunOS 4.0), Sequent Symmetry (Dynix), & Atari ST.
651
652   * `doschk'         (DjgppD, DosCD, SrcCD, UtilT)
653
654     This program is intended as a utility to help software developers ensure
655     that their source file names are distinguishable on System V platforms
656     with 14-character filenames and on MS-DOS with 8+3 character filenames.
657
658   * `ecc'         (SrcCD, UtilT)
659
660     `ecc' is a Reed-Solomon error correction checking program, which can
661     correct three byte errors in a block of 255 bytes and detect more severe
662     errors.  Contact `paulf@Stanford.EDU' for more information.
663
664   * `ed'         (SrcCD, UtilT)
665
666     Ed is the standard text editor.
667
668   * Elib         (LspEmcT, SrcCD)
669
670     Elib is a small library of Emacs Lisp functions, including routines for
671     using AVL trees and doubly-linked lists.
672
673   * GNU Emacs
674
675     In 1975, Richard Stallman developed the first Emacs, an extensible,
676     customizable real-time display editor and computing environment.  GNU
677     Emacs is his second implementation.  It offers true Lisp--smoothly
678     integrated into the editor--for writing extensions, and provides an
679     interface to the X Window System.  It also runs on MS-DOS and Windows
680     NT.  In addition to its powerful native command set, Emacs has
681     extensions which emulate the editors vi and EDT (DEC's VMS editor).
682     Emacs has many other features which make it a full computing support
683     environment.  Our long term plan is now to move it in the direction of a
684     WYSIWYG word processor and make it easy for beginners to use.  Source
685     for the `GNU Emacs Manual', `Programming in Emacs Lisp, An
686     Introduction', the `GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual', and a reference
687     card come with the software.  *Note Documentation::.
688
689   * GNU Emacs 18         (EmcsD, LspEmcT, SrcCD, VMSEmcsT)
690
691     GNU Emacs 18.59 is the last release of version 18 from the FSF.  We are
692     no longer maintaining it.  It runs on many Unix systems.  In hardware
693     order: Alliant FX/80 & FX/2800, Altos 3068, Amdahl (UTS), Apollo, AT&T
694     (3Bs & 7300 PC), DG Aviion, Bull DPX/2 (2nn & 3nn) CCI 5/32 & 6/32,
695     Celerity, Convex, Digital (DECstation 3100 & 5000 (PMAXes), Mips, VAX
696     (BSD, SysV & VMS)), Motorola Delta 147 & 187, Dual, Elxsi 6400, Encore
697     (DPC, APC & XPC), Gould, HP (9000 series 200, 300, 700 & 800, but not
698     500), HLH Orion (original & 1/05), IBM (RS/6000 (AIX), RT/PC (4.2 & AIX)
699     & PS/2 (AIX (386 only))), ISI (Optimum V, 80386), Intel 860 & 80386
700     (BSD, Esix, SVR3, SVR4, SCO, ISC, IX, AIX & others), Iris (2500, 2500
701     Turbo & 4D), Masscomp, MIPS, National Semiconductor 32000, NeXT (Mach),
702     NCR Tower 32 (SVR2 & SVR3), Nixdorf Targon 31, Nu (TI & LMI), pfa50,
703     Plexus, Prime EXL, Pyramid (original & MIPS), Sequent (Balance &
704     Symmetry), SONY News (m68k & MIPS), Stride (system release 2), all Suns
705     including 386i (all SunOS & some Solaris vers.), Tadpole, Tahoe, Tandem
706     Integrity S2, Tektronix (16000 & 4300), Triton 88, Ustation E30 (SS5E),
707     Whitechapel (MG1) & Wicat.
708
709     In operating system order: AIX (RS/6000, RT/PC, 386-PS/2), BSD (vers.
710     4.1, 4.2, 4.3), DomainOS, Esix (386), HP-UX (HP 9000 series 200, 300,
711     700, 800 but not 500), ISC (386), IX (386), Mach, Microport, NewsOS
712     (Sony m68k & MIPS) SCO (386), SVR0 (Vax, AT&T 3Bs), SVR2, SVR3, SVR4,
713     Solaris 2.0, SunOS, UTS (Amdahl), Ultrix (vers. 3.0, 4,1), Uniplus 5.2
714     (Dual machines), VMS (vers. 4.0, 4.2, 4.4, 5.5) & Xenix (386).
715
716   * GNU Emacs 19         (DosCD, EmacsD, LspEmcT, SrcCD)
717
718     Emacs 19 works with character-only terminals as well as with the X
719     Window System (with or without the X toolkit); New features in Emacs 19
720     include: multiple X windows ("frames" to Emacs), with either a separate
721     X window for the minibuffer or a minibuffer attached to each X window;
722     property lists associated with regions of text in a buffer; multiple
723     fonts and colors defined by those properties; simplified and improved
724     processing of function keys, mouse clicks and mouse movement; X
725     selection processing, including clipboard selections; hooks to be run if
726     point or mouse moves outside a certain range; menu bars and popup menus
727     defined by keymaps; scrollbars; before and after change hooks;
728     source-level debugging of Emacs Lisp programs; European character sets
729     support; floating point numbers; improved buffer allocation, including
730     returning storage to the system when a buffer is killed; interfacing
731     with the X resource manager; GNU configuration scheme support; good RCS
732     support; & many updated libraries.
733
734     Recent features include support for Motif widgets as well as the Athena
735     widgets, displaying multiple views of an outline at the same time,
736     version control support for CVS and for multiple branches, ability to
737     open frames on more than one X display from a single Emacs job,
738     operation on MS-DOS and MS Windows, commands to edit text properties,
739     text properties for formatting text, the ability to save text properties
740     in files, & GNU-standard long named command line options.
741
742     Emacs 19.29 is believed to work on, in hardware order: Acorn Risc
743     machine (RISCiX); Alliant FX/2800 (BSD); Alpha (OSF/1); Apollo
744     (DomainOS); Bull DPX/2 2nn & 3nn (SysV.3) & sps7 (SysV.2); Clipper;
745     Convex (BSD); Cubix QBx (SysV); Data General Aviion (DGUX); DEC MIPS
746     (Ultrix 4.2 & OSF/1, not VMS); Elxsi 6400 (SysV); Gould Power Node & NP1
747     (4.2 & 4.3BSD); Harris Night Hawk 1200 and 3000, 4000 and 5000 (cxux);
748     Honeywell XPS100 (SysV); HP 9000 series 200, 300, 700, 800 (but not 500)
749     (4.3BSD or HP-UX 7, 8, 9); Intel i386, i486 and Pentium (386BSD, AIX,
750     BSDI/386, FreeBSD, Esix, GNU/Linux, ISC, MS-DOS (*note MS-DOS
751     Diskettes::. & *Note MS-DOS CD-ROM::),  NetBSD, SCO3.2v4, SysV, Xenix,
752     WindowsNT); IBM RS6000 (AIX 3.2); IBM RT/PC (AIX or BSD); Motorola Delta
753     147 & 187 (SysV.3, SysV.4, & m88kbcs); National Semiconductor 32K
754     (Genix); NeXT (BSD or Mach 2 w/ NeXTStep 3.0); Paragon (OSF/1); Prime
755     EXL (SysV); Pyramid (BSD); Sequent Symmetry (BSD, ptx); Siemens RM400
756     and RM600 (SysV); SGI Iris 4D (Irix 4.x & 5.x); Sony News/RISC (NewsOS);
757     Stardent i860 (SysV); Sun 3 & 4, SPARC 1, 1+, 2, 10 & Classic (SunOS
758     4.0, 4.1, Solaris 2.0-2.3); Tadpole 68k (SysV); Tektronix XD88 (SysV.3)
759     & 4300 (BSD); & Titan P2 & P3 (SysV).
760
761     In operating system order: AIX (i386, RS6000, RT/PC); 4.1, 4.2, 4.3BSD
762     (i386, i860, Convex, Gould Power Node & NP1, HP9000 series 300, NeXT,
763     Pyramid, Symmetry, Tektronix 4300, RT/PC); DG/UX (Aviion);
764     DomainOS(Apollo); Esix (i386); FreeBSD (i386); Genix (ns32k); GNU/Linux
765     (i386); HP-UX 7, 8, 9 (HP 9000 series 200, 300, 700, 800, but not 500);
766     Irix 4 & 5 (Iris 4D); ISC (i386); Mach 2 & 3 (i386, NeXT); MS-DOS (*note
767     MS-DOS Diskettes::. & *Note MS-DOS CD-ROM::); NetBSD (i386, HP9000
768     series 300); OSF/1 (Alpha, Paragon); RISCiX (Acorn); SCO 3.2v4 (i386);
769     SysV (Cubix QBx, Elxsi 6400, Honeywell XPS100, Intel i386, Prime EXL,
770     Siemens RM400 and RM600, Stardent, Tadpole 68k, Titan P2 & P3); SysV.2
771     (Bull sps7); SysV.3 (Bull DPX/2 2nn & 3nn, Motorola Delta 147 & 187,
772     Tektronix XD88); SysV.4 (Motorola Delta 147 & 187, Stardent i860);
773     Solaris 2 (SPARC 1, 1+, 2, 10, Classic); SunOS 4.0, 4.1 (Sun 3 & 4,
774     SPARC 1, 1+, 2, 10 & Classic); Ultrix 4.2 (DEC MIPS); Windows NT; &
775     Xenix (i386).
776
777     Other configurations supported by Emacs 18 should work with few changes
778     in Emacs 19; as users tell us more about their experiences with different
779     systems, we will augment the list.  Also see *Note Forthcoming GNUs::.
780
781   * `es'         (SrcCD, UtilT)
782
783     `es' is an extensible shell based on `rc' with first class functions,
784     lexical scope, exceptions, and rich return values (i.e., functions can
785     return values other than just numbers).  `es''s extensibility comes from
786     the ability to modify and extend the shell's builtin services, such as
787     path searching and redirection.  Like `rc', it is great for both
788     interactive use and for scripting, particularly since its quoting rules
789     are much less baroque than the C or Bourne shells.
790
791   * `f2c'         (LangT, SrcCD)
792
793     `f2c' converts Fortran-77 source files into C or C++, which can be
794     compiled with GCC.  You can get bug fixes by FTP from site
795     `netlib.att.com' or by email from `netlib@research.att.com'.  The fixes
796     are summarized in the file `/netlib/f2c/changes.Z'.  *Note Forthcoming
797     GNUs::, for information about GNU Fortran.
798
799   * Fileutils         (DjgppD, DosCD, SrcCD, UtilD, UtilT)
800
801     The fileutils work on files: `chgrp', `chmod', `chown', `cp', `dd', `df',
802     `dir', `du', `install', `ln', `ls', `mkdir', `mkfifo', `mknod', `mv',
803     `mvdir', `rm', `rmdir', `sync', `touch', & `vdir'.  Only some of these
804     are on the *Note Selected Utilities Diskettes::.
805
806   * Findutils         (DjgppD, DosCD, SrcCD, UtilD, UtilT)
807
808     `find' is frequently used both interactively and in shell scripts to
809     find files which match certain criteria and perform arbitrary operations
810     on them.  Also included are `xargs', which applies a command to a list
811     of files, and `locate', which scans a database for file names that match
812     a pattern.
813
814   * Finger         (SrcCD, UtilT)
815
816     GNU Finger has more features than other finger programs.  For sites with
817     many hosts, a single host may be designated as the finger "server" host,
818     and other hosts at that site configured as finger "clients".  The server
819     host collects information about who is logged in to the clients.  To
820     finger a user at a GNU Finger site, a query to any its client hosts gets
821     useful information.  GNU Finger supports many customization features,
822     including user output filters, and site programmable output for special
823     target names.
824
825   * `flex'         (DjgppD, DosCD, LangT, SrcCD, UtilD)
826
827     `flex' is a replacement for the `lex' scanner generator.  `flex' was
828     written by Vern Paxson of the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory and generates
829     far more efficient scanners than `lex' does.  Source for the `Flex
830     Manual' and reference card are included.  *Note Documentation::.
831
832   * FlexFAX         (UtilT)
833
834     FlexFAX is now called HylaFAX.  For more information, *Note GNU
835     Software::.
836
837   * Fontutils         (SrcCD, UtilT)
838
839     The fontutils create fonts for use with Ghostscript or TeX, starting
840     with a scanned type image and converting the bitmaps to outlines.  They
841     also contain general conversion programs and other utilities.
842
843     Fontutils programs include: `bpltobzr', `bzrto', `charspace',
844     `fontconvert', `gsrenderfont', `imageto', `imgrotate', `limn', and
845     `xbfe'.
846
847   * GAWK         (DjgppD, DosCD, LangT, SrcCD)
848
849     GAWK is upwardly compatible with the latest POSIX specification of
850     `awk'.  It also provides several useful extensions not found in other
851     `awk' implementations.  Texinfo source for the `GAWK Manual' comes with
852     the software.  *Note Documentation::.
853
854   * GCC         (BinCD, DjgppD, DosCD, LangT, SrcCD, VMSCompT)
855
856     Version 2 of the GNU C Compiler supports multiple languages; the source
857     file name suffix or a compiler option selects the language.  The GNU C
858     Compiler distribution includes support for C, C++ and Objective-C.
859     Support for Objective-C was donated by NeXT.  The runtime support needed
860     to run Objective-C programs is now distributed with GCC (this does not
861     include any Objective-C classes aside from `object').  As much as
862     possible, G++ is kept compatible with the evolving draft ANSI standard,
863     but not with `cfront' (AT&T's compiler), which has been diverging from
864     ANSI.
865
866     The GNU C Compiler is a fairly portable optimizing compiler which
867     performs automatic register allocation, common sub-expression
868     elimination, invariant code motion from loops, induction variable
869     optimizations, constant propagation and copy propagation, delayed
870     popping of function call arguments, tail recursion elimination,
871     integration of inline functions and frame pointer elimination,
872     instruction scheduling, loop unrolling, filling of delay slots, leaf
873     function optimization, optimized multiplication by constants, a certain
874     amount of common subexpression elimination (CSE) between basic blocks
875     (though not all of the supported machine descriptions provide for
876     scheduling or delay slots), a feature for assigning attributes to
877     instructions, and many local optimizations that are automatically
878     deduced from the machine description.  Position-independent code is
879     supported on the 68k, i386, i486, Pentium, Hitachi Slt, Hitachi H8/300,
880     Clipper, 88k, SPARC & SPARClite.
881
882     GCC can open-code most arithmetic on 64-bit values (type `long long
883     int').  It supports extended floating point (type `long double') on the
884     68k; other machines will follow.
885
886     GCC supports full ANSI C, traditional C & GNU C extensions (including:
887     nested functions support, nonlocal gotos & taking the address of a
888     label).
889
890     GCC can generate a.out, COFF, ELF & OSF-Rose files when used with a
891     suitable assembler.  It can produce debugging information in these
892     formats: BSD stabs, COFF, ECOFF, ECOFF with stabs & DWARF.
893
894     GCC generates code for many CPUs, including: a29k, Alpha, ARM, AT&T
895     DSP1610, Convex cN, Clipper, Elxsi, Fujitsu Gmicro, H8/300, HP-PA (1.0
896     and 1.1) i370, i386, i486, Pentium, i860, i960, m68k, m68020, m68030,
897     m68040, m88k, MIL-STD-1750a, MIPS, ns32k, PDP-11, Pyramid, ROMP, RS6000,
898     SH, SPARC, SPARClite, VAX, & we32k.
899
900     Operating systems supported include: AIX, ACIS, AOS, BSD, Clix, Ctix,
901     DG/UX, Dynix, Genix, GNU, HP-UX, ISC, Irix, GNU/Linux, Luna, LynxOS,
902     Mach, Minix, NetBSD, NewsOS, OSF, OSF-Rose, RISCOS, SCO, Solaris 2,
903     SunOS 4, SysV, Ultrix, Unos, VMS & Windows/NT.
904
905     Using the configuration scheme for GCC, building a cross-compiler is as
906     easy as building a native compiler.
907
908     We no longer maintain version 1 of GCC, G++, or libg++.
909
910     Texinfo source for the `Using and Porting GNU CC' manual, is included
911     with GCC.   *Note Forthcoming GNUs::, for plans for later releases of
912     GCC.
913
914   * GDB         (BinCD, DjgppD, DosCD, LangT, SrcCD)
915
916     GDB, the GNU DeBugger, is a source-level debugger which supports C, C++,
917     and Fortran.
918
919     GDB can debug both C and C++ programs, and will work with executables
920     produced by many different compilers; however, C++ debugging will have
921     some limitations if you do not use GCC.
922
923     GDB has a command line user interface; GNU Emacs comes with a GDB mode,
924     and `xxgdb' provides an X interface (but it is not distributed or
925     maintained by the FSF; FTP it from `ftp.x.org' in the
926     `/contrib/utilities' directory).
927
928     Executable files and symbol tables are read via the BFD library, which
929     allows a single copy of GDB to debug programs with multiple object file
930     formats (e.g., a.out, COFF, ELF).  Other features include a rich command
931     language, remote debugging over serial lines or TCP/IP, and watchpoints
932     (breakpoints triggered when the value of an expression changes).
933
934     GDB defines a standard interface for simulators, and the included
935     simulator library includes simulators for the Zilog Z8001/2, Hitachi
936     H8/300, H8/500 & Super-H.
937
938     GDB can perform cross-debugging.  To say that GDB "targets" a platform
939     means that it can perform native or cross-debugging for it.  To say that
940     GDB can "host" a given platform means that it can be built on it, but
941     cannot necessarily debug native programs.  GDB can:
942
943        * "target" & "host": Amiga 3000 (Amix), DEC Alpha (OSF/1), DECstation
944          3100 & 5000 (Ultrix), HP 9000/300 (BSD, HP-UX), HP 9000/700 (HP-UX),
945          i386 (BSD, FreeBSD, GNU/Linux, LynxOS, NetBSD, SCO), IBM RS/6000
946          (AIX, LynxOS), Motorola Delta m88k (System V, CX/UX), PC532
947          (NetBSD), Motorola m68k MVME-167 (LynxOS), NCR 3000 (SVR4), SGI
948          (Irix V3, V4, V5), SONY News (NewsOS 3.x), SPARC (SunOS 4.1,
949          Solaris, NetBSD, LynxOS) Sun-3 (SunOS 4.1), & Ultracomputer (a29k
950          running Sym1).
951
952        * "target", but not "host": AMD 29000 (COFF & a.out), Hitachi H8/300,
953          Hitachi SH, i386 (a.out, COFF, OS/9000) i960 (Nindy, VxWorks),
954          m68k/m68332 (a.out, COFF, VxWorks), MIPS (IDT ecoff, ELF), Fujitsu
955          SPARClite (a.out, COFF), & Z8000.
956
957        * "host", but not "target": IBM RT/PC (AIX), and HP/Apollo 68k (BSD).
958
959     GDB can use the symbol tables emitted by the vendor-supplied compilers of
960     most MIPS-based machines, including DEC.  (These tables are in a format
961     which almost nobody else uses.)  Source for the manual
962     `Debugging with GDB' and a reference card are included.  *Note
963     Documentation::.
964
965   * `gdbm'         (LangT, SrcCD, UtilD)
966
967     `gdbm' is the GNU replacement for the traditional `dbm' and `ndbm'
968     libraries.  It implements a database using quick lookup by hashing.
969     `gdbm' does not ordinarily make sparse files (unlike its Unix and BSD
970     counterparts).
971
972   * Ghostscript         (DjgppD, DosCD, SrcCD, UtilT)
973
974     GNU Ghostscript is the GNU release of Ghostscript, which is an
975     interpreter for the Postscript graphics language (*note Forthcoming
976     GNUs::., for news on future plans).
977
978     The current version of GNU Ghostscript is 2.6.2.  Features include the
979     ability to use the fonts provided by the platform on which Ghostscript
980     runs (X Window System and Microsoft Windows), resulting in much
981     better-looking screen displays; improved text file printing (like
982     `enscript'); a utility to extract the text from a Postscript language
983     document; a much more reliable (and faster) Microsoft Windows
984     implementation; support for Microsoft C/C++ 7.0; drivers for many new
985     printers, including the SPARCprinter, and for TIFF/F (fax) file format;
986     many more Postscript Level 2 facilities, including most of the color
987     space facilities (but not patterns), and the ability to switch between
988     Level 1 and Level 2 dynamically.  Version 2.6.2 adds a LaserJet 4 driver
989     and several important bug fixes to version 2.6.1.
990
991     Ghostscript executes commands in the Postscript language by writing
992     directly to a printer, drawing on an X window, or writing to a file for
993     later printing (or to a bitmap file that you can manipulate with other
994     graphics programs).
995
996     Ghostscript includes a C-callable graphics library (for client programs
997     that do not want to deal with the Postscript language).  It also supports
998     IBM PCs and compatibles with EGA, VGA, or SuperVGA graphics (but please
999     do *not* ask the FSF staff any questions about this; we do not use PCs).
1000
1001   * Ghostview         (SrcCD, UtilT)
1002
1003     Tim Theisen, `ghostview@cs.wisc.edu', has created Ghostview, a previewer
1004     for multi-page files with an X11 user interface.  Ghostview and
1005     Ghostscript function as two cooperating programs; Ghostview creates a
1006     viewing window and Ghostscript draws in it.
1007
1008   * `gmp'         (LangT, SrcCD)
1009
1010     GNU mp is a library for arbitrary precision arithmetic on signed integers
1011     and rational numbers.  It has a rich set of functions with a regular
1012     interface.
1013
1014   * GNATS         (SrcCD, UtilT)
1015
1016     GNATS (GNats: A Tracking System, not to be confused with GNAT, The GNU
1017     Ada Translator) is a bug-tracking system.  It is based upon the paradigm
1018     of a central site or organization which receives problem reports and
1019     negotiates their resolution by electronic mail.  Although it has been
1020     used primarily as a software bug-tracking system so far, it is
1021     sufficiently generalized so that it could be used for handling system
1022     administration issues, project management or any number of other
1023     applications.
1024
1025   * `gnuplot'         (SrcCD, UtilT, WdwsD)
1026
1027     `gnuplot' is an interactive program for plotting mathematical
1028     expressions and data.  It handles both curves (2 dimensions) and surfaces
1029     (3 dimensions).  Curiously, the program was neither written nor named for
1030     the GNU Project; the name is a coincidence.  Various GNU programs use
1031     `gnuplot' to produce graphical output.
1032
1033   * GnuGo         (SrcCD, UtilT)
1034
1035     GnuGo plays the game of Go (Wei-Chi); it is not yet very sophisticated.
1036
1037   * `gperf'         (LangT, SrcCD)
1038
1039     `gperf' generates perfect hash tables.  There are two implementations of
1040     `gperf', written in C and C++.  Both produce hash functions in either C
1041     or C++.
1042
1043   * GNU Graphics         (SrcCD, UtilT)
1044
1045     GNU Graphics is a system which produces x-y plots from ASCII or binary
1046     data.  It supports output in Postscript, Tektronix 4010 compatible and
1047     Unix device-independent "plot" formats as well as a previewer for the X
1048     Window System.  Features include a `spline' interpolation program;
1049     examples of shell scripts using `graph' and `plot'; and a statistics
1050     toolkit; and output in TekniCAD TDA and ln03 file formats.  Email bugs or
1051     questions to Rich Murphey, `Rich@lamprey.utmb.edu'.
1052
1053   * grep         (DjgppD, DosCD, SrcCD, UtilD, UtilT)
1054
1055     This package has GNU `grep', `egrep', and `fgrep' which find lines that
1056     match inputed patterns.  They are much faster than the traditional Unix
1057     versions.
1058
1059   * Groff         (DjgppD, DosCD, SrcCD, UtilT)
1060
1061     Groff is a document formatting system based on an implementation of
1062     device-independent troff, which also includes implementations of `eqn',
1063     `nroff', `pic', `refer', `tbl', `troff', and the `man', `ms', and `mm'
1064     macros, as well as drivers for Postscript, TeX `dvi' format, and
1065     typewriter-like devices.
1066
1067     Groff's `mm' macro package is almost compatible with the DWB `mm' macros
1068     and has several extensions.  Also included is a modified version of the
1069     Berkeley `me' macros and an enhanced version of the X11 `xditview'
1070     previewer.  Written in C++, these programs can be compiled with GNU C++
1071     Version 2.5 or later.  A driver for the LaserJet 4 series of printers is
1072     currently in test.
1073
1074     Groff users are encouraged to contribute enhancements.  Most needed are
1075     complete Texinfo documentation, a `grap' emulation (a `pic' preprocessor
1076     for typesetting graphs), a page-makeup postprocessor similar to `pm'
1077     (see `Computing Systems', Vol. 2, No. 2; ask `office@usenix.org' how to
1078     get a copy) and an ASCII output class for `pic' so that `pic' can be
1079     integrated with Texinfo.  Questions and bug reports from users who have
1080     read the documentation provided with groff can be sent to
1081     `bug-groff@prep.ai.mit.edu'.
1082
1083   * `gzip'         (DjgppD, DosCD, LangT, LspEmcT, SrcCD, UtilT)
1084
1085     Some of the contents of our tape and FTP distributions are compressed.
1086     We have software on our tapes and FTP sites to uncompress these files.
1087     Due to patent troubles with `compress', we use another compression
1088     program, `gzip'.  (Such prohibitions on software development are fought
1089     by the League for Programming Freedom, *note What Is the LPF::., for
1090     details.) `gzip' can expand LZW-compressed files but uses another,
1091     unpatented algorithm for compression which generally produces better
1092     results.  It also expands files compressed with System V's `pack'
1093     program.
1094
1095   * `hello'         (DjgppD, DosCD, SrcCD, UtilT)
1096
1097     The GNU `hello' program produces a familiar, friendly greeting.  It
1098     allows non-programmers to use a classic computer science tool which would
1099     otherwise be unavailable to them.  Because it is protected by the GNU
1100     General Public License, users are free to share and change it.
1101
1102     Like any truly useful program, `hello' contains a built-in mail reader.
1103
1104   * `hp2xx'         (SrcCD, UtilT)
1105
1106     GNU `hp2xx' reads HP-GL files, decomposes all drawing commands into
1107     elementary vectors, and converts them into a variety of vector and raster
1108     output formats.  It is also an HP-GL previewer.  Currently supported
1109     vector formats include encapsulated Postscript, Uniplex RGIP, Metafont
1110     and various special TeX-related formats, and simplified HP-GL (line
1111     drawing only) for imports.  Raster formats supported include IMG, PBM,
1112     PCX, & HP-PCL (including Deskjet & DJ5xxC support).  Previewers work
1113     under X11 (Unix), OS/2 (PM & full screen), MS-DOS (SVGA, VGA, & HGC).
1114
1115   * HylaFAX         (UtilT)
1116
1117     HylaFAX is a facsimile system for Unix systems.  It supports sending,
1118     receiving, and polled retrieval of facsimile, as well as transparent
1119     shared data use of the modem.   Information is also available on the
1120     World Wide Web at URL: `http://www.vix.com/hylafax/'.
1121
1122   * `indent'         (DjgppD, DosCD, SrcCD, UtilD, UtilT)
1123
1124     GNU `indent' is a revision of the BSD version.  By default, it formats C
1125     source according to the GNU coding standards.  The BSD default, K&R and
1126     other formats are available as options.  It is also possible to define
1127     your own format.  GNU `indent' is more robust and provides more
1128     functionality than other versions, e.g., it handles C++ comments.
1129
1130   * Ispell         (DjgppD, DosCD, SrcCD, UtilT)
1131
1132     Ispell is an interactive spell checker that suggests "near misses" as
1133     replacements for unrecognized words.  System & user-maintained
1134     dictionaries for multiple languages can be used.  Standalone & GNU Emacs
1135     interfaces are available.   Previously, the GNU Project had its own
1136     version of ispell ("Ispell 4.0"), but has dropped it for a parallel
1137     branch that has had more development ("Ispell 3.1").  (Version 3 was an
1138     earlier release from the original Ispell author, but others have since
1139     made it more sophisticated.)
1140
1141   * JACAL         *Not available from the FSF*
1142
1143     JACAL is a symbolic mathematics system for the manipulation and
1144     simplification of equations and single and multiple-valued algebraic
1145     expressions constructed of numbers, variables, radicals, differential
1146     operators, and algebraic and holonomic functions.  Vectors, matrices,
1147     and tensors of these objects are also supported.
1148
1149     JACAL was written in Scheme by Aubrey Jaffer.  It comes with SCM, an IEEE
1150     P1178 and R4RS compliant version of Scheme written in C.  SCM runs on
1151     Amiga, Atari-ST, MS-DOS, OS/2, NOS/VE, Unicos, VMS, Unix, and similar
1152     systems.  SLIB is a portable Scheme library used by JACAL.
1153     m{No Value For "ergegrafkludge"} The FSF is not distributing JACAL on
1154     any media.  To receive an IBM PC floppy disk with the source and
1155     executable files, send $99.00 to:
1156             Aubrey Jaffer
1157             84 Pleasant Street
1158             Wakefield, MA   01880-1846
1159             USA
1160
1161   * `less'         (SrcCD, UtilD, UtilT)
1162
1163     `less' is a display paginator similar to `more' and `pg' but with
1164     various features (such as the ability to scroll backwards) that most
1165     pagers lack.
1166
1167   * `m4'         (DjgppD, DosCD, SrcCD, UtilD, UtilT)
1168
1169     GNU `m4' is an implementation of the traditional Unix macro processor.
1170     It is mostly SVR4 compatible, although it has some extensions (for
1171     example, handling more than 9 positional parameters to macros).  `m4'
1172     also has built-in functions for including files, running shell commands,
1173     doing arithmetic, etc.
1174
1175   * `make'         (BinCD, DjgppD, DosCD, LangT, LspEmcT, SrcCD, UtilD,
1176     UtilT)
1177
1178     GNU `make' supports POSIX 1003.2 and has all but a few obscure features
1179     of the BSD and System V versions of `make', as well as many of our own
1180     extensions.  GNU extensions include long options, parallel compilation,
1181     flexible implicit pattern rules, conditional execution and powerful text
1182     manipulation functions.  Texinfo source for the `Make Manual' comes with
1183     the program.  *Note Documentation::.
1184
1185     GNU `make' is on several of our tapes because some system vendors supply
1186     no `make' utility at all, and some native `make' programs lack the
1187     `VPATH' feature essential for using the GNU configure system to its full
1188     extent.  The GNU `make' sources have a shell script to build `make'
1189     itself on such systems.
