Sponsored Content
Operating Systems SCO /dev/inet/tcp not listening in SCO 6. Post 302359556 by thecobolguy on Wednesday 7th of October 2009 01:35:21 AM
Old 10-07-2009
/dev/inet/tcp not listening in SCO 6.

While in SCO Openserver 5.0.7, Sybase listened to /dev/inet/tcp, the same is not working in SCO Openserver 6. The Network card is however active and pinging fine. What can be the reason? What is the way out?

An early response will be appreciated.

Thank you

Regards

TCG
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Perl Script Listening On A TCP Port

Hi, Im programming a perl script which will act as a daemon listening on a tcp port (2323) and will take (<stdin>) from the client (im going to use telnet) and run the arguments from (<stdin>) against an program already on the server, which is used to list books in the library at uni. So far... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: emcb
1 Replies

2. IP Networking

TCP/IP printing on SCO 2.1.3

I am trying to set up TCP/IP printing to so we can remove the old novel server. The printer details have been added to the etc/hosts file correctly, and the printer added as a remote UNIX printer . However when a print job is issued lpstat -o displays the job, but it dosent move. Any help yould... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: eel_king
2 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

TCP Listening Ports

Hello all, Can someone instruct me on how to change the listening port for ftp ( or any tcp service) from 21 to another port number? Thanks in advance.. -AJ (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: jacobsa
3 Replies

4. Filesystems, Disks and Memory

SCO TCP/IP runtime System for SCO Unix

Hi everyone i have a question for all of you. It may be basic or it may be a good one. I recently aquired a copy of "SCO TCP/IP runtime System for SCO Unix" (thats what the disks say) and for the life of me i can not get it to load. i have tried opening the disk in linux and it can not determine... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Cerberus
0 Replies

5. Programming

tcp server listening, client connecting problems

hello everyone. I tried searching for something related to this, but I figured it was time to ask my own question. I am experiencing these problems using Ubuntu 7.04 I am starting up a TCP listener/server and once connected, will act as a communication/control link with a program on another... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: pjwhite
3 Replies

6. Solaris

ndd /dev/tcp help

Solaris 10 server (SunOS 5.10 Generic_137137_09) I have a services file configured in /etc in there windows clients connect to my server on port 6034-6037 when I do the following netstat | grep TestServices it pulls all the connections active for those ports so right now I have 10 clients... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: deaconf19
3 Replies

7. Solaris

ndd -set /dev/tcp tcp_host_param

Following command was set up in startup script on Solaris 8 servers - improved network transfers of files from one server to the another (doubled transfer speed). ndd -set /dev/tcp tcp_host_param '10.140.20.10 sendspace 279600 recvspace 279600 timestamp 1' Now they are getting a new server... (15 Replies)
Discussion started by: RTM
15 Replies

8. SCO

TCP in sco unix 3.2

Hi every body. I am looking for TCP package under sco unix 3.2 or sco xenix system. would you please help me? (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: javad1_maroofi
7 Replies

9. SCO

SCO TCP/IP ?

Hello! I tried to install an old version of SCO for test purposes, (3.2v4.0y), all fine, but my TCP/IP disks are "unreadable" and I cant find them on the internetz. Also, SCO doesnt respond to my request....is there any source for those images available? I have license/activation key which... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: doc_holiday
5 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to set timeout for dev/tcp while checking hostname and port?

