Accounting woes for HCX/UX 3.0
Cris Fuhrman,G-40B ESB,293-2190,599-1202
fuhrman at h.cs.wvu.wvnet.edu
Sat Jan 7 07:37:14 AEST 1989
>From article <1356 at mtunb.ATT.COM>, by jcm at mtunb.ATT.COM (was-John McMillan):
>
> Those data are REPORTED in 'comp_t' form. This is NOT a SHORT:
> typedef ushort comp_t; /* "floating point" */
> /* 13-bit fraction, 3-bit exponent */
> Notice: it is NOT EVEN SIGNED. (Would you let your sibling marry
> a NEGATIVE non-signed value?)
>
> If you really think the system does this to save FLOATING POINT arithmetic,
> I've a coupla bridges for ya ;-}. However, if you're interested in
> minimizing the size of accounting records, particularly dating back to
> those halcyon days when a 50 MB disk was often the sole large disk....
>
Is it possible then, that the report code is not using the correct
data type? Or is it that the actual accounting records are
overflowing. What I'm trying to say is, can I get any useful info
at all from accounting, or is it just a waste of cpu time?
Ok... Like I said, I'm new to unix. I just graduated with a bs in cs, and
I had heard a lot of hype about unix from fellow computer scientists. Is
it likely that people developing the new versions will realize that
50 MB sole disks are a thing of the past, and that machines are much
faster and more capable to do things (accounting is an important thing)
in a reasonable fashion? I can see the hype losing it's flair. It's
1989.
(* flame retardant pajamas being donned *)
-Cris
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Cris Fuhrman | manager at a.coe.wvu.wvnet.edu (129.71.12.1) |
| Comp Sys Manager | un020312 at wvnvms.bitnet |
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