1190
1191     MS-DOS binaries for `make' are available with the DJGPP distribution.
1192
1193   * MandelSpawn         (SrcCD, UtilT)
1194
1195     A parallel Mandelbrot generation program for the X Window System.
1196
1197   * mtools         (SrcCD, UtilT)
1198
1199     mtools is a set of public domain programs to allow Unix systems to read,
1200     write and manipulate files on an MS-DOS file system (usually a diskette).
1201
1202   * MULE         (EmcsD, DosCD, SrcCD)
1203
1204     MULE is a MULtilingual Enhancement to GNU Emacs.  It can handle many
1205     character sets at once including Japanese, Chinese, Korean, Vietnamese,
1206     Thai, Greek, the ISO Latin-1 through Latin-8 character sets, Ukrainian,
1207     Arabic, Hebrew, Russian, and other Cyrillic alphabets.  A text buffer in
1208     MULE can contain a mixture of characters from these languages.  To input
1209     any of these characters, you can use various input methods provided by
1210     MULE itself.  In addition, if you use MULE under some terminal emulators
1211     (kterm, cxterm, or exterm), you can use its input methods.  MULE is
1212     being merged into GNU Emacs.  *Note GNU and Other Free Software in
1213     Japan::, for more information about MULE.
1214
1215   * NetHack         (SrcCD, UtilT)
1216
1217     NetHack is a display-oriented adventure game similar to Rogue.  Both
1218     ASCII and X displays are supported.
1219
1220   * NIH Class Library         (LangT, SrcCD)
1221
1222     The NIH Class Library (formerly known as "OOPS", Object-Oriented Program
1223     Support) is a portable collection of C++ classes, similar to those in
1224     Smalltalk-80, which has been developed by Keith Gorlen of the National
1225     Institutes of Health (NIH), using the C++ programming language.
1226
1227   * `nvi'         (SrcCD, UtilT)
1228
1229     `nvi' is a free implementation of the `vi'/`ex' Unix editor.  It has
1230     most of the functionality of the original `vi'/`ex', except "open" mode
1231     & the `lisp' option, which will be added.  Enhancements over `vi'/`ex'
1232     include split screens with multiple buffers, handling 8-bit data,
1233     infinite file & line lengths, tag stacks, infinite undo & extended
1234     regular expressions.  It runs under GNU/Linux, BSD, NetBSD, FreeBSD,
1235     BSDI, AIX, HP-UX, DGUX, IRIX, PSF, PTX, Solaris, SunOS, Ultrix, Unixware
1236     & should port easily to many other systems.
1237
1238   * GNU Objective-C Library         (LangT, SrcCD)
1239
1240     The GNU Objective-C Class Library (`libobjects') is a library of
1241     general-purpose, non-graphical Objective-C objects written by Andrew
1242     McCallum and other volunteers.  It includes collection classes for
1243     maintaining groups of objects and C types, streams for I/O to various
1244     destinations, coders for formatting objects and C types to streams, ports
1245     for network packet transmission, distributed objects (remote object
1246     messaging), string classes, pseudo-random number generators, and time
1247     handling facilities.  The package will also include the foundation
1248     classes for the GNUStep project; over 50 of these classes have already
1249     been implemented.  The library is known to work on i386, i486, Pentium,
1250     m68k, SPARC, MIPS, & RS6000.  Send queries and bug reports to
1251     `mccallum@gnu.ai.mit.edu'.
1252
1253   * `OBST'         (LangT, SrcCD)
1254
1255     `OBST' is a persistent object management system with bindings to C++.
1256     `OBST' supports incremental loading of methods.  Its graphical tools
1257     require the X Window System.  It features a hands-on tutorial including
1258     sample programs.  It compiles with g++ and should install easily on most
1259     Unix platforms.
1260
1261   * Octave         (LangT, SrcCD)
1262
1263     Octave is a high-level language similar to MATLAB that is primarily
1264     intended for numerical computations.  It provides a convenient command
1265     line interface for solving linear and nonlinear problems numerically.
1266     m{No Value For "ergegrafkludge"} Octave does arithmetic for real and
1267     complex scalars and matrices, solves sets of nonlinear algebraic
1268     equations, integrates systems of ordinary differential and
1269     differential-algebraic equations, and integrates functions over finite
1270     and infinite intervals.  Two- and three-dimensional plotting is
1271     available using `gnuplot'.   Send queries and bug reports to:
1272     `bug-octave@che.utexas.edu'.   Source is included for a 220+ page
1273     Texinfo manual, which is not yet published by the FSF.
1274
1275   * Oleo         (SrcCD, UtilT)
1276
1277     Oleo is a spreadsheet program (better for you than the more expensive
1278     spreadsheets).  It supports the X Window System and character-based
1279     terminals, and can output Embedded Postscript renditions of spreadsheets.
1280     Keybindings should be familiar to Emacs users and are configurable.
1281     Under X and in Postscript output, Oleo supports multiple, variable width
1282     fonts.   *Note Forthcoming GNUs::, for the plans for later releases of
1283     Oleo.
1284
1285   * `p2c'         (LangT, SrcCD)
1286
1287     `p2c' is a Pascal-to-C translator written by Dave Gillespie.  It
1288     recognizes many Pascal dialects including Turbo, HP, VAX, and ISO, and
1289     produces readable, maintainable, portable C.
1290
1291   * `patch'         (DjgppD, DosCD, SrcCD, UtilT)
1292
1293     `patch' is our version of Larry Wall's program to take `diff''s output
1294     and apply those differences to an original file to generate the modified
1295     version.
1296
1297   * PCL         (LspEmcT, SrcCD)
1298
1299     PCL is a free implementation of a large subset of CLOS, the Common Lisp
1300     Object System.  It runs under both GCL and CLISP, mentioned above.
1301
1302   * `perl'         (LangT, SrcCD)
1303
1304     Larry Wall's `perl' combines the features and capabilities of `sed',
1305     `awk', `sh' and C, as well as interfaces to the Unix system calls and
1306     many C library routines.
1307
1308   * `ptx'         (SrcCD, UtilD, UtilT)
1309
1310     GNU `ptx' is our version of the traditional permuted index generator.
1311     It handles multiple input files at once, produces TeX compatible output,
1312     & outputs readable "KWIC" (KeyWords In Context) indexes.   It does not
1313     yet handle input files that do not fit in memory all at once.
1314
1315   * `rc'         (SrcCD, UtilT)
1316
1317     `rc' is a shell that features a C-like syntax (much more so than `csh')
1318     and far cleaner quoting rules than the C or Bourne shells.  It's
1319     intended to be used interactively, but is also great for writing
1320     scripts.  It inspired the shell `es'.
1321
1322   * RCS         (SrcCD, UtilD, UtilT)
1323
1324     RCS, the Revision Control System, is used for version control &
1325     management of software projects.  When used with GNU `diff', RCS can
1326     handle binary files (executables, object files, 8-bit data, etc).  Also
1327     see the item about CVS in this section.
1328
1329   * `recode'         (SrcCD, UtilT)
1330
1331     GNU `recode' converts files between character sets and usages.  When
1332     exact transliterations are not possible, it may get rid of the offending
1333     characters or fall back on approximations.  This program recognizes or
1334     produces nearly 150 different character sets and is able to
1335     transliterate files between almost any pair.  Most RFC 1345 character
1336     sets are supported.
1337
1338   * regex         (LangT, SrcCD)
1339
1340     The GNU regular expression library supports POSIX.2, except for
1341     internationalization features.  It is included in many GNU programs which
1342     do regular expression matching and available separately.  An alternative
1343     regular expression package, `rx', comes with `sed'; it has the potential
1344     to be faster than `regex' in most cases, but still needs work.
1345
1346   * Scheme         (SchmT, SrcCD)
1347
1348     For information about Scheme, see *Note Scheme Tape::.
1349
1350   * `screen'         (SrcCD, UtilT)
1351
1352     `screen' is a terminal multiplexer that runs several separate "screens"
1353     (ttys) on a single character-based terminal.  Each virtual terminal
1354     emulates a DEC VT100 plus several ISO 6429 (ECMA 48, ANSI X3.64) and ISO
1355     2022 functions.  Arbitrary keyboard input translation is also supported.
1356     `screen' sessions can be detached and resumed later on a different
1357     terminal type.  Output in detached sessions is saved for later viewing.
1358
1359   * `sed'         (DjgppD, DosCD, SrcCD, UtilD, UtilT)
1360
1361     `sed' is a stream-oriented version of `ed'.  GNU `sed' comes with the
1362     `rx' library, a faster version of `regex' (*note Forthcoming GNUs::.).
1363
1364   * Sharutils         (SrcCD, UtilT)
1365
1366     `shar' makes so-called shell archives out of many files, preparing them
1367     for transmission by electronic mail services, while `unshar' helps
1368     unpack these shell archives after reception.  `uuencode' prepares a file
1369     for transmission over an electronic channel which ignores or otherwise
1370     mangles the high order bit of bytes, while `uudecode' does the converse
1371     transformation.
1372
1373   * Shellutils         (DjgppD, DosCD, SrcCD, UtilT)
1374
1375     Use shellutils interactively or in shell scripts: `basename', `date',
1376     `dirname', `echo', `env', `expr', `false', `groups', `hostname', `id',
1377     `logname', `nice', `nohup', `pathchk', `printenv', `printf', `pwd',
1378     `sleep', `stty', `su', `tee', `test', `true', `tty', `uname', `users',
1379     `who', `whoami', and `yes'.
1380
1381   * GNU Shogi         (SrcCD, UtilT)
1382
1383     Shogi is a Japanese game similar to Chess; a major difference is that
1384     captured pieces can be returned into play.   GNU Shogi is a variant of
1385     GNU Chess; GNU Shogi implements the same features as GNU Chess and uses
1386     similar heuristics.  As a new feature, sequences of partial board
1387     patterns can be introduced in order to help the program play toward
1388     specific opening patterns.  There are both character and X display
1389     interfaces.   GNU Shogi is primarily supported by Matthias Mutz on
1390     behalf of the FSF.
1391
1392   * Smalltalk         (LangT, SrcCD)
1393
1394     GNU Smalltalk is an interpreted object-oriented programming language
1395     system written in highly portable C.  It has been successfully ported to
1396     many Unix and some other platforms, including DOS (but these non-Unix
1397     ports are not available from the FSF).  Current features include a
1398     binary image save capability, the ability to invoke user-written C code
1399     and pass parameters to it, a GNU Emacs editing mode, a version of the X
1400     protocol invocable from Smalltalk, optional byte-code compilation
1401     tracing and byte-code execution tracing, and automatically loaded
1402     per-user initialization files.  It implements all of the classes and
1403     protocol in the Smalltalk-80 book "Smalltalk-80: The Language", except
1404     for the graphic user interface (`GUI') related classes.
1405
1406     *Note Forthcoming GNUs::, for plans for later releases of Smalltalk.
1407
1408   * Superopt         (LangT, SrcCD)
1409
1410     Superopt is a function sequence generator that uses an exhaustive
1411     generate-and-test approach to find the shortest instruction sequence for
1412     a given function.  You provide a function as input, a CPU to generate
1413     code for, and how many instructions you can accept.  Its application in
1414     GCC is described in the `ACM SIGPLAN PLDI'92' proceedings.  Superopt
1415     supports: SPARC, m68k, m68020, m88k, IBM RS/6000, AMD 29000, Intel
1416     80x86, Pyramid, DEC Alpha, & HP-PA.
1417
1418   * `tar'         (SrcCD, UtilT)
1419
1420     GNU `tar' includes multivolume support, the ability to archive sparse
1421     files, automatic archive compression/decompression, remote archives and
1422     special features that allow `tar' to be used for incremental and full
1423     backups.  Unfortunately, GNU `tar' implements an early draft of the
1424     POSIX 1003.1 `ustar' standard which is different from the final
1425     standard.  Adding support for the new changes in a backward-compatible
1426     fashion is not trivial.
1427
1428   * Termcap Library         (SrcCD, UtilT)
1429
1430     The GNU Termcap library is a drop-in replacement for `libtermcap.a' on
1431     any system.  It does not place an arbitrary limit on the size of Termcap
1432     entries, unlike most other Termcap libraries.  Included is source for the
1433     `Termcap Manual' in Texinfo format.  *Note Documentation::.
1434
1435   * TeX         (SrcCD)
1436
1437     TeX is a document formatting system that handles complicated
1438     typesetting, including mathematics.  It is GNU's standard text formatter.
1439
1440     You can obtain TeX from the University of Washington, which maintains and
1441     supports a tape distribution of TeX for Unix systems.  The core material
1442     consists of Karl Berry's `web2c' TeX package, the sources for which are
1443     available via anonymous ftp; retrieval instructions are in
1444     `pub/tex/unixtex.ftp' on `ftp.cs.umb.edu'.  If you receive any
1445     installation support from the University of Washington, please consider
1446     sending them a donation.
1447
1448     To order a full distribution written in `tar' on either a 1/4inch
1449     4-track QIC-24 cartridge or a 4mm DAT cartridge, send $210.00 to:
1450
1451             Pierre A. MacKay
1452             Department of Classics
1453             DH-10, Denny Hall 218
1454             University of Washington
1455             Seattle, WA   98195
1456             USA
1457
1458             Electronic-Mail: `mackay@cs.washington.edu'
1459             Telephone: +1-206-543-2268
1460
1461     Please make checks payable to the University of Washington.  Do not
1462     specify any other payee.  That causes accounting difficulties.  Checks
1463     must be in U.S. dollars, drawn on a U.S. bank.  Prepaid orders are the
1464     only orders that can now be handled.  Overseas sites: please add to the
1465     base cost $20.00 for shipment via air parcel post, or $30.00 for
1466     shipment via courier.  Please check with the above for current prices
1467     and formats.
1468
1469   * Texinfo         (DjgppD, DosCD, LangT, LspEmcT, SrcCD, UtilD, UtilT)
1470
1471     Texinfo is a set of utilities which generate both printed manuals and
1472     online hypertext documentation (called "Info").  There are also programs
1473     for reading online Info documents.  Version 3 has both GNU Emacs Lisp
1474     and standalone programs written in C or shell script.  Texinfo mode for
1475     GNU Emacs enables easy editing and updating of Texinfo files.  Programs
1476     provided include `makeinfo', `info', `texi2dvi', `texindex', `tex2patch',
1477     and `fixfonts'.  Source for the `Texinfo Manual' is included.  *Note
1478     Documentation::.
1479
1480   * Textutils         (DjgppD, DosCD, SrcCD, UtilT)
1481
1482     The Textutils programs manipulate textual data.  They include: `cat',
1483     `cksum', `comm', `csplit', `cut', `expand', `fmt', `fold', `head',
1484     `join', `nl', `od', `paste', `pr', `sort', `split', `sum', `tac', `tail',
1485     `tr', `unexpand', `uniq', and `wc'.
1486
1487   * Tile Forth         (LangT, SrcCD)
1488
1489     Tile Forth is a 32-bit implementation of the Forth-83 standard written
1490     in C, allowing it to be easily ported to new systems, and extended with
1491     "any" C-function (graphics, windowing, etc).   Many Forth libraries with
1492     full documentation are available including ones for top-down parsing,
1493     multi-threads, and object oriented programming.
