Eric J Korpela wrote:
Xilinx used to have software that would run under
Solaris...
woodelf <bfranchuk at jetnet.ab.ca> wrote:
: They could indeed. All I know is the free?/low cost software is
: windows based
: and the hi-priced software is windows/other. I suspect they think if
: you are not
: using a Pee Sea you have $$$ to shell out for software.
Xilinx' free download is available for Winblows and for Linux. I have
downloaded the Linux version, but ran into a brick wall installing it.
The downloadable package is actually a .sh file that constitutes a
/bin/sh script with binary data following it (I know, a totally crazy
arrangement, but I didn't look more closely into how it actually works
due to lack of interest in this manure). When you run it, it unpacks
into a bunch of other files. Those consist of an installer executable
and a bunch of files for it to unpack. When I saw that the latter were
ZIPs, I thought I would just extract them manually, but not so fast -
they are encrypted!!!
The fuckers are forcing the use of their assinine installer, which is of
course not runnable. Attempting to run it produces a complaint about
missing libXm.so.3, i.e., it's some fucking GUI thing. I didn't even
bother finding, downloading and compiling whatever package would provide
that libXm.so.3, since the next thing it would complain about of course
would be that I have no X display. And if I turned inside out to give
it the goddamn X display it wants (that would require making a trip to
my old facility, which would in turn require borrowing a friend for the
duration of the entire procedure since I don't feel safe going there
alone [it's a terrible neighbourhood], and none of my friends have that
kind of spare time), I'm sure there would be something else that would
make it unhappy and it still won't run far enough to unpack the fucking
encrypted archive.
In short, Xilinx has done more than enough to deserve the death penalty
under Galactic law. They are badly in need of a date with Madame La
Guillotine.
Fortunately, I may have found an alternative solution using Altera. Not
that Altera is any better, but the company for which I'm currently doing
a consulting project involving FPGAs uses Altera, and I've got Quartus
(Altera's SW) for Linux through them. I haven't seen it yet actually,
I've just got an E-mail from the boss saying that the CD is on my desk
for me to play with tomorrow. So I'll look at it tomorrow. I'm hoping
that I can install it on my Linux box at the company and then copy the
installed files to my own one (i.e., pirate it).
: Back to FPGA software for the VAX, I don't see the hardware a problem
: but the software could be still be one. The small PDP'S has hoards of
: paper tape
: software, the big ones all need a OS.
The OS is not a problem - I am the maintainer of the one true OS for the
VAX (which is of course 4.3BSD-Quasijarus).
MS