Let's get it straight. I think Kirk McKusick did the FFS. VM was done
by Somebody Babaglu (a greek? name - I know I'm not remembering it correctly.)
I guess Joy did sockets, but I don't know. I do know that he did the
csh and ex/vi. I gather he was also in the kernel, but it wasn't all him.
BSD was not a one man show.
Arnold
Jason Stevens <jsteve(a)superglobalmegacorp.com> wrote:
Yeah sockets, FFS, VM, autoconfiguration. It almost
seems a shame he
went to SUN. Although at the same time it’s no wonder why they grabbed
him ASAP. I guess it’s like Avie working for NeXT.
From: Larry McVoy
Sent: Thursday, August 29, 2019 3:06 AM
To: Chet Ramey
Cc: tuhs(a)tuhs.org; doug(a)cs.dartmouth.edu
Subject: Re: [TUHS] dmr streams & networking [was: Re: If not Linux,then what?]
On Wed, Aug 28, 2019 at 03:03:34PM -0400, Chet Ramey wrote:
On 8/28/19 2:49 PM, arnold(a)skeeve.com wrote:
Sorry,
what I said about London/Reiser is true, but not the whole
story. L/R didn't have demand paging; BSD did.
But my question still stands. Why didn't Research keep going from L/R
and add demand paging? Wouldn't that have been "cleaner" than starting
from BSD?
It's my impression that BSD had done other work that Research didn't want
to duplicate, like autoconfiguration, device support, and so on. Joy got
a lot out of the VAX hardware.
He was a coding machine back then. Quite the legacy.