Kudos to the team of people of the Linux/m68k, Debian/m68k and NetBSD/amiga community for their work keeping the Linux and NetBSD running on Amiga!
This post is about NetBSD/amiga.
What is NetBSD/amiga?
NetBSD/amiga is the port of NetBSD operating system to the Amiga line of personal computers by Commodore, Amiga International and to the DraCo by MacroSystem.
NetBSD is a current, up to date UNIX family operating system with an high degree of compatibility with Amiga hardware, multitasking, multiuser and advanced networking features. It comes with a rich set of system utilities, compilers, X11R7 and even games.
In contrast with GNU/Linux, where we have a kernel and different distributions for the userspace, NetBSD developers covers both, the kernel and the userspace under a single distribution. Notice this is not better or worse than the GNU/Linux approach.
You can watch this video captured from my Warp 1260 enabled Amiga 1200, running NetBSD.
Minimum requirements
If you have a Warp accelerator, you probably are way beyond the minimum requirements for running NetBSD:
- 68020+68851, 68030, 68040 or 68060 CPU.
- ECS or AGA chipset. There is also support for a good amount of RTG cards.
- 24 MB of FAST MEM; way more if you plan to run X.
- 250 MB of HDD available space. The HDD must be connected to a supported storage controller, such as the Gayle IDE, ELBOX FastATA 1200 or one of the multiple SCSI controllers supported.
Networking
I consider networking an essential of any UNIX operating system, and NetBSD is no exception. Apart of several Ethernet controllers, NetBSD supports NE2000 compatible PCMCIA cards. I currently own a D-Link DE-660+ and a Fiberline FL-4680 that work well with both, AmigaOS through the
Specific notes for Warp
NetBSD/amiga doesn't support -at the time of writing these lines- Warp RTG, audio or wireless networking. However it will take full advantage of the 68060 -even more if you clock it beyond the 50 MHz- and the fast access to RAM. If your Amiga is a 1200 and you want to use the PCMCIA slot for a ethernet network card you will need to use WarpTool to set IDEMode in A1200 mode with
This guide continues in the next post!