NetBSD Supports SEGA's Broadband Adapter 83
hubertf writes: "NetBSD now supports the SEGA Broadband (i.e. ethernet) Adapter.
Check out the screendump of someone telnetting into a Dreamcast running NetBSD!" Considering that this adapter only came out a short while ago, this is pretty fast work. Next stop: electric toothbrushes.
It occurs to me... (Score:1)
Re:Jobs for Dreamcasts (Score:1)
Think about it - if they're selling for $99 and you could download an
Re:seems to me.... (Score:2)
And we thought we had a problem when Iraq was buying the Playstation 2s...
ObScreenshots (Score:1)
IP ELF image loader [min.net]
Kernel boot 1 [min.net]
Kernel boot 2 [min.net]
Wish I had more, but I don't have an NFS root for it just yet. (: The console is surprisingly legible for something running on a TV screen, though.
Re:Jobs for Dreamcasts (Score:1)
Also, your Dreamcast must be flaming pile of plastic. My Dreamcast gets too hot too fast.
Re:Jobs for Dreamcasts (Score:1)
My Dreamcast has been on pretty much since I bought it (9-Sep-1999). I wish I could say the same about my PC.
Re:MAME! (Score:2)
http://boob.thegypsy.com/emulators.html
NES, SNES, Gameboy, Genesis/Megadrive, PlayStation, NeoGeo pocket color...
Re:The Dream is not dead! (Score:1)
As far as I know, the Dreamcast (is intended to) only support(s) one adapter, no room for two. Sure, someone will find a way to hack at it, but not for a while.
Ethernet too damn expensive! (Score:1)
I own a Dreamcast, but I'd never pay that much
I bought one of the suckers for this. (Score:4)
I just spent the cash on my Dreamcast (Got it at $149, will get it price-match refunded in a couple weeks, I'm sure) and will be shelling out for the broadband adapter soon. There aren't a lot of Just Because I Can(tm) toys for geeks making $8.50 an hour part-time working the tech support desk at a college.
And there's another rant. Gah! Working for an MCSE in a shop with two mission critical Linux boxen. Fun, usually, to be the only half-clued one, but kinda depressing. :)
Re:MAME! (Score:2)
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saturn + the dreamcast (Score:2)
I wonder... could you do a whole client(saturn)/server(dreamcast) setup entirely of Sega gaming units?
Turn a sega nomad into a networked palm-like device, and you could have Sonic be your IS!
Re:Jobs for Dreamcasts (Score:1)
Re:System Specs (Score:2)
AFAIK, you can't add a hard drive, you burn it to a CD-ROM and NFS mount the root fs.
Funcoland is still around.
I'm constantly surprised that people think it's easier to post a question than do a simple Google search [google.com].
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Re:digital divide (Score:1)
Half-Life? (Score:1)
apache (Score:1)
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dreamcast dying? (Score:1)
Re:Push for Sega to Release SDK to Open Source? (Score:1)
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Re:Dreamcast boot sector (Score:1)
That 'boot sector' your describing, called by most the IP.BIN, resides in the first 16 sectors (32k) of the first data session of the cd does NOT contain any specific information that Sega could consider 'copyrighted' Check here [mc.pp.se] for more information about the 'boot sector'. There IS a checksum of the boot sector, however, but since we know the checksum routine, making our own boot sector is trivially easy. The checksum key is stored in the header itself, so just make that key match your header.
Secondly, the screen dump you should have just read, the one linked in the story, explicitly states that it was uploaded with the IP slave. The IP slave is a program written my Marcus Comstedt (get used to hearing that name a bunch. He should be considered the father of DC development in all of its forms, with heavy contributions from Dan P. and Andrew K. and a few others. You'll also notice Marcus' name as the main readon NetBSD works on the DC at all) that resides on a bootable CD. You turn the DC on, it loads the slave program from disc, and then you then upload the NetBSD binary(s) through the ethernet adaptor. The slave runs the program once the uploaded
In others words, they can easily distribute the NetBSD files if they wish to without stepping on any of Sega's toes.
For those interesting in Dreamcast development, be sure to check out
Marcus' Site [mc.pp.se]
Jules's site [julesdcdev.com]
Dan's site [allusion.net]
For the best information available from people who KNOW, now people who post on Slashdot.
