FreeBSD Support for AMD64 On the Way 22
BSD Forums writes "FreeBSD operating system is making progress towards support for several 64bit platforms. FreeBSD 5.0 introduced SPARC64 and IA64 (Itanium) to its list of platforms and AMD64 is likely to be added in version 5.2."
Re:Whoa (Score:2)
I don't think either of the Itanium users care much about FreeBSD...
correction (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:correction (Score:2)
Re:correction (Score:2)
I believe Mac OS X borrows from NetBSD's userland programs, not FreeBSD. Ironically, Mac OS X borrows from FreeBSD code for the Mach kernel's BSD "server".
Re:correction (Score:3, Interesting)
Darwin (the underpinnings of MacOS X) is based on a Mach MicroKernel kinda semi-bound to a BSD "server" in kernel space. Mach handles the low level hardware, the BSD server handles the other normal interactions you'd expect from a Unix.
The BSD server is actually ahybrid. From what I remember, they started off as more NetBSDish, then got more and more FreeBSDish. They seem to be tracking FreeBSD more and more
Re:correction correction (Score:2, Interesting)
Darwin is a monolithic kernel where BSD is wedded to the Mach services (bound, not semi-bound). Cocoa and Carbon are purely user-space entities. Classic does have some support in the kernel but it is _not_ a server in the Mach sense, and it is also mostly a user-space thing.
From following the Darwin mailing lists, you seem quite correct regarding the BSD lineage. Early MacOS X builds had more of a NetBSD lineage and that shifted t
Re:correction (Score:2)
And when BSD gets it... (Score:2)
NetBSD is already there; FreeBSD won't take long (Score:3, Informative)