Path: sparky!uunet!sun-barr!lll-winken!aunro!ersys!dennis From: den...@ersys.edmonton.ab.ca (Dennis Wong) Newsgroups: comp.os.minix Subject: Linux Message-ID: <X99geB2w164w@ersys.edmonton.ab.ca> Date: 13 Jan 92 07:27:44 GMT Organization: Edmonton Remote Systems, Edmonton, AB, Canada Lines: 9 I've ftp both the boot and root image files from tsx-11.mit.edu. However, I don't have "rawwrite.exe" program to put the image back on the floppy. Could anyone tell me where can I find rawrite.exe ? Thanks Dennis Dennis Wong den...@ersys.edmonton.ab.ca Edmonton Remote Systems: Serving Northern Alberta since 1982
Path: sparky!uunet!mcsun!ieunet!tcdcs!maths.tcd.ie!tim From: t...@maths.tcd.ie (Timothy Murphy) Newsgroups: comp.os.minix Subject: Re: Linux Message-ID: <1992Jan13.141829.2257@maths.tcd.ie> Date: 13 Jan 92 14:18:29 GMT Sender: n...@maths.tcd.ie Organization: Dept. of Maths, Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland. Lines: 22 Nntp-Posting-Host: salmon Is any independent person actually running Linux, and can give an opinion on its merits vis-a-vis 386-Minix? While I could be convinced on this, it seems to me pretty unlikely on the face of it that anyone could really write a reliable operating system from scratch in a short time. After all, it took Tanenbaum years to write Minix, and he worked night and day without stop, and had a team working under him too. One only has to look at the sources to see the sheer intellectual work involved in such an enterprise. -- Timothy Murphy e-mail: t...@maths.tcd.ie tel: +353-1-2842366 s-mail: School of Mathematics, Trinity College, Dublin 2, Ireland
Path: sparky!uunet!mcsun!news.funet.fi!hydra!klaava!torvalds From: torva...@klaava.Helsinki.FI (Linus Benedict Torvalds) Newsgroups: comp.os.minix Subject: Re: Linux Message-ID: <1992Jan13.160250.25332@klaava.Helsinki.FI> Date: 13 Jan 92 16:02:50 GMT References: <1992Jan13.141829.2257@maths.tcd.ie> Organization: University of Helsinki Lines: 48 Sorry, but this post is too good just to leave hanging around :) In article <1992Jan13.141829.2...@maths.tcd.ie> t...@maths.tcd.ie (Timothy Murphy) writes: >Is any independent person actually running Linux, >and can give an opinion on its merits >vis-a-vis 386-Minix? Ok, somebody else should answer this, I can only say that the latest count on the activists-list is 196. Some of them are actually using linux. Many are just interested, and aren't actually going to use it, but there are quite a few that have started making changes and sending in patches: About half the new things in 0.12 have been implemented by others (job control, ptys, select, and virtual consoles are mostly tthe work of others, although I have hcaked them heavily) >While I could be convinced on this, >it seems to me pretty unlikely on the face of it >that anyone could really write a reliable operating system >from scratch in a short time. > >After all, it took Tanenbaum years to write Minix, >and he worked night and day without stop, [ editors note: he probably slept alternate sundays so that he could start afresh for next fortnights hacking. ast, can you confirm :-? ] >and had a team working under him too. >One only has to look at the sources >to see the sheer intellectual work involved >in such an enterprise. Are you writing this seriously? There are a lot of smileys missing. The reason unix has been so successful is that it's actually a very clean and simple operating system. I would seriously doubt anybody will implement VMS in a year (or 5, and even after that I wouldn't want to actually use it :-) On the off chance that this was a real post, and not just a joke then: yes, linux is a viable alternative to minix-386. Minix has a bigger base, and "the book", which are definitive advantages, but if a person knows unix a bit, then linux is entirely possible to use. There are bugs, and "reliable" might be too strong a word for linux still, but most things are easier to do under linux than under minix. Porting is much easier (I remember porting bash-1.05 to minix: it wasn't just "make and go".) Linus
Path: sparky!uunet!mcsun!fuug!nntp.hut.fi!cs.hut.fi!arl From: a...@cs.hut.fi (Ari Lemmke) Newsgroups: comp.os.minix Subject: Re: Linux Message-ID: <ARL.92Jan14034611@zen.hut.fi> Date: 14 Jan 92 02:46:11 GMT References: <1992Jan13.141829.2257@maths.tcd.ie> Sender: use...@nntp.hut.fi (Usenet pseudouser id) Organization: Helsinki University of Technology, Finland Lines: 30 In-Reply-To: tim@maths.tcd.ie's message of 13 Jan 92 14:18:29 GMT Nntp-Posting-Host: zen.cs.hut.fi In article <1992Jan13.141829.2...@maths.tcd.ie> t...@maths.tcd.ie (Timothy Murphy) writes: : While I could be convinced on this, : it seems to me pretty unlikely on the face of it : that anyone could really write a reliable operating system : from scratch in a short time. : After all, it took Tanenbaum years to write Minix, : and he worked night and day without stop, : and had a team working under him too. You must be joking. This article is for fun ???? Teasing us? : One only has to look at the sources : to see the sheer intellectual work involved : in such an enterprise. I've used Minix for teaching (2 years). Minix is definitely too big ... too much trouble with diskettes. The Minix book is quite good, but [no comments]. I don't say 'Linux is perfect' .. there are many things what I would like to do otherwise, but Minix is not perfect either. Never tried to create a new FS to Minix ? [no comments]. : Timothy Murphy arl // Writing better OSes with less code
Path: sparky!uunet!mcsun!ieunet!tcdcs!maths.tcd.ie!tim From: t...@maths.tcd.ie (Timothy Murphy) Newsgroups: comp.os.minix Subject: Re: Linux Message-ID: <1992Jan15.130403.13480@maths.tcd.ie> Date: 15 Jan 92 13:04:03 GMT References: <1992Jan13.141829.2257@maths.tcd.ie> <ARL.92Jan14034611@zen.hut.fi> Sender: n...@maths.tcd.ie Organization: Dept. of Maths, Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland. Lines: 20 Nntp-Posting-Host: walton In <ARL.92Jan14034...@zen.hut.fi> a...@cs.hut.fi (Ari Lemmke) writes (in reply to a remark of mine): > You must be joking. This article is for fun ???? > Teasing us? ... > I've used Minix for teaching (2 years). Minix is definitely > too big ... too much trouble with diskettes. I'm baffled by this. You're comparing Minix with Linux. So you must have a 386. Why don't you run 386-Minix? With shoelace there is no reason to use diskettes at all. -- Timothy Murphy e-mail: t...@maths.tcd.ie tel: +353-1-2842366 s-mail: School of Mathematics, Trinity College, Dublin 2, Ireland
Subject: Re: Linux Date: Wed, 15 Jan 92 23:35:49 -0500 From: gillham@edmund.cs.andrews.edu (Andrew Gillham) To: tim@maths.tcd.ie In-Reply-To: <1992Jan13.141829.2257@maths.tcd.ie> Cc: linux-activists@joker.cs.hut.fi In article <1992Jan13.141829.2257@maths.tcd.ie> you write: >Is any independent person actually running Linux, >and can give an opinion on its merits >vis-a-vis 386-Minix? I've used both, Minix386 about 6months ago, Linux for the last month. Linux is a lot faster I feel, and ports better according to people on the mailing list. It is compiled with gcc, and feels pretty stable and solid. I would suggest you give it a go for a couple of days and see how you like it. >While I could be convinced on this, >it seems to me pretty unlikely on the face of it >that anyone could really write a reliable operating system >from scratch in a short time. >After all, it took Tanenbaum years to write Minix, >and he worked night and day without stop, >and had a team working under him too. >One only has to look at the sources >to see the sheer intellectual work involved >in such an enterprise. Then Linus is a f**king code poet. I don't know how long he's been working on it, but if it's been "months" I'd be *super* impressed! Right now I'm just real impressed.. :-) Seriously though there have been quite a few contributions from other net.code.poets to Linux so it's not like it was a total one man effort, though Linus seems to have done most the core operating system stuff. I'd suggest you send a note to "linux-activists-request@joker.cs.hut.fi" and ask to be put on the mailing list if you're real interested or that you just download linux itself and play with it or read some of the release notes and/or code if you're just mildly intrigued. I don't have a lot of time to dedicate to development (ok, none really) but I *really* like the idea of a free, evolving (rapidly) UNIX clone that isn't "owned" by a big company like Prentice-Hall and has all the hassles (and costs) that come along with commercialization. It's Linus' system but because it's free (except for your net connections) I think it has the potential to become a popular, well supported (ports) system.. (ok, I got carried away..basic thought: I like it!) >Timothy Murphy >e-mail: tim@maths.tcd.ie >tel: +353-1-2842366 >s-mail: School of Mathematics, Trinity College, Dublin 2, Ireland -Andrew -- ===================================================================== Andrew Gillham ****** Andrews University ****** (gillham@andrews.edu) I would've added a cool .signature, but I already mailed this letter.
Path: sparky!uunet!ukma!widener!iggy.GW.Vitalink.COM!pacbell.com!mips! think.com!yale.edu!yale!mintaka.lcs.mit.edu!bloom-picayune.mit.edu! athena.mit.edu!tytso From: ty...@athena.mit.edu (Theodore Y. Ts'o) Newsgroups: comp.os.minix Subject: Linux Summary: Responses to some questions/comments about Linux Message-ID: <1992Jan16.060442.22199@athena.mit.edu> Date: 16 Jan 92 06:04:42 GMT Sender: n...@athena.mit.edu (News system) Organization: Massachusetts Institute of Technology Lines: 85 Nntp-Posting-Host: tsx-11.mit.edu First of all, I'm the person who's implemented job control, and BSD supplementary groups, and a dynamic kernel memory allocator in the Linux kernel, so I should admit my biases up front. The reason why decided to work on Linux instead of Minix was the cost; being able to just FTP the source code and not having to pay $150 was a big win. Also, at least for me, it seemed much easier to add new features to Linux than Minix, just looking source code from both systems. Perhaps I had to modify a few more modules in Linux than in Minix, but (1) that's what context diffs are for, and (2) Linux was much easier for me to understand. >While I could be convinced on this, >it seems to me pretty unlikely on the face of it >that anyone could really write a reliable operating system >from scratch in a short time. >After all, it took Tanenbaum years to write Minix, >and he worked night and day without stop, There are a couple of responses to this. First of all, it's much easier to write a new operating system when you have an old OS to use as a bootstrap. For example, there was quite a while when Linux did not yet have a fsck program, but since it was (and still) uses a Minix filesystem, people who owned Minix could use Minix's fsck. Also, Linus didn't need to write the utility programs. Almost all of the utility programs and compilers and such used the GNU Free Software Foundation programs. This certainly cut a lot of time away from the development of Linux. This also had the advantage that when Linus had the choice of modifying the GNU utility program's source code or modifying the operating system/include files to make it compile, he chose to modify the kernel. As a result, POSIX is very nearly completely POSIX compliant. So most of the GNU programs and other public domain Unix programs compile with almost no modifications. Finally, up to a limit, a non-message passing kernel is simply easier to write and modify and understand. As Linux gets bigger, if we don't become *very* careful with the abstraction boundaries inside the kernel, it could become a big mess, like (say) the BSD kernel. But at the moment, it's small and compact, and relatively clean --- and its current size, the fact that Linux "monolithic" is an advantage over Minix's "modular, message passing" approach. The true test, though, will be after we add BSD networking and sockets. (And yes, there are people within the Linux community who are interested in doing this.) If we can keep Linux to be (relatively) compact and clean and easy to understand even after we've added all of these new features, I think we will have succeeded, and we will be able to justify saying that "yes, you can write a Real Operating System without using message passing." >I remember reading a(may be several) posting that mentions that >curently available version of Linux (is it .11) does not have >init/login. Then am I correct in presuming that I will always be root >in Linux. Does this mean that I cannot change my uid and change my >previlege level (or is it just that you don't have login/su to do >it.). As you can see, I am confused by the real meaning of the phrase >"init/login not available". Actually, someone just made a bare-bones version of init/login to the Linux FTP servers. What that comment meant was that while the setuid() and getuid() and setreuid() calls were implemented in the Linux kernel, there weren't any application programs that actually used them. When you booted Linux, it dumped you into a root shell on the console (essentially, "single-user mode"). But people who wrote quick hacks like "main(){setuid(15806);execl("/bin/sh","/bin/sh",0);}" would be able to run at a different (non-root) privilege level. As far as privelege levels are concerned, Linux is probably more advanced than Minix, since Linux 0.12 has BSD/POSIX supplementary group sets, which allow a user operate in several different groups at the same time. ----------------------------------------------------------------- >I have just got a copy of Linux-0.11 and I have a couple of questions.... Questions about Linux should go to the Linux-Activi...@niksula.hut.fi mailing list. Send mail to Linux-Activists-Requ...@niksula.hut.fi to be placed on the mailing list. =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= Theodore Ts'o bloom-beacon!mit-athena!tytso 3 Ames St., Cambridge, MA 02139 ty...@athena.mit.edu Everybody's playing the game, but nobody's rules are the same!
Path: sparky!uunet!ukma!wupost!darwin.sura.net!Sirius.dfn.de! math.fu-berlin.de! uniol!unido!mcsun!fuug!nntp.hut.fi!cs.hut.fi!arl From: a...@cs.hut.fi (Ari Lemmke) Newsgroups: comp.os.minix Subject: Re: Linux Message-ID: <ARL.92Jan16073718@zen.hut.fi> Date: 16 Jan 92 06:37:18 GMT References: <1992Jan13.141829.2257@maths.tcd.ie> <ARL.92Jan14034611@zen.hut.fi> <1992Jan15.130403.13480@maths.tcd.ie> Sender: use...@nntp.hut.fi (Usenet pseudouser id) Organization: Helsinki University of Technology, Finland Lines: 32 In-Reply-To: tim@maths.tcd.ie's message of 15 Jan 92 13:04:03 GMT Nntp-Posting-Host: zen.cs.hut.fi In article <1992Jan15.130403.13...@maths.tcd.ie> t...@maths.tcd.ie (Timothy Murphy) writes: In <ARL.92Jan14034...@zen.hut.fi> a...@cs.hut.fi (Ari Lemmke) writes (in reply to a remark of mine): > I've used Minix for teaching (2 years). Minix is definitely > too big ... too much trouble with diskettes. > I'm baffled by this. > You're comparing Minix with Linux. No, I try to avoid compairing. > So you must have a 386. Couple, and some 286s and 88s too > Why don't you run 386-Minix? Sometimes. Not actually much. > With shoelace there is no reason to use diskettes at all. You don't get it .. I was taking about teaching that means you have to copy those disks (1.3d it was 10 diskettes in our kit) to your students, so they could make the project at home. Our Comp Sci Lab and PCs? No, we have only work stations (local joke) ;-) ... > Timothy Murphy arl
Subject: Re: Linux Date: Thu, 16 Jan 92 12:27:46 +0200 From: wirzeniu@cs.Helsinki.FI (Lars Wirzenius) To: tim@maths.tcd.ie, gillham@edmund.cs.andrews.edu Cc: linux-activists@joker.cs.hut.fi > Then Linus is a f**king code poet. I don't know how long he's been > working on it, but if it's been "months" I'd be *super* impressed! > Right now I'm just real impressed.. :-) I think he's been at it since about April, 1991. Can't be much longer than that, since he didn't get a 386 until spring 1991.
