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Revision 1.21, Mon Jan 5 08:00:08 1998 UTC (26 years, 4 months ago) by graichen
add the machine offer from dieter mayer for someone willing to help hacking on the pmax |
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 3.2//EN"> <HTML> <HEAD> <TITLE>OpenBSD/pmax</TITLE> <META NAME="resource-type" CONTENT="document"> <META NAME="description" CONTENT="the OpenBSD/pmax page"> <META NAME="keywords" CONTENT="openbsd,pmax"> <META NAME="distribution" CONTENT="global"> <META NAME="copyright" CONTENT="This document copyright 1996 by OpenBSD."> <META NAME="GENERATOR" CONTENT="Mozilla/3.01Gold (X11; I; OpenBSD 2.1 i386) [Netscape]"> </HEAD> <BODY BGCOLOR="#FFFFFF" TEXT="#000000" LINK="#23238E"> <P><LINK rev=made href=mailto:www@openbsd.org></P> <H2>OpenBSD/pmax</H2> <P> <HR></P> <FONT COLOR=#00c000> We are looking for someone with some time and interest in helping with the development of OpenBSD/pmax who also has some skills for doing this. Dieter Mayer from Open System Solutions in Munich (germany) will provide a complete machine for free for this task. Someone from germany would be prefered due to the transport of that machine and if this person comes from the area around munich there's also the possibility to couple the hacking with some payed system administration at Open System Solutions. <P> We are thinking about: <UL> <LI> bringing the old style scsi subsystem over to the new generic scsi framework used by the other architectures </LI> <LI> integration of an Xws (used by X11R6 or newer xservers) compatible interface to the console/framebuffer (some ideas for that are already available from Dieter Mayer) </LI> <LI> helping in merging over good stuff from NetBSD/pmax </LI> <LI> general development on the pmax (often building and veryfying that everything work on the pmax) </LI> </UL> <P> if you are interested - please contact dieter@oss.de </FONT> <H3><B>History and status:</B></H3> <P>The pmax port of OpenBSD is being worked on by Thomas Graichen (<A HREF="mailto:graichen@openbsd.org">graichen@OpenBSD.org</A>). From the pmax specific code it is heavily based on NetBSD/pmax. I usually try to keep it in sync with all fixes and improvements from NetBSD/pmax. Starting with the 2.1 release of OpenBSD the pmax port is now no longer only available in form of snapshots but i still plan to make new snapshots of the current state of OpenBSD/pmax from time to time available. So far it is running very stable for me and is also reported to do so from a lot of other people on different kinds of machines. I want to take the chance here to say thanks to Dieter Mayer and Rob Urban for supplying me with the hardware to do the development on. Also i want to thank all the people from the NetBSD/pmax team and mailinglists especially Jonathan Stone and Michael Hitch for their help in many situations. If you are interested in getting OpenBSD/pmax you can either use the latest formal release of OpenBSD or one of the snapshots of OpenBSD/pmax if you are interested in tracking the current state - you may get them both from <A HREF="ftp.html">the usual OpenBSD ftp servers</A>.</P> <P>I'm very interested in getting feedback from people running OpenBSD/pmax on their machines ... so if you do so - please send me a mail about it ... this way i can get a feeling of how many people are using it - thanks.</P> <P>Despite of the fact that the hardware specific code in OpenBSD/pmax doesn't differ much from NetBSD/pmax there are for the system as a whole some ...</P> <H3><B>Differences to NetBSD/pmax:</B></H3> <UL> <LI>we have native shared libraries (... but also for NetBSD/pmax there are snapshots with shared libraries based mostly on the OpenBSD shared library support from per fogelstrom available now - but the latest formal release of it - 1.2 is completely statically linked)</LI> <LI>the port is self-hosting (... that means it only uses in-tree tools - there is no need for external binutils).</LI> <LI>i try too keep the release of snapshots and releases close to releasing X11 binaries too (X11R5 servers and X11R6 clients - both compiled with ProjectRoot /usr/X11R6) so that you should have a usable system including X11 without having to build or search all the stuff yourself</LI> <LI>you get all the usual OpenBSD improvements, additions and fixes - most important here the security related stuff and fixes</LI> <LI>i have tried to make the installation of the release as simple as possible ... i hope to improve this further with the next release</LI> </UL> <H3>Supported machines:</H3> <P>OpenBSD/pmax currently supports the following machines:</P> <UL> <LI>decstation 2100 and 3100 (pmin and pmax)</LI> <LI>decstation 5000/120, /125 and /133 (3min)</LI> <LI>decstation 5000/200 (3max)</LI> <LI>decstation 5000/240 (3maxplus)</LI> <LI>decstation 5000/20 and /25 (personal decstation)</LI> </UL> <P>OpenBSD/pmax does currently not run on:</P> <UL> <LI>decstation 5100 (r2000 based cousin of the decstation 3100)</LI> <LI>decsystem 5400 and 5500 (close to mayfair and mayfair II vax with mips cpu)</LI> <LI>decsystem 5800 (close to vax 6300/6300 with mips cpus)</LI> </UL> <P>Per Fogelstrom (<A HREF="mailto:pefo@OpenBSD.org">pefo@OpenBSD.org</A>) now also has one of the r4000 cpu upgraded decstations ... so i expect support for them soon.</P> <H3><B>Supported devices:</B></H3> <P>If something is wrong here - please let me know!</P> <P>Framebuffer:</P> <UL> <LI>pm mono (1024x864x1) or color (1024x864x8) onboard framebuffer (pmin and pmax)</LI> <LI>PMAG-DV (1024x864x8) onboard framebuffer (personal decstation)</LI> <LI>PMAG-AA (1024x864x1) turbochannel framebuffer card - mfb</LI> <LI>PMAG-BA (1280x1024x8) turbochannel framebuffer card - cfb</LI> <LI>PMAGB-BA (1024x864x8) turbochannel framebuffer card - sfb</LI> <P>Keep in mind that you need a monitor which can do sync on green- because all the above framebuffers give sync on green output. Also the monitor should be multisync-capable or it should have a dec-compatible fixed frequency. All the above framebuffers should be supported by the x server too.</P> </UL> <P>Ethernet:</P> <UL> <LI>onboard amd lance ethernet interface</LI> <LI>turbochannel amd lance lance interface card</LI> </UL> <P>SCSI:</P> <UL> <LI>onboard dec SCSI controller - sii (pmin and pmax)</LI> <LI>onboard dec SCSI controller - asc</LI> <LI>turbochannel dec SCSI controller card - asc</LI> </UL> <P>Misc:</P> <UL> <LI>dec lk201 or compatible keyboard</LI> <LI>dec or compatible mouse</LI> <LI>onboard serial ports on most machines</LI> </UL> <H3><B>Hints and fixes for OpenBSD/pmax 2.1 release:</B></H3> <P>At this place i plan to collect all hints for the installation of the 2.1 release and fixes for problems while doing it to. There is one little problem with the X11R6 clients of the OpenBSD/pmax 2.1 distribution which is described in detail on the <a href=errata.html>errata page</a>. Also i want to note that there are some problems with the serial ports in some situations and also with some framebuffers which are partially fixed in the current tree (mostly fixes merged in from NetBSD/pmax). Send me (<A HREF="mailto:graichen@openbsd.org">graichen@OpenBSD.org</A>) a mail if you have problems and want a newer kernel for testing.</P> <P> <HR><A HREF="plat.html"><IMG SRC="back.gif" ALT="OpenBSD" BORDER=0 ></A> <A HREF="mailto:www@openbsd.org">www@openbsd.org</A> <BR> <FONT SIZE=-1>$OpenBSD: pmax.html,v 1.14 1997/05/15 12:40:47 graichen Exp $</FONT> </P> </BODY> </HTML>