On Tue, Feb 1, 2022, at 1:34 PM, Will Senn wrote:
All,
I did my research on this, but it's still a bit fuzzy (why is it
that people's memories from 40 years ago are so malleable?).
1. What are y'all's recollections regarding BSD 4.1's releases,
vis a vis the VAX. In McKusick's piece, Twenty Years of Berkeley
Unix, I get one perspective, and from Sokolov's Quasijarus
project, I get quite another. In terms of popularity and in terms
of stable performance, what say you? Was 4.1 that much better than
4BSD? Was 4.1as obsolete immediately as McKusick says? 4.1b sounds
good with FFS, was it? 4.1c's the last pre 4.2 release, but it
sounds like it was nearly a beta version of 4.2...
2. Sokolov implies that the CSRG mission started going off the
rails with the 4.3/4.3BSD-Tahoe and it all went pear shaped with
the 4.3-Reno release, and that Quasijarus puts the mission back on
track, is that so?
My recollection from 1997 or 1998 is that Sokolov appeared out of nowhere, alone, with (as someone else in this thread best put it) a "revolutionary zeal", and decided to create Quasijarus with the specific goal of supporting VAXen beyond the models that had been originally supported under 4.2. Sokolov was 18 or 19 at the time, so I can certainly understand the revolutionary zeal (I miss mine!). Beyond that, I don't think anything else ever came out of it.
-Seth
--
Seth Morabito
Poulsbo, WA
web@loomcom.com