Path: sparky!uunet!ukma!wupost!spool.mu.edu!umn.edu!cs.umn.edu!lynx! nmsu.edu!opus!kduling From: kdu...@nmsu.edu (Kevin J. Duling) Newsgroups: comp.os.minix Subject: Re: Linux Message-ID: <KDULING.92Jan16093807@dante.nmsu.edu> Date: 16 Jan 92 16:38:07 GMT Article-I.D.: dante.KDULING.92Jan16093807 References: <1992Jan16.060442.22199@athena.mit.edu> Sender: use...@nmsu.edu Organization: NMSU Computer Science Lines: 14 In-Reply-To: tytso@athena.mit.edu's message of Thu, 16 Jan 1992 06:04:42 GMT I really don't wish to flame, but it's starting to annoy me that 50% of the articles I read in this newsgroup are about Linux. I don't have Linux and I don't want it -- it won't run on my machine, so I have no interest in it. I thought that this was a Minix newsgroup. Why don't you make the effort and create comp.os.linux? That sounds quite a bit more harsh than I inteneded, but that's my suggestion, anyway. -- -=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=- Kevin J. Duling UNIX kdu...@nmsu.edu New Mexico State University VM/CMS opr...@nmsuvm1.nmsu.edu Computer Center/Small Systems VMS CC4...@helen.nmsu.edu -=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-
Newsgroups: comp.os.minix Path: sparky!uunet!microsoft!satishc From: sat...@microsoft.com (Satish CHITTAMURU) Subject: Re: Linux Message-ID: <1992Jan20.221928.8788@microsoft.com> Date: 20 Jan 92 22:19:28 GMT Organization: Microsoft Corp. References: <1992Jan16.060442.22199@athena.mit.edu> <KDULING.92Jan16093807@dante.nmsu.edu> Sender: sat...@microsoft.com Followup-To: comp.os.minix Lines: 17 In article < KDULING.92...@dante.nmsu.edu> kdu...@nmsu.edu (Kevin J. Duling) writes: > I really don't wish to flame, but it's starting to annoy me that 50% > of the articles I read in this newsgroup are about Linux. I don't > have Linux and I don't want it -- it won't run on my machine, so I > have no interest in it. I thought that this was a Minix newsgroup. > Why don't you make the effort and create comp.os.linux? I agree, but for the opposite reason. I am only interested in Linux (I was interested in Minix, but since Linux came along I have lost interest). So I suggest that comp.os.linux be formed (Yeah! I know. Yet another!). Since I am not quite familiar with proposals and voting etc. could someone make the proposal and the CFD for this (that is, if other too feel it is worthwhile to start a new group). The volume of messages seem to justify it. -- Satish K. Chittamuru sat...@microsoft.com Microsoft Corporation Redmond, WA ===== Veni! Vidi! Visa! (I came! I saw! I purchased!). -- Julius, Sieze Her!
Path: sparky!uunet!usc!wupost!think.com!mips!pacbell.com! iggy.GW.Vitalink.COM!widener!widener!brendan From: bre...@cs.widener.edu (Brendan Kehoe) Newsgroups: comp.os.minix Subject: Re: Linux newsgroup Message-ID: <BRENDAN.92Jan20185024@betty.cs.widener.edu> Date: 21 Jan 92 02:50:24 GMT References: <1992Jan16.060442.22199@athena.mit.edu> <KDULING.92Jan16093807@dante.nmsu.edu> <1992Jan20.221928.8788@microsoft.com> Reply-To: bre...@cs.widener.edu Followup-To: comp.os.minix Organization: Widener University Computer Science Dept, Chester PA Lines: 18 NNTP-Posting-Host: betty.cs.widener.edu In-reply-to: satishc@microsoft.com's message of 20 Jan 92 22:19:28 GMT In article < 1992Jan20....@microsoft.com> sat...@microsoft.com (Satish CHITTAMURU) writes: So I suggest that comp.os.linux be formed (Yeah! I know. Yet another!). Since I am not quite familiar with proposals and voting etc. could someone make the proposal and the CFD for this (that is, if other too feel it is worthwhile to start a new group). The volume of messages seem to justify it. alt.os.linux has been created; the traffic probably can't be used as a gauge on the potential traffic in a comp.os.linux group until the initial "Burst" of popularity dies down. In a couple of months, maybe. -- Brendan Kehoe, Sun Network Manager bre...@cs.widener.edu Widener University Chester, PA ``Ya know Quaker Oats make you feel good twice?'' Hmm.