Hello

what books you guys recommend to start with hardware programming?
(nemo's kernel book of course)

I mean, having no experience with hardware programming, a desire i
have is to read something to learn from other's experience on writing
software for manage hardware. (something like the practice of
programming but focused on hardware issues).

of course i can always re-read my school notes, and start to fight
with the real life. . . but this looks discouraging, (and becomes much
more discouraging taking in account the comments of more talented
programmers on the iwp9 :)

thanks

gabi


On 12/12/06, Charles Forsyth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> - writing drivers sucks.

it's not a big problem in itself.  i quite enjoy it for
the reasonably well-documented chipsets one finds in (say)
embedded ARM and PowerPC platforms.  for those, i hardly ever
bother to look at another driver.  it's just so straightforward.
i look at the book and do what it says.  it doesn't work, so i
find there's an errrata or fuss about discovering that a bit
has the opposite sense from what's documented.  no matter.

on the PC, it's rather more troublesome: when i could get
reasonable documentation it was much the same as anything else.
without it, it's tedious, and perhaps too time-consuming
if i'm doing it in my spare time.  theo de raadt's slides
were quite a good summary.

still, there's not much choice, really.

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