Re:I bought one of the suckers for this. (Score:1)
PCI? Lummie. (Score:5)
maple0 at shb0
Dreamcast Controller at maple0 port 0 not configured
mkbd0 at maple0 port 3: US keyboard
wskbd0 at mkbd0: console keyboard
pvr0 at shb0: 640 x 480, 16bpp, NTSC, composite
wsdisplay0 at pvr0: console (80x30, vt100 emulation), using wskbd0
gdrom0 at shb0
g2bus0 at shb0
gapspci0 at g2bus0: SEGA GAPS PCI Bridge
pci0 at gapspci0 bus 0
pci0: memory space enabled
rtk0 at pci0 dev 0 function 0: SEGA Broadband Adapter
rtk0: interrupting at SH4 irq 11
rtk0: Ethernet address 00:d0:f1:02:ab:30
ukphy0 at rtk0 phy 7: Generic IEEE 802.3u media interface
ukphy0: OUI 0x000000, model 0x0000, rev. 0
ukphy0: 10baseT, 10baseT-FDX, 100baseTX, 100baseTX-FDX, auto
So: The controller, keyboard, console keyboard, the powervr2 accelerator (!), the gdrom thingy, a PCI bridge that I had no idea was in the dreamcast, the PCI bus, finally what looks like a realtek ethernet chip.
Realtek? Shit, they must've been reckoning on cashing in big time here. Ten brownie points for anyone making a 'make yerself a sega broadband connector for only $5' webpage.
Anyway, immense kudos to the NetBSD team (@shagedelic.org ??). If this is for real, I'm well impressed guys.
Dave
digital divide (Score:2)
"Next stop: electric toothbrushes" (Score:2)
Just think of what would happen if some 31337 h4x0r broke into your toothbrush while you were using it to brush your teeth. My guess is that the results would be rather painful.
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Check in...OK! Check out...OK!
Rising to the bait... (Score:3)
get off...
Oh fuck it, I really can't be bothered.
Suffice to say, great work NetBSD camp, you seem to be doing pretty well despite the drivel some
people post in response to any *BSD stories here on Slashdot.
Si
--
"Make them stop, please"
Great one more system to crack rc5 with :) (Score:1)
System Specs (Score:1)
Does anyone know some system specs for it ? CPU mhz, RAM, etc ? Also, how the hell do you get this on there ?! I assume you would need to add a hard drive somewhere in there.
I figured I could pick up a few from FunCo land (Are they still around ? :) or some place like that for less then $99.
until (succeed) try { again(); }
Re:digital divide (Score:1)
Moz.
Re:Firewall? (Score:2)
Packets go into the Dreamcast in TCP/IP, go out in PPPoE. Because nothing else speaks to the DSL modem, you've got a firewall.
Re:NetBSD is dying (Score:1)
It looks like BSD and acts like BSD, maybe it is BSD?
(I'm a MacOS X programmer)
Re:*BSD is dying (Score:1)
Re:Jobs for Dreamcasts (Score:1)
Point of contention. PCs are full of legacy technology, not legacy hardware or designs. The dual PIII system I put together last summer has ISA slots, but they're not ISA components or chips from an AT. Remember, even a new house has a load of legacy technology in it -- flush toilets, running water, central heat are all much older than the ISA slot.
I'd wager that the Dreamcast architecture has the designed reliability of a TV, stereo or any other consumer grade electronics item, including home PCs. That its design features components lacking the ability to integrate with older technology isn't a guarntee of its stability or suitability for anything.
Push for Sega to Release SDK to Open Source? (Score:1)
Re:PCI? Lummie. (Score:1)
I will see about taking a picture with my digital camera. So what would it take to convince anyone?
So, if you want to test boot yours, just for fun, go to the following URL:
NetBSD rocks! [roadsign.com]
Re:Push for Sega to Release SDK to Open Source? (Score:2)
Re:Dreamcast graphics hardware? (Score:1)
Re:Jobs for Dreamcasts (Score:2)
I bet to differ. Legacy technology and legacy design are the same in most instances. Look at the way PCs still handle those interrupts. There's still nothing close to UMA in a PC either. Thus, it is laden with legacy hardware and design as well as technology.
Re:Jobs for Dreamcasts (Score:2)
Actual Screenshots (Score:1)
Re:Push for Sega to Release SDK to Open Source? (Score:1)
Re:NetBSD is dying (Score:1)
And I don't think pptp without patch would work in this emulator (haven't tried it).
¹Not according to Marcus's web pages (Score:1)
That 'boot sector' your describing, called by most the IP.BIN, resides in the first 16 sectors (32k) of the first data session of the cd does NOT contain any specific information that Sega could consider 'copyrighted'
Then what's this [mc.pp.se] by Marcus? (My emphasis.) Or is this old information? (I'm aware of Sega v. Accolade, but that was settled out of court, setting no precedent.)Like Tetris? Like drugs? Ever try combining them? [pineight.com]
Re:"Next stop: electric toothbrushes" (Score:2)
Oh-ho-ho! It you who give good comeback! It him who driven into shame!
