We could perhaps create a page with a summary of what we know.
Johnny
On 2020-12-30 23:00, Thomas DeBellis wrote:
Ah, I got it; I was counting and thinking the
wrong way.
If RSX is using unsigned and hasn't blown up, then I don't see why anybody else
shouldn't at least have a look. I'll have to check further into the Tops-20
conditional to see what it's all about; the code is completely different from Tops-10.
The question is where else it might be being handled.
I have sources to everything except the Tops-20 NICE process; NMLT20, so if I have to fix
something there... That's a bummer; we were a source site and asked for years
(particularly for early versions which would crash if you looked at them wrong). I
don't suppose anybody having ever heard of this; it appears to have been write in some
variant of BLISS.
Meanwhile, if anybody wants to try my trivial patch to D36COM, I'd like to hear about
it. I'm pretty sure it will keep your Tops-10 machine from crashing...
On 12/28/20 11:20 PM, Johnny Billquist wrote:
> Argh. 32766 would be 77776 of course, and so on... But I hope people get the idea. I
see no reason why not just treat it as an unsigned 16 bit value for now.
>
> And as Peter suggest, if we want to extend things further, we can change the base.
But simply going unsigned already gives us 44 more years to think about it. And at least
RSX have already done this since 20 years ago.
>
> Johnny
>
> On 2020-12-29 05:18, Johnny Billquist wrote:
>> 16363 days, means 32766 half days, which is octal 77777, which is 7FFF hex. 16
bits can hold up to 65535, which is 177777 octal, or FFFF hex, if treated unsigned. Which
with the current encoding will cover up to the year 2065.
>>
>> Johnny
>>
>> On 2020-12-29 05:06, Thomas DeBellis wrote:
>>> I did some date arithmetic; there are 16,383 days between 1/1/1977 and
11/9/2021.
>>>
>>> Since Tops-10 is calculating by half days, that's why I clamp it to the
unsigned octal value of 177777 (3FFF hex).
>>>
>>> Would a later version of NICE have expanded this to four bytes? That seems
like the thing to do.
>>>
>>> On 12/28/20 11:00 PM, Johnny Billquist wrote:
>>>> Uh? It seemed VMS is treating it as signed, and/or wrapping at 15 bits,
so it fails after Nov 9, 2021.
>>>>
>>>> Why not just do as RSX, and treat it as unsigned 16 bits. Which leaves it
working correct until 2065.
>>>>
>>>> If we, at some point, want to change things after that, we can either
change the format, or change the base year.
>>>>
>>>> Johnny
>>>>
>>>> On 2020-12-29 04:52, Thomas DeBellis wrote:
>>>>> So it appears that NICE wants the Julian half day count in an
unsigned short, or 16 bits; that seems obvious enough.
>>>>>
>>>>> I wrote a Tops-10 patch to have it wrap like what appears to be
happening on OpenVMS.
>>>>>
>>>>> In D36COM.MAC at NMXTIM+9, change the following two lines (which
skip or fall into the COM911 BUGHLT),
>>>>>
>>>>> SKIPL T2 ;MAKE SURE WE HAVE A POSITIVE NUMBER
OF SECONDS
>>>>> TDNE T1,[XWD -1,600000] ;MAKE SURE NO DATE OVERFLOW
>>>>>
>>>>> to
>>>>>
>>>>> SKIPGE T2 ;Do WE HAVE A POSITIVE NUMBER OF
SECONDS?
>>>>> MOVMS T2 ; No. Fine, now we're plenty
positive
>>>>> TDZA T1,[XWD -1,600000] ;MAKE SURE never any DATE OVERFLOW
ever
>>>>>
>>>>> However, I don't run any Tops-10 systems, so if anybody wants to
try this and let me know, that would be appreciated. Better to wrap the count than to
just stop code. At WPI, we would have considered that 'rude'.
>>>>>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
>>>>> On 12/28/20 10:08 PM, Thomas DeBellis wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> If I'm understanding this correctly, it would seem to
indicate that there is no reason for Tops-10 to crash because of a Julian half day roll
over. I had verified that there is no problem with the internal time for system logging
(I.E., the records that SPEAR gets out of ERROR.SYS).
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Tops-10 and Tops-20 share the same internal time format (a
significant difference between Tops-20 and TENEX), even if Tops-10 doesn't handle it
properly as an unsigned word, it will still handle events up to 27-Sep-2217. Since
that's over 196 years from now, I would assume this is adequate time to really address
the problem.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I'll take another look at the code and see if I can't
come up with a workaround.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Meanwhile, I wanted to make sure I understood what was going on
where with the output below. Which OPCOM is running where? Is this only OPCOM output
from APOLLO as HERMES comes up and sends a circuit up message? The START /NETWORK DECNET
is issued on HERMES?
