* Re: [9fans] Re: Solaris thread scheaduling @ 2000-08-18 15:34 rob pike [not found] ` <rob@plan9.bell-labs.com> 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: rob pike @ 2000-08-18 15:34 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans What, we should use uncooperative threads? Adversarial threads? Anarchic threads? I guess I don't know the terminology. If POSIX threads are a good thing, perhaps I don't want to know what they're better than. -rob ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
[parent not found: <rob@plan9.bell-labs.com>]
* Re: [9fans] pipefile @ 2000-08-02 14:48 ` rob pike 2000-08-02 15:49 ` James A. Robinson 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: rob pike @ 2000-08-02 14:48 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 486 bytes --] > When I input Japanese like below: > > term% 日本語の入力の練習です。<cr> > > > I cannot now return to rc shell. I don't understand. Do you want just to enter one line of Japanese text? The idea was to switch the mode of /dev/cons permanently. I assumed your Japanese input methods could provide both ASCII and Japanese text. The pipefile program is a permanent fixture, not useful for just sending one line and going back to the previous state. -rob [-- Attachment #2: Type: message/rfc822, Size: 2128 bytes --] From: okamoto@granite.cias.osakafu-u.ac.jp To: 9fans@cse.psu.edu Subject: Re: [9fans] pipefile Date: Wed, 2 Aug 2000 16:55:47 0900 Message-ID: <200008020754.DAA15253@cse.psu.edu> >As I said in the beginning, this trick is suitable for continuous >files such as devices I was confused in my earlier mail, because I had no EARGF definition on my libc.h. Now, I got the new update, and it works now what you intended (probably). Then, now I'm wondering rightly☺ how I can end the input, and return to shell prompt, when I hit return key on rio environment. Yes, I have read rio sources, but it's beyond my ability. My only understand on this is to send nil length font length to the frame of the window of rio.... I know this procedure is simple, and works under acme, too. When I input Japanese like below: term% 日本語の入力の練習です。<cr> I cannot now return to rc shell. Kenji ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] pipefile 2000-08-02 14:48 ` [9fans] pipefile rob pike @ 2000-08-02 15:49 ` James A. Robinson 0 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: James A. Robinson @ 2000-08-02 15:49 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans [-- Warning: decoded text below may be mangled, UTF-8 assumed --] [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain; charset="x-unknown", Size: 668 bytes --] I think he was thinking of the v2 edition where, with ktrans, you could hit a ctrl seq and switch into different modes. I assume that functionality was always part of ktrans itself, in other words after it's started it is always running and handles whether or not to do translation. > > When I input Japanese like below: > > > > term% 日本語の入力の練習です。<cr> > > > > > > I cannot now return to rc shell. > > I don't understand. Do you want just to enter one line of Japanese text? > The idea was to switch the mode of /dev/cons permanently. I assumed > your Japanese input methods could provide both ASCII and Japanese text. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Re: Solaris thread scheaduling [not found] ` <rob@plan9.bell-labs.com> 2000-08-02 14:48 ` [9fans] pipefile rob pike @ 2000-08-18 20:25 ` Tom Duff 2000-09-06 21:59 ` [9fans] Reliable Cray Y-MP C90 Supercomputer rob pike ` (18 subsequent siblings) 20 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Tom Duff @ 2000-08-18 20:25 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans On Aug 18, 11:34am, rob pike wrote: > Subject: Re: [9fans] Re: Solaris thread scheaduling > What, we should use uncooperative threads? > Adversarial threads? Anarchic threads? > > I guess I don't know the terminology. If POSIX threads > are a good thing, perhaps I don't want to know what they're > better than. Cooperative threads are just coroutines. They're `cooperative' because if the thread doesn't cooperate by calling the scheduler, no other thread ever get scheduled. -- Tom Duff. FUD in optima forma. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Reliable Cray Y-MP C90 Supercomputer @ 2000-09-06 21:59 ` rob pike 2000-09-06 22:02 ` James A. Robinson 2000-09-06 22:11 ` Boyd Roberts 0 siblings, 2 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: rob pike @ 2000-09-06 21:59 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > > well you i told you not too. and it didn't feel like water and > it wasn't coffee. so what was it? i believe it came in 18x18x18" > clear(ish) plastic containers. does that refresh your memory? > That's fluorinert all right. But it wasn't me. -rob ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Reliable Cray Y-MP C90 Supercomputer 2000-09-06 21:59 ` [9fans] Reliable Cray Y-MP C90 Supercomputer rob pike @ 2000-09-06 22:02 ` James A. Robinson 2000-09-06 22:14 ` Boyd Roberts 2000-09-06 22:11 ` Boyd Roberts 1 sibling, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: James A. Robinson @ 2000-09-06 22:02 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > > well you i told you not too. and it didn't feel like water and > > it wasn't coffee. so what was it? i believe it came in 18x18x18" > > clear(ish) plastic containers. does that refresh your memory? > > That's fluorinert all right. But it wasn't me. > > -rob I bet it was Penn and Teller... (http://www.sincity.com/penn-n-teller/wired-penn.html) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Reliable Cray Y-MP C90 Supercomputer 2000-09-06 22:02 ` James A. Robinson @ 2000-09-06 22:14 ` Boyd Roberts 0 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2000-09-06 22:14 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans From: James A. Robinson <jim.robinson@stanford.edu> > > I bet it was Penn and Teller... no, but they were around. i got this immortal quote from lou reed, thanks to rob and penn: always go for overkill rawb, you and your aussie friends... ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Reliable Cray Y-MP C90 Supercomputer 2000-09-06 21:59 ` [9fans] Reliable Cray Y-MP C90 Supercomputer rob pike 2000-09-06 22:02 ` James A. Robinson @ 2000-09-06 22:11 ` Boyd Roberts 1 sibling, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2000-09-06 22:11 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans From: rob pike <rob@plan9.bell-labs.com> > > That's fluorinert all right. But it wasn't me. > > -rob oh yes it was, rob. i remember. 'round the time you were writing acme IIRC. and yes, i remember the car ride back from ny with bob. not one of the cleverest things i'd done... ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] new versions of graphics programs? [not found] ` <rob@plan9.bell-labs.com> ` (2 preceding siblings ...) 2000-09-06 21:59 ` [9fans] Reliable Cray Y-MP C90 Supercomputer rob pike @ 2000-09-07 22:18 ` Tom Duff 2000-11-01 22:23 ` [9fans] /n/smtp rob pike ` (16 subsequent siblings) 20 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Tom Duff @ 2000-09-07 22:18 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > I worked on a couple of the tools and stumbled into original > bugs that I didn't see how to fix, so that project has stalled. > The shipped gif and jpg tools and the iconv program should > address some of the lower-level needs. Higher-level > image processing is a project for a dedicated soul; it's a big > job. Obviously, I should speak up. I'm the original author of most of the fb code, and would be an obvious candidate to revive it all. There may be issues with my current employer that I have to resolve. I'll take a look at the issues and the code and see what I might do. Please speak to me if you have a specific interest... -- Tom Duff. Simple PCs with super overcloaked pentiums. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] /n/smtp @ 2000-11-01 22:23 ` rob pike 2000-11-01 22:38 ` Scott Schwartz 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: rob pike @ 2000-11-01 22:23 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > sam should have a named pipe for commands The code is adaptable, because there are a few diehards here that don't use plumbing. B works for them since sam checks if plumbing is available and if not, turns on the pipe stuff. That should be trivial to make work on Unix, since it always did. On Boyd's point, plumbing is of course the evolution of B. -rob ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] /n/smtp 2000-11-01 22:23 ` [9fans] /n/smtp rob pike @ 2000-11-01 22:38 ` Scott Schwartz 0 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Scott Schwartz @ 2000-11-01 22:38 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans Yes, if you use the old unix samterm, it continues to do what it always did. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Crazy idea... or a new project? @ 2000-11-24 0:41 ` rob pike 2000-11-24 0:48 ` Boyd Roberts 2000-11-24 22:13 ` Scott Schwartz 0 siblings, 2 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: rob pike @ 2000-11-24 0:41 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 580 bytes --] That's a little simplistic. The x86 is a lousy architecture, and you're right about the compilers etc. But all those lousy drivers, VGAs, USB floppies, it goes on and on. Are any two the same? I doubt it. That's the horror of PCs, yet is a perhaps unavoidable consequence of the history that made the PC dominant (c.f. the Mac). The PC kernel for Plan 9 is huge because of all the drivers it must have to run on all devices. Sure we could have (and perhaps should have) loadable device drivers, but that is a solution to a problem that shouldn't exist. -rob [-- Attachment #2: Type: message/rfc822, Size: 1463 bytes --] From: "Russ Cox" <rsc@plan9.bell-labs.com> To: 9fans@cse.psu.edu Subject: Re: [9fans] Crazy idea... or a new project? Date: Thu, 23 Nov 2000 19:05:08 -0500 Message-ID: <20001124000509.EF643199EE@mail.cse.psu.edu> I don't agree about the x86. Sure it's an ugly chip. Sure it and its PC hosts are complicated. But the bootstrap code and the compiler are written. In Plan 9, it's no different to write applications for the x86 than it is to write them for any other architecture. Russ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Crazy idea... or a new project? 2000-11-24 0:41 ` [9fans] Crazy idea... or a new project? rob pike @ 2000-11-24 0:48 ` Boyd Roberts 2000-11-24 22:13 ` Scott Schwartz 1 sibling, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2000-11-24 0:48 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > ... Sure we could have > (and perhaps should have) loadable device drivers, > but that is a solution to a problem that shouldn't exist. > yes, in your environment. but like you can glue a namespace together, why not device drivers? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Crazy idea... or a new project? 2000-11-24 0:41 ` [9fans] Crazy idea... or a new project? rob pike 2000-11-24 0:48 ` Boyd Roberts @ 2000-11-24 22:13 ` Scott Schwartz 2000-11-24 22:24 ` Boyd Roberts 1 sibling, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Scott Schwartz @ 2000-11-24 22:13 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans | Sure we could have | (and perhaps should have) loadable device drivers, | but that is a solution to a problem that shouldn't exist. Just to digress for a moment, I've never liked the idea of loadable device drivers, because they seeem like such a stopgap measure. Either a real microkernel (ala QNX) or a conventional but pagable kernel would address the space issue in a (IMHO) cleaner way. Having the window system allocate memory from unpageable ram bothers me in a similar way. I'm sure rob's thought about these issues more than I, so I look forward to being set straight on the topic. :-) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Crazy idea... or a new project? 2000-11-24 22:13 ` Scott Schwartz @ 2000-11-24 22:24 ` Boyd Roberts 0 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2000-11-24 22:24 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans From: Scott Schwartz <schwartz@bio.cse.psu.edu> > Just to digress for a moment, I've never liked the idea of loadable > device drivers, because they seeem like such a stopgap measure. maybe you could 'plumb' them. after boot the kernel gets handed up a file with rules/whatever to load device drivers based on interrupts or other device ready 'events'. i was thinking about digital uda-50 interfaces. you could just plug 'em in and ultrix would autoconf them at run (ie. any) time. of course, the driver was already loaded. probably hard to generalise, but it might work out. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] azerty [french] keyboard support @ 2001-02-06 17:11 ` rob pike 2001-02-06 19:10 ` Scott Schwartz 2001-02-06 19:23 ` Dan Cross 0 siblings, 2 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: rob pike @ 2001-02-06 17:11 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans It would be very little work to create a file, writable only by eve, that allows you to cp /lib/keyboard /dev/kbdtrans or some such and avoid the recompilation. However, this problem is a local one and it doesn't feel right to make it so generally programmable. Something more along the way timezone works would suit me better, but I don't see the way. -rob ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] azerty [french] keyboard support 2001-02-06 17:11 ` [9fans] azerty [french] keyboard support rob pike @ 2001-02-06 19:10 ` Scott Schwartz 2001-02-06 19:23 ` Dan Cross 1 sibling, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Scott Schwartz @ 2001-02-06 19:10 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > cp /lib/keyboard /dev/kbdtrans It's more a question of personalization than localization. That mechanism could also be used for qwerty vs dvorak, or replacing function keys with selected non-ascii characters. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] azerty [french] keyboard support 2001-02-06 17:11 ` [9fans] azerty [french] keyboard support rob pike 2001-02-06 19:10 ` Scott Schwartz @ 2001-02-06 19:23 ` Dan Cross 1 sibling, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Dan Cross @ 2001-02-06 19:23 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans In article <20010206171115.E303A199F8@mail.cse.psu.edu> you write: >It would be very little work to create a file, writable only by eve, >that allows you to > cp /lib/keyboard /dev/kbdtrans >or some such and avoid the recompilation. However, this problem >is a local one and it doesn't feel right to make it so generally >programmable. Something more along the way timezone works >would suit me better, but I don't see the way. No, you're right; it is a local problem. But a solution might fix a bunch of local problems. :-) A filesystem to handle the keyboard is my best guess, but that isn't gaining a lot of favor. I agree, though, that putting the programmability into the kernel isn't a good solution.... - Dan C. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] 9p2k, fsync @ 2001-02-07 15:23 ` rob pike 2001-02-07 18:42 ` Scott Schwartz 2001-02-08 1:19 ` Dan Cross 0 siblings, 2 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: rob pike @ 2001-02-07 15:23 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans Fsync etc. is at the wrong level. The issue is not a system-wide question, but a file-server question. As a trivial example of how to think about this problem, disk/kfscmd sync strikes closer to the way the problem should be handled than a 'sync' system call. The details of how a file server backs up and stabilizes its storage are specific to the server, and should be implemented by it. Plan 9 conventions show how to provide such an interface; the file protocol is not the place. -rob ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] 9p2k, fsync 2001-02-07 15:23 ` [9fans] 9p2k, fsync rob pike @ 2001-02-07 18:42 ` Scott Schwartz 2001-02-08 1:19 ` Dan Cross 1 sibling, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Scott Schwartz @ 2001-02-07 18:42 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans | Fsync etc. is at the wrong level. The issue is not a system-wide | question, but a file-server question. So how does an application with an open fd assure that the write()s it has issued are really on disk? It's impossible for that program to tell which file server you're using. In fact, you might be using several, if they're stacked up. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] 9p2k, fsync 2001-02-07 15:23 ` [9fans] 9p2k, fsync rob pike 2001-02-07 18:42 ` Scott Schwartz @ 2001-02-08 1:19 ` Dan Cross 2001-02-08 9:43 ` Douglas A. Gwyn 1 sibling, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Dan Cross @ 2001-02-08 1:19 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans In article <20010207152343.C1B91199E1@mail.cse.psu.edu> you write: >Fsync etc. is at the wrong level. The issue is not a system-wide >question, but a file-server question. As a trivial example of how >to think about this problem, > disk/kfscmd sync >strikes closer to the way the problem should be handled than >a 'sync' system call. The details of how a file server backs up >and stabilizes its storage are specific to the server, and should >be implemented by it. Plan 9 conventions show how to provide >such an interface; the file protocol is not the place. Hey? No disagreement that it's a fileserver issue, but I should also be able to ask the file server to sync the data associated with a particular FID. Multics had this problem; no synchronization primitives for segments. It was impossible to build a database on it for many years (maybe they fixed it eventually; I don't know), because one couldn't guarantee serialization of transactions on persistent media. It would be a shame to send Plan 9 down the same road for the exact same reason. - Dan C. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] 9p2k, fsync 2001-02-08 1:19 ` Dan Cross @ 2001-02-08 9:43 ` Douglas A. Gwyn 0 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Douglas A. Gwyn @ 2001-02-08 9:43 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans Dan Cross wrote: > Multics had this problem; no synchronization primitives for segments. > It was impossible to build a database on it for many years (maybe they > fixed it eventually; I don't know), because one couldn't guarantee > serialization of transactions on persistent media. It would be a shame > to send Plan 9 down the same road for the exact same reason. I think that all that is required is consistency. The server is the right place to enforce that, and I'd suggest making it an explicit requirement. How about this: To ensure that a 9P2k message has been integrated into the server state, just wait for an ack for the message, or if it is one-way, send some innocuous request and wait for it to return data. Getting the feedback from the server guarantees that the server (which is responsible for maintaining consistency) has successfully processed the previous request. Of course, if the service does a lousy job you have reason to demand an improved server. I once encountered a disk drive that apparently wrote data to disk successfully, except it didn't modify the sectors that it was supposed to have written. In the face of such phenomena it is pointless to insist on absolute guarantees of synchronization. Good design calls for such secondary matters to be handled as close to the source of the problem as possible, rather than intruding such low-level considerations into higher logical levels. If something does happen at a lower level that necessarily affects things at a higher level, then so be it, but if it couldn't be solved down there it can't be solved up here either, and up here dealing with it distracts from the more strategic concerns. (For similar reasons I am a fan of nested exception handling instead of functions returning failure codes, but that's another thread.) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] isatty @ 2001-02-14 13:51 ` rob pike 2001-02-14 16:42 ` Scott Schwartz 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: rob pike @ 2001-02-14 13:51 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 184 bytes --] Yeah. For purity and consistency, I tried to get TD to forget about prompting in rc, just have it run commands, but he caved in to pressure from less clean-minded people. -rob [-- Attachment #2: Type: message/rfc822, Size: 1374 bytes --] From: rog@vitanuova.com To: 9fans@cse.psu.edu Subject: [9fans] isatty Date: Wed, 14 Feb 2001 13:48:40 0000 Message-ID: <20010214124400.7C58819A16@mail.cse.psu.edu> > since the idea is that what i see from > ls > should be a good guide to what grep sees in > ls | grep '\.c' > then yes, that isatty is indeed a bad idea mind you, plan 9 isn't entirely innocent in this respect, c.f. /sys/src/cmd/rc/exec.c:/Isatty ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] isatty 2001-02-14 13:51 ` [9fans] isatty rob pike @ 2001-02-14 16:42 ` Scott Schwartz 0 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Scott Schwartz @ 2001-02-14 16:42 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans | Yeah. For purity and consistency, I tried to get TD to forget | about prompting in rc, just have it run commands, but he | caved in to pressure from less clean-minded people. Maybe the window system could do the prompting. It could check if there are any outstanding read requests for a window, and if so, change the border color, or something like that. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] sam mod for delete-forward @ 2001-03-26 14:12 ` rob pike 2001-03-26 15:37 ` Douglas A. Gwyn 2001-03-26 15:42 ` Scott Schwartz 0 siblings, 2 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: rob pike @ 2001-03-26 14:12 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans I'm nervous about this because rio can't do the same thing, and if you get in the habit in sam place you'll be sorry in rio when you kill the process. I regret the different interpretations of ESC and don't want to make another mistake like that. -rob ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] sam mod for delete-forward 2001-03-26 14:12 ` [9fans] sam mod for delete-forward rob pike @ 2001-03-26 15:37 ` Douglas A. Gwyn 2001-03-27 8:25 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-03-26 15:42 ` Scott Schwartz 1 sibling, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Douglas A. Gwyn @ 2001-03-26 15:37 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans rob pike wrote: > I'm nervous about this because rio can't do the same thing, and if you > get in the habit in sam place you'll be sorry in rio when you kill the > process. I regret the different interpretations of ESC and don't want > to make another mistake like that. I appreciate the point. It is a pity that the industry didn't agree on standard uses for control keystrokes. Actually DEL is RUBOUT, which should be ignored since it is where the punched paper tape was backspaced and overpunched to remove an erroneous character. ESC is supposed to introduce a *sequence* of characters. Etc. I'm not sure why the early Unix use of DEL to generate an INTR signal was carried into Plan 9, but frankly it seems like a poor choice. ETX (^C) is a semi-standard for this function, just as DEL deletes forward in most text processors these days. I doubt you want to go the X11-init-file route, but it might be useful to employ *some* sort of functional key map, defaulting to whatever you think is best. Then sam, rio, and other apps could be uniformly coded to test for the key corresponding to the function Delete-Word-Backward, Delete-Char-Forward, Generate-Signal, etc. instead of hard-wiring the functions. I know that hard-wired functions make it easier to use somebody else's environment, but I don't think that trumps the desire to be able to switch among Plan 9 and other OSes without having to retrain one's fingers. I just realized that while preparing this message under Solaris with Netscape's Compose window, I used DEL for delete-forward several times. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] sam mod for delete-forward 2001-03-26 15:37 ` Douglas A. Gwyn @ 2001-03-27 8:25 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-03-27 14:01 ` Sam 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2001-03-27 8:25 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans Douglas A. Gwyn <gwyn@arl.army.mil> a crit dans le message : 3ABF5D54.B549A18B@arl.army.mil... > I appreciate the point. It is a pity that the industry didn't agree on > standard uses for control keystrokes. Actually DEL is RUBOUT, which > should be ignored since it is where the punched paper tape was > backspaced and overpunched to remove an erroneous character. ESC is > supposed to introduce a *sequence* of characters. |-------------| | o o . o | | . o o | | o . o | | o . o | | o . | | o o . o o | | . o | | o o . o o o | | o . o o | | . o o | | o o . o | | o o . o o | | o o . o | | o o . o o o | | o . o | | o . | | o o . o o | | . o | | o o . o o o | | o o . | | . o | | o o . o o | | . o | | o o . o o o | | o . o | | . o | | o o . o o | | . o | | o o . o o o | | o o . o | | . o o | | o . o o | | o o . o o | | . o | | o o . o o o | | . o o | | . o o | | . o | | o o . o o | | . o | | o o . o o o | | o o . | | o . o | | o . o | | o o . o o | | . o | | o o . o o o | | o . o | | . o o | | o . o | | o o . o o | | o . | | o . o o | | o o . o o | | . o | | o o . o o o | | o . o o | | o o . o | | . o o | | o . o o | | . o | | o . o | | . o o | | . o o | | o o . | | o . o | | o . o | | . o | | o . o o | | o o . o o | | . o | | o o . o o o | | . o | | . o o | | o o . o o | | . o | | o o . o o o | | . o | | . o o | | o . | | o o . o o | | . o | | o o . o o o | | o . o o | | . o o | | . o o o | | . o o o | | o o . | | . o o | | o . o | | o o . o o | | . o | | o o . o o o | | o o . o | | o . o | | . o o | | o . o | | . o o | | o o . o | | o o . o o | | o . o o | | o . | |-------------| ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] sam mod for delete-forward 2001-03-27 8:25 ` Boyd Roberts @ 2001-03-27 14:01 ` Sam 2001-03-27 16:51 ` Dan Cross 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Sam @ 2001-03-27 14:01 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans At the risk of asking a perhaps foolish question . . . What the hell is this!?! :), sam On Tuesday 27 March 2001 03:25, you wrote: > Douglas A. Gwyn <gwyn@arl.army.mil> a crit dans le message : > 3ABF5D54.B549A18B@arl.army.mil... > > > I appreciate the point. It is a pity that the industry didn't agree on > > standard uses for control keystrokes. Actually DEL is RUBOUT, which > > should be ignored since it is where the punched paper tape was > > backspaced and overpunched to remove an erroneous character. ESC is > > supposed to introduce a *sequence* of characters. > > > |-------------| > | o o . o | > | . o o | > | o . o | > | o . o | > | o . | > | o o . o o | > | . o | > | o o . o o o | > | o . o o | > | . o o | > | o o . o | > | o o . o o | > | o o . o | > | o o . o o o | > | o . o | > | o . | > | o o . o o | > | . o | > | o o . o o o | > | o o . | > | . o | > | o o . o o | > | . o | > | o o . o o o | > | o . o | > | . o | > | o o . o o | > | . o | > | o o . o o o | > | o o . o | > | . o o | > | o . o o | > | o o . o o | > | . o | > | o o . o o o | > | . o o | > | . o o | > | . o | > | o o . o o | > | . o | > | o o . o o o | > | o o . | > | o . o | > | o . o | > | o o . o o | > | . o | > | o o . o o o | > | o . o | > | . o o | > | o . o | > | o o . o o | > | o . | > | o . o o | > | o o . o o | > | . o | > | o o . o o o | > | o . o o | > | o o . o | > | . o o | > | o . o o | > | . o | > | o . o | > | . o o | > | . o o | > | o o . | > | o . o | > | o . o | > | . o | > | o . o o | > | o o . o o | > | . o | > | o o . o o o | > | . o | > | . o o | > | o o . o o | > | . o | > | o o . o o o | > | . o | > | . o o | > | o . | > | o o . o o | > | . o | > | o o . o o o | > | o . o o | > | . o o | > | . o o o | > | . o o o | > | o o . | > | . o o | > | o . o | > | o o . o o | > | . o | > | o o . o o o | > | o o . o | > | o . o | > | . o o | > | o . o | > | . o o | > | o o . o | > | o o . o o | > | o . o o | > | o . | > |-------------| -- Sam Hopkins ------------------------------------------------ Random QOTD: "It now costs more to amuse a child, than it once did to educate his father." ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] sam mod for delete-forward 2001-03-27 14:01 ` Sam @ 2001-03-27 16:51 ` Dan Cross 2001-03-28 8:37 ` Douglas A. Gwyn 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Dan Cross @ 2001-03-27 16:51 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans In article <01032709015600.08511@softnet> you write: >At the risk of asking a perhaps foolish question . . . >What the hell is this!?! It's a paper tape image. I'm not sure what the text says, though. I think the first letter is ``I,'' though. - Dan C. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] sam mod for delete-forward 2001-03-27 16:51 ` Dan Cross @ 2001-03-28 8:37 ` Douglas A. Gwyn 2001-03-29 8:26 ` Boyd Roberts 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Douglas A. Gwyn @ 2001-03-28 8:37 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans Dan Cross wrote: > It's a paper tape image. I'm not sure what the text says, though. Since it has 5 levels, one assumes it uses Baudot code. (He may have put the sprocket track in the wrong row.) Translating: WHILE YOU'RE AT IT WHY NOT ADD DOSKEY FUNCTIONALITY TOO THE COMMAND WINDOW? (There were unnecessary figure/letter shifts around the spaces.) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] sam mod for delete-forward 2001-03-28 8:37 ` Douglas A. Gwyn @ 2001-03-29 8:26 ` Boyd Roberts 0 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2001-03-29 8:26 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans Douglas A. Gwyn <DAGwyn@null.net> a crit dans le message : > WHILE YOU'RE AT IT WHY NOT ADD DOSKEY FUNCTIONALITY TOO THE COMMAND WINDOW? > (There were unnecessary figure/letter shifts around the spaces.) While I've rarely agreed with you I know you're no fool. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] sam mod for delete-forward 2001-03-26 14:12 ` [9fans] sam mod for delete-forward rob pike 2001-03-26 15:37 ` Douglas A. Gwyn @ 2001-03-26 15:42 ` Scott Schwartz 1 sibling, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Scott Schwartz @ 2001-03-26 15:42 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans | I'm nervous about this because rio can't do the same thing, and if you | get in the habit in sam place you'll be sorry in rio when you kill the | process. I regret the different interpretations of ESC and don't want | to make another mistake like that. Does rio really need to use the delete key for that? Most keyboards these days have some spare function keys, if not a key that's actually labled something like "Break". ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] snprint(), getfields() specification @ 2001-05-10 14:59 ` rob pike 2001-05-10 16:42 ` Scott Schwartz 2001-05-10 18:13 ` Steve Kilbane 0 siblings, 2 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: rob pike @ 2001-05-10 14:59 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans Observe the error: > some of the printed characters were discarded. None of the printed characters was discarded. I understood what was being said and I am objecting to the design. I understand the idea - that you can't find out what you need any other way, so return that information and use strlen() to find out what really got done - but I still think it sets a dangerous precedent. Like the strcpy() that returned a pointer to the end of the string (fixed by ANSI C), the return value sacrifices a long-standing principle to short-sighted expedience. C99 has made many mistakes, and this is hardly the worst, but it bothers me that people are now (or will soon be) arguing that we should follow a broken design (c.f. malloc(0)) because it's written down somewhere. I suppose we should fix (read break) our snprintf() implementation, but I can at least hold on to the fact that snprint() is not defined by C99. I really object to this speculative return value, but it's not my decision so pooey. It's malloc(0) and int a[0] all over again. Sigh. -rob ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] snprint(), getfields() specification 2001-05-10 14:59 ` [9fans] snprint(), getfields() specification rob pike @ 2001-05-10 16:42 ` Scott Schwartz 2001-05-10 18:13 ` Steve Kilbane 1 sibling, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Scott Schwartz @ 2001-05-10 16:42 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans (Well, not strlen. Just a check to see if the return value was bigger than the limit.) What then is the elegant solution? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] snprint(), getfields() specification 2001-05-10 14:59 ` [9fans] snprint(), getfields() specification rob pike 2001-05-10 16:42 ` Scott Schwartz @ 2001-05-10 18:13 ` Steve Kilbane 2001-05-10 21:38 ` Boyd Roberts 1 sibling, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Steve Kilbane @ 2001-05-10 18:13 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans I'd say adopt the other UNIX convention, and return -1. The arguments aren't "right" - insufficient space - so do nothing. It moves the speculative behaviour onto the user. steve ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] snprint(), getfields() specification 2001-05-10 18:13 ` Steve Kilbane @ 2001-05-10 21:38 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-05-11 6:51 ` Steve Kilbane 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2001-05-10 21:38 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans From: "Steve Kilbane" <steve@whitecrow.demon.co.uk> > > I'd say adopt the other UNIX convention, and return -1. The arguments > aren't "right" - insufficient space - so do nothing. It moves the > speculative behaviour onto the user. no, return a value so you have the best possible idea of why it didn't 'work'. if it was a space problem, allocate more space, loop. i recall that netscape on windows 3 allowed you to specify how many tcp connection it would manage at once and the i/o buffer size. should you try a > 16kb read/write bad things happened to your winsock dll. my dll, which called winsock while doing all the socks 4 work, had a parameter in the ini file to split the i/o's up into chunks and then return the total read/written. should the dll get an i/o error you'd get a short i/o so you'd continue with the bit that was left and then get an error. err, of course, i'm referring to a correctly written winsock application. yeah, i suffered that sort of junk for 2 years -- ouch. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] snprint(), getfields() specification 2001-05-10 21:38 ` Boyd Roberts @ 2001-05-11 6:51 ` Steve Kilbane 0 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Steve Kilbane @ 2001-05-11 6:51 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans Boyd: > no, return a value so you have the best possible idea of why it > didn't 'work'. i know; i was thinking about rob's comments on consistent return values. however, he's already gone beyond this anyway. steve ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: Re[4]: [9fans] home, end ^h^j^k^l @ 2001-05-19 14:14 ` rob pike 2001-05-19 14:26 ` Re[6]: " Matt H ` (8 more replies) 0 siblings, 9 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: rob pike @ 2001-05-19 14:14 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans Yes, the behavior of the escape key (selecting typed text when nothing is selected; deleting it when something is), backspace, typing when text is selected, all this and more comes from Smalltalk, which was the nicest thing to take ideas from when the precursors to all this software were written, back in the early 1980s. My primary regret is in this area is the different behavior of ESC between sam and acme vs. rio. Rio's use of ESC is a great feature, but it should have been placed on a different key. But then, which key on which keyboard...? > Is it that the people who made the choices used different keyboards to > the WinTel world? Yes. The lack of support for Insert, Delete, the Windows key, End, Page Up, etc. all stem from the lack of those keys on the keyboards this software was developed for. (Plan 9 didn't even run on PCs in its early days, and I bet the Windows key didn't exist before Windows.) Also in the early days of Plan 9 there was a variety of machines (now, sometimes it seems PCs are the only machines in the world) and a consequential variety of keyboards. Are we settling in? Does everyone agree that ^C is copy and ^V is paste? I doubt it. Do we know that all keyboards will have the keys we need? I'm not sure. Seems like you should decide what features you want in your user interface, and map those to the available keys, rather than the other way around. There are a few decisions I made in Plan 9 that I expected to get blasted on but that turned out not to generate much heat. One of those is that there is no equivalent of stty; the control codes are fixed in the software. My argument was that the complexity isn't worth the convenience; you'll learn what keys do what and adapt. Let the other systems use stty to match Plan 9; they're all so proud of that interface. I wrote a paper called "Window Systems Should be Transparent". It's on my web page; go have a look. (It predates Plan 9.) > functioning cursor keys would still be a speed benefit. This feels true but is false. There were some fascinating experiments done a few years ago in which people were given a long, tedious editing task. Some of the people were keyboard fans, some were mouse fans. Both folks were asked to do the task two ways, in random order, once using the mouse to do the editing, once using cursor keys etc. Regardless of their predilections, which was stated up front, after the experiment everyone who did the task agreed that it was faster to use the keyboard than the mouse to complete the task. Everyone. Here's the kicker: everyone was wrong. They were being timed, and in fact the reverse was true. Although they thought the keyboard was faster, doing the task using the mouse was faster for everyone, by a substantial fraction. The explanation, besides the obvious that arrow keys are actually pretty slow if you're going more than a line or character, is that people feel the mouse wastes time because you need to grab it and move it, but it's time well spent. The part of the brain that uses keyboard commands to move the cursor is a higher-order function, and thinking and planning how to use the keys to get to the destination blocks thinking about the editing task at hand. But using the mouse is done by a lower-order part of the brain, which keeps the editing part of the brain clear. There's less task switching going on when you use the mouse, so you work more efficiently. If you don't believe me, the story is here: http://www.asktog.com/readerMail/1999-12ReaderMail.html Thanks to some forgotten 9fan who mentioned this a while back. I didn't know about these experiments when I said, long ago, that using arrow keys to point at a display is like telling someone how to go somewhere by giving directions, while using a mouse is like pointing at a map. In fact, I never used a screen editor until I had a mouse, for just this reason. Before this discussion devolves into the usual silliness, here's something fun we've been working on. Who last modified those ether drivers? pc% ls -m ether*.c [sape] --rw-rw-r-- M 2812 sape sys 2820 Apr 18 12:23 ether2000.c [sean] --rw-rw-r-- M 2812 sape sys 34782 May 3 10:19 ether2114x.c [sape] --rw-rw-r-- M 2812 sape sys 4644 Apr 18 12:23 ether589.c [sean] --rw-rw-r-- M 2812 sape sys 13352 May 3 10:18 ether79c970.c [sape] --rw-rw-r-- M 2812 sape sys 6665 Apr 18 12:24 ether8003.c [sean] --rw-rw-r-- M 2812 sape sys 25364 May 17 10:15 ether82543gc.c [presotto] --rw-rw-r-- M 2812 sape sys 28587 Apr 23 13:52 ether82557.c [sape] --rw-rw-r-- M 2812 sape sys 17544 Apr 18 12:24 ether8390.c [jmk] --rw-rw-r-- M 2812 sape sys 3745 May 2 17:02 etherec2t.c [sean] --rw-rw-r-- M 2812 sape sys 47826 May 17 10:14 etherelnk3.c [jmk] --rw-rw-r-- M 2812 sape sys 24348 May 2 16:59 etherga620.c [sape] --rw-rw-r-- M 2812 sape sys 15079 Apr 18 12:26 ethersmc.c [jmk] --rw-rw-r-- M 2812 sape sys 28045 May 8 13:18 etherwavelan.c pc% The -m flag reports the muid (modifier uid) of the file, as reported in the new 9P protocol. This is the person who most recently modified the file, instead of the person who created it. History reports the information over time: pc+% history ether82557.c Apr 23 13:52:18 EDT 2001 ether82557.c 28587 [presotto] Apr 23 13:52:18 EDT 2001 /n/dump/2001/0519/sys/src/9/pc/ether82557.c 28587 [presotto] Apr 18 13:33:20 EDT 2001 /n/dump/2001/0423/sys/src/9/pc/ether82557.c 28510 [jmk] Feb 28 18:40:30 EST 2001 /n/dump/2001/0418/sys/src/9/pc/ether82557.c 28445 [jmk] Nov 11 10:30:56 EST 2000 /n/dump/2001/0228/sys/src/9/pc/ether82557.c 28058 [sape] Jun 19 00:05:20 EDT 2000 /n/dump/2000/1111/sys/src/9/pc/ether82557.c 28058 [jmk] ... The history command could now be renamed 'whotoblame'. And as always, history -D will tell you why to blame them. -rob ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re[6]: [9fans] home, end ^h^j^k^l 2001-05-19 14:14 ` Re[4]: [9fans] home, end ^h^j^k^l rob pike @ 2001-05-19 14:26 ` Matt H 2001-05-19 22:45 ` [9fans] ls -m Scott Schwartz 2001-05-19 15:35 ` Re[4]: [9fans] home, end ^h^j^k^l James A. Robinson ` (7 subsequent siblings) 8 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Matt H @ 2001-05-19 14:26 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans Hello rob, rp> If you don't believe me, the story is here: rp> http://www.asktog.com/readerMail/1999-12ReaderMail.html rp> Thanks to some forgotten 9fan who mentioned this a while back. thanks rob. That has satisfied my curiosity. And that story is fascinating really. rp> Before this discussion devolves into the usual silliness, here's rp> something fun we've been working on. looks great, good idea. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* [9fans] ls -m 2001-05-19 14:26 ` Re[6]: " Matt H @ 2001-05-19 22:45 ` Scott Schwartz 2001-05-19 22:50 ` Boyd Roberts 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Scott Schwartz @ 2001-05-19 22:45 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > Before this discussion devolves into the usual silliness, here's > something fun we've been working on. Why the brackets? It looks ok, but seems to makes it gratuitously harder to parse the output. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] ls -m 2001-05-19 22:45 ` [9fans] ls -m Scott Schwartz @ 2001-05-19 22:50 ` Boyd Roberts 0 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2001-05-19 22:50 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans From: "Scott Schwartz" <schwartz@bio.cse.psu.edu> > Why the brackets? It looks ok, but seems to makes it gratuitously harder > to parse the output. good point. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: Re[4]: [9fans] home, end ^h^j^k^l 2001-05-19 14:14 ` Re[4]: [9fans] home, end ^h^j^k^l rob pike 2001-05-19 14:26 ` Re[6]: " Matt H @ 2001-05-19 15:35 ` James A. Robinson 2001-05-19 20:36 ` Boyd Roberts ` (6 subsequent siblings) 8 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: James A. Robinson @ 2001-05-19 15:35 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > The -m flag reports the muid (modifier uid) of the file, as reported > in the new 9P protocol. This is the person who most recently modified > the file, instead of the person who created it. That's pretty cool. I suppose it would be a waste of space to record who deleted a file as well? One of the problems we had to deal with twice over the years is someone accidently deleting important files, but never coming forward. Sifting through process logs was a not a lot of fun. =) Jim ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: Re[4]: [9fans] home, end ^h^j^k^l 2001-05-19 14:14 ` Re[4]: [9fans] home, end ^h^j^k^l rob pike 2001-05-19 14:26 ` Re[6]: " Matt H 2001-05-19 15:35 ` Re[4]: [9fans] home, end ^h^j^k^l James A. Robinson @ 2001-05-19 20:36 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-05-19 23:30 ` Richard Elberger ` (5 subsequent siblings) 8 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2001-05-19 20:36 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > The -m flag reports the muid (modifier uid) of the file, as reported > in the new 9P protocol. This is the person who most recently modified > the file, instead of the person who created it. now, that looks cool. with that and /n/dump it would obviate the need for *cs. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* RE: Re[4]: [9fans] home, end ^h^j^k^l 2001-05-19 14:14 ` Re[4]: [9fans] home, end ^h^j^k^l rob pike ` (2 preceding siblings ...) 2001-05-19 20:36 ` Boyd Roberts @ 2001-05-19 23:30 ` Richard Elberger 2001-05-20 2:37 ` Boyd Roberts ` (4 subsequent siblings) 8 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Richard Elberger @ 2001-05-19 23:30 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans >Are we settling in? Does everyone agree that ^C is copy and ^V is >paste? I doubt it. Do we know that all keyboards will have the keys >we need? I'm not sure. Seems like you should decide what features >you want in your user interface, and map those to the available keys, >rather than the other way around. I worked in software internationalization (in software release management) for a few years and it just wasn't char set issues, it was hardware as well. Our inventory of keyboards in the lab was huge. This is why the mouse (or other type of pointing device) is really nice. It really reduces the problem of having to track all the keyboard dependencies -- *if* the pointing device is reliable and the application was built with functionality being run by a pointing device. I think that stuff like ^C has become a learnt evil with the most common OS's and shouldn't be a requirement in the next generation simply because it's habit. -- rich ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: Re[4]: [9fans] home, end ^h^j^k^l 2001-05-19 14:14 ` Re[4]: [9fans] home, end ^h^j^k^l rob pike ` (3 preceding siblings ...) 2001-05-19 23:30 ` Richard Elberger @ 2001-05-20 2:37 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-05-20 7:03 ` Lucio De Re ` (3 subsequent siblings) 8 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2001-05-20 2:37 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > The history command could now be renamed 'whotoblame'. And as always, > history -D will tell you why to blame them. nah, call it 'culprit'. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: Re[4]: [9fans] home, end ^h^j^k^l 2001-05-19 14:14 ` Re[4]: [9fans] home, end ^h^j^k^l rob pike ` (4 preceding siblings ...) 2001-05-20 2:37 ` Boyd Roberts @ 2001-05-20 7:03 ` Lucio De Re 2001-05-20 11:16 ` paurea ` (2 subsequent siblings) 8 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Lucio De Re @ 2001-05-20 7:03 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans On Sat, May 19, 2001 at 10:14:25AM -0400, rob pike wrote: > > The -m flag reports the muid (modifier uid) of the file, as reported > in the new 9P protocol. This is the person who most recently modified > the file, instead of the person who created it. > > History reports the information over time: > Wow! > pc+% history ether82557.c > Apr 23 13:52:18 EDT 2001 ether82557.c 28587 [presotto] > Apr 23 13:52:18 EDT 2001 /n/dump/2001/0519/sys/src/9/pc/ether82557.c 28587 [presotto] > Apr 18 13:33:20 EDT 2001 /n/dump/2001/0423/sys/src/9/pc/ether82557.c 28510 [jmk] > Feb 28 18:40:30 EST 2001 /n/dump/2001/0418/sys/src/9/pc/ether82557.c 28445 [jmk] > Nov 11 10:30:56 EST 2000 /n/dump/2001/0228/sys/src/9/pc/ether82557.c 28058 [sape] > Jun 19 00:05:20 EDT 2000 /n/dump/2000/1111/sys/src/9/pc/ether82557.c 28058 [jmk] > ... > > The history command could now be renamed 'whotoblame'. And as always, > history -D will tell you why to blame them. > Now you just have to have incremental diffs (yes, I know about dump, just add file-close granularity) and file qualifiers (I forget what the Macintosh calls them, but in CP/M it is extensions) and we can take over the world. Oh, people also ask for ACLs :-) ++L ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: Re[4]: [9fans] home, end ^h^j^k^l 2001-05-19 14:14 ` Re[4]: [9fans] home, end ^h^j^k^l rob pike ` (5 preceding siblings ...) 