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Comparing BasiliskII/README (file contents):
Revision 1.34 by nigel, 2003-03-21T09:14:34Z vs.
Revision 1.38 by gbeauche, 2004-05-09T16:15:36Z

# Line 2 | Line 2
2    Basilisk II
3    A 68k Macintosh emulator
4  
5 <  Copyright (C) 1997-2003 Christian Bauer et al.
5 >  Copyright (C) 1997-2004 Christian Bauer et al.
6  
7  
8   License
# Line 362 | Line 362 | ether <ethernet card description>
362  
363    Linux:
364      The "ethernet card description" is the name of an Ethernet interface.
365 <    There are two approaches to networking with Basilisk II:
365 >    There are three approaches to networking with Basilisk II:
366  
367        1. Direct access to an Ethernet card via the "sheep_net" kernel module.
368           The "ethernet card description" must be the name of a real Ethernet
# Line 432 | Line 432 | ether <ethernet card description>
432           your network administrator about the nets and zones you can use
433           (instead of the ones given in the example above).
434  
435 +      3. Access the network through a "tuntap" interface.
436 +         The "ethernet card description" must be set to "tun".
437 +
438 +         TUN/TAP provides packet reception and transmission for user
439 +         space programs.  It can be viewed as a simple Point-to-Point
440 +         or Ethernet device, which instead of receiving packets from a
441 +         physical media, receives them from user space program and
442 +         instead of sending packets via physical media writes them to
443 +         the user space program.
444 +
445 +         A virtual network configuration script is required and the
446 +         default is /usr/local/BasiliskII/tunconfig unless you specify
447 +         a different file with the "etherconfig" item.
448 +
449 +         This script requires you that "sudo" is properly configured
450 +         so that "/sbin/ifconfig" and "/sbin/iptables" can be executed
451 +         as root. Otherwise, you can still write a helper script which
452 +         invokes your favorite program to enhance a user priviledges.
453 +         e.g. in a KDE environment, kdesu can be used as follows:
454 +
455 +           #!/bin/sh
456 +           exec /usr/bin/kdesu -c /path/to/tunconfig $1 $2
457 +
458    FreeBSD:
459      The "ethertap" method described above also works under FreeBSD, but since
460      no-one has found the time to write a section for this manual, you're on
# Line 524 | Line 547 | nogui <"true" or "false">
547    error alerts. All errors will then be reported to stdout. The default
548    is "false".
549  
550 + keyboardtype <keyboard-id>
551 +
552 +  Specifies the keyboard type that BasiliskII should report to the MacOS.
553 +  The default is "5" which is a "Apple Extended Keyboard II (ISO)",
554 +  but many other numbers are understood by most versions of the MacOS
555 +  (e.g. 11 is a "Macintosh Plus Keyboard with keypad",
556 +        13 is a "Apple PowerBook Keyboard (ISO)" )
557 +
558   For additional information, consult the source.
559  
560  
# Line 830 | Line 861 | Contributions by (in alphabetical order)
861   - Nigel Pearson <nigel@ind.tansu.com.au>: Mac OS X port
862   - Lauri Pesonen <lpesonen@nic.fi>: Windows NT port
863   - Bernd Schmidt <crux@pool.informatik.rwth-aachen.de>: UAE 68k emulation
864 + - Michael Z. Sliczniak <msliczniak@comcast.net>: Mach memory fault recovery
865   - and others...
866  
867   Special thanks to:

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