bdisk/docs/manual/user/GETTING_STARTED.adoc

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== Getting Started
=== Downloading
If it isn't in your distro's repositories (It *is* in Arch's AUR! Both https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/bdisk/[tagged release] and https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/bdisk-git/[git master].), you can still easily get rolling. Simply visit the project's https://git.square-r00t.net/BDisk/[source code web interface] and download a tarball under the *Download* column:
image::fig1.1.png[cgit,align="center"]
If you know the tag of the commit you want, you can use curl:
`curl -sL -o bdisk.tar.xz https://git.square-r00t.net/BDisk/snapshot/BDisk-3.11.tar.xz`
or wget:
`wget -O bdisk.tar.xz https://git.square-r00t.net/BDisk/snapshot/BDisk-3.11.tar.xz`
You can use `https://git.square-r00t.net/BDisk/snapshot/BDisk-master.tar.xz` for the URL if you want the latest working version. If you want a snapshot of a specific commit, you can use e.g. `https://git.square-r00t.net/BDisk/snapshot/BDisk-5ac510762ce00eef213957825de0e6d07186e7f8.tar.xz` and so on.
Alternatively, you can use https://git-scm.com/[git]. Git most definitely _should_ be in your distro's repositories.
TIP: If you're new to git and want to learn more, I highly recommend the book https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2[Pro Git]. It is available for free download (or online reading).
You can use https:
You can clone via https:
`git clone https://git.square-r00t.net/BDisk`
or native git protocol:
`git clone git://git.square-r00t.net/bdisk.git BDisk`
The git protocol is much faster, but at a cost of lessened security.
=== Prerequisites
Here's a complete list of prerequisites: