Beta test distribution READ-ME file. ----------------------------------- THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED ``AS IS'' AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Now, with that out of the way, let me point you to a few things: The file doc/HOW_TO_BUILD gives instructions on how to start build Kerberos. More complete building and installation instructions can be found in the doc/install.texi. (A postscript file is provided for your convenience.) The file doc/TREE-GRAPH is a graphical representation of the source directory tree you should receive with this distribution. The file doc/SOURCE-TREE describes what's in each directory. >> << >> Please report any problems/bugs/comments to 'krb5-bugs@athena.mit.edu' << >> << Appreciation Time!!!! There are far too many people to try to thank them all; many people have contributed to the development of Kerberos V5. This is only a partial listing.... Thanks to Mark Eichin at Cygnus for writing the new autoconf configuration system, for making the code much more portable, and for serving as pre-release testers. Thanks to Marc Horowitz, Barry Jaspan, and Jonathan Kamens (and others) at Openvision, Inc. for providing us with an GSS-API library, for serving as pre-release testers, and for finding and fixing many bugs. Thanks to Cybersafe for providing patches to fix bugs with inter-realm authentication. Thanks to Ari Medivnsky and Cliff Neuman for writing a ksu client. Thanks to Jim Miller from Suite Software for contributing many detailed bug reports, most of them by doing desk checks over the code! Thanks to Prasad Upasani from ISI for porting the Berkeley rlogin/rsh/rcp suite and for testing out our distribution on the Sun. Thanks to Glenn Machin and Bill Wrahe from Sandia National Labs for contributing the old kadmin server, plus lots of bugfixes. Thanks to Bill Sommerfeld from HP for commenting on early Kerberos interface drafts, suggesting improvements in later coding interfaces, and finding and fixing many bugs. Thanks to Paul Borman from Cray for writing the Kerberos v4 to v5 glue layer and the Kerberos v5 subroutines for telnet. Thanks to Dan Bernstein, for providing the replay cache code. Thanks to the members of the Kerberos V5 development team at MIT, both past and present: Richard Basch, Jay Berkenbilt, John Carr, Don Davis, Nancy Gilman, Barry Jaspan, John Kohl, Cliff Neuman, Paul Park, Ezra Peisach, Chris Provenzano, Jon Rochlis, Jeff Schiller, Ted Ts'o, Tom Yu. Note: Project Athena, Athena, Athena MUSE, Discuss, Hesiod, Kerberos, Moira, and Zephyr are trademarks of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). No commercial use of these trademarks may be made without prior written permission of MIT. FYI, "commercial use" means use of a name in a product or other for-profit manner. It does NOT prevent a commercial firm from referring to the MIT trademarks in order to convey information (although in doing so, recognition of their trademark status should be given).