1494
1495   * `time'         (SrcCD, UtilT)
1496
1497     `time' is used to report statistics (usually from a shell) about the
1498     amount of user, system and real time used by a process.  On some systems
1499     it also reports memory usage, page faults, and other statistics.
1500
1501   * `tput'         (SrcCD, UtilT)
1502
1503     `tput' is a portable way for shell scripts to use special terminal
1504     capabilities.  Our `tput' uses the Termcap database, instead of Terminfo
1505     as most others do.
1506
1507   * UUCP         (SrcCD, UtilT)
1508
1509     This version of UUCP was written by Ian Lance Taylor, and is GNU's
1510     standard UUCP system.  It supports the `f', `g' and `v' (in all window
1511     and packet sizes), `G', `t', `e', Zmodem and two new bidirectional (`i'
1512     and `j') protocols.  If you have a Berkeley sockets library, it can make
1513     TCP connections.  If you have TLI libraries, it can make TLI
1514     connections.  Source is included for a Texinfo manual, which is not yet
1515     published by the FSF.
1516
1517   * `wdiff'         (DjgppD, DosCD, SrcCD, UtilT)
1518
1519     `wdiff' is a front-end to GNU `diff'.  It compares two files, finding
1520     the words deleted or added to the first to make the second.  It has many
1521     output formats and works well with terminals and pagers.  `wdiff' is
1522     very useful when two texts differ only by a few words and paragraphs
1523     have been refilled.
1524
1525   * `Ygl'         (SrcCD, UtilT)
1526
1527     `Ygl' emulates SGI's GL (Graphics Language) library under X11.  It runs
1528     under GNU/Linux with XFree, AIX 3.2, ConvexOS, HP-UX 7.0/8.0/9.0, SunOS
1529     and many others.
1530
1531
1532
1533Program/Package Cross Reference - (NOT COMPLETELY UP TO DATE)
1534*******************************
1535
1536Here is a list of what package each GNU program or library is in.  You can
1537anonymously FTP a full list in the file `/pub/gnu/ProgramIndex' from a GNU
1538FTP host (*note How to Get GNU Software::. for a list).
1539
1540        * a2p perl
1541        * a2x xopt
1542        * ac bsd44
1543        * accton bsd44
1544        * acl bsd44
1545        * acm acm
1546        * acms acm
1547        * addftinfo Groff
1548        * adventure bsd44
1549        * afm2tfm TeX
1550        * amd bsd44
1551        * ansitape bsd44
1552        * AnswerGarden xopt
1553        * apply bsd44
1554        * appres xreq
1555        * apropos bsd44
1556        * ar Binutils
1557        * arithmetic bsd44
1558        * arp bsd44
1559        * atc bsd44
1560        * autoconf Autoconf
1561        * autoheader Autoconf
1562        * autoreconf Autoconf
1563        * autoscan Autoconf
1564        * autoupdate Autoconf
1565        * auto_box xopt
1566        * auto_box xreq
1567
1568        * b2m Emacs
1569        * backgammon bsd44
1570        * bad144 bsd44
1571        * badsect bsd44
1572        * banner bsd44
1573        * basename Shellutils
1574        * bash BASH
1575        * battlestar bsd44
1576        * bc bc
1577        * bcd bsd44
1578        * bdes bsd44
1579        * bdftops Ghostscript
1580        * beach_ball xopt
1581        * beach_ball xreq
1582        * beach_ball2 xopt
1583        * bibtex TeX
1584        * biff bsd44
1585        * bison Bison
1586        * bitmap xreq
1587        * boggle bsd44
1588        * bpltobzr Fontutils
1589        * bugfiler bsd44
1590        * build ispell
1591        * bzrto Fontutils
1592
1593        * c++ GCC
1594        * c++filt Binutils
1595        * c2ph perl
1596        * ca100 xopt
1597        * caeser bsd44
1598        * cal bsd44
1599        * calendar bsd44
1600        * canfield bsd44
1601        * cat Textutils
1602        * cbars wdiff
1603        * cc GCC
1604        * cc1 GCC
1605        * cc1obj GCC
1606        * cc1plus GCC
1607        * cccp GCC
1608        * charspace Fontutils
1609        * checknr bsd44
1610        * chess bsd44
1611        * chflags bsd44
1612        * chgrp Fileutils
1613        * ching bsd44
1614        * chmod Fileutils
1615        * chown Fileutils
1616        * chpass bsd44
1617        * chroot bsd44
1618        * ci RCS
1619        * cksum Textutils
1620        * clisp CLISP
1621        * clri bsd44
1622        * cmail xboard
1623        * cmmf TeX
1624        * cmodext xopt
1625        * cmp Diffutils
1626        * co RCS
1627        * col bsd44
1628        * colcrt bsd44
1629        * colrm bsd44
1630        * column bsd44
1631        * comm Textutils
1632        * compress bsd44
1633        * comsat bsd44
1634        * connectd bsd44
1635        * cp Fileutils
1636        * cpicker xopt
1637        * cpio cpio
1638        * cpp GCC
1639        * cppstdin perl
1640        * cribbage bsd44
1641        * crock xopt
1642        * csh bsd44
1643        * csplit Textutils
1644        * ctags Emacs
1645        * ctwm xopt
1646        * cu UUCP
1647        * cut Textutils
1648        * cvs CVS
1649        * cvscheck CVS
1650        * cvtmail Emacs
1651        * cxterm xopt
1652
1653        * d Fileutils
1654        * date Shellutils
1655        * dc bc
1656        * dd Fileutils
1657        * delatex TeX
1658        * demangle Binutils
1659        * descend CVS
1660        * detex TeX
1661        * df Fileutils
1662        * diff Diffutils
1663        * diff3 Diffutils
1664        * digest-doc Emacs
1665        * dipress bsd44
1666        * dir Fileutils
1667        * dirname Shellutils
1668        * dish xopt
1669        * disklabel bsd44
1670        * diskpart bsd44
1671        * dld dld
1672        * dm bsd44
1673        * dmesg bsd44
1674        * doschk doschk
1675        * dox xopt
1676        * du Fileutils
1677        * dump bsd44
1678        * dumpfs bsd44
1679        * dvi2tty TeX
1680        * dvicopy TeX
1681        * dvips TeX
1682        * dvitype TeX
1683
1684        * ecc ecc
1685        * echo Shellutils
1686        * ed ed
1687        * edit-pr GNATS
1688        * editres xreq
1689        * edquota bsd44
1690        * eeprom bsd44
1691        * egrep grep
1692        * emacs Emacs
1693        * emacsclient Emacs
1694        * emacsserver Emacs
1695        * emacstool Emacs
1696        * emu xopt
1697        * env Shellutils
1698        * eqn Groff
1699        * error bsd44
1700        * es es
1701        * esdebug es
1702        * etags Emacs
1703        * ex nvi
1704        * expand Textutils
1705        * expect DejaGnu
1706        * expr Shellutils
1707        * exterm xopt
1708
1709        * f2c f2c
1710        * factor bsd44
1711        * fakemail Emacs
1712        * false Shellutils
1713        * fastboot bsd44
1714        * fax2ps HylaFAX
1715        * faxalter HylaFAX
1716        * faxanswer HylaFAX
1717        * faxcover HylaFAX
1718        * faxd HylaFAX
1719        * faxd.recv HylaFAX
1720        * faxmail HylaFAX
1721        * faxquit HylaFAX
1722        * faxrcvd HylaFAX
1723        * faxrm HylaFAX
1724        * faxstat HylaFAX
1725        * fc f2c
1726        * fdraw xopt
1727        * fgrep grep
1728        * file bsd44
1729        * find Findutils
1730        * find2perl perl
1731        * finger finger
1732        * fingerd finger
1733        * fish bsd44
1734        * fixfonts Texinfo
1735        * fixinc.svr4 GCC
1736        * fixincludes GCC
1737        * flex flex
1738        * fmt bsd44
1739        * fold Textutils
1740        * font2c Ghostscript
1741        * fontconvert Fontutils
1742        * forth Tile Forth
1743        * forthicon Tile Forth
1744        * forthtool Tile Forth
1745        * fortune bsd44
1746        * fpr bsd44
1747        * freq ispell
1748        * freqtbl ispell
1749        * from bsd44
1750        * fsck bsd44
1751        * fsplit bsd44
1752        * fstat bsd44
1753        * ftp bsd44
1754        * ftpd bsd44
1755
1756        * g++ GCC
1757        * gas Binutils
1758        * gawk Gawk
1759        * gcc GCC
1760        * gcore bsd44
1761        * gdb GDB
1762        * genclass libg++
1763        * getty bsd44
1764        * gftodvi TeX
1765        * gftopk TeX
1766        * gftype TeX
1767        * ghostview Ghostview
1768        * gnats GNATS
1769        * gnuchess Chess
1770        * gnuchessc Chess
1771        * gnuchessn Chess
1772        * gnuchessr Chess
1773        * gnuchessx Chess
1774        * gnupdisp Shogi
1775        * gnuplot gnuplot
1776        * gnuplot_x11 gnuplot
1777        * gnushogi Shogi
1778        * gnushogir Shogi
1779        * gnushogix Shogi
1780        * go GnuGo
1781        * gpc xopt
1782        * gpc xreq
1783        * gperf gperf
1784        * gperf libg++
1785        * gprof Binutils
1786        * graph Graphics
1787        * grep grep
1788        * grodvi Groff
1789        * groff Groff
1790        * grops Groff
1791        * grotty Groff
1792        * groups Shellutils
1793        * gs Ghostscript
1794        * gsbj Ghostscript
1795        * gsdj Ghostscript
1796        * gslj Ghostscript
1797        * gslp Ghostscript
1798        * gsnd Ghostscript
1799        * gsrenderfont Fontutils
1800        * gunzip gzip
1801        * gwm xopt
1802        * gzexe gzip
1803        * gzip gzip
1804
1805        * h2ph perl
1806        * h2pl perl
1807        * hack bsd44
1808        * hangman bsd44
1809        * head Textutils
1810        * hello hello
1811        * hexdump bsd44
1812        * hexl Emacs
1813        * hostname Shellutils
1814        * hp2xx hp2xx
1815        * hterm xopt
1816
1817        * i18nOlwmV2 xopt
1818        * i2mif xopt
1819        * ico xopt
1820        * ico xreq
1821        * id Shellutils
1822        * ident RCS
1823        * ifconfig bsd44
1824        * ifnames Autoconf
1825        * ImageMagick xopt
1826        * imageto Fontutils
1827        * iman xopt
1828        * imgrotate Fontutils
1829        * indent indent
1830        * indxbib Groff
1831        * inetd bsd44
1832        * info Texinfo
1833        * inimf TeX
1834        * init bsd44
1835        * initex TeX
1836        * inn bsd44
1837        * install Fileutils
1838        * iostat bsd44
1839        * ispell ispell
1840        * ixterm xopt
1841        * ixx xopt
1842
1843        * join Textutils
1844        * jot bsd44
1845        * jove bsd44
1846
1847        * kdestroy bsd44
1848        * kdump bsd44
1849        * kermit bsd44
1850        * kgames xopt
1851        * kgmon bsd44
1852        * kill bsd44
1853        * kinit bsd44
1854        * kinput2 xopt
1855        * klist bsd44
1856        * kpasswdd bsd44
1857        * ksrvtgt bsd44
1858        * kterm xopt
1859        * ktrace bsd44
1860
1861        * lam bsd44
1862        * larn bsd44
1863        * lasergnu gnuplot
1864        * last bsd44
1865        * lastcomm bsd44
1866        * latex TeX
1867        * lclock xopt
1868        * ld Binutils
1869        * leave bsd44
1870        * less less
1871        * lesskey less
1872        * libbfd.a Binutils
1873        * libbfd.a GAS
1874        * libbfd.a GDB
1875        * libbzr.a Fontutils
1876        * libc.a C Library
1877        * libcompat.a bsd44
1878        * libcurses.a bsd44
1879        * libcurses.a nvi
1880        * libedit.a bsd44
1881        * libF77.a f2c
1882        * libg++.a libg++
1883        * libgdbm.a gdbm
1884        * libgf.a Fontutils
1885        * libgmp.a gmp
1886        * libI77.a f2c
1887        * libkvm.a bsd44
1888        * libm.a bsd44
1889        * libnihcl.a NIHCL
1890        * libnihclmi.a NIHCL
1891        * libnihclvec.a NIHCL
1892        * libnls.a xreq
1893        * liboctave.a Octave
1894        * liboldX.a xreq
1895        * libpbm.a Fontutils
1896        * libPEXt.a xopt
1897        * libpk.a Fontutils
1898        * libresolv.a bsd44
1899        * librpc.a bsd44
1900        * libtcl.a DejaGnu
1901        * libtelnet.a bsd44
1902        * libterm.a bsd44
1903        * libtermcap.a Termcap
1904        * libtfm.a Fontutils
1905        * libutil.a bsd44
1906        * libWc.a xopt
1907        * libwidgets.a Fontutils
1908        * libX.a xreq
1909        * libXau.a xreq
1910        * libXaw.a xreq
1911        * libXcp.a xopt
1912        * libXcu.a xopt
1913        * libXdmcp.a xreq
1914        * libXmp.a xopt
1915        * libXmu.a xreq
1916        * libXO.a xopt
1917        * libXop.a xopt
1918        * libXp.a xopt
1919        * libXpex.a xopt
1920        * libXt.a xopt
1921        * libXt.a xreq
1922        * libXwchar.a xopt
1923        * liby.a bsd44
1924        * libYgl.a Ygl
1925        * limn Fontutils
1926        * listres xopt
1927        * listres xreq
1928        * lkbib Groff
1929        * ln Fileutils
1930        * locate Findutils
1931        * lock bsd44
1932        * logger bsd44
1933        * login bsd44
1934        * logname Shellutils
1935        * look ispell
1936        * lookbib Groff
1937        * lorder bsd44
1938        * lpr bsd44
1939        * ls Fileutils
1940
1941        * m4 m4
1942        * mail bsd44
1943        * make Make
1944        * make-docfile Emacs
1945        * make-path Emacs
1946        * makeindex TeX
1947        * makeinfo Texinfo
1948        * MakeTeXPK TeX
1949        * man bsd44
1950        * man-macros Groff
1951        * mattrib mtools
1952        * maze xopt
1953        * maze xreq
1954        * mazewar xopt
1955        * mcd mtools
1956        * mcopy mtools
1957        * mdel mtools
1958        * mdir mtools
1959        * me-macros Groff
1960        * merge RCS
1961        * mesg bsd44
1962        * mf TeX
1963        * mformat mtools
1964        * mft TeX
1965        * mgdiff xopt
1966        * mh bsd44
1967        * mille bsd44
1968        * mkdep bsd44
1969        * mkdir Fileutils
1970        * mkfifo Fileutils
1971        * mklocale bsd44
1972        * mkmanifest mtools
1973        * mkmf bsd44
1974        * mkmodules CVS
1975        * mknod Fileutils
1976        * mkstr bsd44
1977        * mlabel mtools
1978        * mm-macros Groff
1979        * mmd mtools
1980        * monop bsd44
1981        * more bsd44
1982        * morse bsd44
1983        * mount bsd44
1984        * mountd bsd44
1985        * movemail Emacs
