• retrac 10 months ago

    2.x BSD was also ported to MIPS and some other archs a while back: https://github.com/RetroBSD/retrobsd

    I have periodically wondered why we didn't see more of that. It's a small monolithic Unix with the complete stack, including (now rather ancient) TCP/IP networking. Fits in 1 MB of RAM with room to spare. BSD licenced.

    From what I remember off the biggest issues are probably that: 1) it is pretty closely tied to the PDP-11 architecture (though not insurmountably) 2) it's pre-ANSI C.

  • AStonesThrow 10 months ago

    That's wild. <4BSD was never on my radar at all, from my first encounters in 1990.

    Morally, this isn't really 2.11 anymore after so much backporting and updating, so my questions would be, what's the utility of such a platform, if not nostalgia or legacy support?

    Not clear which arches are supported, aside from i386. My love affair with Open/NetBSD was partially sparked by its enormous roster of cool hardware support.

    • bediger4000 10 months ago

      1989-90 you could still dial in to "Nyx", a PDP-11 at University of Denver, running 2.? BSD. The big attraction was Usenet access, Nyx probably got it via uucp.

      • AStonesThrow 10 months ago

        Universities maintained legacy systems for sure, but in 1989, 4.3 was already a mature, gold standard, for the right hardware.

        Personally I was put on SVR3/3B2, and SunOS on IPX/SLC type systems, along with an awareness of all kinds of other stuff available there, such as a "recreational" 4.3BSD VAX.

        • bediger4000 10 months ago

          Oddly, I dialed in to Nyx from a 3b2. Paid extra for SVr3 to get that newfangled Korn shell.

          • kjs3 10 months ago

            Was there some CDC gear laying around in the back, cause if so we might have gone to the same place (where I ran some of the 4.3/VAX, recreationally).

            • aap_ 10 months ago

              2.11BSD is still a popular choice if you have a PDP-11 (or are emulating one).

        • somat 10 months ago

          My understanding is that 2bsd is 16 bit clean, which is most of the reason it is still around. A nice OS to run on your 16-bit micro controllers.

          However when trying to fact check myself, I found many of the architecture targets are 32-bit, so I may be wrong about this.

          see also: retrobsd a 2bsd fork

          https://github.com/RetroBSD/retrobsd

        • kjs3 10 months ago

          There are also V6 & V7 ports for the x86, but they're much less functional/interesting than 2.x.

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