2001-05-20 7:03 ` Lucio De Re @ 2001-05-20 11:16 ` paurea 2001-05-20 13:11 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-05-20 13:04 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-05-23 8:24 ` Randolph Fritz 8 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: paurea @ 2001-05-20 11:16 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans rob pike writes: > From: "rob pike" <rob@plan9.bell-labs.com> > Subject: Re: Re[4]: [9fans] home, end ^h^j^k^l > Date: Sat, 19 May 2001 10:14:25 -0400 > > > This feels true but is false. There were some fascinating experiments > done a few years ago in which people were given a long, tedious > editing task. Some of the people were keyboard fans, some were mouse > fans. Both folks were asked to do the task two ways, in random order, > once using the mouse to do the editing, once using cursor keys etc. > Regardless of their predilections, which was stated up front, after > the experiment everyone who did the task agreed that it was faster to > use the keyboard than the mouse to complete the task. Everyone. > > Here's the kicker: everyone was wrong. They were being timed, and in > fact the reverse was true. Although they thought the keyboard was > faster, doing the task using the mouse was faster for everyone, by a > substantial fraction. > I've read this argument before and conducted some experiments on my own. I agree that it is faster to use the mouse than the arrow keys on some cases. When I am in emacs, for long jumps I use some other method which is faster some times. I normally type C-s and search for a word. (typing it repeatedly looks for the next match). My conclusions are that, for local moves of two or more characters, the C-p C-f (the emacs equivalents to arrow keys) are faster. For long, like modifying two paragraphs at the start and the end of the text, , C-s is best, specially if you can't see where you are jumping (it is one or two pages away). For midrange jumps, moving to somewhere you can see on the screen, specially if you are jumping here and there, the mouse is much faster than any other thing, even more if you are cutting and pasting things around. Something else which is fast and I use a lot in emacs, is C-a and C-e, to go to the starting and end of the line. Taking the hands away from the letter keys, even to the arrows is time consuming. More than the act of moving them, the time it takes to accomodate them back on the keyboard to start typing again. Another thing which takes time is the difficulty to be precise with the mouse (this depends on the resolution the screen is at). On the other hand, the cursor moves itself at a more or less constant rate and that makes it slow too. It is also very distracting because you have to keep your attention on it to stop it on time. -- Saludos, Gorka "Curiosity sKilled the cat" -- /"\ \ / ascii ribbon campaign - against html mail X - against ms attachments / \ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: Re[4]: [9fans] home, end ^h^j^k^l 2001-05-20 11:16 ` paurea @ 2001-05-20 13:11 ` Boyd Roberts 0 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2001-05-20 13:11 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans From: <paurea@dei.inf.uc3m.es> > I've read this argument before and conducted some experiments on my > own. I agree that it is faster to use the mouse than the arrow keys on > some cases. When I am in emacs, for long jumps I use some other > method which is faster some times. I normally type C-s and search for > a word. (typing it repeatedly looks for the next match). any set of convoluted operations may be faster in a given circumstance. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: Re[4]: [9fans] home, end ^h^j^k^l 2001-05-19 14:14 ` Re[4]: [9fans] home, end ^h^j^k^l rob pike ` (6 preceding siblings ...) 2001-05-20 11:16 ` paurea @ 2001-05-20 13:04 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-05-23 8:24 ` Randolph Fritz 8 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2001-05-20 13:04 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > pc% ls -m ether*.c > [sape] --rw-rw-r-- M 2812 sape sys 2820 Apr 18 12:23 ether2000.c put the muid after the gid or just before the mod time. i think i prefer after the gid: - the 3rd name should be obvious, given the first 2 should be engraved on everyone's psyche - puting it near the mtime is probably bad, 'cos it's not always an mtime. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: Re[4]: [9fans] home, end ^h^j^k^l 2001-05-19 14:14 ` Re[4]: [9fans] home, end ^h^j^k^l rob pike ` (7 preceding siblings ...) 2001-05-20 13:04 ` Boyd Roberts @ 2001-05-23 8:24 ` Randolph Fritz 2001-05-23 8:46 ` Re[6]: " Matt H 8 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Randolph Fritz @ 2001-05-23 8:24 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans In article <20010519141427.A5005199C1@mail.cse.psu.edu>, rob pike wrote: > > Are we settling in? Does everyone agree that ^C is copy and ^V is > paste? > Windows and Mac do...or more precisely, Mac uses command-C and command-V; windows uses control-C and control-V. (And Microsoft changed midstream; their original choices were amazingly hard to type and remember.) One change it seems that could be easily made is the use of the PgDn key for the "view" key; it is *extremely* confusing to go back and forth to other systems that ues the downarrow key as a cursor positioning key IIRC, the Mac key choices were originally made on the basis of ease of gesture by Tognazzini. > > If you don't believe me, the story is here: > http://www.asktog.com/readerMail/1999-12ReaderMail.html > Thanks to some forgotten 9fan who mentioned this a while back. > That was me. :-) > I didn't know about these experiments when I said, long ago, that > using arrow keys to point at a display is like telling someone how to > go somewhere by giving directions, while using a mouse is like > pointing at a map. In fact, I never used a screen editor until I had > a mouse, for just this reason. > The last time this came up I had an off-group discussion of this; I think some of the comments I wrote on this are relevant here. > > I've become frustrated with the lack of even simple cursor keys in > Plan 9--for going one or two characters cursor keys are faster than > mouse clicks. (I've measured it--point and click is worth about six > keystrokes, assuming no think time.) On the other hand, having > extensive cursor keys tempts one to use only cursor keys, but tests > consistently show that that method of editing is actually slower than > using a mouse, despite seeming faster. [...] > [Keyboard shortcuts are] an accessibility need, I'd think--not > everyone can use a mouse, and the chording is going to be difficult > for many people with hand disabilities [including me!], quite apart > from the RSI risks. > > In my personal opinion, the two-handed model of using the mouse for > pointing, and doing operations like cut, copy, and paste from the > keyboard has much to recommend it for users of typical physical > ability. Since we are discussing UI again, let me put in a plea for user testing. I don't even know how *I'll* respond to a new UI unless I work with a prototype. Arguing about UI without testing is a high-entropy (high heat, low light) activity :-) I have come to believe that both Unix and the Macintosh owe much of their success to user testing, with very different groups of users. Randolph A few web essays on user testing, to start with. http://www.asktog.com/columns/001closecoupledtesting.html http://www.asktog.com/columns/037TestOrElse.html http://www.useit.com/alertbox/20000319.html http://www.useit.com/alertbox/20010204.html ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re[6]: [9fans] home, end ^h^j^k^l 2001-05-23 8:24 ` Randolph Fritz @ 2001-05-23 8:46 ` Matt H 2001-05-23 9:04 ` Boyd Roberts 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Matt H @ 2001-05-23 8:46 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Randolph Fritz Hello Randolph, Wednesday, May 23, 2001, 9:24:54 AM, you wrote: RF> In article <20010519141427.A5005199C1@mail.cse.psu.edu>, rob pike wrote: >> >> Are we settling in? Does everyone agree that ^C is copy and ^V is >> paste? >> RF> Windows and Mac do...or more precisely, Mac uses command-C and RF> command-V; windows uses control-C and control-V. (And Microsoft RF> changed midstream; their original choices were amazingly hard to type RF> and remember.) I still find myself using Shift-Delete for cut, Shift-Insert for copy and Shift-Insert for paste I believe ^c ^v & ^x were taken from an IBM UI guide but someone else might correct me. -- Best regards, Matt mailto:matt@proweb.co.uk ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: Re[6]: [9fans] home, end ^h^j^k^l 2001-05-23 8:46 ` Re[6]: " Matt H @ 2001-05-23 9:04 ` Boyd Roberts 0 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2001-05-23 9:04 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans i'm suprised this subject hasn't degenerated into a total flamefest. i think have things like ^c and ^v for copy and paste operations are definitive proof that the UI is broken. if it was easy to do with the mouse why would you have such 'keyboard accelerators'? i use them, but that's because it's easier than the various turgid mouse driven GUIs and with a two button trackpad it's easier than ctrl/tab + right button. all these are indications of broken interfaces or limited technology (ie. 2 button mice). look around. the 3 button mouse is nearly dead. the closest seems to be those horrible 2 1/2 button + wheel things -- ugh. even with all that code that runs the trackpad i can't get it to give me a middle button. well i could [left+right], but then i run out of fingers with which to select. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* [9fans] ls -m @ 2001-05-20 0:16 ` rob pike 2001-05-20 0:31 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-05-20 1:38 ` [9fans] mouse vs key Scott Schwartz 0 siblings, 2 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: rob pike @ 2001-05-20 0:16 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans The [muid] format was not chosen at random. I was worried about ls -lm producing three uids. Just printing another uid after the gid would be confusing: two make a couple but three are a lot to keep straight intuitively. I wanted ls -m to be useful without -l, but to have a format that reminds you of its output. (Quick: what are the units in ls -s?) I also considered the possibility of the muid showing up in other places, such as history(1), in which a purely positional mnemonic wouldn't be available. As it stands, if you see [muid] anywhere, you have a clue what it means. I chose a bracket format because it is a parenthetical remark about the file; it contains no permission information, for example. So I understand the objection but I still think it makes sense to present the muid differently. -rob ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] ls -m 2001-05-20 0:16 ` [9fans] ls -m rob pike @ 2001-05-20 0:31 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-05-20 1:38 ` [9fans] mouse vs key Scott Schwartz 1 sibling, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2001-05-20 0:31 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > So I understand the objection but I still think it makes sense to > present the muid differently. just need to find a clear but simple way to represent it. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* [9fans] mouse vs key 2001-05-20 0:16 ` [9fans] ls -m rob pike 2001-05-20 0:31 ` Boyd Roberts @ 2001-05-20 1:38 ` Scott Schwartz 2001-05-20 6:29 ` Dan Cross 2001-05-20 8:09 ` Matt H 1 sibling, 2 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Scott Schwartz @ 2001-05-20 1:38 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans Re-reading Tog's articles, I'm struck by one thing: The studies he cites were done using the Mac GUI, which has specific properties that make the mouse efficient (Fitt's law: targets along an edge are faster to access). Most other systems lack those properties, which might effect the outcome. Also, elsewhere he's said that mouse chords are a bad idea. Possibly not the best source for a defense of Acme. :-) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] mouse vs key 2001-05-20 1:38 ` [9fans] mouse vs key Scott Schwartz @ 2001-05-20 6:29 ` Dan Cross 2001-05-20 8:09 ` Matt H 1 sibling, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Dan Cross @ 2001-05-20 6:29 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans In article <20010520013841.25839.qmail@g.bio.cse.psu.edu> you write: >Re-reading Tog's articles, I'm struck by one thing: The studies he cites >were done using the Mac GUI, which has specific properties that make the >mouse efficient (Fitt's law: targets along an edge are faster to access). >Most other systems lack those properties, which might effect the outcome. That's interesting; could you elaborate on what those properties are? - Dan C. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] mouse vs key 2001-05-20 1:38 ` [9fans] mouse vs key Scott Schwartz 2001-05-20 6:29 ` Dan Cross @ 2001-05-20 8:09 ` Matt H 2001-05-20 11:35 ` Re[2]: [9fans] mouse vs key - nethack matt 2001-05-20 12:50 ` [9fans] mouse vs key Boyd Roberts 1 sibling, 2 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Matt H @ 2001-05-20 8:09 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Scott Schwartz Hello Scott, SS> (Fitt's law: targets along an edge are faster to access). SS> Most other systems lack those properties, which might effect the outcome. I've been looking forward to tactile feedback mice for this kind of reason. When them mouse crosses a window boundary for instance, it resists for a short time to help you target your mouse. Logitech have now released one : http://www.logitech.com/cf/products/productoverview.cfm/79?24 SS> Also, elsewhere he's said that mouse chords are a bad idea. SS> Possibly not the best source for a defense of Acme. :-) hehe but they were convinced that a combination of mouse and keybard were positive which does lend some weight to my idea of assigning stuff to the function keys. Function keys are also present on the world's keyboards (AFAIK). Making them programmable would be cool. In fact if you made them a directory you could bind them in either collectively or individually. Takes me back to my BBC Model B and is a function I've missed in modern computers. -- Best regards, Matt mailto:matt@proweb.co.uk ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re[2]: [9fans] mouse vs key - nethack 2001-05-20 8:09 ` Matt H @ 2001-05-20 11:35 ` matt 2001-05-20 13:13 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-05-20 12:50 ` [9fans] mouse vs key Boyd Roberts 1 sibling, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: matt @ 2001-05-20 11:35 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans Anyone tried playing nethack with a mouse? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: Re[2]: [9fans] mouse vs key - nethack 2001-05-20 11:35 ` Re[2]: [9fans] mouse vs key - nethack matt @ 2001-05-20 13:13 ` Boyd Roberts 0 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2001-05-20 13:13 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > Anyone tried playing nethack with a mouse? the death of civilisation as we know it... ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] mouse vs key 2001-05-20 8:09 ` Matt H 2001-05-20 11:35 ` Re[2]: [9fans] mouse vs key - nethack matt @ 2001-05-20 12:50 ` Boyd Roberts 1 sibling, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2001-05-20 12:50 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans From: "Matt H" <matt@proweb.co.uk> > > I've been looking forward to tactile feedback mice for this kind of > reason. When them mouse crosses a window boundary for instance, it > resists for a short time to help you target your mouse. > iirc jim or a version of the window system that ran in the blit used to have 'gravity' so that the cursor would 'stick' to the scrollbar. rob will correct me on this. i'm not sure such features are a good thing. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] src vs db @ 2001-05-29 4:27 ` rob pike 2001-05-29 4:37 ` Scott Schwartz 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: rob pike @ 2001-05-29 4:27 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > Is src still out of sync with db? I think I've installed > all the updates, but my db is printing the "name = 386" > that src doesn't expect. That was a debugging print that was left in by mistake a long time ago. I believe the binary in the last full distribution doesn't have the print. Have you tried recompiling libmach and db? -rob ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] src vs db 2001-05-29 4:27 ` [9fans] src vs db rob pike @ 2001-05-29 4:37 ` Scott Schwartz 0 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Scott Schwartz @ 2001-05-29 4:37 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans | That was a debugging print that was left in by mistake a long | time ago. I believe the binary in the last full distribution | doesn't have the print. I just installed that, which is why I was surprised to see it. | Have you tried recompiling libmach and db? Not yet. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] sam vs acme @ 2001-07-11 19:22 ` rob pike 2001-07-11 20:08 ` James A. Robinson 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: rob pike @ 2001-07-11 19:22 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans You can use the 1-2 chord to execute an arbitrarily long Edit command from a scratch window. Only the Edit word itself needs to be in the window in which the command is to be run. -rob ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] sam vs acme 2001-07-11 19:22 ` [9fans] sam vs acme rob pike @ 2001-07-11 20:08 ` James A. Robinson 0 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: James A. Robinson @ 2001-07-11 20:08 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > You can use the 1-2 chord to execute an arbitrarily long Edit command > from a scratch window. Only the Edit word itself needs to be in the > window in which the command is to be run. Do you mean passing a Snarfed argument to Edit in the target window tag? Or something else? I know about passing an arg to Edit, and after playing around a bit just now I realized it's easier to type, Esc, Snarf, Paste into Edit then my previous attempt (type, select, cut, paste, paste into Edit). Maybe I'd just need to use it for awhile to get used to doing it this way. Jim ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] User Interface @ 2001-08-14 12:54 ` rob pike 2001-08-14 15:01 ` James A. Robinson ` (2 more replies) 0 siblings, 3 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: rob pike @ 2001-08-14 12:54 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > The editors, sam and acme are virtually unusable. Many people disagree, even feel the opposite, that they are among the easiest-to-use editors around. > Why is it that such a simple task as editing the contents of a textfile > must cause so much pain? I don't hear many yelps where I work and essentially everyone uses either sam or acme. I suspect you don't know how to use them. A criticism I will accept is that there is inadequate documentation explaining how to use them well. Try reading the associated papers, rather than just the man pages. They help somewhat. -rob ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] User Interface 2001-08-14 12:54 ` [9fans] User Interface rob pike @ 2001-08-14 15:01 ` James A. Robinson 2001-08-16 13:45 ` phaet0n 2001-08-20 8:57 ` Randolph Fritz 2 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: James A. Robinson @ 2001-08-14 15:01 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > I don't hear many yelps where I work and essentially everyone uses > either sam or acme. I suspect you don't know how to use them. > > A criticism I will accept is that there is inadequate documentation > explaining how to use them well. Try reading the associated papers, > rather than just the man pages. They help somewhat. Actually, the documentation is far better that most I've seen. I'm am talking about the associated papers you mention. That's all I used for awhile when learning to use sam. Combine those papers with the man page and tutorial, and the docs cover everything from concept to execution of command. I'm still working on internalizing the nuances of addresses in ranges like -0+,+0-, but most of the other commands (even 't' and 'm') are comfortable. Jim ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] User Interface 2001-08-14 12:54 ` [9fans] User Interface rob pike 2001-08-14 15:01 ` James A. Robinson @ 2001-08-16 13:45 ` phaet0n 2001-08-20 8:57 ` Randolph Fritz 2 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: phaet0n @ 2001-08-16 13:45 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans I have to admit that reading this newsgroup is perhaps the most amusing thing one can do on the internet. Having followed it in silence since release 3, I've decided to break silence. Plan 9 is gorgeously designed. It's actually refreshing. But I've not touched it recently. More later. The UI crisis can be traced to the fact that no developer ships documentation with commerical end-user software any more. Online help is appauling. Moreover, developers have no consistency of metaphor. Apple's success can be traced to the fact that their UI guidelines were with development documentation. I've never encountered an Apple user who didn't have at least minimal command of a new application, mainly because developers tried to adhere to those guidelines. If you expect those guidelines to be followed by every OS, well you're an idiot. However, if you expect the UI to be intuitive, then you're dead right. The installer for Plan 9 is intuitive. In fact, Rio is intuitive. I felt at ease immediately using them. The only curiosity was the ESC feature in Rio which required reading the man page. As you see, I don't even know what it's called, but I use it... intuitive. This minimal intuitiveness is all that is required. The rest falls on the user to gain acquaintence with the metaphor used by the OS designer. This is where Plan 9 becomes truly refreshing. Please read about how it treats process namespaces, how the snarf buffer works, how rio can be run within itself, and thus how hardware devices are multiplexed and treated as files. The list goes on and on. But it requires a little work on your part so, please, read the papers on website. Intuitiveness is framed by personal experience. If someone could only get this into the skulls of the HCI people at schools. We use elevators, hand- guns, can openers, etc., not because they're inherently intuitive, but because we've seen them being used since we were very little. This is not some kind of Freudian condition that requires having intefaces resemble your mother in order to be intuitive. Although it would explain why going down is so popular in others OSes. As for having not used p9 recently that's because I'm not willing to work in 8bit under my Matrox MII. I don't know how to write PCI drivers. So for now, I'm developing a compiler for a (yes, another) functional language, since I hate C and can't get GHC, or nhc to build. I'm working on BeOS, which is very nice but dying. It works and I get to use OCaml to develop the compiler. Now all I have to do is to ask you kind folks where I can find out about Plan 9's object format so I can port the Netwide assembler and get it to emit proper object files. Then hopefully we can all look forward to a nice compiler in the future which emits objects for both Plan 9 and ELF. Thank you. And keep me laughing, or crying. Thanks to Rob eh, and the gang at Bell Labs. Your work is greatly appreciated. ph -- ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] User Interface 2001-08-14 12:54 ` [9fans] User Interface rob pike 2001-08-14 15:01 ` James A. Robinson 2001-08-16 13:45 ` phaet0n @ 2001-08-20 8:57 ` Randolph Fritz 2 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Randolph Fritz @ 2001-08-20 8:57 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans In article <20010814125559.826F319A3E@mail.cse.psu.edu>, rob pike wrote: >> The editors, sam and acme are virtually unusable. > > Many people disagree, even feel the opposite, that they are among > the easiest-to-use editors around. > >> Why is it that such a simple task as editing the contents of a textfile >> must cause so much pain? > > I don't hear many yelps where I work and essentially everyone uses > either sam or acme. I suspect you don't know how to use them. > > A criticism I will accept is that there is inadequate documentation > explaining how to use them well. Try reading the associated papers, > rather than just the man pages. They help somewhat. > I think a key point has been hit, albeit glancingly: computer scientists are willing to study a system before using it; most people--including most software professionals, these days--are not. The original usability goal of the Mac was 30 minutes from a newbie sitting down to beginner-level productivity. (Without, I think, reference to any manuals, though with quite a lot of text on-screen.) A much gentler learning curve, yes? Now there is no requirement that Plan 9 be accessible without extensive study. However, I suspect there are good reasons to look at these issues more closely. If nothing else, it seems to me there are interesting design process issues in the area, and working on it might open up interesting research topics. I've seen a lot of sneering at the Mac, but, still--30 minutes to usability? That's an impressive design achievement, and it surprises me it doesn't engender more respect and emulation. It also seems to me that aiming at a gentler learning curve for software developers might attract a broader group of software researchers to Plan 9 and--forgive me if I have this wrong--isn't that one of the reasons Plan 9 is being published on the internet with source code? It would be an interesting research topic for someone who wasn't busily studying architecture and building science... :-) Randolph ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] plumb @ 2001-12-02 3:10 ` rob pike 2001-12-02 3:31 ` Scott Schwartz 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: rob pike @ 2001-12-02 3:10 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 308 bytes --] HelpYou would be mostly right. HelpCertainly B grew from the idea that one program should tell another what to do. HelpWhether it's natural is not for me to judge; also there was a lot of time involved and it took two versions (Inferno and Plan 9) to get a design I was comfortable with. -Helprob [-- Attachment #2: Type: message/rfc822, Size: 1693 bytes --] From: "Boyd Roberts" <boyd@fr.inter.net> To: <9fans@cse.psu.edu> Subject: [9fans] plumb Date: Sun, 2 Dec 2001 00:57:32 +0100 Message-ID: <02a101c17ac3$f150cba0$a4b6c6d4@cybercable.fr> HelpWould I be right in surmising that plumb was a natural progression from B? Or was it an independent thing? