C o n t r i b u t i o n s ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- This drawer contains programs not explicitly written for the MMU library, by people that are not members of the "MMU library development group". Please note to take care of the copyright restrictions these authors have set, please study their documentation and their guide files to find out more about legal restrictions. _____________________________________________________________________________ BPPCFix by Frank Wille Allows you to remove some ROM resident processor libraries like the "ppc.library" or the resident "68040" and "68060.library" of the "Blizzard" boards to be able to replace them with some customized processor libraries in this archive. More about installation and configuration is in the documentation in its drawer. Big thanks goes to Frank Wille and Stephen Brookes for working this out! _____________________________________________________________________________ Sashimi by Olaf "Olsen" Barthel This tool redirects "Raw IO" terminal output to a console window, as generated by programs that use "debug.lib" functions like kprintf() and friends. It allows to use these tools even if no external terminal is available to capture this output. To tell "MuForce" to use the "Sashimi" output window, specify the "RawIO" option. More about the command line options of Sashimi is in its documentation, "Sashimi.doc" _____________________________________________________________________________ PatchWork by Richard Körber Most crashes seen on an Amiga system are not directly related to invalid memory accesses, but are due to calling Os functions incorrectly or in an undocumented way. PatchWork checks the most frequently used Os calls for these cases and will generate a warning if it finds a problem. More about PatchWork can be found in its documentation. _____________________________________________________________________________ Thanks Olaf, thanks Frank, thanks Stephen, thanks Richard for allowing me to include your programs in this package, and thanks for writing them! January 2002, Thomas Richter