iBCS

2001-03-13 Thread lars . johansson
Hello!
I'm trying to compile iBCS for kernel v2.2.18 on a sparc32.
My aim is to get SunOS/Solaris emulation to work. 
As I understand, the built in emulation only works on sparc64.
(I tried, but it get segfaults. I have the SunOS/Solaris binaries)
My problem is; iBCS build scripts doesn't seem to do verry much. They
definitely does not install any modules anywhere.
I have supplied the kernel source tree, with a just used configuration
(the kernel works allright). 
My questions are; does it requier extra magic?
Should the SunOS binary emulation option be on or off when compileing
the kernel? (I had it on)

Thanx!

/Lars Johansson

-- 
Lars M. Johansson +44 (0)7880 633134 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

The UNIX system has a command, nice, which allows a user to voluntarily
 reduce the priority of his process, in order to be nice to other users.
 Nobody ever uses it
   A. S. Tanenbaum, Modern Operating Systems



Re: Solaris binaries under Linux

2001-02-26 Thread lars . johansson
On Sat, Feb 24, 2001 at 09:43:05AM +1000, Q89029292 wrote:
 You have installed the solaris libraries under /usr/gnemul/solaris/ ?
 At least thats where I think they are supposed to go.
 Personally I use Sunos emulation if I can.

OK, Sunos and Solaris are not really compatible, are they?
Does anyone have the Solaris libraries for me to download, i only have
access to Sunos?

/Lars

-- 
Lars M. Johansson +44 (0)7880 633134 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

The UNIX system has a command, nice, which allows a user to voluntarily
 reduce the priority of his process, in order to be nice to other users.
 Nobody ever uses it
   A. S. Tanenbaum, Modern Operating Systems



Solaris binaries under Linux

2001-02-21 Thread lars . johansson
Hi everyone!

I have been trying to get Solaris binaries to run on my SPARCclassic under
Debian Linux.
I have recompiled the kernel (2.2.18pre21) with built in support fot this.
But how do I run them? My shell just tells me there is no such file or
directory when i try to run them from a command line!

Regards, Lars Johansson

-- 
Lars M. Johansson +44 (0)7880 633134 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

The UNIX system has a command, nice, which allows a user to voluntarily
 reduce the priority of his process, in order to be nice to other users.
 Nobody ever uses it
   A. S. Tanenbaum, Modern Operating Systems