I have been using Inferno for a while and wrote it originally to use legacy services from within Inferno. So most (not to say all) testing have been done using Inferno so far.
I have just set up Plan9 under Xen and got everything (including network) up and running. I will focus on Plan9 for further development, but have to make myself familiar with it first. But I am sure, that it will work with Plan9 without problems. I am also confident that the J9P server will also work with other 9fs clients like v9fs - but that needs checking as well. If you give it a try, can you please file a "field report", so I can include it in the documentation? Regards, Bernd. David Leimbach schrieb: > Very cool. Can I mount it with v9fs? :-) > I may actually have a use for such a thing very soon, oddly enough. > > Dave > > On Wed, Apr 1, 2009 at 4:43 AM, Bernd R. Fix <bernd....@aspector.com> wrote: > >> Hi, >> >> I just want to announce that a new 9P-related framework has been >> published (pre-alpha status, PoC). You find the current project >> documentation on the project homepage "http://aspector.com/~brf/J9P"; >> the published packages are available on SourceForge: >> "https://sourceforge.net/projects/j9pstyxlib/". >> >> J9P is a pure Java implementation of the 9P(2000) protocol including >> authentication and message digests/encryption. It comes with a generic >> 9P server that publishes namespaces that are assembled from Java >> objects. File operations in the namespace are mapped to Java method >> calls; the called object handles the operation accordingly. This way it >> is quite easy to integrate non-9P services (like SQL databases) into 9P >> networks. >> >> Have fun, Bernd. >> -- >> gpg fp: F722 2826 40C2 B3C4 E136 6DE5 1DC0 7A20 513B C8F4 >> >> > -- gpg fp: F722 2826 40C2 B3C4 E136 6DE5 1DC0 7A20 513B C8F4