It's homebrew, a package repository for OS X. OS X already comes with a
ruby interpreter anyway. And this allows anyone to compile from source qemu
2.0.0 without much fuss.
On Thu, May 22, 2014 at 4:44 PM, Jeff Sickel wrote:
>
> On May 22, 2014, at 9:39 AM, Rubén Berenguel
> wr
➜ ~ brew info qemu
qemu: stable 2.0.0, HEAD
http://www.qemu.org/
/usr/local/Cellar/qemu/1.5.1 (114 files, 90M)
Built from source
/usr/local/Cellar/qemu/2.0.0_1 (120 files, 98M) *
Built from source
From:
https://github.com/Homebrew/homebrew/commits/master/Library/Formula/qemu.rb
==> Dependenci
don't know what I'll do from this point on, since this was a good
"reasoned" way to justify an always on device with Plan9... Now I think it
will be a device with Raspbian or Plan9 depending on what I want to do...
And it will probably mean Raspbian more often than not (so I can use
I'd bet almost always on the keyboard/periferal device, though.
On Sun, Mar 9, 2014 at 4:44 PM, erik quanstrom wrote:
> > Sounds like the keyboard went idle (on its own!?) and the Rasp lost
> > connection to it. ep6.1 is the name of a USB device (something about
> > logical unit devices or somet
Sounds like the keyboard went idle (on its own!?) and the Rasp lost
connection to it. ep6.1 is the name of a USB device (something about
logical unit devices or something,) you can try unplugging something and
you'll see similar things pop up. kb is complaining the keyboard went away,
and since the
Thanks Steve. In any case, I can't serve HFS+ serving files because P9
can't access them. But I could serve a FAT device.
I finally managed to exportfs the drive, I'm not sure if due to a
combination of things in /lib/namespace or the -t flag in listen1 did the
trick, or the combination of the two
I don't seem to have θfs, which is weird (the Raspberry Pi distribution is
9atom, isn't it?.) At least, its source is not in sys/src/cmd. I pulled
changes 3 or 4 days ago.
On Sat, Mar 8, 2014 at 6:58 PM, erik quanstrom wrote:
> On Sat Mar 8 12:55:25 EST 2014, ru...@mostlymaths.net wrote:
>
> >
The thing is, I don't want access to HFS+ from my Plan9 host. I want my
Plan9 host to serve a HFS+ drive. Access is required, but it's not the end
goal.
On Sat, Mar 8, 2014 at 4:16 PM, Jeff Sickel wrote:
> I agree with Gorka, this would be a good GSoC project.
>
> But there are other ways to mo
Sorry to be bothersome again, but still can't figure it out. I need
/srv/dos available in /lib/namespace, so I can mount the external drive
before anything else is done on the system, but to do so I need to execute
dossrv, and in a namespace file I can't execute anything beside bind/mount
and relat
Thanks for the quick reply. Where is exactly the proper point to consider
it as "started on boot"? I really don't know how the Plan9 boot process
follows along (I guess "something" loads /lib/profile which in turn loads
/rc/bin/termrc, but I'm not even sure about this ordering), and so far the
docu
Thanks all for the prompt replies. I add a few answers:
@Sergey: The point is using an existing HFS+ with ~500 GB of data. Moving
all the data and reformatting is way beyond the time commitment I wanted to
give to this, which was only the moderately convenient remote access. I
know how to use disk
Hi all,
can Plan9 access a USB disk formatted with HFS plus (i.e. the Mac OS
Extended (& journaled) file system?
The part about USB is just because it happens to be an USB drive, but
basically I don't know how to mount the /dev/sdD.D/data. Of course, dossrv
can't do it (already tried).
Thanks,
cd=1&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=es
Matthias Bauer page:
http://shoestringfoundation.org/cgi-bin/blosxom.cgi/2007/06/27#learned
Knowing how to plug the mounted namespace screen to a current screen would
be interesting, too.
Thanks,
Ruben
On Mon, Mar 3, 2014 at 3:59 PM, Rubén Berenguel wrote:
I have a long running process on my remote Plan9 (it's compiling a huge
thing and it's taking ages... Raspberry Pi, it explains it) and I'd like to
remotely check if it has finished (I can already drawterm into it). I can
at least check if /proc/id has finished, but is there a better way? I.e.
for
I've been using Acme from p9p to interact with gnu-apl (sadly it has some
quirks that make it kind of unusable...) and I am also interested in
hearing of a way to do it (it was a mild pain to have to write ./apl
--emacs each time I opened and closed acme or gnu-apl crashed.
Ruben
On Fri, Jan 10,
I somewhat agree that some of the answers you are getting have somewhat
been (sometimes, not all, and not constantly) been insulting. But a year or
so ago I was also a Plan9 newbie, and I just read the manuals when I didn't
know how to do something. I followed some long-ago-read advice of first
sma
Seeing a Go link on your homepage I thought, oh, you also program in go?
