On Fri, Jan 26, 2001 at 08:35:54AM -0700, Wes Peters wrote: > Several others have made good replies to this, but here's another thought: > The best way to learn something is to have a goal in mind. If you understand > C pretty well, pick a PR out of the problem report database and start working > on that. It will give you a starting point and a goal. Another place other then the PR system to find a goal is on of PHK's periodic tasks for "Junior Kernel Hackers" sorts of posts. For instance I implemetend the almost-clone hack on the snp device which was an intresting experience. -- Brooks -- Any statement of the form "X is the one, true Y" is FALSE. To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with "unsubscribe freebsd-hackers" in the body of the message
- Re: Kernel Hacking (i tried not to make it lame) Dag-Erling Smorgrav
- Re: Kernel Hacking (i tried not to make it la... Ronald G Minnich
- Re: Kernel Hacking (i tried not to make i... Alfred Perlstein
- Re: Kernel Hacking (i tried not to ma... Garrett Rooney
- Chuck Cranor's PhD thesis on VM Ronald G Minnich
- Re: Chuck Cranor's PhD thesis on... Greg Lehey
- Re: Chuck Cranor's PhD thesis on... Mike Silbersack
- Re: Chuck Cranor's PhD thesis on... Greg Black
- Re: Kernel Hacking (i tried not to make it lame) Sergey Babkin
- Re: Kernel Hacking (i tried not to make it lame) Wes Peters
- Re: Kernel Hacking (i tried not to make it lame) Brooks Davis
- Re: Kernel Hacking (i tried not to make it lame) GLOBALLINK2001
- RE: Kernel Hacking (i tried not to make it lame) Koster, K.J.
- Re: Kernel Hacking (i tried not to make it lame) Bill Fumerola
- RE: Kernel Hacking (i tried not to make it lame) Doug Barton
- RE: Kernel Hacking (i tried not to make it lame) Koster, K.J.

