If you have hardware you could donate or loan to a NetBSD developer, or
are interested in writing a driver and just need the hardware, this is
the place to check. Each entry has a contact email address.
Please cc If you have anything you would like to add to this list, please contact us. If your company would like to assist the NetBSD project, please see the appropriate page. There is also a list of other donations |
Simon Burge <simonb@wasabisystems.com>
would like to improve
support for the mips r5k based Cobalt RAQ2 and QUBE. In particular he is
interested in investigating the cache and pci stability issues and the
firmware restriction on max image size.
He is based in Australia and would be willing to help cover shipping.
Allen Briggs <briggs@ninthwonder.com>
is interested in porting
NetBSD to Motorola m88110-based hardware such as the Data General AViiON.
Note that there are both 88100-based and 88110-based systems "out there"
and Allen already has some 88100-based hardware.
Noriyuki Soda <soda@NetBSD.org>
is working on NetBSD/arc, but is handicapped by his host being
a very flaky preproduction unit. Having a (dependable) ARC box would help
expediate both of NetBSD/arc and NetBSD/mips64 projects.
Jonathan Stone <jonathan@DSG.Stanford.EDU>
would benefit from
a TURBOchannel based Alpha machine to ensure any changes he makes to the
TURBOchannel code for NetBSD/pmax do
not impact NetBSD/alpha.
Lubomir Sedlacik <salo@NetBSD.org>
would like to continue his work on
Solaris support in pkgsrc but has no suitable machine anymore. An UltraSPARC
workstation capable of holding SCSI drives and equipped with a PCI bus (such
as Ultra 10, 30, 60, 80 machines or newer Blade systems) would be appreciated.
Hard drives aren't necessary, disk brackets and SMP configurations are
welcome. He is located in Prague, Czech Republic. [20060119]
Jonathan Stone <jonathan@DSG.Stanford.EDU>
would be happy to test
a loaner PMAG-J and do any necessary development for NetBSD/pmax. Longer-term, we really need one in
a developer's hands for release testing and development. Donation of a PMAG-J
would be much appreciated.
The NetBSD build lab is looking for several >1GB SCSI drives for the
NFS server. Contact Herb Peyerl <hpeyerl@NetBSD.org>
.
Several ports could make use of a SCSI bus analyzer for debugging SCSI
drivers, developing new SCSI drivers, figuring out poorly or undocumented
hardware, and for improving existing performance of existing drivers. An
analyzer that can work with old narrow SCSI/SCSI-2 busses is sufficient.
The intent is to share this among developers on an as-needed basis. Contact
Allen Briggs <briggs@NetBSD.org>
.
If you have some MCA (Micro-Channel Architecture, also referred to as only MC)
cards in your junk pile you'd be willing to give away, please contact
Jaromir Dolecek <jdolecek@NetBSD.org>
.
He is collecting them, so that drivers for the cards could be written,
tested and added to the NetBSD tree. More information (as well as
list of most wanted hardware) is at the
NetBSD on IBM PS/2 page.
Dave Camp <freemalloc@yahoo.com>
would be willing to give an IBM
POWERstation 320, model 7012 RS/6000, to anyone who would like to port NetBSD
to it. It was reported to be fully functional up until the hard drive crashed.
This system is located near the San Francisco Bay area.
[20000218]
Iggy Drougge <optimus@canit.se>
has a DIAB DS90/20 (68020/68581/68881/ 8450/misc. Zilog) which is
available to anyone interested in porting
NetBSD to the DIAB DS90 machines.
[20011024]
Kjetil B. Thomassen <kjetil@thomassen.priv.no>
has a couple of
Acorn A310 and an R140 ARM2/3 based machines he would be willing to lend for
an indefinite time to anyone interested in working on a port.
The R140 can run RISCiX, Acorn's own BSD gcc using BSD 4.3-port, which it might be possible to leverage. [20000107]
Bob Nestor <rnestor@metronet.com>
would be willing to loan his
Performa-5320 All-in-One for anyone interested in working on porting NetBSD/macppc to non open
firmware Power Macintosh hardware.
