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RTEMS was developed by On-Line Applications Research (OAR) under
contract to the U.S. Army Missile Command. Other than the
contributions listed in this document, all code and documentation
was developed by OAR for the Army.
The RTEMS project would like to thank those who have made
contributions to the project. Together we make RTEMS a
much better product.
The following persons/organizations have made contributions:
+ Dr. Mikhail (Misha) Savitski (mms@eiscathq.irf.se) of the EISCAT Scientific
Association submitted the BSP and other miscellaneous support for the
Motorola MVME162 (M68040LC CPU) VMEbus single board computer.
+ Division Inc. of Chapel Hill, NC for sponsoring On-Line Applications
Research to port RTEMS to the Hewlett-Packard PA-RISC architecture (V1.1)
and the addition of HP-UX as a development host. Tony Bennett
(tbennett@divnc.com) was assisted in this effort by Joel Sherrill
(jsherril@redstone.army.mil). Tony also deserves a big pat on the
back for contributing significantly to the overall organization
of the development environment and directory structure. RTEMS
is much easier to build because of Tony.
+ Greg Allen of Division Inc. of Chapel Hill, NC for
porting RTEMS to HP-UX. This port treats a UNIX computer as simply
another RTEMS target processor. This port can be used to develop
and test code which will ultimately run on the embedded platform.
+ Doug McBride (mcbride@rodin.colorado.edu) of the Colorado Space Grant
College at the University of Colorado at Boulder submitted the BSP
for the Motorola IDP board (M68EC040 CPU) single board computer. The
BSP leverages heavily off of the existing RTEMS BSP framework, the
examples in the back of the IDP user's manual, and the libgloss example
support for the IDP board from the newlib/libgloss distribution.
+ David Glessner (dwg@glenqcy.glenayre.com) of Glenayre Electronics
submitted the support for the Motorola MC68302 CPU. This included
the "gen68302" BSP which uses the on-chip peripherals on the MC68302
as well as the modifications to the m68k dependent executive code to
support m68k family members based on the mc68000 core.
+ Bryce Cogswell (cogswell@cs.uoregon.edu) submitted the support for MS-DOS
as a development environment as well as djgpp/go32 as a target environment.
+ Andy Bray (andy@i-cubed.demon.co.uk) of I-CUBED Ltd. in Cambridge U.K.
for porting RTEMS to the PowerPC. This effort included support for the
IBM 403 as well as the Motorola 601, 603, and 604 variants. A special
thanks to Dom Latter (dom@i-cubed.demon.co.uk) for being an RTEMS
evangelist and promoting the use of RTEMS both at I-CUBED Ltd. as well
as within the Internet community as a whole.
+ John S. Gwynne (jsg@coulomb.eng.ohio-state.edu) of Ohio State University
submitted the support for the Motorola MC68332 CPU as well as completing
the support for CPUs based on the MC68000 core. This included the "efi68k"
and "efi332" BSPs as well as completing the modifications to the m68k
dependent executive code to support m68k family members based on the
MC68000 core. "efi68k" and "efi332" are single board computers designed
primarily for automotive electronic fuel injection (EFI) control, but can
be considered general purpose controllers when used without the EFI
companion board(s). See the README in each BSP for more information.
+ The European Space Agency for sponsoring On-Line Applications Research
to port RTEMS to the SPARC V7 architecture for use with their ERC32
radiation-hardened CPU. Jiri Gaisler (jgais@wd.estec.esa.nl) deserves
special thanks for championing this port within the ESA was well as
for developing and supporting the SPARC Instruction Simulator used to
develop and test this port.
Finally, the RTEMS project would like to thank those who have contributed
to the other free software efforts which RTEMS utilizes. The primary RTEMS
development environment is from the Free Software Foundation (the GNU
project). The "newlib" C library was put together by Cygnus and is
a collaboration of the efforts of numerous individuals and organizations.
We would like to see your name here. BSPs and ports are always welcome.
Useful libraries which support RTEMS applications are also an important
part of providing a strong foundation for the development of real-time
embedded applications and are welcome as submission.
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