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Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers Looking for acceleratedX for system V Post 303041509 by lastlibra on Tuesday 26th of November 2019 10:40:48 AM
Old 11-26-2019
OK, I tried it again. The goal was to migrate the system from a 133MHz PC (from 1998) to a 2GHz Maxdata Pentium Platform. The OS installed is SCO open server 5.0.2.
Special feature is a matrox comet pci card for graphics input and output, combined with this AcceleratedX in Version 1.2.
I copied the harddisk with dd bs=512 and put it to the new hardware. On the first boot I get a NLM RPC error. I fixed that by deleting several rows in /etc/hosts. Now it boots to console and starts scologin. There it gets stuck and shows nothing but a blinking cursor on tty2. Changing tty works. I can stop scologin and start it again without difference.

Any idea? Is there a log file, that might report details?
 

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LAST(1) 						    BSD General Commands Manual 						   LAST(1)

NAME
last -- indicate last logins of users and ttys SYNOPSIS
last [-n] [-nTx] [-f file] [-H hostsize] [-h host] [-L linesize] [-N namesize] [-t tty] [user ...] DESCRIPTION
last will list the sessions of specified users, ttys, and hosts, in reverse time order. Each line of output contains the user name, the tty from which the session was conducted, any hostname, the start and stop times for the session, and the duration of the session. If the ses- sion is still continuing or was cut short by a crash or shutdown, last will so indicate. The following options are available: -n Limits the report to n lines. -f file last reads the file file instead of the default, /var/log/wtmpx or /var/log/wtmp. If the file ends with 'x', it is treated as a utmpx(5) format file, else it is treated as a utmp(5) format file. If the file is ``-'', standard input is used. -H hostsize Use the provided hostsize as the width to format the host name field. -h host Host names may be names or internet numbers. -L linesize Use the provided linesize as the width to format the tty field. -N namesize Use the provided namesize as the width to format the login name field. -n Print host addresses numerically. This option works only on wtmpx(5) entries, and prints nothing on wtmp(5) entries. -T Display better time information, including the year and seconds. -t tty Specify the tty. Tty names may be given fully or abbreviated, for example, ``last -t 03'' is equivalent to ``last -t tty03''. -x Assume that the file given is in wtmpx(5) format, even if the filename does not end with an 'x'. Also useful when reading such format from standard input. If multiple arguments are given, the information which applies to any of the arguments is printed, e.g., ``last root -t console'' would list all of ``root's'' sessions as well as all sessions on the console terminal. If no users, hostnames, or terminals are specified, last prints a record of all logins and logouts. The pseudo-user reboot logs in at reboots of the system, thus ``last reboot'' will give an indication of mean time between reboot. If last is interrupted, it indicates to what date the search has progressed. If interrupted with a quit signal last indicates how far the search has progressed and then continues. FILES
/var/log/wtmp login data base /var/log/wtmpx login data base SEE ALSO
lastcomm(1), utmp(5), utmpx(5), ac(8), lastlogin(8) HISTORY
last appeared in 3.0BSD. BSD
October 18, 2011 BSD
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