The easiest way to see if the IP address, etc, is configured is via ifconfig.
Type
man ifconfig
to read the manual page for ifconfig, as each *nix has its own command variation.
The actual interface device name also varies wildly between unix flavours. You can run
ifconfig <device>
Linux uses eth0 for the first ethernet device
HP-UX uses lan0
And SCO (I believe) uses net0
On SCO, ifconfig -a will show you information about all configured devices
*something like*
ifconfig net0 192.168.0.1 netmask 255.255.255.0 up
should bring the interface up if it already isn't.
You'll then need
route add default 192.168.0.100
to specify the default gateway
(Linux uses "route add default gw <address>")
All this will need to be added to startup scripts to make the changes persistent after everything is tested and working.
You'll also need to think about DNS, or if your network only has a few hosts on it, just edit the /etc/hosts file and add the hosts in.
There's quite a lot to do, and there is some good documentation on
www.sco.com
Cheers
ZB