Be careful of "ncp copy known nodes".
Cluster nodes and DECserver nodes can become corrupted with this command. That is why I
wrote
On Nov 4, 2018, at 09:54, Johnny Billquist
<bqt at softjar.se> wrote:
On 2018-11-04 14:59, supratim sanyal wrote:
Hi Douglas,
Great, I will mark port 60004 as allocated to you.
One reason for TCP is it does not require Johnny to go change the IP address on his end
every time a residential ISP IP address changes.
Which is not maybe that relevant in a link between you two... The VMS Multinet do not
appear to be as flexible in configuring peers, so you might need to restart if addresses
change anyway. But yes, for the RSX Multinet-compatible links, the active end can change
IP address without me having to do anything on my side. TCP also have the advantage to
better handle if packets might be dropped, which can be an issue over long haul links, as
well as better match what these Multinet links pretend to be to DECnet, which are DDCMP
links. But the VMS implementation seems to be cheating in several ways, making it look
funny at times, so it might not matter much from that point.
Also, TCP is easier if you have firewalls or NAT. UDP can also be made to work, but is
usually a little more complicated here.
Does ?MCR NCP COPY KNOWN NODES FROM MIM TO BOTH?
not work to copy over node db from MIM?
It should work for him, once he have MIM defined.
I also run a neat command file by Steve Davidson
that I found somewhere (maybe on MIM or STRGTE) which I am attaching ? it runs on
SYS$BATCH and updates local node db automatically. The .XCOMX extension should be .COM,
psilobyte rejects .COM file attachments.
I could also mention that I have an automated system that sends mails when I update the
nodename database, in case anyone would want such a thing. If you are creative, you set
things up so that script is run automatically when such a mail is received.
Johnny
Best,
Supratim
Sent from Mail <https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=550986> for Windows 10
*From: *Douglas Hall <mailto:dhall.hecnet at dhcl.co.uk>
*Sent: *Sunday, November 4, 2018 07:57
*To: *hecnet at Update.UU.SE <mailto:hecnet at Update.UU.SE>
*Subject: *Re: [HECnet] Multinet connection in UK
On Sun, 4 Nov 2018, at 11:19, supratim sanyal wrote:
If you wish you can run an experiment with IMPVAX (VA, USA); I have
heard trans-Atlantic loop latencies are not as bad as one might
think. TCP only, Something like this in
DECNET-CIRCUITS.COM should work:
$ multinet set /decnet /remote=52.23.221.223 /port=60000
/device=tcpa0: /connect /tcp=connect /buffers=24
That looks to be working OK. It's very bursty to some locations, e.g. BOPOHA, but
connectivity is connectivity. Thanks! Out of interest, what is reason for using TCP as
the underlying transport protocol instead of the default? I've configured the link
with a reasonably high cost in case I make another connection somewhere more local.
This is my first experience with DECnet over more than a few local nodes, is there an
easy way to get a full node list onto my systems?
This all takes me back a while. Last commercial VMS/DECnet systems I used were back in
1994. I actually stumbled across hecnet whilst trying to find out if anyone still used
uucp for anything. I was the last sysadmin of the UKNET uucp setup, then managed by PSINet
before we finally dismantled all that infrastructure in 1999.
Douglas
--
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