If you are smart enough to write support for umodem for the MF626, then
learning vi should be a breeze.
Alternatively:
If learning vi is so hard for you, then you havn't a hope in hell of
writing
support for umodem for the MF626.
paulm
On 4/02/2010, at 12:52 PM, Giridhari wrote:
Hare Krsna.
From: Giridhari
Sent: Thursday, February 04, 2010 7:37 AM
To: dera...@cvs.openbsd.org ; dera...@openbsd.org
Subject: Fw: pico and/or nano in the releases and snapshots
ATTENTION
Last night I saved a rat from certain death at the hands of a cat whose
ovaries had been cut out. This is the cutting edge of bhakti in the
interests
of OpenBSD. You have been notified.
Note: The below message has been slightly adjusted to that which was
sent to
dera...@theos.org.
From: Giridhari
Sent: Thursday, February 04, 2010 7:28 AM
To: dera...@theos.com
Subject: pico and/or nano in the releases and snapshots
Hare Krsna Mr. DeRaadt.
I am trying to write a new security implementation for OpenBSD, but
find vi to
be clumsy and hampering.
I was very comfortable with pico, and nano. I am running a new system
with
multiprocessor kernel, and currently have no support for the ZTE MF626
modem I
connect via cellular network with. I have tried installing the package
of pico
but it failed, so I installed it's dependencies, but pico still would
not
install because it had partially installed, would not pkg_delete (not
even
when forced), and I could not find a way to clean this up.
I would really appreciate if pico or nano, which are simple and
elegant,
perhaps not with the frills vi uses apparently seem to appreciate, but
simple
and natural nonetheless, we part of the distribution. I fly with
those. PLEASE
INCLUDE PICO OR NANO OR BOTH IN A NEW SNAPSHOT, and from now-on, and
please
overlook the apparent justifications for vi-only exclusivity, and help
please.
FOR BHAKTA GIRIDHARI. Krsna is your friend. PLEASE!!! I know its is a
non-standard request, but honestly, vi is so clumsy, and I have LOTS
of coding
to do, including writing support for umodem for the MF626, and I would
like to
write it as a learning exercise in assembly. The new security
mechanism is
brute force resilient, and it is for particularly nasty weather. Pull a
Torvaldsesque dictatorship because-I-said-so if you have to.
Hare Bol.