To buy or not to buy.
esa at kvvax4.UUCP
esa at kvvax4.UUCP
Fri Jan 2 14:59:59 AEST 1970
** WARNING **
Quite recently we bought an INTERACTIVE Z80 C cross compiler for
our 4.1bsd. I was in good faith when I recommended this product
to a project management.
We've had quite a few problems with IS systems, especially while
we were trying to get started with an IS/3. Fortunately we
decided to throw away the IS/3 system and are quite happy now
with the 4.1bsd running on the very machine.
Okey, I got the Z80 C tape delivered by BTM in Belgium (they
represent INTERACTIVES in Europe) a couple of weeks late and after
a few telexes and one phone call. The enclosed letter said:
"the tape contains to tar format files with blockfactor 20"
I guess they ment 10 files. Anyway, that's about how many I
found. So I was able to extract the files, no trouble at all.
The trouble started when I was looking for a README file,
makefile or something. I found none of the kind. Except that
there was a sub directory 'docs', which contained files such as
install.txt.p. The problem was that those files were not
readable, file(1) said 'data'. After trying ccat(1),
uncompact(1) and od(1) without any results, I tried to read the
tape on an IS (IS/1 Workbench for VMS) machine which we happen to
have, too. I couldn't get anything sensible done there either.
But we've got a uucp link between our machines, so I transfered
the *.p files by uucp from the bsd machine to IS/1 machine (by
using -b option for raw or binary, which is a bit special for
VMS). And look: IS's unpack[cmd] worked. So I got the files in
readable format after all. Maybe one should have guessed this,
because of the suffix .p instead of .C, which is used on the BSD
for packed (or compact(1)ed) files.
The install.txt.p file proudly stated the following
> This guide tells you how to install the INTERACTIVE Z80 C Compiler
> on a VAX, a PDP-11, or an IDEA machine running IS/1, IS/3, Bell UNIX, or
> Berkeley UNIX. Just ignore the special instructions for machines or
> operating systems that aren't yours.
What the hell should I have done if I hadn't happen to have an IS
machine. I had ordered a compiler, which was to be installed on a
machine running Berkeley 4.1 Unix.
Later on there were the statements:
>(f) The directory "docs" contains a subdirectory "man". Under "man"
> are all the manual pages for the various programs in the Z80 pack-
> age, one file per program.
which is WRONG. There was no such subdirectory. Neither were
there any manual pages.
In retrospect with the afore history, I would like to mention
that not so many weeks ago I installed another xcompiler, this
was a Whitesmith's 68000 C, also on the 4.1bsd, and that job took
about 10 minutes using a makefile. Whereas now I found no
makefiles, no nothing.
The whole thing wasn't ofcourse a big thing but I thought it to
be interesting enough to be told. (At least next time I know,
whom not to buy from).
Esa K Viitala (decvax!mcvax!kvport!kvvax4!esa)
Corporate R & D
Kongsberg Vaapenfabrikk, CTG4
P.O.Box 25
N-3601 Kongsberg
Norway
P.S Incidentally, the prices:
IS's Z80 C cross compiler $7500
the Whitesmith's 68000 C cross compiler around $1700.
More information about the Comp.unix.wizards
mailing list