What system C compiler does that setup provide? I cannot seem to find out when GCC was introduced to replace the more original UNIX ones.
The default /usr/bin/cc is gcc version 1.42
What system C compiler does that setup provide? I cannot seem to find out when GCC was introduced to replace the more original UNIX ones.
Well, sort of. iXsystems is the successor to BSDi (or BSDI, both spellings exist). But the thing that (to me) created BSDi was the people; a company founded and run by Kirk McKusick, Bill Jolitz, Keith Bostic, Rob Kolstad, Mike Karels, and a few others I forgot. None of those people have been involved with iXsystems in the last 10 or 15 years, as far as I know. Staff wise there was a significant break between 1998 and 2005.... turns out iXsystems *is* BSDi (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IXsystems).
$ uname -a
4.4BSD *****.*******.** 4.4BSD-Lite 4.4BSD-Lite #6: Mon Jun 13 21:52:19 MET DST 1994 oscar@*****.******.**:/sys/compile/BSD DEC
$ uptime
4:35PM up 12 days, 17:48, 1 user, load averages: 0.00, 0.00, 0.00
Oh man, you just brought back some bad memories about struggling with dotclocks and modelines.I have run 4.x and 5.x on a Pentium 4 Gateway and Pentium III Dell Optiplex, both which I bought for the purpose of retrocomputing.
Being much younger myself, I didn't realize how painful XFree86 configuration was, I grew up with Xorg autoconfiguration.