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Operating Systems SCO Virtualize physical SCO 5.0.6 Post 302451397 by methyl on Monday 6th of September 2010 08:18:55 PM
Old 09-06-2010
This advice is general because I haven't seen SCO unix for many years.

Reading between the lines you appear to be trying to move an existing running SCO unix system to a virtual machine. You have already hit the 2 Gb limit on any file (including a cpio archive) which is found in old versions of unix.

Personally I wouldn't attempt to move the Operating System. I would cold install on the new platform and then transfer any data files. Assuming you have a technique to boot the result (a technique unknown to me), copying all the files is straightforward providing that the destination filesystem can be handled by the source Operating System.

Try using "find ." piped to "cpio -p". This is documented in both "man find" and "man cpio". The key point here is that we are not creating a "cpio archive" (which could exceed 2 Gb) we are just copying files (none of which could possibly exceed 2 Gb). It is what "cpio" is for.

Sample example command sequence follows: Please check exact syntax on your computer with your "man" pages and do rehearse on expendable filesystems. I recall that the parameter "-xdev" used to be "-mount" in SCO unix but things have probably changed in the meantime.

You cannot move all filesystems in one operation. It needs one copy operation per filesystem. Start with root then each mountpoint in descending order of directory hirearchy. Ensure that the target filesystems match the source filesystems.

Code:
cd /old_mountpoint
find . -xdev -depth -print | cpio -pdumv /mnt/new_mountpoint

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UBT(4)							   BSD Kernel Interfaces Manual 						    UBT(4)

NAME
ubt -- USB Bluetooth driver SYNOPSIS
ubt* at uhub? port ? configuration ? interface ? DESCRIPTION
The ubt driver provides support for USB Bluetooth dongles to the Bluetooth protocol stack. USB Bluetooth dongles provide two interfaces, both of which the ubt driver claims. The second interface is used for Isochronous data and will have several alternate configurations regarding bandwidth consumption, which can be set using the hw.ubtN.config sysctl(8) variable. The number of alternate configurations is indicated by the value in the hw.ubtN.alt_config variable, and the isoc frame size for the current configuration is shown in the hw.ubtN.sco_rxsize and hw.ubtN.sco_txsize variables. By default, configuration 0 is selected, which means that no bandwidth is used on the Isochronous interface and no SCO data can be sent. Consult the Bluetooth USB specification at https://www.bluetooth.org/ for complete instructions on setting bandwidth consumption. The fol- lowing extract may be useful as a general guidance though details may differ between manufacturers. 0 No active voice channels 1 One voice channel with 8-bit encoding 2 Two voice channels with 8-bit encoding, or one voice channel with 16-bit encoding. 3 Three voice channels with 8-bit encoding 4 Two voice channels with 16-bit encoding 5 Three voice channels with 16-bit encoding SEE ALSO
bluetooth(4), uhub(4), sysctl(8) HISTORY
This ubt device driver was originally a character device written by David Sainty and Lennart Augustsson. It was rewritten to support socket based Bluetooth access for NetBSD 4.0 by Iain Hibbert. CAVEATS
Isochronous data is seemingly not well supported over USB in the current system and to get SCO working, you may have to calculate the SCO packet size that the stack will use. This is the sco_mtu value reported by the btconfig(8) command, and when combined with the SCO header (3 bytes) should fit exactly into an integer number of Isochronous data frames where the frame size is indicated by the 'hw.ubtN.sco_txsize' sysctl variable. For example: I want one voice channel (which is all that is supported, for now) so am using configuration #2, with a frame length of 17 bytes. This gives possible values of: (17 * 1) - 3 = 14 (17 * 2) - 3 = 31 (17 * 3) - 3 = 48 (17 * 4) - 3 = 65 (17 * 5) - 3 = 82 etc. btconfig(8) shows the maximum SCO payload as 64 bytes, so I am using the next smaller size of 48, to minimize the overhead of the 3 header bytes. The SCO packet size can be changed using the 'scomtu' option to btconfig(8). The failure mode is that the USB Bluetooth dongle locks up though generally removal/reinsertion will clear the problem. BUGS
The Isochronous configuration can only be changed when the device is not marked up. BSD
August 27, 2006 BSD
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