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⟦c1137a100⟧ TextFile

    Length: 19645 (0x4cbd)
    Types: TextFile
    Names: »README.distrib«

Derivation

└─⟦52210d11f⟧ Bits:30007239 EUUGD2: TeX 3 1992-12
    └─⟦63303ae94⟧ »unix3.14/TeX3.14.tar.Z« 
        └─⟦c58930e5c⟧ 
            └─⟦this⟧ »TeX3.14/README.distrib« 

TextFile


Hello:  This is in response to your request for information on 
the UNIX TeX Distribution. 

---------------------------------------------------------------

April 1991


A full distribution of UNIX TeX may be ordered from:

        NORTHWEST COMPUTING SUPPORT CENTER        
        DR-10, Thomson Hall 35
        University of Washington        
        Seattle, Washington  98195

        (206) 543-6259

The distribution is available in five forms:

        1) on an industry standard 2400-foot, 1/2-inch, 9-track 
           tape reel, tar format, blocked 20, 1600 bpi, 1 file; 

        2) on an industry standard 2400-foot, 1/2-inch, 9-track 
           tape reel, cpio format, blocked 5120, 1600 bpi, 
           ASCII headers, 1 file;

        3) on a 450-foot, 1/4-inch, 4-track streamer cartridge,  
           tar format, (physical format = QIC-24);

        4) on a 600-foot, 1/4-inch, 4-track streamer cartridge, 
           cpio format, ASCII headers, (physical format = QIC-24);

           [AT&T 3B2 sites:  regret to say, you will NOT be able to read
           our cpio cartridges.  If you have an NCR Tower or a Stellar
           machine around, you can unload the material on such a drive
           and ethernet/ftp the files over to your 3B2.]

        5) on a laser-disk, NeXT format:  The Humanities and Arts Computing
	   Center kindly allows us to use their NeXT drive.  Because of the
	   high cost of the medium, however, we are not able to supply laser-
	   disks, and must request that you send one on which you wish to have
  	   the distribution written.


     If you have an old system with a cartridge drive that can 
     read ONLY QIC-11, 8000 bpi recordings, let us know; we'll 
     do our best to accommodate you. 

     Regret to say we cannot write 9-track on cartridges, 
     nor can we write TK50 cartridges for the Microvax,
     nor cartridges for ISI drives.

Please specify clearly the form in which you would like to receive 
the distribution: 9-track tar tape reel, 9-track cpio tape reel, 
tar cartridge, cpio cartridge, laser-disk.  

Costs for duplicating & distributing this free-of-licensing-restrictions
& public domain software are:

     1/2" 2400' 9-track magnetic tar or cpio tape reel   $140.00

     1/4" 450'tar or 600'cpio streamer cartridge         $165.00
       or laser-disk

     Purchase Order/Invoice Handling Fee                 $ 10.00
       or Payment by Wire Handling Fee (see below)

     Shipping Fee: (regret to say subject to change without notice)

		   USA: UPS Ground		         $  0.00
			RUSH (courier): 9-track reel     $ 13.00
				        1/4" cartridge   $ 10.00

		   Canada (non-UPS; see below)           $ 20.00

                   Overseas:     courier                 $ 30.00
                   (see below)   Air Parcel Post         $ 20.00

Payment:

  If you can possibly do so, please send a check with your order.

  The check should be drawn on a U.S. bank, and it must be payable 
  in U.S. Dollars.  It should be made out to the University of 
  Washington (IRS Tax I.D. number 91-6001537). 

  If payment is to be by Purchase Order requiring us to send you 
  an invoice through the University of Washington, there is a    
  a Purchase Order/Invoice Handling Fee of $10.00, owing to the
  processing charges we incur.  Please note that if you are sending 
  a check at the same time as you are sending a purchase order, 
  it is not necessary to add on this PO/Inv Handling Fee.

  Direct payment by wire: We regret very much to say that 
  constant shortages of up to $25.00 USD from the amount
  that should have reached us, due to charges made by banks 
  along the way, have rendered this mode of payment impossible
  for us.  

We regret to say we are not able to handle payment by credit card.

We do not take confirming orders by phone.  

We have no fax facilities.  

Processing of orders begins directly a check or purchase order is 
received.  When all is going well, orders are shipped within 
two weeks of receipt.  It is then in the hands of the carrier.

Shipping (regret to say, subject to change without notice):

    U.S. orders: no shipping fee when shipped UPS Ground
                 (delivery in eight working days).

       If it is necessary that your order be shipped RUSH, 
       we would be glad to do so; but please clearly label 
       it as such, and please send an additional RUSH shipping
       fee:

		9-track reel: 	$13.00
		1/4" cartridge: $10.00

	and we will ship it via courier.

    Canadian orders: no shipping fee when shipped UPS Ground 
                     (service only to Province of Ontario, 
                     and metropolitan areas of Montreal, Winnepeg, 
                     Regina, Saskatoon, Calgary, Edmonton, Vancouver, 
                     and Victoria).

       All other areas in Canada, please add $20.00 shipping fee for 
       shipment via Airborne.

    Overseas orders:  please add 

        $30.00 shipping fee for shipment via courier;
        $20.00 shipping fee for shipment via Air Parcel Post.

            We label the software for customs as free & public 
            domain with no commercial value; we declare only 
            the actual cost of the physical medium on which the 
            software is written.                                 

    Please provide clearly the particulars of the SHIPPING ADDRESS.  
    If at all possible, please supply the NAME and PHONE NUMBER of 
    an individual to whose attention the order may be shipped.  
    This information is frequently useful to the carrier who delivers
    the parcel to you.
 
UPDATES:  Because of the low cost of this software, there are no 
provisions for upgrades other than to order anew.  The cost is strictly 
administrative: what it takes to do this distribution.  
    We try to keep updated to the latest releases from Stanford.  
Please know that TeX is relatively stable, and it is not necessary for 
an end-user to keep up with every new version.  In February '89, 
Barbara Beeton of the TeX Users Group recommended to readers of TeXhax 
"that most users should periodically (at this point, that's probably 
every year or so) obtain an up-to-date version of the tailored 
distribution for their system."  For those with access to anonymous 
FTP, the latest changes to TeX, METAFONT, and WEB-to-C are available in 
the ftp/tex directory on june.cs.washington.edu.  This is the only UNIX 
TeX FTP site which Dr. Pierre MacKay maintains.  

Except for files available via anonymous ftp in the "tex" directory, 
we are unable to transfer files electronically.

                            *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *

Since TeX is in the public-domain and is free-of-licensing-restrictions,
just about everything that can be sent out in source form is included 
on the tape.  

Please note, however, that although there are no licensing restrictions, 
there are minor copyright restrictions which are noted in the affected files.  

Because all the software collected into the distribution is licensed 
free of charge, we provide no warranty.  (A "No Warranty" statement is 
in the file ./TeX3.1/README on the tape.)

Since TeX is "free and public-domain" software, you may wish to know why 
there is a fee at all for your tape.  There is a fee because the costs of 
having this site open and operating must, somehow, be met.  The fee is 
strictly a distribution fee set on the basis of recovering the costs of 
operating this distribution, which is self-supporting and not financially 
subsidized by the State of Washington. 

By necessity, we are frugal.  Our UNIX work is done on two isolated SUN2/120 
machines.  We do our best within our means to help you with difficulties 
you may encounter during the installation of the basic TeX and METAFONT 
material, and trust you to understand that our ability to help with machine-
specific problems is limited. 

                            *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *

The distribution includes sources for both BSD and System V UNIX.  
                                                
The original organization of the distribution reflected the use of 
Pascal for all compilations of TeX, TeXware, BibTeX, METAFONT, and 
MFware.  This has now been supplemented by a more convenient and more 
generally portable WEB-to-C compilation (working directly from WEB 
code supplied by Stanford, using common change files which seem to be 
valid for all UNIX systems) for TeX, TeXware, BibTeX, METAFONT, and 
MFware.  

LaTeX (including SliTeX and BibTex) and AMSTeX are macro packages 
processed by TeX, and do not require any further compilation. 

                            *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *

The version of TeX produced through WEB-to-C is smaller, faster, 
tastier, and altogether superior to the Pascal compilation.  It has 
the additional advantage that if your site needs a TeX with a truly 
gigantic capacity for boxes and macros, you can compile it under C.  
(UC Berkeley Pascal puts a 16-bit limitation on array indices, which 
prevents this expansion.)  It is genuine TeX, and passes the 
nefarious trip test in all respects.  The above remarks are true for 
METAFONT, TeXware, BibTeX and MFware, and should ultimately be true 
for all programs written in the original form of WEB.  C compilation 
has been successful on a wide range of Unix machines, and has become 
the only system fully supported in the UnixTeX distribution, but it 
is also likely to smoke out bugs in some C compilers on new systems 
just as the Pascal compilation did for many versions of Pascal. 

                            *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *

A partial list of machines on which TeX 3.0+ --a new and different TeX--
has been successfully compiled under WEB-to-C: 

Apollo DN560       BSD4.2+Domain/IX 9.7  cc 4.89           bsuggs
                   TeX trips without -O.  Metafont does not trap.

DECstation3100     Ultrix 3.1            cc                mackay
                   All programs work even with -O optimization.

HP9000             HP-UX 6.5             gcc 1.36          spqr

i386               386/ix 2.0.2          gcc 1.36          karl
                   32-bit TeX: gcc 1.36 does not compile tex5.c correctly 
                   (core dump in make_math_accent); this is not exercised 
                   by the trip test.  cc compiles it OK, though.  The 
                   16-bit TeX does not have this problem. 

Masscomp 5600      RTU 4.1A              cc                spqr
                   But: trap test for METAFONT core dumps.

MIPS/2000          RISC/os 4.01          cc 2.0            lgy
                   For either systype=bsd43 or systype=sysv.  -O1 works, but 
                   -O2 doesn't. 

Sequent Symmetry   Dynix 3.0.12          cc                morgan
                   cc -O fails on mf/x11.c; just compile that without -O.

Sun 2              Sun Unix 3.2 & 3.4    cc                mackay
                   Passes trip and trap; compiles 32-bit TeX; all parts
                   can be compiled with cc -O, but long lines in mf2.c
                   and mf4.c break the compiler.  Simple editing corrects
                   this.  Oversize case statements in gftodvi.c and
                   vftovp.c cause yacc errors; again, simple editing solves
                   the problem.  See ./PROBLEMS

Sun 3              Sun Unix 3.4          gcc 1.36          karl

Sun 386i           SunOS 4.0.1           gcc 1.36          karl
                   32-bit TeX: gcc 1.36 does not compile tex5.c correctly. 
                   Compiling it with cc works, though.
                   But cc -O fails with Metafont: see ./PROBLEMS.

Sun 4/110          Sun Unix 3.4          gcc 1.36          karl

Sun sparc          SunOS 4.0.3c          gcc 1.36          karl

vax 11/750         4.3bsd                gcc 1.36          karl

[A more current and complete listing is always on the tape in the file 
./TeX3.1/MACHINES.W2C.]

                            *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *

Current versions of standard programs in the distribution are:

                TeX 3.1 (plain.tex version 3.1)
                     tangle 4.1 
                     weave 4.2
                     dvitype 3.4
                     pltotf 3.3 
                     tftopl 3.1 
                LaTeX 2.09 (release of 24 May 1989)
                SliTeX 2.09
                BibTeX 0.99c 
                METAFONT 2.7 
                     gftodvi 3.0 
                     gftopk 2.3 
                     gftype 3.0 
                     mft 2.0
                     pktogf 1.0 
                     pktype 2.3 

and the new virtual font programs

                VFtoVP 1.2 
                VPtoVF 1.2 


Various foreign language utilities, German, Greek, Portuguese, Swedish, 
        Dutch, and a first run of TeX-Xet for Semitic languages.  

Fonts in tfm (TeX Font Metric) format: describes fonts for TeX.  
        Includes all useful information about font characters except what 
        they will actually look like on paper.  Is size independent 
        and device independent, and can therefore be used on any 
        system that runs TeX.  It will give you a valid DVI (DeVice 
        Independent) output file, but will be of no use to give you
        readable hard (or CRT) copy output. 

Fonts in mf source format:  the full set of Computer Modern as released 
        from Stanford; utility fonts for character proofs, etc. (not 
        made with cmbase.mf); LaTeX and SliTeX fonts.

Fonts in pk format: very device-dependent, so only supplied for  
        a small range of common output devices.  Standard shapes 
        and sizes declared in plain.tex, lfonts.tex, sfonts.tex, and 
        webmac.tex are here, in 120, 240, and 300 pk (dpi) 
        series.  The 300dpi fonts are sent out in write-black and 
        write-white flavors (CanonCX and Ricoh 4080).  
        
        No provision is made for the global magnifications of LaTeX 
        style files (such as bk11.sty).  If your site needs these or 
        similar magnifications, you will have to run METAFONT to get 
        them.  The pk files for the principal LaTeX and SliTeX 
        alphanumeric and symbol fonts are in a separate list.  
        
Fonts in pxl format:  No more.  All the best drivers use gf or pk 
        these days.  If you really need pxl, you will have to compile 
        and run pktopx.

