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From: Digestifier <Linux-Development-Request@senator-bedfellow.mit.edu>
To: Linux-Development@senator-bedfellow.mit.edu
Reply-To: Linux-Development@senator-bedfellow.mit.edu
Date: Fri, 23 Sep 94 00:13:14 EDT
Subject: Linux-Development Digest #208
Linux-Development Digest #208, Volume #2 Fri, 23 Sep 94 00:13:14 EDT
Contents:
Re: Linux on CD (Hans Boehm)
Voicemail modems ZOOM! (John G. Wagner)
Re: Compiling X-apps using xmkmf (pommnitz%prometheus.heidelbg.ibm.com@ibmpa.awdpa.ibm.com)
driver for NE3200 (EtherExpress 32 EISA)? (Stefan (SAM Muenzel))
LINUX WANTED !!! (Franck)
Re: Linux on CD (Jeff Kesselman)
Re: AX25 & KISS Amateur Radio Protocols in Linux? (Jay Ashworth)
Re: AX25 & KISS Amateur Radio Protocols in Linux?? (Vassili Leonov)
Re: AX25 & KISS Amateur Radio Protocols in Linux?? (Alan Cox)
Re: X.25 support ....exist ? (Alan Cox)
Re: Linux on multiple processors? (Alan Cox)
Re: IP Packet Prioritization for Dial-up Networks (QOS) (Alan Cox)
Re: Don't use Linux?! (Alan Cox)
Re: Extending the IP Protocol? (Alan Cox)
Re: Extending the IP Protocol? (don provan)
Re: [STATUS] Linus Floppy Driver Development (Paul Vojta)
how to compile cxterm ? (Short Circuit)
Re: how to compile cxterm ? (Shawn Hsiao)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: boehm@parc.xerox.com (Hans Boehm)
Subject: Re: Linux on CD
Date: 20 Sep 1994 18:03:36 GMT
kruithof@hannover.sgp.slb.com (Andries Kruithof) writes:
>I can confirm this. I tried it with the TransAmeritech CD, release April 1994.
>The main problem is that it becomes real slow, compared to running it from HD.
>This was on a NEC 3xi with an Adaptec 1542 SCSI adapter.
>I think the big problem is when 2 processes try to access two different files
>(=> physical locations) simultaneously on the CD-ROM. The head has to move a
>lot, so the seek-time slows down the data-xfer. (Am I right here?)
>I think it's more reasonable to have the often used stuff on your HD, and the
>less used stuff you can run from CD-ROM.
>How do other people feel about running from CD-ROM? I do like the idea of
>saving HD-space, but it becomes too slow for me to be usable.
Also having done this (with a much slower CDROM drive), I suspect there's
another problem. If you're running a big executable from the CDROM,
and the kernel needs to page out some of the text segment, it presumably
decides that it's already in a file, and there's no reason to write
it to the swap space on your disk. When it needs it again, it just
reads it in again from the CDROM. Oops. Instead of 40 msecs or so
for two seeks on the disk, this just cost you 200msecs (650 in my case)
for a seek on the CDROM. (This is largely conjecture. Please correct
me if I'm wrong.)
I still think this is a reasonable way to run, but probably only if you
put commonly used executables on the magnetic disk, or have enough
memory that the kernel doesn't need to page AT ALL. Leaving things
like man pages on the CD seems fine.
The problem seems fixable with a more intelligent paging policy. But I
don't know of any OS that does this right.
Hans-J. Boehm
(boehm@parc.xerox.com)
Standard disclaimer ...
------------------------------
From: jwagner@mental.mitre.org (John G. Wagner)
Subject: Voicemail modems ZOOM!
Date: 20 Sep 1994 18:00:32 GMT
Reply-To: jwagner@mental.mitre.org (John G. Wagner)
Ok I have a ZOOM modem that has the voicemail stuff built in
( an extra chip I think) Has anybody written a driver for this yet?
