"actual DECnet router" meant "actual DECnet router" :-) Until now I thought
this was something only available in a VMS router node.
VMS not required... MIM is an area router running RSX. :-)
But yeah, "DECnet router" really meant just that.
T10/T20 is routing-IV, if you want to burn kernel memory it can be
area router, but, on the KI10 we had batter use of the memory, like
talking IP....
It would be a fun exercise to turn the bridge into an actual DECnet router.
One day, when I have a lot of time I might even think about trying that.
Feel free. The specifications are out there, so it's definitely not an
impossible task. But I guess it will take some work. It would be very
nice if the bridge did turn into a WAN router...
Bliss to C or a blisse X86 code generator... ---:)
-P
On 2012-06-06 11:26, Peter Coghlan wrote:
No, you have not misunderstood. You are just not getting the full
picture. Yes, the Cisco box will transport the DECnet frames inside
something. At the bottom there will be IP, but most likely the DECnet
frames are actually sitting inside UDP...
My understanding of it is that GRE is another IP protocol on the same level
as TCP and UDP rather than using UDP.
You could definitely be right on GRE. It was way too long since I
actually tried working with GRE to really remember much anymore...
GRE, L2TPv3, TCP, UDP, ICMP are all protocols transported in/by
IP. It's a 8 bit identifier.
www.iana.org/assignments/protocol-numbers/protocol-numbers.xml
--P
(what is 120...)
As I have hacked my own copy around a bit to make it work on Windows, can
you tell me what the fix was as I may find it hard to locate your change?
Thanks
Rob
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-hecnet at Update.UU.SE [mailto:owner-
hecnet at Update.UU.SE] On Behalf Of Johnny Billquist
Sent: 06 June 2012 23:43
To: hecnet at Update.UU.SE
Subject: [HECnet] The bridge program...
Hi all. I found a stupid bug in the bridge program, which I fixed.
Improved the code documentation slightly while I was at it. New version at
http://www.update.uu.se/~bqt/hecnet as usual.
Johnny
I've got a Windows NT 4.0 VM up occasionally too..
Sampsa
On 7 Jun 2012, at 00:00, Johnny Billquist wrote:
Just some fun details...
As of today, there are 321 nodes in the nodename database.
They are spread out over 16 areas.
We have machines located on (at least) three continents, if I remember right.
While not online all the time, I think we currently have atleast the following OSes represented:
RSX
RSTS/E
VMS
Ultrix
Linux
OSF/1
TOPS-10
Tops-20
Windows XP
IOS
If you know of any errors in this information, more fun facts, or anything else you'd like to share, feel free to do so.
Johnny
p.s. Retrochallenge registration is open. It runs for the month of July.
Would be great to see some entries from you guys.
http://retrochallenge.org
Regards, Mark
Hmmm... Maybe a DECnet router on a Raspberry Pi....
By the way: any more thought about where and when for DEC Legacy 2012?
Regards
Rob
Just some fun details...
As of today, there are 321 nodes in the nodename database.
They are spread out over 16 areas.
We have machines located on (at least) three continents, if I remember right.
While not online all the time, I think we currently have atleast the following OSes represented:
RSX
RSTS/E
VMS
Ultrix
Linux
OSF/1
TOPS-10
Tops-20
Windows XP
IOS
If you know of any errors in this information, more fun facts, or anything else you'd like to share, feel free to do so.
Johnny
Hi all. I found a stupid bug in the bridge program, which I fixed. Improved the code documentation slightly while I was at it. New version at http://www.update.uu.se/~bqt/hecnet as usual.
Johnny
On 05/06/12 23:04, Mark Benson wrote:
On 5 Jun 2012, at 19:54, Dave McGuire wrote:
UNIX "sucks" because you don't know how to use it, and its design
differs from the OS that you DO know how to use? Interesting logic. ;)
*poke poke*
Nooow Dave, that kind of humour has gotten you into all sorts of trouble before on ClassicCMP ;) ;)
Besides, anyone who thinks I know how to use VMS is a moron, Im a total VMS noob. I know properly 10x about Linux what I do about VMS. That said there are plenty areas I've never had to deal with and mounting without root privileges is seemingly one of them. Thing is it 'just works' in RSX and VMS it 'just don't work' in Linux, at least at a prompt using the conventional tools.
The specifics of how to accomplish this does, however, differ from
UNIX to UNIX. Under any modern-ish Linux system for example, this is
done automatically upon device insertion by a combination of udev, dbus,
and gvfs. It Just Works, I've done it five or six times since lunch
today. Of course you have to be logged into a "desktop" session in
order for it to work, but 99% of the time, that's what's going on.
Yes. Same as it works just fine in Mac OS X (except when Apple's crummy USB drivers cause another kernel panic). I appreciate that, but because my SimH emulations don't need a GUI... I don't need a GUI. To me if it doesn't work at the command prompt it doesn't work full stop. Stuff that happens in GUIs is written for GUIs, I don't consider GUIs that are often tailored to each distro part of the GNU Linux or UNIX, they are an extra. I'm old fashioned, so sue me.
If you want to do it a different way, say when nobody is logged in,
this is easily accomplished with a udev rule that matches the device
when it's inserted, and takes some action, in this case mounts the
filesystem. If you need to do that, let me know, and I may be able to help.
What I need to do is type 'mount<device> ~/usb' and have it work, without using sudo or su.
To my mind this is the equivalent of ALL DUA0: // MOU DUA0: MARKDISK1 MARK: in VMS... except you don't have top putz about in VMS, it just works.
That was my point, which in itself was kinda tongue-in-cheek anyway :)
Hey guys,
My email client has been slowly squirrelling HECnet emails away in a folder using a rule I set up and then forgot about since I got my shiny new iPad. Is there a cross platform way of achieving uniformity with this kind of thing using gmail hosted mail? Or do I need to configure each client. That'll be a PITA.
Anyway, I'm slowly catching up on the Raspberry Pi/SIMH thread. I had shipping notification yesterday, and this seems like an excellent use of the hardware. Glad to hear it's been an easy ride...
This is also mildly interesting: http://netbsd0.blogspot.co.uk/2012/06/retrocomputing-with-vamp-stack-vax.ht…
Always good to see a VAXstation being put to good use.
Now, more importantly, when do we start on that multi-GHz nVAX FPGA implementation?
Regards,
Mark
p.s. Retrochallenge registration is open. It runs for the month of July. Would be great to see some entries from you guys.
http://retrochallenge.org
Regards, Mark
--
--
Mark Wickens
http://wickensonline.co.ukhttp://declegacy.org.ukhttp://retrochallenge.orghttps://twitter.com/#!/@urbancamo
By the way, as a warning...
I seem to remember that DECnet support now have been dropped from Linux. So it might not be in there anymore, if you look at recent versions.
I've also had less than stellar results from trying to talk from Linux to RSX. So it might not work absolutely right under all conditions. Developers mostly (it not only) had VMS machines to test against...
Johnny
On 2012-06-07 00:07, Rob Jarratt wrote:
I reckon it could be done with a single interface.
Will take a look at the specs, a raspberry pi DECnet router would be great!
Regards
Rob
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-hecnet at Update.UU.SE [mailto:owner-
hecnet at Update.UU.SE] On Behalf Of Mark Benson
Sent: 06 June 2012 22:41
To: hecnet at Update.UU.SE
Subject: Re: [HECnet] Multinet Tunnel Connections to SG1::
On 6 Jun 2012, at 22:37,<Paul_Koning at Dell.com> wrote:
On Jun 6, 2012, at 5:34 PM, Johnny Billquist wrote:
On 2012-06-06 22:40, Rob Jarratt wrote:
...
It would be a fun exercise to turn the bridge into an actual DECnet
router.
One day, when I have a lot of time I might even think about trying
that.
Feel free. The specifications are out there, so it's definitely not an
impossible task. But I guess it will take some work. It would be very nice
if the
bridge did turn into a WAN router...
Johnny
DECnet Phase IV is pretty straightforward. The specs are all out there.
And
much of it is implemented in Linux, so you can find C sources ready to
go...
Even if sample code only does L1 routing, you're nearly there because area
routing is essentially the same thing done a second time on a second set
of
tables.
There may be mileage in building dedicated DECnet bridges/routers using
RaspberryPi boards in a suitable case running a very cut-down Linux with
an
advanced version of the bridge? I am no programming wizard but I am good
at compiling and testing stuff.
Would it require 2 Ethernet interfaces to work or would (like the bridge)
just
one work okay?
--
Mark Benson
http://DECtec.info
Twitter: @DECtecInfo
HECnet: STAR69::MARK
Online Resource& Mailing List for DEC Enthusiasts.
I reckon it could be done with a single interface.
Will take a look at the specs, a raspberry pi DECnet router would be great!
Regards
Rob
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-hecnet at Update.UU.SE [mailto:owner-
hecnet at Update.UU.SE] On Behalf Of Mark Benson
Sent: 06 June 2012 22:41
To: hecnet at Update.UU.SE
Subject: Re: [HECnet] Multinet Tunnel Connections to SG1::
On 6 Jun 2012, at 22:37, <Paul_Koning at Dell.com> wrote:
On Jun 6, 2012, at 5:34 PM, Johnny Billquist wrote:
On 2012-06-06 22:40, Rob Jarratt wrote:
...
It would be a fun exercise to turn the bridge into an actual DECnet
router.
One day, when I have a lot of time I might even think about trying
that.
Feel free. The specifications are out there, so it's definitely not an
impossible task. But I guess it will take some work. It would be very nice
if the
bridge did turn into a WAN router...
Johnny
DECnet Phase IV is pretty straightforward. The specs are all out there.
And
much of it is implemented in Linux, so you can find C sources ready to
go...
Even if sample code only does L1 routing, you're nearly there because area
routing is essentially the same thing done a second time on a second set
of
tables.
There may be mileage in building dedicated DECnet bridges/routers using
RaspberryPi boards in a suitable case running a very cut-down Linux with
an
advanced version of the bridge? I am no programming wizard but I am good
at compiling and testing stuff.
Would it require 2 Ethernet interfaces to work or would (like the bridge)
just
one work okay?
--
Mark Benson
http://DECtec.info
Twitter: @DECtecInfo
HECnet: STAR69::MARK
Online Resource & Mailing List for DEC Enthusiasts.