Hi all,
So. On a lighter note. I was tooling around the web and came across a discussion of QED, the editor. It’s been resurrected in no small part based on discussions on this list (and members like Rob Pike). Anyhow, there’s a version that compiles in modern systems and that handles wide characters. My question for the group is this how different is QED from ed? I’ve read Dennis’ paper on the history of QED and it’s fascinating, but all I really got out of the discussion related to ed, was that QED was a precursor. I’m curious about functional parity or lack thereof, more than technical differences. In full disclosure, and at the risk of drawing fire from lovers of other editors, I have to confess a love of the original ed (and it’s decendent ed’s and vi).
Cheers,
Will
Sent from my iPhone
> From: Jim Geist
> When did mmap(2) come about?
Pretty sure it's a Berserkleyism. I think it came in with the VM stuff that
DARPA mandated for VAX Unix (for the research project they funded).
Noel
One of the things that I've noticed in my explorations into the H.J. Lu
bootable root disks is that some of them predate the /sbin split in Linux.
One of them has exactly one file in /sbin and other commands spread
across /bin, /usr/bin, and /etc. The single file in /sbin is sln.
To me, this makes it fairly self evident that /sbin was originally for
statically linked binaries. At least in Linux.
Does anyone have any history of /sbin from other traditional Unixes?
I'd be quite interested in learning more.
I also noticed that (at least) one of the early versions of the H.J. Lu
disks had root's home directory in /usr/root.
I seem to recall that one version used an atypical of /users vs /usr.
Which as I understand it, goes back to the original / vs /usr split in
Unix, before /home became a thing.
--
Grant. . . .
unix || die
Nice archaeology. Blinded by my distaste for Basic , I never bothered to
try bs--and should have. Dave has highlighted features that deserve respect.
One telling example suggests this should be legalized in C:
printf("%s\n", {"true", "false"}[1]);
Doug
All,
So... I've moved on from v7 to 2.11bsd - shucks, vi and tar and co. just
work there and everything else seems to be similar enough for what I'm
interested in anyway. So yay, I won't be pestering y'all about vi
anymore :). One the other hand, now I'm interested in printing the docs.
2.11bsd comes with docs in, of all places, /usr/doc. In there are
makefiles for making the docs - ok, make nroff will make ascii docs, and
troff will make troff? docs using Ossana's 'original' troff. So, after
adding -t to it so it didn't complain about 'typesetter busy', I got no
errors. I mounted a tape, tar'ed my .out file and untar'ed it on my
macbook (did it for the nroff and troff output). Then I hit the first
snag, groff -Tps -ms troff.out > whatever.ps resulted in cannot adjust
line and cannot break line errors and groff -Tps -ms nroff.out >
whatever.ps resulted in a bunch of double vision. I seem to recall doing
this in v6 and it working ok (at least for nroff).
My questions:
1. Is there a troff to postcript conversion utility present in a stock
2.11 system (or even patch level 4xx system)?
2. Is there a way to build postscript directly on the system?
3. Is there an alternative modern way to get to ps or pdf output from
the nroff/troff that 2.11 has?
I'm still digging into the nroff stuff as that may be just minor diffs
between ancient nroff macros and "modern" macros or even just errors
(.sp -2 rather than .sp or .sp -1, .in -2 instead of .in +2), etc.
Although, the files display ok in 2.11bsd using nroff -ms nroff.out...
Thanks,
Will
--
GPG Fingerprint: 68F4 B3BD 1730 555A 4462 7D45 3EAA 5B6D A982 BAAF
> From: Norman Wilson
> You get a good deal and support a worthwhile small business (not just
> ABE but the individual selling shop) at the same time.
ABE isn't a small business (any more); Amazon bought them a couple of years
ago. Biblio (https://www.biblio.com/) is the same basic thing ("more than 6500
independent book stores"), but independent. There's also Alibris
(https://www.alibris.com/) but I like Biblio's site better; YMMV.
Noel
Nemo Nusquam:
Borenstein wrote a book ("Programming as if people mattered: Friendly
Programs, Software Engineering, and Other Noble Delusions") in which he
mused about W and X and Andrew. (A very nice read but horribly
expensive -- fortunately I bought it when PUP had reasonably priced
paperbacks.)
======
abebooks.com is your friend here. I just bought a used paperback copy
for about USD 15 including shipping to Canada. There are others of
similar price. Shipping to the US is probably a little cheaper.
There's at least one copy available from a seller in the UK as
well (and doubtless some from other countries if you dig further
in the listings).
For those who don't know, ABE is a central place for independent
booksellers, including used-book shops, to sell online. You get
a good deal and support a worthwhile small business (not just ABE
but the individual selling shop) at the same time.
Norman Wilson
Toronto ON
Since nobody seems to have mentioned his passing yet, I thought I might.
David Tilbrook died (from complications of COVID-19) in the early hours
of January 15, 2021.
He had been in long term care in Toronto for just over a year.
His web site remains up and running for now at http://qef.com/ though I
don't know for how long that may last.
--
Greg A. Woods <gwoods(a)acm.org>
Kelowna, BC +1 250 762-7675 RoboHack <woods(a)robohack.ca>
Planix, Inc. <woods(a)planix.com> Avoncote Farms <woods(a)avoncote.ca>
All,
I came across this note on vermaden's valuable news blog and thought
y'all might enjoy it - it's not pure unix, but it's got a lot of
crossover. The history is interesting and to us relative newbs,
informative. I can't confirm its accuracy on the history side of things,
but I'm sure you can :).
http://unixsheikh.com/articles/the-terminal-the-console-and-the-shell-what-…
Later,
Will
SIMH has 3b2 emulation...
Much of the work was documented here:
https://loomcom.com/3b2/emulator.html
<https://loomcom.com/3b2/emulator.html>
-----Original Message-----
From: Henry Bent [SMTP:henry.r.bent@gmail.com]
Sent: Wednesday, January 27, 2021 12:05 AM
To: Arnold Robbins
Cc: The Eunuchs Hysterical Society
Subject: Re: [TUHS] System V Release 2, adding swap?
On Mon, 25 Jan 2021 at 11:02, Arnold Robbins < arnold(a)skeeve.com
<mailto:arnold@skeeve.com> > wrote:
Hi.
Does anyone know how to add swap space on a System V Release
2 system?
In particular, on an emulated AT&T 3B1. The kernel is S5R1
or S5R2
vintage.
I don't see any commands with 'swap' in their names.
A little bit of Google Groups trawling turned up this:
https://groups.google.com/g/comp.sys.att/c/8XLILI3K8-Y/m/VxVMJNdt9NQJ
<https://groups.google.com/g/comp.sys.att/c/8XLILI3K8-Y/m/VxVMJNdt9NQJ>
But I don't have one of those systems, so I have no way to verify.
-Henry