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diff --git a/public/posix-pricing.html b/public/posix-pricing.html index 47a82b4..cdfea63 100644 --- a/public/posix-pricing.html +++ b/public/posix-pricing.html @@ -9,11 +9,30 @@ <body> <header><a href="/">Luke Shumaker</a> » <a href=/blog>blog</a> » posix-pricing</header> <article> -<h1 id="posix-pricing-and-availability-or-do-you-really-need-the-pdf">POSIX pricing and availability; or: Do you really need the PDF?</h1> -<p>The Open Group and IEEE are weird about POSIX pricing. They’re protective of the PDF, making you pay <a href="http://standards.ieee.org/findstds/standard/1003.1-2008.html">hundreds of dollars</a> for the PDF; but will happily post an HTML version for free both <a href="http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/">online</a>, and (with free account creation) download as a <a href="https://www2.opengroup.org/ogsys/catalog/t101">a .zip</a>.</p> -<p>They also offer a special license to the “Linux man-pages” project, allowing them to <a href="https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/docs/man-pages/man-pages-posix/">distribute</a> the man page portions of POSIX (most of it is written as a series of man pages) for free; so on a GNU/Linux box, you probably have most of POSIX already downloaded in manual sections 0p, 1p, and 3p.</p> -<p>Anyway, the only thing you aren’t getting with the free HTML version is a line number next to every line of text. It’s generated from the same troff sources. So, in an article or in a discussion, I’m not cheating you out of specification details by citing the webpage.</p> -<p>If you’re concerned that you’re looking at the correct version of the webpage or man pages, the current version (as of February 2018) of POSIX is “POSIX-2008, 2016 edition.”</p> +<h1 +id="posix-pricing-and-availability-or-do-you-really-need-the-pdf">POSIX +pricing and availability; or: Do you really need the PDF?</h1> +<p>The Open Group and IEEE are weird about POSIX pricing. They’re +protective of the PDF, making you pay <a +href="http://standards.ieee.org/findstds/standard/1003.1-2008.html">hundreds +of dollars</a> for the PDF; but will happily post an HTML version for +free both <a +href="http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/">online</a>, and +(with free account creation) download as a <a +href="https://www2.opengroup.org/ogsys/catalog/t101">a .zip</a>.</p> +<p>They also offer a special license to the “Linux man-pages” project, +allowing them to <a +href="https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/docs/man-pages/man-pages-posix/">distribute</a> +the man page portions of POSIX (most of it is written as a series of man +pages) for free; so on a GNU/Linux box, you probably have most of POSIX +already downloaded in manual sections 0p, 1p, and 3p.</p> +<p>Anyway, the only thing you aren’t getting with the free HTML version +is a line number next to every line of text. It’s generated from the +same troff sources. So, in an article or in a discussion, I’m not +cheating you out of specification details by citing the webpage.</p> +<p>If you’re concerned that you’re looking at the correct version of the +webpage or man pages, the current version (as of February 2018) of POSIX +is “POSIX-2008, 2016 edition.”</p> </article> <footer> |