for the kernel sections in there
man release
man crash
that pretty much gives you what that tells you.
Neither of which tells you how to do kernel hacking.
Start reading code and understanding it.
2009/12/10 Robert Yuri robert.yu...@gmail.com:
which the best way to learn about OpenBSD kernel
On Thu, Dec 10, 2009 at 10:40:16AM -0700, Bob Beck wrote:
2009/12/10 Bret S. Lambert bret.lamb...@gmail.com:
On Thu, Dec 10, 2009 at 02:24:00PM -0300, Robert Yuri wrote:
which the best way to learn about OpenBSD kernel ?
I found a bunch of docs from FreeBSD site such as developer's handbook
Robert Yuri wrote:
I'll learn just reading kernel code ?
so, many night you need to understand it ?
Oh yes. Many.
Subject: Re: too many cpus
2009/12/9 Theo de Raadt dera...@cvs.openbsd.org:
Being different just to be different is also pretty silly. So unless
there is a good reason not to choose '1' for this purpose, I'd love to
see a new diff from Ted.
Being the same is a burden. You should
On Thu, Dec 10, 2009 at 02:49:51PM -0300, Robert Yuri wrote:
I'll learn just reading kernel code ?
so, many night you need to understand it ?
Absolutely:
$ pwd
/usr/src/sys/kern
$ wc -l * | tail -n 1
64300 total
It's going to take you many nights just to *read* it.
Not to mention the
On Thu, Dec 10, 2009 at 12:24 PM, Robert Yuri robert.yu...@gmail.com wrote:
which the best way to learn about OpenBSD kernel ?
I have mixed feelings about the need for an OpenBSD specific resource.
There are man pages for the people who want to know *what* the kernel
does (or is supposed to
On Thu, 10 Dec 2009 14:24:00 -0300
Robert Yuri robert.yu...@gmail.com wrote:
which the best way to learn about OpenBSD kernel ?
I found a bunch of docs from FreeBSD site such as developer's handbook at
http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/developers-handbook/ ,
there any same that
On Thu, Dec 10, 2009 at 08:54:30PM +0100, Thomas Pfaff wrote:
A few books on this topic in general worth mentioning is Modern Operating
Systems by Tanenbaum, Operating Systems: Design and Implementation. The
latter one details the MINIX system, though.
Modern Operating Systems is mostly of
A g r a d e c e r e m o s s u d i f u s i o n !
[demime 1.01d removed an attachment of type image/jpeg which had a name of
1.jpg]
That book is very relevant. Modern really means add more shit.
On Thu, Dec 10, 2009 at 09:04:31PM +0100, Joerg Sonnenberger wrote:
On Thu, Dec 10, 2009 at 08:54:30PM +0100, Thomas Pfaff wrote:
A few books on this topic in general worth mentioning is Modern Operating
Systems by Tanenbaum,
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