Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: UNIX emulators
Special Forums UNIX Desktop Questions & Answers UNIX emulators Post 41053 by norsk hedensk on Sunday 28th of September 2003 08:12:48 PM
Old 09-28-2003
well, here is a good one:
cygwin (search google)

it is not so much an emulator, but actually a posix unix layer between the win32 kernel. but many software that runs on linux is available to run on cygwin.
 

8 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Windows UNIX emulators?

Is there some way I could run UNIX in a window by itself on a Win2K PC? I have to use this PC at work, and I'd like to run UNIX in the background, so I can learn the system during the inevitable lulls (my job is boring as hell). Any help would be appreciated...thanks! (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: liquidcross
7 Replies

2. Solaris

Sun OS 3 Emulators?

Hi all, I guess I'm going to get lots of annoyed people asking about windows on a unix forum but here goes. I have a win XP machine and need to run some sofware that was written on and compiled on a sun os 3 machine. Does anyone know of any emulators that will run in the windows enviromment to... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: northernalex
2 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

any emulators

iam new to unix , i would like to practice unix commands at home, can anyone help me to know if there are any emulators that i can download to practice or any trial versions that can be installed to practice. Regards dep (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: dep
1 Replies

4. Solaris

8&16bit emulators

Hi to everybody!! Being an Amiga junkie for almost 20 years, I recently decided to start learning a couple of thing about UNIX. My first hardware choice was a Sun U10 and than a U60! Have managed so far to set up the machines to work well with Solaris9, they really are very good but I miss my... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: kokkiklhs
0 Replies

5. Windows & DOS: Issues & Discussions

Windows Terminal Emulators

I have been using NetTerm on various Windows flavors for a while and have just run into a problem with printer passthru (transparent printing) that I can analyse but not resolve. The setup is a Epson TM60 POS Label Printer connected XON/XOFF via COM1 on a Win98SE system. This is controlled... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: MickZA
3 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Looking for Unix Emulators on Windows XP

Hello all, Forgive me if this question was asked before, I'm unable to find an answer to it on this forum upon searching "windows unix". I have Windows XP at home, and I want to practice Unix, I want to re-learn all Unix commands, Shell script programming and the Vi Editor. I'm looking... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: thoughts
11 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Advanced info on CPU Emulators

I have searched and searched this topic but without looking at source code ; my next step maybe , I find the same ambiguous information. My main question is how is the target code translated? It is stated that there are variables created that hold the data that the emulated CPU would hold in... (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: theKbStockpiler
12 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

File Transfer from Window server to UNIX and UNIX to UNIX

Dear All, Can someone help to command or program to transfer the file from windows to Unix server and from one unix server to another Unix server in secure way. I would request no samba client. (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: yadavricky
4 Replies
GVPE.OSDEP(5)						   GNU Virtual Private Ethernet 					     GVPE.OSDEP(5)