I sure would like to fire up my voice/fax/data modem and let the computer
figure out what is calling and what to do with it. ( maybe the software
could tell if it's a salesman and hangup on him too :))
--
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
+ Heck even I don't know what I do, so the company can't. +
+ empire isn't a game, it's a world ruled by elves! :) +
+ Bowling IS a sport, and if you don't believe me, I'll beat'ya +
+ and YES I mean with a BIG stick!! }:@ +
+ jwagner@mitre.org | John Wagner | PH# (703)883-3740 +
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
------------------------------
From: pommnitz%prometheus.heidelbg.ibm.com@ibmpa.awdpa.ibm.com
Subject: Re: Compiling X-apps using xmkmf
Date: 20 Sep 1994 12:50:39 GMT
Reply-To: pommnitz%prometheus.heidelbg.ibm.com@ibmpa.awdpa.ibm.com
In <CwEACs.7qJ@crdnns.crd.ge.com> lyonspr@crd.ge.com (Paul R. Lyons) writes:
> I can't seem to use xmkmf because the file Imake.tmpl is not found in
> /usr/lib/X11/config. Does anyone know what Slackware Dist. disks this
> file can be found on, as I really don't want to have to reinstall X. I
> installed the X,Xdev, and X apps disks way back in the spring. All works
> great under kernel 0.99.pl15. What am I missing?
How about /usr/X386/lib/X11/config ?
If it is there, you can make /usr/lib/X11 a symlink that points to
/usr/X386/lib/X11.
Best regards
Joerg
================================================================================
Joerg Pommnitz, ARTe Team, IBM Scientific Center Heidelberg, Germany
Mail1: pommnitz%prometheus.heidelbg.ibm.com@ibmpa.awdpa.ibm.com
Mail2: jpo@vnet.ibm.com
Tel. : Germany (06221) 59 3609
------------------------------
From: muenzel@ceres.tat.physik.uni-tuebingen.de (Stefan (SAM) Muenzel)
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.help,comp.os.linux.misc,comp.os.linux.admin,de.comp.os.linux
Subject: driver for NE3200 (EtherExpress 32 EISA)?
Date: 22 Sep 94 15:49:22 GMT
Hi folks,
I have the following problem:
my current employer has an EISA-machine with an (for me) unknown
ethernet-card. It's a
Intel EtherExpress 32Bit ( NE3200 ) / EISA
I'm not sure this is the correct name, but i hope some guru on
the net will recognize it.
I looked through the kernel-sources (1.1.50), but couldn't find a
driver for this card (or is it the ac3200 in drivers/net?).
Does anybody know of this card, or is there already someone writing
the driver?
It's fairly important for us to get them working (the
destination-machine will have 3 of them).
Any information would be of great value ;-)
ciao
SAM
--
=============================================================================
Stefan "SAM" Muenzel . o c , Fencing
Theoretical Astrophysics / "#v-- --v#" is
Computational Physics /'> <`\ fun !
University of Tuebingen
Auf der Morgenstelle 10 --- D-72076 Tuebingen --- Germany
Email: muenzel@tat.physik.uni-tuebingen.de
=============================================================================
------------------------------
From: franck@davina.inria.fr (Franck )
Subject: LINUX WANTED !!!
Date: 22 Sep 1994 09:26:28 GMT
Hello, everybody !
I want to install Linux on my PC.
I have some very simple questions :
- What's the last version of Linux ?
- Where can I find it ? (ftp site...)
Is documentation about installation, administration be complete and
clear ?
Thanks a lot for any contribution.
_____/ _____/
/ /
/_ / Franck Charlemagne.
__/ / Projet Rodin.
/ / e-mail : franck@inria.fr
_/ _/ ______/
"Whatever you can do, or dream you can, begin it.
Boldness has genius, power and magic in it."
Goethe.
------------------------------
From: jeffpk@netcom.com (Jeff Kesselman)
Subject: Re: Linux on CD
Date: Fri, 23 Sep 1994 00:01:58 GMT
In article <CwEC65.9tC@pe1chl.ampr.org>, Rob Janssen <pe1chl@rabo.nl> wrote:
>In <CwDx2M.ww@cs.bsu.edu> fagarcia@cs.bsu.edu writes:
>
>>I was having a chat with someone over the net and we came to this..
>>What if Linux came fully implemented (X & all the disk sets) on a CD and
>>all you would have to do is boot off the CD rom and have the
>>settings/option files (ie ~/.seyon inittab & the rc scrips) in your HD.
>
>>I mean, this would save a lot of diskspace ;)
>
>There are several CD-ROMs available that allow you to do this...
