Andreas Saurwein wrote:
Crispin Cowan wrote:
However, where ever C made an arbitrary decision (either way is just
as good) PL/M went the opposite direction from C, making it very
annoying for a C programmer to use.
Does that mean it did not make any decision at all? What was the outcome?
No, just
Dana Epp wrote...
[...snip...]
> For those of us who write kernel mode / ring0 code, what language are
> you suggesting we write in? Name a good typesafe language that you have
> PRACTICALLY seen to write kernel mode code in. Especially on Windows and
> the Linux platform. I am not trying to fue
Crispin Cowan wrote:
However, where ever C made an arbitrary decision (either way is just as
good) PL/M went the opposite direction from C, making it very annoying for
a C programmer to use.
Does that mean it did not make any decision at all? What was the outcome?
Michael S Hines wrote:
When you
Michael S Hines wrote:
Likewise for the IBM Mainframe operating systems MVS,OS/390,z/OS - much of
which is written in (I believe) PL/M - a dialect much like PL/1.
If PL/M is the language I am remembering from an embedded systems class
back in the 1980s, then it is not at all like PL/1. Rather,
At 9:16 AM -0500 6/11/04, Michael S Hines wrote:
> IBM had Language Environment (LE) before .NET come along.
What is Language Environment (for either of those) ?
> For those of us who write kernel mode / ring0 code, what language are
> you suggesting we write in? Name a good typesafe language that you
> have PRACTICALLY seen to write kernel mode code in.
Lisp. I used Lisp Machines back when I worked in academia, and almost
everything was in Lisp, includi
ljknews wrote:
At 2:00 PM -0700 6/10/04, Dana Epp wrote:
Ok, lets turn the tables a bit here. We talked about this a bit back last December
when I said that you need to use the right tool for the right job, and to quit beating
on C.
For those of us who write kernel mode / ring0 code, what lang
Likewise for the IBM Mainframe operating systems MVS,OS/390,z/OS - much of
which is written in (I believe) PL/M - a dialect much like PL/1.
Many of our Operating Systems seem to have evolved out of the old DEC RSTS
system. For example, CP/M had a PIP command. Later renamed to COPY in DOS.
UNIX
At 2:00 PM -0700 6/10/04, Dana Epp wrote:
>Ok, lets turn the tables a bit here. We talked about this a bit back last December
>when I said that you need to use the right tool for the right job, and to quit
>beating on C.
>
>For those of us who write kernel mode / ring0 code, what language are you
Ok, lets turn the tables a bit here. We talked about this a bit back
last December when I said that you need to use the right tool for the
right job, and to quit beating on C.
For those of us who write kernel mode / ring0 code, what language are
you suggesting we write in? Name a good typesafe
Damir Rajnovic wrote:
While this is true that only some of the bugs are fixed that fixing can
have unexpectedly high price tag attached. No matter how do you look
at this it _is_ cheaper to fix bugs as soon as possible in the process
(or not introduce them at the first place).
This is true in th
On Wed, Jun 09, 2004 at 10:37:45AM +0200, Florian Weimer wrote:
> I don't think this is correct. The costs for fixing bugs is higher
> later in the product lifecycle (and the article cites confirming
> data), but these costs might never materialize. Only a fraction of
> all bugs are found, and th
* Kenneth R. van Wyk:
> There's an interesting article out on Net-Security.org (see the full article
> at http://www.net-security.org/article.php?id=697) that addresses why
> software development organizations adopt (or do not adopt) a Software
> Security development methodology. Check it out
Integrating security activities into the software development lifecycle is
going to be a major theme at OWASP AppSec 2004 (June 19/20 in NYC). The
talks will cover a broad range of topics that web application and web
service developers must address, including metrics, training, standards, and
best
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