[19990502]
Edwin Mons <e@ik.nu>
can supply a working Sun386i
to anyone who wants to port NetBSD to it. The location of the machine
is Geldrop in The Netherlands.
Parts included:
Francesco Messineo <frank@ideare.com>
has Olivetti ESC-I and
ESC-II EISA SCSI adapters, available to anyone who would like to write a
driver for them.
oskar@unna.ping.de (Jan-Hinrich Fessel) has a DNSES EISA Synchronous Communications Controller with minimal docs (i.e. pinout and install guide) for anyone who is willing to do a port for it. It supports V.35@64kb V.24/V.28@19.2kb V.11/V.36@E1/T1 and V.10@64kb.
Lloyd Parkes <lloyd@must-have-coffee.gen.nz>
has a Compaq
NetFlex-2 ENET-TR card, which is an EISA card that combines ethernet and
token ring interfaces. He is happy to send it to anybody who is keen on
writing EISA drivers. [20060122]
Grant Beattie <grant@NetBSD.org>
has a Sun ffb available for loan
(preferably within Melbourne, Australia) to assist in development of the X
server on NetBSD/sparc64. It is the
model suitable for use in PCI/UPA-based ultra boxes.
Felix Triebel <ernte23@gmx.de>
has a Intergraph Powerstorm 4D50T
graphics card available for any developer wishing to add support for it. The
card comes from a Digital Personal Workstation (Miata). [20020618]
Armijn Hemel <armijn@nl.linux.org>
has a group of ethernet cards
available, he prefers to give them to someone in the Netherlands. Cards
located near Utrecht (NL).
Daniel van Eeden <daniel_e@dds.nl>
has some network cards for
anyone to write a driver. These cards are made for 100VG networks and Daniel
also has a 14-port 100VG 100 Mbit manageable switch with builtin 10 Mbit
bridge and SNMP module to accompany them. He is located in the Netherlands.
Daniel van Eeden <daniel_e@dds.nl>
also has a SunPCi card from
Sun Microsystems which is available to anyone who wants to write NetBSD guest
and/or host support. It's the first PCI version (P/N X1131A-64.2) with AMD
K6-2 CPU. [20060118]
Wilko Bulte <wilko@FreeBSD.ORG>
has various alpha parts available
for interested developers:
Bob Lee <bob@sunstarip.com>
has a working DEC Multia (small scsi
hard drive(~1Gb) and cdrom in second case) with 128 Mb RAM available. It's got
NetBSD 1.5ZA (Jan 02) and recently retired from web service. Floppy generates
some soft errors, but always seems to work out OK when installing. Bob has
offered to pay the shipping as a way of saying thanks for NetBSD.
Leo Weppelman <leo@wau.mis.ah.nl>
has an NCD19B XTerminal
available for free. It is fairly heavy, so it needs to be picked up in
Utrecht, The Netherlands.
Craig Daniels <craigdaniels@mediaone.net>
has a Mac Quadra 840av
with 48MB of RAM, 500MB hard drive and a 2x CD-ROM drive that he would like to
donate for development on NetBSD/mac68k.
He also has the original Mac 16" monitor as well. The items are located in
Georgia, US.
Scott Walters <scott@slowass.net>
has a about 40 Sparc 5's, 10's
and 20's available. These systems have no keyboards and he has only one GX
framebuffer. CPUs are single, dual and quad (two processors on a CPU card,
two CPU cards) SuperSparc-IIs. These machines are supported already but
someone working on the kernel or pkgsrc might want an actual Sparc to test on.
They're $30 to ship UPS ground (the 10's weigh less) or they can be picked up
in the Phoenix, Arizona, USA area. The hardware is free to anyone who has
done development on BSD in the past or can be recognized to be associated with
the project.