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Command: compat_bsdos | Section: 8 | Source: NetBSD | File: compat_bsdos.8
COMPAT_BSDOS(8) FreeBSD System Manager's Manual COMPAT_BSDOS(8)
NAME
compat_bsdos - binary compatibility for BSDi releases
DESCRIPTION
The COMPAT_NOMID kernel option includes compatibility with BSDi 1.x-3.x
a.out(5) binaries on NetBSD/i386 and NetBSD/amd64. The option is enabled
by default in the GENERIC kernel on i386, but needs to be set along with
EXEC_AOUT on amd64.
Null memory protection must be disabled with the sysctl(7) option
vm.user_va0_disable set to 0 for the binaries to run successfully.
BSD/OS binaries may be placed under /emul directory to match the location
of other non-native executables on NetBSD, but the compatibility
environment does not automatically lookup libraries under /emul/bsdos as
happens with the shared libraries for NetBSD 1.0-1.5 a.out(5) binaries
under /emul/aout.
BSD/386 1.0-1.1 uses static binaries that do not dynamically load
libraries at runtime.
BSD/OS 2.0 introduced "static shared libraries" as the default for
standard binaries. The shared libraries are compiled from /lib and
/usr/lib to a custom format bound to memory loading addresses for each
library under /shlib. BSDi libraries under /shlib are not in the
standard ar(5) or position-independent shared object formats and cannot
be loaded by ldconfig(8) on NetBSD. In order for BSDi executables to
access the objects at the hardcoded /shlib path, the user may setup a
symbolic link from /shlib to /emul/bsdos/shlib.
BSD/OS 4.0 switched to an ELF binary executable format that does not run
under the compatibility layers currently available on NetBSD.
SEE ALSO
ld.aout_so(1), options(4), a.out(5), elf(5), sysctl(7),
compat_netbsd32(8), ldconfig(8)
HISTORY
BSD/386 1.0-1.1 was derived from 4.3BSD Reno code in the Net/2 release.
BSD/OS 2.0 was based on 4.4BSD Lite, but added the new static shared
library format as the runtime default for executables. The build system
included the shlicc command with the -Bstatic flag that allowed reverting
to the standard library archive format that remained available under /lib
and /usr/lib.
NetBSD 1.0 added shared libraries using a standard position-independent
shared object format. The previous default relocatable libraries in the
traditional ar(5) format remained available.
OpenBSD 2.2-4.7 included a different compatibility implementation under
the COMPAT_BSDOS kernel option.
BUGS
BSD/OS compatibility was broken on NetBSD 5-6.
BSD/OS 3.0 added SPARC support, but the binaries are incorrectly
recognized as SunOS executables and fail on NetBSD/sparc and
NetBSD/sparc64.
FreeBSD 14.1-RELEASE-p8 August 27, 2020 FreeBSD 14.1-RELEASE-p8