From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Date: Tue, 2 Nov 1993 00:51:19 -0500 From: mike@majestix.cs.uoregon.edu mike@majestix.cs.uoregon.edu Subject: standalone plan9 Topicbox-Message-UUID: fe00135a-eac7-11e9-9e20-41e7f4b1d025 Message-ID: <19931102055119.QJQ_nKVSn0ecsi5gfS1Hzoe_8J_RvF-NiZ6wQWhdfU4@z> >i know that rob et. al. were spotted at a recent usenix >conference sporting [34]86 laptops (or so i've heard). >so i'd like to know >o is this included on the cd? Yes. >o is anybody using this Yes; I have it running on a 486 box. >o this implies that the laptop is running the > fileserver, cpuserver and terminal software. No. It is just running the terminal software. The "file server" in this case is just an ordinary user level process that speaks 9P to the kernel and maintains a file system on a raw disk partition. It's slow, and according to the documentation, susceptible to crashes, although I haven't had any (yet). There is no need for a cpu server to run Plan 9, unless you want to run daemons that accept calls from the outside world, for instance for mail delivery or remote logins. There is no real difference between a terminal and a cpu server; a cpu server is essentially the same kernel with a different startup script that starts various daemons. The file server is a radically different kernel and cannot coexist on the same machine with the terminal or cpu kernels. However, you don't need to use the standard file server. >Is this > possible to pull off on a sun or sgi? Of course. However, it is not supported in the system as distributed; you have to do a bit of work...