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Full Discussion: Compatibility between UNIXes
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Compatibility between UNIXes Post 302790477 by Corona688 on Friday 5th of April 2013 12:45:39 PM
Old 04-05-2013
You obviously know already that nearly all your questions get a flat "no", so I'll just explain why.

UNIX runs on many systems that are completely incompatible with each other. HP-UX runs on Itanium and PA-RISC... Solaris runs on x86 and Sparc... AIX runs on POWER or System/370... IRIX runs on MIPS. And so forth. They are physically incompatible with each other. Not even linux-SPARC is compatible with linux-x86, their CPU's do not have a common instruction set. They cannot run the same binary programs, computers simply do not work that way.

UNIX can share programs which aren't native instructions, though. Most importantly, C programs. These are the ones which actually become binary programs... You can compile the same C code into binary programs for IRIX, HP-UX, AIX, or Solaris. This is what lets UNIX run the same program on umpteen different kinds of completely alien computers. This is what all these different UNIX have in common, they call it "source compatibility".

If UNIX had to be "compatible" the way you want, it would run on one and only one kind of computer -- the PDP-7.

Last edited by Corona688; 04-05-2013 at 01:54 PM..
 

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CACHEFLUSH(2)						     Linux Programmer's Manual						     CACHEFLUSH(2)

NAME
cacheflush - flush contents of instruction and/or data cache SYNOPSIS
#include <asm/cachectl.h> int cacheflush(char *addr, int nbytes, int cache); DESCRIPTION
cacheflush() flushes the contents of the indicated cache(s) for the user addresses in the range addr to (addr+nbytes-1). cache may be one of: ICACHE Flush the instruction cache. DCACHE Write back to memory and invalidate the affected valid cache lines. BCACHE Same as (ICACHE|DCACHE). RETURN VALUE
cacheflush() returns 0 on success or -1 on error. If errors are detected, errno will indicate the error. ERRORS
EFAULT Some or all of the address range addr to (addr+nbytes-1) is not accessible. EINVAL cache is not one of ICACHE, DCACHE, or BCACHE (but see BUGS). CONFORMING TO
Historically, this system call was available on all MIPS UNIX variants including RISC/os, IRIX, Ultrix, NetBSD, OpenBSD, and FreeBSD (and also on some non-UNIX MIPS operating systems), so that the existence of this call in MIPS operating systems is a de-facto standard. Caveat cacheflush() should not be used in programs intended to be portable. On Linux, this call first appeared on the MIPS architecture, but nowadays, Linux provides a cacheflush() system call on some other architectures, but with different arguments. BUGS
Linux kernels older than version 2.6.11 ignore the addr and nbytes arguments, making this function fairly expensive. Therefore, the whole cache is always flushed. This function always behaves as if BCACHE has been passed for the cache argument and does not do any error checking on the cache argument. COLOPHON
This page is part of release 4.15 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, information about reporting bugs, and the latest version of this page, can be found at https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/. Linux 2017-09-15 CACHEFLUSH(2)
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