The NetBSD Project is pleased to announce that the release 2.0 of the NetBSD operating system is now available.
NetBSD is widely known as the most portable operating system in the world. It currently supports fifty four different system architectures, all from a single source tree, and is always being ported to more.
NetBSD 2.0 continues our long tradition with major improvements in file system and memory management performance, major security enhancements, and support for many new platforms and peripherals.
The addition of a native threads implementation for all platforms and symmetric multiprocessing (SMP) on i386 and other popular platforms were long-standing goals for NetBSD 2.0. Both of these goals have now been met—SMP support has been added for i386, SPARC, and PowerPC, the SMP support on Alpha and VAX has been improved, and the new port to the 64-bit AMD/Opteron also supports SMP.
Please read below for more achievements in NetBSD 2.0!
Complete source and binaries for NetBSD 2.0 are available for download at many sites around the world. A list of download sites providing FTP, AnonCVS, SUP, and other services is provided at the end of this announcement; the latest list of available download sites may also be found at: http://www.NetBSD.org/mirrors/
We encourage users who wish to install via a CD-ROM ISO image to download via BitTorrent by using the torrent files supplied in the ISO image area. This is the first major release of NetBSD to add BitTorrent to the distribution mechanisms and its use is strongly encouraged to help keep bandwidth available.
A list of hashes for the NetBSD 2.0 distribution has been signed with the well-connected PGP key for the NetBSD Security-Officer: ftp://ftp.NetBSD.org/pub/NetBSD/security/hashes/NetBSD-2.0_hashes.asc
The NetBSD operating system is a full-featured, open source, UNIX-like operating system descended from the Berkeley Networking Release 2 (Net/2), 4.4BSD-Lite, and 4.4BSD-Lite2. NetBSD 2.0 runs on 54 different system architectures featuring 17 machine architectures across 17 distinct CPU families, and is being ported to more. The NetBSD 2.0 release contains complete binary releases for 48 different machine types.
NetBSD is a highly integrated system. In addition to its highly portable, high performance kernel, NetBSD features a complete set of user utilities, compilers for several languages, the X Window System, firewall software and numerous other tools, all accompanied by full source code. The NetBSD Packages Collection contains over 5000 packages and binary package releases for a number of platforms are currently in progress.
More information on the goals of the NetBSD Project can be procured from the NetBSD web site at:
NetBSD is free. All of the code is under non-restrictive licenses, and may be used without paying royalties to anyone. Free support services are available via our mailing lists and web site. Commercial support is available from a variety of sources; some are listed at:
More extensive information on NetBSD is available from the NetBSD web site:
NetBSD is the work of a diverse group of people spread around the world. The “Net” in our name is a tribute to the Internet, which enables us to communicate and share code, and without which the project would not exist.
The NetBSD 2.0 release provides supported binary distributions for the following systems:
NetBSD/acorn26 | Acorn Archimedes, A-series and R-series systems |
NetBSD/acorn32 | Acorn RiscPC/A7000, CATS, Digital Shark, EBSA-285, VLSI RC7500 |
NetBSD/algor | Algorithmics, Ltd. MIPS evaluation boards |
NetBSD/alpha | Digital/Compaq Alpha (64-bit) |
NetBSD/amd64 | AMD64 family of processors |
NetBSD/amiga | Commodore Amiga, MacroSystem DraCo |
NetBSD/arc | MIPS-based machines following the Advanced RISC Computing spec |
NetBSD/atari | Atari TT030, Falcon, Hades |
NetBSD/cats | Chalice Technology's Strong Arm evaluation board |
NetBSD/cesfic | CES FIC8234 VME processor board |
NetBSD/cobalt | Cobalt Networks' MIPS-based Microservers |
NetBSD/dreamcast | Sega Dreamcast game console |
NetBSD/evbarm | ARM evaluation boards |
NetBSD/evbmips | MIPS-based evaluation boards |
NetBSD/evbppc | IBM PowerPC 405GP based Walnut evaluation board |
NetBSD/evbsh3 | Evaluation boards with Hitachi Super-H SH3 and SH4 CPUs |