NAME
gvpe.osdep - os dependent information DESCRIPTION
This file tries to capture OS-dependent configuration or build issues, quirks and platform limitations, as known. TUN vs. TAP interface Most operating systems nowadays support something called a tunnel-device, which makes it possible to divert IPv4 (and often other protocols, too) into a user space daemon like gvpe. This is being referred to as a TUN-device. This is fine for point-to-point tunnels, but for a virtual ethernet, an additional ethernet header is needed. This functionality (called a TAP device here) is only provided by a subset of the configurations. On platforms only supporting a TUN-device, gvpe will invoke it's magical ethernet emulation package, which currently only handles ARP requests for the IPv4 protocol (but more could be added, bu the tincd network drivers might need to be modified for this to work). This means that on those platforms, only IPv4 will be supported. Also, since there is no way (currently) to tell gvpe which IP subnets are found on a specific host, you will either need to hardwire the MAC address for TUN-style hosts on all networks (and avoid ARP altogether, which is possible), or you need to send a packet from these hosts into the vpn network to tell gvpe the local interface address. Interface Initialisation Unless otherwise notes, the network interface will be initialized with the expected MAC address and correct MTU value. With most interface drivers, this is done by running /sbin/ifconfig, so make sure that this command exists. Interface Types native/linux TAP-device; already part of the kernel (only 2.4+ supported, but see tincd/linux). This is the configuration tested best, as gvpe is being developed on this platform. ifname should be set to the name of the network device. To hardwire ARP addresses, use iproute2 (arp can do it, too): MAC=fe:fd:80:00:00:$(printf "%02x" $NODEID) ip neighbour add 10.11.12.13 lladdr $MAC nud permanent dev $IFNAME tincd/linux TAP-device; already part of the kernel (2.2 only). See native/linux for more info. ifname should be set to the path of a tap device, e.g. /dev/tap0. The interface will be named accordingly. native/cygwin TAP-device; The TAP device to be used must either be the CIPE driver (http://cipe-win32.sourceforge.net/), or (highly recommended) the newer TAP-Win32 driver bundled with openvpn (http://openvpn.sf.net/). Just download and run the openvpn installer. The only option you need to select is the TAP driver. ifname should be set to the name of the device, found in the registry at (no kidding :): HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESYSTEMCurrentControlSetControlNetwork{4D36E972-E325-11CE-BFC1-08002BE10318}<adapterid>ConnectionName The MAC address is dynamically being patched into packets and ARP-requests, so only IPv4 works with ARP on this platform. tincd/bsd TAP-device, maybe; migth work for many bsd variants. This driver is a newer version of the tincd/*bsd drivers. It might provide a TAP device, or might not work at all. You might try this interface type first, and, if it doesn't work, try one of the OS-specific drivers. tincd/freebsd TAP-device; part of the kernel (since 4.x, maybe earlier). ifname should be set to the path of a tap device, e.g. /dev/tap0. The interface will be named accordingly. These commands might be helpful examples: ifconfig $IFNAME 10.0.0.$NODEID route add -net 10.0.0.0 -netmask 255.255.255.0 -interface $IFNAME 10.0.0.$NODEID tincd/netbsd TUN-device; The interface is a point-to-point device. To initialize it, you currently need to configure it as a point-to-point device, giving it an address on your vpn (the exact address doesn't matter), like this: ifconfig $IFNAME mtu $MTU up ifconfig $IFNAME 10.11.12.13 10.55.66.77 route add -net 10.0.0.0 10.55.66.77 255.0.0.0 ping -c1 10.55.66.77 # ping once to tell gvpe your gw ip The ping is required to tell the ARP emulator inside GVPE the local IP address. ifname should be set to the path of a tun device, e.g. /dev/tun0. The interface will be named accordingly. tincd/openbsd TUN-device; already part of the kernel. See tincd/netbsd for more information. native/darwin TAP-device; The necessary kernel extension can be found here: http://www-user.rhrk.uni-kl.de/~nissler/tuntap/ There are two drivers, the one to use is the "tap" driver. It driver must be loaded before use, read the docs on how to install it as a startup item. ifname should be set to the path of a tap device, e.g. /dev/tap0. The interface will be named accordingly. These commands might be helpful examples: ifconfig $IFNAME 10.0.0.$NODEID route add -net 10.0.0.0 -interface $IFNAME 255.255.255.0 tincd/darwin TUN-device; See tincd/netbsd for more information. native/darwin is preferable. The necessary kernel extension can be found here: http://chrisp.de/en/projects/tunnel.html ifname should be set to the path of a tun device, e.g. /dev/tun0. The interface will be named accordingly. The driver must be loaded before use: kmodload tunnel tincd/solaris TUN-device; already part of the kernel(?), or available here: http://vtun.sourceforge.net/tun/ Some precompiled tun drivers might be available here: http://www.monkey.org/~dugsong/fragroute/ The interface MAC and MTU are NOT set up for you. Please try it out and send me an ifconfig command invocation that does that. See tincd/netbsd for more information. Completely untested so far. tincd/mingw TAP-device; see native/cygwin for more information. The setup is likely to be similar to native/cygwin. Completely untested so far. tincd/raw_socket TAP-device; purpose unknown and untested, probably binds itself on an existing ethernet device (given by ifname). It must be down prior to running the command, and GVPE will try to set it's MAC address and MTU to the "correct" values. Completely untested so far. tincd/uml_socket TAP-device; purpose unknown and untested, probably creates a UNIX datagram socket (path given by ifname) and reads and writes raw packets, so might be useful in other than UML contexts. No network interface is created, and the MAC and MTU must be set as appropriate on the other side of the socket. GVPE will exit if the MAC address doesn't match what it expects. Completely untested so far. tincd/cygwin Known to be broken, use native/cygwin instead. SEE ALSO
gvpe(5). AUTHOR
Marc Lehmann <gvpe@schmorp.de> 2.2 2008-09-01 GVPE.OSDEP(5)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:20 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy