Mailing-List: contact cygwin-help AT cygwin DOT com; run by ezmlm List-Subscribe: List-Archive: List-Post: List-Help: , Sender: cygwin-owner AT cygwin DOT com Mail-Followup-To: cygwin AT cygwin DOT com Delivered-To: mailing list cygwin AT cygwin DOT com To: cygwin AT cygwin DOT com From: Shankar Unni Subject: Re: MS offers "Services For Unix" free of charge Date: Thu, 15 Jan 2004 13:15:56 -0800 Lines: 21 Message-ID: References: <20040114213617 DOT GD4088 AT redhat DOT com> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; format=flowed Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-Complaints-To: usenet AT sea DOT gmane DOT org User-Agent: Mozilla Thunderbird 0.5a (20040105) In-Reply-To: Andrew DeFaria wrote: > Last I checked SFU's NFS was just DiskAccess and the POSIX was merely a > 30-day trial of MKS. 30-day trial? It's actually a subset of the MKS toolkit, but is not 30-day restricted in any way. Previously, if you paid the $99, you got most of what you would need anyway. Now it's free and unrestricted. What SFU 3.x adds is that everything has been ported to the underlying Interix API, which is they claim is "not an emulation layer like Cygwin" (nice to see them acknowledge Cygwin!), but apparently is a 1st-class NT subsystem. I plan to try it out soon and see how well it interoperates with Cygwin. Obviously some things overlap (services, for instance - even with SFU, they have two telnet servers, so this isn't something new or unexpected). What'll be interesting is all those cross-toolkit usages (like starting a Cygwin bash with "tty" from the SFU sh and seeing if things misbehave :-). Nothing will be reported as a "Cygwin bug", I promise :-). -- Unsubscribe info: http://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple Problem reports: http://cygwin.com/problems.html Documentation: http://cygwin.com/docs.html FAQ: http://cygwin.com/faq/