1986        * mprof bsd44
1987        * mrd mtools
1988        * mread mtools
1989        * mren mtools
1990        * ms-macros Groff
1991        * msgs bsd44
1992        * mt cpio
1993        * mterm xopt
1994        * mtree bsd44
1995        * mtype mtools
1996        * mule MULE
1997        * muncher xopt
1998        * mv Fileutils
1999        * mvdir Fileutils
2000        * mwrite mtools
2001
2002        * nethack Nethack
2003        * netstat bsd44
2004        * newfs bsd44
2005        * nfsd bsd44
2006        * nfsiod bsd44
2007        * nfsstat bsd44
2008        * nice Shellutils
2009        * nl Textutils
2010        * nlmconv Binutils
2011        * nm Binutils
2012        * nohup Shellutils
2013        * notify HylaFAX
2014        * nroff Groff
2015        * number bsd44
2016
2017        * objc GCC
2018        * objcopy Binutils
2019        * objdump Binutils
2020        * objective-c GCC
2021        * obst-boot OBST
2022        * obst-CC OBST
2023        * obst-cct OBST
2024        * obst-cgc OBST
2025        * obst-cmp OBST
2026        * obst-cnt OBST
2027        * obst-cpcnt OBST
2028        * obst-csz OBST
2029        * obst-dir OBST
2030        * obst-dmp OBST
2031        * obst-gen OBST
2032        * obst-gsh OBST
2033        * obst-init OBST
2034        * obst-scp OBST
2035        * obst-sil OBST
2036        * obst-stf OBST
2037        * oclock xreq
2038        * octave Octave
2039        * od Textutils
2040        * oleo Oleo
2041        * ora-examples xopt
2042
2043        * p2c p2c
2044        * pagesize bsd44
2045        * palette xopt
2046        * pascal bsd44
2047        * passwd bsd44
2048        * paste Textutils
2049        * patch patch
2050        * patgen TeX
2051        * pathalias bsd44
2052        * pathchk Shellutils
2053        * pax bsd44
2054        * pbmplus xopt
2055        * perl perl
2056        * pfbtops Groff
2057        * phantasia bsd44
2058        * pic Groff
2059        * pig bsd44
2060        * ping bsd44
2061        * pixedit xopt
2062        * pixmap xopt
2063        * pktogf TeX
2064        * pktype TeX
2065        * plaid xopt
2066        * plot2fig Graphics
2067        * plot2plot Graphics
2068        * plot2ps Graphics
2069        * plot2tek Graphics
2070        * pltotf TeX
2071        * pollrcvd HylaFAX
2072        * pom bsd44
2073        * pooltype TeX
2074        * portmap bsd44
2075        * ppt bsd44
2076        * pr Textutils
2077        * pr-addr GNATS
2078        * pr-edit GNATS
2079        * primes bsd44
2080        * printenv Shellutils
2081        * printf Shellutils
2082        * protoize GCC
2083        * ps bsd44
2084        * ps2ascii Ghostscript
2085        * ps2epsi Ghostscript
2086        * ps2fax HylaFAX
2087        * psbb Groff
2088        * pstat bsd44
2089        * psycho xopt
2090        * ptx ptx
2091        * pubdic+ xopt
2092        * puzzle xopt
2093        * puzzle xreq
2094        * pwd Shellutils
2095        * pyramid xopt
2096
2097        * query-pr GNATS
2098        * quiz bsd44
2099        * quot bsd44
2100        * quota bsd44
2101        * quotacheck bsd44
2102        * quotaon bsd44
2103
2104        * rain bsd44
2105        * random bsd44
2106        * ranlib Binutils
2107        * rbootd bsd44
2108        * rc rc
2109        * rcp bsd44
2110        * rcs RCS
2111        * rcs-to-cvs CVS
2112        * rcs2log Emacs
2113        * rcsdiff RCS
2114        * rcsfreeze RCS
2115        * rcsmerge RCS
2116        * rdist bsd44
2117        * reboot bsd44
2118        * recode recode
2119        * recvstats HylaFAX
2120        * refer Groff
2121        * renice bsd44
2122        * repquota bsd44
2123        * restore bsd44
2124        * rev bsd44
2125        * rexecd bsd44
2126        * rlog RCS
2127        * rlogin bsd44
2128        * rlogind bsd44
2129        * rm Fileutils
2130        * rmail bsd44
2131        * rmdir Fileutils
2132        * rmt cpio
2133        * rmt tar
2134        * robots bsd44
2135        * rogue bsd44
2136        * route bsd44
2137        * routed bsd44
2138        * rr xopt
2139        * rs bsd44
2140        * rsh bsd44
2141        * rshd bsd44
2142        * runtest DejaGnu
2143        * runtest.exp DejaGnu
2144        * ruptime bsd44
2145        * rwho bsd44
2146        * rwhod bsd44
2147
2148        * s2p perl
2149        * sail bsd44
2150        * savecore bsd44
2151        * sc bsd44
2152        * sccs bsd44
2153        * sccs2rcs CVS
2154        * scdisp xopt
2155        * screen screen
2156        * script bsd44
2157        * scsiformat bsd44
2158        * sctext xopt
2159        * sdiff Diffutils
2160        * sed sed
2161        * send-pr GNATS
2162        * sendfax HylaFAX
2163        * sendmail bsd44
2164        * sgi2fax HylaFAX
2165        * sh bsd44
2166        * shar Sharutils
2167        * shinbun xopt
2168        * shogi Shogi
2169        * showfont xopt
2170        * showmount bsd44
2171        * shutdown bsd44
2172        * size Binutils
2173        * sj3 xopt
2174        * sjxa xopt
2175        * slattach bsd44
2176        * sleep Shellutils
2177        * sliplogin bsd44
2178        * snake bsd44
2179        * snftobdf xopt
2180        * soelim Groff
2181        * sort Textutils
2182        * sos2obst OBST
2183        * spider xopt
2184        * split Textutils
2185        * startslip bsd44
2186        * stf OBST
2187        * strings Binutils
2188        * strip Binutils
2189        * stty Shellutils
2190        * su Shellutils
2191        * sum Textutils
2192        * superopt Superopt
2193        * swapon bsd44
2194        * sync bsd44
2195        * sysctl bsd44
2196        * syslogd bsd44
2197        * systat bsd44
2198
2199        * tac Textutils
2200        * tail Textutils
2201        * taintperl perl
2202        * talk bsd44
2203        * talkd bsd44
2204        * tangle TeX
2205        * tar tar
2206        * tbl Groff
2207        * tcl DejaGnu
2208        * tclsh DejaGnu
2209        * tcopy bsd44
2210        * tcp Emacs
2211        * tee Shellutils
2212        * tek2plot Graphics
2213        * telnet bsd44
2214        * telnetd bsd44
2215        * test Shellutils
2216        * test-g++ DejaGnu
2217        * test-tool DejaGnu
2218        * tetris bsd44
2219        * tex TeX
2220        * tex3patch Texinfo
2221        * texi2dvi Texinfo
2222        * texindex Texinfo
2223        * texspell TeX
2224        * textfmt HylaFAX
2225        * tfmtodit Groff
2226        * tftopl TeX
2227        * tftp bsd44
2228        * tftpd bsd44
2229        * tgrind TeX
2230        * time time
2231        * timed bsd44
2232        * timer Emacs
2233        * timex xopt
2234        * tip bsd44
2235        * tkpostage xopt
2236        * tn3270 bsd44
2237        * touch Fileutils
2238        * tput tput
2239        * tr Textutils
2240        * traceroute bsd44
2241        * transcript HylaFAX
2242        * transfig xopt
2243        * trek bsd44
2244        * trn3 bsd44
2245        * troff Groff
2246        * trpt bsd44
2247        * trsp bsd44
2248        * true Shellutils
2249        * tset bsd44
2250        * tsort bsd44
2251        * tty Shellutils
2252        * tunefs bsd44
2253        * tvtwm xopt
2254        * twm xreq
2255
2256        * ul bsd44
2257        * umount bsd44
2258        * uname Shellutils
2259        * uncompress gzip
2260        * unexpand Textutils
2261        * unifdef bsd44
2262        * uniq Textutils
2263        * unprotoize GCC
2264        * unshar Sharutils
2265        * unvis bsd44
2266        * update bsd44
2267        * updatedb Findutils
2268        * users Shellutils
2269        * uuchk UUCP
2270        * uucico UUCP
2271        * uuconv UUCP
2272        * uucp UUCP
2273        * uucpd bsd44
2274        * uudecode Sharutils
2275        * uudir UUCP
2276        * uuencode Sharutils
2277        * uulog UUCP
2278        * uuname UUCP
2279        * uupick UUCP
2280        * uurate UUCP
2281        * uusched UUCP
2282        * uustat UUCP
2283        * uuto UUCP
2284        * uux UUCP
2285        * uuxqt UUCP
2286
2287        * v Fileutils
2288        * vacation bsd44
2289        * vandal xopt
2290        * vcdiff Emacs
2291        * vdir Fileutils
2292        * vftovp TeX
2293        * vgrind bsd44
2294        * vi nvi
2295        * viewres xopt
2296        * viewres xreq
2297        * vine xopt
2298        * vipw bsd44
2299        * virmf TeX
2300        * virtex TeX
2301        * vis bsd44
2302        * vmstat bsd44
2303        * vptovf TeX
2304
2305        * w bsd44
2306        * wakeup Emacs
2307        * wall bsd44
2308        * wargames bsd44
2309        * wc Textutils
2310        * wdiff wdiff
2311        * weave TeX
2312        * what bsd44
2313        * whatis bsd44
2314        * whereis bsd44
2315        * who Shellutils
2316        * whoami Shellutils
2317        * whois bsd44
2318        * window bsd44
2319        * winterp xopt
2320        * wish DejaGnu
2321        * worm bsd44
2322        * worms bsd44
2323        * write bsd44
2324        * wump bsd44
2325
2326        * x11perf xreq
2327        * x2p perl
2328        * xalarm xopt
2329        * xancur xopt
2330        * xargs Findutils
2331        * xauth xreq
2332        * xbfe Fontutils
2333        * xbiff xopt
2334        * xbiff xreq
2335        * xboard xboard
2336        * xboing xopt
2337        * xbuffy3 xopt
2338        * xcalc xopt
2339        * xcalc xreq
2340        * xcalendar xopt
2341        * xcdplayer xopt
2342        * xcell xopt
2343        * xclipboard xreq
2344        * xclock xreq
2345        * xcmdmenu xopt
2346        * xcms xopt
2347        * xcmsdb xreq
2348        * xcmstest xreq
2349        * xco xopt
2350        * xcolorize xopt
2351        * xcolors xopt
2352        * xconsole xreq
2353        * xcrtca xopt
2354        * xdaliclock xopt
2355        * xdiary xopt
2356        * xditview Groff
2357        * xditview xopt
2358        * xditview xreq
2359        * xdm xreq
2360        * xdpyinfo xreq
2361        * xdu xopt
2362        * xdvi TeX
2363        * xdvi xopt
2364        * xdvorak xopt
2365        * xearth xopt
2366        * xed xopt
2367        * xedit xopt
2368        * xedit xreq
2369        * xev xopt
2370        * xev xreq
2371        * xexit xopt
2372        * xeyes xopt
2373        * xeyes xreq
2374        * xfd xreq
2375        * xfed xopt
2376        * xfedor xopt
2377        * xfeoak xopt
2378        * xferstats HylaFAX
2379        * xfig xopt
2380        * xfontsel xopt
2381        * xfontsel xreq
2382        * xforecast xopt
2383        * xgas xopt
2384        * xgas xreq
2385        * xgc xopt
2386        * xgc xreq
2387        * xhearts xopt
2388        * xhelp xopt
2389        * xhost xreq
2390        * xinit xreq
2391        * xkeycaps xopt
2392        * xkill xreq
2393        * xlax xopt
2394        * xlayout xopt
2395        * xlbiff xopt
2396        * xless xopt
2397        * xload xopt
2398        * xload xreq
2399        * xlogin xopt
2400        * xlogo xreq
2401        * xlsatoms xreq
2402        * xlsclients xreq
2403        * xlsfonts xreq
2404        * xmag xreq
2405        * xmail xopt
2406        * xmailbox xopt
2407        * xmailwatcher xopt
2408        * xman xopt
2409        * xman xreq
2410        * xmandel xopt
2411        * xmessage xopt
2412        * xmeter xopt
2413        * xmh xreq
2414        * xmh-icons xopt
2415        * xmh.editor xopt
2416        * xmodmap xreq
2417        * xmon xopt
2418        * xmove xopt
2419        * xmphone xopt
2420        * xpd xopt
2421        * xphoon xopt
2422        * xpipeman xopt
2423        * xplot Graphics
2424        * xpostit xopt
2425        * xpr xopt
2426        * xpr xreq
2427        * xprompt xopt
2428        * xproof xopt
2429        * xprop xreq
2430        * xpserv xopt
2431        * xrdb xreq
2432        * xrefresh xreq
2433        * xrsh xopt
2434        * xrubik xopt
2435        * xrunclient xopt
2436        * xscope xopt
2437        * xscreensaver xopt
2438        * xsession xopt
2439        * xset xreq
2440        * xsetroot xreq
2441        * xshogi xshogi
2442        * xstdcmap xreq
2443        * xstr bsd44
2444        * xtalk xopt
2445        * xterm xreq
2446        * xterm_color xopt
2447        * xtetris xopt
2448        * xTeXcad.13 xopt
2449        * xtiff xopt
2450        * xtree xopt
2451        * xtv xopt
2452        * xwd xreq
2453        * xwininfo xreq
2454        * xwud xreq
2455
2456        * yacc bsd44
2457        * yes Shellutils
2458        * youbin xopt
2459        * yow Emacs
2460
2461        * zcat gzip
2462        * zcmp gzip
2463        * zdiff gzip
2464        * zforce gzip
2465        * zgrep gzip
2466        * zmore gzip
2467        * znew gzip
2468
2469        * [ Shellutils
2470
2471
2472
2473Tapes
2474*****
2475
2476We offer Unix source code on tapes in `tar' format on these media:
2477
2478   * 4mm DAT cartridges
2479
2480   * 8mm Exabyte cartridges
2481
2482   * Sun DC300XLP QIC-24 1/4in cartridges (readable on some other systems)
2483
2484   * Hewlett-Packard 16-track DC600HC 1/4in cartridges
2485
2486   * IBM RS/6000 QIC-150 1/4in cartridges (readable on some other systems)
2487
2488   * 1600bpi 9-track 1/2in reel tape
2489
2490The contents of the reel and various cartridge tapes for Unix systems are the
2491same (except for the RS/6000 Emacs tape, which also has executables for
2492Emacs); only the media are different.  For pricing information, see the *note
2493Free Software Foundation Order Form::..  Source code for the manuals and
2494reference cards is included (*note Documentation::.).
2495
2496Some of the files on the tapes may be compressed with `gzip' to make them
2497fit.  Refer to the top-level `README' file at the beginning of each tape for
2498instructions on uncompressing them.  `uncompress' and `unpack' *do not work*!
2499
2500
2501
2502Languages Tape - (VERSION NUMBERS NOT COMPLETELY UP TO DATE)
2503--------------
2504
2505This tape contains programming tools: compilers, interpreters, and related
2506programs (parsers, conversion programs, debuggers, etc.).
