> The libsec-chacha.diff patch is not useful, since it's not used yet.
Just to clarify. The libsec-chacha.diff patch implements ChaCha20
stream cipher in libsec. It was developped by Charles Forsyth.
(https://bitbucket.org/plan9-from-bell-labs/plan9).
To make use of it, you have to implement Poly
I'm not sure there's a single "canonical" answer, but many installations have
run the auth server off its own file system, as James originally described.
It's been several years now so my memory could be fuzzy, but I believe this is
what they did at the main Bell Labs installation.
> On Nov 15
> I have converted the open source font called Hack to plan 9 font format.
Thats nice, not sure if I will switch, I will try it for a week or so...
I think the sizes are wrong, the 14 point in the hack directory looks close to
9 point in
the plan9 pelm font.
-Steve
Thanks for checking it out.
I'll check the tool for sizing problems.
Chris
On Nov 16, 2016, at 9:27 AM, Steve Simon wrote:
>> I have converted the open source font called Hack to plan 9 font format.
>
> Thats nice, not sure if I will switch, I will try it for a week or so...
>
> I think the
Anthony Sorace wrote:
>I'm not sure there's a single "canonical" answer, but many
>installations have run the auth server off its own file system, as
>James originally described. It's been several years now so my memory
>could be fuzzy, but I believe this is what they did at the main Bell
>Labs i
Steve Simon wrote:
>> I have converted the open source font called Hack to plan 9 font
>format.
>
>Thats nice, not sure if I will switch, I will try it for a week or
>so...
>
>I think the sizes are wrong, the 14 point in the hack directory looks
>close to 9 point in
>the plan9 pelm font.
>
>-Stev
Any plans for Plan 9 5th edition?
My desires:
ISO-compliant C compiler and preprocessor
Port other programming languages (especially Go) to here
Start a source code repository
Port Git, SVN, Mercurial, et cetera to here
Charlie Lin wrote:
>Any plans for Plan 9 5th edition?
>
>My desires:
>ISO-compliant C compiler and preprocessor
>Port other programming languages (especially Go) to here
>Start a source code repository
>Port Git, SVN, Mercurial, et cetera to here
At the risk of being contradicted: No.
sl
I think there was a port of gcc at one time. It should be possible to use
that to port later versions of gcc.
Go is already ported, AFAIK, but I have not yet found an excuse to try it
out.
Personally, I would really like to have Ada (Gnat) working on Plan9. I
have made enough errors in C and C++ f
A C compiler that supports the latest spec would be nice as long as it doesn't
sacrifice compile times. I like how quickly the system can recompile itself.
Maybe extend pcc to include new features?
Go works pretty well and is on its way to be a supported platform. I use it
quite frequently on 9
Add one more: EFI support
Also, can Plan 9 be booted on Open Firmware? (Used on at least Sun SPARC
workstations)
On Nov 16, 2016 5:27 PM, "Charlie Lin" wrote:
> Any plans for Plan 9 5th edition?
>
> My desires:
> ISO-compliant C compiler and preprocessor
> Port other programming languages (espec
On Wed, Nov 16, 2016 at 07:21:14PM -0500, Charlie Lin wrote:
> Add one more: EFI support
> Also, can Plan 9 be booted on Open Firmware? (Used on at least Sun SPARC
> workstations)
>
> On Nov 16, 2016 5:27 PM, "Charlie Lin" wrote:
>
> > Any plans for Plan 9 5th edition?
> >
> > My desires:
> > IS
On Wed, Nov 16, 2016 at 3:54 PM Chris McGee wrote:
> A C compiler that supports the latest spec would be nice as long as it
> doesn't sacrifice compile times. I like how quickly the system can
> recompile itself. Maybe extend pcc to include new features?
>
I'll admit to never having paid much at
Who has write access to the Wiki so that we can put the ideas in a TODO
list?
Also does anyone want to host the source tree in a repository?
On Nov 16, 2016 7:21 PM, "Charlie Lin" wrote:
> Add one more: EFI support
> Also, can Plan 9 be booted on Open Firmware? (Used on at least Sun SPARC
> work
Charlie there are some things you should know:
http://fqa.9front.org/fqa0.html
sl
I have the ANSI X3.159-1989 (C89), the ISO/IEC 9989:1990 (C90) (ANSI
version) and ISO/IEC 9989:1999 (C99).
The first one I found it at the National Technical Reports Library. The
other two I do not know where I obtained them but I know they are on the
Internet, as final standards, not drafts.
On
On Wed, Nov 16, 2016 at 07:55:38PM -0500, Charlie Lin wrote:
> Also does anyone want to host the source tree in a repository?
This sounds like a lot of work. Who would undertake this??
khm
What size grapefruit are we talking here? Using grapefruit bought from my local
supermarket (http://www.paknsave.co.nz/upper-north-island/auckland/royal-oak/)
I could fit at most 5 vertically, 7 horizontally into the screen of a 27 inch
iMac. I’m fairly sure I could fit more 9pt lucm runes on my
On Thu, Nov 17, 2016 at 02:30:08PM +1300, Andrew Simmons wrote:
> What size grapefruit are we talking here? Using grapefruit bought from my
> local supermarket
> (http://www.paknsave.co.nz/upper-north-island/auckland/royal-oak/) I could
> fit at most 5 vertically, 7 horizontally into the screen
Apples are a citrus fruit? Who knew???
> On Nov 17, 2016, at 2:38 PM, Kurt H Maier wrote:
>
> On Thu, Nov 17, 2016 at 02:30:08PM +1300, Andrew Simmons wrote:
>> What size grapefruit are we talking here? Using grapefruit bought from my
>> local supermarket
>> (http://www.paknsave.co.nz/upper-no
opsec andrew
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