Amiga Workbench 3 1 Adf Systems
ROM space is very tight for this release on account of the much larger mass storage drivers (SCSI, IDE) and the integrated OCS/ECS/AGA graphics.library.Commodore was already pushing the limits for the 1994 Kickstart 3.1 in the Amiga 1200 ROM, and it only got worse. The Amiga 4000T ROM would no longer contain workbench.library either (in 1994) because the graphics.library and the SCSI driver took up so much room.There is no room for workbench.library and icon.library in the 512 KB 3.1.4 ROM.
Going back to a previous set of workbench.library/icon.library versions is not an option because these do not fit either.1 MB ROMs are not viable solution at this point. Only a select few models support these, and the point was to make the 3.1.4 update available to all desktop systems.Besides, a 1 MB ROM would require retooling of the build process for the operating system, which we did not attempt. The last 1 MB ROMs were built in 1994 (for the CD32) and very little documentation survives on how this is done, and how the ROM images need to be prepared.We were already quite busy with the desktop systems and chose not to spend the time on research and QA work necessary for the 1 MB ROM build. There is no room for workbench.library and icon.library in the 512 KB 3.1.4 ROM.Unfortunately. Understandable.Only a select few models support these, and the point was to make the 3.1.4 update available to all desktop systems.Nobody is telling you to ditch the 512k rom. It's just it sucks not to have workbench.library and icon.library, when using a system that does maprom with 1mb support.The Amiga 4000T ROM would no longer contain workbench.library either (in 1994) because the graphics.library and the SCSI driver took up so much room.And roms with workbench inside were proudly released recently.
Amiga Workbench 3 1 Adf Systems For Sale
Meaning both there's interest, and that you understand this interest.We were already quite busy with the desktop systems and chose not to spend the time on research and QA work necessary for the 1 MB ROM build.It's good if there was at least consideration.Maybe try and release romable versions of workbench and icon library? The community will take over from there, with tools. Nobody is telling you to ditch the 512k rom. It's just it sucks not to have workbench.library and icon.library, when using a system that does maprom with 1mb support.The next best thing is to load both the workbench.library and icon.library using the LoadModule command (which is part of the AmigaOS 3.1.4 update, if I remember correctly) and reboot your machine. Both libraries will then remain in memory as if they had been in the ROM. They will survive subsequent warm reboots, but they will consume RAM.Loading the libraries in this manner can be handled by the Startup-Sequence, for example.
Maybe try and release romable versions of workbench and icon library?Both libraries are technically 'fit' to go into ROM, if there were enough space available for them to fit;-) They are 'romable'. As long as it's fast ram, it's pretty good for a next best thing. I wasn't aware.The ROM changes which shipped with the AmigaOS 3.5/3.9 updates all exercised the same mechanism by which operating system modules loaded into RAM whose contents would survive a warm reset would supersede the contents of the ROM image.If I remember correctly, the same tool (LoadModule) had been used then.Documentation for these technical aspects has always been somewhat lacking I'm afraid. Not everyone wants to trawl the Amiga forums for hints on what is possible and how.This time, however, there is an official FAQ on the web site of the company which sells the product and further pointers to more information on Amiga forums which cover the AmigaOS 3.1.4 update. That's great news. I'm not sure where I heard they weren't.
I'm hopeful tools to do that will pop up on Aminet:)You might want to have a look at Christian Vogelgsang'scollection. There's going to be a physical version at some point, but summary:1. Buy A500/A600 download version, or A1200 if you've got a Vampire accelboard.2. Get adf into Amiga floppies by whatever means (serial cable, pcmcia nic adapter, flashfloppy-enabled floppy drive emulator)3. Boot workbench disk or installer disk. ROM patches will be loaded by loadmodule @ startup-sequence.4.
(Optional) Flash into (E/EE)PROM chip or (more sane) into A500Flash1M or similar such rom switcher solution with a flashrom in it.Note you'll want at least 2MB RAM total for this, at least 1MB of which being CHIP RAM. If you don't have this much, don't even bother. 'Remember 'Diskdoctor'?
It earned its PhD and is now ready to reliably rescue data from your floppies or hard disks.' Remember the cool old 'AGA - time to upgrade - AGA' slogan in some of the demos? Now it'sZFS - time to upgrade - ZFS.it's the 21st century, and AmigaOS doesn't even have software RAID, let alone ZFS yet. We still have to check filesystems for metadata corruption, and checking them for data corruption is still science fiction. And nobody bats an eyelash, like it's the most normal thing in the world.
Meanwhile, the capacitors are leaking like crazy, modern PC-bucket power supplies don't deliver steady 5V, the clock crystal loses or gains up to 5 seconds per day, even the newest accelerator hardware doesn't support ECC memory. What could possibly go wrong with one's data? It's the 21st century, so maybe you should upgrade from 1992 to 2018! That's 26 years!You really want a heavy weight like ZFS (which is a total memory hog, btw., I use it in my server) on Amiga hardware from 1992?You should be happy, that there is such an update to AmigaOS at all!I understand the enthusiasm.
I used an A4000/Cyberstorm060/CyberGfx64 exclusively till 2001. I did not care, that each reboot would take 6 minutes (with starting all the background stuff) and that my system was runtime memory patched into oblivion, and no memory protection in the system.

That it crashed 10 times a day (multiply this with boot times, HO HO!). But one day a day has come and one needs to realize: Reality! 'It's the 21st century, so maybe you should upgrade from 1992 to 2018! That's 26 years!'
Selwyn Indonese
I did upgrade: 128 MB FAST RAM, 64-bit MC68080 @ 234 MHz with AMMX SIMD instructions, 16 GB industry grade CF and 8 GB microSDHC. OS 3.9 @ 1300 x 768 x 32-bit color HDMI.' You really want a heavy weight like ZFS (which is a total memory hog, btw., I use it in my server) on Amiga hardware from 1992?' Yes, I do, because as a Solaris engineer, I understand that ZFS will release memory due to memory pressure from applications, and can in fact run in memory constrained systems. Should be able to run on an Amiga with a Vampire accelerator and 129 MB of RAM. ZIL is auto tuned.
Just don't use features like de-duplication and it'll be fine.(My reboots take about three seconds, with or without the Vampire accelerator, and that's even with OS 3.9.). This is Amiga we're discussing here, a computer designed to be almost infinitely upgradable, so yes, I expect it as if it were the most normal thing in the world. Just look at all the new hardware upgrades coming out!There is even the Amiga reloaded project with a revised A500+ motherboard design coming out, and a new A500-A1200-A4000 hybrid motherboard being designed, so Amiga is far from dead, just very niche.What hadn't kept pace is the OS: even the most modern AmigaOS 4.1 is far from capabilities of modern operating systems like illumos, and I mean very, very far behind.
Smaller than 512 bytes? I beg to differ. The file system data structure layout requires a minimum of 512 bytes per block.The Amiga OFS/FFS, etc. File system data structures scale with the block size (block sizes of 512, 1024,., 65536 bytes are possible).At 256 bytes per block, for example, the directory hash table size would shrink so much that you'd have so many hash collisions that it would be morbidly funny.Anyway, the data blocks in OFS have to account for the checksum and some metadata which aids in recovery.
So you are correct that the payload (488 bytes for a 512 byte block) is smaller than the raw block size. The focus of AmigaOS 3.1.4 development work was on fixing bugs, integrating code which so far had been separate (e.g. The mass storage drivers last updated in AmigaOS 3.9) and generally making it easier for Amiga hardware developers to make use of the operating system (e.g. Adapt the operating system rather than force the developers to twist their designs).The AmigaOS 3.9 NDK ('native development kit') is still relevant for the AmigaOS 3.1.4 update.The 3.1.4 update added new API functionality, but these changes are few and could (= will) be covered separately. The AmigaOS 3.9 code was largely unavailable for development work.