On 12/11/2007, Holger Berger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Nov 11, 2007 3:36 AM, John Sonnenschein <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Is anyone other than myself interested in seeing an IA64/Itanium port
> > of OpenSolaris?
> >
> > My reasoning is that Solaris already runs on two of the 4 major
> > enterprise architectures (SPARC & x86/amd64) and a port to a third is
> > making strides recently ( I'm referring to the ppc32 port ).
> >
> > Since Sun already had an IA64 port underway half a decade ago, they
> > may be able to look in to the legalities of opening it back up. I'm
> > sure there's some sort of legal wrangling between them and Intel that
> > can go on, since Intel would undoubtedly love to see more ia64
> > customers, and Sun already sells Solaris to HP's x86 customers.
> >
> > Failing that, of course, if anyone's interested in doing a straight-up
> > re-port based on the current onnv-gate ( or ppc-dev gate, if that
> > proves to be more portable ) that's an option as well.
> >
> > This port may actually prove easier logistically than the PPC port, as
> > there's already an accurate ia64 simulator ( it's called ski ) out
> > there, though it only runs on HPUX, Linux ( I haven't tried it with
> > brandZ ) & FreeBSD.
> >
> >
> > So, that in mind, any comments?
>
> The project will not have a chance. The Solaris/IA64 project was

The source code is open and no one can stop such a thing from
happening; Sun may not have any desire to help and may actively not
help at all. So, actually, the project has a very good chance of
succeeding. There are no rules to prevent integration of said source
code either.

-- 
Shawn Walker, Software and Systems Analyst
http://binarycrusader.blogspot.com/

"We don't have enough parallel universes to allow all uses of all
junction types--in the absence of quantum computing the combinatorics
are not in our favor..." --Larry Wall
_______________________________________________
opensolaris-discuss mailing list
[email protected]

Reply via email to