How well HP and SUNs work together
Anthony A. Datri
aad at stepstone.com
Wed Mar 8 05:23:48 AEST 1989
hplabs!burdick at hpindda.hp.com (Matt Burdick) writes:
> SUN's file system supports long file names (255 character names)
> only. HP-UX supports both long and short file names (14 character
> names). Short file names are supported because some applications
> do not expect file names to be any longer than 14 characters. The
> catch is that once you convert a file system from short file names
> to long file names, it isn't possible to reverse the process.
You would seem to imply that a filesystem with long filenames would
*require* filenames to be over 14 characters.
> 'nobody' to 0 rather than -2. Note that this patches the bits in
> the /hp-ux file rather than the running kernel. Therefore, to use
> it you must reboot the system:
>
> #!/bin/sh
> /bin/adb -w /hp-ux <<-"END_SEMI_CLUSTER"
> nobody?W 0
> END_SEMI_CLUSTER
My 6.2 hp-ux has an "_nobody", but no "nobody"
> HP-UX systems allow either IEEE 802.3 or Ethernet packets on the
> LAN.
According to my documentation, Ethernet level 1 or 802.3. No level 2.
Our HP 9000/320 drops 95-98% of the packets when I spray it remotely.
> HP-UX uses terminfo while SUN uses termcap.
HP-UX, as far as I can tell, prefers the terminfo files, and the libraries
use them. There's a /etc/termcap file there as well, for applications
that look at it directly. As I understand it, SunOS uses the termcap file
when you call termcap routines, and terminfo files if you call terminfo
routines, although I've never run a Sun in SysV mode.
> vice-versa). For purists, there is an 'lpr' script that is a
> wrapper around 'lp' that can be used (I'm not sure if it's shipped
> with HP-UX or not, though).
Our 6.2 has the lpr script, but I can't figure out from the man pages how
to get it to interact with our remote lpd.
Anthony A. Datri @SysAdmin(Stepstone Corporation) aad at stepstone.com stpstn!aad
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