Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: My UnixWare SCO Server
Operating Systems SCO My UnixWare SCO Server Post 302598921 by admin_xor on Wednesday 15th of February 2012 05:33:46 PM
Old 02-15-2012
Try migrating to newer OS and hardware. What is the ERP solution you are using?

IBM Power systems with AIX could be great for SAP/ERP in terms of performance and stability, but with high maintenance cost. A good Intel based server with Linux on top will save you money a lot. Even you can go for Solaris on Intel (again Sparc servers are costly). But still when you think of Intel platform, Linux is the best bait.

I know UnixWare 7 (release 7.1.4) is the latest one and I use this OS for my testing purposes. What's your hardware configuration by the way?
 

8 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Filesystems, Disks and Memory

SCO Unixware 2.1

I am using SCO Unixware 2.1 & some PC clients are connected, suddenly one message appearslike : UX:strintercept error: dropping message this message starts coming repeatedly & agtre some time system hangs.I had to reset the system & now the problem is not there.Please suggest, why this is... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: paprch
0 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

SCO Unixware 7 download

According to this thread: https://www.unix.com/showthread.php?t=1 one guy says However, I cannot find any sco unixware7 iso download link in their download section (http://wdb1.sco.com/clbk_web/owa/dwn_customer), is it really for free, and if that is true, where can I download it? Thanks, (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: phalcos
2 Replies

3. SCO

Samba 3.0.24 in SCO UnixWare 7.1.4

Please help me in troubleshooting my problem in Samba? I tried to instal Samba 3.0.24 in our SCO UnixWare 7.1.4 but after installing the nmbd daemon is not running. When i check the syslog from /var/adm, the following error appears: Sep 30 13:04:22 unixeei nmbd: bind failed on port 137... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: eric_hing
0 Replies

4. SCO

sco unixware + oracle 8.0.5

hi, anybody can give procedure for how to install oracle 8.0.5 in sco unixware 7.1.4. (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: prakrithi
0 Replies

5. SCO

Noob needs help with Sco Unixware 7.1

We are retiring a Unixware 7.1 server that has custom applications on it. It has Raid 5 and we would like to use the machine for other things. Is there a way we can image/clone to virtual machine file and run that VM within say Virtual PC 2007 or VMware? I am not aware of anything to do this. I... (20 Replies)
Discussion started by: ccd1977
20 Replies

6. SCO

Install GRUB on SCO Unixware 7.1.1

Hi, I am trying to install the linux boot loader (GRUB) on a non-linux machine (Unixware 7.1.1). The thing is I want to boot the linux kernel (vmlinuz) and the linux ram disk (initrd.img) from unixware and boot the machine with it. Does anyone have a good way to do this? (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: teen_racer19
10 Replies

7. SCO

SCO Unixware 7.1.1 Install - Need help

(sorry my English, is really poor). I have a SCO Unixware 7.1.1 and I need install in ML350 G3. Reading in google and HP web, make a floppy disks for install, but the options that I have is for network or floppy disk. How install from CD with patch for HP smart array 532 ?? or How... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: xplertor
5 Replies

8. SCO

Need Help with installtion of SCO UNIXware 7.0.1

Hi, I need help to install SCO Unixware 7.0.1. Can any one help with any documentation or installation notes for SCO Unixware 7.0.1. Thank you (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: farhandalvi
1 Replies
SHTOOL-PLATFORM.TMP(1)					      GNU Portable Shell Tool					    SHTOOL-PLATFORM.TMP(1)

