Sponsored Content
Operating Systems SCO Can not recognize network adapter SCO UNIX in HP z400 Post 302984843 by moein.mojtaba on Tuesday 1st of November 2016 09:59:20 AM
Old 11-01-2016
yes.tanks
Can not recognize network adapter SCO UNIX in HP z400-imag1997jpg
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

SCO Unix and Two Network Cards

Our shops server runs SCO Openserver 5 release 5. It has two network cards in it (one on 10.0.0.6 and one on 90.0.0.99). When I run scoadmin and look at the network settings it show both my 3com network cards and a loop back driver http://theentertainer.com/james/untitled.jpg Can anyone tell... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: potter
1 Replies

2. SCO

Sco Unix network issues

I have got a Sco Unix Server, i want to connect some windows workstations. What configurations do i need to make on server and or workstation? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: tpurazi1
1 Replies

3. AIX

hacmp network adapter re-define

I have an LPAR in a P5 machine which has been setup in an HACMP cluster. The person who set it up allocated the wrong network adapter (en) to the persistent network. For the life of me I cannot find where I can re-assign this adapter. Anyone able to help me as I am tearing my hair out and do not... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: johnf
1 Replies

4. SCO

SCO Unix Network Configuration

Hello Guys, We have an old PC running on SCO Unix V. Is there any sites where i can get manual/procedures on how to install and configure Network. Thanks (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: nrcuevas
2 Replies

5. AIX

change network adapter

hello i've need to change network adapter on machine H80 aix 4.3.3 hacmp ( ent0 ) what i need to do after the new adapter installed on the machine? thanks best regards ariec (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ariec
1 Replies

6. AIX

How to active this network adapter?

When I configure two VIO Servers, VIOS1 used to ping its gateway, after I configured second VIOS2, VIOS1 cannpt ping its gateway, when I run this command: entstat -all ent#|grep -i priority Priority: 5 Active: False How to make Active to True? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: rainbow_bean
1 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

External Network Adapter for Solaris 10

Hi All, I am new here - this is my first post. I have installed Solaris 10 5/09 on my Dell M6300. The install went well, but the Dell's onboard network card is the Broadcom BCM5756ME Gigabit Ethernet - and sadly no Solaris driver exists for it. The Solaris 10 install just jumped by the... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: soulmerchant
1 Replies

8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

SCO Unixware 7.1.4 Network Adapter Error

Hi All I P2Vd a Unixware 7.1.4 box with VMWare Vsphere. I try to add a network adapter under Network Configuration Manager and it comes up with the error attached. I've added a virtual adapter using the "E1000" option. It detects both the AMD PCI NET and E1000 virtual adapters under Network... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: flashinwrx
8 Replies

9. SCO

Configuare Network SCO UNIX 5.0.7 on Vmware

hi i installed sco unix open server 5.0.7 on virtual machine vmware and runing it, its work perfect and good. now how i can configuare network at scoadmin that i able to access nework ? ---------- Post updated at 08:56 AM ---------- Previous update was at 01:47 AM ---------- nobody can... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: farzad226
2 Replies

10. Red Hat

Red Hat 7 cannot recognize ethernet adapter

Hello community, I have a Proliant HP DL380P with the following network adapters: NetXtreme BCM5719 Gigabit Ethernet PCIe (Ethernet 1Gb 4-port 331FLR Adapter) 82580 Gigabit Network Connection (NC365T 4-port Ethernet Server Adapter) I installed Red Hat 7.2 but it recognizes only the... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: Lord Spectre
9 Replies
BATTLEBALL(6)							   Games Manual 						     BATTLEBALL(6)

NAME battleball - military version of soccer
SYNOPSIS
battleball [options] Players ... DESCRIPTION
BattleBall is essentially the game of soccer, played with military vehicles rather than with people. Each player drives a tank or flies a helicopter, and tries to move the ball down the playfield to the other team's goal. In BattleBall, the teams' "goals" are their headquar- ters buildings, positioned at the ends of the playfield. Hitting another team's headquarters building with the ball scores a point, knock- ing the building over in the process. Yes, realism was my ultimate goal in this game. OPTIONS
-ag ##l Set players' auto-gunner settings. The argument of this option is three characters: a single-digit number specifying firing accu- racy, a single-digit number specifying firing frequency, and one of the following letters specifying target selection: a - fire at all targets b - fire only at the ball v - fire only at vehicles n - no targets (i.e. do not fire) This option affects players which appear after it on the command line. The default is 43a. -ff d|b|t Make accidental 'friendly fire' from fellow teammates: d - dangerous (the default) b - blocked or t - transparent. -grav # Set gravity. Defaults to 0.031 m/iteration^2. -help Show the help screen -id # Set the inter-frame delay. If the game runs too slow, set this lower; if the game seems to lag behind your keystrokes, set this higher. Defaults to 30 milliseconds. -mtns # Set the number of mountains. Defaults to 8. -noag Disable human players' auto-gunner capability. -noap Disable human players' auto-pilot capability. -nobang Disable 'bangs' (the flashes at the end of a gun barrel) -noflyby Disable aircraft fly-bys. -nopause Disable players' use of the pause ('P') key. -noresize Do not automatically resize the window to fit the graphics. -noshade Disable shadows. Uses less cpu time. -out Allow vehicles to go outside of the playfield. -pts # Set number of points required to win. Defaults to 3. -rad # Set the 'radius' of the playfield. Defaults to 100 meters. -sb Single-buffer the game windows. -sd # Set the startup delay. The game will wait for this many seconds for players to get ready. -simple Use simpler graphics. Uses less cpu time. -snum # Set number of shells per player. Defaults to 3. -spow # Set shell power. Defaults to 1.6. -svel # Set shell muzzle velocity. Defaults to 1.5 meters/frame. At higher velocities, some collisions may not be reliably detected. -train Include a train running on a track around the playfield. -trees # Set the number of trees. Defaults to 12. -wf Use wireframe rendering. Uses less cpu time. PLAYERS &; TEAMS Battleball is played with teams of human and computer players. Up to six teams can play at once, and teams may have any combination of human and computer players. Human players are created by giving the name of an X display on the command line. Computer players are created by using the magic name 'comp' instead. Computer players may be created with specific auto-gunner settings. Use 'comp', followed by (no space) the three characters used in the -ag option, e.g. 'comp67b'. This overrides the -ag option. Commas between names put players on the same team; spaces between names separate teams. Teams may have any mix of human and computer play- ers. At least one player (one team) must be specified on the command line. However, soccer with just one team is rather boring; using two or more is strongly suggested. Each team is assigned a color. Tanks, helicopters, and headquarter buildings are all marked with the team's color. PLAY
When the game starts, each player is seated in her vehicle, in front of her goal, facing the ball at the center of the playfield. Vehicles are, of course, armed with cannons, but these are primarily a means to an end. Gunfire is good for forcing obstinate opponents out of your way, but gunfire doesn't destroy anything. Gunfire is also good for blasting the ball across the playfield and into your opponent's HQ. You use the keyboard to control your vehicle. The commands that are available at any given time are shown at the bottom of the screen. Commands for all vehicles: 'I' (or up arrow.) Move forward. 'J' (or left arrow.) Turn left. 'K' (or down arrow.) Move back. 'L' (or right arrow.) Turn right. Space Fire. 'P' Pause. 'Q' Quit. 'T' Transform tank to helicopter or vice versa. 'A' Toggle autopilot. 'G' Toggle autogunner. 'V' Switch between view from vehicle, and view of vehicle from HQ. Tab Show teams and scores. Extra commands for tanks: 'E' Raise barrel (shots go farther). 'S' Rotate turret left. 'D' Lower barrel. 'F' Rotate turret right. The current angle of the barrel and turret are shown beneath the main display, next to the team insignia. Commands for helicopters: 'E' Go up (note, your helicopter cannot fly on the ground). 'S' Fly left. 'D' Go down. 'F' Fly right. 'Y' Pitch forward. 'H' Pitch back. The current elevation and pitch are shown beneath the main display, next to the team insignia. The controls which are available to your vehicle are always shown at the bottom of the screen. SCORING
When there are two teams, scoring is the same as it is in soccer: scoring a "goal" is worth 1 point. When there are more than two teams, scoring a goal earns 2 points, and the other teams besides the losing team receive 1 point each for defending their headquarters. EXAMPLES
battleball :0 Starts a game with only one player on only one team, a human player on the local X display. Not a very interesting game. battleball :0 comp A single human player vs. the computer, one-on-one. battleball ford:0 chevy:0 Two humans, head-to-head, one on the display "ford:0", one on "chevy:0". battleball flavio:0 chirp:0,roar:0 Sets up a one-player team against a two-player team. battleball parrot:0,comp raven:0 comp,comp Creates three teams with a mix of human and computer players. battleball dunce:0 comp75a comp,comp Creates three teams. The first computer player gets special auto-gunner settings; the other computer players get default settings. BUGS
Using multiple X displays introduces certain security risks (which are beyond the scope of this document). Networked games will require the use of the incredibly insecure xhost(1) command or the less insecure but rather complicated xauth(1) utility. Do not play this game with people you don't know and trust. Using multiple X displays also imposes performance overheads. You will need fast network connections for multi-player games. The game must render 3d graphics for each player in the game. This can slow the game down dramatically as the number of players increases. You can use various options to speed up the game, but you will eventually reach a point of diminishing returns. SEE ALSO
See battleball -help and /usr/share/doc/battleball/README.gz for more information. AUTHOR
Battleball was written by Philip A. Hardin. This man page was written by Chris Waters <xtifr@debian.org>. Debian/GNU Linux August 27, 1998 BATTLEBALL(6)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:40 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy