This is the "Software Tools for Unix 4.1BSD" distribution
tape, as provided by Barbara Chase in Septemeber 1998.

Below is the README file from the distribution tape:



LAWRENCE BERKELEY LABORATORY                         January 1982



Here  is  a version of the Software Tools Users Group basic tape,
implemented under  UNIX  -  Berkeley  4.1  distribution.   A  few
enhancements  have  been  included   and  some debugging has been
done (especiallly in sedit and diff). 

Executable images have not been included on the  tape,  to  avoid
licensing  problems.   (None  of  the  source  code  is  licensed
material.) A makefile to generate the executables  is  available.
To  bring  up  the  tools, simply read the tape into your machine
and type:
                             % make

Tools with names which conflict with  standard  Unix  tools  have
been  renamed,  often to begin with a "t" (tcat, techo, etc.) See
/usr/tools/man/summary for a list of tools and  their  associated
names. 

The  primitives have been implemented as calls to the appropriate
C library and system call routines.  Everything specified by  the
users  group has been implemented except the  shell, which seemed
superfluous.  The  local  UNIX  shell  is  used  to  perform  I/O
redirections. 

Random   writing   on  4.1  BSD  does  not  work  correctly  when
interspersed with random  reading  because  of  system  buffering
problems.   This  is a known bug and there is evidently a fix for
it 'somewhere' ...  Because of this, the  editor  as  distributed
by  the  Users  Group  would  not  work.   We  have  provided  an
alternative version, developed by Joe Sventek of  LBL  and  David
Martin  of  Hughes  Aircraft.  This editor uses an in-core buffer
to maintain the lines  (quite  acceptible  on  a  virtual  memory
machine)  and  is  somewhat  more enhanced than the regular tools
editor. 

Also included with the Unix tools, though  not  yet  included  in
the  standard  Software Tools Package, is the Text Control System
(TCS)  developed  by  Neil  Groundwater  at  ADI.   TCS  provides
capabilities  similar  to  SCCS, allowing a user to keep track of
the evolution of source code.  The TCS package  consists  of  the
tools   "admin",  "delta",  and  "get".   They  should  still  be
considered experimental. 



















LAWRENCE BERKELEY LABORATORY                         January 1982


The directory hierarchy set up is:

                        /usr/tools
                            |
                            |
            -----------------------------------------
            |               |                       |
       executables         /src                    /man
                            |                       |
                            |                       |
                            |                   (tool documents
                            |                    and manual)
            --------------------------------------
            |         |          |               |
           *.w    /C_lib    /ratfor_lib       /Original
 (tool sources)   (C prims)  (ratfor prims)   (original tape)

If you wish to change the directory names, or the structure,  you
will  have to alter the 'tman' and 'trc' scripts, the make files,
and the file name definitions in rat4 ("ratdef"),  spell  ("dict"
and "dictdx"), and the editor ("ed.hlp"). 

Scratch  files  are  currently created on /usr/tmp.  If you would
like them to be located elsewhere, alter the  "mkuniq"  primitive
(in /usr/tools/src/C_lib/mkuniq.c). 

These  tools  have  NOT  been  extensively  tested.  There are no
warrantees, expressed or implied, etc.  Use at your own risk. 



                                        Deborah K. Scherrer