to answer the original question, maybe: on the netbsd cd/mirror there is a mac directory and a shared directory. i think the shared means other kinds of 68k. there is more in the mac directory on netbsd than you find in debian-linux-68k. some basic utility/toolchain stuff.
But my impression is that things get more complicated later on, or/and perhaps deeper in the code, that is maintaining the 68k binaries is harder than it should be with them being universal across brands. whereas with netbsd there is less of that even among varieties of 68k, never mind higher up to less competition with powerpc and intel sources. so even if there are byte order problems those could be built from ppc sources in netbsd straight away. once the 68k hardware is successfully "abstracted" ??? On 4/9/07, Wouter Verhelst <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Mon, Apr 09, 2007 at 06:59:20AM -0700, DataZap wrote: > Hi, > > With few exceptions (like the kernel) NetBSD is binary compatible across > the 68k ports. Is there a simple way to make this work in linux? I'm not sure I understand your question. Could you elaborate? -- <Lo-lan-do> Home is where you have to wash the dishes. -- #debian-devel, Freenode, 2004-09-22
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