Ubuntu 20.04 works fine. Thank you, that is what I have been searching for
a long time.
On Wed, Oct 25, 2023 at 4:50 AM John Forecast <john(a)forecast.name> wrote:
Sometime around mid-2022 the Linux kernel developers decided to remove the
DECnet code from the Linux
kernel. Kernel 6.0.x was the last release which included source code for a
DECnet implementation. More
recently, there has been some discussion around removing the code from the
Long Term Support kernels.
These changes mean that the repository I have been maintaining at
<https://github.com/JohnForecast/RaspbianDECnet> can no longer be
installed on recent releases.
Over the past year or so, I have been working on a replacement for this
repository with the following
characteristics:
- Designed to be built as an external kernel module
This simplifies and speeds up the installation since we no
longer need to rebuild the entire
kernel.
- Can only be built as an ethernet endnode
Again this substantially simplifies the kernel code. The
routing code was alway marked as
“experimental” and I never tried to get it running. If you
need a DECnet router, pyDECnet or
Route20 are much better solutions.
- Minimize the use of Linux kernel frameworks
Many of the problems with keeping RaspbianDECnet running
between Linux versions
were changes to the kernel framework APIs. By limiting the
use of these APIs I am hoping
that the kernel module will need fewer changes to keep up
with kernel changes. So far,
I have had to make one additional conditional code change
at kernel 6.5 and that was in
the socket layer so all networking code would need to be
changed.
In addition to a new kernel module there have been a number of changes to
the userland code:
- What used to be “fal2” is now the default file access listener.
The old “fal” is still available in the
“fal-old” directory
- What used to be “nml2” is now the default and only network
management listener.
- There is now a subset implementation of “ncp” which is
sufficient to support all of the requests
available from the Linux network management listener. It does
implement a “tell” prefix so all
of these commands may be issued to remote systems. In addition,
it implements
“ncp copy known nodes from <node name/address>” to update the
local node name database.
- The new kernel module now supports node counters as defined in
the Network Management
Specification and the ncp/nml combination are able to display
and zero them.
- The installation procedure is no longer targeted solely at
Raspberry Pi releases. The current
procedure supports installation on systems derived from Debian
or Fedora although only a
limited number of distributions have been tested (see
README.DECnet).
This new release is available at:
<https://github.com/JohnForecast/LinuxDECnet>
and should be considered to be in Beta test at this time. See
README.DECnet in the top level directory
for more information and installation instructions.
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