Misc AUX 2.0 Questions
Ron Johnston
johnston at Apple.COM
Thu Oct 4 10:35:33 AEST 1990
In article <1191 at ucl-cs.UUCP> J.Pearce at ucl-cs.UUCP writes:
>I am considering purchasing AUX 2.0 on CD-ROM and would appreciate
>any help with a few questions.
>
>1. With an 80M hard disk, how much can be used directly off the
> CD-ROM, and how much space will left for user files ?
The entire A/UX 2.0 distribution leaves on the order of 13 MBytes for user
files. If you leave some things on CD-ROM, or rmount them from an NFS server,
you could regain quite a bit of space: man pages, the troff tools, etc.
>2. Will AUX work with a LWIISC or do you need a postscript printer ?
You need either an AppleTalk printer OR a direct-connect serial printer.
>3. Is 4M RAM enough, or is 8M recommended ?
8M is definitely better than 4M, especially if you're using X.
>4. Is it worth getting the cache card for a IIci ?
The cache card makes an amazing difference in performance. Get it.
>5. I know the manuals for AUX are sold separately, but does AUX
> come with a documentation for installation.
A/UX comes with an Accessory Kit, which includes 1) Installation Guide;
2) A/UX Essentials; 3) Setting Up Accounts and Peripherals; and
4) Road Map to the other optional documentation. This is enough documentation
to get a typical end user going.
>6. Are any of the AUX manuals absolutely essential - the complete
> set is rather expensive.
You COULD do OK without any other manuals, especially if you already have
access to a BSD or a System V manual set. But, you'll find it easier going
if you spring for the manuals. There are three optional sets:
1) User Kit - describes shells, editors, mail, uucp, troff, etc.
2) Programmer's Kit - describes C, assembler, linker, libraries, system calls,
Mac Toolbox, SCCS, awk, lex, yacc, etc. Also includes man page hardcopy.
3) System Administrator's Kit - describes administration and maintenance
stuff like user/group admin, backup/restore, adding peripherals, fsck,
configuration tuning, and network, NFS, sendmail, YP, etc.
/Ron Johnston - A/UX Engineering
More information about the Comp.unix.aux
mailing list