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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? What was your first computer? Post 302373573 by edfair on Friday 20th of November 2009 09:07:44 PM
Old 11-20-2009
As IBM FE in early 60s got to see all the old stuff still installed prior to the 1401s. Was supposed to go to 7080 school but cancelled at last minute and sent to fixing EAM stuff. Got to "penny a day" on a 1401 and hands on repair on some 1402s if it was card drive stuff. Amusing stuff was not paying attention to signing with penny a day, comparison for last day failed, the high speed 1403 probably went through 30 pages before I got it stopped.
First owned was 6800 SWTP starting with 1 K, ending with 6800 and 6809 mixed manufacturers, up to 48K and hard drives. Proud of hardware hacking a bitbanging serial port to make it SASI and driving up to 3 hard drives and 4 floppies on a WD controller. And the software hacks to patch in the drivers, most of which I wrote in assembler or machine language. Did the full TRS line as a leasing and service company with some basic programming for quick & dirty jobs, then transitioned into PC stuff when I finally saw the handwriting on the wall. Missed the MCA fiasco because the ISA stuff was still selling.
Jumped into a hardware problem when 3 other companies had failed to fix a machine, had to learn Xenix in the process, and ended up with a life consumed by SCO stuff.
 

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PERL-AFTER-UPGRADE(1)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				     PERL-AFTER-UPGRADE(1)

NAME
perl-after-upgrade -- fixup FreeBSD packages that depend on perl SYNOPSIS
perl-after-upgrade perl-after-upgrade -f perl-after-upgrade -v DESCRIPTION
The standard procedure after a perl port (either lang/perl5.6 or lang/perl5.8) upgrade is to basically reinstall all other packages that depend on perl. This is always a painful exercise. The perl-after-upgrade utility makes this process mostly unnecessary. The tool goes through the list of installed packages, looks for those that depend on perl, moves files around, modifies shebang lines in those scripts in which it is necessary to do so, tries its best to adjust dynamically linked binaries that link with libperl.so in the old path, and updates the package database. After installation of the new perl is complete, either by hand from the ports collection, or from a package, or via portupgrade, do the following: o go root; o run perl-after-upgrade utility. Do not specify any arguments at first, so it does nothing destructive. Pay attention to the produced output and especially to errorlist at the end, if any; o run the utility again, with -f command line option. This will actually do the work. Again, pay attention to the output produced; o fix any reported errors; o reinstall required packages: The utility will tell you what packages that depend on perl it could not handle. It will also tell you why it happened (for example, they were compiled against a binary incompatible perl). If you want such packages to remain operational, you will have to reinstall then by hand or via portupgrade. o review the files left in the older perl installation. This is typically /usr/local/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.X.Y/. There should be very little, if any, files in that directory and its subdi- rectories, excepting a number of .ph files; o check that things work as they should; o remove backup files from the package database. Those will be /var/db/pkg/*/+CONTENTS.bak; o that's all. COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright 2005 by Anton Berezin "THE BEER-WARE LICENSE" (Revision 42) <tobez@FreeBSD.org> wrote this module. As long as you retain this notice you can do whatever you want with this stuff. If we meet some day, and you think this stuff is worth it, you can buy me a beer in return. Anton Berezin NO WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, USE AT YOUR OWN RISK. HISTORY
The first version of this utility was not bundled with perl package on FreeBSD. It was dumber than the current version in several impor- tant areas. It was faster. CREDITS
Thanks to Mathieu Arnold for discussion. SEE ALSO
perl(1). perl v5.8.9 2009-04-13 PERL-AFTER-UPGRADE(1)
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