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7.9. What is this thing called ``sup'', and how do I use it?

SUP stands for Software Update Protocol, and was developed by CMU for keeping their development trees in sync. We use it to keep remote sites in sync with our central development sources.

Unless you have direct internet connectivity, and don't care too much about the cost/duration of the sessions, you shouldn't use sup. For those ``low/expensive-bandwidth'' applications, we have developed CTM, see the section on CTM for more about that.

To use it, you need to have direct internet connectivity (not just mail or news). First, pick up the sup.tgz package from:

The SUP package

Second, read the Handbook's section on SUP

This file describes how to setup sup on your machine. You may also want to look at


Frequently Asked Questions for FreeBSD 2.X : Miscellaneous Questions : What is this thing called ``sup'', and how do I use it?
Previous: I've heard of something called FreeBSD-current. How do I run it, and where can I get more information?
Next: Has anyone done any temperature testing while running FreeBSD? I know linux runs cooler than dos, but have never seen a mention of FreeBSD. It seems to run really hot [an error occurred while processing this directive]