From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: dwalker@doomd.net (Derrik Walker v2.0) Date: Sun, 17 Sep 2017 14:07:24 -0400 Subject: [TUHS] Weird nix? Regulus In-Reply-To: <601911ED-162B-47E6-ADB5-4BB31EE6D733@kdbarto.org> References: <601911ED-162B-47E6-ADB5-4BB31EE6D733@kdbarto.org> Message-ID: On 09/17/2017 01:27 PM, David wrote: > What a pain, almost like Unix, and not quite. l It was a clone of Unix for the 68k. The APIs were ever so slightly different because the authors were concerned about copyright infringement. libc calls had different argument orders or types and in general it was just off enough that you wanted to claw at the screen every time something went wrong. > > To top it off, the system we were hosting it on was so slow that a full rebuild of our meager (10k lines) software took overnight. > > I eventually ported all the software to a SparcStation-2 cross compiling to the 68k target we were embedded on. > >> To kick a more relevant thread off, what was the "weirdest" Unix system you used & why? Could be an emulation like Eunice, could be the hardware e.g NULL was not zero, NUXI byte ordering etc. >> >> Cheers, Warren Mach Ten ... this weird BSD thing that runs on top of Classic Mac OS. I actually have a minivmac image on my Linux box that it boots and runs on! I used it as my "UNIX workstation" Until I finally got my hands on a Sparc in the late '90's. - Derrik Derrik Walker v2.0, RHCE dwalker at doomd.net "Those UNIX guys, they think weird!" -- John C. Dvorak -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: smime.p7s Type: application/pkcs7-signature Size: 3986 bytes Desc: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature URL: