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Archive for the ‘NetBSD’ Category
PRINTF documentation are specified together, on some platforms: HP-UX 10.20. * printf “%010f” of nan and Infinity yields an incorrect result (padded with zeroes) on some platforms: macos X 10.3, freebsd 6.0, netbsd 3.0, AIX 5.2, IRIX 6.5, OSF/1 5.1, Solaris 10, Cygwin 2007, mingw. * This function does not support precisions larger than 512 or 1024 in integer, floating-point and pointer output on some platforms: mingw, beos. * This function can crash in out-of-memory conditions on some platforms: macos X 10.3, freebsd 6.0, netbsd 3.0. Portability problems not fixed by Gnulib: www.gnu.org 12.12.7 Formatted Output Functions This section describes how to call printf and related functions. Prototypes for these functions are in the header file stdio.h. Because these functions take a variable number of arguments, you must
Installing Netbsd 5.0.1 onto an IBM z50 workpad mini laptop — Part 2 of 5
asiabsdcon 2009 Paper Session. Abstract: Code is code. In the entire application stack only a very small fraction of code is special in the sense that it requires the hardware to run in priviledged mode. In theory all the rest can run in either the kernel or user domain, with the tradeoffs being well-known. Engineering an operating system core so that the same code can function both in user and kernel mode alike provides numerous benefits: testing and development, virtualization, stability and reusability of code in applications. In the current Unix style code is divided to kernel code and userspace code. Although some limited code modules, such as byte order and address translation routines may be shared, functionality at large is not available in both domains. This paper discusses the nuts and bolts of running the BSD networking code in userspace. It does not advocate turning BSD into a microkernel operating system, but rather gives concrete level proof that the kernel networking stack and kernel networking applications can be run in userspace. The virtual userspace networking stack is measured to be performant enough to be able to saturate a regular network and to be over 10 times faster than the kernel networking stack running in a machine emulator. An implementation for netbsd available from the netbsd source repository is discussed.
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Disclaimer: This video is NOT MINE, it was done by bobf and male from #stumpwm on irc.freenode.net This video demos the uses of the Stumpwm window manager for the X11 environment which runs on any OS that supports X/X11 including Linux, netbsd, etc… Stumpwm is a keyboard driven window manager written in Common Lisp. The original version can be found, here: www.archive.org NOTE: The text is more legible in the ogg version of this video on the download link on the left hand side of the page of the above link.



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