Warner's Random Hacking Blog

A Diary of Warner's Hacking Projects and other random thoughts

20200803

Missing 2.11BSD patches

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2.11BSD Missing Patches While looking into some date anomalies in the final image (since I'd like to get the dates right) I discovered a...
20200727

When Unix learned to reboot(2).

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History of Reboot(2) Recently, a friend asked me the history of halt, and when did we have to stop with the sync / sync / sync dance before ...
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20200724

First screen shot of 2.11BSD as released

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My automation produced this today... which is the first time something close to a 2.11BSD, unmodified, has booted in 30 years... Alas, it...
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About Me

Warner Losh
Warner Losh has been interested in computers since a very early age. He got his degree from a small school in the middle of New Mexico where he used 4.2BSD on the VAX 11/750. He's done a little GUI work, and a lot of kernel work in BSD, Solaris and even Linux. He became interested in the MIPS architecture when he was given a Deskstation rPC44 in 1994 and has wanted a FreeBSD MIPS port ever since then. In the mean time, he's amused himself and his employers by writing or improving FreeBSD's PC Card, CardBus, USB, SD/MMC, PCI and device configuration subsystems. He's embedded FreeBSD into products for the past 9 years. He serves on the FreeBSD core team and has specialized in handling "problem children" in the FreeBSD project and sorting out the complexity of open source software licensing. In the past 8 years, he's worked in the high precision time and frequency domain. He delivered systems that are used to montior the cesium clocks at NIST and USNO; used to recover UTC from GPS satellites; and used to synchronize digital video broadcasting stations. These systems were a mix of C++ user level code, kernel device drivers and specialized "timing" hardware.
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