NAME
shtool-platform - GNU shtool Unix platform identification SYNOPSIS
shtool platform [-F|--format format] [-S|--sep string] [-C|--conc string] [-L|--lower] [-U|--upper] [-v|--verbose] [-c|--concise] [-n|--newline] [-d|--debug] [-t|--type type] [-n|--newline] [-d|--debug] DESCRIPTION
shtool platform is a flexible Unix platform identification program. It distinguishes a platform according to its hardware architecture and operating system. For both there is a class, product and technology identification. For each of those six identifications, there is a verbose, regular and concise version. This leads to eighteen (2x3x3) available identification strings for each platform, from which usually 2 are chosen in a particular situation. This is done by assembling the platform identification string using a format string containing one or more identification constructs of the forms ""%[xx]"" (verbose), ""%{xx}"" (regular) and ""%<xx>"" (concise). OPTIONS
The following command line options are available. -F, --format format This option controls the output formatting of this program. It is a plain-text string with the ""%"xx" constructs which expand to the various platform information strings. ""%{"xx"}"" is the canonical regular version of the information. ""%["xx"]"" is the verbose version of the information. ""%<"xx">"" is the concise version of the information. In total, the following constructs are available for expansion: %[ac] verbose hardware architecture class %{ac} regular hardware architecture class %<ac> concise hardware architecture class %[ap] verbose hardware architecture product %{ap} regular hardware architecture product %<ap> concise hardware architecture product %[at] verbose hardware architecture technology %{at} regular hardware architecture technology %<at> concise hardware architecture technology %[sc] verbose operating system class %{sc} regular operating system class %<sc> concise operating system class %[sp] verbose operating system product %{sp} regular operating system product %<sp> concise operating system product %[st] verbose operating system technology %{st} regular operating system technology %<st> concise operating system technology The default format string is ""%{sp} (%{ap})"", providing the regular operating system and hardware architecture product information. -S, --sep string This option sets the word separation string for the platform information strings. By default it is "" "" (whitespace). It is especially used for separating the operating system name and the operating system version. -C, --conc string This option sets the word concatenation string for the platform information strings. By default it is ""/"". It is especially used to concatenate multiple parts in operating system name and version parts. -L, --lower This options enforces conversion of the output to all lower case. -U, --upper This options enforces conversion of the output to all upper case. -v, --verbose This option enforces verbose versions of all expansion constructs in format string of option -F. It is equal to specifying all expansion constructs as ""%["xx"]"". -c, --concise This option enforces concise versions of all expansion constructs in format string of option -F. It is equal to specifying all expansion constructs as ""%<"xx">"". -n, --no-newline This option omits the usual trailing newline character in the output. -t, --type type This option is a meta option which internally sets options -F, -S, -C, -L, -U, -v or -c according to TYPE. It can be used to easily specify various commonly known outputs. The following TYPEs are available: binary Binary Package Id (OpenPKG RPM). This is equal to ""-F '%<ap"-%<sp>' -L -S '' -C '+'>" and results in outputs like ""ix86-freebsd4.9"" and ""ix86-debian3.0"". build Build-Time Checking (OpenPKG RPM). This is equal to ""-F '%<at"-%<st>' -L -S '' -C '+'>" and results in outputs like ""i686-freebsd4.9"" and ""i586-linux2.4"". gnu GNU config.guess Style Id. This is similar to build and is equal to ""-F '"%<at"-unknown-%<st>' -L -S '' -C '+'>" and results in outputs like ""i686-unknown-freebsd4.9"" and ""i586-unknown-linux2.4"". web HTTP Server Header Id. This is equal to ""-F '"%<sp"-%<ac>' -S '/' -C '+'>" and results in outputs like ""FreeBSD/4.9-iX86"" and ""Debian/3.0-iX86"". summary Human Readable Verbose Summary Information. This is equal to ""-F 'Class: %[sc] (%[ac]) Product: %[sp] (%[ap]) Technology: %[st] (%[at])' -S ' ' -C '/'"" and results in outputs like: Class: 4.4BSD (iX86) Product: FreeBSD 4.9-RC (iX86) Technology: FreeBSD 4.9-RC (i686) and Class: LSB (iX86) Product: Debian GNU/Linux 3.0 (iX86) Technology: GNU/Linux 2.2/2.4 (i686) all-in-one All-In-One Full-Table Information. This just outputs really all 2x2x3 identification strings as a table. -d, --debug This option enables some internal debugging messages. -V, --version This option outputs the version information of shtool platform only. -h, --help This option outputs the usage information of shtool platform only. EXAMPLE
The following real-life use cases are known: OpenPKG build-time decisions $ platform -c -L -S "" -C "+" -F "%at-%st" $ platform -c -L -S "" -C "+" -F "%ac-%sc" OpenPKG binary RPM packages $ platform -c -L -S "" -C "+" -F "%ap-%sp" README files $ platform -v -F "%sp (%ap)" $ platform -v -F "%sc (%ac)" Debugging $ platform --type=all-in-one SUPPORT
shtool platform currently knows the following particular Unix platforms in detail: FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, Linux, Sun Solaris, SCO UnixWare, QNX Neutrino, SGI IRIX, HP HP-UX, HP Tru64, IBM AIX and Apple Mac OS X Darwin. All other Unix platforms are recognized through generic uname(1) information and so usually can be identified sufficiently, although the identification might be not as precise as possible. HISTORY
shtool platform was implemented in September 2003 by Ralf S. Engelschall for use in the OSSP and OpenPKG projects. It was prompted by the need in OpenPKG to have both product (for RPM filenames) and technology (for build-time decisions) identifiers for the Unix platforms, OpenPKG packages are maintained for. It was inspired by the GNU config.guess and the old GNU shtool guessos command. The major difference to GNU config.guess is that shtool platform does not use a vendor identification (cannot be determined most of the time and is not used at all in all projects I've ever seen) and is a lot more flexible (class, product and technology identifications combined with verbose, regular and concise outputs). The drawback of shtool platform is that it (still) knows less particular platforms, although the generic platform identification is sufficient enough most of the time. SEE ALSO
uname(3), GNU config.guess. 18-Jul-2008 shtool 2.0.8 SHTOOL-PLATFORM.TMP(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:51 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy