Title: | -={ H A C K E R S }=- |
Notice: | Write locked - see NOTED::HACKERS |
Moderator: | DIEHRD::MORRIS |
Created: | Thu Feb 20 1986 |
Last Modified: | Mon Aug 03 1992 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 680 |
Total number of notes: | 5456 |
$ SET HOST will take input from a file but $ SET HOST/DTE won't. Is there a way to fool SET HOST/DTE into taking input from a file. My reason for trying this is that I'm trying to get up to LTA1000 on my �Vax in an attempt to reproduce a bug reported. I have borrowed a DECserver 100 from comminications and have my a �VAX hooked up to it (via tta1). $ Set Host/Dte/nolog TTA1 gets me to the DECserver and I can get to other machines from there. A regular set host isn't good enough to reproduce the problem as you can't get 1000 users on a system and lower RTAnnn's get reused if you logout. Lower LTAnnn's don't get reused. Our cluster never stays up long enough to get up that high and munging the data structure that holds the device name was shot down in an earlier note. I don't like the thought of logging in manually 1000 times to do this so a command file that repeats it for me is what I'm getting at but I've failed to make /DTE work. Any help is appreciated, ..Dan ps. there is a note in the LAT conference asking about going directly to LTA1000. pps. The problem <<< CLT::ULTRIX$:[NOTES$LIBRARY]VAX_BASIC.NOTE;1 >>> -< Discussions on VAX BASIC >- ================================================================================ Note 199.0 LTA1000, INVDEVNAM No replies WATNEY::ROARK "Kelly Roark" 5 lines 5-JAN-1987 18:55 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- I've had a customer report a INVDEVNAM error when trying a generic PRINT statement after logging into an LTA device greater than LTA999. Has anyone seen this before and is there a fix coming 'round the pike? Kelly
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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406.1 | MOTHRA::DUTKO | Nestor Dutko, VMS/VAXclusters CSSE | Wed Feb 11 1987 11:28 | 22 | |
Hmmm... I think I may know what is wrong. Note the change in device name? Well, if you have the device before LTA999, the process has reserved in the PCB seven bytes for the device name. Therefore, the device will appear as LTA999:. Note that once you get to the devices in the thousands, there is a *problem*. Now you still have the seven bytes reserved for the terminal (PCB$T_TERMINAL), but the colon is omitted. If your application is trying to do anything peculiar where it assumes the device, and there is no colon, that is where the problem would occur. Sorry, about this not addressing the problem with getting up to unit 1000, but perhaps you may get some information from the above description and not have to do the reproduction of problem. BTW, I believe that you could have used LATCP and created an additional port LTA1000, and logged into it as an appklication and gone from there, instead of trying to get VMS and LTDRIVER to incrementally increase the unit numbers that high... -- Nestor |