[TUHS] Porting the SysIII kernel: boot, config & device drivers

Warner Losh imp at bsdimp.com
Sun Jan 1 12:29:25 AEST 2023


FreeBSD's boot loader uses Forth as it's scripting language.... well, we
replaced it a couple years ago with Lua... it's just big enough to be
useful and small enough to fit in BIOS constrained (640k) environments.
Perl and python are too big...

Warner


On Sat, Dec 31, 2022, 6:40 PM Larry McVoy <lm at mcvoy.com> wrote:

> All true except for the Forth choice.  It's as bad, maybe worse, as
> choosing Tcl for your language.  I've written a ton of Tcl but I
> need the Tk GUI part so I put up with Tcl to get it.  I'd never
> push Tcl as a language that other people had to use.  Same thing
> with Forth.
>
> I dunno what I'd pick, Perl in the old days, Python now (not that
> I care for Python but everyone can program it).  Just pick something
> that is trivial for someone to pick up.
>
> On Sun, Jan 01, 2023 at 11:16:16AM +1000, George Michaelson wrote:
> > A counter argument which will be well understood as self-justifying if
> made
> > by a boot rom specialist:
> >
> > Every machine I make winds up looking a bit different. The new bus has
> > different logic. The chip initialisation differs. Blobs become more
> > interestingly hard to handle because associated pre boot initialisation
> > dependency keeps rising and no amount of push back from me stops it.
> >
> > If I make my boot ROM forth, I can reduce my marginal costs to writing
> > forth code for most variant handling and occasional uplift of new
> > primitives and constants into the forth for edge cases. My life gets
> > simpler if I implement the wheel of life.
> >
> > I would imagine after the 10th sub variant, one would wind up thinking
> like
> > this.
> >
> > Of course a rational alternative is to maintain a monrepo of all the
> > variants and recompile all of them all the time to make all the boot ROMs
> > far smaller. But making the generic anything ROM and changing only some
> > forth would be attractive.
> >
> >  Never owned this problem. I did work with two groups doing lsi-11 images
> > for x.25 handling on yorkbox, and they definitely thought more like you
> > than me on this: hand code it, code it well, they aren't general purpose
> > devices when doing this kind of job. (I annoyed them a lot which tends to
> > "probably they were right" in hindsight on my part)
> >
> > G
>
> --
> ---
> Larry McVoy           Retired to fishing
> http://www.mcvoy.com/lm/boat
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://minnie.tuhs.org/pipermail/tuhs/attachments/20221231/7b096f84/attachment.htm>


More information about the TUHS mailing list