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BSD Operating Systems Hardware

NetBSD Ported to Motorola MVME PowerPC Boards 18

hubertf writes: "NetBSD/mvmeppc is a new port of NetBSD to the Motorola MVME PowerPC Single Board Computers. This was made possible through a donation by Gan Starling of two (plus one loaner) MVME160x boards so that a porting effort could be made. Due to NetBSD's highly portable architecture, the operating system was up and running multi-user after just two weeks worth of part-time effort. A NetBSD/mvmeppc specific mailing list has been set up for people to discuss any issues with running NetBSD on their MVME PowerPC boards, and a snapshot of NetBSD/mvmeppc is also available for anyone wishing to experiment with the new port. Steve Woodford is the NetBSD/mvmeppc port maintainer."
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NetBSD Ported to Motorola MVME PowerPC Boards

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  • Maybe I am just being a troll, but why put in the effort to port BSD to PPC when Apple has provided a perfectically good (yes i know not free) distro to the PPC already, with optimizations. It seems to me that alot of work in the open source community is wasted in redundant projects. Stig.
    • Re:Why? (Score:3, Informative)

      by T-Punkt ( 90023 )
      Well, you are a troll...

      Or you simple don't understand the article.

      Apple may provide a "perfectically good (yes i know not free) distro to the PPC" (I guess you mean Mac OS X) - but only for (not that old) Apple computers It won't run on anything else. And it probably will never.

      And honestly, Mac OS X is neither targeted nor suited for the kind of application this Motorola MVME PowerPC single board computer is designed for...
      • Well, you are a troll...

        Or you simple don't understand the article.

        Apple may provide a "perfectically good (yes i know not free) distro to the PPC" (I guess you mean Mac OS X) - but only for (not that old) Apple computers It won't run on anything else. And it probably will never.

        And honestly, Mac OS X is neither targeted nor suited for the kind of application this Motorola MVME PowerPC single board computer is designed for..

        I assume he means Apple Darwin [apple.com], not Mac OS X.

        Whether Darwin can or should be ported to this hardware, I don't know. Perhaps someone who knows more about the advantages and disadvantages of the Darwin/Mach microkernel architecture, compared to the monolithic NetBSD kernel for this hardware's intended use can say more.

        • Ermm, but "not free" and Darwin doesn't match IMHO so he must have ment Mac OS X.

        • Re:Why? (Score:2, Informative)

          by Listen Up ( 107011 )

          Okay, whoever modded you up to +3 doesn't know his ass from a hole in the ground. Apple makes a BSD based distribution called "Darwin" and it IS completely FREE. Porting this OS would make a helluva lot more sense than porting NetBSD to this platform. The only reason to do it with NetBSD would be to waste redundant effort making NetBSD work on yet another platform instead of taking excellent, existing technology and making that work instead.
          But, then I guess there is Linux, QNX, Windows, Solaris, etc. for Intel, so whatever, right?
    • Well, NetBSD already has PPC ports, and they're usually one of the first to port to a new and different platform.

      Linux does the same.. Isn't the philosophy the more the merrier (and more parallel evolution)?

      After all, OSX absorbed a lot of NetBSD (besides FreeBSD) code into it initially because of NetBSD's previous efforts on the PPC. Same idea here.

      Besides, I see very little reason for anybody to port the more complex Darwin to this new platform because of all the optimizations done for the not-quite-fully-compatible Apple platform.
    • Yeah, you do sound like a troll. You've got your timeline backwards... why did Apple make the effort to port BSD to PPC when NetBSD had provided a perfectly good (and free) distro to the PPC already? The first NetBSD release for Power Macintosh was in May 1999 [netbsd.org]. MacOS X came about two years later, March 2001 [apple.com]. (Well, okay... MacOS X Server was released in March 1999 [apple.com], but that's just barely earlier than NetBSD. Both were in development at the same time...)

      And like other posters have mentioned, the MVME boards are nothing like a PowerMac. MacOS X isn't going to run on 'em anyways.

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