Subject: RE: Sector sizes other than 512 bytes
To: John Harrison <John.Harrison@3Dlabs.com>
From: Jasper Wallace <jasper@ivision.co.uk>
List: port-arm32
Date: 12/02/1997 10:10:35
On Tue, 2 Dec 1997, John Harrison wrote:

> On Monday, December 01, 1997 11:48 PM, Kjetil B. Thomassen wrote:
> > If you had been reading current-users, you would have known that
> 
> The only mailing list I am currently on is port-arm32. What other lists
> are there for NetBSD and how does one go about joining?

loads ;-)

send an email to majordomo@netbsd.org with nothing on the subject line and a
body containing:

lists
end

majordomo will reply with a list of all the lists.

the ones that are generally usefull for port-arm32 people are:

netbsd-bugs: all the bugs reported with automated bug reporting thingy (I've
completly forgottern what it's called) end up here, and discussions about
them.

current-users: this is for people using netbsd-current (i.e. downloading the
latest source using sup and rebuilding their systems to track the changes on
a weekly or daily basis). It has quite a lot of traffic, but has lots of
interesting discussions about how the code is changing and the best way of
doing things(tm). has been known to erupt into flame wars about licensing
issue and the inevetible linux v. netbsd v. freebsd v. everyone else.

source-changes: As the source tree changes and the changes are commited into
the central cvs repository a mail is sent automatticly to this list. If your
following -current with sup (or whatever) this list is a great help.

netbsd-users & netbsd-help: these are for general (non port-specific)
questions about netbsd and unix in general.

port-*: all the other ports

-- 
    They were so ignorant! Young men and women, educated very carefully to
be apolitical, to be technicians who thought they disliked politics, making
them putty in the hands of their rulers, just like always.
    - Frank Chalmers in Kim Stanley Robinson's "Red Mars".