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Encyclopedia > Common Hardware Reference Platform

Common Hardware Reference Platform (CHRP) was an early PowerPC hardware reference design. The successor of PReP, it was conceptualized as a design to allow various operating systems (especially Mac OS, Windows NT and various flavors of UNIX) to run on a common hardware platform. It did not catch on, and the only systems to ship with actual CHRP hardware were certain members of IBM's RS/6000 series machines running AIX. New World ROM Macintosh computers are partially based on CHRP/PReP.


External link

  • penguinppc.org description of chrp (http://penguinppc.org/otherhw/#chrp)

  Results from FactBites:
 
PowerPC Microprocessor Common Hardware Reference Platform Book 1 changes (6831 words)
CHRP Specification Sections 7.3.5.1 and 7.3.5.2 do not say anything about the endianess of the data in configuration space and whether it should be returned "as-is" or "byte-reversed" depending on the endianess of the processor.
The platform may want to output indicators that we do not know of, the platform may have different triggers for resume than for normal power on, etc. So we are thinking of using hibernate with a null block list (first word, length in bytes, of the block list is 0).
Platform Implementation Note: The existence of this sensor state reporting capability should not be construed as a requirement to have any limits on sensors or to always have all four limits.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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