yes
there is pf9 for windows, which is a port of p9p.
I have also been working on my own port for years, more orientated towards
using a windows box as a cup server. shout if you want that.
Steve
> On 29 Nov 2014, at 00:54, Ryan Gonzalez wrote:
>
> I Google'd it, but I didn't find anythi
On 18.11.2014 09:22, Skip Tavakkolian wrote:
thanks folks ... seems I need to think through all of this more deeply.
If I'm not completely mistaken, factotum can also handle various
authentication protocols, and may be the only one who really knows
the actual secrets.
One scenario I'm thinking
> So, how would a Plan9 solution for these usecases look like ?
plan 9 doesn't pretend that the hostowner doesn't fully control the box,
so it doesn't attempt to prevent the hostowner from e.g. turning wireless
on and off.
- erik
On 29.11.2014 20:46, erik quanstrom wrote:
Hi,
>> So, how would a Plan9 solution for these usecases look like ?
>
> plan 9 doesn't pretend that the hostowner doesn't fully control the box,
> so it doesn't attempt to prevent the hostowner from e.g. turning wireless
> on and off.
In my scenario,
> In my scenario, I'm (more precisely: the account I'm using) not the
> hostowner, just a plain user - in Unix terms: non-root). But that
> account has the special privileges of controlling the network
> connections. Other accounts may only choose from a predefined list
> of connections.
if you've
On 29 November 2014 at 03:31, Ryan wrote:
>
> Of course; VS can barely compile anything useful.
The version of lib9 and libbio in Inferno will compile with the free MS
compiler suite.
I don't remember any particular problems.
I agree. I have never seen Inferno built with ming.
brucee
On 30 November 2014 at 12:31, Charles Forsyth
wrote:
>
> On 29 November 2014 at 03:31, Ryan wrote:
>
>>
>> Of course; VS can barely compile anything useful.
>
>
> The version of lib9 and libbio in Inferno will compile with the free MS