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Special Forums Hardware Trying to find a compatible OS for an old computer Post 302695155 by jgt on Saturday 1st of September 2012 05:15:15 PM
Old 09-01-2012
The DEC Rainbow had a 8086 processor. You should be able to install Xenix 2.1 or 2.2, but not Xenix 386 or SCO Unix 3.2. Finding installation media on 5-1/4 floppies is going to be a problem ( I tossed all of mine in the big clean up.) A 20mb hard drive is lots. The os was on about 16 diskettes, N1 through N4, B1 thru B3 and X1 through X9.
Xenix 2.2 is preferred because it is possible to type in the hard drive parameters rather than having only the BIOS options as in 2.1
It will run with 640kb of memory, but probably only one session/program at a time.
If the system has 1mb of memory, you may have to split it as 512kb lower and 512kb extended, rather than the more common 640 / 384 kb split.
Another OS to consider is QNX
 

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ntp.drift(4)						     Kernel Interfaces Manual						      ntp.drift(4)

NAME
ntp.drift - Network Time Protocol (NTP) drift file DESCRIPTION
When the NTP daemon (xntpd) is first started, it computes the error in the intrinsic frequency of the clock on the computer it is running on. This process usually takes about a day or two after the daemon is started to compute a good estimate of this (and it needs a good estimate to synchronize closely to its server). Once the initial value is computed, it will change only by relatively small amounts during the course of continued operation. The driftfile declaration should always be included in the ntp.conf file. This provides xntpd with complete path name to a file in which it can store the current value of the frequency error. That way, if the daemon is stopped and restarted, it can reinitialize itself to the previous estimate without spending time recomputing the frequency estimate. The ntp.drift file contains one line with the following format: freq_offset flag Specifies the nominal frequency offset. DO NOT modify this field. Specifies the method used to improve system clock accuracy. Specifies that xntpd runs a Phase-Locked Loop (PLL) algorithm to keep synchronized with other hosts. This is the default. Specifies the use of the PLL algorithm in the kernel. This requires the NTP_TIME kernel option. After the option is configured in the kernel, edit the ntp.drift file and change the flag value to 1. See System Administration for information on the NTP_TIME kernel option. FILES
Conventional name of the drift file RELATED INFORMATION
Commands: ntpdate(8), ntpq(8), xntpd(8), xntpdc(8) Files: ntp.conf(4) Network Administration, System Administration delim off ntp.drift(4)
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