[[!template id=port port="sparc" cur_rel="5.1.2" future_rel="6.0" changes_cur="5.0" changes_future="6.0" thumbnail="http://www.netbsd.org/images/ports/sparc/ipx.gif" about=""" NetBSD/sparc is based on work done at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory by the Computer Systems Engineering group under DARPA contract BG 91-66, which later appeared in the 4.4BSD-Lite distribution from the University of California, Berkeley. It was imported into the NetBSD source tree on October 2, 1993. Special thanks are extended to the LBL Computer Systems Engineering group for their work. Without which, this port would not exist. For frequently asked questions and links to Sun hardware information, see the NetBSD/sparc FAQ. For newer UltraSPARC-based machines, see NetBSD/sparc64. """ supported_hardware=""" Systems for which support was added in NetBSD 2.0 are marked (2.0). Note:Models marked '(SMP)'can have multiple CPUs but NetBSD/sparc does not use more than one CPU prior to release 2.0 *Sun sun4m machines (all known SuperSPARC, hyperSPARC, microSPARC, and TurboSPARC CPUs are supported):
If you have a device that's not listed, it might be compatible with something else, or we might have simply forgotten it. If all else fails, maybe you could write a driver!
Sun 4/600, SPARCstation/server 10, SPARCstation/server 20, and clones
On-board and sbus card.
VME card, on-board, or P4 (supported only on 4/100 and 4/300 series).
Note: VME/IPI disks are not supported
All PCMCIA devices listed on the Machine-independent PCMCIA drivers page should work in -current, but not in 1.6. Some have been tested. See the FAQ for more information about using the nell driver on 1.6.
/dev/ttyC0
) and JavaStation-NC
(1.5)
If you have a device that's not listed, it might be compatible with something else, or we might have simply forgotten it. If all else fails, maybe you could write a driver!