The Atari Jaguar Runs Linux | Hackaday
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Among the many forgotten might-have-beens of the games console world, the Atari Jaguar occupies a special place. It was the final gasp of Atari Corporation, the Jack Tramiel-era incarnation of the famous pioneering game console brand that brought us the ST line of computers, and like Marlon Brando’s Terry Malloy character from On the Waterfront, it coulda been a contender. But the early ’90s games business wasn’t kind to the console from Sunnyvale, and it was squeezed from behind by the SNES and Genesis/MegaDrive, and in front from the PlayStation. Thirty years later then, can it run Linux? [Cakehonolulu] is here to show us how.
With only 2 megabytes of RAM and space for 8 megabytes of ROM, this is hardly a powerhouse. But its 16-bit 68000 processor is a supported Linux architecture, albeit with the -nommu flag on compilation. The "Jerry" DSP chip has the required serial port and timer to boot a first Linux kernel, and after a bit of hackery to make it jump to the ROM location, something boots. There’s no init process until the flat executable file for a -nommu kernel is navigated, but with that past a BusyBox userspace and a graphics driver for the "Tom" graphics chip gives it a chunky on-screen console. The code can be found in a GitHub repository, for the curious.
It seems to be the moment for 68k consoles to receive the Linux treatment, as it’s only a few weeks since we saw it on a MegaDrive. Other ’90s consoles aren’t far behind though, with the Nintendo 64 falling to the penguin a few years ago. Meanwhile, the Dreamcast had Linux running decades ago.
Jaguar image: Evan-Amos, Public domain.
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