Matthias Wächter wrote:
On Fri, 5 Feb 1999, Charles Esson wrote:
First question. Do you think it should just replace what is there now. Or should the job be done properly.
Of course, in my opinion, it should be done properly.
If you want to do the job properly, then the OS's have to change.
This is why all OSS OSes are so well suited for OpenBIOS - we just have to write a new thing like LILO (say, OBLL, OpenBIOS Linux Loader) which correctly interacts with OpenBIOS to have all compatible as we need it.
Basically the Intel PC is a mess, because the bios is a mess.
Well, ... Intel PC is a mess, because BIOS is a mess, because the original 8088-XT was a mess. Of course, it was somewhat well suited for the needs that time (1986 or so), but I can't understand why there has nothing come up with new features, etc.
PS: Do you want to continue talking privatly? I don't have any problem with that though it would be interesting for the other OpenBIOS subscribers to keep in touch with our thoughts. (feel free to reply publicly)
Sorry clicked the wrong dam button.
If it is agreed it has to be done properly, then we have to agree on what the bios should do.
1) Boot an OS 2) Provide diagnostics 3) Provide a bios ( basic input output services )
And at all times we should remember that the PCI standard specifies that PCI cards can supply FCODE drivers, that SUN and apple have gone down this path, and that FREEBSD have gone down that same path.
I see no reason to reinvent the wheel but I do see a good reason to get the FREEBSD code, unfortunately I have found the boot image but not the source, and I have no idea who is doing the work.
Regards
Charles
Winschdawos,
- Matthias
-- Der Wein mit der Pille ist in dem Becher mit dem Fächer.