> Farid Hajji wrote: > > And yes, the docs... Although things start improving now, we still need > > a lot more of tutorial-like materials. "Hello worlds" for misc. parts of > > the system may be one way to introduce newbies to the internals of Mach > > and the Hurd(-libraries). I'm thinking here especially of small dummy > > translators, dummy filesystems and other simple user-level programs.
Tomasz Wegrzanowski wrote: > I might write hello-worlds for cthreads. > This is easy, little library, but there is very little documentation for it. That would be great! If possible, I'd love to see such hello-worlds go in a new subdirectory of the hurd/ CVS, so we can gather them in a single place. Where should additional documentation about the Hurd go in the CVS tree? I'm asking this because there are different areas of interest: gnumach, hurd, mig, grub and glibc (at least). It would be helpful to setup a new CVS project about GNU/Hurd Documentation in general, that would encompass all these topics (suggested name: hurd-docs ?). -- Farid Hajji -- Unix Systems and Network Administrator | Phone: +49-2131-67-555 Broicherdorfstr. 83, D-41564 Kaarst, Germany | [EMAIL PROTECTED] - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - + - - - - - - - - - - - - Fermat: ...I've found a remarkable proof for this: Let x,y @[EMAIL PROTECTED]@ NO CARRIER

