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README for XFree86[tm] 3.3.6

The XFree86 Project, Inc

31 December 1999

Abstract

XFree86 is a port of X11R6.3 that supports several Unix and Unix-
like operating systems on Intel and other platforms. The 3.3.x
versions of XFree86 are considered the "legacy branch" of XFree86.
The majority of development is being done in the XFree86-4 branch.
We will continue to maintain XFree86-3.3.x to some degree at least
throughout the year 2000. The release is available as source
patches against the X Consortium X11R6.3 code and the XFree86 3.3.5
release. Binary distributions for many architectures are also
available.

1. What's new in XFree86 3.3.6

For a summary of new features in this release, please refer to the RELNOTES
file. For a detailed list of changes, refer to the CHANGELOG file in the
source distribution.

2. Systems XFree86 has been tested on

Note: Not all systems listed here have been tested with the current release.

SVR4.0:

o Esix: 4.0.3A, 4.0.4, 4.0.4.1

o SunSoft: Solaris x86 2.1, 2.4, 2.5, 2.5.1, 2.6

SVR4.2:
(untested lately)

o Consensys

o Novell/SCO UnixWare

SVR3:
(untested lately)

o ISC: 3.0, 4.0, 4.1

Others:

o NetBSD 1.0, 1.1, 1.2, 1.2.1, 1.3, 1.3.1, 1.3.2, 1.3.3, 1.4

o OpenBSD 2.0, 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, 2.4

o FreeBSD 2.0.5, 2.1, 2.1.5, 2.1.6, 2.1.7, 2.1.7.1, 2.2,
2.2.1, 2.2.2, 2.2.5, 2.2.6, 2,2,7, 2.2.8, 3.0, 3.1, 3.2

o Linux (Intel x86, DEC Alpha/AXP and m68k)

o LynxOS x86 2.3.0, 2.4.0, 2.5.x, 3.0.x

o LynxOS microSPARC 2.4.0, 2.5.x, 3.0.x

o LynxOS PowerPC 2.4.0, 2.5.x, 3.0.x

o OS/2 Warp 3 FP5/17/22, Warp 4 -/FP1

PC98:

o FreeBSD(98) 2.0.5, 2.1, 2.1.5, 2.1.7.1, 2.2, 2.2.1, 2.2.2,
2.2.5, 2.2.6, 2,2,7, 2.2.8, 3.0, 3.1, 3.2

o NetBSD/pc98 (based on NetBSD 1.2, 1.2.1, 1.3, 1.3.1, 1.3.2,
1.3.3)

o PANIX 5.0 for 98

o Linux/98

3. Supported video-card chip-sets

At this time, XFree86 3.3.6 supports the following chipsets:

Ark Logic
ARK1000PV, ARK1000VL, ARK2000PV, ARK2000MT

Alliance
AP6422, AT24

ATI
18800, 18800-1, 28800-2, 28800-4, 28800-5, 28800-6, 68800-3,
68800-6, 68800AX, 68800LX, 88800GX-C, 88800GX-D, 88800GX-E,
88800GX-F, 88800CX, 264CT, 264ET, 264VT, 264GT, 264VT-B, 264VT3,
264GT-B, 264GT3 (this list includes the Mach8, Mach32, Mach64, 3D
Rage, 3D Rage II and 3D Rage Pro), Rage LT, Rage LT PRO, Rage 128

Avance Logic
ALG2101, ALG2228, ALG2301, ALG2302, ALG2308, ALG2401

Chips & Technologies
65520, 65525, 65530, 65535, 65540, 65545, 65546, 65548, 65550,
65554, 65555, 68554, 69000, 64200, 64300

Cirrus Logic
CLGD5420, CLGD5422, CLGD5424, CLGD5426, CLGD5428, CLGD5429,
CLGD5430, CLGD5434, CLGD5436, CLGD5440, CLGD5446, CLGD5462,
CLGD5464, CLGD5465, CLGD5480, CLGD6205, CLGD6215, CLGD6225,
CLGD6235, CLGD6410, CLGD6412, CLGD6420, CLGD6440, CLGD7541(*),
CLGD7543(*), CLGD7548(*), CLGD7555(*)

Cyrix
MediaGX, MediaGXm

Compaq
AVGA

Digital Equipment Corporation
TGA

Epson
SPC8110

Genoa
GVGA

IBM
8514/A (and true clones), XGA-2

Intel
i740

IIT
AGX-014, AGX-015, AGX-016

Matrox
MGA2064W (Millennium), MGA1064SG (Mystique and Mystique 220),
MGA2164W (Millennium II PCI and AGP), G100, G200, G400

MX
MX68000(*), MX680010(*)

NCR
77C22(*), 77C22E(*), 77C22E+(*)

NeoMagic
2200, 2160, 2097, 2093, 2090, 2070

Number Nine
I128 (series I, II and IV), Revolution 3D (T2R)

NVidia/SGS Thomson
NV1, STG2000, RIVA128, Riva TNT, Riva TNT2

OAK
OTI067, OTI077, OTI087

RealTek
RTG3106(*)

Rendition
V1000, V2x00

S3
86C911, 86C924, 86C801, 86C805, 86C805i, 86C928, 86C864, 86C964,
86C732, 86C764, 86C765, 86C767, 86C775, 86C785, 86C868, 86C968,
86C325, 86C357, 86C362, 86C375, 86C375, 86C385, 86C988, 86CM65,
86C260

SiS
86C201, 86C202, 86C205, 86C215, 86C225, 5597, 5598, 6326, 530,
620, 540, 630, 300

3dfx
Voodoo Banshee, Voodoo3

3DLabs
GLINT 500TX, GLINT MX, Permedia, Permedia 2, Permedia 2v

Tseng
ET3000, ET4000AX, ET4000/W32, ET4000/W32i, ET4000/W32p, ET6000,
ET6100

Trident
TVGA8800CS, TVGA8900B, TVGA8900C, TVGA8900CL, TVGA9000,
TVGA9000i, TVGA9100B, TVGA9200CXR, Cyber9320(*), TVGA9400CXi,
TVGA9420, TGUI9420DGi, TGUI9430DGi, TGUI9440AGi, TGUI9660XGi,
TGUI9680, ProVidia 9682, ProVidia 9685(*), Cyber 9382, Cyber
9385, Cyber 9388, 3DImage975, 3DImage985, Cyber 9397, Cyber 9520,
Cyber 9525, Blade3D, CyberBlade

Video 7/Headland Technologies
HT216-32(*)

Weitek
P9000, P9100

Western Digital/Paradise
PVGA1

Western Digital
WD90C00, WD90C10, WD90C11, WD90C24, WD90C24A, WD90C30, WD90C31,
WD90C33

(*) Note, chips marked in this way have either limited support or the drivers
for them are not actively maintained.

All of the above are supported in both 256 color, and some are supported in
mono and 16 color modes, and some are supported an higher color depths.

Refer to the chipset-specific README files (currently for TGA, Matrox,
Mach32, Mach64, NVidia, Oak, P9000, S3 (except ViRGE), S3 ViRGE, SiS, Video7,
Western Digital, Tseng (W32), Tseng (all), AGX/XGA, ARK, ATI (SVGA server),
Chips and Technologies, Cirrus, Trident, NeoMagic, Rendition, Rage128, Epson,
3DLabs) i740) for more information about using those chipsets.

The monochrome server also supports generic VGA cards, using 64k of video
memory in a single bank, the Hercules monochrome card, the Hyundai HGC1280,
Sigma LaserView, Visa and Apollo monochrome cards.

The VGA16 server supports memory banking with the ET4000, Trident, ATI, NCR,
OAK and Cirrus 6420 chipsets allowing virtual display sizes up to about
1600x1200 (with 1MB of video memory). For other chipsets the display size is
limited to approximately 800x600.

4. Where to get more information

Additional documentation is available in the XFree86(1), XF86Config(4/5),
XF86_SVGA(1), XF86_Mono(1), XF86_VGA16(1), XF86_Accel(1), XF86Setup(1) and
xvidtune(1) manual pages. In addition, several README files and tutorial
documents are provided. These are available in /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/doc in the
binary distributions, and in xc/programs/Xserver/hw/xfree86/doc in the
source distribution.

The files QuickStart.doc and README.Config should be consulted for informa-
tion on how to set up the XFree86 servers. All supplied documents, manual
pages, and the XFree86 FAQ should be read
before contacting the XFree86 team for assistance.

Documentation on SVGA driver development can be found in the directory
/usr/X11R6/lib/Server/VGADriverDoc in the binary distribution, and in the
directory xc/programs/Xserver/hw/xfree86/VGADriverDoc in the source distribu-
tion.

If you are totally at a loss, you can contact the XFree86 Support Team at
. Before doing so, please make sure that you are using
the latest release of XFree86. Check the versions listed on
ftp://ftp.xfree86.org/pub/XFree86.

There is a Usenet news group comp.windows.x.i386unix that contains mostly
discussions about XFree86 and related topics. Many questions can be answered
there.

5. Credits

XFree86 was originally put together by:

o David Dawes

o Glenn Lai

o Jim Tsillas

o David Wexelblat

XFree86 support was integrated into the base X11R6 distribution by:

o Stuart Anderson

o Doug Anson

o Gertjan Akkerman

o Mike Bernson

o Robin Cutshaw

o David Dawes

o Marc Evans

o Pascal Haible

o Matthieu Herrb

o Dirk Hohndel

o David Holland

o Alan Hourihane

o Jeffrey Hsu

o Glenn Lai

o Ted Lemon

o Rich Murphey

o Hans Nasten

o Mark Snitily

o Randy Terbush

o Jon Tombs

o Kees Verstoep

o Paul Vixie

o Mark Weaver

o David Wexelblat

o Philip Wheatley

o Thomas Wolfram

o Orest Zborowski

386BSD, FreeBSD, NetBSD support by:

o Rich Murphey

NetBSD, OpenBSD support by:

o Matthieu Herrb

Original 386BSD port by:

o Pace Willison,

o Amancio Hasty Jr

Mach 386 support by:

o Robert Baron

Linux support by:

o Orest Zborowski

DG/ux support by:

o Takis Psarogiannakopoulos

SCO Unix support by:

o David McCullough

Amoeba support by:

o Kees Verstoep

Minix-386 support by:

o Philip Homburg

OSF/1 support by:

o Marc Evans

BSD/OS support by:

o Hans Nasten ,

o Paul Vixie

Solaris support by:

o Doug Anson ,

o David Holland

ISC SVR3 support by:

o Michael Rohleder

LynxOS support by:

o Thomas Mueller

OS/2 support by:

o Holger Veit

o Sebastien Marineau

Linux shared libraries by:

o Orest Zborowski ,

o Dirk Hohndel

PC98 support by:

o Toyonori Fujiura ,

o Hiroyuki Aizu ,

o Tetsuya Kakefuda ,

o Takefumi Tsukada ,

o H.Komatsuzaki,

o Naoki Katsurakawa ,

o Shuichiro Urata ,

o Yasuyuki Kato ,

o Michio Jinbo ,

o Tatsuya Koike ,

o Koichiro Suzuki ,

o Tsuyoshi Tamaki ,

o Isao Ohishi ,

o Kohji Ohishi ,

o Shin'ichi Yairo ,

o Kazuo Ito ,

o Jun Sakuma ,

o Shuichi Ueno ,

o Ishida Kazuo ,

o Takaaki Nomura ,

o Tadaaki Nagao ,

o Minoru Noda ,

o Naofumi Honda ,

o Akio Morita ,

o Takashi Sakamoto ,

o Yasuhiro Ichikawa ,

o Kazunori Ueno ,

o Yasushi Suzuki ,

o Satoshi Kimura ,

o Kazuhiko Uno ,

o Tomiharu Takigami ,

o Tomomi Suzuki ,

o Toshihiko Yagi ,

o Masato Yoshida (Contributor of PW805i support)

Original accelerated code by:

o Kevin E. Martin ,

o Rik Faith ,

o Jon Tombs

XFree86 Acceleration Architecture (XAA) by:

o Harm Hanemaayer ,

S3 accelerated code by:

o Jon Tombs ,

o Harald Koenig ,

o David Wexelblat ,

o David Dawes ,

o Robin Cutshaw ,

o Amancio Hasty ,

o Norbert Distler ,

o Leonard N. Zubkoff ,

o Bernhard Bender ,

o Dirk Hohndel ,

o Joe Moss

S3V accelerated code by:

o Harald Koenig ,

o Kevin Brosius

o Berry Dijk

o Dirk Hohndel

o Huver Hu

o Dirk Vangestel

Mach32 accelerated code by:

o Kevin E. Martin ,

o Rik Faith ,

o Mike Bernson ,

o Mark Weaver ,

o Craig Groeschel

o Bryan Feir

Mach64 accelerated code by:

o Kevin E. Martin ,

Mach8, 8514 accelerated code by:

o Kevin E. Martin ,

o Rik Faith ,

o Tiago Gons ,

o Hans Nasten ,

o Scott Laird

Cirrus accelerated code by:

o Simon Cooper ,

o Harm Hanemaayer ,

o Bill Reynolds ,

o Corin Anderson

Western Digital accelerated code by:

o Mike Tierney ,

o Bill Conn

P9000 accelerated code by:

o Erik Nygren ,

o Harry Langenbacher

o Chris Mason

o Henrik Harmsen

AGX accelerated code by:

o Henry Worth ,

Number Nine I128 driver by:

o Robin Cutshaw ,

ET4000/W32 accelerated code by:

o Glenn Lai ,

ET6000 SVGA and accelerated support (both based on the existing W32 code) by:

o Koen Gadeyne ,

Oak Technologies Inc. accelerated code by:

o Jorge Delgado ,

16 color VGA server by:

o Gertjan Akkerman

2 color VGA and non-VGA mono servers by:

o Pascal Haible

ATI SVGA driver by:

o Per Lindqvist and Doug Evans
.

o Ported to X11R5 by Rik Faith .

o Rewritten by Marc Aurele La France

WD90C24 support by:

o Brad Bosch

Trident SVGA driver by:

o Alan Hourihane

SiS SVGA driver by:

o Alan Hourihane

o Xavier Ducoin

o Dirk Hohndel

DEC 21030 (TGA) server by:

o Alan Hourihane

o Harald Koenig

NCR SVGA driver by:

o Stuart Anderson with the permission
of NCR Corporation

Cirrus SVGA driver by:

o Bill Reynolds ,

o Hank Dietz ,

o Simon Cooper ,

o Harm Hanemaayer ,

o Corin Anderson

Cirrus CL64xx driver by:

o Manfred Brands

o Randy Hendry

o Jeff Kirk

Compaq SVGA driver by:

o Hans Oey

o Ming Yu

o Gerry Toll

Oak SVGA driver by:

o Steve Goldman

o Jorge Delgado

ARK Logic SVGA driver by:

o Harm Hanemaayer

o Leon Bottou

AL2101 SVGA driver by:

o Paolo Severini

Avance Logic ``ali'' SVGA driver by:

o Ching-Tai Chiu

Chips & Technologies SVGA driver by:

o Regis Cridlig

o Jon Block

o Mike Hollick

o Nozomi Ytow

o Egbert Eich

o David Bateman

o Xavier Ducoin

MX SVGA driver by:

o Frank Dikker

Video7 SVGA driver by:

o Craig Struble

RealTek SVGA driver by:

o Peter Trattler

Apollo Mono driver by:

o Hamish Coleman

Matrox SVGA driver by:

o Guy Desbief

o Radoslaw Kapitan

o Andrew Vanderstock

o Angsar Hockmann

o Michael Will

o Andrew Mileski

o Stephen Pitts

o Dirk Hohndel

o Leonard N. Zubkoff

ViRGE SVGA driver by:

o Sebastien Marineau ,

o Harald Koenig

Linux/m68k Frame Buffer Device driver by:

