Jan Nieuwenhuizen writes:
> It may just yet. Make sure your /dev/sda1 smaller than 128GiB.
Eh...the Hurd must not see any parts of a disk beyond 128GiB. So if
hd0s1 starts at 0, it must is not bigger than 128GiB. A GNU/Linux
partition can live beyond that.
I had a 20GiB hd0s2 partition start
pelzflorian (Florian Pelz) writes:
Hello!
> On Sun, Jul 12, 2020 at 01:05:28AM +0200, Jan Wielkiewicz wrote:
>> Hurd lacks SMP (Simultaneous MultiProcessing), is 32-bit only and it
>> doesn't support modern hardware yet.
>
> I too wanted to try Hurd on real hardware. I see Jan Nieuwenhuizen
> do
On Sun, Jul 12, 2020 at 01:05:28AM +0200, Jan Wielkiewicz wrote:
> Hurd lacks SMP (Simultaneous MultiProcessing), is 32-bit only and it
> doesn't support modern hardware yet.
I too wanted to try Hurd on real hardware. I see Jan Nieuwenhuizen
does much work on it.
After Jan Nieuwenhuizen’s patche
Thanks, yes I did see the post about it.
I kind of thought it might not be real :-) got me!
Thanks for the info.
On 7/11/20 4:05 PM, Jan Wielkiewicz wrote:
Hello,
Dnia 2020-07-11, o godz. 14:14:16
fr33d0m napisał(a):
I'm running a standalone GUIX system and have been updating it with
GUIX
Hello,
Dnia 2020-07-11, o godz. 14:14:16
fr33d0m napisał(a):
> I'm running a standalone GUIX system and have been updating it with
> GUIX pull and upgrading packages.
>
> I'd like to try running the Hurd instead of Libre-Linux but I don't
> know how to do this.
I guess you read the first April
I'm running a standalone GUIX system and have been updating it with GUIX
pull and upgrading packages.
I'd like to try running the Hurd instead of Libre-Linux but I don't know
how to do this.
Can someone help me on how to accomplish this if it's possible to do now?
I'm new to GUIX so don't as