SIM990/DX10 help?
Sean Caron
scaron at umich.edu
Sun Jan 4 21:48:52 CST 2015
And if I hit Ctrl-X in my Telnet session /now/ (after I have initialized
the system; this seems important) as you say, it works! I'm off! Thanks for
your ideas!
Best,
Sean
On Sun, Jan 4, 2015 at 10:43 PM, Sean Caron <scaron at umich.edu> wrote:
> Yeah, I kind of "figured it out"... poring through README.txt and just
> noodling around a little bit. So, you extract the disk images and run
> sim990 (still, from a SSH session via PuTTY):
>
> sim990 -m 10 -s 512K -c dx10.cfg
>
> Once it starts up, from within that window, I found I could hit Esc (not
> F10) then "!" and then I got an SCI prompt and a message about the system
> being uninitialized!
>
> I ran a "IS" command as described in Vol. 2 of the DX-10 documentation...
> this system is pretty easy to use... just filled in the date and ran with
> defaults otherwise. It churned for no more than 30 seconds and eventually
> it lands at a QUIT message. I let it sit for a while and once I convince
> myself it's idle, I try poking at it again...
>
> Hit Esc and "!" and I get prompted to sign on to SCI now! I logged in with
> the username and password given in README.txt (SYS001/SYSTEM). I get the
> SCI prompt at the console, I can run commands just fine. Cool!
>
> So, now that I can use the system from the console, I'm trying to test it
> with Telnet again, to see if it'll behave differently after the system has
> been initialized.
>
> I find that now when I open Telnet sessions to port 2000, I get a prompt
> to signon to SCI, which I didn't get before, and if I create a new user
> account for myself using "AUI" at the console, I can get logged in. After
> login, I'm at the same menu I saw before, but I still don't get a SCI
> prompt in the Telnet sessions like I do from the console.
>
> I strongly am suspecting it might be an "emulation" issue with the Telnet
> sessions, where the console is set up as a "TTY" while it is expecting the
> Telnet sessions to look more like a TI VDT. I'm still poking at it but at
> this point I'm confident I'll get to the bottom of it... or... I can just
> use it from the console, failing all else.
>
> The scheme used for user accounts in DX10 is bizarre and amusing. It took
> me a minute to figure out that the user ID /is/ the three digits in the
> account name and they need to be unique across accounts! LOL
>
> Woo hoo!
>
> Best,
>
> Sean
>
>
> On Sun, Jan 4, 2015 at 7:04 PM, jwsmobile <jws at jwsss.com> wrote:
>
>>
>> On 1/4/2015 3:35 PM, jwsmobile wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> Below is what I have so far.
>>>
>> Control X is your friend. It is the "Command" key for some terminal, and
>> gets a "System is not initialized response back.
>>
>> Onward to screw up my disk image...
>>
>> T E X A S I N S T R U M E N T S
>> D X 1 0 S Y S T E M 3 . 7 . 0
>>
>>
>>
>> SELECT ONE OF THE FOLLOWING COMMAND GROUPS
>>
>> /DEV - DEVICE OPERATIONS
>> /FILE - FILE OPERATIONS
>> /PDEV - PROGRAM DEVELOPMENT
>> /SMAIN - DX10 MAINTENANCE
>> /SOP - DX10 OPERATION
>>
>>
>> Jim
>>
>
>
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