I have a command to check the status of hostname and port number, echo > /dev/tcp/hostname/80 echo $? 0 success case echo > /dev/tcp/hostname/809999 I got the output ------------------- connection timed out It took almost 4 minutes to time out,,, how can I set it to 10 seconds? my... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: sam@sam
2 Replies
COMPAT_IBCS2(8) 					    BSD System Manager's Manual 					   COMPAT_IBCS2(8)

NAME
compat_ibcs2 -- setup procedure for running iBCS2 binaries DESCRIPTION
NetBSD supports running Intel Binary Compatibility Standard 2 (iBCS2) binaries. This only applies to i386 systems for now. Binaries are supported from SCO UNIX and other systems derived from AT&T System V Release 3 UNIX. iBCS2 support is only well tested using SCO binaries. XENIX binaries are also supported although not as well tested. SVR4 binaries are supported by the COMPAT_SVR4 option. iBCS2 supports COFF, ELF, and x.out (XENIX) binary formats. Binaries from SCO OpenServer (version 5.x) are the only ELF binaries that have been tested. Most programs should work, but not ones that use or depend on: kernel internal data structures STREAMS drivers (other than TCP/IP sockets) local X displays (uses a STREAMS pipe) virtual 8086 mode The iBCS2 compatibility feature is active for kernels compiled with the COMPAT_IBCS2 option enabled. If support for iBCS2 ELF executables is desired, the EXEC_ELF32 option should be enabled in addition to COMPAT_IBCS2. Many COFF-format programs and most ELF-format programs are dynamically linked. This means that you will also need the shared libraries that the program depends on. Also, you will need to create a ``shadow root'' directory for iBCS2 binaries on your NetBSD system. This directory is named /emul/ibcs2. Any file operations done by iBCS2 programs run under NetBSD will look in this directory first. So, if an iBCS2 pro- gram opens, for example, /etc/passwd, NetBSD will first try to open /emul/ibcs2/etc/passwd, and if that does not exist open the 'real' /etc/passwd file. It is recommended that you install iBCS2 packages that include configuration files, etc. under /emul/ibcs2, to avoid nam- ing conflicts with possible NetBSD counterparts. Shared libraries should also be installed in the shadow tree. Generally, you will need to look for the shared libraries that iBCS2 binaries depend on only the first few times that you install an iBCS2 program on your NetBSD system. After a while, you will have a sufficient set of iBCS2 shared libraries on your system to be able to run newly imported iBCS2 binaries without any extra work. Setting up shared libraries How to get to know which shared libraries iBCS2 binaries need, and where to get them? Depending on the file type of the executable, there are different possibilities (when following these instructions: you will need to be root on your NetBSD system to do the necessary installation steps). COFF binaries You can simply copy all of the available shared libraries since they are fairly small in size. The COFF shared libraries are typically found in /shlib and can be obtained from the following sources: SCO UNIX version 3.x (aka ODT) SCO UNIX version 5.x (aka OpenServer) SCO UnixWare Many versions of SVR4.2/x86 After copying the shared libraries, you should have at least the following files on your system: /emul/ibcs2/shlib/libc_s /emul/ibcs2/shlib/libnsl_s /emul/ibcs2/shlib/protlib_s ELF binaries You can simply copy all of the available shared libraries from the source system or distribution or use ldd(1) to determine the libraries required by a specific binary. After copying the shared libraries, you should have at least the following files on your system: /emul/ibcs2/usr/lib/libc.so.1 /emul/ibcs2/usr/lib/libcrypt.so /emul/ibcs2/usr/lib/libndbm.so /emul/ibcs2/usr/lib/libsocket.so.1 If you don't have access to a SCO system, you will need to get the extra files you need from a SCO distribution. As of January 1998, SCO sells a copy of SCO OpenServer (iBCS2) and/or SCO UnixWare (SVR4) for personal/non-commercial use for only the cost of shipping (about $20US). The distribution comes on an ISO9660-format CDROM which can be mounted and used to copy the necessary files. Run the following script to copy the basic set of files from a SCO distribution directory mounted somewhere locally: /usr/share/examples/emul/ibcs2/ibcs2-setup [directory] You should now be set up for SCO binaries which only need standard shared libs. BUGS
The information about SCO distributions may become outdated. Attempting to a use a nameserver on the local host does not currently work due to an absurd shortcut taken by the iBCS2 network code (remem- ber that there are no kernel sockets). 16/32/64 bit offsets may not be handled correctly in all cases. BSD
February 8, 1998 BSD
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:40 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy