On Wed, Oct 06, 1999 at 11:19:54PM -0700, Kirk Davis wrote:
> Warren,
> I've been checking out your vtserver program. It's a great idea
> and it's been fun to play with. I'm bringing up a /34 and have been
> collecting parts for it for a few months. I've got it set up with
> a few RL02's on it. Few questions for you:
>
> Do you know of anyone that has used it on a /34? I've punched in the
> bootstrap and ran it. It loads the boot file from my Linux system.
> It appears to call it but it halts somewhere in the 70000-70040 region.
> Nothing comes up on the console. Looks like the memory is over written
> with the same values over and over again in this area. Any thoughts?
>
> I'm working on getting a source license from SCO. I'd love to hack on
> this with you if you are interested in any help.
Sorry for the delay Kirk. It could be that the V7 bootstrap expects
split I/D, or a different I/O mapping then what's provided on the /34.
I'll punt this to the PUPS mailing list. I have a suspicion that
you won't be able to install V7, but you should be able to install V6
or 2.9BSD instead.
Cheers,
Warren
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>From Wilko Bulte <wilko(a)yedi.iaf.nl> Fri Oct 15 03:18:02 1999
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From: Wilko Bulte <wilko(a)yedi.iaf.nl>
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Subject: Re: vtserver
In-Reply-To: <19991014163422.C41213(a)henry.cs.adfa.edu.au> from Warren Toomey at "Oct 14, 1999 4:34:43 pm"
To: wkt(a)cs.adfa.edu.au (Warren Toomey)
Date: Thu, 14 Oct 1999 19:18:02 +0200 (CEST)
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As Warren Toomey wrote ...
> On Wed, Oct 06, 1999 at 11:19:54PM -0700, Kirk Davis wrote:
> > Warren,
> > I've been checking out your vtserver program. It's a great idea
> > and it's been fun to play with. I'm bringing up a /34 and have been
> > collecting parts for it for a few months. I've got it set up with
> > a few RL02's on it. Few questions for you:
> >
> > Do you know of anyone that has used it on a /34? I've punched in the
> > bootstrap and ran it. It loads the boot file from my Linux system.
> > It appears to call it but it halts somewhere in the 70000-70040 region.
> > Nothing comes up on the console. Looks like the memory is over written
> > with the same values over and over again in this area. Any thoughts?
> >
> > I'm working on getting a source license from SCO. I'd love to hack on
> > this with you if you are interested in any help.
>
> Sorry for the delay Kirk. It could be that the V7 bootstrap expects
> split I/D, or a different I/O mapping then what's provided on the /34.
>
> I'll punt this to the PUPS mailing list. I have a suspicion that
> you won't be able to install V7, but you should be able to install V6
> or 2.9BSD instead.
I once had Ultrix-11 3.1 running on a dual RK05 11/34. What I'd call a
very minimal system ;-) But it ran
--
| / o / / _ Arnhem, The Netherlands - Powered by FreeBSD -
|/|/ / / /( (_) Bulte WWW : http://www.tcja.nlhttp://www.freebsd.org
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>From "Steven M. Schultz" <sms(a)moe.2bsd.com> Fri Oct 15 04:36:52 1999
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Date: Thu, 14 Oct 1999 11:36:52 -0700 (PDT)
From: "Steven M. Schultz" <sms(a)moe.2bsd.com>
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To: wilko(a)yedi.iaf.nl, wkt(a)cs.adfa.edu.au
Subject: Re: vtserver
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Hi -
> From: Wilko Bulte <wilko(a)yedi.iaf.nl>
I will be doing some more research on this when I get home from
work tonight.
> I once had Ultrix-11 3.1 running on a dual RK05 11/34. What I'd call a
> very minimal system ;-) But it ran
That is because DEC put the extra effort into supporting non-split I/D
machines. The "stock" V7 really wanted a 11/70. In fact there was a
chapter in the back of one of the manuals/books detailing what it took
to get V7 running on an 11/40 (it was a non-trivial project).
Several things conspire against V7 and later on 11/34 (or 35, 40, 60,
etc). The two most notable ones are the limited address space,
everything (drivers, data structures, general kernel code) must fit
in 56kb instead of 120kb - (8kb reserved for the I/O page) and lack
of instruction restart on MMU faults.
I'll take a look at the V7 layout later but my memory is that it
wanted an 11/70.
Steven Schultz
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Anybody here interested in helping?
Greg
----- Forwarded message from Christoph Kaeder <hh-city(a)lehmanns.de> -----
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> Date: Thu, 30 Sep 1999 23:53:14 +0200
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>
> Hello.
>
> Lehmanns bookshop in Germany will print a
> Unix-Freeware-Calender in
> postersize and give it away for FREE (300.000 copies /
> 4-colour!).
>
> The calendar will include over 100 remarkable days from the
> History of Unix, Linux, Freeware and Open Source.
>
>
> Would you like to add some remarkable days from the
> FreeBSD-History?
> Release days or ...
>
>
> - calendar-home : http://www.lob.de/cal0
> - first look (JPEG): http://www.lob.de/cal1
> - a detail: http://www.lob.de/cal2
> - form to add your remarkable days: http://www.lob.de/cal3
>
> And if you agree we would like to add the FreeBSD Daemon on
> this calender beside the Tux, TeX-Lion, Perl Camel ...
>
> Do you agree to this and can you send us a Tif or JPEG?
> We need it with 300 dpi, 4-colour, about 1 inch high
>
> Thanks.
> Christoph Kaeder
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In article by Lord Isildur:
> hello,
>
> alas, i do not have an account on the PUPS Archive machine! could i have one?
> i remember vaguely something about requiring pgp-signed stuff, and i dont
> use pgp, and so dont have a public (or any other) key.
> isildur
Here's the policy for the machine holding the PUPS Archive:
+ People with UNIX source licenses can get at least
guest FTP access to the archive, with S/Key as the
authentication mechanism.
+ People with UNIX source licenses, and who either
help to maintain the archive, or who have volunteered
to distribute the archive, can get ssh access to the
machine.
+ No telnet access, no e-mail. The box runs with `reserved
tolerance' from the real system administrators :-)
If you fall into either category, and can prove you have a UNIX source
license, then I can either PGP e-mail you, or fax you, the access
details.
Apologies for the cross-post to the 3 old UNIX-related mailing lists!
Cheers,
Warren