Hi list,

I have gotten so far as being pretty comfortable about cross-compiling gnumach, 
and am
using a custom microkernel now for Hurd. I was easily able to build oskit on 
Debian/Linux,
and can run all the sample kernels. The oskit smp sample kernel is detecting my 
two cpu's,
and seems to be working fine.

    I haven't been able to compile much on Hurd yet, as I only have modem 
connectivity and
can't cvs sources in Hurd. Also, most of my Linux partitions are around 3Gb so 
I haven't tried
to mount them. I suppose I need to make some tarballs and copy them over to 
/gnu next.

    Anyways, I wasn't able to cross-compile oskit-mach due to misplaced gnumach 
and hurd
headers. I have them installed in my Hurd partition which is /gnu

    How should I set up my symlinks so that /usr/i386-gnu/bin/gcc can find 
these headers?

    Also, what do I need to do to set up an oskit cross compilation 
environment? Or do I just
build and install oskit for Linux and then let the i386-gnu-gcc compiler deal 
with it magically.

    In the meantime, I have been reading the gnumach sources and trying to get 
it to build with
smp support. In gnumach/i386/imps the files seem to want an ENABLE_MP=yes 
switch, I tried
boldly hacking this into the Makefile, but it was apparently ignored. It seems 
that whoever made
the configure script didn't include the ability to configure an --enable-smp 
option. Not sure how
or what all it would entail anyways.

    This is all moot anyways as oskit-mach seems a better candidate for running 
Hurd on SMP
boxes. With all the hoopla about how Hurd and Mach were designed for 
multiprocessing from
the very start, I think I'm going to try and focus on getting it working as it 
is very core feature
that Hurd is fundamentally based upon, and would gain us mucho bragging rights 
about how
cool Hurd is.

    And this is way out there, but I keep having these weird thoughts about 
using my GeForce
card as a vector processor, kind of like the old i860 transputer cards, and 
using its GPU unit
when available to boost my computer speed. It does have registers and such, so 
it must be
possible to load a value into one of its registers, do something, and read it 
back. Wouldn't
that be cool! Hmm... ( la la la - the land of chocolate... )

    Oh, ok. Where was I. Right. I have done some rather exhaustive searches on 
the web for
documentation about Mach and it looks pretty bleak. There are tons of broken 
links to old
Mach documentation, and the one book that looked cool _Programming_Under_Mach_ 
is
long out of print and not available anymore.

    I read that Roland was working on writing a book on oskit-mach and Hurd, 
that would be
a very nice thing to have considering that Mach is about 15 years old, mostly 
undocumented
now, and is the very core of this OS at the moment. Hey Roland, can I buy a 
postscript copy
of your manuscript please? Well thats where I'm at, can run oskit smp sample 
kernel, but can't
quite build oskit-mach yet. Maybe next week...

Cheers!
- Doug

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