Drivers for DVI Output (producing intermediate files of one sort or 
another):
        Imagen (two styles) [dviimp uses Pascal compiler for BSD]   
        LaserWriter (PostScript)
        QMS/Talaris (QMS 800/1200/1500/2400)       
        LN03

   If you need an HPLaserJet driver, we recommend you get in touch with 
   Dr. Nelson Beebe (801) 581-5254; e-mail: Beebe@CS.UTAH.EDU; let him know 
   that you have a UNIX system.
                  
Screen Previewer Programs:
   dviapollo--uses GPR & Apollo font files
   dvipage (runs under SunView)
   dvisun (uses entire display screen)               
   dvitovdu (written in modula; weird spacing)    
   dvi2tty (for text-only terminals and line-printers)    
   xdvi (runs under X-windows)

[Regret to say that--not having the equipment--we are unable to 
support the programs in the DVIware (previewers and printer drivers) 
directory.  The programs are passed on to you because they are 
frequently requested.]
                             *  *  *  *  *

If you have any questions concerning this distribution of TeX, please 
feel free to write or to call Elizabeth Tachikawa at the address and 
phone number given above; email: elisabet@max.u.washington.edu.  
Phone calls concerning TeX are received 8:00 am - 12:00 noon Pacific 
Time, Mon-Fri (a recorder is on otherwise).

                             *  *  *  *  *

A bit about us:  When Donald Knuth's TeX first began to migrate 
into a broad range of operating systems, and away from exclusive 
dependence on the Stanford University SAIL compiler, the TeX 
Users Group saw the need for a system of volunteer "site 
coordinators" who would collect and organize the system-specific 
files needed to compile TeX on various operating systems.  In 
1983, Dr. Pierre MacKay and his then-graduate-student-assistant 
Richard Furuta took over the work for the UNIX operating system.  
Since 1985, when Richard Furuta went on to become a professor at 
another university, Dr. MacKay has had sole responsibility for 
UNIX TeX.

This particular version of the TeX distribution grew with the 
increasing popularity of UNIX itself, and eventually required a 
small amount of administrative support to continue.  The 
Northwest Center was established to provide this support.

Our distribution fee covers the cost of tapes, preparation, mailing, 
telephone, wages of an office assistant, and University overhead 
fees (13% of the fee goes to the University).  We are not funded by 
the State, and operate on what we charge for the distribution.  Some 
computing and communications resources are supplied by Computing 
Services and the Department of Computer Science at this 
University.  The equipment we use for copying tapes was originally 
funded by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities.  

We welcome donations.  Since we work on two isolated SUN2/120s, 
no laser printer, all are welcome to donate or loan the UNIX TeX 
distribution any machine to which they wish to have TeX and METAFONT 
fully ported, or on which they wish to have previewers and printer-drivers 
tested, or for which they wish to have mode_defs written.

Since we are small, we appreciate prompt payment--anything that can 
help us cut down on the time we spend on paper work; and we rely upon 
you for feedback on the quality of the distribution as well as for 
the undertaking of such projects as will improve what is distributed 
(but please check with Dr. MacKay before taking on any such tasks).  

All work done by Dr. MacKay to improve and maintain this distribution 
is unpaid and voluntary.  The software itself--thanks to the ideals 
of Donald Knuth and all who have contributed programs to the distribution--
is free of licensing restrictions.

The association with the humanities is one of the special features of 
the UNIX TeX distribution.  Pierre MacKay is professor of Classics 
and Near Eastern Languages with research interests in Greek, Arabic, 
and Turkish literature.  The Humanities and Arts Computing Center--
under whose aegis the Northwest Center operates--also supports work 
on other languages, especially the languages of the Indian sub-
continent.  The maintenance of this version of the Tex distribution 
is thus an offshoot of research work on the adaptation of TeX and 
Metafont to such context-sensitive and bi-directional scripts as 
occur in many of these languages.  For a discussion of some of the 
problems involved in the computer-assisted digital photocomposition 
of these scripts, please see "Typesetting Problem Scripts" by Dr. 
Pierre MacKay, in BYTE (Feb. 1986): 201-18. 

                         *******************

Site distributions of TeX are coordinated through the TeX Users Group 
(TUG).  We urge all users of TeX and METAFONT to join TUG for support 
and to keep informed of the latest developments in the TeX world 
particularly through the journal, TUGboat.  Call/Write: The TeX Users 
Group, P. O. Box 9506, Providence, RI  02940-9506; phone: 401-751-7760.

A membership form is sent with each order.

                         *******************

Thank you for your interest in and support of the UNIX TeX distribution.

                         *******E*N*D*******