>>>>>>
>>>>>> On 12/27/20 8:17 PM, Jason Brady wrote:
>>>>>>> Ah...here are the test system (HERMES) operator log messages
(notice the 31-JAN-1977 00:00:06.21 timestamp):
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> $ START /NETWORK DECNET
>>>>>>> %%%%%%%%%%% OPCOM 27-DEC-2022 16:41:31.22 %%%%%%%%%%%
>>>>>>> Message from user DECNET on HERMES
>>>>>>> DECnet starting
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> %RUN-S-PROC_ID, identification of created process is
00000125
>>>>>>> %DCL-I-SUPERSEDE, previous value of MOM$SYSTEM has been
superseded
>>>>>>> %DCL-I-SUPERSEDE, previous value of MOM$SYSTEM_NOSOFTID has
been superseded
>>>>>>> %DCL-I-SUPERSEDE, previous value of MOM$SYSTEM_SOFTID has
been superseded
>>>>>>> %NCP-I-NOINFO, No information in database
>>>>>>> %RUN-S-PROC_ID, identification of created process is
00000127
>>>>>>> $
>>>>>>> %%%%%%%%%%% OPCOM 27-DEC-2022 16:41:36.76 %%%%%%%%%%%
>>>>>>> Message from user DECNET on HERMES
>>>>>>> DECnet event 4.10, circuit up
>>>>>>> From node 2.404 (HERMES), 31-JAN-1977 00:00:06.21
>>>>>>> Circuit EWA-0
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> $
>>>>>>> %%%%%%%%%%% OPCOM 27-DEC-2022 16:41:41.87 %%%%%%%%%%%
>>>>>>> Message from user DECNET on HERMES
>>>>>>> DECnet event 4.15, adjacency up
>>>>>>> From node 2.404 (HERMES), 31-JAN-1977 00:00:06.21
>>>>>>> Circuit EWA-0, Adjacent node = 2.400 (APOLLO)
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> And from APOLLO adjacent node (down/up when DECnet cycled):
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> APOLLO->
>>>>>>> %%%%%%%%%%% OPCOM 27-DEC-2020 16:31:27.60 %%%%%%%%%%%
>>>>>>> Message from user DECNET on APOLLO
>>>>>>> DECnet event 4.18, adjacency down
>>>>>>> From node 2.400 (APOLLO), 27-DEC-2020 16:31:27.59
>>>>>>> Circuit EWA-0, Adjacent node listener receive timeout
>>>>>>> Adjacent node = 2.404 (HERMES)
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> APOLLO->
>>>>>>> %%%%%%%%%%% OPCOM 27-DEC-2020 16:42:33.54 %%%%%%%%%%%
>>>>>>> Message from user DECNET on APOLLO
>>>>>>> DECnet event 4.15, adjacency up
>>>>>>> From node 2.400 (APOLLO), 27-DEC-2020 16:42:33.54
>>>>>>> Circuit EWA-0, Adjacent node = 2.404 (HERMES)
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> On Sun, Dec 27, 2020, at 5:03 PM, Paul Koning wrote:
>>>>>>>> That doesn't fully answer the question. What you see
is the system log, which presumably uses VMS time stamps. Those have a wide range. The
question is what the DECnet events would show, when encoded in the NICE protocol. If you
configure it to send events (like node reachable or circuit up) to another node, what do
the timestamps look like on that other node?
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> paul
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> On Dec 27, 2020, at 7:42 PM, Jason Brady <jr_brady
at
fastmail.com <mailto:jr_brady at fastmail.com>> wrote:
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Booted test Alpha system running OpenVMS 8.4 and set
the date to 27-DEC-2022. Started DECnet Phase IV. No errors.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> From node APOLLO, no problem transferring files from
the test system and displaying network info (TELL ... SHOW EXEC, etc.).
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Snippet from test system NML$SERVER.LOG:
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
--------------------------------------------------------
>>>>>>>>> Connect request received at 27-DEC-2022
16:29:25.54
>>>>>>>>> from remote process
APOLLO::"0=JASON"
>>>>>>>>> for object
"SYS$COMMON:[SYSEXE]NML.EXE"
>>>>>>>>>
--------------------------------------------------------
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Snippet from test system FAL$SERVER.LOG:
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
--------------------------------------------------------
>>>>>>>>> Connect request received at 27-DEC-2022
16:26:56.85
>>>>>>>>> from remote process
APOLLO::"0=JASON"
>>>>>>>>> for object
"SYS$COMMON:[SYSEXE]FAL.EXE"
>>>>>>>>>
--------------------------------------------------------
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Is the above satisfactory, at least for OpenVMS
Alpha?
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Regards,
>>>>>>>>> Jason
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> On Sun, Dec 27, 2020, at 10:06 AM, Robert Armstrong
wrote:
>>>>>>>>>> > John Forecast wrote:
>>>>>>>>>> >DECnet event logging for any system may fail
after Nov 9th 2021.
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> Oh, that's a much bigger deal! Do you
happen to know if VMS handles this field as unsigned?? A lot of people here are going to
be bummed if VMS quits working next fall...
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> Bob
>>>>>>>
>>>>
>>
>
--
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