BSD 4.3 Minimal system?
Ken Seefried iii
ken at capone.gatech.edu
Sun Jul 23 11:34:05 AEST 1989
In article <4036 at udccvax1.acs.udel.EDU> gdtltr at vax1.acs.udel.EDU (Gary D Duzan) writes:
>
> What exactly are the minimal requirements for a BSD 4.3 system? Does it
>need a 32 bit machine? What assumptions does it make about the C compiler
>compiling it? I am not worried about what makes a good or useful BSD system,
>just what is necessary to get it running. Thanx.
>
Hmmm...depends on your criteria of minimal. Cost? Chip count?
Memory? Disk? Speed? I/O? MMU sophistication?
If you have a good enough team, you can port it to most anything.
For example, most of the functionality of 4.3 has been replicated in
BSD 2.{8,9,10}, which runs on the later DEC PDP-11 machines. The
PDP-11 is a 16-bit machine with a very primative memory management
scheme (it's still one of the nicer architectures around).
A very sharp team at Rice has ported the bulk of 4.3 to the acursed
Intel 80286, a 16-bit machine with a a perverse memory management
scheme (N.B. lets not wage another war over the 286, its been done far
to many times here. Save it for alt.computers.religion, which i
mercifully don't get. Also, don't e-mail me concerning the Rice 4.3
port).
More than 32-bits is not a problem either, as evidenced by the several
ports to 64-bit 'super-{micro,mini}'.
...ken seefried iii
ken at gatech.edu
ken seefried iii ...!{akgua, allegra, amd, harpo, hplabs,
ken at gatech.edu masscomp, rlgvax, sb1, uf-cgrl, unmvax,
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