>
>(well, not actually *booting* from CD-ROM, that was something that only
> lived in the 386BSD PR-guy's mind... but having all the files on CD-ROM
> is a realistic possibility, with a small bootable partition on HD)
>
>Rob
>--
>-------------------------------------------------------------------------
>| Rob Janssen | AMPRnet: rob@pe1chl.ampr.org |
>| e-mail: pe1chl@rabo.nl | AX.25 BBS: PE1CHL@PI8UTR.#UTR.NLD.EU |
>-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Technically, you are right, Rob. At least the Yygdrasil though comes
with a boot floppy. So unless you don't have a floppy drive, there is not
much difference here...
Jeff Kesselman
------------------------------
From: jra@zeus.IntNet.net (Jay Ashworth)
Subject: Re: AX25 & KISS Amateur Radio Protocols in Linux?
Date: 22 Sep 1994 22:21:59 -0400
stevew@sheridan.ncd.com (Steve Wilson) writes:
>The only limitations U.S. hams have to worry about is obscene language
>content, and whether a transmission would benefit them directly financially.
The language is still "compensation, direct or indirect, paid or promised",
is it not?
Cheers,
-- jra
--
Jay R. Ashworth Ashworth
Designer High Technology Systems Consulting & Associates
ka1fjx/4
jra@baylink.com Linux: The Choice of a GNU Generation +1 813 790 7592
------------------------------
From: vassili@cs.sunysb.edu (Vassili Leonov)
Subject: Re: AX25 & KISS Amateur Radio Protocols in Linux??
Date: 22 Sep 1994 18:59:39 GMT
Mark A. Horton KA4YBR (mah@ka4ybr.com) wrote:
: Vassili Leonov (vassili@cs.sunysb.edu) wrote:
: : Rob Janssen (rob@pe1chl.ampr.org) wrote:
: Vassili, I respectfully say "BULLSHIT." (Couldn't say that on
: the air! :) I suppose you've never wondered about "baudot" have
This is one illustration, why you can not carry Internet feeds by
the ham radio channels. I though that at the age of 44 you should be able
to control your language better, Mark.
: portion of the spectrum utilised. I shudder to ask your opinion of
: CW.
Well - at least I managed to pass 13 wpm test - ulike you...
: Not to mention that I've never seen a project run by any government
: that could be managed more efficiently and cost-effectively than
: one in a competitive private sector!
What about GNU and Linux for that matter? I would not say it's run by
the Government - but not by the private sector either.
: : is just a vehicle - not an aim in itself. In my opinion - commericial
: : providers have unfair advantage of being able to use a spectrum - to
: : no benefit of mine... If you look at HAM radio you'll see that it's
: WRONG! A lot of traffic that you enjoy goes through commercial
: providers at some point or another. Face it, were it not for
And if it would go by free channels - it would be cheaper. That's it.
And it can not go by the free channels - not because it's financially or
technically impossible, but because of certain state enforced
regulations. And that is something that I don't like. As an example -
some people bring the car to the mechanics - some work on it themselfs.
In telecommunications you're forced to do it with the mechanics. And
they know it. And charge you many times more. But that's because they
give part of this money to the gov. - that enforces the situation.
So - if you call this FREE market and FARE competition - then we
speak different ways...
: a) your can figure out how to do it for no cost.
If allowed I would pay my share. A few $K would be OK. But then
I'm FREE. And nobody can STEP ON me one day. Makes a BIG difference.
: b) you don't steal bandwidth from Amateur Radio... we
: already lost 11 meters to "public use" and look what
: that got us! There are already enough well-funded
Amazing GREED! Tune to 10 meters - in regular days - how many
channels are used there (2MHz of spectrum)?. You're lucky if 2-3 of them.
Then tune CB (11m - 0.65MHZ spectrum).
Most channels are used. So - that WAS very fare. Use it or LOSE IT!
: interests after our spectrum space! Hell, they've
: even (supposedly) made it a crime to listen to 800MHz
: now! (In direct violation of the 1st ammendment AND
: the Communications Act of 1934 in the USA at least)
This may leave some feeling with non-hams reading that that WAS the
essence of amateur radio... Listen to other people... Done' respect
privacy. Well - I'm also pro alowing encription on HAM channels -
so you know.
: : Vassili.
: What's your call sign, Vassili???
You can find it in the callbook...
Vassili.
