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Operating Systems SCO SCO 5.0.6 application compatibility w/ Linux? Post 302191207 by bcsi on Thursday 1st of May 2008 10:10:39 PM
Old 05-01-2008
If you're talking about binary compatibility, then the old Linuxes had a module you could load that gave you that. You might have still needed to do some tweaking but it generally worked. The newer kernels dropped that module.

I know there still a separate group working on an ABI module that you can compile into you're kernel but it's always many released behind.

I'd say for a corporation the upgrade cost to 6.0.0 from 5.0.6 is NOT that onerous considering what you get. And your apps will still run.

Think about it.
 

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MKFS.BFS(8)						       System Administration						       MKFS.BFS(8)

NAME
mkfs.bfs - make an SCO bfs filesystem SYNOPSIS
mkfs.bfs [options] device [block-count] DESCRIPTION
mkfs.bfs creates an SCO bfs filesystem on a block device (usually a disk partition or a file accessed via the loop device). The block-count parameter is the desired size of the filesystem, in blocks. If nothing is specified, the entire partition will be used. OPTIONS
-N, --inodes number Specify the desired number of inodes (at most 512). If nothing is specified, some default number in the range 48-512 is picked depending on the size of the partition. -V, --vname label Specify the volume label. I have no idea if/where this is used. -F, --fname name Specify the filesystem name. I have no idea if/where this is used. -v, --verbose Explain what is being done. -c This option is silently ignored. -l This option is silently ignored. -h, --help Display help text and exit. -V, --version Output version information and exit. Option -V only works as --version when it is the only option. EXIT CODES
The exit code returned by mkfs.bfs is 0 when all went well, and 1 when something went wrong. SEE ALSO
mkfs(8). AVAILABILITY
The mkfs.bfs command is part of the util-linux package and is available from ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-linux/. util-linux July 2011 MKFS.BFS(8)
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