Okay Brian,
Push an update:
pass in quick on pppoe0 inet proto tcp from 199.166.5.172 to any port = 161 flags S/SA rdr-to 10.10.0.10 port 161
--
Cory Smelosky
http://gewt.net Personal stuff
http://gimme-sympathy.org Projects
Any info like this I'll put on recondite-computers.co.uk if you want.
On 26/04/2014 19:33, Johnny Billquist wrote:
On 2014-04-26 14:29, Brian Hechinger wrote:
You know, instead of writing this up in an email every time, here's a
web page. :)
http://myst.platinum.net/~wonko/hecnet/GRE_tunnel_info.txt
A typical thing we should gather somewhere easy to find. I'll add a link from Madame for now. Thanks.
Johnny
-brian
PS: This also answers your question, Cory.
On Fri, Apr 25, 2014 at 10:53:09PM -0400, Cory Smelosky wrote:
On Fri, 25 Apr 2014, Brian Hechinger wrote:
GRE tunnels? I'm your guy. :)
What's the SNMP IP again? I have everything (mostly) ready to go
here again...I just need to add the pf rule. ;)
I'll send you a private mail of what info I need when I'm at my computer.
-brian
On Apr 25, 2014, at 17:40, Mark G Thomas <Mark at Misty.com> wrote:
Hi,
I'm thinking I'd like to get connected to hecnet, and maybe put one
of my VAX systems online.
I've got a static Verizon FIOS IP, and a Cisco router with which I could set
up a GRE tunnel.
Who can help me?
Mark
--
Mark G. Thomas (Mark at Misty.com)
--
Cory Smelosky
http://gewt.net Personal stuff
http://gimme-sympathy.org Projects
Hello,
I'm playing again a little bit with DECNET/OSI. Does anybody have the X500 directory server install kit at hand? The PAKs are included in the hobbyist set, but the CSD I have is the 1992 one so I guess there has to be a more recent one (for VAX, by the way). The DECDns stuff changed from 6.X to 7.X so I'm pretty sure the version I have in my CDs won't work.
By the way, BITXOZ is configured as a DECDns server, and "owns" the HECNET: namespace. All HECNET nodes are loaded in the form HECNET:.NAME. I toyed previously with a schema like HECNET:.AREAn.NAME but I have ditched it. My internet domain (jguillaumes.dyndns.org or jordi.guillaumes.name) has also opened the access to BITXOZ via rfc1006, so anyone with a DECNET/OSI stack shoud be able to do a $SET HOST jguillaumes.dyndns.org or a $DIR/APP=FTAM jguillaumes.dyndns.org:: and access that system even without a working HECNET link.
Jordi Guillaumes i Pons
jg at jordi.guillaumes.name
HECnet: BITXOV::JGUILLAUMES
On 2014-04-26 14:29, Brian Hechinger wrote:
You know, instead of writing this up in an email every time, here's a
web page. :)
http://myst.platinum.net/~wonko/hecnet/GRE_tunnel_info.txt
A typical thing we should gather somewhere easy to find. I'll add a link from Madame for now. Thanks.
Johnny
-brian
PS: This also answers your question, Cory.
On Fri, Apr 25, 2014 at 10:53:09PM -0400, Cory Smelosky wrote:
On Fri, 25 Apr 2014, Brian Hechinger wrote:
GRE tunnels? I'm your guy. :)
What's the SNMP IP again? I have everything (mostly) ready to go
here again...I just need to add the pf rule. ;)
I'll send you a private mail of what info I need when I'm at my computer.
-brian
On Apr 25, 2014, at 17:40, Mark G Thomas <Mark at Misty.com> wrote:
Hi,
I'm thinking I'd like to get connected to hecnet, and maybe put one
of my VAX systems online.
I've got a static Verizon FIOS IP, and a Cisco router with which I could set
up a GRE tunnel.
Who can help me?
Mark
--
Mark G. Thomas (Mark at Misty.com)
--
Cory Smelosky
http://gewt.net Personal stuff
http://gimme-sympathy.org Projects
--
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
You know, instead of writing this up in an email every time, here's a
web page. :)
http://myst.platinum.net/~wonko/hecnet/GRE_tunnel_info.txt
-brian
PS: This also answers your question, Cory.
On Fri, Apr 25, 2014 at 10:53:09PM -0400, Cory Smelosky wrote:
On Fri, 25 Apr 2014, Brian Hechinger wrote:
GRE tunnels? I'm your guy. :)
What's the SNMP IP again? I have everything (mostly) ready to go
here again...I just need to add the pf rule. ;)
I'll send you a private mail of what info I need when I'm at my computer.
-brian
On Apr 25, 2014, at 17:40, Mark G Thomas <Mark at Misty.com> wrote:
Hi,
I'm thinking I'd like to get connected to hecnet, and maybe put one
of my VAX systems online.
I've got a static Verizon FIOS IP, and a Cisco router with which I could set
up a GRE tunnel.
Who can help me?
Mark
--
Mark G. Thomas (Mark at Misty.com)
--
Cory Smelosky
http://gewt.net Personal stuff
http://gimme-sympathy.org Projects
On Fri, 25 Apr 2014, Brian Hechinger wrote:
GRE tunnels? I'm your guy. :)
What's the SNMP IP again? I have everything (mostly) ready to go here again...I just need to add the pf rule. ;)
I'll send you a private mail of what info I need when I'm at my computer.
