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Footnotes

(1)

The name Hurd stands for "Hird of Unix-Replacing Daemons." The name Hird stands for "Hurd of Interfaces Representing Depth."

(2)

The term bootstrapping refers to a Dutch legend about a boy who was able to fly by pulling himself up by his bootstraps. In computers, this term refers to any process where a simple system activates a more complicated system.

(3)

The GRand Unified Bootloader, available from http://www.gnu.org/software/grub/.

(4)

Note that this function will be deleted when the Mach pager interface is fixed to provide this information.

(5)

The latter portion of <hurd/io.defs> and all of <hurd/shared.h> describe how to implement shared-memory I/O operations. However, shared I/O has been deprecated. See section 4.1.2 Conch Management, for more details.

(6)

The number 1 corresponds to the PF_LOCAL C library socket domain constant.

(7)

It is important to note that device drivers are not provided by the Hurd, but by the underlying microkernel. Hurd `devices' are just storeio-translated nodes which make the microkernel device drivers obey Hurd semantics. If you wish to implement a new device driver, you will need to consult the appropriate microkernel documentation.

(8)

"RAID" stands for Redundant Array of Independent Disks: several disks used in parallel to achieve increased capacity, redundancy and/or performance.

(9)

You are lost in a maze of twisty little filesystems, all alike....



This document was generated by Alfred M. Szmidt on January, 22 2005 using texi2html