From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: sven_dehmlow@web.de (Sven Dehmlow) Date: Tue, 29 Jan 2002 14:47:06 +0100 Subject: [TUHS] Porting Unix v6 to i386 In-Reply-To: <02012822034503.20290@g4klx> References: <02012717103901.00631@linux> <02012822034503.20290@g4klx> Message-ID: <02012914470600.00631@linux> On Monday 28 January 2002 22:03, Jonathan Naylor wrote: > Hi Sven > > I can't help feel that you've missed the point of wanting to port > UNIX edition 6 or 7 to the PC. Its a challenge, nothing more, > nothing less. I have run both editions on Bob Supniks excellent > emulator (now with PDP-10 support BTW) and they're great, but it'd > be ultra cool to boot it directly on a PC. I can't agree more, it would even be more than ultra cool to be able to boot Unix 6th Edition directly on your PC. But I can't make a complete (and everything else would be senseless) port on my own as this would from my point of view mean to much work for a single individual. I try to do as much as I can but if you want to get a real port we've to found an open source project for reaching this aim. > > I would guess that VMWare would be a great host, or maybe its open > source equivalents (Plex86 or Bochs) so that you could save the > reboot cycles. I would also try porting V7 instead of V6, at least > initially. With so much open source code out there, it'd be a > relatively simple task to find C code for IDE disc access and such > like. I would even suggest getting older Linux code from the 2.0.x > days as its likely to be a little less complex, while still being > stable. Well, this are details. The question to be answered before we can start thinking about them is this one above: Do we start an open source project for porting Unix or not? > > Just my 0.02 EURO. You should notice that it is dangerous to talk about the EURO with me. I always become very aggressive... ;-) > > Jonathan Sven