PowerLogix manufactured 3rd party G3 and G4 upgrade cards for
Macintosh. This is their driver software for a G3 daughter card from
1999. PowerLogix included a full install of LinuxPPC 1999 Release 5,
on the CD which came with the G3 daughter card.
I've added a copy of the driver for anyone who needs it, separate from
the CD, so they don't need to DL 500 MBs of unrelated Linux software
just to get the 400KB driver software.
I'm also archiving the entire CD for historical interest. LinuxPPC was
a very good Linux to run at the time, based largely on Red Hat ports.
[Top DL]: The PowerLogix G3 Cache Profiler software only
MD5 checksum & filename: 0aafd698230c5a8c80f10b19e181cba9
*PLgxG3-cache-profiler.sit
[2nd DL]: The PowerLogix CD with LinuxPPC 1999 included.
MD5 checksum & filename: 3e3bf0259e2edba865a6b0d8302c7742 *powerlogix-
cd-iso.zip
[4th DL]: The PowerLogix G3/G4 Cache Profiler v1.4b2
[5th DL]: The PowerLogix G3/G4 Cache Profiler v1.5
About LinuxPPC
LinuxPPC is completely compatible with programs compiled for MkLinux,
except for the few that make Mach system calls. MkLinux is Apple
Computer's version of Linux that runs on top of the Mach kernel.
LinuxPPC is a completely PowerPC-native operating system that can co-
exist peacefully on the same hard drive as your original operating
system, such as Mac OS, AIX, or BeOS. By placing LinuxPPC on separate
partitions from your other operating system, it can function
independently without interfering with any of your other data. You can
also share files between the two systems by mounting the partitions
within LinuxPPC. If you prefer, you can also install LinuxPPC on a
separate hard drive or have it completely replace your original OS as
your primary system.
* A few features of LinuxPPC include:
* stable and fast - protected memory, preemptive multitasking, advanced virtual memory
* supports SCSI and IDE drives
* supports PCI-based 601, 603/603e, 604/604e/604r, and G3 machines (NuBus-based PowerMac 6100, 7100, and 8100 are not supported)
* shared library support, glibc 2.1, Linux 2.2 kernel
* compatible with both big and little endian filesystems
* floppy, sound, ethernet, and CD-ROM support
* serial and USB device support (can print to supported printers and use PPP through a modem).
* runs Netscape Communicator, MP3 players, and other popular internet/multimedia tools
* XWindows and several window managers (AfterStep, WindowMaker, Enlightenment, and desktop environments such as KDE and GNOME)
* free, powerful web server (Apache), anonymous FTP, file server, multi-user support
* Java support (JDK 1.1.7, 1.2)
* For Powermac users, BootX provides a simple OS chooser that allows you to select Mac OS or Linux at boot-up. You can also quit Mac OS and boot LinuxPPC from the Finder. Finally, BootX allows you to use Mac OS initialized video and install LinuxPPC without using a floppy
* X-based installer or Red Hat style installer
Compatibility
Architecture: PPC
The PowerLogix Drivers are for PPC Macintosh
LinuxPPC 1999 runs on PCI-based Power Macintosh computers and
compatibles as well as PowerPC BeBox, PReP and CHRP machines.
Machines that can run LinuxPPC include:
* Apple Computer
* G3 desktop and Powerbooks, iMac, Blue & White G3, 9600, 9500, 8600, 8500,
8200, 7600, 7500, 7300, 7200, 6500, 6400, 6360, 5500, 5400, 4400,
Powerbook
2400 and 3400, 20th Anniversary Macintosh
* Be
* BeBox
* IBM
* RS6000 (PowerPC-based), 830, 850, 40P, Nobis, INDI
* Motorola
* StarMax (and all StarMax clones from APS, PowerTools, Mactell), PowerStack, Series E, PowerStack II
* Power Computing
* PowerBase, PowerWave, PowerCenter, PowerCenter Pro, PowerTower, PowerTower Pro
* Umax
* C500, C600, J700, S900, Apus 2000 and 3000