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] plumb 2001-12-02 3:10 ` [9fans] plumb rob pike @ 2001-12-02 3:31 ` Scott Schwartz 0 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Scott Schwartz @ 2001-12-02 3:31 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > a lot of time involved and it took two versions (Inferno and > Plan 9) to get a design I was comfortable with. I'm still nervous that the app and the programs that plumber launches have unrelated namspaces. In a full blown Actor style system, there would be closures that made it all work, but maybe Plan 9 could pass the information around by hand. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] venti @ 2002-01-30 5:52 ` rob pike 2002-01-30 6:23 ` George Michaelson ` (2 more replies) 0 siblings, 3 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: rob pike @ 2002-01-30 5:52 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans Of course, but the beauty of Venti is the ease with which it provides the hooks you need to address such issues. Replication, mirroring, load balancing, all those things are made trivial by the realization that a hash is a universal address space. -rob ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] venti 2002-01-30 5:52 ` [9fans] venti rob pike @ 2002-01-30 6:23 ` George Michaelson 2002-01-30 8:07 ` paurea 2002-01-30 11:17 ` Boyd Roberts 2 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: George Michaelson @ 2002-01-30 6:23 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > Of course, but the beauty of Venti is the ease with which it provides > the hooks you need to address such issues. Replication, mirroring, > load balancing, all those things are made trivial by the realization that > a hash is a universal address space. Except as the paper says, get above petabytes, and the *choice* of hash gets harder/slower because it has to be 'better'. ie, too universal makes the hash function less nice. I like the comments about certain operations on older data being extremely expensive. This resonated with my memories of using archival storage on the TOPS-10 system, where you stalled for Operators to find the tape, load the temporary pack, copy the tape to the pack, put that content into exposed filespace in a place you could find it, and get back to you. ICL CAFS might have been there, except it was the usual UK R&D 20+ years before viable market/technology. Oh, the joys of doing research to far ahead of the game... if they made the hash function for URI/URN compatible, passing around a referent in the web might wind up going back to the canonical data anyway. cheers -George ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] venti 2002-01-30 5:52 ` [9fans] venti rob pike 2002-01-30 6:23 ` George Michaelson @ 2002-01-30 8:07 ` paurea 2002-01-30 11:17 ` Boyd Roberts 2 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: paurea @ 2002-01-30 8:07 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans rob pike writes: > all those things are made trivial by the realization that > a hash is a universal address space. I read some time ago about a filesystem called LBFS which uses the same idea for a network filesystem. Any opinions on it?. -- Saludos, Gorka "Curiosity sKilled the cat" ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] venti 2002-01-30 5:52 ` [9fans] venti rob pike 2002-01-30 6:23 ` George Michaelson 2002-01-30 8:07 ` paurea @ 2002-01-30 11:17 ` Boyd Roberts 2 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2002-01-30 11:17 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans rob pike wrote: > ... a hash is a universal address space. Yes the hash buys you a lot. I really like it. I really like the 'server lied' case :) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: Fwd: Re: [9fans] samuel (fwd) @ 2002-03-01 6:20 ` rob pike 2002-03-01 6:34 ` George Michaelson 2002-03-01 12:04 ` Boyd Roberts 0 siblings, 2 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: rob pike @ 2002-03-01 6:20 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > What do you say rob, could you suggest how? ;) I don't remember exactly what samuel did, and I'm not much of a fan of syntax-directed editing anyway. Text is text. C is text. Sam is a text editor. Voilà. Sam's `understanding' of C as plain text has never felt like a limitation to me. Sometimes I run grep in another window to figure something out. Use grep -n in *.[ch] and plumb the result and you're probably 90% of the way to samuel. Semantics-directed editing, now that might be something special. -rob ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: Fwd: Re: [9fans] samuel (fwd) 2002-03-01 6:20 ` Fwd: Re: [9fans] samuel (fwd) rob pike @ 2002-03-01 6:34 ` George Michaelson 2002-03-01 12:04 ` Boyd Roberts 1 sibling, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: George Michaelson @ 2002-03-01 6:34 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > Semantics-directed editing, now that might be something special. Visual Basick IDE tries to tell you what arguments you want to put into the function it thinks you are trying to write. I think thats a mis[-take | -mischievious idea | -understanding of what I want] %PRESS TAB TO COMPLETE% (sigh) -George ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: Fwd: Re: [9fans] samuel (fwd) 2002-03-01 6:20 ` Fwd: Re: [9fans] samuel (fwd) rob pike 2002-03-01 6:34 ` George Michaelson @ 2002-03-01 12:04 ` Boyd Roberts 1 sibling, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2002-03-01 12:04 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans; +Cc: Fredrik Juhlin rob pike wrote: > Sam is atext editor. Voilà . Je suis complètement d'accord avec toi. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* [9fans] Fourth Release of Plan 9 Now Available @ 2002-04-27 16:35 ` rob pike, esq. 2002-04-27 18:24 ` Scott Schwartz ` (2 more replies) 0 siblings, 3 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: rob pike, esq. @ 2002-04-27 16:35 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans The Fourth Edition of Plan 9 may now be downloaded from http://plan9.bell-labs.com/plan9dist As usual, this is an open source release. The release notes summarize the changes; a copy is attached but they are available in other formats at: http://plan9.bell-labs.com/sys/doc/release4.html http://plan9.bell-labs.com/sys/doc/release4.ps http://plan9.bell-labs.com/sys/doc/release4.pdf ==== Plan 9 From Bell Labs Fourth Release Notes April, 2002 Copyright (C) 2002 Lucent Technologies Inc. All Rights Reserved The fourth release of the Plan 9 operating system from Bell Labs packages a major overhaul of the system at every level. From the underlying file system protocol, 9P, through the kernel, libraries, and applications, almost everything has been modified and, in many cases, redesigned or rewritten. The most significant change is that 9P has been redesigned to address a number of shortcomings, most important, its previous inability to handle long file names. Unfortu- nately, squeezing long names onto the disks of existing file servers is a messy business that we're still grappling with, so at the moment fs(4) and kfs(4) can't yet handle long names, although they do talk the new protocol. (In fact, they talk both old and new, as required, to ease transi- tion.) In the meantime, there is a workaround - lnfs(4) - and many of the other file servers such as ramfs(4) and u9fs(4) work just fine with long names. It's only the stan- dard disk-resident file servers that don't, and as soon we have versions that do, we'll release them. The following is a partial list of the major changes throughout the system. * The file system protocol, 9P, has been reworked. It now has variable-length names, so it can handle long names but also is more compact when handling short ones. It uses a different format that is easily parsed, eliminating the need for the old aux/fcall utility, and delegates its authenti- cation duties to an external agent, factotum. * Security has been a focus of attention. A new security agent, factotum(4), manages passwords and other secrets and, coupled with a new secure file store secstore(4), enables secure single sign-on. * Cpu, import, and exportfs all encrypt their connections now, and since they use the new 9P they also use new network port numbers. A new service aan(1) is used by import to make its network connections more reliable in the face of network outages. The old ports still work, through the agency of a protocol conversion filter srvold9p(4). * We are phasing out the IL protocol since it doesn't handle long-distance connections well (and long-distance networks don't handle it well, either). IL is still used by fs(4) (in time, that too will change) but TCP has become the stan- dard protocol for all other services. * The software for the new network-resident secure block store, venti(8), is included with this distribution. We are in the process of reworking fs(4) to use Venti rather than a WORM as its permanent block repository/backup medium, but that code is only in the design stage and is not included in this release. * The need to handle longer file names triggered a rethink- ing of the way the system handles strings in general. The kernel is now more explanatory when it gives an error mes- sage and more consistent in how it handles strings such as commands to devices. The interfaces to many of the system calls, such as errstr(2) and wait(2) all had to change as a result, as did the library interface to read directories, stat(2) and its relatives. * The formatted I/O package described in print(2) and fmtinstall(2) has been redesigned. Although the basic interface is unchanged, it now runs without locks and has an internal buffer management mechanism that means print no longer needs a large on-stack buffer. The interface for writing custom print verbs and custom formatted I/O routines has also been greatly improved. * The thread library thread(2) has been completely rewrit- ten. The main visible change is that, coupled with the changes to printing, threadprint is gone; you can just use print or fprint at will. * Support for electronic mail has been extended in many ways and now includes some new spam filtering tools, much better (and more standard) handling of MIME messages, the ability to render incoming HTML mail, and much more. There are so many changes to the programming interfaces of the system that they are described in a separate document, entitled Changes to the Programming Environment in the Fourth Release of Plan 9. Please read it before you start updating your own software to run under the new system. The installation method has also changed and we're moving towards a new method for maintaining updates. The Plan 9 Wiki (http://plan9.bell-labs.com/wiki/plan9) and Usenet group (comp.os.plan9) are the places to visit to learn more and stay current. In particular, the installation notes are now maintained in the Wiki; the traditional papers on installation and start-up are gone. There's lots more new stuff. If you have problems, mail 9trouble@plan9.bell-labs.com or, better, check the wiki http://plan9.bell-labs.com/wiki/plan9 or ask the Usenet newsgroup comp.os.plan9. Good Luck! ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Fourth Release of Plan 9 Now Available 2002-04-27 16:35 ` [9fans] Fourth Release of Plan 9 Now Available rob pike, esq. @ 2002-04-27 18:24 ` Scott Schwartz 2002-04-27 22:14 ` Laura Creighton 2002-04-29 9:37 ` Andrew 2 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Scott Schwartz @ 2002-04-27 18:24 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans Rob announces: > The Fourth Edition of Plan 9 may now be downloaded from Yay! Thanks guys! One question, though... The supported hardware page says: Serial mouse support has existed in the past and will exist in the future, but is not currently available. Sorry. <Scott looks at his serial mouse> <Looks at the web page> <Looks at mouse> Does that really mean that mice plugged into serial ports don't work? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Fourth Release of Plan 9 Now Available 2002-04-27 16:35 ` [9fans] Fourth Release of Plan 9 Now Available rob pike, esq. 2002-04-27 18:24 ` Scott Schwartz @ 2002-04-27 22:14 ` Laura Creighton 2002-04-29 9:37 ` Andrew 2 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Laura Creighton @ 2002-04-27 22:14 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans Congratulations and thanks everybody. Laura Creighton ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Fourth Release of Plan 9 Now Available 2002-04-27 16:35 ` [9fans] Fourth Release of Plan 9 Now Available rob pike, esq. 2002-04-27 18:24 ` Scott Schwartz 2002-04-27 22:14 ` Laura Creighton @ 2002-04-29 9:37 ` Andrew 2 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Andrew @ 2002-04-29 9:37 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans I've been trying to install it and here's what I got so far: <snip> kfs...version...time init: starting /bin/rc dossrv: serving #s/dos assert failed: (*t)->magic==FREE_MAGIC vga 52: suicide: sys: trap: fault read addr=0x0 pc=0x000260e6 assert failed: (*t)->magic==FREE_MAGIC vga 55: suicide: sys: trap: fault read addr=0x0 pc=0x000260e6 rio: can't open display: initdisplay: /dev/draw/new: no frame buffer init: rc exit status: rc 10: rio 67: display open and then it shows prompt. R3 installation was able to init display on this voodoo 3 3000 card with no problem. What's the problem now? -- DISCLAIMER: <DEFAULT DISCLAIMER> ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] dumb question @ 2002-06-28 16:49 ` rob pike, esq. 2002-06-29 2:23 ` Scott Schwartz 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: rob pike, esq. @ 2002-06-28 16:49 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans It strikes me that the arguments people are making against having blanks in file names are the same arguments I heard against converting Plan 9 to Unicode and UTF: too hard, too much code to change, too many symmetries broken. But there's no way this problem is as hard as that conversion, and we handled that one just fine. All that's missing is a concerted effort to push ahead, plus the will to do so. Neither seems to be forthcoming, though. Oh well. -rob ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] dumb question 2002-06-28 16:49 ` [9fans] dumb question rob pike, esq. @ 2002-06-29 2:23 ` Scott Schwartz 0 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Scott Schwartz @ 2002-06-29 2:23 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans Rob says: | conversion, and we handled that one just fine. All that's missing is | a concerted effort to push ahead, plus the will to do so. Neither | seems to be forthcoming, though. Oh well. I suspect it's more the case that people need time to roll the ideas around in their heads. You guys wrote a nice paper that pretty clearly showed how to do utf8 and make it work, but still it took a while to catch on elsewhere. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] new versions of graphics programs? @ 2000-09-07 21:57 rob pike 2000-09-07 22:50 ` Jim Choate 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: rob pike @ 2000-09-07 21:57 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans I started on a couple of the tools. Since the PIC format is now largely irrelevant - the standard image format captures much of its capabilities - it seemed worth retiring the fb software. Retiring it also helped keep the distribution smaller and easier to assemble. But clearly, some of the tools in fb/ are worth having. I worked on a couple of the tools and stumbled into original bugs that I didn't see how to fix, so that project has stalled. The shipped gif and jpg tools and the iconv program should address some of the lower-level needs. Higher-level image processing is a project for a dedicated soul; it's a big job. -rob ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] new versions of graphics programs? 2000-09-07 21:57 [9fans] new versions of graphics programs? rob pike @ 2000-09-07 22:50 ` Jim Choate [not found] ` <ravage@einstein.ssz.com> 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Jim Choate @ 2000-09-07 22:50 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans Speaking of new versions of graphics. Anyone remember NAPLPS? ____________________________________________________________________ He is able who thinks he is able. Buddha The Armadillo Group ,::////;::-. James Choate Austin, Tx /:'///// ``::>/|/ ravage@ssz.com www.ssz.com .', |||| `/( e\ 512-451-7087 -====~~mm-'`-```-mm --'- -------------------------------------------------------------------- ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
[parent not found: <ravage@einstein.ssz.com>]
* Re: [9fans] new versions of graphics programs? [not found] ` <ravage@einstein.ssz.com> @ 2000-09-07 22:35 ` Tom Duff 2000-09-07 23:24 ` Jim Choate 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Tom Duff @ 2000-09-07 22:35 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > Speaking of new versions of graphics. Anyone remember NAPLPS? Get thee behind me, Satan! -- Tom Duff. Simple PCs with super overcloaked pentiums. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] new versions of graphics programs? 2000-09-07 22:35 ` Tom Duff @ 2000-09-07 23:24 ` Jim Choate 2000-09-08 15:28 ` please_no_spam_to_ 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Jim Choate @ 2000-09-07 23:24 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans On Thu, 7 Sep 2000, Tom Duff wrote: > > Speaking of new versions of graphics. Anyone remember NAPLPS? > Get thee behind me, Satan! You're jealous you didn't think of it sooner... ____________________________________________________________________ He is able who thinks he is able. Buddha The Armadillo Group ,::////;::-. James Choate Austin, Tx /:'///// ``::>/|/ ravage@ssz.com www.ssz.com .', |||| `/( e\ 512-451-7087 -====~~mm-'`-```-mm --'- -------------------------------------------------------------------- ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] new versions of graphics programs? 2000-09-07 23:24 ` Jim Choate @ 2000-09-08 15:28 ` please_no_spam_to_ [not found] ` <D.M.Pick@qmw.ac.uk> 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: please_no_spam_to_ @ 2000-09-08 15:28 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans Jim Choate (ravage@einstein.ssz.com) wrote: : On Thu, 7 Sep 2000, Tom Duff wrote: : > > Speaking of new versions of graphics. Anyone remember NAPLPS? : > Get thee behind me, Satan! : You're jealous you didn't think of it sooner... I was certainly jealous at the time: there were some quite nice ideas in NAPLPS; especially the coordinate system. Since then I've realised that if I *had* invented it I would have had to face the prospect of yet another of my brilliant ideas being undervalued. By the way, can I interest you in my new mousetrap... -- David Pick ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
[parent not found: <D.M.Pick@qmw.ac.uk>]
* Re: [9fans] new versions of graphics programs? [not found] ` <D.M.Pick@qmw.ac.uk> @ 2000-09-08 16:43 ` Tom Duff 0 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Tom Duff @ 2000-09-08 16:43 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans Jim Choate (ravage@einstein.ssz.com) wrote: > > Thu, 7 Sep 2000, Tom Duff wrote: > > > > Speaking of new versions of graphics. Anyone remember NAPLPS? > > Get thee behind me, Satan! > > You're jealous you didn't think of it sooner... I'm sorry, I didn't understand this until just now... I wasn't trying to suggest that NAPLPS was inferior to the alternatives (Prestel or Ceefax or whatever), but that the whole idea of transmitting cheezy little display lists over ISDN or in your TV's vertical interval was dopey. (But, if you have to do that sort of thing, Display Postscript is more like the right way to do it.) -- Tom Duff. Superficial similarities spawn spurious statements. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] could those of you who have students check this out for
@ 2001-06-09 17:22 forsyth
2001-06-09 18:50 ` [9fans] Re: the 'science' in computer science andrey mirtchovski
0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread
From: forsyth @ 2001-06-09 17:22 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: 9fans
>>our computer science department has strong roots in algorithmics.
that might be true, but do the students, in the main, write programs
except those they are required to do for assessments and projects?
