On Fri, 26 Jan 2001, you wrote:
> * [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [010125 19:04] wrote:
> > hey guys i know you probably get this question all the time but i am looking 
> > into getting into doing somekernel hacking first i will tell you some thing i 
> > have assumed about it:
> 
> > 1.) you should know atleast more programming language well (probably C would 
> > be best)
> 
> C is necessary including a strong understanding of the pre-precessor,
> knowing a bit about 'make' is also pretty important.
> 
> > 2.) you should know some basic stuff about FreeBSD internels (i am planning 
> > on getting The Design and Implementation of the 4.4BSD Operating System 
> 
> Well more than 'basic' hopefully. :)
> 
> Good choice on a book, others to look at are:
> "UNIX Internals 'the new frontiers'" Vahalia
> "The Basic Kernel Source Secrets" Jolitz
> and of course "The UNIX Hater's Handbook"
> 
> > that is about it the rest really is a blur and is so complex and huge i have 
> > no idea where to begin hope i wasn't to lame guys :-)
> 
> Find a local user group, find and talk to some kernel hackers, but
> step away at the first sign of dizzyness or lightheadness.
> 
> Feel free to ask on the mailing lists if something is
> confounding you, just be sure to check the mailing list archives
> first.
> 
> best of luck,
The manual pages are very helpfull although not the complete references,
the sources itself is the saviour. I remembered porting back cd9660 to
2.2.x tree, and now look forward porting softupdates (If anybody can give
me some light I really appreciate that). I'm reviewing sources from current,
stable and from other BSD project such OpenBSD to pick all the good stuffs.
I'm a happy 2.2.x user.

-- 
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        /     ./__
       /       __/ < I do understand..
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
    *warf* *warf*


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