Date: Tue, 26 Mar 1996 14:09:25 -0700 (MST) From: Don Yuniskis <dgy@rtd.com> To: mikebo@tellabs.com Cc: freebsd-hackers@freefall.FreeBSD.org (FreeBSD hackers) Subject: Re: OSF Micro Kernel for Linux/FreeBSD/etc Message-ID: <199603262109.OAA13438@seagull.rtd.com> In-Reply-To: <199603261648.KAA25149@sunc210.tellabs.com> from "mikebo@tellabs.com" at Mar 26, 96 10:48:43 am
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> FreeBSD hackers - > I received a copy of this from a friend who does a lot of PowerPC work. > Since I've seen nothing about this on the FreeBSD lists as yet, I thought > some of you might like to know about this new frontier. The article > mentions FreeBSD, but perhaps the discussion is more germane to NetBSD. Mklinux has already seen it's second release. I gather the "port" is far from complete. It also seems to be suffering from some holes in the installation documentation... ;-) I think most of the work to date has been coordinated out of OSF Grenoble. > Is the FreeBSD core team open to the idea of possibly moving to a Mach > 3.0 micro-kernel, or is there significant sentimental attachment to > the traditional, monolithic BSD kernel? Um, speaking *mostly* from ignorance but I think Mklinux is implemented as a single-server atop Mach. So, in that sense, it's still a monolithic kernel (albeit residing atop a microkernel). I don't think they've really gone too far afield and tried for a multi-server... Can someone shed any more light on this? > Unrelated shot-in-the-dark question: Does ANY version of Linux > incorporate the FreeBSD or 4.4BSD Lite TCP/IP networking code? > - Mike
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