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* [9fans] Re: the 'science' in computer science 2001-06-09 17:22 [9fans] could those of you who have students check this out for forsyth @ 2001-06-09 18:50 ` andrey mirtchovski 2001-06-09 17:56 ` Boyd Roberts ` (3 more replies) 0 siblings, 4 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: andrey mirtchovski @ 2001-06-09 18:50 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans unfortunately dan cross is very right in his analysis -- most of the students care not for algorithmics. the three classes i listed are the most hated ones (together with the "Systems Programming and Introduction to Operating Systems", the UNIX class) simply because they actually make the students think... there are the occasional bad apples who explore the field, write code and are interested in the 'science' part of 'computer science'.. the others are happy to get their 3 year degrees and drone off to the job market. andrey On Sat, 9 Jun 2001 forsyth@caldo.demon.co.uk wrote: > >>our computer science department has strong roots in algorithmics. > > that might be true, but do the students, in the main, write programs > except those they are required to do for assessments and projects? > > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Re: the 'science' in computer science 2001-06-09 18:50 ` [9fans] Re: the 'science' in computer science andrey mirtchovski @ 2001-06-09 17:56 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-06-11 8:27 ` pac 2001-06-11 15:19 ` Dan Cross 2001-06-12 0:09 ` Scott Merrilees ` (2 subsequent siblings) 3 siblings, 2 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2001-06-09 17:56 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans i don't think i'd go so far to call it a science -- more like an art. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Re: the 'science' in computer science 2001-06-09 17:56 ` Boyd Roberts @ 2001-06-11 8:27 ` pac 2001-06-11 15:19 ` Dan Cross 1 sibling, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: pac @ 2001-06-11 8:27 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans IMHO, CS is to mathematics, as medicine is to biology; personally, I call them both "technology" :-( Peter -- Peter A. Cejchan Dept. Paleobiology, Inst. Geology Acad. Sci., Rozvojova 135, Prague 6 CZ-16502 Czech Republic <cej@cejchan.gli.cas.cz> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A plea: Please, consider your support to the Public Library of Science initiative at http://www.publiclibraryofscience.org ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Re: the 'science' in computer science 2001-06-09 17:56 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-06-11 8:27 ` pac @ 2001-06-11 15:19 ` Dan Cross 2001-06-11 21:43 ` Boyd Roberts [not found] ` <0cb501c0f2bf$97cacea0$e8b7c6d4@SOMA> 1 sibling, 2 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Dan Cross @ 2001-06-11 15:19 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans In article <041601c0f10d$72dabaa0$e8b7c6d4@SOMA> you write: >i don't think i'd go so far to call it a science -- more like an art. Okay, this is getting way off topic for 9fans, but, let me ask this: at the real abstract, pure level, is science any different at all from art? I contend that they're one and the same. - Dan C. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Re: the 'science' in computer science 2001-06-11 15:19 ` Dan Cross @ 2001-06-11 21:43 ` Boyd Roberts [not found] ` <0cb501c0f2bf$97cacea0$e8b7c6d4@SOMA> 1 sibling, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2001-06-11 21:43 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans From: "Dan Cross" <cross@math.psu.edu> > Okay, this is getting way off topic for 9fans, but, let me ask > this: at the real abstract, pure level, is science any different > at all from art? I contend that they're one and the same. nonsense. physics is a science. i can predict things with it. does computer science predict anything for me? i'll give you that it does have an axiom that states: you will be plagued by bugs in any development effort but that doesn't really predict anything in anything that vaguely approaches a _law_ of physics -- pick one. eg. the prohibition of speeds greater than the of speed of light. comp sci is more like an engineering discipline with very few fundamentals. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
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* Re: [9fans] Re: the 'science' in computer science [not found] ` <0cb501c0f2bf$97cacea0$e8b7c6d4@SOMA> @ 2001-06-11 22:43 ` paurea 2001-06-12 14:18 ` Dan Cross 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: paurea @ 2001-06-11 22:43 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans Boyd Roberts writes: > From: "Boyd Roberts" <boyd@fr.inter.net> > Subject: Re: [9fans] Re: the 'science' in computer science > Date: Mon, 11 Jun 2001 23:43:45 +0200 > > From: "Dan Cross" <cross@math.psu.edu> > > Okay, this is getting way off topic for 9fans, but, let me ask > > this: at the real abstract, pure level, is science any different > > at all from art? I contend that they're one and the same. > > nonsense. physics is a science. i can predict things with it. > > does computer science predict anything for me? i'll give you that > it does have an axiom that states: > > you will be plagued by bugs in any development effort > > but that doesn't really predict anything in anything that vaguely > approaches a _law_ of physics -- pick one. eg. the prohibition > of speeds greater than the of speed of light. > > comp sci is more like an engineering discipline with very few > fundamentals. ¿Would you say Math is a science?. Its theoretical foundations are based on turing machines... (I believe all physics are written in math simbols...) -- Saludos, Gorka "Curiosity sKilled the cat" -- /"\ \ / ascii ribbon campaign - against html mail X - against ms attachments / \ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Re: the 'science' in computer science 2001-06-11 22:43 ` paurea @ 2001-06-12 14:18 ` Dan Cross 2001-06-12 15:50 ` Boyd Roberts 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Dan Cross @ 2001-06-12 14:18 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans In article <15141.18819.7956.967025@nido.hilbert.space> you write: >Would you say Math is a science?. >Its theoretical foundations are based on turing machines... Woah, they are? Mathematics, and many of its theoretical foundations, existed for a really long time before Alan Turing was born.... >(I believe all physics are written in math simbols...) Basically, but each discipline seems to invent its own psuedo- mathematical notation. Not necessarily a bad thing, but it can get really confusing (cf. i in mathematics vs. j in engineering). - Dan C. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Re: the 'science' in computer science 2001-06-12 14:18 ` Dan Cross @ 2001-06-12 15:50 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-06-12 18:48 ` Dan Cross 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2001-06-12 15:50 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > >(I believe all physics are written in math simbols...) i think i'll have to take feynman's stance: physics is to math what sex is to ... i just can't get a good reference for this 1999? quote. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Re: the 'science' in computer science 2001-06-12 15:50 ` Boyd Roberts @ 2001-06-12 18:48 ` Dan Cross 0 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Dan Cross @ 2001-06-12 18:48 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans In article <10df01c0f357$6fff23b0$e8b7c6d4@SOMA> you write: >i think i'll have to take feynman's stance: > > physics is to math what sex is to ... > >i just can't get a good reference for this 1999? quote. Feynman was dead in 1999. - Dan C. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Re: the 'science' in computer science 2001-06-09 18:50 ` [9fans] Re: the 'science' in computer science andrey mirtchovski 2001-06-09 17:56 ` Boyd Roberts @ 2001-06-12 0:09 ` Scott Merrilees 2001-06-12 0:16 ` Boyd Roberts [not found] ` <0cc301c0f2c0$78949560$e8b7c6d4@SOMA> 2001-06-16 23:34 ` Matt 3 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Scott Merrilees @ 2001-06-12 0:09 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans >unfortunately dan cross is very right in his analysis -- most of the >students care not for algorithmics. the three classes i listed are the most >hated ones (together with the "Systems Programming and Introduction to >Operating Systems", the UNIX class) simply because they actually make the >students think... > >there are the occasional bad apples who explore the field, write code >and are interested in the 'science' part of 'computer science'.. the others >are happy to get their 3 year degrees and drone off to the job market. > >andrey Then you have the occasional CS dept / Computer Centre with a computer usage policy that probihits all use of the univerity computer systems except for specific course work. Sm ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Re: the 'science' in computer science 2001-06-12 0:09 ` Scott Merrilees @ 2001-06-12 0:16 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-06-12 0:42 ` Scott Merrilees 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2001-06-12 0:16 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > Then you have the occasional CS dept / Computer Centre with a computer > usage policy that probihits all use of the univerity computer systems > except for specific course work. yeah, but some of us got around that and the more you got around it the more you learned -- the useful stuff. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Re: the 'science' in computer science 2001-06-12 0:16 ` Boyd Roberts @ 2001-06-12 0:42 ` Scott Merrilees 2001-06-12 1:08 ` Boyd Roberts 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Scott Merrilees @ 2001-06-12 0:42 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans >> Then you have the occasional CS dept / Computer Centre with a computer >> usage policy that probihits all use of the univerity computer systems >> except for specific course work. >boyd: >yeah, but some of us got around that and the more you got around >it the more you learned -- the useful stuff. Very true, but the above CS attitude encourages the production of drones, while discouraging and even punishing those with the audacity to try and do some self directed learning. Sm ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Re: the 'science' in computer science 2001-06-12 0:42 ` Scott Merrilees @ 2001-06-12 1:08 ` Boyd Roberts 0 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2001-06-12 1:08 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > Very true, but the above CS attitude encourages the production of > drones, while discouraging and even punishing those with the audacity > to try and do some self directed learning. i don't disagree, but when you had 2000 students and one 11/780 for all of them (even with share/hacks giving you a maximum of 128 simultaneous student logins) i guess something had to be done. more resources would have been nice. on the other hand, it was always a nice clause to use on password crackers and others nuisances. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
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* Re: [9fans] Re: the 'science' in computer science [not found] ` <0cc301c0f2c0$78949560$e8b7c6d4@SOMA> @ 2001-06-12 14:12 ` Dan Cross 0 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Dan Cross @ 2001-06-12 14:12 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans In article <0cc301c0f2c0$78949560$e8b7c6d4@SOMA> you write: >nonsense. physics is a science. i can predict things with it. I can predict things with computer science as well: the average and worst-case running times of an algorithm, for instance, or the amount of memory used by activation records in a recursive algorithm. >does computer science predict anything for me? i'll give you that >it does have an axiom that states: > > you will be plagued by bugs in any development effort This is a software engineering maxim. Speaking of which.... There are ``laws'' of software engineering that are kind of like laws of physics. Add more programmers to a late project, and it gets later; etc. >but that doesn't really predict anything in anything that vaguely >approaches a _law_ of physics -- pick one. eg. the prohibition >of speeds greater than the of speed of light. The Church-Turing thesis; NP-complete problems; the halting problem, just to name a few. >comp sci is more like an engineering discipline with very few >fundamentals. Maybe, but that wasn't even my point. - Dan C. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Re: the 'science' in computer science 2001-06-09 18:50 ` [9fans] Re: the 'science' in computer science andrey mirtchovski ` (2 preceding siblings ...) [not found] ` <0cc301c0f2c0$78949560$e8b7c6d4@SOMA> @ 2001-06-16 23:34 ` Matt 2001-06-28 21:29 ` Boyd Roberts 3 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Matt @ 2001-06-16 23:34 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans My friend is on his third year (of 4) of his Computer Science Degree. I know they've covered Assembler, Java, C++ and Databases. I mentioned to him that Dennis Ritchie posted to 9fans thinking he might be interested. "Who?" I didn't bother saying "Those who do not understand Unix are doomed to reinvent it - poorly..." ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Re: the 'science' in computer science 2001-06-16 23:34 ` Matt @ 2001-06-28 21:29 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-06-28 22:03 ` Matt 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2001-06-28 21:29 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > I know they've covered Assembler, Java, C++ and Databases. surely s/he could have picked a 5th worthless subject... ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Re: the 'science' in computer science 2001-06-28 21:29 ` Boyd Roberts @ 2001-06-28 22:03 ` Matt 2001-06-28 23:20 ` George Michaelson 2001-06-29 4:30 ` Lucio De Re 0 siblings, 2 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Matt @ 2001-06-28 22:03 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans ----- Original Message ----- From: "Boyd Roberts" <boyd@fr.inter.net> To: <9fans@cse.psu.edu> Sent: Thursday, June 28, 2001 10:29 PM Subject: Re: [9fans] Re: the 'science' in computer science > > I know they've covered Assembler, Java, C++ and Databases. > > surely s/he could have picked a 5th worthless subject... i think that's saved up for the final year He constantly amazes us (his friends) with his computer cluelessness. Like finding it difficult to persuade him that his overclocked celeron might be struggling to execute the tcp/ip stack while he was trying to play high-end games. Or helping him install a windows based web proxy (literally double clicking on setup.exe) I remember they used MS Access for their database. We had a CS graduate come for an interview. He was clearly a bit clueless. The questions were scaled down to make him feel a bit better when he left. "What is a hexadecimal number?" "A combination of numbers and letters" He had a nice suit on though. M ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Re: the 'science' in computer science 2001-06-28 22:03 ` Matt @ 2001-06-28 23:20 ` George Michaelson 2001-06-29 21:27 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-07-18 15:49 ` Ralph Corderoy 2001-06-29 4:30 ` Lucio De Re 1 sibling, 2 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: George Michaelson @ 2001-06-28 23:20 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > We had a CS graduate come for an interview. He was clearly a bit clueless. > The questions were scaled down to make him feel a bit better when he left. > "What is a hexadecimal number?" > "A combination of numbers and letters" > You know, there are contexts where this is the right answer. Like, if you manipulate them as input/output objects and need to check the datastream to see if the tokenising input should end. And, the difference between Hex 0F and Decimal 15 is that both have exactly the same bit-pattern in memory. Strangely, if you add 2 apples in hex and 2 oranges in decimal OR octal, you still have 4 bits of fruit. So, you can do mixed-base sums after all. Why don't they teach you that at school any more? I had a chum who'd had a 6th finger cut off early. If they'd left it on, would he have had any advantages doing finger arithmetic? > He had a nice suit on though. > Should'a employed him then. Anybody slavish enough to dress up to get a job is probably going to work hard for the first 7 months until disallusionment sets in. I still writhe with embarrassment recalling an interview for the UK N.E.R.C to get a junior progroid job onboard the antarctic ships, when asked to write a solution to pythagoras in pascal, there, in front of the panel. Flop sweat and memory loss and nicotine withdrawal and sheer fright combined to make it both humiliating for me, and revealing for them. I think they made the right decision to quietly let me go. Still, I got to see the steam loco graveyard at barry island so it wasn't all wasted. cheers -George PS I suspect that in this niche, people aren't working as a result of a successful interview. I think they probably know people who know people who trust people who let them on board. If there is an interview, its more like dogs sniffing each other, or 'do you wanna be in my gang?' than joining the army. -- George Michaelson | APNIC Email: ggm@apnic.net | PO Box 2131 Milton QLD 4064 Phone: +61 7 3367 0490 | Australia Fax: +61 7 3367 0482 | http://www.apnic.net ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Re: the 'science' in computer science 2001-06-28 23:20 ` George Michaelson @ 2001-06-29 21:27 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-07-18 15:49 ` Ralph Corderoy 1 sibling, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2001-06-29 21:27 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > Should'a employed him then. Anybody slavish enough to dress up to get a job > is probably going to work hard for the first 7 months until disallusionment > sets in. they should come to france. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Re: the 'science' in computer science 2001-06-28 23:20 ` George Michaelson 2001-06-29 21:27 ` Boyd Roberts @ 2001-07-18 15:49 ` Ralph Corderoy 1 sibling, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Ralph Corderoy @ 2001-07-18 15:49 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans Hi George, > I still writhe with embarrassment recalling an interview for the UK > N.E.R.C What's N.E.R.C? Ralph. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Re: the 'science' in computer science 2001-06-28 22:03 ` Matt 2001-06-28 23:20 ` George Michaelson @ 2001-06-29 4:30 ` Lucio De Re 1 sibling, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Lucio De Re @ 2001-06-29 4:30 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans On Thu, Jun 28, 2001 at 11:03:57PM +0100, Matt wrote: > > He had a nice suit on though. > You don't get, it then :-) It's the shoes, what shoes was he wearing? Were they well polished? ++L ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
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* Re: [9fans] string to list? @ 2001-06-10 17:32 ` vikki 2001-06-10 17:47 ` Boyd Roberts ` (2 more replies) 0 siblings, 3 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: vikki @ 2001-06-10 17:32 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans >rc irc client? sounds reasonable :) >i wish i could find my 80-line C irc client i wrote last year for p9 (it was >my first project :).. come to think of it though, rc is a much better idea >and a funnier one to implement :) wish i had a working p9 installation, i >could've helped! We're having a bit of a competition at work. They've got their monolithic perl bot running. I'm trying to impress them with the plan9 version as a learning exercise. I plan to have it do eval `{$msg} and do whatever it's namespace will let it. They keep adding code to the perl bot and getting deeper and deeper. Already they've had to split it in half (on my suggestion :-) to separate information gathering and display. >how about awk? daemonize an awk program if RC does not five you the >utility to do it :) yeah that's a good idea. I didn't fancy spawning awk for every line of irc. I did wonder one day why plan9 has any command line utilities at all apart from bind, mount, import, unmount , cd, echo and cat. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] string to list? 2001-06-10 17:32 ` [9fans] string to list? vikki @ 2001-06-10 17:47 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-06-10 17:55 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-06-10 18:03 ` Scott Schwartz 2 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2001-06-10 17:47 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > They've got their monolithic perl bot running. that's kinda funny, in a 'finally got it to run' sense. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] string to list? 2001-06-10 17:32 ` [9fans] string to list? vikki 2001-06-10 17:47 ` Boyd Roberts @ 2001-06-10 17:55 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-06-10 18:03 ` Scott Schwartz 2 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2001-06-10 17:55 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > yeah that's a good idea. I didn't fancy spawning awk for every line of irc. how about gross ifs/fn/`{...} trickery? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] string to list? 2001-06-10 17:32 ` [9fans] string to list? vikki 2001-06-10 17:47 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-06-10 17:55 ` Boyd Roberts @ 2001-06-10 18:03 ` Scott Schwartz 2001-06-10 21:48 ` Matt 2 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Scott Schwartz @ 2001-06-10 18:03 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans | I plan to have it do eval `{$msg} and do whatever it's | namespace will let it. I really wouldn't do that. It's just too unpredictable and dangerous. eval considered harmful. cmd=`{echo $msg} if (fgrep -f okcmdlist $cmd(1)) { $cmd } ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] string to list? 2001-06-10 18:03 ` Scott Schwartz @ 2001-06-10 21:48 ` Matt 2001-06-10 22:24 ` Scott Schwartz 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Matt @ 2001-06-10 21:48 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans ----- Original Message ----- From: "Scott Schwartz" <schwartz@bio.cse.psu.edu> > | I plan to have it do eval `{$msg} and do whatever it's > | namespace will let it. > > I really wouldn't do that. It's just too unpredictable and dangerous. > eval considered harmful. being as I've not implemented it my understanding is weak but I thought that I could dictate the namespace that a process sees. If the total namespace the ircbot process sees is / /bin/opme /bin/cat /bin/ls /bin/eval /bin/echo /slashdotheadlines then all ircbot can do is combinations like echo eval 'ls /bin' echo eval 'opme' echo eval 'cat /slashdotheadlines' but because it can't bind new files in or import them it can't manipulate it's namespace via the eval ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] string to list? 2001-06-10 21:48 ` Matt @ 2001-06-10 22:24 ` Scott Schwartz 2001-06-10 22:30 ` Boyd Roberts 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Scott Schwartz @ 2001-06-10 22:24 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans | ...I thought that I could dictate the namespace that a process sees. Yes, unless you someone makes a mistake. But there's more to it than that. eval gives the bad guys unrestricted access to the shell, which you probably don't want. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] string to list? 2001-06-10 22:24 ` Scott Schwartz @ 2001-06-10 22:30 ` Boyd Roberts 0 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2001-06-10 22:30 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > which you probably don't want. s/probably/definitely/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
