On Fri, Jan 25, 2002 at 03:27:25AM -0700, M. Warner Losh wrote:
Real as in 286 or as in 8088 :-).
Yup, otherwise you start mucking around with the protected mode
shuffle to 32 bits and I have been burnt by that before. The ix86
chips are startup from cold in 16bit mode so it makes life easier.
I've love to have a v7 port to my
DEC Rainbow 100, which isn't too IBM-PC-like other than the fact that
both have an 8088. There was a 8088 port of V7 (or maybe it was v6)
to the Rainbow marketed under the name of venix, but no one seems to
be able to find a distribution anymore.
Oooh that would be so usefull and save so much mucking around.
gcc can compile K&R, but the language has evolved
some since the v7
days. =*, =+, etc became *=, +=, etc. There are some other subtle
things too that I don't recall off the top of my head, but which vexed
the comp.lang.c news groups in the early 1980's.
That makes things a challenge. Still the source of the kernel is
around 10K lines IIRC and going through it in stages doesnt make life
too painfull.
I must be mad thinking about this again....
paul