dear all,
i am working on test server with solaris 10 , after installing OSI deamon i stopped it for a test now when i am starting again i am getting this message that i ggoled and search evrywhere and haven't any response i will be glade for any help in here mate the error was :
./osinet... (1 Reply)
Hi friends,
I hope everyone is doing fine. I have this confusion regarding the OSI model. I have been reading a book on datacommunication and networking which discusses the OSI model in great detail. One thing that I can't figure out is the OSI daigram in this book. It shows communication between... (1 Reply)
I'm using OSI version 9.0 with solaries OS , I 'm thinking of analysing the tracing while sending information through OSI layers , I want to analyze exactly the BER data ? Any one could provide an examples , I know the command for tracing these information but i need to understand the bytes travels... (1 Reply)
Hi.
I get the folloing message if i try to start the osinet deamon:
# /etc/rc2.d/S90osinet start
starting osi daemonunable to unload all the osi modules
some OSI applications may be running
unable to start OSI daemon
#
Has anyone an idea what is going wrong?
Answers to mail: (Note... (1 Reply)
Dear
After i received a demo license for OSI 9.0 from SUN , i installed the packages . but when i tried to start the osinet deamon ( /etc/rc2.d/S90osinet ) i am getting the foellowing errror
# ./S90osinet start
starting osi daemon/usr/sbin/osinetd cannot find a valid license (STACK 9.0)... (4 Replies)
after reading a paper about the OSI-model I'm not exactly sure how to look at this model.
Does data (a file) travel from the application level "down" each layer at the client
Application
V
Presentation
V
Session
V
Transport
V
Network
V
Data link
V
|
|
| (Physical)
| (3 Replies)
ISO_ADDR(3) BSD Library Functions Manual ISO_ADDR(3)NAME
iso_addr, iso_ntoa -- elementary network address conversion routines for Open System Interconnection
LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <netiso/iso.h>
struct iso_addr *
iso_addr(const char *cp);
char *
iso_ntoa(struct iso_addr *isoa);
DESCRIPTION
The routine iso_addr() interprets character strings representing OSI addresses, returning binary information suitable for use in system
calls. The routine iso_ntoa() takes OSI addresses and returns ASCII strings representing NSAPs (network service access points) in a notation
inverse to that accepted by iso_addr().
Unfortunately, no universal standard exists for representing OSI network addresses.
The format employed by iso_addr() is a sequence of hexadecimal ``digits'' (optionally separated by periods), of the form:
<hex digits>.<hex digits>.<hex digits>
Each pair of hexadecimal digits represents a byte with the leading digit indicating the higher-ordered bits. A period following an even num-
ber of bytes has no effect (but may be used to increase legibility). A period following an odd number of bytes has the effect of causing the
byte of address being translated to have its higher order bits filled with zeros.
RETURN VALUES
iso_ntoa() always returns a null terminated string. iso_addr() always returns a pointer to a struct iso_addr. (See BUGS.)
SEE ALSO iso(4)HISTORY
The iso_addr() and iso_ntoa() functions appeared in 4.3BSD-Reno.
BUGS
The returned values reside in a static memory area.
The function iso_addr() should diagnose improperly formed input, and there should be an unambiguous way to recognize this.
BSD June 4, 1993 BSD