Linux On A RISC Box?
Noctrnl asks: "I've recently begun a search for a Linux distro to run on my old IBM RS/600 model 250 machines. A lot of PPC projects support the CPU architecture, but I have yet to find one that supports MCA on them. At every turn I can find a distro that supports the PowerPC chip on a PCI-based system, but have been unable to find a distribution that will run on my machines. Are there any projects underway that will allow me to boot a real operating system besides AIX on these babies? Just in case you were wondering, *BSD doesn't support them either."
I have not done any extensive research, but as well as I can recall, MCA is not supported by open source software, period. Just about the only thing that came out of the MCA/P2 design that is supported by anyone but IBM and M$oft is the keyboard and mouse connector. ;-P
Complain to IBM about proprietary architectures.
Good judgement comes from experience, and experience comes from bad judgement.
- W. Wriston, former Citibank CEO
That said, I'm working on it now :-)
Well I know that Yellow Dog Linux runs on most PowerPC machines. Actually, there is a writeup in this months Linux Journal about running YDL on some IBM RISC Machines. Maybe it applies?
www.jackasscritics.com
Nope. Not that bus arch. It wouldn't be terribly difficult, but there aren't too many of the early MCA models out there. Demand for such a 'port' would be exceedingly low. On the upside, MCA on Intel and the RISC arch themselves are supported, so I suppose all it would really take is one moderatly good kernel hacker, two lackeys and a working example.
I wonder how much the company would charge me for a 2xx series? Probably nothing.. Perhaps I've got a project..
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