NetBSD/evbsh5 | Evaluation boards with Hitachi Super-H SH5 CPUs |
NetBSD/hp300 | Hewlett-Packard 9000/300 and 400 series |
NetBSD/hpcarm | StrongARM based Windows CE PDA machines |
NetBSD/hpcmips | MIPS-based Windows CE PDA machines |
NetBSD/hpcsh | Hitachi SH3/4 based Windows CE PDA machines |
NetBSD/i386 | 80x86-based IBM PCs and clones |
NetBSD/ibmnws | IBM Network Station 1000 |
NetBSD/luna68k | OMRON Tateisi Electric's LUNA series |
NetBSD/mac68k | Apple Macintosh with 68k CPU |
NetBSD/macppc | Apple Power Macintosh and clones |
NetBSD/mipsco | MIPS family of workstations and servers |
NetBSD/mmeye | Brains mmEye multimedia server |
NetBSD/mvme68k | Motorola MVME 68k SBCs |
NetBSD/mvmeppc | Motorola PowerPC VME SBCs |
NetBSD/netwinder | StrongARM based NetWinder machines |
NetBSD/news68k | Sony's 68k-based “NET WORK STATION” series |
NetBSD/newsmips | Sony's MIPS-based “NET WORK STATION” series |
NetBSD/next68k | NeXT 68k “black” hardware |
NetBSD/ofppc | OpenFirmware PowerPC machines |
NetBSD/pmax | Digital MIPS-based DECstations and DECsystems |
NetBSD/pmppc | Artesyn's PM/PPC board |
NetBSD/prep | PReP (PowerPC Reference Platform) and CHRP machines |
NetBSD/sandpoint | Motorola Sandpoint reference platform |
NetBSD/sbmips | Broadcom SiByte evaluation boards |
NetBSD/sgimips | Silicon Graphics' MIPS-based workstations |
NetBSD/shark | Digital DNARD (“shark”) |
NetBSD/sparc | Sun SPARC (32-bit) and UltraSPARC (in 32-bit mode) |
NetBSD/sparc64 | Sun UltraSPARC (in native 64-bit mode) |
NetBSD/sun2 | Sun 2 |
NetBSD/sun3 | Sun 3 and 3x |
NetBSD/vax | Digital VAX |
NetBSD/x68k | Sharp X680x0 series |
Ports available in source form only for this release include the following:
NetBSD/amigappc | PowerPC-based Amiga boards |
NetBSD/bebox | Be Inc's BeBox |
NetBSD/hp700 | Hewlett-Packard 9000 Series 700 workstations |
NetBSD/pc532 | The NS32532-based PC532 computer |
NetBSD/playstation2 | SONY PlayStation 2 |
NetBSD/xen | Xen virtual machine monitor |
The complete list of changes can be found in the CHANGES-2.0 file in the top level directory of the NetBSD 2.0 release tree. Some highlights include:
/bin
and /sbin
).
/rescue
.
These are space-optimized statically linked versions
of various tools required to repair a system (including
/rescue/init
and
/rescue/sh
).
And of course there have also been innumerable bug fixes and other miscellaneous enhancements.
Please note that at the moment, sysinst will not assist you in installing pre-built third-party binary packages or the pkgsrc system itself. See the NetBSD packages collection documentation:
The NetBSD Foundation would like to thank all those who have contributed code, hardware, documentation, funds, colocation for our servers, web pages and other documentation, release engineering, and other resources over the years. More information on the people who make NetBSD happen is available at:
We would like to especially thank the University of California at Berkeley and the GNU Project for particularly large subsets of code that we use. We would also like to thank the Internet Systems Consortium Inc and the Helsinki University of Technology for current colocation services.
The NetBSD Foundation was chartered in 1995, with the task of overseeing core NetBSD project services, promoting the project within industry and the open source community, and holding intellectual property rights on much of the NetBSD code base. Day-to-day operations of the project are handled by volunteers.
As a non-profit organisation with no commercial backing, The NetBSD Foundation depends on donations from its users, and we would like to ask you to consider making a donation to the NetBSD Foundation in support of continuing production of our fine operating system. Your generous donation would be particularly welcome at this point in time, since the release engineering proccess for NetBSD 2.0 was unfortunately set back by hardware failures on the build machines, necessitating the immediate replacement of the equipment.
Donations can be done via PayPal <paypal@NetBSD.org>
and are
fully tax-deductible in the US. If you would prefer not to use PayPal, or
would like to make other arrangements, please contact
<finance-exec@NetBSD.org>
.
Please use a mirror site close to you.
Please also note our list of CD-ROM vendors.