Subject: Re: m68k soft float (was illegal instruction)
To: Frederick Bruckman <fredb@immanent.net>
From: Victor Gallardo <goombaz@worldnet.att.net>
List: port-mac68k
Date: 03/11/2003 08:29:28
The New Pastor

The new pastor was visiting in the homes of his parishioners. At one house
 it seemed obvious that someone was at home, but no answer came to his
 repeated knocks at the door. He took out a card, wrote "Revelation 3:20"
 on the back and stuck it in the door.

When the offering was processed the following Sunday, he found that his
 card had been returned. Added to it was this cryptic message, "Genesis
 3:10."

Reaching for his Bible to check out the citation, he broke up in gales of
 laughter.

Revelation 3:20 begins "Behold, I stand at the door and knock."

Genesis 3:10 reads, "I heard your voice in the garden and I was afraid for
 I was naked."

Remember when the funniest jokes were the clean ones? They still are!

A cheerful heart is good medicine... (Prov 17:22a)

----- Original Message -----
From: "Victor Gallardo" <goombaz@worldnet.att.net>
To: "Frederick Bruckman" <fredb@immanent.net>; "Izumi Tsutsui"
<tsutsui@ceres.dti.ne.jp>
Cc: <john@sixgirls.org>; <sibagaki@lsi.melco.co.jp>;
<port-mac68k@netbsd.org>; <port-m68k@netbsd.org>
Sent: Tuesday, March 11, 2003 8:23 AM
Subject: Re: m68k soft float (was illegal instruction)


> A young soldier was in his bunkhouse all alone one Sunday morning
> over in Afghanistan.  It was quiet that day, the guns and the mortars,
> and land mines for some reason hadn't made a noise. The young soldier knew
> it was Sunday, the Lord's day.  As he was sitting there, he got out an
> old deck of cards and laid them out across his bunk.
>
>
>
> Just then an army sergeant came in and said, "Why aren't you with the rest
> of the platoon?"  The soldier replied, "I thought I would stay behind and
> spend some time with the Lord."  The sergeant said, "Looks like you're
going
> to play cards."  The soldier said, "No sir, you see, since we are not
> allowed to have Bibles or other  spiritual books in this country, I've
> decided to talk to the Lord by studying this deck of cards."  The sergeant
> asked in disbelief, "How will you do that?"  "You see the Ace, Sergeant,
it
> reminds that there is only one God.  The Two represents the two parts of
the
> Bible, Old and New Testaments.  The Three represents the Father, the Son,
> and the Holy Ghost.  The Four stands for the Four Apostles: Matthew, Mark,
> Luke and John.  The Five is for the five virgins that were ten but only
five
> of them were glorified.  The Six is for the six days it took God to create
> the Heavens and Earth.  The Seven is for the day God rested after working
> the six days.  The Eight is for the family of Noah and his wife, their
three
> sons and their wives, in which God saved the eight people from the flood
> that destroyed the earth for the first time.  The Nine is for the lepers
> that Jesus cleansed of leprosy.  He cleansed ten but nine never thanked
Him.
> The Ten represents the Ten Commandments that God handed down to Moses on
> tablets made of stone.  The Jack is a reminder of Satan.  One of God's
first
> angels, but he got kicked out of heaven for his sly and wicked ways and is
> now the joker of eternal hell.  The Queen stands for the Virgin Mary.  The
> King stands for Jesus, for he is the King of all kings.  When I count the
> dots on all the cards, I come up with 365 total, one for every day of the
> year.  There are a total of 52 cards in a deck, each is a week, 52 weeks
in
> a year.  The four suits represents the four seasons: Spring, Summer, Fall
> and Winter.  Each suit has thirteen cards, there are exactly thirteen
weeks
> in a quarter. So when I want to talk to God and thank Him, I just pull out
> this old deck of cards and they remind me of all that I have to be
thankful
> for." The sergeant just stood there and after a minute, with tears in his
> eyes and pain in his heart, he said, "Soldier, can I borrow that deck of
> cards?" -- Originator Unknown
>
>
>
> Please let this be a reminder and take time to pray for all of our
soldiers
> who are being sent away, putting their lives on the line fighting for us.
> Send this on so that we can have a multitude praying for our people and
our
> country.  God Bless America!
>
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Frederick Bruckman" <fredb@immanent.net>
> To: "Izumi Tsutsui" <tsutsui@ceres.dti.ne.jp>
> Cc: <john@sixgirls.org>; <sibagaki@lsi.melco.co.jp>;
> <port-mac68k@netbsd.org>; <port-m68k@netbsd.org>
> Sent: Wednesday, March 05, 2003 9:48 AM
> Subject: Re: m68k soft float (was illegal instruction)
>
>
> > On Thu, 6 Mar 2003, Izumi Tsutsui wrote:
> >
> > > In article
> <Pine.NEB.4.44.0303051017390.5663-100000@elation.immanent.net>
> > > fredb@immanent.net wrote:
> > >
> > > > As for future releases, isn't sun2 userland built with -soft-float?
If
> > > > so, it could serve with just a few additions. Then we could have
just
> > > > the two sets of sets, one for m68000 (-m68000 + -msoft-float), and
one
> > > > for m68k (-m68020 or -m68020-40 or -m68020-60).
> > >
> > > sun2 has different MACHINE_ARCH (m68000) and MID_MACHINE
(MID_M680002K)
> > > from other m68k ports (m68k and MID_M68K).
> >
> > But it's basically the same compiler, with different "specs" (i.e.
> > different defaults). So if you compile a package with CFLAGS='-m68020
> > -mno-soft-float' on m68000, you get the same binary as on m68k (no
> > CFLAGS). Is that not true?
> >
> > Frederick
> >
> >
>