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Full Discussion: Is UNIX hardware sensitive?
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Is UNIX hardware sensitive? Post 87556 by Neo on Tuesday 25th of October 2005 01:52:02 PM
Old 10-25-2005
You can build a Linux kernel, I'm pretty sure, that will support the SCO file system.

Also, see this web discussion.

Quote:
For now you can do the following:
simply create a SCO filesystem on a raw partition manually, Linux will be
able to mount that filesystem, and so will SCO.

"mdev hd" is a script that runs fdisk, then divvy, then mkfs (among other
things)

The easiest way to go would be to run mkdev hd to add a new hard drive,
(this creates the /dev/hdxxx device files for you) then determine the
device name for your new raw partition (or whole drive for that metter,
you actually do not need any partitions at all, not even one that takes up
the whole drive)

then dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/hd10 (for whole 2nd ide drive for instance)
then mkfs -f HTFS /dev/hd10
then mkdir /d2
then mount -f HTFS /dev/hd10 /d2
then to copy your "u" filesystem,
cd /u; tar cf - . | (cd /d2 ;tar xf -)
then in Linux:
mkdir /d2
modprobe sysv
mount -t sysv /dev/hdb /d2

Note: if Linux can't read the HTFS filesystem, you may need to try
substituting one of the following until it works. I know for a fact Linux
reads Xenix just fine, but Xenix fs has yucky limitations like 14
character name length

AFS Acer Fast Filesystem
DTFS Desktop Filesystem
EAFS Extended Acer Fast Filesystem
HTFS High Throughput Filesystem
S51KB AT&T UNIX(R) System V 1KB Filesystem
XENIX XENIX(R) filesystem
 

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VLLOG(5)							AFS File Reference							  VLLOG(5)

NAME
VLLog - Traces Volume Location Server operations DESCRIPTION
The VLLog file records a trace of Volume Location (VL) Server (vlserver process) operations on the local machine and describes any error conditions it encounters. If the VLLog file does not already exist in the /var/log/openafs directory when the VL Server starts, the server process creates it and writes initial start-up messages to it. If there is an existing file, the VL Server renames it to VLLog.old, overwriting the existing VLLog.old file if it exists. The file is in ASCII format. Administrators listed in the /etc/openafs/server/UserList file can use the bos getlog command to display its contents. Alternatively, log onto the server machine and use a text editor or a file display command such as the UNIX cat command. By default, the mode bits on the VLLog file grant the required "r" (read) permission to all users. The VL Server records operations only as it completes them, and cannot recover from failures by reviewing the file. The log contents are useful for administrative evaluation of process failures and other problems. The VL Server can record messages at three levels of detail. By default, it records only very rudimentary messages. To increase logging to the first level of detail, issue the following command while logged onto the database server machine as the local superuser "root". # kill -TSTP <vlserver_pid> where <vlserver_pid> is the process ID of the vlserver process, as reported in the output from the standard UNIX ps command. To increase to the second and third levels of detail, repeat the command. To disable logging, issue the following command. # kill -HUP <vlserver_pid> To decrease the level of logging, first completely disable it and then issue the "kill -TSTP" command as many times as necessary to reach the desired level. SEE ALSO
UserList(5), bos_getlog(8), vlserver(8) COPYRIGHT
IBM Corporation 2000. <http://www.ibm.com/> All Rights Reserved. This documentation is covered by the IBM Public License Version 1.0. It was converted from HTML to POD by software written by Chas Williams and Russ Allbery, based on work by Alf Wachsmann and Elizabeth Cassell. OpenAFS 2012-03-26 VLLOG(5)
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