Has the 9p protocol ever been implemented on an 8-bit machine (like a 6502)? Assuming an 8-bit machine with a network adapter (which is common nowadays), would such a thing even be possible? -- Glenn Holmer (Linux registered user #16682) "After the vintage season came the aftermath -- and Cenbe."
On Sun, Oct 9, 2022 at 11:03 AM Glenn Holmer <cenbe@protonmail.com> wrote: > > Has the 9p protocol ever been implemented on an 8-bit machine (like a > 6502)? Assuming an 8-bit machine with a network adapter (which is common > nowadays), would such a thing even be possible? > > -- > Glenn Holmer (Linux registered user #16682) > "After the vintage season came the aftermath -- and Cenbe." > Echoline's ninepea library for the arduino 8bit atmega 2650 is an example. https://github.com/echoline/NinePea Sigrid wrote 9c, a "Low level 9p client and server." It looks very embeddable. I believe I one asked her this question and she told me that indeed it can be used on a micro so don't see why you couldn't run it on a 8bit machine with a uart or ethernet. https://shithub.us/sigrid/c9/HEAD/info.html
> Echoline's ninepea library for the arduino 8bit atmega 2650 is an example.
> https://github.com/echoline/NinePea
Correction: arduino mega 1280. not 2650.
Though it is likely portable since they are similar.
i did have a 9p server running on a 16bit embedded system 10years ir so ago. that was easy, just a port of u9fs.
it has been a long time since i used 6502s and 8085s, the embedded world is an arm in the circles i move in.
-Steve
> On 9 Oct 2022, at 18:45, Thaddeus Woskowiak <tswoskowiak@gmail.com> wrote:
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>> Echoline's ninepea library for the arduino 8bit atmega 2650 is an example.
>> https://github.com/echoline/NinePea
>
> Correction: arduino mega 1280. not 2650.
>
> Though it is likely portable since they are similar.