If that's the MIPs code base, it is likely to not be there. I could be forgetting something, but I remember that DECnet was released for the MIPS products. It was on Tru64 and Ultrix, but is a 'layered product' so you needed a license to install it and it needed to be a late enough version that had switched to exposing a full OSI stack.That said, I do not remember/know how well it functioned talking to any OSI stack other than DECs.
On Wed, Aug 28, 2019 at 7:05 AM Jason Stevens <jsteve@superglobalmegacorp.com> wrote:
I have OSF/1 1.0 running on gxemul …
Any idea on where/ how to configure OSI?
OSF/1 Release 1 (OSFMIPS) console
login: root
Last login: Thu Aug 29 06:03:07 on console
DEC OSF/1 V1.0 (Rev. 166); Sun Jun 07 19:23:34 CDT 1970
DEC OSF/1 V1.0 Worksystem Software (Rev. 161)
# find / -name 'osi*' -print
#
From: Peter Jeremy
Sent: Wednesday, August 28, 2019 2:47 PM
To: Wesley Parish
Cc: TUHS main list
Subject: Re: [TUHS] If not Linux, then what?
On 2019-Aug-28 18:19:21 +1200, Wesley Parish <wobblygong@gmail.com>
wrote:
>Speaking of OSI stacks, I know 4.4BSD Lite came with some fragments of
>one. OSI's dead and hardly mourned these days, but did anyone in the
>Unix world ever get beyond the 4.4BSD fragmentary implementation?
There was ISODE
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_Development_Environment).
I recall experimenting with it but didn't actually use it in anger.
I know that DEC/Compaq/HP Tru64 Unix (nee OSF/1) came with a OSI stack -
we had customers who wanted/used FTAM and I was surprised to find it
came with the OS.
--
Peter Jeremy