Warren's 'VTserver'
Jacob Ritorto
jacob.ritorto at gmail.com
Fri Jan 30 13:11:40 CST 2015
As I mentioned some hours ago, compiling it on a real unix machine instead
of the Mac cleared up the problem and now it's working, as you put it,
"delightfully."
It literally does delight me to just watch it run and blink the lights,
etc. :)
Honestly, my first inclination is that there was a problem with the cheap
usb-to-serial dongle I was using mangling characters. I've seen it
senselessly corrupt output from the pdp11 before.
On Fri, Jan 30, 2015 at 10:34 AM, Ian S. King <isking at uw.edu> wrote:
> I too have used VTserver many times. It's a delightfully clever tool. And
> don't forget, that for PDP-8 there's David Gesswein's dumprest, which also
> works very well. I've used VTserver to build RK05s for Unix 6th Ed. on my
> 11/34 and dumprest to build RK05s for OS/8 on LCM's 8/e.
>
> Jacob, I don't know why it would have hung for you unless the copy program
> is buggered. I used VTserver without modification and without problem. --
> Ian
>
> On Fri, Jan 30, 2015 at 6:04 AM, Jay West <jwest at classiccmp.org> wrote:
>
> > I have used it quite a bit, and it always "just worked" for me. Wonderful
> > piece of software. I should do something similar for the 21MX :)
> >
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: cctalk [mailto:cctalk-bounces at classiccmp.org] On Behalf Of Jacob
> > Ritorto
> > Sent: Thursday, January 29, 2015 10:34 PM
> > To: General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts
> > Subject: Warren's 'VTserver'
> >
> > Has anyone used this software
> > ftp://minnie.tuhs.org/pub/PDP-11/Vtserver/README against a real pdp11?
> > I'm trying to use it to install a disk image on my 11/34, now, and after
> > keying in the initial code, it appears to happily upload the first file
> > (standalone 'copy') quite successfully, but then hangs. Since Warren has
> > no real pdp11s, I'm wondering if the emulators he used whilst authoring
> > this VTserver do something different than a real '11 that keeps the
> program
> > from proceeding.
> >
> > thx
> > jake
> >
> >
> >
>
>
> --
> Ian S. King, MSIS, MSCS
> Ph.D. Candidate
> The Information School
> University of Washington
>
> An optimist sees a glass half full. A pessimist sees it half empty. An
> engineer sees it twice as large as it needs to be.
>
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