About NetBSD/hp300
NetBSD/hp300 is the port of NetBSD to Hewlett-Packard 9000 Series 300
and 400 workstations. It runs on almost all workstations from this
generation. Series 700 and 800 workstations are not currently supported,
but work is underway on NetBSD/hp700.
NetBSD/hp300 is based on work done by David P. Davis at the University
of California, Berkeley and the Systems Programming Group at the University
of Utah Department of Computer Science, beginning in the mid-80's. It was
imported into the NetBSD source tree on May 13, 1993.
Special thanks are extended to David and the Systems Programming
Group for their work. Without it, the port would not exist.
Easily installed binary distributions of NetBSD/hp300 are available for
the 3.0 release and for
snapshots of NetBSD-current.
NetBSD/hp300 News
- 2005-12-23: NetBSD 3.0 released
- NetBSD 3.0 released
with support for 57 architectures. More information is available in
the 3.0 release
announcement.
- 2005-11-02: NetBSD 2.1 released
- NetBSD 2.1,
the first maintenance release of the netbsd-2 release branch,
has been released with binary distributions for 48 architectures.
More information is available in the 2.1 release
announcement.
- 2004-12-09: NetBSD 2.0 released
- NetBSD 2.0 released
with support for 48 architectures. More information is available in
the 2.0 release
announcement.
- 2004-04-10: APCI com fixed
- Some fixes for apci serial, which switched to MI com(4)
driver, are committed so that now it's actually functional.
- 2004-04-08: Framebuffer attachment problem fixed
- A longstanding bug in console attachment functions is fixed, so that
now DIO based framebuffers (mostly used on HP4xx machines) can be
used as console again.
- 2004-03-01: NetBSD 1.6.2 released
- NetBSD 1.6.2 released
with support for 40 architectures. More information is available in
the 1.6.2 release
announcement.
- 2003-11-08: Switched to MI com
- NetBSD/hp300 has switched to use the machine independent serial
com
device to simplify code maintenance. This currently only applies to
the dca and apci devices until others get tested.
- 2003-08-01: Switched to MI SCSI
- NetBSD/hp300 has switched to use the machine independent SCSI layer
at last so that all SCSI devices supported by
MI SCSI drivers (including
SCSI tape devices) are fully functional like other ports.
Archive of NetBSD/hp300 news items
Supported System Models
All systems with a FPU are supported in NetBSD/hp300 (this excludes
the 310 and 332). Systems marked with a
* do not support the built-in
framebuffer. You will need to set up a serial console on these machines.
- 320
- 318, 319, 330
- 340
- 350
- 360
- 362 *
- 370
- 345, 375
- 380
- 382 *
- 385
- 400s, 400t, 400dl
- 425s, 425t, 425dl
- 425e *
- 433s, 433t, 433dl
- Note: Series 400 machines must be configured in
"HP-UX Compatible Boot Mode". Follow
these
instructions in the FAQ.
Some specific configurations of the above models don't support
a local console.
In particular, the 362 and 382 have a built-in framebuffer that is
unsupported. The 425e (and some rare 4XXt and 4XXdl machines) have their
graphics device on the SGC bus, which is currently
unsupported. Also, to use local console on a Series 400 workstation,
you must
currently use a HP-HIL keyboard/mouse (instead of Domain keyboard/mouse).
Unsupported HP Models
The following HP workstations are not and will never be
supported under NetBSD/hp300 due to extremely different architectures:
9000 Series 100, 9000 Series 200, 9000 Series 500, 9000 Series 600,
9000 Series 700, 9000 Series 800, 9000 Series 900, 3000 Series, and
Apollo DNXXXXX.
Here are a few links that might be of interest to anyone with HP
hardware not supported by NetBSD/hp300:
|
-
NetBSD/hp300 Information
-
Mailing Lists
-
Current Release
-
Future Releases
-
Related Links
|