-<listitem>
-<para>
-Try doing <Command>cvs co fpconfig</Command>. All being well, bytes should
-start to trickle through, leaving a directory <filename>fptools</filename>
-in your current directory. (You can <Command>rm</Command> it if you don't
-want to keep it.) The following messages appear to be harmless:
-</para>
-
-<Screen>
-setsockopt IPTOS_LOWDELAY: Invalid argument
-setsockopt IPTOS_THROUGHPUT: Invalid argument
-</Screen>
-
-<para>
-At this point I found that CVS tried to invoke a little dialogue with
-me (along the lines of `do you want to talk to this host?'), but
-for some reason bombed out. This was from a bash shell running in Emacs.
-I solved this by invoking a Cygnus shell, and running CVS from there.
-Once things are dialogue free, it seems to work OK from within Emacs.
-</para>
-</listitem>
-
-<listitem>
-<para>
-If you want to check out part of large tree, proceed as follows:
-</para>
-
-<ProgramListing>
-cvs -f checkout -l papers
-cd papers
-cvs update cpr
-</ProgramListing>
-
-<para>
-This sequence checks out the <Literal>papers</Literal> module, but none
-of its sub-directories.
-The "<Option>-l</Option>" flag says not to check out sub-directories.
-The "<Option>-f</Option>" flag says not to read the <filename>.cvsrc</filename> file
-whose <Option>-P</Option> default (don't check out empty directories) is
-in this case bogus.
-</para>
-
-<para>
-The <Command>cvs update</Command> command sucks in a named sub-directory.
-</para>
-</listitem>
-
-</ItemizedList>
-
-<para>
-There is a very nice graphical front-end to CVS for Win32 platforms,
-with a UI that people will be familiar with, at
-<ULink URL="http://www.wincvs.org/">wincvs.org</ULink>.
-I have not tried it yet.
-</para>
-
-</Sect2>
-
-
- <Sect2><Title>Building GHC</Title>