2507
2508        * Binutils 2.5.2
2509        * Bison 1.22
2510        * C Library 1.09
2511        * DejaGnu 1.2
2512        * dld 3.2.3
2513        * ecc 1.2.1
2514        * f2c 1994.11.03
2515        * flex 2.4.7
2516        * Gawk 2.15.5
2517        * GCC/G++/Objective-C 2.7.0
2518        * GDB 4.13
2519        * gdbm 1.7.3
2520        * gmp 1.3.2
2521        * gperf 2.1a
2522        * gzip 1.2.4
2523        * indent 1.9.1
2524        * libg++ 2.6.1
2525        * libobjects 0.1.0
2526        * Make 3.72.1
2527        * NIHCL 3.0
2528        * OBST 3.4
2529        * Octave 1.0
2530        * p2c 1.20
2531        * perl 4.036
2532        * perl 5.000
2533        * regex 0.12
2534        * rx 0.05
2535        * Smalltalk 1.1.1
2536        * Superopt 2.3
2537        * Texinfo 3.1
2538        * Tile Forth 2.1
2539
2540
2541
2542Lisps and Emacs Tape - (VERSION NUMBERS NOT COMPLETELY UP TO DATE)
2543--------------------
2544
2545This tape has Common Lisp systems and libraries, GNU Emacs, assorted
2546extensions that work with GNU Emacs, and a few other important utilities.
2547
2548        * Calc 2.02c
2549        * CLISP 1994.10.26
2550        * Common Lisp 1.1
2551        * elib 0.06
2552        * Emacs 18.59
2553        * Emacs 19.29
2554        * GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manaul, Ed. 2.3
2555        * gzip 1.2.4
2556        * Make 3.72.1
2557        * MULE 2.1
2558        * PCL 1993.03.18
2559        * Texinfo 3.1
2560
2561
2562
2563Utilities Tape - (VERSION NUMBERS NOT COMPLETELY UP TO DATE)
2564--------------
2565
2566This tape consists mostly of smaller utilities and miscellaneous applications.
2567
2568        * acm 4.6
2569        * Autoconf 1.11
2570        * Autoconf 2.1
2571        * BASH 1.14.2
2572        * bc 1.03
2573        * Chess 4.0.73
2574        * cpio 2.3
2575        * CVS 1.3
2576        * dc 0.2
2577        * Diffutils 2.7
2578        * doschk 1.1
2579        * ed 0.2
2580        * es 0.84
2581        * Fileutils 3.12
2582        * Findutils 4.1
2583        * finger 1.37
2584        * HylaFAX 2.2.2.1
2585        * Fontutils 0.6
2586        * Ghostscript 2.6.1
2587        * Ghostview 1.5
2588        * GNATS 3.2
2589        * GnuGo 1.1
2590        * gnuplot 3.5
2591        * Graphics 0.17
2592        * grep 2.0
2593        * Groff 1.09
2594        * gzip 1.2.4
2595        * hello 1.3
2596        * hp2xx 3.1.4
2597        * ispell 3.1.13
2598        * m4 1.3
2599        * Make 3.72.1
2600        * mkisofs 1.01
2601        * mm 1.07
2602        * mtools 2.0.7
2603        * Nethack 3.1.3
2604        * nvi 1.34
2605        * Oleo 1.6
2606        * patch 2.1
2607        * ptx 0.4
2608        * rc 1.4
2609        * RCS 5.6.0.1
2610        * recode 3.4
2611        * saoimage 1.08
2612        * screen 3.5.2
2613        * screen 3.6.0
2614        * sed 1.18 & 2.05
2615        * Sharutils 4.1
2616        * Shellutils 1.12
2617        * Shogi 1.2.02
2618        * tar 1.11.2
2619        * Termcap 1.2
2620        * Texinfo 3.1
2621        * Textutils 1.11
2622        * time 1.6
2623        * tput 1.0
2624        * UUCP 1.05
2625        * wdiff 0.04
2626        * xboard 3.1.1
2627        * xshogi 1.2.02
2628        * Ygl 2.9
2629
2630
2631
2632Scheme Tape
2633-----------
2634
2635Scheme is a simplified, lexically-scoped dialect of Lisp.  It was designed at
2636MIT and other universities to teach students the art of programming, and to
2637research new parallel programming constructs and compilation techniques.
2638
2639This tape now contains MIT Scheme 7.3, which conforms to the "Revised^4
2640Report On the Algorithmic Language Scheme" (MIT AI Lab Memo 848b), for which
2641TeX source is included.  It is written partly in C, but is presently hard to
2642bootstrap.  Binaries that can be used to bootstrap Scheme are available for:
2643
2644   * HP 9000 series 300, 400, 700 & 800 running HP-UX 7.0 or 8.0
2645
2646   * NeXT running NeXT OS 1.0 or 2.0
2647
2648   * Sun-3 or Sun-4 running SunOS 4.1
2649
2650   * DECstation 3100/5100 running Ultrix 4.0
2651
2652   * Sony NeWS-3250 running NEWS OS 5.01
2653
2654   * Vax running 4.3BSD
2655
2656If your system is not on this list and you don't enjoy the bootstrap
2657challenge, see the JACAL item in *Note GNU Software::.
2658
2659
2660
2661X11 Tapes
2662---------
2663
2664The two X11 tapes contain Version 11, Release 6 of the X Window System.  The
2665first tape contains all of the core software, documentation and some
2666contributed clients.  We call this the "required" X tape since it is
2667necessary for running X or running GNU Emacs under X.  The second, "optional"
2668tape contains contributed libraries and other toolkits, the Andrew User
2669Interface System, games, and other programs.
2670
2671The X11 Required tape also contains all fixes and patches released to date.
2672We update this tape as new fixes and patches are released for programs on
2673both tapes.  *Note Tape & CD-ROM Subscription Service::.
2674
2675We will distribute X11R5 on tape until X11R6 is stable, and on the *Note
2676November 1993 Source Code CD-ROM::, while supplies last.
2677
2678
2679
2680Berkeley 4.4BSD-Lite Tape
2681-------------------------
2682
2683The "4.4BSD-Lite" release is the last from the Computer Systems Research
2684Group at the University of California at Berkeley.  It has most of the BSD
2685software system, except for a few files that remain proprietary.  It is much
2686more complete than the previous "Net2" release.
2687
2688
2689
2690VMS Emacs and VMS Compiler Tapes
2691--------------------------------
2692
2693We offer two VMS tapes.  One has just GNU Emacs 18.59 (none of the other
2694software on the *Note Lisps/Emacs Tape::, is included).  The other has GCC
26952.3.3, Bison 1.19 (to compile GCC), GAS 1.38 (to assemble GCC's output) and
2696some library and include files (none of the other software on the *Note
2697Languages Tape::, is included).  We are not aware of a GDB port for VMS.
2698Both VMS tapes have DEC VAX executables from which you can bootstrap, as the
2699DEC VMS C compiler cannot compile GCC.  We do not have executables for DEC
2700Alpha VMS systems.  Please do not ask us to devote effort to VMS support,
2701because it is peripheral to the GNU Project.
2702
2703
2704
2705CD-ROMs
2706*******
2707
2708We offer these CD-ROMs:
2709
2710   * *Note MS-DOS CD-ROM::, expected in September 1995.
2711
2712   * *Note Debian GNU/Linux CD-ROM::, expected in late fall 1995.
2713
2714   * *Note Compiler Tools Binaries CD-ROM::.
2715
2716   * *Note June 1995 Source Code CD-ROM::.
2717
2718   * *Note May 1994 Source Code CD-ROM::.
2719
2720   * *Note November 1993 Source Code CD-ROM::.
2721
2722Our CD-ROMs are in ISO 9660 format & can be mounted as a read-only file
2723system on most computers.  If your driver supports it you can mount each
2724CD-ROM with "Rock Ridge" extensions (the MS-DOS CD-ROM is only in ISO 9660
2725format) & it will look just like an ordinary Unix file system, rather than
2726one full of truncated & otherwise mangled names that fit vanilla ISO 9660.
2727
2728You can build most of the software without copying the sources off the CD.
2729You only need enough disk space for object files and intermediate build
2730targets.
2731
2732
2733
2734Pricing of the GNU CD-ROMs
2735--------------------------
2736
2737If a business or organization is ultimately paying, the June 1995 Source CD
2738costs $240.  It costs $60 if you, an individual, are paying out of your own
2739pocket.  The December 1994 Compiler Tools Binaries CD-ROM costs $220 for a
2740business or organization, and $55 for an individual.
2741
2742
2743
2744What do the individual and company prices mean?
2745
2746The software on our disk is free; anyone can copy it and anyone can run it.
2747What we charge for is the physical disk and the service of distribution.
2748
2749We charge two different prices depending on who is buying.  When a company or
2750other organization buys the June 1995 Source CD-ROM, we charge $240.  When an
2751individual buys the same disk, we charge just $60.
2752
2753This distinction is not a matter of who is allowed to use the software.  In
2754either case, once you have a copy, you can distribute as many copies as you
2755wish, and there's no restriction on who can have or run them.  The price
2756distinction is entirely a matter of what kind of entity pays for the CD.
2757
2758You, the reader, are certainly an individual, not a company.  If you are
2759buying a disk "in person", then you are probably doing so as an individual.
2760But if you expect to be reimbursed by your employer, then the disk is really
2761for the company; so please pay the company price and get reimbursed for it.
2762We won't try to check up on you--we use the honor system--so please cooperate.
2763
2764Buying CDs at the company price is very helpful for GNU; just 140 Source CDs
2765at that price supports an FSF programmer or tech writer for a year.
2766
2767
2768
2769Why is there an individual price?
2770
2771In the past, our distribution tapes have been ordered mainly by companies.
2772The CD at the price of $240 provides them with all of our software for a much
2773lower price than they would previously have paid for six different tapes.  To
2774lower the price more would cut into the FSF's funds very badly, and decrease
2775the software development we can do.
2776
2777However, for individuals, $240 is too high a price; hardly anyone could
2778afford that.  So we decided to make CDs available to individuals at the lower
2779price of $60.
2780
2781
2782
2783Is there a maximum price?
2784
2785Our stated prices are minimum prices.  Feel free to pay a higher price if you
2786wish to support GNU development more.  The sky's the limit; we will accept as
2787high a price as you can offer.  Or simply give a donation (tax-deductible in
2788the U.S.) to the Free Software Foundation, a tax-exempt public charity.
2789
2790
2791
2792MS-DOS CD-ROM
2793-------------
2794
2795We expect to release our first CD-ROM for MS-DOS in September, 1995.  Contact
2796either address on page 1 for more information at that time.   The MS-DOS CD
2797will be packaged inside a book describing its contents.  It will have all the
2798sources and executables on the MS-DOS Diskettes.  For details and version
2799numbers, *note MS-DOS Diskettes::..
2800
2801
2802
2803Debian GNU/Linux CD-ROM
2804-----------------------
2805
2806The FSF expects to ship a CD-ROM with Debian GNU/Linux on it in the late fall
28071995.  This CD will be packaged inside a book describing its contents.
2808m{No Value For "ergegrafkludge"} Debian GNU/Linux is a complete operating
2809system for x86 machines, available in both source code and binary form.  It
2810is a GNU/Linux system--that is to say, a variant GNU system which uses Linux
2811as the kernel.  (All the systems now available which use the Linux kernel are
2812GNU/Linux systems.)
2813
2814Debian is being developed by Ian Murdock and the Debian Association in
2815conjunction with the Free Software Foundation.  We are distributing it as an
2816interim measure until the GNU kernel (the Hurd) is ready for users.
2817
2818Debian GNU/Linux is available for FTP at `ftp.cps.cmich.edu' in file
2819`/pub/debian'.  For more information about the Debian Project and how to get
2820involved, see `/pub/gnu/GNUinfo/DEBIAN' on a GNU FTP host (*note How to Get
2821GNU Software::. for a list).
2822
2823
2824
2825December 1994 Compiler Tools Binaries CD-ROM
2826--------------------------------------------
2827
2828We are now offering a CD-ROM that contains executables for GNU compiler tools
2829for some systems which lack a compiler.  This enables the people who use
2830these systems to compile GNU and other free software without having to buy a
2831proprietary compiler.  You can also use the GNU compilation system to compile
2832your own C/C++/Objective-C programs.
2833
2834We hope to have more systems on each update of this CD.  If you can help
2835build binaries for new systems (especially those that don't come with a C
2836compiler), or have one to suggest, please contact us at the addresses on page
28371.
2838
2839These packages:
2840
2841        *DJGPP 1.12.m2 from GCC 2.6.0
2842        *GCC/G++/Objective-C 2.6.2
2843        *GNU C Library 1.09
2844        *GDB 4.13
2845        *Binutils 2.5.2
2846        *Bison 1.22
2847        *Emacs 19.26 (MS-DOS only)
2848        *Flex 2.4.7
2849        *Make 3.72.1
2850        *libg++ 2.6.1
2851
2852On these platforms:
2853
2854        *`i386-msdos'
2855        *`hppa1.1-hp-hpux9'
2856        *`sparc-sun-solaris2'
2857        *`sparc-sun-sunos4.1'
2858
2859
2860
2861Source Code CD-ROMs
2862-------------------
2863
2864We have several versions of our Source Code CD-ROMs available:
2865
2866   * *Note June 1995 Source Code CD-ROM::.
2867
2868   * *Note May 1994 Source Code CD-ROM::.
2869
2870   * *Note November 1993 Source Code CD-ROM::.
2871
2872The older Source Code CDs will be available while supplies last at a reduced
2873price; see the *note Free Software Foundation Order Form::..
2874
2875All of the Source Code CDs also contain Texinfo source for the GNU manuals
2876listed in *Note Documentation::.
2877
2878The VMS tapes' contents are *not* included.  Many programs that are only on
2879MS-DOS diskettes and not on the tapes are also *not* included.  The contents
2880of the MIT Scheme & X11 Optional tapes are *not* on the November 1993 & May
28811994 Source CDs.  *Note Tapes:: & *Note MS-DOS Diskettes::.
2882
2883There are no precompiled programs on these Source CDs.  You will need a C
2884compiler (programs which need some other interpreter or compiler normally
2885provide the C source for a bootstrapping program).  We ship C compiler
2886binaries for some systems on the *Note Compiler Tools Binaries CD-ROM::.
2887
2888
2889
2890June 1995 Source Code CD-ROM - (VERSION NUMBERS NOT COMPLETELY UP TO DATE)
2891............................
