Minixfs is copyright S.N. Henson 1991,1992,1993. This code may be freely distributed unmodified, provided this copyright notice is intact. A small copying fee may be charged for redistribution provided this does not exceed the equivalent of five pounds Sterling (UK currency). You are free to compile, modify and recompile modified versions of this program, however redistribution of modified versions is not allowed without my consent, this is because making apparently minor changes to the code can cause considerable damage (as I can testify). Binaries compiled from this code may be not be redistributed. If you wish to distribute binaries then use the binary version of this release. This version may not be used for profit or in a commercial environment, this includes the development of software that requires a registration fee. If you wish to use Minixfs to develop anything other than free software or use it in a commercial environment then Minixfs must be registered for a small fee, please contact me for further details. Distribution of this program with commercial packages is not allowed without my written permission, please contact me if you wish to do this, or indeed if you want a similar filesystem writing for a different purpose (e.g. TT Unix or Spectre), however I am not in a position to write filesystems for other commercial packages free of charge. I reserve the right to modify these conditions at some future date. This program is not 'shareware' and no registration fee is levied. If you find this program useful I would appreciate a donation sent to the address in 'minixfs.doc'. I currently have negligible resources so anything would be appreciated. Please note that although I believe each release to be stable and test it thoroughly I offer no guarantee. Therefore, THIS PROGRAM COMES WITH NO WARANTEE WHATSOEVER AND USE IS ENTIRELY AT YOUR OWN RISK, I WILL NOT BE LIABLE FOR ANY DAMAGE CAUSED DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY FROM ITS USE. Please do not abuse the conditions of this copyright. Abuses may result in some or all of the following. 1. Distribution of binary only versions in future. 2. Charging a 'shareware fee' and only distributing severely crippled 'demo' versions (financial considerations may force this anyway). 3. My giving the whole thing up for something that pays more ...