Subject: Re: pkg_install
To: None <fair@clock.org>
From: Andrew Reilly <reilly@zeta.org.au>
List: current-users
Date: 10/02/1997 08:59:09
On 1 Oct, Erik E. Fair wrote:
In relation to ports...
> The depth of our binary distribution problem depends on how optimized we
> want to be. As a first cut, we need binaries for:
>
> 68000
> sparc
> mips
> alpha
> i386
> ARM
> ns32532
> (and some that I've forgotten)
>
> but life gets more interesting when one considers more processor specific
> code generation, e.g. 68020? 68030? 68040? 68060? v7 sparc? v8 sparc? 386?
> 486? Pentium? Pentium Pro? Pentium II?
>
> Sounds like we need a new post: port-package-master (someone for each port
> to build the packages)
>
> It gives us an interesting M x N problem. 9GB disks are getting cheaper,
> and there is ccd...
Sounds like NetBSD would be the first group to get significant bennefit
from a working ANDF. Has anyone considered something like a new GCC
target for something like an extended JVM or Amsterdam Compiler Kit
stack machine (or even "generic assembler: C")? Then you'd only need
one distribution and a back-end that includes a compiler/optimiser of
sorts. Of course this isn't going to help for things like ocaml and
kaffe, that know about a few specific architectures, but could work for
more general applications.
Can't see the point myself, when distribution by source works so well,
and you end up with the source code...
--
Andrew
"The steady state of disks is full."
-- Ken Thompson