2892
2893We now have the sixth edition of our Source CD.  This CD has Edition X.X for
2894version 19 of the `GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual' & some additional
2895software; not all FSF distributed software is included (*note Source Code
2896CD-ROMs::.).  It contains the following packages:
2897     *XXXXX UPDATE THIS LIST XXXXX*
2898        *acm 4.5
2899        *Autoconf 1.10
2900        *BASH 1.13.5
2901        *bc 1.02
2902        *Binutils 2.3
2903        *Bison 1.22
2904        *C Library 1.08
2905        *Calc 2.02c
2906        *Chess 4.0.69
2907        *CLISP 1994.01.08
2908        *Common Lisp 1.0
2909        *cpio 2.3
2910        *CVS 1.3
2911        *dc 0.2
2912        *DejaGnu 1.2
2913        *Diffutils 2.6
2914        *dld 3.2.3
2915        *doschk 1.1
2916        *ecc 1.2.1
2917        *ed 0.1
2918        *elib 0.06
2919        *Emacs 18.59
2920        *Emacs 19.23
2921        *es 0.84
2922        *f2c 1994.04.14
2923        *Fileutils 3.9
2924        *find 3.8
2925        *finger 1.37
2926        *flex 2.4.6
2927        *Fontutils 0.6
2928        *GAS 1.36.utah
2929        *GAS 2.2
2930        *Gawk 2.15.4
2931        *GCC 2.5.8
2932        *GDB 4.12
2933        *gdbm 1.7.1
2934        *Ghostscript 2.6.1
2935        *Ghostview 1.5
2936        *Ghostview for Windows 1.0
2937        *gmp 1.3.2
2938        *GNATS 3.2
2939        *GnuGo 1.1
2940        *gnuplot 3.5
2941        *gperf 2.1a
2942        *Graphics 0.17
2943        *grep 2.0
2944        *Groff 1.09
2945        *gzip 1.2.4
2946        *hello 1.3
2947        *hp2xx 3.1.4
2948        *indent 1.9.1
2949        *ispell 4.0
2950        *libg++ 2.5.3
2951        *m4 1.1
2952        *Make 3.71
2953        *MandelSpawn 0.07
2954        *mtools 2.0.7
2955        *MULE 1.0
2956        *NetFax 3.2.1
2957        *Nethack 3.1.3
2958        *NIHCL 3.0
2959        *nvi 1.11
2960        *Octave 1.0
2961        *Oleo 1.5
2962        *p2c 1.20
2963        *patch 2.1
2964        *PCL 1993.03.18
2965        *perl 4.036
2966        *ptx 0.3
2967        *rc 1.4
2968        *RCS 5.6.0.1
2969        *recode 3.3
2970        *regex 0.12
2971        *screen 3.5.2
2972        *sed 2.05
2973        *shellutils 1.9.4
2974        *Shogi 1.1.02
2975        *Smalltalk 1.1.1
2976        *Superopt 2.3
2977        *tar 1.11.2
2978        *Termcap 1.2
2979        *TeX 3.1
2980        *Texinfo 3.1
2981        *Textutils 1.9.1
2982        *Tile Forth 2.1
2983        *time 1.6
2984        *tput 1.0
2985        *UUCP 1.05
2986        *uuencode 1.0
2987        *wdiff 0.04
2988        *X11R6
2989        *xboard 3.0.9
2990        *xshogi 1.2.02
2991
2992
2993
2994May 1994 Source Code CD-ROM
2995...........................
2996
2997We still have the fourth edition of our Source CD, at a reduced price.  This
2998CD has Edition 2.3 for version 19 of the `GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual' &
2999some additional software; not all FSF distributed software is included (*note
3000Source Code CD-ROMs::.).  It contains these packages:
3001        *acm 4.5
3002        *Autoconf 1.10
3003        *BASH 1.13.5
3004        *bc 1.02
3005        *Binutils 2.3
3006        *Bison 1.22
3007        *C Library 1.08
3008        *Calc 2.02c
3009        *Chess 4.0.69
3010        *CLISP 1994.01.08
3011        *Common Lisp 1.0
3012        *cpio 2.3
3013        *CVS 1.3
3014        *dc 0.2
3015        *DejaGnu 1.2
3016        *Diffutils 2.6
3017        *dld 3.2.3
3018        *doschk 1.1
3019        *ecc 1.2.1
3020        *ed 0.1
3021        *elib 0.06
3022        *Emacs 18.59
3023        *Emacs 19.23
3024        *es 0.84
3025        *f2c 1994.04.14
3026        *Fileutils 3.9
3027        *find 3.8
3028        *finger 1.37
3029        *flex 2.4.6
3030        *Fontutils 0.6
3031        *GAS 1.36.utah
3032        *GAS 2.2
3033        *Gawk 2.15.4
3034        *GCC 2.5.8
3035        *GDB 4.12
3036        *gdbm 1.7.1
3037        *Ghostscript 2.6.1
3038        *Ghostview 1.5
3039        *Ghostview for Windows 1.0
3040        *gmp 1.3.2
3041        *GNATS 3.2
3042        *GnuGo 1.1
3043        *gnuplot 3.5
3044        *gperf 2.1a
3045        *Graphics 0.17
3046        *grep 2.0
3047        *Groff 1.09
3048        *gzip 1.2.4
3049        *hello 1.3
3050        *hp2xx 3.1.4
3051        *indent 1.9.1
3052        *ispell 4.0
3053        *libg++ 2.5.3
3054        *m4 1.1
3055        *Make 3.71
3056        *MandelSpawn 0.07
3057        *mtools 2.0.7
3058        *MULE 1.0
3059        *NetFax 3.2.1
3060        *Nethack 3.1.3
3061        *NIHCL 3.0
3062        *nvi 1.11
3063        *Octave 1.0
3064        *Oleo 1.5
3065        *p2c 1.20
3066        *patch 2.1
3067        *PCL 1993.03.18
3068        *perl 4.036
3069        *ptx 0.3
3070        *rc 1.4
3071        *RCS 5.6.0.1
3072        *recode 3.3
3073        *regex 0.12
3074        *screen 3.5.2
3075        *sed 2.05
3076        *shellutils 1.9.4
3077        *Shogi 1.1.02
3078        *Smalltalk 1.1.1
3079        *Superopt 2.3
3080        *tar 1.11.2
3081        *Termcap 1.2
3082        *TeX 3.1
3083        *Texinfo 3.1
3084        *Textutils 1.9.1
3085        *Tile Forth 2.1
3086        *time 1.6
3087        *tput 1.0
3088        *UUCP 1.05
3089        *uuencode 1.0
3090        *wdiff 0.04
3091        *X11R6
3092        *xboard 3.0.9
3093        *xshogi 1.2.02
3094
3095
3096
3097November 1993 Source Code CD-ROM
3098................................
3099
3100We still have the third edition of our Source CD, at a reduced price.  It
3101contains X11R5, as we feel that people should have a choice between X11R5 and
3102X11R6 until the latter is stable.  This CD has Edition 2.2 for version 19 of
3103the `GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual' & some additional software; not all FSF
3104distributed software is included (*note Source Code CD-ROMs::.).  It contains
3105the following packages:
3106        *acm 3.1
3107        *Autoconf 1.7
3108        *BASH 1.13.4
3109        *bc 1.02
3110        *Binutils 1.9 2.3
3111        *Bison 1.22
3112        *C Library 1.06.7
3113        *Calc 2.02b
3114        *Chess 4.0p62
3115        *CLISP 93.11.08
3116        *cpio 2.3
3117        *CVS 1.3
3118        *dc 0.2
3119        *DejaGnu 1.0.1
3120        *Diffutils 2.6
3121        *dld 3.2.3
3122        *doschk 1.1
3123        *ecc 1.2.1
3124        *elib 0.06
3125        *Emacs 18.59
3126        *Emacs 19.21
3127        *es 0.84
3128        *f2c 1993.04.28
3129        *Fileutils 3.9
3130        *find 3.8
3131        *finger 1.37
3132        *flex 2.3.8
3133        *Fontutils 0.6
3134        *GAS 1.36.utah
3135        *GAS 1.38.1
3136        *GAS 2.2
3137        *Gawk 2.15.3
3138        *GCC 2.5.4
3139        *GDB 4.11
3140        *gdbm 1.7.1
3141        *Ghostscript 2.6.1
3142        *Ghostview 1.5
3143        *Ghostview for Windows 1.0
3144        *gmp 1.3.2
3145        *GNATS 3.01
3146        *GnuGo 1.1
3147        *gnuplot 3.5
3148        *gperf 2.1a
3149        *Graphics 0.17
3150        *grep 2.0
3151        *Groff 1.08
3152        *gzip 1.2.4
3153        *hello 1.3
3154        *hp2xx 3.1.3a
3155        *indent 1.8
3156        *Ispell 4.0
3157        *less 177
3158        *libg++ 2.5.1
3159        *m4 1.1
3160        *Make 3.69.1
3161        *MandelSpawn 0.06
3162        *mtools 2.0.7
3163        *MULE 1.0
3164        *NetFax 3.2.1
3165        *Nethack 3.1.3
3166        *NIHCL 3.0
3167        *Oleo 1.5
3168        *p2c 1.20
3169        *patch 2.1
3170        *PCL 93.03.18
3171        *perl 4.036
3172        *ptx 0.3
3173        *rc 1.4
3174        *RCS 5.6.0.1
3175        *recode 3.2.4
3176        *regex 0.12
3177        *screen 3.5.2
3178        *sed 1.18 2.03
3179        *Shellutils 1.9.1
3180        *Shogi 1.1p02
3181        *Smalltalk 1.1.1
3182        *Superopt 2.3
3183        *tar 1.11.2
3184        *Termcap 1.2
3185        *TeX 3.1
3186        *Texinfo 3.1
3187        *Tile Forth 2.1
3188        *time 1.6
3189        *time 1.6
3190        *tput 1.0
3191        *UUCP 1.04
3192        *uuencode 1.0
3193        *wdiff 0.04
3194        *X11R5
3195
3196
3197
3198
3199MS-DOS Diskettes
3200****************
3201
3202The FSF distributes some of the GNU software ported to MS-DOS, on 3.5inch
32031.44MB diskettes. These disks have both sources and executables.
3204
3205
3206
3207DJGPP Diskettes - (VERSION NUMBERS NOT COMPLETELY UP TO DATE)
3208---------------
3209
3210We offer DJGPP on 30 diskettes.  For further details, see *Note GNU
3211Software::.  The DJGPP diskettes contain the following:
3212
3213        * bc 1.03
3214        * Binutils 2.4
3215        * Bison 1.22
3216        * cpio 2.3
3217        * Diffutils 2.6
3218        * doschk 1.1
3219        * Fileutils 3.9
3220        * Findutils 3.8
3221        * GAS 2.4
3222        * Gawk 2.15.5
3223        * GCC 2.6.0
3224        * GDB 4.12
3225        * Ghostscript 2.6.1
3226        * Ghostview for Windows 1.0
3227        * Groff 1.09
3228        * gzip 1.24
3229        * hello 1.3
3230        * indent 1.9
3231        * ispell 4.0
3232        * m4 1.2
3233        * Make 3.71
3234        * patch 2.1
3235        * sed 1.18
3236        * shellutils 1.9
3237        * Texinfo 3.1
3238        * texutils 1.9
3239        * wdiff 0.04
3240
3241
3242
3243Emacs Diskettes - (VERSION NUMBERS NOT COMPLETELY UP TO DATE)
3244---------------
3245
3246Two versions of GNU Emacs are included on the Emacs diskettes we distribute:
3247GNU Emacs version 19.29 handles 8-bit character sets; the other, MULE version
32482.1, handles 16-bit character sets including Kanji.
3249
3250
3251
3252Selected Utilities Diskettes - (NOT COMPLETELY UP TO DATE)
3253----------------------------
3254
3255The GNUish MS-DOS Project ported GNU software to PC compatibles.  Though the
3256GNUish Project is no longer active, users still ask for these ports that were
3257done several years ago.  You can anonymous FTP files
3258`/pub/gnu/MicrosPorts/MSDOS*' from `prep.ai.mit.edu' to find out how to
3259access these ports over the Internet.  We offer these programs on five
3260diskettes.  In general, this software will run on 8086 and 80286-based 16-bit
3261machines; an 80386 is not required.  Some of these utilities are necessarily
3262missing features.   Included are: `cpio', `diff', `find', `flex', `gdbm',
3263`grep', `indent', `less', `m4', `make', `ptx', RCS, `sed', `shar', `sort', &
3264Texinfo.
3265
3266
3267
3268Windows Diskette
3269----------------
3270
3271We offer GNU Chess and `gnuplot' for Microsoft Windows on a single diskette.
3272
3273
3274
3275Tape & CD-ROM Subscription Service
3276**********************************
3277
3278If you do not have net access, our subscription service enables you to stay
3279current with the latest GNU developments.  For a one-time cost equivalent to
3280three tapes or CD-ROMs (plus shipping in some cases), we will ship you four
3281new versions of the tape of your choice or the Source Code CD-ROM.  The tapes
3282are sent each quarter; the CD-ROMs are sent as they are issued (which is
3283between two and four times a year.)
3284
3285Regularly, we will send you a new version of an Lisps/Emacs, Languages,
3286Utilities, or X Window System (X11R6) Required tape or the Source CD-ROM.
3287The MIT Scheme and X Window System Optional tapes are not changed often
3288enough to warrant quarterly updates.  We do not yet know if we will be
3289offering subscriptions to the Compiler Tools Binaries or our new CD-ROMs.
3290
3291Since Emacs 19 is on the Lisps/Emacs Tape and the Source CD-ROM, a
3292subscription to either is an easy way to keep current with Emacs 19 as it
3293evolves.
3294
3295A subscription is an easy way to keep up with the regular bug fixes to the X
3296Window System.  We update the X11R6 Required tape as fixes and patches are
3297issued throughout the year.  Each new edition of the *Note Source Code
3298CD-ROMs::, also has updated sources for the X Window System.
3299
3300Please note: In two cases, you must pay 4 times the normal shipping required
3301for a single order when you pay for each subscription.  If you're in Alaska,
3302Hawaii, or Puerto Rico you must add $20.00 for shipping for each
3303subscription.  If you're outside of U.S., Canada, and Puerto Rico, you have
3304to add $80.00 for each subscription.  See "Unix and VMS Software" & "Shipping
3305Instructions" on the *note Free Software Foundation Order Form::..
3306
3307
3308
3309The Deluxe Distribution
3310***********************
3311
3312The Free Software Foundation has been asked repeatedly to create a package
3313that provides executables for all of our software.  Normally we offer only
3314sources.  In addition to providing binaries with the source code, the Deluxe
3315Distribution includes a complete set of our printed manuals and reference
3316cards.
3317
3318The FSF Deluxe Distribution contains the binaries and sources to hundreds of
3319different programs including GNU Emacs, the GNU C Compiler, the GNU Debugger,
3320the complete X Window System, and all the GNU utilities.
3321
3322We will make a Deluxe Distribution for any machine, with any operating
3323system.  We will send someone to your office to do the compilation, if we
3324can't find a suitable machine close to us!  However, we can only compile the
3325programs that already support your chosen machine and system  - porting is a
3326separate matter (if you wish to commission a port, see the GNU Service
3327Directory, details in *Note Free Software Support::).  Compiling all these
3328programs take time; a Deluxe Distribution for an unusual machine will take
3329longer to produce then one for a common machine.  Please contact the FSF
3330office if you have any questions.
3331
3332We supply the software in one of these tape formats in Unix `tar' format:
33331600 or 6250bpi 1/2in reel, Sun DC300XLP 1/4in cartridge - QIC24,
3334Hewlett-Packard 16-track DC600HC 1/4in cartridge, IBM RS/6000 1/4in cartridge
3335- QIC 150, Exabyte 8mm cartridge, or DAT 4mm cartridge.  If your computer
3336cannot read any of these, please contact us to see if we can handle your
3337format.
3338
3339The manuals included are one each of the `Bison', `Calc', `Gawk', `GNU C
3340Compiler', `GNU C Library', `GDB', `Flex', `GNU Emacs Lisp Reference',
3341`Programming in Emacs Lisp: An Introduction', `Make', `Texinfo', & `Termcap'
3342manuals; six copies of the `GNU Emacs' manual; and a packet of ten reference
3343cards each for GNU Emacs, Bison, Calc, Flex, & GDB.   Every Deluxe
3344Distribution also includes a copy of the latest editions of our CD-ROMs
3345(including the MS-DOS CD & the Debian GNU/Linux CD when they are available)
3346that contain sources of our software & compiler tool binaries for some
3347systems.  The MS-DOS CD is in ISO 9660 format.  The other CDs are in ISO 9660
3348format with Rock Ridge extensions.