------------------------------
From: iialan@iifeak.swan.ac.uk (Alan Cox)
Subject: Re: AX25 & KISS Amateur Radio Protocols in Linux??
Date: Thu, 22 Sep 1994 09:17:15 GMT
In article <35kroh$sq3@newsserv.cs.sunysb.edu> vassili@cs.sunysb.edu (Vassili Leonov) writes:
>The original identity of the HAM radio is to be at the frontier and
>benefit the humanity - and free of charge... It's public service -
>running a NON-COMMERCIAL network on top of that is no contradiction.
ROTFL. The real motivation for most Governments allowing amateur radio is a
handy supply of radio trained people in case a war turns up.
Alan
--
..-----------,,----------------------------,,----------------------------,,
// Alan Cox // iialan@www.linux.org.uk // GW4PTS@GB7SWN.#45.GBR.EU //
``----------'`----------------------------'`----------------------------''
------------------------------
From: iialan@iifeak.swan.ac.uk (Alan Cox)
Subject: Re: X.25 support ....exist ?
Date: Thu, 22 Sep 1994 09:20:12 GMT
In article <CwFn4q.4rp@aston.ac.uk> evansmp@mb4715.aston.ac.uk (Mark Evans) writes:
>paolo bertona (bertop@c700-1.sm.dsi.unimi.it) wrote:
>: I am searching for some support for X.25 cards
>: under Linux, can somebody help me ?
>
>The only X25 support is the AX25 written by Alan Cox,
>You might like to look at this code for ideas, I
>suspect you will find that things like the HDLC
>management you can leave to the hardware.
HDLC is normally done on board by an 8530 SCC chip (or relative). The AX.25
code is currently (its probably going to change state machine code) based on
BSD netccitt from net-2 which is a LAPB and very limited X.25 layer just
about good enough to get IP over X.25 up. The Linux stuff is AX.25 which
is a variant on LAPB for a broadcast medium and has no equivalent upper
layers to the HDLC/LAPB/X.25/X.29 stack.
Alan
--
..-----------,,----------------------------,,----------------------------,,
// Alan Cox // iialan@www.linux.org.uk // GW4PTS@GB7SWN.#45.GBR.EU //
``----------'`----------------------------'`----------------------------''
------------------------------
From: iialan@iifeak.swan.ac.uk (Alan Cox)
Subject: Re: Linux on multiple processors?
Date: Thu, 22 Sep 1994 09:21:27 GMT
In article <35mojq$t04@sundog.tiac.net> mdorman@mallet.tiac.net (michael alan dorman) writes:
>considering using Linux as a platform (dialin Internet host, web server,
>fairly high volume) seems to me to be one for which SMP might give
>good results--or at least make it easier to stave off the purchase of
>a second machine.
For a web server which does spread easily between machines a pile of old
386SX's with 2-4Mb of RAM is very cost effective for the job.
Alan
--
..-----------,,----------------------------,,----------------------------,,
// Alan Cox // iialan@www.linux.org.uk // GW4PTS@GB7SWN.#45.GBR.EU //
``----------'`----------------------------'`----------------------------''
------------------------------
From: iialan@iifeak.swan.ac.uk (Alan Cox)
Subject: Re: IP Packet Prioritization for Dial-up Networks (QOS)
Date: Thu, 22 Sep 1994 09:33:45 GMT
In article <Cw9vKq.51u@pe1chl.ampr.org> pe1chl@rabo.nl writes:
>Applications can use the TOS field to specify what they want, and existing
>applications can be handled by the header peeking. (TCP port 20, etc)
All the standard network kit follows the recommendations and uses IP_TOS
to set options. People using very old networking programs may gain from
a recompile with current stuff. Linux fully supports both SO_PRIORITY and
IP_TOS.
Alan
--
..-----------,,----------------------------,,----------------------------,,
// Alan Cox // iialan@www.linux.org.uk // GW4PTS@GB7SWN.#45.GBR.EU //
``----------'`----------------------------'`----------------------------''
------------------------------
From: iialan@iifeak.swan.ac.uk (Alan Cox)
Subject: Re: Don't use Linux?!
Date: Thu, 22 Sep 1994 09:34:31 GMT
In article <35g6hg$sao@ulowell.uml.edu> jrichard@cs.uml.edu (John Richardson) writes:
>How would one go about asking Wordperfect about this? Is their an
>e-mail address, or do you just talk to them on the phone?
I just phoned them up.
Alan
--
..-----------,,----------------------------,,----------------------------,,
// Alan Cox // iialan@www.linux.org.uk // GW4PTS@GB7SWN.#45.GBR.EU //
``----------'`----------------------------'`----------------------------''
------------------------------
From: iialan@iifeak.swan.ac.uk (Alan Cox)
Subject: Re: Extending the IP Protocol?
Date: Thu, 22 Sep 1994 09:37:15 GMT
In article <35fq5f$j4s@mark.ucdavis.edu> slouken@cs.ucdavis.edu (Sam Oscar Lantinga) writes:
> On another note, it may be necessary to do full packet
>encapsulation for this to work properly. Is it possible to select
>a new protocol number say "encap" that would correspond to a simple
>encapsulation protocol?
IPIP already exists and is used occasionally. Its very undesirable since
(with some few exceptions) what it does can be done with properly set up routing.
Adding it the Linux kernel is possible I guess probably as an ipip virtual
device.
Alan
--
..-----------,,----------------------------,,----------------------------,,
// Alan Cox // iialan@www.linux.org.uk // GW4PTS@GB7SWN.#45.GBR.EU //
``----------'`----------------------------'`----------------------------''
------------------------------
Crossposted-To: comp.protocols.tcp-ip
From: donp@novell.com (don provan)
Subject: Re: Extending the IP Protocol?
Date: Fri, 23 Sep 1994 00:12:04 GMT
In article <35nage$m7r@mark.ucdavis.edu> slouken@cs.ucdavis.edu (Sam Oscar Lantinga) writes:
>Gert Doering (gert@greenie.muc.de) wrote:
>: Why not simply using Proxy ARP on the SLIP server? Sounds a lot easier +
>: faster.
>
>...
>2) I don't have access to the SLIP server.
In other words, you want to implement something in the protocol to get
around the fact that you do not control the SLIP server. Normally
protocol changes are not made to solve administrative problems.
By the way, from your description of the proposed relay option, it
sounds as if it behaves exactly like the existing loose source routing
option. Am I missing some subtle difference between the two?
don provan
donp@novell.com
------------------------------
From: vojta@tashkent.berkeley.edu (Paul Vojta)
Subject: Re: [STATUS] Linus Floppy Driver Development
Date: 23 Sep 1994 00:23:14 GMT
In article <35sheg$b71@earth.baylor.edu>,
Pyramids-R-Us <ges@earth.baylor.edu> wrote:
>Also I don't want my unprivelged users to be able to mount
>a minix or ext2 filesystem that has executables owned by root and with
>the setuid bit on. Most of the users of the linux machine I adminiter
>at school have access to the console so this is a real concern.
OK, so read the man page for mount(1) and set the options correctly.
This issue has already been discussed in typical Usenet fashion (lots
of erroneous posts, converging very slowly to the truth) very recently
in this newsgroup.
--Paul Vojta, vojta@math.berkeley.edu
------------------------------
From: ckwen@mail.ncku.edu.tw (Short Circuit)
Subject: how to compile cxterm ?
Date: Thu, 22 Sep 1994 13:40:21 GMT
Hello,
Does anyone of you know how to compile cxterm-11.5.1 ? I got the
error message when making it:
main.c: sgtty.h not found
Thanks in advance.
--
========================================================================
Cheng-Kang Wen E-mail: ckwen@mail.ncku.edu.tw
Distributed Systems Lab.
Institute of Electrical Engineering
National Cheng Kung University
Tainan
Taiwan
========================================================================
------------------------------
From: shawn@skydome.hinet.net (Shawn Hsiao)
Subject: Re: how to compile cxterm ?
Date: 22 Sep 1994 18:53:17 GMT
In article <1994Sep22.134021.26517@dec8.ncku.edu.tw> ckwen@mail.ncku.edu.tw (Short Circuit) writes:
Does anyone of you know how to compile cxterm-11.5.1 ? I got the
error message when making it:
main.c: sgtty.h not found
Try add `-I/usr/include/bsd' to your compilation options.
You can join the tw.bbs.comp.linux for more information about using chinese
under Linux.
--
// Shawn
E-mail: shawn@skydome.hinet.net
------------------------------
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