Update comments in the second paragraph, discussing versioning issues
related to the BSD DB library.  Based on comments from Mark Summerfield
<summer@netcraft.com>.
diff --git a/Doc/lib/libbsddb.tex b/Doc/lib/libbsddb.tex
index 6a27a3b..e27aff8 100644
--- a/Doc/lib/libbsddb.tex
+++ b/Doc/lib/libbsddb.tex
@@ -14,16 +14,17 @@
 other objects as keys or to store other kinds of objects the user must
 serialize them somehow, typically using marshal.dumps or pickle.dumps.
 
-The \module{bsddb} module is only available on \UNIX{} systems, so it
-is not built by default in the standard Python distribution.  Also,
-there are two incompatible versions of the underlying library.
+There are two incompatible versions of the underlying library.
 Version 1.85 is widely available, but has some known bugs.  Version 2
 is not quite as widely used, but does offer some improvements.  The
-\module{bsddb} module uses the 1.85 interface.  Users wishing to use
-version 2 of the Berkeley DB library will have to modify the source
-for the module to include \file{db_185.h} instead of
-\file{db.h} (\file{db_185.h} contains the version 1.85 compatibility
-interface).
+\module{bsddb} module uses the 1.85 interface.  Starting with Python
+2.0, the \program{configure} script can usually determine the
+version of the library which is available and build it correctly.  If
+you have difficulty getting \program{configure} to do the right thing,
+run it with the \longprogramopt{help} option to get information about
+additional options that can help.  On Windows, you will need to define
+the \code{HAVE_DB_185_H} macro if you are building Python from source
+and using version 2 of the DB library.
 
 The \module{bsddb} module defines the following functions that create
 objects that access the appropriate type of Berkeley DB file.  The