On 6 Feb 2013, at 16:39, Dave McGuire <mcguire at neurotica.com> wrote:
On 02/06/2013 04:31 PM, Brian Hechinger wrote:
Ok, put the following on your router:
*access-list 1 permit 216.15.64.181*
*snmp-server community <community name> rw 1
Choose an unused access-list of course. :)
This will allow only me to access your read/write snmp community.*
Give me the community string you've used. I'll add it to the db and
everytime a new config is generated it'll autoload that on your router.
Keep in mind that I'm not doing a 'wr mem'/'copy run start' yet as I
haven't quite figured that one out yet so if you reload your router
you'll lose the latest version uploaded.
Done on my end. Community string sent in unmarked private mail.
I will need to get a little crazy to enable SNMP to the outside I think...
-Dave
--
Dave McGuire, AK4HZ
New Kensington, PA
On 02/06/2013 04:31 PM, Brian Hechinger wrote:
Ok, put the following on your router:
*access-list 1 permit 216.15.64.181*
*snmp-server community <community name> rw 1
Choose an unused access-list of course. :)
This will allow only me to access your read/write snmp community.*
Give me the community string you've used. I'll add it to the db and
everytime a new config is generated it'll autoload that on your router.
Keep in mind that I'm not doing a 'wr mem'/'copy run start' yet as I
haven't quite figured that one out yet so if you reload your router
you'll lose the latest version uploaded.
Done on my end. Community string sent in unmarked private mail.
-Dave
--
Dave McGuire, AK4HZ
New Kensington, PA
Ok, put the following on your router:
access-list 1 permit 216.15.64.181
snmp-server community <community name> rw 1
Choose an unused access-list of course. :)
This will allow only me to access your read/write snmp community.
Give me the community string you've used. I'll add it to the db and everytime a new config is generated it'll autoload that on your router.
Keep in mind that I'm not doing a 'wr mem'/'copy run start' yet as I haven't quite figured that one out yet so if you reload your router you'll lose the latest version uploaded.
-brian
Ok, more progress being made. Now when a row gets updated a trigger function is set off which auto-generated the new configs.
Once happened last night, but I didn't have it passing info through so I had no idea what caused it. I can guess that it was Cory's IP changing because the only cron-ed task right now is to check and update dynamic IPs.
That caused me to re-write the db trigger that handles catching the updates to pass info through the payload function of LISTEN/NOTIFY.
It now also auto-matically loads the config on my router so as soon as something is updated mine router is good to go.
Anyone else who wants this to happen please let me know and please make sure bart.4amlunch.net has access to a RW snmp community on your router and I'll have it load the new configs on the fly for you.
-brian
I forgot to attribute the source for this great little collection: http://kgbreport.com/dcl.html
sampsa
On 6 Feb 2013, at 14:18, Sampsa Laine <sampsa at mac.com> wrote:
I shamelessly downloaded the whole archive of the famous DCL Dialogue (basically DCL hints and tips) and uploaded it to RHESUS::[.MEDIALIB.DCLDIALOG]
The individual text files are there, and if you want to grab them all quickly just copy ALLDCL.ZIP.
sampsa
PS: This stuff is not on the retrotron mirror yet.
I shamelessly downloaded the whole archive of the famous DCL Dialogue (basically DCL hints and tips) and uploaded it to RHESUS::[.MEDIALIB.DCLDIALOG]
The individual text files are there, and if you want to grab them all quickly just copy ALLDCL.ZIP.
sampsa
PS: This stuff is not on the retrotron mirror yet.
On 2013-02-04 23:49, Bob Armstrong wrote:
An off the wall question that I m sure somebody on HECnet will know
was it ever possible to download a boot image (e.g. RSX-11S) to a PDP11
over a DDCMP serial interface (e.g. a DUP/DMR/DMC or whatever)? Kind of
like doing MOP over Ethernet, but without the Ethernet.
Yes. Exactly what interfaces is something I'd need to check up, though.
Johnny
--
Johnny Billquist || "I'm on a bus
|| on a psychedelic trip
email: bqt at softjar.se || Reading murder books
pdp is alive! || tryin' to stay hip" - B. Idol
Florian,
Thank you for this list - very helpful. The problem I now see is that I don't have enough RAM - I only appear to have 32Mb and all of these images want 64Mb.
In the morning, I'll try some of the images in the emulator - if they have the features I need, then I will go ahead and get a RAM upgrade for the router.
Thanks again.
Ian
On 2013-02-04, at 9:51 PM, Florian Voigt <flvoigt at gmail.com> wrote:
@Ian: I compiled a list with IOS images for the 2610-2613 wich contain at least Decnet Phase IV and IPv6.
It was generated using the Cisco Feature Navigator. http://tools.cisco.com/ITDIT/CFN/jsp/by-feature-technology.jsp
Basically, it boils down to getting an image with either the Enterprise Basic featureset or the IP/IPX/AT/DEC/FW/IDS PLUS.
Cheers,
-Florian
On Mon, Feb 4, 2013 at 10:15 PM, Cory Smelosky <b4 at gewt.net> wrote:
On 4 Feb 2013, at 16:12, Ian McLaughlin <ian at platinum.net> wrote:
> Yay. Area 9 tunnel is up:
Yup. It's still suffering local packet loss though...
>
> hub#sh dec nei
> Net Node Interface MAC address Flags
> 0 9.1023 Tunnel52 0000.0000.0000 A
> 0 52.1023 Tunnel50 0000.0000.0000 A
> 0 42.1023 Tunnel0 0000.0000.0000 V A
> hub#ping 9.1023
>
> Type escape sequence to abort.
> Sending 5, 100-byte DECnet echos to atg 0 area.node 9.1023, timeout is 5 seconds
> :
> !!!!!
> Success rate is 100 percent (5/5), round-trip min/avg/max = 84/92/120 ms
>
> Ian
>
> On 2013-02-04, at 1:01 PM, Cory Smelosky <b4 at gewt.net> wrote:
>
>>
>> On 4 Feb 2013, at 15:46, Cory Smelosky <b4 at gewt.net> wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> On 4 Feb 2013, at 15:45, Brian Hechinger <wonko at 4amlunch.net> wrote:
>>>
>>>> On 2/4/2013 2:58 PM, Cory Smelosky wrote:
>>>>> Looks like Brian has to update his firewall to reflect my new IP.;)
>>>>
>>>> This is not it?
>>>>
>>>> 75.49.13.19
>>>
>>> Interesting, that is the correct one. The VM must've been glitching then. Updating the host VM now to see if I can resolve the 40-60% packet loss issue
>>
>> --- 10.10.10.7 ping statistics ---
>> 50 packets transmitted, 40 packets received, 20.0% packet loss
>> round-trip min/avg/max/stddev = 1.605/13.890/62.054/16.173 ms
>>
>> This was fine before the move to VMWare...
>>
>>>
>>> --
>>> Cory Smelosky
>>> http://gewt.net/ Personal stuff!
>>> http://gimme-sympathy.org/ My permanently-a-work-in-progress pet project.
>>>
>>
>> --
>> Cory Smelosky
>> http://gewt.net/ Personal stuff!
>> http://gimme-sympathy.org/ My permanently-a-work-in-progress pet project.
>>
>>
>>
>> ---
>> Filter service subscribers can train this email as spam or not-spam here: http://my.email-as.net/spamham/cgi-bin/learn.pl?messageid=03EC4DFC6F0E11E29…
>
--
Cory Smelosky
http://gewt.net/ Personal stuff!
http://gimme-sympathy.org/ My permanently-a-work-in-progress pet project.
---
Filter service subscribers can train this email as spam or not-spam here <Cisco-IOS-DecnetIV-withIPv6-2600.txt>
@Ian: I compiled a list with IOS images for the 2610-2613 wich contain at least Decnet Phase IV and IPv6.
It was generated using the Cisco Feature Navigator. http://tools.cisco.com/ITDIT/CFN/jsp/by-feature-technology.jsp
Basically, it boils down to getting an image with either the Enterprise Basic featureset or the IP/IPX/AT/DEC/FW/IDS PLUS.
Cheers,
-Florian
On Mon, Feb 4, 2013 at 10:15 PM, Cory Smelosky <b4 at gewt.net> wrote:
On 4 Feb 2013, at 16:12, Ian McLaughlin <ian at platinum.net> wrote:
> Yay. Area 9 tunnel is up:
Yup. It's still suffering local packet loss though...
>
> hub#sh dec nei
> Net Node Interface MAC address Flags
> 0 9.1023 Tunnel52 0000.0000.0000 A
> 0 52.1023 Tunnel50 0000.0000.0000 A
> 0 42.1023 Tunnel0 0000.0000.0000 V A
> hub#ping 9.1023
>
> Type escape sequence to abort.
> Sending 5, 100-byte DECnet echos to atg 0 area.node 9.1023, timeout is 5 seconds
> :
> !!!!!
> Success rate is 100 percent (5/5), round-trip min/avg/max = 84/92/120 ms
>
> Ian
>
> On 2013-02-04, at 1:01 PM, Cory Smelosky <b4 at gewt.net> wrote:
>
>>
>> On 4 Feb 2013, at 15:46, Cory Smelosky <b4 at gewt.net> wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> On 4 Feb 2013, at 15:45, Brian Hechinger <wonko at 4amlunch.net> wrote:
>>>
>>>> On 2/4/2013 2:58 PM, Cory Smelosky wrote:
>>>>> Looks like Brian has to update his firewall to reflect my new IP.;)
>>>>
>>>> This is not it?
>>>>
>>>> 75.49.13.19
>>>
>>> Interesting, that is the correct one. The VM must've been glitching then. Updating the host VM now to see if I can resolve the 40-60% packet loss issue
>>
>> --- 10.10.10.7 ping statistics ---
>> 50 packets transmitted, 40 packets received, 20.0% packet loss
>> round-trip min/avg/max/stddev = 1.605/13.890/62.054/16.173 ms
>>
>> This was fine before the move to VMWare...
>>
>>>
>>> --
>>> Cory Smelosky
>>> http://gewt.net/ Personal stuff!
>>> http://gimme-sympathy.org/ My permanently-a-work-in-progress pet project.
>>>
>>
>> --
>> Cory Smelosky
>> http://gewt.net/ Personal stuff!
>> http://gimme-sympathy.org/ My permanently-a-work-in-progress pet project.
>>
>>
>>
>> ---
>> Filter service subscribers can train this email as spam or not-spam here: http://my.email-as.net/spamham/cgi-bin/learn.pl?messageid=03EC4DFC6F0E11E29…
>
--
Cory Smelosky
http://gewt.net/ Personal stuff!
http://gimme-sympathy.org/ My permanently-a-work-in-progress pet project.
Others already answered the boot ROM part. As for the protocol, MOP arrived first on DDCMP, and yes, that includes load/dump. If anything, it's primarily load/dump. The Sysid stuff is specific to Ethernet. I think DDCMP MOP also has MOP level loopback, using MOP packets which are different from the 90-00 Ethernet loop protocol.
In DDCMP, MOP is a mode ("maintenance mode") -- same basic frame format but it's a datagram service as opposed to a connection oriented service. It's all spelled out in the specs ("maintop" which is MOP, and the DDCMP spec).
paul
On Feb 4, 2013, at 5:49 PM, Bob Armstrong wrote:
An off the wall question that I m sure somebody on HECnet will know was it ever possible to download a boot image (e.g. RSX-11S) to a PDP11 over a DDCMP serial interface (e.g. a DUP/DMR/DMC or whatever)? Kind of like doing MOP over Ethernet, but without the Ethernet.
Thanks,
Bob