Title: | DECnet/OSI for {ULTRIX,OSF/1} |
Notice: | Indicate version and platform when writing...see #2 for kits |
Moderator: | BULEAN::CARR |
Created: | Wed Sep 25 1991 |
Last Modified: | Thu Jun 05 1997 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 2187 |
Total number of notes: | 10469 |
I have read in other notes that DECnet does not yet offer Year 2000 support. Is this true? For interest I have been resetting the clock to the year 1999 to see what happens. I realise I may have been a bit foolish to do this but I wanted to work out what/how to do this. First I could only set the clock when the network cable was plugged out and I had booted as single-user. If I have the network cable plugged in then the time resets itself to the real current time. I don't have NTP or RDATE configured so my guess is that some network service reset the date? Anybody got any ideas? Also something nasty seems to have happened to my machine with respect to udp. That is it no longer seems to exist. As soon as I try to do something that involves sockets, such as running dbx, the machine crashes. I would really be interested to know how I could fix udp by the way, (without reinstalling the o/s). Neil
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2187.1 | ABBYRD::RMULAC::S_WATTUM | Scott Wattum - FTAM/VT/OSAK Engineering (303) 840-2986 | Thu Jun 05 1997 09:00 | 11 | |
> I have read in other notes that DECnet does not yet offer Year 2000 > support. Is this true? I think it would be more correct to say that we don't currently claim Y2K compliance - this will be changing, because it's a requirement to be Y2K compliant. I know testing has been going on - for a few days we had 2 systems booted into the year 1999 (remember Space 1999?) and let them roll into 2000; I haven't heard the full results of that test but it has been done. I think the biggest problem for the test was getting paks that were valid for 2000. --Scott | |||||
2187.2 | DRAGNS::WALLACE | Thu Jun 05 1997 14:20 | 3 | ||
Regarding your clock being reset - that was probably dtssd - the DECnet version of ntp. -- Vince |