And then found that you actually *play* go (Google harmed a lot looking for
information on the game). More surprising :D
On Wed, Dec 18, 2013 at 6:18 PM, Blake McBride wrote:
> This is not D. It is a language of my own de
Sometimes (for long pieces of text like blog posts) I use wwb to check
style and readability. Correcting something usually is
1. Right-click the line number in +errors
2. Correct
3. Go back to 1
For spell checking, tweaking aspell's output is best. Also, keep in mind
that all the steps can be (af
Right-click colon comma, like
:,
On Sat, Dec 14, 2013 at 8:22 PM, Blake McBride wrote:
> fmt works fine. Thanks. BTW, besides 'Edit ,', is there an easier way
> to select an entire file (to send to a program)?
>
> Thanks again.
>
>
> On Sat, Dec 14, 2013 at 12:40 PM, Bence Fábián wrote:
>
A kind of crude workaround is using the whole /Users/whatever/file with
spaces, selecting it with first button and 1-2 chording it to Get. This
works on Mac, problem is that it's quite horrible to do. An intermediate
solution may be to use some piping rule like sp:filename with spaces, but I
don't
ear smoothly, fonts
> without significant compression exist. How can I get "uncompressed" / much
> higher resolution fonts for acme?
>
> Thanks.
>
> Blake
>
>
>
> On Wed, Dec 11, 2013 at 1:53 PM, Rubén Berenguel wrote:
>
>> Check here:
>>
>
pload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/98/Acme.png
> http://research.swtch.com/acme
>
> Those look like mine. Obviously it is highly usable, but the fonts shown
> are pixilated and not smooth like fonts that come with the Mac, Linux, etc.
>
> Thanks.
>
>
>
> On Wed,
When I installed p9ports in my new Macbook Air (around 4 months ago),
fontsrv didn't compile "out of the box," I had to compile it separately.
For me all available fonts read perfectly well and sharp (Mac OS X 10.9 on
Air 13" and Mac OS X 10.6.8 on Macbook 13")
Regards,
Ruben
On Wed, Dec 11, 20
Tooting my own horn: I explained a few examples of plumbing rules in this
post of mine (I posted it on reddit/r/plan9 a while ago)
http://www.mostlymaths.net/2013/04/just-as-mario-using-plan9-plumber.html
In the end, everything is written down in the various man pages describing
plumb and plumber
.@gmail.com> wrote:
> Plan 9 has run on MIPS machines almost since inception. Mikrotik 450g is
> the latest. checkout /sys/src/9/rb
>
> mikro% cat '#P/cputype'
> MIPS 24k 680
>
>
>
> On Wed, Oct 30, 2013 at 9:24 AM, Rubén Berenguel wrote:
>
>> Plan9
Plan9 on a MIPS processor?
On Wed, Oct 30, 2013 at 5:19 PM, Skip Tavakkolian <
skip.tavakkol...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Is anyone working on a port? Any thoughts on viability?
>
> -Skip
>
Erik, quick question:
how can I go about getting it into one of my USB drives (if possible a
method without needing a working P9, because all I have are virtual
machines and I think they are in my other computer) and testing some of my
"I'd like P9 here but installing got f*ed up"? I think every t
Zhilkin wrote:
> sources.cs.bell-labs.com and plan9.bell-labs.com are different machines, web
> is sux, not a way to get sources :)
>
>
> 2013/10/9 Rubén Berenguel
>>
>> Same here (Barcelona), repeatedly.
>>
>> Ruben
>>
>> On Wed, Oct 9, 2013 at 6:4
Same here (Barcelona), repeatedly.
Ruben
On Wed, Oct 9, 2013 at 6:48 PM, James A. Robinson
wrote:
> I certainly can't get to it via port 80, I get a timeout.
>
>
> On Wed, Oct 9, 2013 at 9:14 AM, Alex Jordan
> wrote:
>>
>> Anyone know why plan9.bell-labs.com/ is down?
>> Yesterday I visited and
I guess so. At least, I have tried with RCA-to-SCART and Plan9 worked
correctly... but the resolution was far from optimal. HDMI rocks,
though (even if my keyboard doesn't work with Plan9 :_( )
Ruben
On Wed, Aug 14, 2013 at 9:01 PM, Roswell Grey wrote:
> Is it possible to use the rca out on the
It would be awesome (even if incredibly stupid without a mouse option
and due to the small screen) to run it on a Ben Nanonote (MIPS, little
endian IIRC, without floating point unit/extensions)
Ruben
On Mon, Aug 12, 2013 at 6:35 PM, Aram Hăvărneanu wrote:
> I'm curious where one can find a mips
I'm not absolutely sure if this settles it, but bInterfaceSubClas is 1
Boot Interface Subclass so it should (according to what I've read
around usb.org and Wikipedia) support the usb boot protocol for
keyboards... I'm completely unsure :/ Maybe I should grab a Logitech
K120 (the plain, old simple k
I have no idea... How can I check?
On Mon, Aug 12, 2013 at 5:41 PM, Richard Miller <9f...@hamnavoe.com> wrote:
> The plan 9 usb keyboard driver only implements the simplified
> 'boot protocol' which most, but not all, keyboards support.
> Maybe this particular one doesn't?
>
>
Hi all,
I am trying to use a Cherry USB Keyboard (with ID card reader... of
course I don't need the reader with P9 but it's the USB keyboard I
have at hand) with P9 in the Raspberry.
The keyboard works just fine with all other Raspberry OSes I have
tried (Raspbian, RaspBMC and IIRC, I also tried
plan_9_in_a_virtualbox/index.html
>
> I would recommend using qemu these days, though.
>
> Cheers,
>
> ingo
>
> -- Forwarded message --
> From: "Rubén Berenguel"
> To: Fans of the OS Plan 9 from Bell Labs <9fans@9fans.net>
> Cc:
&
Hi all,
The newest version of VirtualBox (4.2.16) works with Plan9 (at last!)
but I can't figure out how to set up networking (I had no trouble
setting it up with qemu before.) For reference, I'm using VirtualBox
(the version described) in a MacBook. I have tried bridget and NAT for
all adapters,
D--n!
My fault: I had created a function named ag in rcmain (my first try
involved a function and writing :ag something to test how to call rc
functions from within acme and get this search feature working.) I had
completely forgotten until a few seconds ago: removing it makes it
work as expected.
Hi everyone,
yesterday, out of boredom and geekness I decided to add a plumbing
rule to my plumber, to allow me to search in subdirectories with The
Silver Searcher (the command line ag, best described here:
https://github.com/ggreer/the_silver_searcher) In short, ag "something
to search" [where]
Oh I wasn't meaning Apple forbids 3-button mice, but just a side remark at
the fact that they only create one-buttoned things. I do have a 3-button
mouse I plug occasionally to my Mac, but most often than not I forget it at
home (or I'm too lazy to pick it up) and having this keyboard fallback is
n
As you may know, Apple has an odd stance against multi-button mice and
trackpads. Acme works surprisingly well with just one button, with the
emulation of buttons 2 and 3 with alt+click and cmd+click. Problem is, with
these settings there's no way to do a 2-1 chord, since "1" is already
pressed whi
I run acme (in Mac OS X with zsh) as:
SHELL=$PLAN9/bin/rc acme -a -f /mnt/font/Monaco/16a/font &
to be able to use rc in Win. I guess this also loads all the stuff in
profile.rc (I think I had tried this already a few weeks ago) and probably
also acme.rc (didn't know about acme.rc, makes more sen
Hi all,
I'm wondering if I can get a somewhat working native Plan9 installation in
any of my "spare" machines. They would be (in order of more sparey to less
sparey)
Acer Aspire One (ZG5)
Acer TravelMate 4001 LMi
Acer Aspire 5865 WLMi (or something similar, quoting from memory)
Intel Macbook (Ear
il, unknown error :/) but I have seen much
pointless emails in the last 2 weeks and I was thinking of shutting the
thing.
Ruben
On Tue, Mar 26, 2013 at 1:57 PM, Charles Forsyth
wrote:
>
> On 26 March 2013 12:11, Rubén Berenguel wrote:
>
>> I'm starting to wonder why I dec
That's pretty meta on your part Hiro. I'm here for plan9 knowledge, tips,
tricks, news and related things (I guess go is a related thing, although I
still have to manage to install it... mercurial screwed me up last time I
tried to install it in P9)
As for picolisp dexen... Have never checked it (
I'm starting to wonder why I decided to subscribe to yet another newsgroup,
after having unsubscribed from so many in the past for lack of content. I
guess I never learn the required lessons.
Ruben
On Tue, Mar 26, 2013 at 1:07 PM, wrote:
> >> It is possible to use computers without also using j
:) mail groups have these fun side effects. Although I controlled my
/bin/Mail spurious program, the problem is I still can't get anything from
my gmail account:
mailfs -t imap.gmail.com
mailfs: imapconnect: Unknown error: 0
Since it is an unknown error, I can't really tell what may be going on.
Ben: Yup, I can write perfectly on your generated images, so it's not a
problem with qemu. I thought the correct boot option would be 5, but then
I'll use 9queen and then sooner or later I'll see if I can understand
everything else is there, Plan9 is relatively complex in its namespace
stuff (comin
Hi again,
I kind of figured what the problem may be last night before falling asleep.
At first I thought it may be because I use zsh as shell, and it has this
funny thing about changing uppercase for lowercase in case of need (which
may shadow Mail as a shell command to execute /usr/bin/mail from
Hi everyone,
I'm trying (just for the sake of getting it to work!) to read my (imap)
mail via acme from plan9ports. I got the mail file server started in my
namespace (I can 9p ls mail and see my folders in INBOX for my work
account, but I can't get gmail to work... Probably needs TLS support and
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