Re:Jobs for Dreamcasts (Score:1)
The Dream is not dead! (Score:1)
So the Dreamcast is not dead [slashdot.org] after all. Perhaps it can be made into a Firewall? Run X on your big screen TV? Maybe even to emulate PS2? ;-)
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Re:MAME! (Score:2)
Nonetheless, all those Pac Man / Invaders / Galaga / Q-Bert era games should work a treat, and I really hope someone does the port.
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Re:"Next stop: electric toothbrushes" (Score:1)
H4H4H4H!!!! 1 g07 r007 c4n5l, 5ux0r!!!!!
Jobs for Dreamcasts (Score:4)
Name server. Even with the high possibility of future BIND exploits, who will go to the trouble of creating shellcode for a Dreamcast? "I can't find the mailserver?" ... "Oh, sorry, I was playing games"
Considering that the reliability and durability of these boxes is going to be far better than the average bits of PC hardware, I think they'd be very well suited to be credit card processors. Even if you can't hook up a modem to them directly they could make use of a terminal server and a seperate network segment. In that application the lack of disk will be a plus, "extra security" and all.
The thought of businesses across the nation depending on $99 video game consoles and really cool hacks for their income just appeals, somehow...
seems to me.... (Score:1)
...that it was like yesterday that i had mentioned something to the tune of, once the netbsd port catches up, we need a beowulf of these. maybe its time to try it ;)
as soon as the netbsd port is stable, im considering getting about 10 of these together to try it. hopefully theyll be a bit cheaper by then, not that they arent already ridiculously cheap since they announced the death of them.
.brad
Drink more tea
organicgreenteas.com [organicgreenteas.com]
Re:Jobs for Dreamcasts (Score:1)
I find it hard to believe that the game companies took very much time to make sure there systems had any significant amount of uptime. I mean really if a game locks up I usually decide the box is too hot or something and shut if off for a while. I have also seen bugs in console games. People just need to realize that PC's and game consoles are electronic devices and all prone to the same types of problems. I think the only reason people think that PC's are less stable than game consoles is because they expect more from the pc and run wierder combinations of software.
Figure it out people, if console systems were really more reliable than the pc systems in use today, pc's would be using the console hardware so that they ran better.
Re:NetBSD is dying (Score:1)
(darwin)
Re:"Next stop: electric toothbrushes" (Score:2)
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Re:Push for Sega to Release SDK to Open Source? (Score:1)
Sega heavily subsidises Dreamcast hardware - it makes a loss on each unit sold, the idea being that they then make back that cash selling games for it.
So how would it benefit them to sell Dreamcasts to people who aren't going to buy any games?
Re:digital divide (Score:1)
Dreamcast boot sector (Score:2)
they don't have binaries available for this dreamcast port.
And they won't. The BIOS checks the boot sector against a copy in ROM, and if it isn't bit-for-bit identical, it won't boot the disc. "So just copy the boot sector in the ISO!" Sorry, the Dreamcast boot sector is copyright SEGA.
Like Tetris? Like drugs? Ever try combining them? [pineight.com]
Re:Jobs for Dreamcasts (Score:1)
>technology in it flush toilets, running water,
>central heat are all much older than the ISA slot
Well, this is a non argument. Flush toilets, while older than most anything else, are still the best thing available. The legacy hardware in this comparison would be the outhouse. I don't see many outhouses there days. If toilets were like PCs, each flush toilet would come with an optional lever that just opened a flap on the bottom and dumped your waste into the ground, in case you didn't feel like "flushing". That's legacy hardware.
Legacy hardware is that which is kept to acomodate out of date and outclassed hardware. Old hardware that still does the job better than anything else is just... hmm, pre-modern? Classic? Traditional?
Dreamcast reliability (Score:1)
allready the fan is making more noise then it should. Also I never give more then a year or two on cdroms working reliably. Should hear the poor thing grind away at what some of the games make it do.
NIC drivers are a good step
-Cookie Monster CRUNCH!
Dreamcast graphics hardware? (Score:1)
Re:Jobs for Dreamcasts (Score:1)
Where do we get an ISO image of this? (Score:1)
Re:Ethernet too damn expensive! (Score:1)
Dreamcast Porting (Score:1)
Re:Where do we get an ISO image of this? (Score:1)
Re:NetBSD is dying = disinformation (Score:1)
None of the BSDs are dead. Just because there aren't multi-billion (maybe only multimillion now) dollar *BSD companies, doesn't necessarily mean it's a poor OS or that no one is using it. BSD has taken a different approach, and please don't deem that as an unsuccessful "dead" OS.
Cheers.
It's nice to see... (Score:1)
Re:*BSD is dying (Score:1)
Funny how 3 organisations with no revenue can make a loss.
Except the practical purpose that "NetBSD is being actively supported, runs on almost anything, and this will continue for the forseeable future". Which, TBH, is all that matters. It is a UNIX so most free stuff does run on it and will run on it for the forseeable future.
Re:Jobs for Dreamcasts (Score:1)
Nope. It has a built in modem, and with a homemade serial cable you can hook another up to it. Would make a cheep dial-in pool if you so desiered.
Re:Jobs for Dreamcasts (Score:2)
PCs are filled with legacy hardware. Not saying that this directly causes them to be less stable, as I have no real proof of it, but there's plently of anedoctal evidence to back that up.
Now, your argument "why don't people use game consoles over PCs?" is certainly valid. The answer is that when the PC architecture (ia32, x86, whatever you want to call it- you can be a pendant and argue against any one of those terms) doesn't cut it for a user, they get hardware that's generally considered to be nicer. Like a Sun machine. Or an Alpha.
MP3 Client Anyone? (Score:1)
Now all I'd need is an MP3 client to hook up to my server and my DC would make a very nice jukebox/net appliance combo. I WANT THIS!
Re:NetBSD first? (Score:3)
There's a huge difference between "Do everything right" and "Don't be the first" - Don't believe all of the propoganda that everyone tells you. (OpenBSD is the secure one, FreeBSD is the fast one, and NetBSD is the portable one that's always the last to get new toys) -- heck, NetBSD has _always_ blazed trails!
Re:Jobs for Dreamcasts (Score:2)
MAME! (Score:4)
-jfedor
Re:Rising to the bait... (Score:2)
Sounds like you have issues friend. Thats alot of hostility for one
Re:I bought one of the suckers for this. (Score:2)
Ill trade you my $75k per year:
"mine the widget production data from Oracle and stick it in a pie chart on a webpage"
job anyday for your
"meet interesting people with something to say about the universe" if you'd like.
Re:Push for Sega to Release SDK to Open Source? (Score:1)
Followup, same day. (Score:1)
But, I just spent $30 to make my DC hook in with my cheapo 5.1 surround system, and my VGA monitor. Then I got Phantasy Star Online.
As much as I expect to have great fun playing around with new ideas and new uses for the Dreamcast hardware in the next year or so... It's going to be awfully damn hard to tear me away from what ten minutes of wandering has already shown to be one of the best MMORPGish experiences ever released. This game IS the perfect example that Sega does games best.
As to the critic telling me to study... Hey, I got a 3.97 last semester, get off my back. :)
Re:It's nice to see... (Score:1)
-motardo
Re:NO MORE LIES (Score:1)
Re:Dreamcast Porting (Score:1)
See http://www.netbsd.org/packages/
- Hubert
woohoo! (Score:1)
Sure, Sega wants to abandon it, but I'm sure plenty of geeks would kill to develop for Dreamcast BSD. Especially at the price :)
Re:NetBSD is dying (Score:2)
OpenBSD leader Theo states that there are 7000 users of OpenBSD. How many users of NetBSD are there? Let's see. The number of OpenBSD versus NetBSD posts on Usenet is roughly in ratio of 5 to 1. Therefore there are about 7000/5 = 1400 NetBSD users. BSD/OS posts on Usenet are about half of the volume of NetBSD posts. Therefore there are about 700 users of BSD/OS. A recent article put FreeBSD at about 80 percent of the BSD market. Therefore there are (7000+1400+700)*4 = 36400 FreeBSD users. This is consistent with the number of FreeBSD Usenet posts. Due to the troubles of Walnut Creek, abysmal sales and so on, FreeBSD went out of business and was taken over by BSDI who sell another troubled OS. Major marketing surveys show that BSD has steadily declined in market share. BSD is very sick and its long term survival prospects are very dim. If BSD is to survive at all it will be among OS hobbyists (i.e. those who dabble with Minix, Xinu, etc). *BSD continue to falter. Nothing short of a miracle could save it at this point in time. For all practical purposes, NetBSD is dead.
I love you for the way you warm up each and every BSD thread. We can always count on you, no matter what else comes along. Keep up the good work.
Cheers.
Even more reason to buy a DC (Score:1)
Please... (Score:1)