3349
3350The price of the Deluxe Distribution is $5000 (shipping included).  These
3351sales provide enormous financial assistance to help the FSF develop more free
3352software.  To order, please fill out the "Deluxe Distribution" section on the
3353*note Free Software Foundation Order Form::.  and send it to:
3354
3355        Free Software Foundation, Inc.
3356        59 Temple Place -- Suite 330
3357        Boston, MA   02111--1307
3358        USA
3359
3360        Telephone: +1-617-542-5942
3361        Fax (including Japan):       +1-617-542-2652
3362        Free Dial Fax (in Japan):
3363                   0031-13-2473 (KDD)
3364                   0066-3382-0158 (IDC)
3365        Electronic mail: gnu@prep.ai.mit.edu
3366
3367
3368
3369FSF T-shirt
3370***********
3371
3372Our latest T-shirt has artwork by Berkeley, CA artist Etienne Suvasa.  The
3373front has the ever-popular picture of GNArnold from the `Flex Manual', while
3374the back has the Preamble to the GNU General Public License.
3375
3376They are available in two colors, Natural & Black.  Natural is an off-white,
3377unbleached, undyed, environment-friendly cotton, printed with black ink, & is
3378great for tye-dyeing or displaying as is.  Black is printed with white ink &
3379is perfect for late night hacking.  All shirts are thick 100% cotton, & are
3380available in sizes M, L, XL & XXL.  This shirt makes a great gift for your
3381favorite hacker!
3382
3383The previous version of the T-shirt will be available while supplies last,
3384but please contact the FSF to see if we have what you would like before
3385ordering.
3386
3387
3388
3389Free Software Foundation Order Form
3390***********************************
3391
3392All items are distributed with permission to copy and to redistribute.
3393Texinfo source for each manual and source for each reference card is on
3394the appropriate tape, diskette, or CD-ROM; the prices for these magnetic
3395media do not include printed documentation.  All items are provided on
3396an ``as is'' basis, with no warranty of any kind.  Please allow six
3397weeks for delivery (though it won't usually take that long).
3398
3399
3400     PRICE AND CONTENTS MAY CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE AFTER January 31, 1996.
3401
3402
3403
3404Unix and VMS Software
3405---------------------
3406
3407These tapes in the formats indicated (*note Tapes::., for contents):
3408
3409        Please circle the dollar amount for each tape you order.
3410
3411                Reel to   Sun (1)   HP        IBM (2)   Exabyte  DAT
3412                reel                          RS/6000
3413                Unix tar  Unix tar  Unix tar  Unix tar  Unix tar Unix tar
3414                9-track   QIC-24    16-track  QIC-150
3415                1600 bpi  DC300XLP  DC600HC   DC600A
3416                1/2" reel 1/4" c.t. 1/4" c.t. 1/4" c.t. 8mm c.t. 4mm c.t.
3417
3418    (c.t. = cartridge tape)
3419
3420Lisps/Emacs     $200      $210      $230      $215 (3)  $205     $225
3421Languages       $200      $210      $230      $215      $205     $225
3422Utilities       $200      $210      $230      $215      $205     $225
34234.4BSD-Lite     $200      $210      $230      $215      $205     $225
3424Scheme          $200      $210      $230      $215      $205     $225
3425X11R5-Required  $200      $210      $230      $215      $205     $225
3426X11R5-Optional  $200      $210      $230      $215      $205     $225
3427X11R6-Required  $200      $210      $230      $215      $205     $225
3428X11R6-Optional  $200      $210      $230      $215      $205     $225
3429
3430         (1) Sun tapes can be read on some other Unix systems.
3431         (2) IBM RS/6000 tapes can be read on some other Unix systems.
3432         (3) The IBM Emacs tape also has binaries for GNU Emacs.
3433
3434
3435Subscriptions, 4 updates for one year (*note Tape & CD-ROM Subscription Service::.):
3436
3437Emacs           $600      $630      $690      $645      $615     $675
3438Languages       $600      $630      $690      $645      $615     $675
3439Utilities       $600      $630      $690      $645      $615     $675
3440X11R6-Required  $600      $630      $690      $645      $615     $675
3441
3442      Subtotal $ ______  Please put total of the above circled amounts here.
3443
3444
3445These 1600 bpi reel-to-reel 9 track 1/2" tapes, in VMS BACKUP format (aka
3446interchange format) (*note VMS Emacs and VMS Compiler Tapes::.):
3447
3448____ @ $195  = $ ______   VMS Emacs, GNU Emacs source & executables only.
3449
3450____ @ $195  = $ ______   VMS Compiler, GCC, GAS, and Bison source and
3451                           executables only.
3452
3453
3454FSF Deluxe Distribution (*note Deluxe Distribution::.):
3455......................................................
3456
3457
3458____ @ $5000 = $ ______   The Deluxe Distribution, with manuals, etc.
3459
3460Machine: _____________________________________________________________________
3461
3462Operating system: ____________________________________________________________
3463
3464Media type: __________________________________________________________________
3465
3466
3467
3468CD-ROMs, in ISO 9660 format (*note CD-ROMs::.):
3469..............................................
3470
3471
3472GNU Source Code CD-ROM, Version 6 with X11R6 (*note June 1995 Source Code CD-ROM::.):
3473
3474____ @ $240  = $ ______   for corporations and other organizations.
3475
3476____ @ $ 60  = $ ______   for individuals.
3477
3478
3479
3480GNU Compiler Tools Binaries CD-ROM, Version 2, December 1994 Edition
3481(*note Compiler Tools Binaries CD-ROM::.):
3482
3483____ @ $220  = $ ______   for corporations and other organizations.
3484
3485____ @  $55  = $ ______   for individuals.
3486
3487
3488
3489Debian GNU/Linux Book with CD-ROM - expected late fall 1995 (*note Debian GNU/Linux CD-ROM::.):
3490
3491____ @ $200  = $ ______   for corporations and other organizations.
3492
3493____ @  $50  = $ ______   for individuals.
3494
3495
3496Subscriptions, next 4 updates, of the Source Code CD-ROM, in ISO 9660 format
3497(*note Tape & CD-ROM Subscription Service::.):
3498
3499____ @ $720  = $ ______   for corporations and other organizations.
3500
3501____ @ $180  = $ ______   for individuals.
3502
3503
3504
3505MS-DOS Software
3506---------------
3507
3508MS-DOS Book with CD-ROM - expected September 1995 (*note MS-DOS CD-ROM::.):
3509
3510____ @ $180  = $ ______   for corporations and other organizations.
3511
3512____ @  $45  = $ ______   for individuals.
3513
3514
3515
3516The following sources and executables for MS-DOS, on 3.5" 1.44MB diskettes
3517(*note MS-DOS Diskettes::.):
3518
3519____ @ $ 90  = $ ______   Emacs diskettes, GNU Emacs, for 80386 and up.
3520
3521____ @ $ 80  = $ ______   DJGPP diskettes, GCC version 2, for 80386 and up
3522                           (also on the *note Compiler Tools Binaries CD-ROM::. and *note MS-DOS CD-ROM::..)
3523____ @ $ 85  = $ ______   Selected Utilities diskettes, 8086 and up.
3524
3525____ @ $ 40  = $ ______   Windows diskette, GNU Chess and gnuplot for
3526                           Microsoft Windows.
3527
3528
3529Manuals
3530-------
3531
3532These manuals (*note Documentation::.).  Please call for bulk purchase
3533discounts.
3534
3535____ @ $300  = $ ______   One copy each of the following 13 manuals.
3536
3537____ @ $ 25  = $ ______   GNU Emacs version manual, with a reference card.
3538
3539____ @ $ 50  = $ ______   GNU Emacs Lisp Reference manual, in two volumes.
3540
3541____ @ $ 50  = $ ______   Using and Porting GNU CC.
3542
3543____ @ $ 50  = $ ______   GNU C Library Reference Manual.
3544
3545____ @ $ 50  = $ ______   GNU Emacs Calc manual, with a reference card.
3546
3547____ @ $ 20  = $ ______   Programming in Emacs Lisp, An Introduction
3548
3549____ @ $ 20  = $ ______   Debugging with GDB, with a reference card.
3550
3551____ @ $ 20  = $ ______   Gawk manual.
3552
3553____ @ $ 20  = $ ______   Make manual.
3554
3555____ @ $ 20  = $ ______   Bison manual, with a reference card.
3556
3557____ @ $ 20  = $ ______   Flex manual, with a reference card.
3558
3559____ @ $ 20  = $ ______   Texinfo manual.
3560
3561____ @ $ 15  = $ ______   Termcap manual.
3562
3563
3564
3565Reference Cards
3566---------------
3567
3568The following reference cards, in packets of ten.  For single copies please
3569call.
3570
3571____ @ $ 10  = $ ______   GNU Emacs version 19 reference cards.
3572
3573____ @ $ 10  = $ ______   GNU Emacs Calc reference cards.
3574
3575____ @ $ 10  = $ ______   GDB reference cards.
3576
3577____ @ $ 10  = $ ______   Bison reference cards.
3578
3579____ @ $ 10  = $ ______   Flex reference cards.
3580
3581
3582
3583T-shirts
3584--------
3585
3586GNU/FSF T-shirts, thick 100% cotton (*note FSF T-shirt::.):
3587
3588____ @ $ 15  = $ ______   Size M     ____ natural  ____ black.
3589
3590____ @ $ 15  = $ ______   Size L     ____ natural  ____ black.
3591
3592____ @ $ 15  = $ ______   Size XL    ____ natural  ____ black.
3593
3594____ @ $ 15  = $ ______   Size XXL   ____ natural  ____ black.
3595
3596
3597
3598Older Items
3599-----------
3600
3601Older items are only available while supplies last.
3602
3603____ @ $  5  = $ ______   GNU Emacs version 18 reference cards, in packets
3604                           of ten.
3605
3606Please fill in the number of each older CD-ROM you order:
3607
3608                                                for             for
3609                                                corporations    individuals:
3610                                                and other
3611                                                organizations:
3612
3613GNU Compiler Tools Binaries CD-ROM
3614        December 1993 Edition (Version 1)       ____________    ____________
3615
3616
3617GNU Source Code CD-ROM
3618        May 1994 edition with X11R6             ____________    ____________
3619
3620GNU Source Code CD-ROM
3621        November 1993 edition with X11R5        ____________    ____________
3622
3623GNU Source Code CD-ROM
3624        May 1993 edition with X11R5             ____________    ____________
3625
3626GNU Source Code CD-ROM
3627        October 1992 edition with X11R5         ____________    ____________
3628
3629
3630Please put the total count and cost of the above older CD-ROMs here:
3631
3632____ @ $ 80  = $ ______   for corporations and other organizations.
3633
3634____ @ $ 20  = $ ______   for individuals.
3635
3636                 ======
3637
3638      Subtotal $ ______
3639
3640
3641
3642Tax and Shipping Costs
3643----------------------
3644
3645             + $ ______   In Massachusetts: add 5% sales tax, or give tax
3646                          exempt number.
3647             + $ ______   In Alaska, Hawaii, or Puerto Rico for shipping:
3648                          for GNU Emacs Lisp Reference and GNU Emacs Calc
3649                          manuals, add $5 *each*.  For *each* tape or
3650                          CD-ROM subscription, add $20.  For all other
3651                          items, add $5 base charge, then $1 per item except
3652                          reference cards; i.e.,
3653                          shipping for all other items = $5 + ($1 * i).
3654             + $ ______   Outside of U.S., Canada, and Puerto Rico for
3655                          shipping:  Add $20 base charge; then add $80 more
3656                          for *each* tape or CD-ROM subscription; and then
3657                          add $10 more for *each* manual in the order;
3658                          i.e., shipping for all other items
3659                                             = $20 + ($80 * s) + ($10 * m).
3660             + $ ______   Optional (tax-deductible in the U.S.) donation.
3661                 ------   We suggest 5% if paying by credit card.
3662
3663         TOTAL $ ______   We pay for shipping via UPS ground transportation in
3664                          the contiguous 48 states and Canada.  For very
3665                          large orders, ask about actual shipping costs for
3666                          that order.
3667
3668
3669
3670Shipping Information
3671--------------------
3672
3673Name: ________________________________________________________________________
3674
3675Mail Stop/Dept. Name: ________________________________________________________
3676
3677Organization: ________________________________________________________________
3678
3679Street Address: ______________________________________________________________
3680
3681City/State/Province: _________________________________________________________
3682
3683Zip Code/Postal Code/Country: ________________________________________________
3684
3685Telephone number in case of a problem with your order.
3686For international orders, please include a FAX number. _______________________
3687
3688
3689------------------------------------------------------------------------------
3690|                                                                            |
3691|  Orders filled only upon receipt of check, money order or credit card      |
3692|  order in U.S. dollars.  Unpaid orders will be returned to the sender.     |
3693|  We do not have the staff to handle the billing of unpaid orders.  Please  |
3694|  help keep our lives simple by including your payment with your order.     |
3695|                                                                            |
3696------------------------------------------------------------------------------
3697
3698
3699For orders from outside the U.S.:
3700---------------------------------
3701
3702You are responsible for paying all duties, tariffs, and taxes.  If you
3703refuse to pay the charges, the shipper will return or abandon the order.
3704
3705
3706 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3707 |                                                                         |
3708 |      Please make checks payable to the ``Free Software Foundation''.    |
3709 |                                                                         |
3710 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3711
3712
3713For Credit Card Orders:
3714-----------------------
3715
3716The Free Software Foundation takes these credit cards: Carte Blanche,
3717Diner's Club, JCB, Mastercard, Visa, or American Express.  Please note that
3718we are charged about 5% of an order's total amount in credit card
3719processing fees.  Please consider paying by check instead, or adding on a
37205% donation to make up the difference.  To place a credit card order,
3721please give us this information:
3722
3723
3724Card type: ___________________________________________________________________
3725
3726Account Number: ______________________________________________________________
3727
3728Expiration Date: _____________________________________________________________
3729
3730Cardholder's Signature: ______________________________________________________
3731
3732
3733
3734------------------------------------------------------------------------------
3735|                                                                            |
3736|     If you wish to pay by wire transfer, or you are a reseller, please     |
3737|     call or write us for details.                                          |
3738|                                                                            |
3739------------------------------------------------------------------------------
3740
3741
3742                Please mail orders to:  Free Software Foundation
3743                                        59 Temple Place -- Suite 330
3744                                        Boston, MA   02111
3745                                        +1-617-542-5942
3746                                        FAX (including Japan): +1-617-542-2652
3747                                        Free Dial FAX numbers in Japan:
3748PRICES AND CONTENTS MAY CHANGE                          0031-13-2473 (KDD)
3749WITHOUT NOTICE AFTER January 31, 1996.                  0066-3382-0158 (IDC)
3750
3751Version: June 1995 ASCII Bull to June 1995 Src CD/GNU 19.29/GCC 2.7.0
3752
3753---------------------------------------------------------------------
3754local variables:
3755mode: text
3756fill-column: 78
3757end:
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