[parent not found: <matt@proweb.co.uk>]
* [9fans] help, i'm in a wet paper bag and I can't get out @ 2001-06-12 0:39 ` Matt 2001-06-12 0:55 ` Scott Schwartz 2001-06-12 1:00 ` Boyd Roberts 0 siblings, 2 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Matt @ 2001-06-12 0:39 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans Well it's not going too well. I got this far but of course (I can say that now) the `{..} doesn't return until $netdir/data sends an eof and then prints each line ifs=' ' for (k in `{ cat $netdir/data }) { echo $k } so how do i read a line at a time before `{..} closes it's stdout? once I've cracked that it's just about finished M ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] help, i'm in a wet paper bag and I can't get out 2001-06-12 0:39 ` [9fans] help, i'm in a wet paper bag and I can't get out Matt @ 2001-06-12 0:55 ` Scott Schwartz 2001-06-12 1:12 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-06-12 1:00 ` Boyd Roberts 1 sibling, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Scott Schwartz @ 2001-06-12 0:55 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans | I got this far but of course (I can say that now) | the `{..} doesn't return until $netdir/data sends an eof | and then prints each line Instead of "for cat", don't you want "while read"? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] help, i'm in a wet paper bag and I can't get out 2001-06-12 0:55 ` Scott Schwartz @ 2001-06-12 1:12 ` Boyd Roberts 0 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2001-06-12 1:12 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > Instead of "for cat", don't you want "while read"? well he does, but rc doesn't have 'read'. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] help, i'm in a wet paper bag and I can't get out 2001-06-12 0:39 ` [9fans] help, i'm in a wet paper bag and I can't get out Matt 2001-06-12 0:55 ` Scott Schwartz @ 2001-06-12 1:00 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-06-12 1:30 ` Jonathan Sergent 2001-06-15 8:27 ` Hermann Samso 1 sibling, 2 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2001-06-12 1:00 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > I got this far but of course (I can say that now) > the `{..} doesn't return until $netdir/data sends an eof > and then prints each line well, obviously. it's a file isn't it? <smirk> > so how do i read a line at a time before `{..} closes it's stdout? write some C program that that reads _unbuffered_ characters and spits them until it sees 'end of line' (whatever that may be). you should buffer the output, but _not_ the input. can't be more than 20 lines of code. btw: i hope you're dealing with 8 bit chars 'cos latin-1 will really screw up utf encoded streams that the rest of the system expects. years ago i wrote (on ultrix) riso [rune to iso-latin-1] and isor (pronounced eye-sore) filters so that the unix sam could deal with the few french docs i had to deal with. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] help, i'm in a wet paper bag and I can't get out 2001-06-12 1:00 ` Boyd Roberts @ 2001-06-12 1:30 ` Jonathan Sergent 2001-06-15 8:27 ` Hermann Samso 1 sibling, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Jonathan Sergent @ 2001-06-12 1:30 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans On Monday, June 11, 2001, at 06:00 PM, Boyd Roberts wrote: > write some C program that that reads _unbuffered_ characters > and spits them until it sees 'end of line' (whatever that may be). > you should buffer the output, but _not_ the input. You could just read the manual and use /bin/read, instead of rewriting it. So you get { while () { line=`{read} echo line: $line } } < filename Somehow putting the < filename after the inner } makes rc reopen it for each loop iteration. (Am I misinterpreting this?) A more convoluted way to do to the same thing would be { echo 0 > /srv/something.$pid } < filename while () { line=`{read /srv/something.$pid} echo line: $line } rm /srv/something.$pid but that's probably better for showing off /srv to your friends than it is for actually solving the problem. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] help, i'm in a wet paper bag and I can't get out 2001-06-12 1:00 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-06-12 1:30 ` Jonathan Sergent @ 2001-06-15 8:27 ` Hermann Samso 2001-06-15 11:53 ` Boyd Roberts 1 sibling, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Hermann Samso @ 2001-06-15 8:27 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans Boyd Roberts <boyd@fr.inter.net> wrote: >> I got this far but of course (I can say that now) >> the `{..} doesn't return until $netdir/data sends an eof >> and then prints each line > well, obviously. it's a file isn't it? <smirk> >> so how do i read a line at a time before `{..} closes it's stdout? > write some C program that that reads _unbuffered_ characters > and spits them until it sees 'end of line' (whatever that may be). > you should buffer the output, but _not_ the input. > can't be more than 20 lines of code. > btw: i hope you're dealing with 8 bit chars 'cos latin-1 will > really screw up utf encoded streams that the rest of the > system expects. years ago i wrote (on ultrix) riso [rune > to iso-latin-1] and isor (pronounced eye-sore) filters > so that the unix sam could deal with the few french docs > i had to deal with. With so many snippets of code, everyone could make use of, isn't there any common repository? Or will they allget integrated in time for next release? Ok, there is always Deja News, but... saludos, hermann samso ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] help, i'm in a wet paper bag and I can't get out 2001-06-15 8:27 ` Hermann Samso @ 2001-06-15 11:53 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-06-15 12:18 ` Matt 2001-06-15 14:01 ` Matt 0 siblings, 2 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2001-06-15 11:53 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans From: "Hermann Samso" <samso@studserv.stud.uni-hannover.de> > With so many snippets of code, everyone could make use > of, isn't there any common repository? Or will they > allget integrated in time for next release? > Ok, there is always Deja News, but... oh, but there is. you must have missed the 'why don't we build a common repository' thread. i finally cracked (in desperation) and did this: http://mapage.noos.fr/~repo but about the only thing it's done is to a) proove a point and b) receive mail of the form 'nice page. the first cut was done by hand, the second is automated with a mash-mk mashfile on inferno. the bitsy code should probably go back to 1127. i don't mind adding it too. matt's rc irc bot could be added if he so wishes. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] help, i'm in a wet paper bag and I can't get out 2001-06-15 11:53 ` Boyd Roberts @ 2001-06-15 12:18 ` Matt 2001-06-15 14:01 ` Matt 1 sibling, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Matt @ 2001-06-15 12:18 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans ----- Original Message ----- From: "Boyd Roberts" <boyd@fr.inter.net> To: <9fans@cse.psu.edu> Sent: Friday, June 15, 2001 12:53 PM Subject: Re: [9fans] help, i'm in a wet paper bag and I can't get out > From: "Hermann Samso" <samso@studserv.stud.uni-hannover.de> > > With so many snippets of code, everyone could make use > > of, isn't there any common repository? Or will they > > allget integrated in time for next release? > > Ok, there is always Deja News, but... > > oh, but there is. you must have missed the 'why don't > we build a common repository' thread. i finally cracked > (in desperation) and did this: > > http://mapage.noos.fr/~repo > > but about the only thing it's done is to a) proove a > point and b) receive mail of the form 'nice page. > > the first cut was done by hand, the second is automated > with a mash-mk mashfile on inferno. > > the bitsy code should probably go back to 1127. > i don't mind adding it too. > > matt's rc irc bot could be added if he so wishes. > > > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] help, i'm in a wet paper bag and I can't get out 2001-06-15 11:53 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-06-15 12:18 ` Matt @ 2001-06-15 14:01 ` Matt 2001-06-15 14:25 ` Boyd Roberts 1 sibling, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Matt @ 2001-06-15 14:01 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans bugger, sorry >but about the only thing it's done is to a) proove a >point and b) receive mail of the form 'nice page. no news is good news? >matt's rc irc bot could be added if he so wishes A basic irc bot that evals commands it's given with the permission & namespace of whoever started it. http://www.proweb.co.uk/~matt/chugly.rc ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] help, i'm in a wet paper bag and I can't get out 2001-06-15 14:01 ` Matt @ 2001-06-15 14:25 ` Boyd Roberts 0 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2001-06-15 14:25 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > no news is good news? well, it's better than being the middle of a firefight... err, flamewar. > A basic irc bot that evals commands it's given with > the permission & namespace of whoever started it. > http://www.proweb.co.uk/~matt/chugly.rc ok, will do. i got it down to this as a mashfile: for (i in contrib/*) contrib.html : $i/li.html; */*/li.html :~ $1/$2/url { mash tools/c2li $1/$2 > $0 }; */*/url :~ $1/$2/desc {}; */*/desc :~ $1/$2/from {}; */*/from :~ $1/$2/date {}; *.html :~ $1/0/url { cat $1/*/li.html > $0 }; default: index.html {}; index.html : head.html contrib.html tail.html { cat head.html contrib.html tail.html > index.html }; ---- the contrib directory has directories, named 0...n, which have these files: url desc [description] from date [rfc822/std11 date. it's well known and can be parsed] li.html [this is the html <li> made out of the above files] brucee gave me a bit of a hand, 'cos mash-mk is not mk or make. i think he has a much better and simpler solution to the problem. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* [9fans] bitsy question @ 2001-06-26 16:33 John Packer 2001-06-26 17:10 ` [9fans] " Dan Cross 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: John Packer @ 2001-06-26 16:33 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans I have Plan9 installed on my ipaq, but I don't have a pcmcia sleeve, or wavelan on my network. So I have been trying to link the bitsy to my terminal using ppp over the serial port. (I made a ramdisk with ip/ppp). PPP tries to authenticate for 30 seconds (through chap, I think) then times out. I've tried running ppp a few different ways, but something like ip/ppp -df -b 115200 -p /dev/eia0 -s $user:$secret 135.104.99.5 on the bitsy and something like ip/ppp -dfS -b 115200 -p /dev/eia0 135.104.99.1 on the server. Has anyone tried this? What am I doing wrong? Thanks, John ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* [9fans] Re: bitsy question 2001-06-26 16:33 [9fans] bitsy question John Packer @ 2001-06-26 17:10 ` Dan Cross 2001-06-26 19:51 ` John Packer ` (2 more replies) 0 siblings, 3 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Dan Cross @ 2001-06-26 17:10 UTC (permalink / raw) To: packer; +Cc: 9fans In article <3B38BA06.E55B62AC@bway.net> you write: >I have Plan9 installed on my ipaq, but I don't have a pcmcia sleeve, >or wavelan on my network. Ouch; that makes it much more difficult to use, as you have discovered. >So I have been trying to link the bitsy to my terminal using ppp over >the serial port. (I made a ramdisk with ip/ppp). > >PPP tries to authenticate for 30 seconds (through chap, I think) then >times out. > >I've tried running ppp a few different ways, but something like > > ip/ppp -df -b 115200 -p /dev/eia0 -s $user:$secret 135.104.99.5 > >on the bitsy and something like > > ip/ppp -dfS -b 115200 -p /dev/eia0 135.104.99.1 > >on the server. > >Has anyone tried this? What am I doing wrong? Well, at least one thing that you're probably encountering is that the bitsy tries to use the serial port as a console device, and is hardwired in the kernel to do so. In order to fix that, you have to edit the kernel sources in /sys/src/9/bitsy/ and recompile; I managed to turn it off by changing the argument to sa1110_uartsetup() to zero in main.c. However, if you do ONLY that, the machine panics when it comes up because the keyboard input queue for the console device is nil. Whoops! You have to change sa1110_uartsetup() in sa1110uart.c (the last routine in the file) to assign a valid Queue pointer to kbdq. I just changed the relevant section to be: if(console) { uartspecial(p, 115200, &kbdq, &printq, kbdcr2nl); } else { kbdq = qopen(4*1024, 0, 0, 0); } That is, adding the ``else'' clause which calls qopen. I'm not sure that this is the best method; if there's a better one, I'd be interested to know. btw- the serial console mode can be really handy at times; it's nice to be able to put the bitsy on it's cradle, start up con, and then type into bitsy windows without using bitsy/keyboard. The hand becomes much less cramped. Anyway, I'm assuming this is something you haven't messed with yet; it'd most definately mess with ip/ppp, since every other character gets redirected to /dev/cons! Another problem you may have is that the bitsy uart driver doesn't really do modem control; actually, it might be more accurate to say that the StrongARM SA1100 doesn't do modem control signaling directly. Instead, it simulates it using the GPIO pins on the 1100. I'm not sure what exactly, if anything, the bitsy does differently in this regard (the driver has a comment about the RTS/CTS stuff being h3600 specific, but nothing more); my attempts to add DTR and RTS/CTS modem control to the serial driver didn't work the way I had expected them to (I was trying to hack them in in order to get my Targus stowaway keyboard working; I did get it to mostly ``do the right thing,'' but it wasn't perfect and I got busy with other stuff. I'll get back to it eventually.) I've been meaning to try out ppp on the bitsy, using my ricochet modem, but I haven't round a serial cable for it yet (well, I haven't exactly been looking that hard). I definately thing it'd be pretty cool to use my bitsy to send email from the train. bway.net, huh? You in New York? Anyone else on the list in NYC? We ought to start a New York Plan 9 Club or something. - Dan C. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* [9fans] Re: bitsy question 2001-06-26 17:10 ` [9fans] " Dan Cross @ 2001-06-26 19:51 ` John Packer 2001-06-26 20:34 ` Dan Cross 2001-06-27 1:15 ` [9fans] Two cpu servers? Ish Rattan 2001-06-26 20:09 ` [9fans] Re: bitsy question John Packer 2001-06-26 20:18 ` Latchesar Ionkov 2 siblings, 2 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: John Packer @ 2001-06-26 19:51 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Dan Cross, 9fans Dan Cross wrote: > You have to change sa1110_uartsetup() in sa1110uart.c > (the last routine in the file) to assign a valid Queue pointer to > kbdq. I just changed the relevant section to be: > > if(console) { > uartspecial(p, 115200, &kbdq, &printq, kbdcr2nl); > } else { > kbdq = qopen(4*1024, 0, 0, 0); > } > This is an interesting clue. I'll try this out tonight. > btw- the serial console mode can be really handy at times; it's nice to > be able to put the bitsy on it's cradle, start up con, and then type > into bitsy windows without using bitsy/keyboard. I've noticed this - very useful. > Another problem you may have is that the bitsy uart driver doesn't > really do modem control I don't think I need modem control, I'm not using a modem: just a PPP server and client over the serial cable to my PC. This is, I'm guessing, how ActiveSync works, and how Linux users connect to their Ipaqs. It just doesn't seem to authenticate. This may be the wrong approach, I don't know. > I've been meaning to try out ppp on the bitsy, using my ricochet modem, > but I haven't round a serial cable for it yet (well, I haven't exactly > been looking that hard). I definately thing it'd be pretty cool to use > my bitsy to send email from the train. Very. > > bway.net, huh? You in New York? Anyone else on the list in NYC? We > ought to start a New York Plan 9 Club or something. Yep. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Re: bitsy question 2001-06-26 19:51 ` John Packer @ 2001-06-26 20:34 ` Dan Cross 2001-06-29 22:32 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-06-27 1:15 ` [9fans] Two cpu servers? Ish Rattan 1 sibling, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Dan Cross @ 2001-06-26 20:34 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans; +Cc: packer In article <3B38E7BE.D4C22541@bway.net> you write: > > [...] > >> Another problem you may have is that the bitsy uart driver doesn't >> really do modem control > >I don't think I need modem control, I'm not using a modem: just a >PPP server and client over the serial cable to my PC. Oh duh; of course you said that earlier and I was too slow to catch on. Yes, you're right; if you're not using a modem, you don't need modem control. For that matter, you might not need modem control even if you have a modem. >This is, I'm guessing, how ActiveSync works, and how Linux users connect >to their Ipaqs. Well, I think they mostly use ``normal'' serial line protocols; either just raw text passed over the serial line, or using a data transfer protocol like xmodem. I'm not sure they'd bother with the overhead of PPP in the general case (where they just wanted to sync data, or copy a file; for making TCP connections and the like, yeah, you'd need PPP or SLIP or a real network interface). >It just doesn't seem to authenticate. That's almost certainly the keyboard input queue messing you up. >This may be the wrong approach, I don't know. Well, if you've got an extra thousand bucks just laying around, definately invest in the Wavelan route. If not, then it's a reasonable approach; it won't zoom, though, and I've found ip/ppp pretty unreliable (using a wireless modem, though; still, it seems to work reasonably well under FreeBSD. I haven't been motivated enough to track down what's wrong, though). > [...] > >> bway.net, huh? You in New York? Anyone else on the list in NYC? We >> ought to start a New York Plan 9 Club or something. > >Yep. Cool. Any other New Yorker's? - Dan C. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Re: bitsy question 2001-06-26 20:34 ` Dan Cross @ 2001-06-29 22:32 ` Boyd Roberts 0 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2001-06-29 22:32 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > Cool. Any other New Yorker's? stair 9 is not that far from ny. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* [9fans] Two cpu servers? 2001-06-26 19:51 ` John Packer 2001-06-26 20:34 ` Dan Cross @ 2001-06-27 1:15 ` Ish Rattan 1 sibling, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Ish Rattan @ 2001-06-27 1:15 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans Does it make sense to have two cpu-servers? I have a standalone spu/auth server running. How can I add another cpu server to have two of these? Any pointers will be appreciated. -ishwar ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* [9fans] Re: bitsy question 2001-06-26 17:10 ` [9fans] " Dan Cross 2001-06-26 19:51 ` John Packer @ 2001-06-26 20:09 ` John Packer 2001-06-26 20:36 ` Dan Cross 2001-06-26 20:18 ` Latchesar Ionkov 2 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: John Packer @ 2001-06-26 20:09 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > Do you also use that serial line as the console? You'll get garbage > in your packets that way. > > Sape Hmm. I'm not running a con window when I try this. The debugging output appears to indicate a lack of response to a CHAP request. Maybe it is not picking up the '-s $user:$secret' option from the client. John ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Re: bitsy question 2001-06-26 20:09 ` [9fans] Re: bitsy question John Packer @ 2001-06-26 20:36 ` Dan Cross 0 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Dan Cross @ 2001-06-26 20:36 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans In article <3B38EC0E.4326AA8D@bway.net> you write: >Hmm. I'm not running a con window when I try this. Right, but the kernel on the bitsy is still hardwired to take data from the serial port and place it into the keyboard input queue; running con on the other end doesn't matter, what's running locally on the bitsy is what's messing it up. - Dan C. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Re: bitsy question 2001-06-26 17:10 ` [9fans] " Dan Cross 2001-06-26 19:51 ` John Packer 2001-06-26 20:09 ` [9fans] Re: bitsy question John Packer @ 2001-06-26 20:18 ` Latchesar Ionkov 2001-06-26 20:28 ` Matt 2 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Latchesar Ionkov @ 2001-06-26 20:18 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans On Tue, Jun 26, 2001 at 01:10:45PM -0400, Dan Cross said: > > bway.net, huh? You in New York? Anyone else on the list in NYC? We > ought to start a New York Plan 9 Club or something. I am in New York too. Lucho ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Re: bitsy question 2001-06-26 20:18 ` Latchesar Ionkov @ 2001-06-26 20:28 ` Matt 2001-06-26 22:13 ` Steve Kilbane 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Matt @ 2001-06-26 20:28 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > On Tue, Jun 26, 2001 at 01:10:45PM -0400, Dan Cross said: > > > > bway.net, huh? You in New York? Anyone else on the list in NYC? We > > ought to start a New York Plan 9 Club or something. > > I am in New York too. > > Lucho part of my heart lives there ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Re: bitsy question 2001-06-26 20:28 ` Matt @ 2001-06-26 22:13 ` Steve Kilbane 0 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Steve Kilbane @ 2001-06-26 22:13 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans Matt wrote: > part of my heart lives there part, huh? might have known that a plan 9'er would be distributed at heart. steve ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] architectures
@ 2001-07-12 8:42 forsyth
2001-07-12 13:56 ` Laura Creighton
2001-07-12 16:13 ` Ozan Yigit
0 siblings, 2 replies; 168+ messages in thread
From: forsyth @ 2001-07-12 8:42 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: 9fans
>>i'm particularly fond of the acme interface, and i really
>>like the chording (okay, maybe it's not for everyone, but _i_
>>really like it). i'm asking about non-techie folks. for them,
>>wouldn't a single-button interface be simpler to understand?
