Glad it?s working for you. Is this running the latest Raspbian release? What kernel
version is it running?
John.
On Nov 8, 2021, at 12:21 PM, Keith Halewood
<Keith.Halewood at pitbulluk.org> wrote:
Well, that was an interesting compilation of the raspbian kernel.
I cloned
https://github.com/JohnForecast/RaspbianDECnet and got busy. I had to remove the
--help-- stanzas from the Kconfig file. They were tripping something up.
I had to move the MAC address change to the bridge (I use /etc/network/interfaces with
bridges and taps etc..)
DECnet is all working on a 32bit raspbian on a pi3b+, HECnet node name 29.115 - I'll
christen it at some point :)
Thank you John Forecast for doing all the hard work.
Keith
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-hecnet at Update.UU.SE [mailto:owner-hecnet at Update.UU.SE] On Behalf Of
Johnny Billquist
Sent: 07 November 2021 20:37
To: hecnet at Update.UU.SE
Subject: Re: [HECnet] Is this the most up to date version of DECnet OS numbers?
On 2021-11-07 18:06, Robert Armstrong wrote:
I think
DECnet/8 is for RTS-8, but there never was one for OS-8.
Yes, the DECnet-8 was for RTS although you could run OS/8 as a task
under RTS (so maybe those two count as the same). In any case AFAIK
there was never any NFT or FAL or remote terminal or NCP/NML or
anything else like that implemented for DECnet/8. It was more of a
toolkit kind of thing where you could write your own RTS program to
make a DECnet connection to another node. What you sent over that connection was your
problem.
Right. It was/is slightly more than a toolkit. It does have a couple of processes which
deals with circuits and executor management. And I think there is TLK/LSN so you can
communicate. But beyond that, you were on your own.
And no, OS/8 under RTS-8 don't allow them to be counted as one. :-)
Never heard of DECnet for CP/M although there
certainly was one for MSDOS.
Linux is interesting, although I doubt that was put there by DEC.
Probably somebody added it later.
Linux was definitely defined post-DEC. I simply just talked with a Linux FAL from RSX and
checked what value it put in the OS field, and added that to my list from there.
And what the heck is COPOS/11?? I see that is
says TOPS-20 front
end, but I thought TOPS20 used the same RSX20F as TOPS10.
I don't think it's the same as the RSX20F frontend. I have no idea what it is,
but it's in the source files for the RSX DECnet code. Sounds like some oddball thing
that existed somewhere. CSS thing maybe?
And DTF/MVS? Is that the IBM OS MVS?
I almost suspect it might be, but again, no real clue. All I can say is that this is what
is in the RSX sources.
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