-brian
On Apr 25, 2014, at 17:40, Mark G Thomas <Mark at Misty.com> wrote:
Hi,
I'm thinking I'd like to get connected to hecnet, and maybe put one
of my VAX systems online.
I've got a static Verizon FIOS IP, and a Cisco router with which I could set
up a GRE tunnel.
Who can help me?
Mark
--
Mark G. Thomas (Mark at Misty.com)
--
Cory Smelosky
http://gewt.net Personal stuff
http://gimme-sympathy.org Projects
GRE tunnels? I'm your guy. :)
I'll send you a private mail of what info I need when I'm at my computer.
-brian
On Apr 25, 2014, at 17:40, Mark G Thomas <Mark at Misty.com> wrote:
Hi,
I'm thinking I'd like to get connected to hecnet, and maybe put one
of my VAX systems online.
I've got a static Verizon FIOS IP, and a Cisco router with which I could set
up a GRE tunnel.
Who can help me?
Mark
--
Mark G. Thomas (Mark at Misty.com)
Hi,
I'm thinking I'd like to get connected to hecnet, and maybe put one
of my VAX systems online.
I've got a static Verizon FIOS IP, and a Cisco router with which I could set
up a GRE tunnel.
Who can help me?
Mark
--
Mark G. Thomas (Mark at Misty.com)
On Apr 23, 2014, at 3:36 PM, Johnny Billquist <bqt at softjar.se> wrote:
On 2014-04-23 21:31, Paul_Koning at Dell.com wrote:
On Apr 23, 2014, at 3:16 PM, Johnny Billquist <bqt at softjar.se> wrote:
...
Indeed, the quota was the problem. Works now. Excellent! Cool. However, RSTS/E did not present the kind of attributes on text files that I would have thought.
Native RSTS files don t *have* attributes, no more than Unix files do. FAL supplies something if you don t specifically ask for a transfer mode, and that something is probably a safe but unhelpful default like undefined records, 512 block size.
Right. I just sortof expected DAP to say that they were stream files, or something like that.
But on the other hand, that could possibly be messy if the file actually was some binary thing, so maybe unknown makes more sense after all.
Yes, that s why it is done that way.
If you ask for text mode, FAL will handle that, and supply something more helpful. Either stream_crlf, or it will convert to a more popular RMS format, I don t remember.
It obviously do work right if you ask for ASCII. I wonder which end do the conversion in that case. Is the sending side aware that the file should be sent as some kind of ASCII text file?
Quoting the DAP 5.6.0 spec, Attributes message:
DATATYPE(EX-2) : BM = The type of data being transferred. The
default is Image. Unless a file has
attributes specifying whether the file
contains ASCII or Image data, the value
(ASCII or Image) sent by the accessing
process when opening a file, is returned by
the accessed process.
Bit Meaning (When Set)
0 ASCII (see Note 1).
1 IMAGE (default) (see Note 2 below).
2 EBCDIC (Reserved).
3 Compressed format. ...
Note that it says the default is Image, which is another reason why RSTS FAL defaults as it does. And the setting up the link section says that after opening the connection, an Attributes message is sent by the accessing system specifying the mode and format of the data , followed by an access message to specify the operation.
So NFT says what it wants, FAL replies that it will comply, and FAL sends the data in the requested form.
RSX and VMS don t have this because all files are RMS files.
Well, technically, in RSX you can have either an RMS-11 DAP, or an FCS-11 DAP. But since RMS is pretty much a superset of FCS it's more of a technicality than a real point. :-)
What I should have said is that on RMS and VMS, all files have RMS style attributes, while on RSTS only some do. For files that don t, the user and/or application are expected to know what the file format is; the OS doesn t help you.
paul
On 2014-04-23 21:36, Johnny Billquist wrote:
On 2014-04-23 21:31, Paul_Koning at Dell.com wrote:
On Apr 23, 2014, at 3:16 PM, Johnny Billquist <bqt at softjar.se> wrote:
...
Indeed, the quota was the problem. Works now. Excellent! Cool.
However, RSTS/E did not present the kind of attributes on text files
that I would have thought.
Native RSTS files don t *have* attributes, no more than Unix files
do. FAL supplies something if you don t specifically ask for a
transfer mode, and that something is probably a safe but unhelpful
default like undefined records, 512 block size.
Right. I just sortof expected DAP to say that they were stream files, or
something like that.
But on the other hand, that could possibly be messy if the file actually
was some binary thing, so maybe unknown makes more sense after all.
If you ask for text mode, FAL will handle that, and supply something
more helpful. Either stream_crlf, or it will convert to a more
popular RMS format, I don t remember.
It obviously do work right if you ask for ASCII. I wonder which end do
the conversion in that case. Is the sending side aware that the file
should be sent as some kind of ASCII text file?
RSX and VMS don t have this because all files are RMS files.
Well, technically, in RSX you can have either an RMS-11 DAP, or an
FCS-11 DAP. But since RMS is pretty much a superset of FCS it's more of
a technicality than a real point. :-)
And I should probably correct myself. When I write DAP, I meant FAL.
Unless I'm confused DAP is the protocol, while FAL is the object/task/program that implements DAP on the listener side.
Johnny