Ugh. Back to work.
I did see some errors....
Kurt
On Sat, Jun 8, 2019, 8:35 PM Johnny Billquist <bqt at softjar.se> wrote:
Well, just taking a peek at CURLY, I can also tell
that you have not
managed to get the multinet links up and running, but are communicating
with DECnet over ethernet. :-)
Johnny
On 2019-06-09 02:20, Kurt Hamm wrote:
That's it! Everything works great. I have
the node list and can access
reachable nodes from the PDP-11.
This is just really wonderful.
As a thank you, I will leave the mailing list alone for a while. ha!
Kurt
On Sat, Jun 8, 2019 at 6:42 PM Johnny Billquist <bqt at softjar.se
<mailto:bqt at softjar.se>> wrote:
Ok, a quick rundown on some of the more esoteric details about lines
and
circuits might be useful here.
First of all, Kurt, you might want to redo the NETGEN and not set the
system up for DECnet routing. It takes a lot of resources, and if you
don't really want it, you are much better off with a system not even
generated for it.
The question about remote nodes are just for an initial population of
your local nodename database. All you need there is really to define
MIM
(1.13). You can then copy the whole nodename database from MIM over
to
your machine that way instead. Let me know if
you want some details
on
that step.
On 2019-06-08 22:25, Mark Matlock wrote:
Kurt,
If you want two circuits like UNA-0 and IP-0-0 I think you
have to
be a routing node (but not an area router).
Not really, but maybe. If you define multiple circuits, and are an
end-node, only one circuit will be active. But others can exist, and
the
system will fall back to some other circuit if the active one goes
down.
So it can be used as a back connection.
However, even as an end-node, you can have several *lines* on and
active
at the same time. And this is a trick to use if you want
DECnet-over-IP,
but want to be an endnode. You need ethernet for TCP/IP to work, but
you
do not want DECnet to use the ethernet circuit.
But you configure one IP line as well, and that is the one DECnet
will
be using. Meanwhile, TCP/IP is using the
ethernet line.
It might sound a little confusing, but think about it for a second,
and
I hope it becomes clear. Otherwise, just ask,
and I'll try to
explain it
better.
Also, you should define all the nodes you want to
talk to with
NCP in
one of the startup files or do it with CFE but I
prefer startup
so it?s
simple to change.
I would actually say that you wouldn't. Of course, there is nothing
wrong in doing this, but if you want the full HECnet nodename
database,
it contains 700 nodes. That will take a while
to type in.
However, you can copy the nodename database from another DECnet node,
and then use this.
But you need at least the nodename of someone where you will be
copying
from to start with, which is why I suggested
adding MIM at the start.
After that, there is [5,54]NNC which is the nodename collector task.
Run
it, collect names from another node, and build a new database with
this.
Then stop and restart the node name server, and you have all the
nodes
defined.
(The node name server is managed by the command SCP.
So, SCP STOP followed by SCP START will do it.)
Johnny
--
Johnny Billquist || "I'm on a bus
|| on a psychedelic trip
email: bqt at softjar.se <mailto:bqt at softjar.se> ||
Reading murder books
pdp is alive! || tryin' to stay hip" - B. Idol
--
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