o Martin Schaller

o Geert Uytterhoeven

o Andreas Schwab

o Guenther Kelleter

Tseng ET4000 and ET6000 SVGA driver by:

o [Unknown authors]

o Dirk Hohndel

o Koen Gadeyne

o ... and others

P9100 accelerated code by:

o Joerg Knura

Rendition code by:

o Tim Rowley

o Marc Langenbach

Cyrix accelerated code by:

o Annius Groenink

o Dirk Hohndel

Epson code by:

o Thomas Mueller

3DLabs accelerated code by:

o Alan Hourihane

o Dirk Hohndel

o Stefan Dirsch

o Helmut Fahrion

3dfx accelerated code by:

o Daryll Strauss

o Scott Bertin

Intel i740 accelerated code by:

o Kevin E. Martin ,

XFree86-VidModeExtension and xvidtune client by:

o Kaleb S. Keithley

o David Dawes

o Jon Tombs

o Joe Moss

XFree86-Misc extension by:

o Joe Moss

o David Dawes

XFree86-DGA extension by:

o Jon Tombs

o Mark Vojkovich

o Harm Hanemaayer ,

o David Dawes

XInput integration, devices and clients by:

o Frederic Lepied (XInput integration,
Wacom tablet, Joystick and extended mouse devices, xset-
pointer and xsetmode clients)

o Patrick Lecoanet (Elographics touch-
screen device)

o Steven Lang (Summagraphics tablet device)

Other contributors:

o Joerg Wunsch (ET3000 banked
mono),

o Thomas Dickey (xterm "new" model ANSI
colors and VT220, VT52 emulation).

o Eric Raymond (new video mode docu-
mentation),

o and an entire horde of beta-testers around the world!

6. Contact information

Ongoing development planning and support is coordinated by the XFree86 Core
Team. At this time the Core Team consists of (in chronoligical order):

o David Dawes

o David Wexelblat

o Rich Murphey

o Dirk Hohndel

o Jon Tombs

o Marc Evans

o Robin Cutshaw

o Takaaki Nomura

o Harald Koenig

o Egbert Eich

o Mark Vojkovich

o Alan Hourihane

o Preston Brown

o Marc Aurele La France

o Kevin E. Martin

o Keith Packard

Mail sent to will reach the core team. Please note that
support questions should be sent to .

7. The XFree86 Project, Inc.

The XFree86 Project, Inc, was founded to accomplish two major goals:

1. To provide a vehicle by which XFree86 can be represented in X Consor-
tium, Inc, the organization responsible for the design, development,
and release of The X Window System.

2. To provide some basic funding for acquisition of facilities for ongoing
XFree86 development, largely to consist of new video hardware and basic
computing facilities.

The first of these was the primary motivation. We have held discussions with
the X Consortium on and off for many months, attempting to find an avenue by
which our loosely-organized free software project could be given a voice
within the X Consortium. The bylaws of the Consortium would not recognize
such an organization. After an initial investigation about funding, we
decided to form our own corporation to provide the avenue we needed to meet
the requirements of the X Consortium bylaws.

By doing this, we were able to be involved in the beta-test interval for
X11R6, and have contributed the majority of XFree86 to the X11R6 and X11R6.1
core release. The version of XFree86 in the initial X11R6 core is 3.0. The
version of XFree86 in the current X11R6.3 release is 3.2.

An additional benefit of this incorporation is that The XFree86 Project, Inc
has obtained outside financial support for our work. This will hopefully
give us the freedom to be more pro-active in obtaining new video hardware,
and enable us to release better products more quickly, as we will be able to
go and get what we need, and get it into the hands of the people who can do
the work.

The current Board of Directors and Officers of the The XFree86 Project, Inc,
are:

o David Dawes, President and Secretary

o Dirk Hohndel, Vice-President

o Robin Cutshaw, Director

o Marc Evans, Director

o Glenn Lai, Director

o Rich Murphey, Treasurer

o Jim Tsillas, Director

o Jon Tombs, Director

o David Wexelblat, Director

Email to reaches the board of directors.

Our bylaws have been crafted in such a way to ensure that XFree86 is and
always will be a free software project. There is no personal financial bene-
fit to any member of the Core Team or any other XFree86 participant. All
assets of the corporation remain with the corporation, and, in the event of
the dissolution of the corporation, all assets will be turned over to the X
Consortium, Inc. It is hoped that by doing this, our corporation will be
merely a formalization of what we have been doing in the past, rather than
something entirely new.

As of March 1997, The XFree86 Project has revised its source/binary access
and release policy. The main points of the new policy are:

o There will be no more time-limited public binary-only beta releases.
Instead we plan to increase the frequency of full public releases to
about four releases per year.

o The source access/use is divided into three categories:

o End users. End users have access to only the source of full public
releases. The main reason for this restriction is that our devel-
opment code often contains code from other sources which cannot be
released to the public immediately.

o Active developers (members of the XFree86 ``developer team'').
Active developers must formally become non-voting members of the
XFree86 Project, and have full access to our internal development
source. They are permitted to make time-limited binaries (in coor-
dination with the Core Team) of the servers they are actively work-
ing on available to external testers for specific testing.

o Commercial members. Commercial members are non-voting members of
The XFree86 Project who donate US$5000/year to the Project. Addi-
tionally, companies who contribute significantly to the development
effort of XFree86 can be awarded commercial membership by the Core
Team on a yearly bases. Commercial members can use the internal
XFree86 development source for derived binary-only products provid-
ing that they take full responsibility for supporting the product,
and don't call it ``XFree86'' (although the derivation of the prod-
uct must be acknowledged in any accompanying documentation).
Binary packages for the OSs we support which are simply compiled
from our internal source without significant added value are
explicitly NOT allowed.

Here is a list of the organizations and individuals who have provided spon-
sorship to The XFree86 Project, Inc, either by financial contribution or by
the donation of equipment and resources. The XFree86 Project, Inc gratefully
acknowledges these contributions, and hopes that we can do justice to them by
continuing to release high-quality free software for the betterment of the
Internet community as a whole.

o SuSE

SuSE, together with the Atlanta Linux Enthusiasts
and VA Linux Systems sponsored and organized the
1st XFree86 hothouse as part of the Atlanta Linux Showcase from Oct 9 till
Oct 15, 1999. In this week XFree86 made more progress than in any other week
in the history of The XFree86 Project. We are already planning to repeat
this in 2000.

o UUNET Communications Services, Inc.

UUNET Communications Services, Inc, deserves special mention. This organiza-
tion stepped forward and contributed the entire 1994 X Consortium membership
fee on a moment's notice. This single act ensured XFree86's involvement in
X11R6.

o GUUG -- 1st German Linux Congress

Also deserving of special mention are the organizers and attendees of the 1st
German Linux Congress in Heidelberg. Significant funding to The XFree86 Pro-
ject has been provided from its proceeds.

o AIB Software Corporation , Herndon, VA

o Roland Alder, Armin Fessler, Patrick Seemann, Martin Wunderli

o American Micro Group

o ATI Technologies Inc

o Andrew Burgess

o Berkeley Software Design, Inc , Colorado
Springs, CO

o Caldera, Inc.

o Delix Computer GmbH , Stuttgart, Germany

o The Destek Group, Inc. , Nashua, NH
(formerly Synergytics)

o Diamond Multimedia Systems, Inc.

o Digital Equipment Corporation

o Elsa GmbH , Aachen, Germany

o Genoa Systems Corporation

o Helius, Inc.

o Hercules Computer Technology, Inc.

o Ralf Hockens

o Dirk Hohndel

o InfoMagic , Flagstaff, AZ

o Daniel Kraemer

o Epoch Networks, Inc. , Irvine, CA

o Frank & Paige McCormick

o Internet Labs, Inc.

o Linux International

o Linux Support Team, Erlangen, Germany

o LunetIX Softfair , Berlin, Germany

o Morse Telecommunications , Long Beach, NY

o MELCO, Inc

o MIRO Computer Products AG, Braunschweig, Germany

o Rich & Amy Murphey

o NCR Corp

o Brett Neumeier

o Number Nine, Lexington, MA

o Kazuyuki Okamoto, Japan

o Prime Time Freeware , San Bruno, CA

o Red Hat Software , Chapel Hill, NC

o Norbert Reithinger

o SPEA Software AG, Starnberg, Germany

o STB Systems

o Clifford M Stein

o Joel Storm

o SuSE GmbH , NЭrnberg, Germany

o Tekelec Airtronic GmbH , Muenchen, Germany

o Jim Tsillas

o Trans-Ameritech Enterprises, Inc., Santa Clara, CA

o Unifix Software GmbH, Braunschweig, Germany

o Vixie Enterprises , La Honda, CA

o Walnut Creek CDROM , Concord, CA

o Xtreme s.a.s. , Livorno, Italy

The XFree86 Project, Inc, welcomes the additional contribution of funding
and/or equipment. Such contributions should be tax-deductible; we will know
for certain when the lawyers get finished with the papers. For more informa-
tion, contact The XFree86 Project, Inc, at

8. Source and binary archive sites

Source patches are available to upgrade X11R6.3 PL2 from the X Consortium
(now The Open Group) to XFree86 3.3.6. Binaries for many OSs are also avail-
able. The distribution is available from:

o ftp://ftp.XFree86.org/pub/XFree86

and the following mirror sites:

o North America:

o ftp://ftp2.XFree86.org/pub/XFree86 (source and binaries)

o ftp://ftp.infomagic.com/pub/mirrors/XFree86-current (source and
binaries)

o ftp://ftp.rge.com/pub/X/XFree86 and
http://www.rge.com/pub/X/XFree86 (source and binaries)

o ftp://ftp.varesearch.com/pub/mirrors/xfree86 (source and binaries)

o ftp://ftp.cs.umn.edu/pub/XFree86 (source and binaries)

o ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/mirrors/xfree86 (source and binaries)

o Europe:

o ftp://fvkma.tu-graz.ac.at/pub/XFree86 (source and binaries)

o ftp://gd.tuwien.ac.at/hci/X11/XFree86 and
http://gd.tuwien.ac.at/hci/X11/XFree86 (source and binaries)

o ftp://ftp.fee.vutbr.cz/pub/XFree86 (source patches and binaries)

o ftp://ftp.gwdg.de/pub/xfree86/XFree86 (source and binaries)

o ftp://ftp.mpi-sb.mpg.de/pub/X/mirror/ftp.xfree86.org (source and
binaries)

o ftp://ftp.cs.tu-berlin.de/pub/X/XFree86 (source and binaries)

o ftp://ftp.uni-erlangen.de/pub/Linux/MIRROR.xfree86 (source and
Linux binaries)

o ftp://ftp.uni-stuttgart.de/pub/X11/Xfree86 (source and binaries)

o ftp://ftp.funet.fi/pub/X11/XFree86 (source and binaries)

o ftp://ftp.ibp.fr/pub/X11/XFree86 (source and binaries)

o ftp://ftp.unina.it/pub/XFree86 (source and binaries)

o ftp://ftp.pvv.unit.no/pub/XFree86 (source and binaries)

o ftp://sunsite.doc.ic.ac.uk/packages/XFree86 (source and binaries)

o Asia/Australia:

o ftp://x.physics.usyd.edu.au/pub/XFree86 (source and binaries)

o ftp://ftp.netlab.is.tsukuba.ac.jp/pub/XFree86 (source and binaries)

o ftp://ftp.iij.ad.jp/pub/X/XFree86/XFree86 (source and binaries)

o ftp://ftp.kreonet.re.kr/pub/Linux/xfree86 (source and binaries)

Ensure that you are getting XFree86 3.3.6 - some of these sites may archive
older releases as well. Check the RELNOTES to find which files you need to
take from the archive.

Generated from XFree86: xc/programs/Xserver/hw/xfree86/doc/sgml/README.sgml,v 3.75.2.57 1999/10/13 21:46:26 hohndel Exp $

$XConsortium: README.sgml /main/31 1996/10/28 05:43:24 kaleb $