Kenneth Stailey <kstailey(a)yahoo.com> wrote:
> Warren, I see that there is a 4.4BSD-Alpha subdir in the TUHS archive. Do you
> want a final CSRG 4.4BSD tape to add there too?
I would definitely want an image of the 4.4BSD tape too! But I do mean *tape*,
not what's on Kirk's CD-ROM. I'm talking about a record-for-record image of
the Official Release Master tape.
> Thanks, I have to go through your archive for it now.
Actually I just took a closer look and it has been in the distributed
/usr/lib/learn since 4.3BSD, it was just never added to /usr/src/usr.lib/learn
for some reason (not even in Quasijarus, I probably didn't notice it). So you
don't have to go through the pain of downloading a dist from Harhan to pull it
out of there, you can just take it from your CD-ROM set.
> It's so difficult being you.
:-)
> I was able to save myself the time by
> using the 4.4BSD version of learn(1) since it has already been
> modified for CRT terminals. You will have to re-invent the wheel
> because of your politics.
Well I'll take a look at what they did to learn in 4.4BSD and see if any of it
is acceptable for Quasijarus. Hopefully I won't have to reinvent the wheel.
I believe in adding new features without breaking or disturbing historical
stuff. It feels so great knowing that my current modern OS (last release
2003-12-07 counts as current and modern to me) still has nearly all original V7
UNIX code almost completely untouched. It's what gives me the right to call it
UNIX.
As far as learn goes I think I would need to add new lessons for UNIX on a CRT
or some options or somesuch, but I do NOT want to remove the facility for
teaching UNIX on a hardcopy tty. That's such a gem, it should be kept!
MS
Kenneth Stailey <kstailey(a)yahoo.com> wrote:
> When I purchased my copy of _The
> CSRG Archives_ CDROM set I was told in E-mail by McKusick that I did not need
> to sign any license agreements. I am assuming that this is due to Caldera
> proclaiming that V32 sources and binaries could be redistributed by the public
> legally.
Yes, this is correct, this is the same reason why Warren was able to remove the
password system from his UNIX Archive and make it completely open.
> In the CDROM set is a fully encumbered 4.4BSD source tree which
> includes the learn(1) source code.
Yup, I have it too (the whole CD-ROM set). learn(1) is far older than 4.4BSD
though, and goes way back. 4.3BSD-Quasijarus has it too.
> I also have yet to
> get the vi lesson data which the source code that I do have says came on a
> separate user-contributed tape.
I just looked and 4.3BSD-Quasijarus has the vi lesson data as part of the
standard system.
> I got here because I have newbies in my life now and I need UNIX online
> courseware.
Hear hear. I sometimes get into this situation too, usually when dating and
getting faced with the need to teach a prospective female how to use a real
operating system, since the one woman who finally makes it would absolutely
have to use 4.3BSD-Quasijarus on my VAXen.
I looked into learn, but one thing it disappointed me with is that it's
woefully outdated. It starts by setting the tty erase and kill chars to '#'
and '@' respectively and teaching you how to edit the command line on a
hardcopy tty. Well, OK, some would see this as good educational value, but the
problem is, if you don't actually *have* a hardcopy tty, and most of us don't,
it doesn't work too well. It prints out lessons longer than 24 lines and they
scroll off the top of the VT terminal. It was definitely written with the
assumption that one has a hardcopy tty with a long roll of continuous paper,
and it expects the student to grab the paper coming out of the teletype and
look at what's been printed, but it just doesn't work on a VT terminal. Not to
mention that in the end the lessons give the student little practical learning
that would actually be useful when using UNIX on a CRT terminal. (For example,
it would be very practical to explain to the student the difference between ^H
and ^? and teach him/her how to deal with it.)
> I'm wondering about distributing the results of my porting effort once it
> matures enough to be worth doing so.
Well, as a I said 4.3BSD-Quasijarus contains learn and all other "encumbered
code" and it is freely available via anonymous FTP from ifctfvax.Harhan.ORG,
so... BTW for those who missed it I released 4.3-QJ0b on 2003-12-07.
MS
> I would be interested to know if there is any chance of getting a hobbyist
> A/UX license out of Apple.
A/UX started out as a port of Unisoft SysV. Prior to version 2.0, there was
no Finder interface at all. A real history of the product should be done at
some point, as opposed to the half-baked opinions of someone who has only
seen a very late version of the product.
Since there were per-copy licensing fees to Unisoft, at least for the early
versions, it seems unlikely that a hobbyist license for A/UX would be possible.
Incidentally, the Unisoft m68k port of SVR2 at the core of A/UX was also
ported to the Perq-5 in 1986/1987, to create the Crosfield Studio 9500.
Perq had just folded, but a core group of ex-Perq employees worked with a
team from the UK company Crosfield Electronics to take the machine (which at
that time existed only as a wire-wrap prototype) through to production.
I was a member of that team and I have fond memories of sitting in a
basement office in Pittsburgh surrounded by kernel listings (with a very
puzzled look on my face).
Just a small footnote in Unix history...
--
Roger
Hi,
When 4.4BSD-lite was released one of the 4.4BSD encumbered things that was cut
was the online courseware program, learn(1). When I purchased my copy of _The
CSRG Archives_ CDROM set I was told in E-mail by McKusick that I did not need
to sign any license agreements. I am assuming that this is due to Caldera
proclaiming that V32 sources and binaries could be redistributed by the public
legally. In the CDROM set is a fully encumbered 4.4BSD source tree which
includes the learn(1) source code. I spent a few hours last night porting it
to NetBSD and FreeBSD and tightening up a few bits like gets() vs. fgets(). I
haven't finished and have yet to distributed the results. I also have yet to
get the vi lesson data which the source code that I do have says came on a
separate user-contributed tape.
I got here because I have newbies in my life now and I need UNIX online
courseware. The only thing I could find in the FreeBSD ports tree was
something called vilearn.
I'm wondering about distributing the results of my porting effort once it
matures enough to be worth doing so.
Thanks,
Ken
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