not necessarily, since the functionality of the extra buttons
must be provided somehow, whether by menus, pop-up menus,
key-mouse combinations, keys alone, or some other way. much might
depend on the choice of conventions for using more than one button.
that in acme all three buttons select text is a big simplification.
i usually introduce it as follows: ``button 1 selects text, button 2
selects text, and button 3 ...'' and during the following pause
nearly everyone says ``selects text?''. i then explain
that `of course' each button does different things with
the text selected. that seems fine. the chording for cut/paste/copy
takes a little practice, but since it has a `feel' much like grabbing
text from the screen, that also seems fine. outside acme,
the Blit convention (perhaps adopted from Smalltalk, i don't know)
was something like: button 1 generally selected things, button 2 provided local
operations (usually on the thing selected), and button 3 provided global operations
for the application, with a few exceptions such as paint programs.
most menus were kept fairly small.
i know at least one non- technical user of acme who sends and receives
mail, plumbing photos and other things, and editing quite happily.
other non-technical people i've shown it to wanted to use acme on
their machines for document preparation and email because the
organisation into columns and frames and the use of the buttons was
just so much more effective than their `desktop' or a clutter of
windows. (they also like the soft use of colour.)
contrary to Tog's advice on this point: with care i suspect
you can make abstractions simple and effective enough without insisting on
drawing a tenuous likeness to something in the `real world'.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] architectures 2001-07-12 8:42 [9fans] architectures forsyth @ 2001-07-12 13:56 ` Laura Creighton 2001-07-12 16:13 ` Ozan Yigit 1 sibling, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Laura Creighton @ 2001-07-12 13:56 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans; +Cc: lac re: drawing tenuous likenesses to the real world. It is possible in the days before everybody knew what a computer was, and a computer program was, that there was some value in giving a user a metaphor with something else on the real world. These days it is a major problem because quite frequently the metaphor is lousier than what we could write if we focused on _how efficiently can we do what we want to do_ rather than _what is something, anything, that somebody is likely to have done before which is sort of like what we want to do_. My favourite example is the desktop metaphor. Now neat people can have the experience of a messed up and cluttered desk. You too can lose important work and documents because you can't find them! Laura ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] architectures 2001-07-12 8:42 [9fans] architectures forsyth 2001-07-12 13:56 ` Laura Creighton @ 2001-07-12 16:13 ` Ozan Yigit 2001-07-12 16:33 ` Matt 1 sibling, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Ozan Yigit @ 2001-07-12 16:13 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans forsyth@caldo.demon.co.uk writes: > contrary to Tog's advice on this point: with care i suspect > you can make abstractions simple and effective enough without insisting on > drawing a tenuous likeness to something in the `real world'. An interesting related bit of work is "The Anti-Mac Interface" by Don Gentner and Jakob Nielson, Communications of the ACM, 29(8), pp. 70-82 August 1996, but also found online. i wish we could have more of this kind of de/re-construction; attempting to break all the interface design rules and see what comes out. the results of this particular attempt are more along the lines of raisin-bran cereal than waldorf salad but thought provoking nevertheless. oz -- www.cs.yorku.ca/~oz | if you couldn't find any weirdness, maybe york u. computer science | we'll just have to make some! -- hobbes ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] architectures 2001-07-12 16:13 ` Ozan Yigit @ 2001-07-12 16:33 ` Matt 2001-07-12 18:12 ` Scott Schwartz 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Matt @ 2001-07-12 16:33 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > An interesting related bit of work is "The Anti-Mac Interface" by Don > Gentner and Jakob Nielson, Communications of the ACM, 29(8), pp. 70-82 > August 1996, but also found online. http://www.acm.org/cacm/AUG96/antimac.htm ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] architectures 2001-07-12 16:33 ` Matt @ 2001-07-12 18:12 ` Scott Schwartz 2001-07-12 18:16 ` Martin Harriss 2001-07-12 18:43 ` Dan Cross 0 siblings, 2 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Scott Schwartz @ 2001-07-12 18:12 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > http://www.acm.org/cacm/AUG96/antimac.htm ``...in designing Sun's home page we decided we needed to change it drastically every month to keep the users' interest...'' No wonder it's so totally impossible to find anything in there! That one statement makes me doubt every other thing they said. Sun's web site has to be the worst I've ever used, especially taking into account the obviously huge amount of effort that goes into it. It's clearly all about entertaining suits, and not at all about making information available to users who don't want to waste their time. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] architectures 2001-07-12 18:12 ` Scott Schwartz @ 2001-07-12 18:16 ` Martin Harriss 2001-07-12 18:43 ` Dan Cross 1 sibling, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Martin Harriss @ 2001-07-12 18:16 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans Scott Schwartz wrote: > > > http://www.acm.org/cacm/AUG96/antimac.htm > > ``...in designing Sun's home page we decided we needed to change it drastically > every month to keep the users' interest...'' > > No wonder it's so totally impossible to find anything in there! That one > statement makes me doubt every other thing they said. Sun's web site > has to be the worst I've ever used, especially taking into account > the obviously huge amount of effort that goes into it. It's clearly > all about entertaining suits, and not at all about making information > available to users who don't want to waste their time. It's also one of the slowest web sites around. I hate to think of the amount of time that I've had to wait wating for their pages to load. They used to *boast* that their web services were provided by a pair of Ultra 1's. Looks like they still are. </gripe> Martin ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] architectures 2001-07-12 18:12 ` Scott Schwartz 2001-07-12 18:16 ` Martin Harriss @ 2001-07-12 18:43 ` Dan Cross 2001-07-13 14:52 ` Douglas A. Gwyn 1 sibling, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Dan Cross @ 2001-07-12 18:43 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans In article <20010712181225.17835.qmail@g.bio.cse.psu.edu> you write: >``...in designing Sun's home page we decided we needed to change it drastically >every month to keep the users' interest...'' Hmm, I predict that Sun will be the DEC of the 2000's; they'll stick to an obsolete and overburdened product line until it's too late, and then get bought out by Dell and ultimately squashed under foot. - Dan ``I saw a Solarian Light'' C. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] architectures 2001-07-12 18:43 ` Dan Cross @ 2001-07-13 14:52 ` Douglas A. Gwyn 2001-07-13 15:13 ` Boyd Roberts 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Douglas A. Gwyn @ 2001-07-13 14:52 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans Dan Cross wrote: > Hmm, I predict that Sun will be the DEC of the 2000's; they'll stick > to an obsolete and overburdened product line until it's too late, ... That's not really what DEC's problem was; there are whole books on this. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] architectures 2001-07-13 14:52 ` Douglas A. Gwyn @ 2001-07-13 15:13 ` Boyd Roberts 0 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2001-07-13 15:13 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans From: "Douglas A. Gwyn" <DAGwyn@null.net> > > That's not really what DEC's problem was; there are whole books on this. the rot had really set in at Digital as early as '93 when i was at PRL. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Virtual memory in BSD and Plan9 @ 2001-10-25 17:55 Russ Cox 2001-10-25 18:29 ` William Josephson 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Russ Cox @ 2001-10-25 17:55 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans Could you please recommend me a reading on both architectures to understand differences between them. I read here that BSD paging has some drawbacks to AT&T one (used in Plan9). And I want to make this clear for myself. The discussions here were talking about many-years-old systems. I don't think anyone even mentioned Plan 9's VM system, which is just about the simplest thing you could imagine. The BSDs have oodles more ``features.'' I'd look in www.researchindex.com for the latest stuff, and in McKusick et al. (Design and Implementation of the 4.4BSD OS) for older stuff. You can decide for yourself whether Plan 9 needs any of it. Russ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Virtual memory in BSD and Plan9 2001-10-25 17:55 [9fans] Virtual memory in BSD and Plan9 Russ Cox @ 2001-10-25 18:29 ` William Josephson 2001-10-26 8:09 ` [9fans] acme bug/annoyance? Matt 2001-10-29 10:16 ` [9fans] Virtual memory in BSD and Plan9 John S. Dyson 0 siblings, 2 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: William Josephson @ 2001-10-25 18:29 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans On Thu, Oct 25, 2001 at 01:55:25PM -0400, Russ Cox wrote: > The discussions here were talking about many-years-old > systems. I don't think anyone even mentioned Plan 9's VM system, > which is just about the simplest thing you could imagine. > The BSDs have oodles more ``features.'' I'd look in > www.researchindex.com for the latest stuff, and in McKusick et al. > (Design and Implementation of the 4.4BSD OS) for older stuff. > You can decide for yourself whether Plan 9 needs any of it. You probably want to take a look at Charles Cranor's PHd thesis from Washington on UVM. If I recall correctly, some of the *BSDs (NetBSD, FreeBSD?) have picked it up or at least borrowed ideas. -WJ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* [9fans] acme bug/annoyance? 2001-10-25 18:29 ` William Josephson @ 2001-10-26 8:09 ` Matt 2001-10-26 11:36 ` rob pike 2001-10-29 10:16 ` [9fans] Virtual memory in BSD and Plan9 John S. Dyson 1 sibling, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Matt @ 2001-10-26 8:09 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans Hi, I just started a new instance of Acme typed some code in an empty yellow window which was a directory listing of an empty directory, I'd put the filename in the titlebar but not saved the file. All was going well until I resized the column and lost all my typing. Not the end of the world but not very user friendly either. An instance of where DWIM would win over "you have to have the text in a file already, stupid" Matt ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] acme bug/annoyance? 2001-10-26 8:09 ` [9fans] acme bug/annoyance? Matt @ 2001-10-26 11:36 ` rob pike 2001-10-26 14:43 ` Scott Schwartz 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: rob pike @ 2001-10-26 11:36 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans A nasty problem here. When you resize a directory window, acme should recolumnate the output, but I couldn't see how to get that right while keeping the user's text, so I just started over. A directory window is therefore a kind of scratch typing space, which is actually a feature I like but is clearly a consequence of, rather than integral to, the design. I suppose the documentation should mention this. -rob ----- Original Message ----- From: Matt <matt@proweb.co.uk> To: <9fans@cse.psu.edu> Sent: Friday, October 26, 2001 4:09 AM Subject: [9fans] acme bug/annoyance? > Hi, > > I just started a new instance of Acme > > typed some code in an empty yellow window which was a directory > listing of an empty directory, I'd put the filename in the titlebar > but not saved the file. > > All was going well until I resized the column and lost all my typing. > > Not the end of the world but not very user friendly either. > > An instance of where DWIM would win over "you have to have the text in > a file already, stupid" > > Matt > > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] acme bug/annoyance? 2001-10-26 11:36 ` rob pike @ 2001-10-26 14:43 ` Scott Schwartz 0 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Scott Schwartz @ 2001-10-26 14:43 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans > I suppose the documentation should mention this. For that matter, maybe such windows should be tinted differently. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Virtual memory in BSD and Plan9 2001-10-25 18:29 ` William Josephson 2001-10-26 8:09 ` [9fans] acme bug/annoyance? Matt @ 2001-10-29 10:16 ` John S. Dyson 1 sibling, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: John S. Dyson @ 2001-10-29 10:16 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans wkj-despam@eecs.harvard.edu (William Josephson) wrote in message news:<20011025142927.B8085@honk.eecs.harvard.edu>... > On Thu, Oct 25, 2001 at 01:55:25PM -0400, Russ Cox wrote: > > The discussions here were talking about many-years-old > > systems. I don't think anyone even mentioned Plan 9's VM system, > > which is just about the simplest thing you could imagine. > > The BSDs have oodles more ``features.'' I'd look in > > www.researchindex.com for the latest stuff, and in McKusick et al. > > (Design and Implementation of the 4.4BSD OS) for older stuff. > > You can decide for yourself whether Plan 9 needs any of it. > > You probably want to take a look at Charles Cranor's PHd thesis from > Washington on UVM. If I recall correctly, some of the *BSDs (NetBSD, > FreeBSD?) have picked it up or at least borrowed ideas. > FreeBSD and NetBSD have different VM systems. FreeBSD's (which I am the primary implementer), is really a corrected and filled out MACH VM for UNIX. It provides lots of the necessary shortcuts fully virtualized for the process VM forking and things like that. The original MACH VM port really wasn't meant as being production ready (per my discussions with Hibler), but was more of a feasibility exercise. Even though it wasn't fully made robust in the original implementations, it wasn't that much worse than many commercial UNIX VM behaviors. Probably the biggest difference doesn't occur during 'normal' memory resident situations, but where FreeBSD has rather advanced paging stats, and really does put off the thrashfest until the system doesn't have enough pages to supply an adequate resident working set. If there is minimally enough memory, FreeBSD will converge reasonably quickly, without undue thrashing. In my early experiments, it was very satisfying to hear the system 'calm down' after experiencing thrashing due to a necessary change in working set population. Most other systems tended to keep on thrashing for long periods, even when there was obviously enough memory. The pseudo-random pagouts and invalidations from non-FreeBSD systems tended to really screw up the page reference information on memory segments being used by otherwise runnable processes. The relatively good behavior has been especially useful when running user-mode windowing systems, where the blocking from poorly chosen page invalidations can really stop-up the works. Both FreeBSD's VM and NetBSD's VM work pretty well (no real complaints from either party), and most/all of the limitations of the original MACH VM have been expunged. There were even cases of limitations that I thought to be unsolvable in the FreeBSD code eventually simply be an 'exercise in data structures', and the last REAL limitation due to address space/fork inheritance was remedied as a result of competition from NetBSD's new VM stuff. FreeBSDs and NetBSDs code is both adequately portable, and that should not be a deciding issue. Frankly, the most important deciding issue is probably based upon knowledge of the VM code that the individual who might do the port to Plan 9. One might make a 'decision' that the VM shouldn't page anyway (except in odd situations), and so the relative advantages of the two systems becomes less important. My philosophy is based upon the fact that an OS MUST NOT just be a fair weather friend, and from my rather VM-centered viewpoint, I believe that this includes the fact that VM shouldn't randomly thrash, when it could more actively converge to a reasonable working set (when possible.) If starting from scratch, it is really easy to write some code that works. However, there is ALOT more work to making a VM system function under load to maximize availability of CPU cycles. Unfortunately, it is clear that VM system behavior is almost always a secondary priority, because it doesn't specify/benchmark very easily. John ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* [9fans] Getting started in Plan9 - help @ 2002-01-20 20:02 Roshan James 2002-01-20 21:01 ` Matt H ` (3 more replies) 0 siblings, 4 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Roshan James @ 2002-01-20 20:02 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 3665 bytes --] Getting started in Plan9 ------------------------- Its been a little over a week since i got my Plan9 working and I still seem to be in tourist mode.Lots of questions and a few suggestions: (I promise I have tried to answer these for myself before before I am ask them) It would be great if we have a school boy style step-by-step getting-off-the-ground tour of plan9, maybe somewhere in the wiki. I would be glad to do this, if i knew enough. Graphics ----------- - I am working with an S3 Trio 64v2 card, the install floppy gave me 800*600 res,but after installation i am on 640*480 and i cant seem to be able to change it aux/vga -l 800x600x8 gives me 'Warning (BUG) : redefinition of aperture does not change s3screen segment.' in a black background in the sentre of the screen and an error message that reads 'aux/vga: vgactlw: <size 800x600x8 m8>: vga already configured' in the console window. it is a low end card but I believe that I did have a higher res through the boot disk so it should be possible here too. how can i change to a higher res ? - If plan9 is booted through xosl in 640*480 res,plan9 graphics display ends up corrupt. the bootloader does switch to text mode before the OS is booted. anyother resolution or a text mode boot loader does not seem to have a problem. The right quarter of the screen (approx) seems to be a duplicate of the band of the screen display between in the left part. (bad description i know). Anyway to fix this ? Acessibility ------------- - How can I read a couple of html docs in Plan9 ? - Is there a place where the uses of directories the std file system heirarchy is discussed, esp /n ? - /n/c: exists, how can i access the extended partitions ? - How can i access the floppy a: ? /n/a: exists but shows no files. - How can i access the extended windows partitions ? - Problem with accessing C: File operations to /n/c: causes a problem '%mkdir /n/c:/testdir' 'mkdir: cant create /n/c:/testdir: write to hungup channel' also a black background error message comes (is there a generic name for these messages ?) 'dossrv 45: suicide: sys: trap fault read addr=0xb pc=0x00004757' help ? Shell ------ - How can I find/search for a file in Plan9 ? the usual find /|grep xxx does not exist here, what is the equivalent ? - Why doesnt/Can rc have autocomplete and filename completion as in bash ? This has become so neccessary. Keys ----- - Why cant the left/right arrow keys+home+end keys move the cursor, it is really difficult to edit something by placing the cursor there with the mouse. - Unless is it part of a grander plan (no pun intended), can we move the process interrupt key from Del to something else and have the conventional functionality of del back ? General ------- - Is the option of plan9 default boot in bootsetup (during install) safe for other OSes that exist on the system ? - Why arent there more applications and more developers interested in developing for plan9 ? Russ, I think it would kill you to keep answering all the newbie questions. Russ, Imel, Thanks for all the help you have been. I think the Plan9 faq needs updation with some of the more generic questions here. This is a lesson that could learned from the Win32's, if you want the OS to grow, you have to get people comfortable with it very fast. I think we can make that happen. Rosh. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- One Ring to rule them all, One Ring to find them, One Ring to bring them all and in the darkness bind them. (Lord of the Rings) [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 4834 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Getting started in Plan9 - help 2002-01-20 20:02 [9fans] Getting started in Plan9 - help Roshan James @ 2002-01-20 21:01 ` Matt H 2002-01-20 22:02 ` Scott Schwartz 2002-01-21 10:22 ` Boyd Roberts 2002-01-20 21:03 ` William S. ` (2 subsequent siblings) 3 siblings, 2 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Matt H @ 2002-01-20 21:01 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans Hi, here's my set of slightly flippant answers > - How can I read a couple of html docs in Plan9 ? install inferno and use the netscape 3 hybrid Charon I bet you can't wait :) Web browsing it's plan9's end user pitfall. No browser, not even text only (unless you count downloading & stripping the html tags text only) > - How can I find/search for a file in Plan9 ? the usual find /|grep xxx > does not exist here, what is the equivalent ? du I think is your best bet it's better still to learn where everything is :) luckily there aren't 5 different directories where programs hide (well there can be but...) all the executables show themselves in /bin which is a union of the directories where executables live if you see what I mean. There's aren't that many, have a look through them all, you'll remember easily enough. > - Why doesnt/Can rc have autocomplete and filename completion as in > bash ? This has become so neccessary. yes, well, you see plan9 is more mouse driven. eventually you'll probably end up with Acme as much your "shell" as anything, and you'll find auto complete is unneccessary. But you're right, it is a nice feature of the bash shell but then there are soooo many goddam directories on a Linux/FreeBSD box and auto complete is Bash's way of trying to alleviate the pain. If you miss it too much I'm sure you could just write a shell script to monitor /dev/cons for tabs, and echo the stuff into /dev/cons. Personally, I do prefer having the screen as free form is plan9's is. The shell is more than the commands you can type, it's where you can type them. > - Why cant the left/right arrow keys+home+end keys move the cursor, > it is really difficult to edit something by placing the cursor there > with the mouse. That's what I said and I still get the urge to say it out loud. They told me I'd get used to it and you know what, I haven't. I'd even settle for Ctrl-J. But when I'm sat at a different terminal I still end up saying "I wish I was using Acme". > - Unless is it part of a grander plan (no pun intended), can we move > the process interrupt key from Del to something else and have the > conventional functionality of del back ? It depends who's conventions. > - Why arent there more applications and more developers interested > in developing for plan9 ? file name completion > This is a lesson that could learned from the Win32's, > if you want the OS to grow, you have to get people comfortable with > it very fast. I think we can make that. After ten years of Windows I'm not sure people are comfortable with it. It's clunky, crashes without explanation, brittle to end user fiddling, repeatedly exposes remote root exploits, is expensive, closed source. I need not go on. > One Ring to rule them all, One Ring to find them, > One Ring to bring them all and in the darkness bind them. > (Lord of the Rings) Arntcha sick of those mobiles phones yet? Matt ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Getting started in Plan9 - help 2002-01-20 21:01 ` Matt H @ 2002-01-20 22:02 ` Scott Schwartz 2002-01-22 9:54 ` ozan s yigit 2002-01-21 10:22 ` Boyd Roberts 1 sibling, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Scott Schwartz @ 2002-01-20 22:02 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans | yes, well, you see plan9 is more mouse driven. eventually you'll | probably end up with Acme as much your "shell" as anything, and you'll | find auto complete is unneccessary. I think that input prediction, if done well, is a beautiful feature, and one that would fit very well with acme, or maybe as a kind of plumbing. I used to use a unix thing called "rk"; a markov chain style thing that continuously prompted you with a line or two of predicted input. You used the arrow keys or tab or ctrl-m to accept the next char/word/line of the prediction. It was uncannily good. A lot of command line stuff is very repetative, and anyone who's seen Rob's fake usenet postings can see how good this kind of thing is for email. One of these days I'll get around to hacking it into acme, maybe. | > - Unless is it part of a grander plan (no pun intended), can we move | > the process interrupt key from Del to something else and have the | > conventional functionality of del back ? Especially since PC keyboards have an actual "break" key to use. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Getting started in Plan9 - help 2002-01-20 22:02 ` Scott Schwartz @ 2002-01-22 9:54 ` ozan s yigit 2002-01-23 10:05 ` Bakul Shah 0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: ozan s yigit @ 2002-01-22 9:54 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans schwartz@bio.cse.psu.edu (Scott Schwartz) writes: > used to use a unix thing called "rk"; a markov chain style thing that > continuously prompted you with a line or two of predicted input. it is "reactive keyboard" and i believe was a thesis work at university of calgary, by Darragh under Witten. i'm sure a web search would still turn up pointers. there is a book about it, not sure if still in print. the interface was interesting in trying to accomodate disabled people to interact with command interfaces by predictive completion. oz -- www.cs.yorku.ca/~oz | if you couldn't find any weirdness, maybe york u. computer science | we'll just have to make some! -- hobbes ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Getting started in Plan9 - help 2002-01-22 9:54 ` ozan s yigit @ 2002-01-23 10:05 ` Bakul Shah 0 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Bakul Shah @ 2002-01-23 10:05 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans ozan s yigit wrote: > it is "reactive keyboard" and i believe was a thesis work at university > of calgary, by Darragh under Witten. i'm sure a web search would still turn > up pointers. there is a book about it, not sure if still in print. the > interface was interesting in trying to accomodate disabled people to > interact with command interfaces by predictive completion. See volume 20 issues 29..32 of comp.sources.unix (Oct '89) at ftp://gatekeeper.dec.com/pub/usenet/comp.sources.unix/volume20/reactivekbd The most recent version seems to be at http://www.csoft.net/~dummy/robert/software/rk-1.6.2.tar.gz ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Getting started in Plan9 - help 2002-01-20 21:01 ` Matt H 2002-01-20 22:02 ` Scott Schwartz @ 2002-01-21 10:22 ` Boyd Roberts 2002-01-21 10:40 ` John Murdie 1 sibling, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread From: Boyd Roberts @ 2002-01-21 10:22 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans Matt H wrote: > > - Why doesnt/Can rc have autocomplete and filename completion as in > > bash ? This has become so neccessary. > yes, well, you see plan9 is more mouse driven. eventually you'll probably end up with Acme as much your "shell" as anything, and you'll find auto complete is unneccessary. > But you're right, it is a nice feature of the bash shell but then there are soooo many goddam directories on a Linux/FreeBSD box and auto complete is Bash's way of trying to alleviate the pain. If you miss it too much I'm sure you could just write a shell script to monitor /dev/cons for tabs, and echo the stuff into /dev/cons. > Personally, I do prefer having the screen as free form is plan9's is. The shell is more than the commands you can type, it's where you can type them. I remember the major flamewar over whether Byron's unix implementation of rc should do this; I was in the 'no way' camp. The result was that you could conditionally compile in that readline trash. You could probably pick it out and stick into Plan 9's rc if you wanted to, but Plan 9 is not unix. It has much better ways to do things. I guess another way to do it is to use pipefile. One of the Kenji's (iirc) did this for japanese input -- now there's a problem for you. As for Latin-1: "Fco. J. Ballesteros" <nemo@plan9.escet.urjc.es> has volunteered to clean up what I did late last year (I'm too busy). If anyone wants it I'll send it on or put it on a web page somewhere. I think the only problem is the caps-lock/ctrl key swap. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Getting started in Plan9 - help 2002-01-21 10:22 ` Boyd Roberts @ 2002-01-21 10:40 ` John Murdie 0 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: John Murdie @ 2002-01-21 10:40 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans; +Cc: John Murdie > - Why doesnt/Can rc have autocomplete and filename completion as in > bash ? This has become so neccessary. If you put the command history editor in the shell, then you can only use it in the shell; if you use another shell from time to time, then you have to learn to use that shell's (different) history mechanism. It's far better to use a single, general, command history mechanism provided by your terminal emulator or Acme (which is so more than a terminal emulator). There is a slight loss from the shell and the command history editor being separated, I know. Incidentally, I hate command completion predictors; they remember my typing mistakes days, weeks or months later, either hesitating to show me the full, correct, command because of my previous mistake or, worse, confidently complete my command with the mistake! -- John A. Murdie Experimental Officer (Software) Department of Computer Science University of York England ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Getting started in Plan9 - help 2002-01-20 20:02 [9fans] Getting started in Plan9 - help Roshan James 2002-01-20 21:01 ` Matt H @ 2002-01-20 21:03 ` William S. 2002-01-20 21:34 ` William Josephson 2002-01-21 6:53 ` cej 3 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: William S. @ 2002-01-20 21:03 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans I can answer this one: step one: (at the prompt type) a: step two: cd /n/a: Bill Amsterdam, NL On Mon, Jan 21, 2002 at 01:32:35AM +0530, Roshan James wrote: <<snip>> > > - How can i access the floppy a: ? /n/a: exists but shows no files. <<snip>> ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Getting started in Plan9 - help 2002-01-20 20:02 [9fans] Getting started in Plan9 - help Roshan James 2002-01-20 21:01 ` Matt H 2002-01-20 21:03 ` William S. @ 2002-01-20 21:34 ` William Josephson 2002-01-21 6:53 ` cej 3 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: William Josephson @ 2002-01-20 21:34 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans On Mon, Jan 21, 2002 at 01:32:35AM +0530, Roshan James wrote: > - Why doesnt/Can rc have autocomplete and filename completion as in > bash ? This has become so neccessary. binding everything on to /bin mostly remove the need for this. If you haven't done so already, I would suggest grabbing the various shell scripts and C programs from Russ Cox's web page at www.eecs.harvard.edu/~rsc. " and "" are very useful in conjunction with the mouse. -WJ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Getting started in Plan9 - help 2002-01-20 20:02 [9fans] Getting started in Plan9 - help Roshan James ` (2 preceding siblings ...) 2002-01-20 21:34 ` William Josephson @ 2002-01-21 6:53 ` cej 3 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: cej @ 2002-01-21 6:53 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans Rosh, you can find some stupid scripts, including "find", at http://cejchan.gli.cas.cz/plan9 Cheers, --pac ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Fourth Release of Plan 9 Now Available @ 2002-04-27 16:44 andrey mirtchovski 0 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: andrey mirtchovski @ 2002-04-27 16:44 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans i suggest we wait a day with submitting the news to slashdot, so people here on the list can download the new release before everyone else jumps on :) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Fourth Release of Plan 9 Now Available
@ 2002-04-27 18:28 Russ Cox
2002-04-27 19:27 ` Mike Haertel
0 siblings, 1 reply; 168+ messages in thread
From: Russ Cox @ 2002-04-27 18:28 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: 9fans
> Does that really mean that mice plugged into serial ports don't work?
Unfortunately, yes. The uart code got rewritten
and serial mouse support never made it back in.
We didn't notice until two days ago. (I guess
we don't use that many serial mice.)
If you have a PS/2 system to install on, the serial
mouse support should be trivial to add back.
It's commented out at the moment. It was just too
big a change to put in untested at the last minute.
Russ
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Fourth Release of Plan 9 Now Available 2002-04-27 18:28 Russ Cox @ 2002-04-27 19:27 ` Mike Haertel 0 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread From: Mike Haertel @ 2002-04-27 19:27 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 9fans It would be kind of nice if the 3rd edition pages (including the distribution and updates) were still up somewhere, if only for archival reasons. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
* Re: [9fans] Fourth Release of Plan 9 Now Available
@ 2002-04-29 11:59 forsyth
0 siblings, 0 replies; 168+ messages in thread
From: forsyth @ 2002-04-29 11:59 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: 9fans
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 536 bytes --]
you need the small repair i posted earlier
for /sys/src/cmd/aux/vga/3dfx.c (it was
wrong before but not noticed).
term% yesterday -d 3dfx.c
diff /n/dump/2002/04291/sys/src/cmd/aux/vga/3dfx.c 3dfx.c
30c30
< ulong r[Nior/4];
---
> ulong r[Nior];
much good it does you before installation, but once it appears
in the downloadable floppy image, you can proceed.
i can generate one myself if you're in a great hurry, but otherwise
i thought the fewer variants in flight at this stage, the less
confusing it would be.
[-- Attachment #2: Type: message/rfc822, Size: 2290 bytes --]
To: 9fans@cse.psu.edu
Subject: Re: [9fans] Fourth Release of Plan 9 Now Available
Date: Mon, 29 Apr 2002 09:37:20 GMT
Message-ID: <gTBy8.14791$ao1.8527@rwcrnsc54>
I've been trying to install it and here's what I got so far:
<snip>
kfs...version...time
init: starting /bin/rc
dossrv: serving #s/dos
assert failed: (*t)->magic==FREE_MAGIC
vga 52: suicide: sys: trap: fault read addr=0x0 pc=0x000260e6
assert failed: (*t)->magic==FREE_MAGIC
vga 55: suicide: sys: trap: fault read addr=0x0 pc=0x000260e6
rio: can't open display: initdisplay: /dev/draw/new: no frame buffer
init: rc exit status: rc 10: rio 67: display open
and then it shows prompt.
R3 installation was able to init display on this voodoo 3 3000 card with no
problem.
What's the problem now?
--
DISCLAIMER: <DEFAULT DISCLAIMER>
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 168+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2002-06-29 2:23 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 168+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed) -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2000-08-18 15:34 [9fans] Re: Solaris thread scheaduling rob pike [not found] ` <rob@plan9.bell-labs.com> 2000-08-02 14:48 ` [9fans] pipefile rob pike 2000-08-02 15:49 ` James A. Robinson 2000-08-18 20:25 ` [9fans] Re: Solaris thread scheaduling Tom Duff 2000-09-06 21:59 ` [9fans] Reliable Cray Y-MP C90 Supercomputer rob pike 2000-09-06 22:02 ` James A. Robinson 2000-09-06 22:14 ` Boyd Roberts 2000-09-06 22:11 ` Boyd Roberts 2000-09-07 22:18 ` [9fans] new versions of graphics programs? Tom Duff 2000-11-01 22:23 ` [9fans] /n/smtp rob pike 2000-11-01 22:38 ` Scott Schwartz 2000-11-24 0:41 ` [9fans] Crazy idea... or a new project? rob pike 2000-11-24 0:48 ` Boyd Roberts 2000-11-24 22:13 ` Scott Schwartz 2000-11-24 22:24 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-02-06 17:11 ` [9fans] azerty [french] keyboard support rob pike 2001-02-06 19:10 ` Scott Schwartz 2001-02-06 19:23 ` Dan Cross 2001-02-07 15:23 ` [9fans] 9p2k, fsync rob pike 2001-02-07 18:42 ` Scott Schwartz 2001-02-08 1:19 ` Dan Cross 2001-02-08 9:43 ` Douglas A. Gwyn 2001-02-14 13:51 ` [9fans] isatty rob pike 2001-02-14 16:42 ` Scott Schwartz 2001-03-26 14:12 ` [9fans] sam mod for delete-forward rob pike 2001-03-26 15:37 ` Douglas A. Gwyn 2001-03-27 8:25 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-03-27 14:01 ` Sam 2001-03-27 16:51 ` Dan Cross 2001-03-28 8:37 ` Douglas A. Gwyn 2001-03-29 8:26 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-03-26 15:42 ` Scott Schwartz 2001-05-10 14:59 ` [9fans] snprint(), getfields() specification rob pike 2001-05-10 16:42 ` Scott Schwartz 2001-05-10 18:13 ` Steve Kilbane 2001-05-10 21:38 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-05-11 6:51 ` Steve Kilbane 2001-05-19 14:14 ` Re[4]: [9fans] home, end ^h^j^k^l rob pike 2001-05-19 14:26 ` Re[6]: " Matt H 2001-05-19 22:45 ` [9fans] ls -m Scott Schwartz 2001-05-19 22:50 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-05-19 15:35 ` Re[4]: [9fans] home, end ^h^j^k^l James A. Robinson 2001-05-19 20:36 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-05-19 23:30 ` Richard Elberger 2001-05-20 2:37 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-05-20 7:03 ` Lucio De Re 2001-05-20 11:16 ` paurea 2001-05-20 13:11 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-05-20 13:04 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-05-23 8:24 ` Randolph Fritz 2001-05-23 8:46 ` Re[6]: " Matt H 2001-05-23 9:04 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-05-20 0:16 ` [9fans] ls -m rob pike 2001-05-20 0:31 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-05-20 1:38 ` [9fans] mouse vs key Scott Schwartz 2001-05-20 6:29 ` Dan Cross 2001-05-20 8:09 ` Matt H 2001-05-20 11:35 ` Re[2]: [9fans] mouse vs key - nethack matt 2001-05-20 13:13 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-05-20 12:50 ` [9fans] mouse vs key Boyd Roberts 2001-05-29 4:27 ` [9fans] src vs db rob pike 2001-05-29 4:37 ` Scott Schwartz 2001-07-11 19:22 ` [9fans] sam vs acme rob pike 2001-07-11 20:08 ` James A. Robinson 2001-08-14 12:54 ` [9fans] User Interface rob pike 2001-08-14 15:01 ` James A. Robinson 2001-08-16 13:45 ` phaet0n 2001-08-20 8:57 ` Randolph Fritz 2001-12-02 3:10 ` [9fans] plumb rob pike 2001-12-02 3:31 ` Scott Schwartz 2002-01-30 5:52 ` [9fans] venti rob pike 2002-01-30 6:23 ` George Michaelson 2002-01-30 8:07 ` paurea 2002-01-30 11:17 ` Boyd Roberts 2002-03-01 6:20 ` Fwd: Re: [9fans] samuel (fwd) rob pike 2002-03-01 6:34 ` George Michaelson 2002-03-01 12:04 ` Boyd Roberts 2002-04-27 16:35 ` [9fans] Fourth Release of Plan 9 Now Available rob pike, esq. 2002-04-27 18:24 ` Scott Schwartz 2002-04-27 22:14 ` Laura Creighton 2002-04-29 9:37 ` Andrew 2002-06-28 16:49 ` [9fans] dumb question rob pike, esq. 2002-06-29 2:23 ` Scott Schwartz 2000-09-07 21:57 [9fans] new versions of graphics programs? rob pike 2000-09-07 22:50 ` Jim Choate [not found] ` <ravage@einstein.ssz.com> 2000-09-07 22:35 ` Tom Duff 2000-09-07 23:24 ` Jim Choate 2000-09-08 15:28 ` please_no_spam_to_ [not found] ` <D.M.Pick@qmw.ac.uk> 2000-09-08 16:43 ` Tom Duff 2001-06-09 17:22 [9fans] could those of you who have students check this out for forsyth 2001-06-09 18:50 ` [9fans] Re: the 'science' in computer science andrey mirtchovski 2001-06-09 17:56 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-06-11 8:27 ` pac 2001-06-11 15:19 ` Dan Cross 2001-06-11 21:43 ` Boyd Roberts [not found] ` <0cb501c0f2bf$97cacea0$e8b7c6d4@SOMA> 2001-06-11 22:43 ` paurea 2001-06-12 14:18 ` Dan Cross 2001-06-12 15:50 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-06-12 18:48 ` Dan Cross 2001-06-12 0:09 ` Scott Merrilees 2001-06-12 0:16 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-06-12 0:42 ` Scott Merrilees 2001-06-12 1:08 ` Boyd Roberts [not found] ` <0cc301c0f2c0$78949560$e8b7c6d4@SOMA> 2001-06-12 14:12 ` Dan Cross 2001-06-16 23:34 ` Matt 2001-06-28 21:29 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-06-28 22:03 ` Matt 2001-06-28 23:20 ` George Michaelson 2001-06-29 21:27 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-07-18 15:49 ` Ralph Corderoy 2001-06-29 4:30 ` Lucio De Re [not found] <vikki@proweb.co.uk> 2001-06-10 17:32 ` [9fans] string to list? vikki 2001-06-10 17:47 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-06-10 17:55 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-06-10 18:03 ` Scott Schwartz 2001-06-10 21:48 ` Matt 2001-06-10 22:24 ` Scott Schwartz 2001-06-10 22:30 ` Boyd Roberts [not found] <matt@proweb.co.uk> 2001-06-12 0:39 ` [9fans] help, i'm in a wet paper bag and I can't get out Matt 2001-06-12 0:55 ` Scott Schwartz 2001-06-12 1:12 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-06-12 1:00 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-06-12 1:30 ` Jonathan Sergent 2001-06-15 8:27 ` Hermann Samso 2001-06-15 11:53 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-06-15 12:18 ` Matt 2001-06-15 14:01 ` Matt 2001-06-15 14:25 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-06-26 16:33 [9fans] bitsy question John Packer 2001-06-26 17:10 ` [9fans] " Dan Cross 2001-06-26 19:51 ` John Packer 2001-06-26 20:34 ` Dan Cross 2001-06-29 22:32 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-06-27 1:15 ` [9fans] Two cpu servers? Ish Rattan 2001-06-26 20:09 ` [9fans] Re: bitsy question John Packer 2001-06-26 20:36 ` Dan Cross 2001-06-26 20:18 ` Latchesar Ionkov 2001-06-26 20:28 ` Matt 2001-06-26 22:13 ` Steve Kilbane 2001-07-12 8:42 [9fans] architectures forsyth 2001-07-12 13:56 ` Laura Creighton 2001-07-12 16:13 ` Ozan Yigit 2001-07-12 16:33 ` Matt 2001-07-12 18:12 ` Scott Schwartz 2001-07-12 18:16 ` Martin Harriss 2001-07-12 18:43 ` Dan Cross 2001-07-13 14:52 ` Douglas A. Gwyn 2001-07-13 15:13 ` Boyd Roberts 2001-10-25 17:55 [9fans] Virtual memory in BSD and Plan9 Russ Cox 2001-10-25 18:29 ` William Josephson 2001-10-26 8:09 ` [9fans] acme bug/annoyance? Matt 2001-10-26 11:36 ` rob pike 2001-10-26 14:43 ` Scott Schwartz 2001-10-29 10:16 ` [9fans] Virtual memory in BSD and Plan9 John S. Dyson 2002-01-20 20:02 [9fans] Getting started in Plan9 - help Roshan James 2002-01-20 21:01 ` Matt H 2002-01-20 22:02 ` Scott Schwartz 2002-01-22 9:54 ` ozan s yigit 2002-01-23 10:05 ` Bakul Shah 2002-01-21 10:22 ` Boyd Roberts 2002-01-21 10:40 ` John Murdie 2002-01-20 21:03 ` William S. 2002-01-20 21:34 ` William Josephson 2002-01-21 6:53 ` cej 2002-04-27 16:44 [9fans] Fourth Release of Plan 9 Now Available andrey mirtchovski 2002-04-27 18:28 Russ Cox 2002-04-27 19:27 ` Mike Haertel 2002-04-29 11:59 forsyth
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