From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: grog@lemis.com (Greg 'groggy' Lehey) Date: Mon, 12 Sep 2016 14:44:32 +1000 Subject: [TUHS] BSD/v8 TCP/IP (was Shell control through external commands) In-Reply-To: <20160912013110.ECB3B4422E@lignose.oclsc.org> References: <20160912013110.ECB3B4422E@lignose.oclsc.org> Message-ID: <20160912044432.GA74856@eureka.lemis.com> On Sunday, 11 September 2016 at 21:31:10 -0400, Norman Wilson wrote: > > -- Adopt 4.1c BSD kernel > ... > > I don't think the BSD kernel when adopted had much, if any, > of sockets, Berkeley's TCP/IP, McKusick's FFS; if it did, > they were excised. > > ... > > TCP/IP support didn't show up until later, I think summer 1985, > though it might have been a year later. I'm confused. 4.1c has gone down in history as the first version with Internet code, and looking at the sources (from mckusick's CD set), I see the network files in /sys/netinet with names very reminiscent of current FreeBSD file names. The files have timestamps between November 1982 and May 1983. Why should they have been removed? I would have thought that exactly this functionality would have been the reason why you adopted 4.1c. Similarly, it also included FFS and (not surprisingly sockets. I checked further back, but unfortunately the previous version on the CDs is 4.1a, and it has no kernel code. Greg -- Sent from my desktop computer. Finger grog at FreeBSD.org for PGP public key. See complete headers for address and phone numbers. This message is digitally signed. If your Microsoft mail program reports problems, please read http://lemis.com/broken-MUA -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: signature.asc Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 181 bytes Desc: not available URL: