Depending on the implementation of the file system, openat vs open can be more efficient if there’s a lot of metadata locking for file creation.Sent from my iPhoneOn Apr 6, 2024, at 1:36 PM, ron minnich wrote:openat gives you the effect of 'cd path; open file' without having to cd. I don't see a
Or you could just run 9front?Sent from my iPhoneOn Jan 24, 2024, at 10:48 AM, alex...@posteo.de wrote:
Hello everyone,I would like to know which hardware (apart from the hardware listed here: https://plan9.io/wiki/plan9/Supported_PC_hardware/index.html) is supported by Plan 9. Is there any
I use a big heavy trackball. Kensington pro trackball is pricey but you get
four buttons and a scroll ring.
Got my first one well over 10 years ago and it’s still my daily driver. I have
a second wireless one on a Mac. The wired one is better overall if you can get
them. The wireless one can
> On Jan 29, 2022, at 8:03 AM, ibrahim via 9fans <9fans@9fans.net> wrote:
>
> And I believe that the reason why NetBSD, OpenBSD, FreeBSD are not as wide
> spread as Linux was the lack of a compiler suite conforming to the BSD license
For some people it’s because they didn’t have a math
Sent from my iPad
> On Aug 26, 2021, at 12:01 PM, fwrm via 9fans <9fans@9fans.net> wrote:
>
>
>> On Wednesday, 25 August 2021, at 9:31 PM, David Leimbach wrote:
>> Try in the tagline
>> Edit ,|fold -s -w80
>> Highlight it and middle click it.
>
Try in the tagline
Edit ,|fold -s -w80
Highlight it and middle click it.
Sent from my iPad
> On Aug 25, 2021, at 8:20 AM, revcomni...@gmail.com wrote:
>
>
> I would like to be able to break up long lines in sam in a way similar to the
> way I break them up in ed. For ed, I rely on the
No problem!
It seems acme does work ok, but it uses XQuartz.
It’s been so long since I’ve used inferno I’ve forgotten how to get started!
Dave
> On Jul 30, 2021, at 12:39 PM, Joseph Stewart wrote:
>
> Good job friend. Thanks for doing this.
>
> On Fri, Jul 30, 2021 at 9:26 AM leimy2k via
Yup
Sent from my iPhone
On Mar 23, 2013, at 12:17 PM, Rob Pike robp...@gmail.com wrote:
It's pointless to complain about the size of hello world. It's not a
real program. In Go's case it's larger than a C binary because the
libraries (and the presence of a runtime) are capable of much more
Where? How?
Sent from my iPhone
On Mar 2, 2013, at 10:23 AM, erik quanstrom quans...@quanstro.net wrote:
this is your monthly iwp9 spam!
it's not too early to register. i'll try to get
a special iwp9 rate this week.
- erik
I'd have called it Plan A.
On Wed, Feb 27, 2013 at 1:36 PM, hiro 23h...@gmail.com wrote:
http://plan10.tumblr.com/
There is/was a Plan B. Some of the ideas went into Octopus I think...
On Wed, Feb 27, 2013 at 1:45 PM, Devon H. O'Dell devon.od...@gmail.comwrote:
2013/2/27 David Leimbach leim...@gmail.com:
I'd have called it Plan A.
[Insert horrific Plan B joke here.]
On Wed, Feb 27, 2013 at 1:36 PM
Sent from my iPhone
On Feb 21, 2013, at 6:16 AM, Charles Forsyth charles.fors...@gmail.com wrote:
On 21 February 2013 12:54, hiro 23h...@gmail.com wrote:
they say it's pretty deterministic. good read from wikipedia.
I was disappointed to discover that ARCNET did not, in fact, send
Can I run it on my iPhone?
Sent from my iPhone
On Feb 21, 2013, at 11:58 AM, andrey mirtchovski mirtchov...@gmail.com wrote:
good day. is this the p9p on osx help forum?
Very cool!
On Fri, Feb 8, 2013 at 7:54 AM, Yaroslav yari...@gmail.com wrote:
/n/sources/contrib/yk/rdesktop
It supports RGB16 server output only and doesn't implement graphic orders
beyond bitmap update. Tested against XP and servers 2003, 2008, 2012.
--
- Yaroslav Kolomiyets
http://fiorentinix.altervista.org/ajbev3.php
This is not from me. I just received a bunch of mail from myself on a few
email accounts at about this time.
Sent from my iPhone
On Jan 15, 2013, at 4:17 AM, David Leimbach leim...@gmail.com wrote:
http://fiorentinix.altervista.org/ajbev3.php
It just occurred to me this could be the backup software I use on my Mac that
runs overnight Its java based client may have done some bad things
Sent from my iPhone
On Jan 15, 2013, at 4:17 AM, David Leimbach leim...@gmail.com wrote:
http://fiorentinix.altervista.org/ajbev3.php
Sent from my iPhone
On Jan 15, 2013, at 6:17 AM, ron minnich rminn...@gmail.com wrote:
On Tue, Jan 15, 2013 at 4:17 AM, David Leimbach leim...@gmail.com wrote:
http://fiorentinix.altervista.org/ajbev3.php
so, what is that place?
ron
No idea
I think you guys should keep doing what you do. Different people have
different reasons and motivations for what they do. These do not always line
up well to form a totally free-from-fragmentation community. That we all still
share 9fans is a good way to keep up with the different efforts
It's the dual of a nap, which probably means to be awake.
On Tue, Nov 27, 2012 at 8:09 PM, Matthew Veety mve...@gmail.com wrote:
On Wed, 28 Nov 2012, cinap_len...@gmx.de wrote:
ken has left the building
--
conap
Who is this conap, and what have you done with cinap?
--
Veety
Haskell
On Tue, Nov 27, 2012 at 9:09 AM, Eugene Gorodinsky
e.gorodin...@gmail.comwrote:
Yay! A C++ vs the world flamewar! Again.
Let me just point out that writing a game engine consists of a little bit
more than just calls to opengl. Game engine programmers tend to embed
scripting
On Nov 23, 2012 6:03 AM, lu...@proxima.alt.za wrote:
Are operating systems written in C for it's technical merits or because
it is industry standard practice?
Neither: pragmatism. The language and Unix grew up together, teaching
each other many tricks.
++L
And they are not all written
On Nov 22, 2012 8:31 AM, lu...@proxima.alt.za wrote:
it's an Xbox game. and yes, you
need it ;)
Xbox-360? Surely it runs IBM code?
Yes. IBM power pc
:-)
++L
On Mon, Nov 19, 2012 at 7:10 AM, Kurt H Maier kh...@intma.in wrote:
On Mon, Nov 19, 2012 at 09:56:33AM -0500, Calvin Morrison wrote:
On 19 November 2012 04:59, Steve Simon st...@quintile.net wrote:
Isn't all C code valid C++? problem solved.
As of c99, they have diverged.
They weren't
On Mon, Oct 29, 2012 at 4:07 PM, erik quanstrom quans...@quanstro.netwrote:
On Mon Oct 29 19:06:41 EDT 2012, ba...@bitblocks.com wrote:
On Mon, 29 Oct 2012 22:47:02 - Charles Forsyth
charles.fors...@gmail.com wrote:
He can fool it once, but can he fool it twice? Can he recompile?
Big Damn HP monitor (ZR30w)
Screen 0: minimum 320 x 200, current 2560 x 1600, maximum 8192 x 8192
VGA1 disconnected (normal left inverted right x axis y axis)
Identifier: 0x41
Timestamp: 19460
Subpixel: unknown
Clones:
CRTCs: 0 1
Transform: 1.00 0.00 0.00
0.00
Sorry to hear this.
On Sunday, October 14, 2012, Benjamin Huntsman wrote:
I'll second that. Made for many an interesting conversation!
RIP
-Ben
From: 9fans-boun...@9fans.net javascript:;
[9fans-boun...@9fans.netjavascript:;]
on behalf of Devon
On Tuesday, August 28, 2012, wrote:
this machine works now in mp mode (after 4 years) with
9front's acpi implementation.
http://9fans.net/archive/2008/02/671
--
cinap
Nice!
On Thu, Jul 26, 2012 at 7:10 AM, erik quanstrom quans...@quanstro.netwrote:
On Thu Jul 26 08:41:56 EDT 2012, 9f...@hamnavoe.com wrote:
And reserve same amount in $5K to have 140 ethernet ports switch ;)
No need for ethernet - just link boards in a mesh using gpio pins.
And yes, I am
On Thu, Jul 26, 2012 at 8:16 AM, andrey mirtchovski
mirtchov...@gmail.comwrote:
I liked it for the same reason I
liked those Cell processors - I'm weird.
a lot of people really hated it because it killed alpha...
Yes that was very sad. I liked Alpha too, but business reasons caused it
On Thu, Jul 26, 2012 at 10:57 AM, tlaro...@polynum.com wrote:
On Thu, Jul 26, 2012 at 01:04:57PM -0400, erik quanstrom wrote:
On Thu Jul 26 11:18:04 EDT 2012, mirtchov...@gmail.com wrote:
I liked it for the same reason I
liked those Cell processors - I'm weird.
a lot of people
On Tue, Jul 24, 2012 at 11:01 PM, Andy Elvey andy.el...@paradise.net.nzwrote:
On 25/07/12 16:06, John Floren wrote:
(snip)
Just write the code, nobody cares. The manual pages define an interface,
and you're going to implement it. The manual pages are copyrighted, sure,
because they're
On Tuesday, June 12, 2012, Lluís Batlle i Rossell wrote:
On Tue, Jun 12, 2012 at 01:12:55AM -0400, Kurt H Maier wrote:
Evaluations of the Sheevaplug in particular revealed it tended to
overheat badly if you put any significant load on the networking
components. Heating problems combined
On Friday, June 8, 2012, erik quanstrom wrote:
In fact, the people who will eat the lunch of these people wrangling
unstructured data, are the ones that figure out how to structure the data
in a way that it's not a problem anymore.
i don't know what you're saying here.
And that is
On Fri, Jun 8, 2012 at 6:58 AM, erik quanstrom quans...@quanstro.netwrote:
I see your point, I guess I can accept that. I still object to the idea
of a whole other suite of programs just to run within the editor, but I
guess it's immaterial whether the window system is part of the editor
On Friday, June 8, 2012, Gorka Guardiola wrote:
Yes, which makes one wonder about type systems in programming languages
and
if they're any better than documented conventions of I/O. (i think they
may
not be, but they serve some documentation purposes all their own)
I think type
Parts of the side. But the ship has a freaking rail gun!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zumwalt_class_destroyer
On Mon, Jun 4, 2012 at 9:37 AM, Matthew Veety mve...@gmail.com wrote:
On Jun 4, 2012, at 12:31 PM, cinap_len...@gmx.de wrote:
then the front falls off.
--
cinap
And
On Wed, May 30, 2012 at 2:24 PM, Charles Forsyth
charles.fors...@gmail.comwrote:
The curious Z spelling was to avoid using a trademarked word in a generic
sense.
But I believe Xerox lost that ability, as their name became a verb in the
common vernacular. At least I believe I heard that in a
On Thu, May 31, 2012 at 7:50 AM, andrey mirtchovski
mirtchov...@gmail.comwrote:
Xerox seems to have missed losing their trademark [1]. There's a
lawsuit filed about Google's trademarked name in arizona [2]. A list
of genericized trademarks is available at [3].
Ahh, litigation...
Ah well,
On Fri, May 11, 2012 at 4:26 AM, Stephen Wiley swwi...@gmail.com wrote:
On May 10, 2012, at 7:30 PM, ge...@plan9.bell-labs.com wrote:
New PC bootstraps and manual pages will be arriving
on sources soon. Highlights include amd64 booting,
using kernel device drivers, better CD booting,
Fantastic!
On Tuesday, May 1, 2012, wrote:
After you pull, you should see a new directory,
/sys/src/9/teg2. From the _announce file:
This is a preliminary Plan 9 port to the Compulab Trimslice,
containing a Tegra 2 SoC: a dual-core, (truly) dual-issue 1GHz
Cortex-A9 v7a-architecture ARM
This is truly excellent.
Now to get Python to work out of the box on Plan 9.
Dave
On Fri, Apr 27, 2012 at 8:04 AM, Steven Stallion sstall...@gmail.comwrote:
All,
I'm happy to report that the official Mecurial port is complete and
has been accepted upstream. Starting with version 2.2,
On Monday, April 23, 2012, Richard Miller 9f...@hamnavoe.com wrote:
I haven't tried genning up a CPU kernel with the new factotum yet.
Sorry, I meant to say with Richard's patched original factotum.
Patching no longer necessary - it's now in the standard auth/factotum
on sources.
Awesome!
On Saturday, April 14, 2012, Nemo wrote:
Hi,
just FYI,
http://lsub.org/ls/nix.html
has links and pointers for anyone to get the
distribution and updates and/or send changes.
hth
On Tuesday, April 3, 2012, Lucio De Re wrote:
I have fixed various bugs in ssh2; they'll be in the ssh2
on sources once it's all shaken down.
Wow!
++L
Makes me want fire my guru plug back up
Anyone doing this? I've had a crazy, no ZANY, notion of running ESX as my
host OS, then spinning up all the various windows, freebsd, or Plan 9's
that I need as necessary on my work workstation.
Dave
On Tue, Mar 20, 2012 at 7:19 AM, Richard Miller 9f...@hamnavoe.com wrote:
My delivery note says May
You're lucky. I'm on the waiting list to be allowed onto
the pre-order queue.
Luxury! There were four of us living in a brown paper bag in a septic
tank...
(sorry couldn't resist)
On Thu, Feb 23, 2012 at 4:49 PM, Jack Johnson knapj...@gmail.com wrote:
On Thu, Feb 23, 2012 at 3:43 PM, erik quanstrom
quans...@labs.coraid.com wrote:
pfft. we've always had find. we've just called it du.
It's funny, since I learned how to do that via 9fans, I still do it
that way on
+1
On Mon, Jan 2, 2012 at 5:41 PM, John Floren j...@jfloren.net wrote:
Voting Thierry for #1 poster of 2012 [so far]
Looking forward to trying the new release!
John
On Sun, Jan 1, 2012 at 3:02 PM, tlaro...@polynum.com wrote:
Hello,
A supplementary note for Plan9 users before
I think this is the reference implementation for r7rs as well isn't it?
On Thu, Dec 1, 2011 at 12:24 PM, Bakul Shah ba...@bitblocks.com wrote:
Alex Shinn's Chibi-scheme is a r7rs small language
compatible Scheme. It can be used standalone for scripting or
as a library to provide an extension
Pretty cool!
On Tue, Nov 15, 2011 at 1:10 PM, Anthony Martin al...@pbrane.org wrote:
Attached is a modified version of p9p yacc that
supports the Go grammar. I'll be sending a
version of Plan 9 yacc later today.
The following is a description of the changes.
1. The %error-verbose
Ucontext stuff was being deprecated in Leopard was my understanding and that
support for it would be shoddy.
Time to roll our own? Didn't you already do this?
Thanks also to David!
Sent from my iPhone
On Sep 26, 2011, at 9:34 AM, Russ Cox r...@swtch.com wrote:
Thanks to heroic effort by
On Thu, Sep 15, 2011 at 11:21 AM, Jack Norton j...@0x6a.com wrote:
Christoph Lohmann wrote:
Hello,
now that an academic non-polished Plan 9 remake with idiotic
dependencies and the fun OS, which has its only goal to add
political jokes, are taking all the pace, I hereby declare,
that Plan
On Wed, Sep 14, 2011 at 10:23 AM, andrey mirtchovski
mirtchov...@gmail.comwrote:
add:
[ $SYSNAME != Darwin ] || ranlib $2
to the bottom of $PLAN9/bin/9ar
then cd src/cmd/devdraw mk cocoa cp cocoa $PLAN9/bin/devdraw
now you're as far as I got :) i'm trying to figure out why 'colors'
Great set of ideas here!
On Wed, Sep 14, 2011 at 8:41 AM, ron minnich rminn...@gmail.com wrote:
We'd like to announce the availability of NIX, a 64-bit Plan 9 kernel
with some new ideas. The full set of changes will be covered at IWP9.
For now, here are some highlights.
- 2 MB PTEs. 4096
On Wed, Sep 14, 2011 at 10:31 AM, ron minnich rminn...@gmail.com wrote:
On Wed, Sep 14, 2011 at 10:28 AM, David Leimbach leim...@gmail.com
wrote:
On Wed, Sep 14, 2011 at 10:23 AM, andrey mirtchovski
mirtchov...@gmail.com
wrote:
add:
[ $SYSNAME != Darwin ] || ranlib $2
On Wed, Sep 14, 2011 at 2:10 PM, ron minnich rminn...@gmail.com wrote:
On Wed, Sep 14, 2011 at 12:22 PM, Bakul Shah ba...@bitblocks.com wrote:
So you use both 2MB and 1GB PTEs?
Yes. nemo had some extremely clever ideas and hence we can use them
(but not in the same segment).
Tubes in
Thanks for all of your work on this!
On Tue, Sep 13, 2011 at 8:59 AM, david jeannot djeanno...@gmail.com wrote:
So I will send my code in the next few days,
unless there is a need.
I'm 9 days late, but here it is: the Cocoa version
of Devdraw. I just submitted it to Codereview:
On Thu, Sep 8, 2011 at 1:51 AM, hiro 23h...@googlemail.com wrote:
HTTP is technically different and not easily comparable to 9p. HTTP is
not a good example of how to do things, but over high-latency links 9p
is much slower for getting files.
HTTP tries to be stateless as well. Hence REST.
On Thu, Sep 8, 2011 at 6:04 AM, dexen deVries dexen.devr...@gmail.comwrote:
On Thursday 08 of September 2011 14:54:40 erik quanstrom wrote:
On Thu Sep 8 04:52:08 EDT 2011, 23h...@googlemail.com wrote:
HTTP is technically different and not easily comparable to 9p. HTTP is
not a good
On Thu, Sep 8, 2011 at 9:59 AM, ron minnich rminn...@gmail.com wrote:
On Thu, Sep 8, 2011 at 9:56 AM, John Floren j...@jfloren.net wrote:
I do not think it is acceptable to have to fork repeatedly merely to
efficiently read a file. Also, as far as I can tell, exactly one
program (fcp)
YES! This is great.
On Tue, Sep 6, 2011 at 7:16 AM, Russ Cox r...@swtch.com wrote:
David's new Cocoa devdraw is in the plan9port tree now,
but not built by default. There are still some rough
edges to work out. If you want to play and maybe
find and fix bugs, you can use
cd
It built ok here, but sam, and acme aren't doing anything terribly
interesting (well maybe it is interesting, but they're crashing, presumably
logging something to somewhere interesting).
I'll keep poking when I'm not at work later.
Dave
On Tue, Sep 6, 2011 at 9:26 AM, Jeff Sickel
You have to then rebuild everything.
On Tue, Sep 6, 2011 at 11:34 AM, Latchesar Ionkov lu...@ionkov.net wrote:
I get the same errors.
Thanks,
Lucho
On Tue, Sep 6, 2011 at 10:25 AM, Aram Hăvărneanu ara...@mgk.ro wrote:
Try adding
# HA HA HA. Apple broke things again.
[ $SYSNAME
I'm using 4.1 currently, will try updating. Everything builds fine, but
some stuff doesn't run.
On Tue, Sep 6, 2011 at 12:37 PM, Russ Cox r...@swtch.com wrote:
I am using Xcode 4.2 on Lion without problems.
Can you try updating to the newer Xcode?
Russ
4.1 is the latest release of Xcode by the way. 4.2 is for Apple devs who
pay (according to the site anyway).
Dave
On Tue, Sep 6, 2011 at 12:41 PM, David Leimbach leim...@gmail.com wrote:
I'm using 4.1 currently, will try updating. Everything builds fine, but
some stuff doesn't run
On Thu, Aug 25, 2011 at 11:33 AM, david jeannot djeanno...@gmail.comwrote:
It is possible that we just need to tweak the
headers to get Carbon to build again, but Cocoa is
obviously the right long term plan.
I have a working Cocoa version of Devdraw for
OS X Lion: I'm using it with Acme
Plan9 is the best idea I've seen never widely executed. Some people in the
know get it, but with the way the web and the cloud is turning out, well it
just makes a ton of sense to me.
Sent from my iPhone
On Aug 20, 2011, at 12:45 AM, Yousong Zhou yszhou4t...@gmail.com wrote:
Wow. The other
Is it obvious enough from the man pages that this wouldn't be too useful to
have on the Plan 9 wiki?
I'm a big believer in the wiki, but not when it pushes one to avoid reading
the authoritative documentation of the man pages.
Dave
On Thu, Aug 11, 2011 at 1:11 AM, David du Colombier
On Thu, Aug 11, 2011 at 9:15 AM, ron minnich rminn...@gmail.com wrote:
OK, there is a go version that lucho wrote:
https://code.google.com/p/govt/
Hooray for government! Oh, wait...
On Thu, Aug 11, 2011 at 9:49 AM, erik quanstrom quans...@labs.coraid.comwrote:
Note a difference between lucho and me: I ignore vtsync (I always sync
on writes) and he properly pays attention to it. Question for the
student: which one is better? Why?
question cannot be answered due to
On Thu, Aug 11, 2011 at 2:19 PM, Fazlul Shahriar fshahr...@gmail.comwrote:
Is it goinstallable? If so, I'm not sure what I'm doing wrong. I very
rarely use any 3rd party Go code but my own :-).
goinstall govt.googlecode.com/hg/vt/vtclnt
goinstall govt.googlecode.com/hg/vt/vtsrv
Works
got it... Seems to build fine now.
On Thu, Aug 11, 2011 at 2:54 PM, ron minnich rminn...@gmail.com wrote:
Lucho is always up to date, better do a pull for go
ron
Sent from my iPhone
On Aug 10, 2011, at 3:07 PM, Lyndon Nerenberg (VE6BBM/VE7TFX)
lyn...@orthanc.ca wrote:
Isn't p9p venti good enough?
Nope. It only works where p9p works. I want code that will compile
on any POSIX-compliant host.
Isn't p9p POSIX enough? Confused I am, but
On Wed, Aug 3, 2011 at 5:52 AM, Russ Cox r...@swtch.com wrote:
On Wed, Aug 3, 2011 at 12:25 AM, David Leimbach leim...@gmail.com wrote:
I was with you till the very easy part. Been following the updates
today
and noted that (earlier) the portion of INSTALL that detects the
architecture
I was with you till the very easy part. Been following the updates today
and noted that (earlier) the portion of INSTALL that detects the
architecture on Darwin was not working. Had a patch for that and
regrettably blew it away (accident), then had to turn my attention to
something else.
May
I was outside watering plants this morning that seem to be proof of my
not-so-green thumb I have for gardening and was thinking of an interesting
home-automation use for Plan 9.
What I'd like to do is get the following:
1. Moisture sensor I can embed in some potted plant soil, and read from Plan
On Fri, Jul 29, 2011 at 6:48 AM, EBo e...@sandien.com wrote:
On Fri, 29 Jul 2011 06:44:09 -0700, David Leimbach wrote:
I was outside watering plants this morning that seem to be proof of my
not-so-green thumb I have for gardening and was thinking of an
interesting
home-automation use
On Fri, Jul 29, 2011 at 9:32 AM, hiro 23h...@googlemail.com wrote:
I don't get the point of plan9 here. Learning C should be a matter of
hours for such an unspoiled mind, so I'd say go with bare hardware.
Consider that I may want to flesh out interfaces to this system later. I
could also do
On Fri, Jul 29, 2011 at 1:08 PM, EBo e...@sandien.com wrote:
On Fri, 29 Jul 2011 10:22:55 -0700, David Leimbach wrote:
Consider that I may want to flesh out interfaces to this system later. I
could also do this in Linux, or FreeBSD or even Windows, but why not on
Plan
9?
It would also
I don't see why anyone combining ideas from Plan 9 into Linux hurts
Plan 9 as long as Plan 9 continues to exist.
On Saturday, July 16, 2011, simon softnet ph.soft...@gmail.com wrote:
Please, don't let plan 9 and linux be interrelated in the future in any way
...Future plan 9 users have the
On Thu, Jun 23, 2011 at 8:18 AM, dexen deVries dexen.devr...@gmail.comwrote:
On Thursday 23 June 2011 17:09:56 ron minnich wrote:
oh no. EFI is much worse than that. It's an operating system written
by people who never understood the lessons learned by Unix in 1970.
I'm not kidding.
can
Sent from my iPhone
On Jun 17, 2011, at 12:47 PM, John Floren j...@jfloren.net wrote:
On Wed, Jun 15, 2011 at 9:23 AM, David Leimbach leim...@gmail.com wrote:
http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=2657135
Dave
The best part of these kind of threads is how they bring out all the
people who
for programming, than exclusively relying
on keyboard shortcuts.
Now quit your frothing at the mouth because you discovered Linux and vim.
Simon
On Fri, Jun 17, 2011 at 11:42 PM, David Leimbach leim...@gmail.com wrote:
Sent from my iPhone
On Jun 17, 2011, at 12:47 PM, John Floren j
It's pretty nice. I started playing around with it yesterday.
I'm a fan of stuff like scheme shell too, so this just seems like it could
be another one of these cool power tools!
Dave
On Wed, May 18, 2011 at 5:38 AM, Rodrigo Miranda rodrigo.mira...@acm.orgwrote:
I saw this at hacker news.
Sent from my iPhone
On May 18, 2011, at 5:24 AM, blstu...@bellsouth.net wrote:
On 05/18/2011 05:12 AM, Jacob Todd wrote:
Writing/porting web stuff to plan 9 will be hard. Writing something that
accesses plan 9 from the web will be less hard.
The KISS (Keep It Simple, Stupid) acronym has
JavaScript is not java...
Sent from my iPhone
On May 17, 2011, at 11:46 AM, a z rhoyerb...@gmail.com wrote:
Ugh, I have to comment because to my noobness this sounds like an easy
project, and an easy project to over-think. Teach a java app how to draw
boxes like rio, and plug it in.
On Tue, May 17, 2011 at 4:58 PM, errno er...@cox.net wrote:
On Tuesday, May 17, 2011 04:40:50 PM Jacob Todd wrote:
Writing/porting web stuff to plan 9 will be hard. Writing
something that accesses plan 9 from the web will be less
hard.
Correct; but also somewhat ancillary to the
Sent from my iPhone
On Apr 12, 2011, at 8:51 AM, com...@panix.com (Greg Comeau) wrote:
In article a260bb06-00d9-43bc-89ae-6f5b08cb3...@gmail.com,
David Leimbach leim...@gmail.com wrote:
On Apr 11, 2011, at 3:44 AM, erik quanstrom quans...@quanstro.net wrote:
the way to do this is
cd
Sent from my iPhone
On Apr 11, 2011, at 3:44 AM, erik quanstrom quans...@quanstro.net wrote:
the way to do this is
cd /sys/src; objtype=arm mk mk clean
Just getting to play with this... had to do some copying of some of
the files first among other setbacks... ok, plain mk asks what
Sent from my iPhone
On Apr 6, 2011, at 1:27 PM, Joel C. Salomon joelcsalo...@gmail.com wrote:
On Tuesday, April 5, 2011 1:33:30 PM UTC-4, David Leimbach wrote:
What we need is an OS port of Plan 9 to Go that can run hosted on another OS
or natively.
InfernGo?
Fuego.
+9!
--Joel
On Mon, Apr 4, 2011 at 9:22 PM, Russ Cox r...@swtch.com wrote:
The number of people who want to run Go on Plan 9
is already small. The number of people who want to
run Go on Plan 9 on 9vx is smaller yet. At that point
why not just run Go directly?
9vx is a nice hack but still a hack.
On Mon, Apr 4, 2011 at 10:11 PM, Russ Cox r...@swtch.com wrote:
All that Microsoft thinking (99.9%-thinking, if you find the other label
offensive) to avoid adding a minute, one-off change to the Go runtime?
It is not a minute, one-off change.
I don't know how to fix it to cope with tiny
On Tue, Apr 5, 2011 at 10:36 AM, erik quanstrom quans...@labs.coraid.comwrote:
What we need is an OS port of Plan 9 to Go that can run hosted on
another
OS or natively.
InfernGo?
huh?
- erik
Inferno-like Go based OS (instead of Limbo??)
Not necessarily with any kind of virtual
2011/4/5 andrey mirtchovski mirtchov...@gmail.com
InfernGo?
Goribund ;)
What a positive sounding project name!
So wait... We can get the toolchain built on plan 9. Or we can target plan 9
via cross compiler? Either way is pretty awesome! Nice work!
Sent from my iPhone
On Apr 2, 2011, at 4:00 PM, andrey mirtchovski mirtchov...@gmail.com wrote:
Congratulations on the hard work and thanks for seeing
Nice!
Sent from my iPhone
On Mar 30, 2011, at 9:39 PM, erik quanstrom quans...@quanstro.net wrote:
i rerolled the atom cd today with some noticable changes
for mp systems.
1. apic handling has changed. the mp code can now handle
apic ids 7. this can affect machines with fewer than 8
Sent from my iPhone
On Feb 25, 2011, at 7:44 AM, dexen deVries dexen.devr...@gmail.com wrote:
On Friday 25 of February 2011 16:32:27 you wrote:
How about reading /proc/$pid/environ (where $pid is the shell spawned for
command execution) before the $pid exits and transfering all the
Sent from my iPhone
On Feb 18, 2011, at 5:45 AM, dexen deVries dexen.devr...@gmail.com wrote:
On Friday, February 18, 2011 02:29:54 pm erik quanstrom wrote:
so this is a complete waste of time if forks getpids.
and THREAD_GETMEM must allocate memory. so
the first call isn't exactly
Sent from my iPhone
On Feb 18, 2011, at 11:15 AM, Bakul Shah bakul+pl...@bitblocks.com wrote:
On Fri, 18 Feb 2011 10:46:51 PST Rob Pike robp...@gmail.com wrote:
The more you optimize, the better the odds you slow your program down.
Optimization adds instructions and often data, in one of
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