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- X11R4 is a fast and usable X server that multitasks well,
- is memory efficient, and sells for US$300. It requires
- either TCP/IP from Commodore, or DECnet from Syndesis, and
- an Ethernet card for full functionality. It runs on all
- Amigas with at least 1 megabyte of memory and one floppy.
- You should run it with 3 or 4 MB of memory and a hard disk.
-
- Manufacturers' addresses:
-
- GfxBase, Inc.
- 1881 Ellwell Drive
- Milpitas, CA 95035
- U.S.A.
-
- phone: (408) 262-1469
- fax: (408) 262-8276
- Usenet: boing!dale, uunet!cbmvax!amiga!boing!dale
- BIX: duck
-
- Harriet Maybeck Tolly
- Syndesis Corporation
- N9353 Benson Road
- Brooklyn, WI 53521
- U.S.A.
-
- phone: (608) 455-1422
- fax: (608) 455-1317
- Compuserve: [76004,1763]
- BIX: rtolly
-
- Commodore Business Machines
- 1200 Wilson Drive
- West Chester, PA 19380
- U.S.A.
-
- phone: (215) 431-9100
-
- (Commodore's number will vary from country to country)
-
- Full review:
-
- One of the main reasons I bought my Amiga 3000 was because
- there was a somewhat affordable X server available for it. I
- can safely say that I wasn't disappointed by the quality of
- the X server. It is among the best Amiga applications I have
- ever used -- it is free of any serious bugs, multitasks, and
- doesn't require much memory.
-
- To use X, I had to buy the Commodore AS225 TCP/IP software
- and the Commodore A2065 Ethernet card. The AS225 lists for
- $200, and the A2065 for $300, but discounts are generally
- available. In short, the A2065 is a good Ethernet card --
- it's fast, easy to install because of Autoconfig, and easy
- to configure for thin or thick Ethernet. The AS225 software
- is unfortunately a different story. It is still a version 1.0
- release and shows it -- there are many, many minor bugs, but
- it generally works. It comes with ftp, rlogin, telnet, NFS,
- rcp, and rsh. There is only a server for ftp, that is, you
- cannot rlogin or telnet to, or NFS-mount your Amiga. You also
- cannot have interactive rsh, but you can rcp from your Amiga.
- Installation was easy -- there's a script that copies the
- two disks to your hard drive. Configuration was difficult --
- make sure you have a TCP/IP-savvy person around to help you
- because a lot of what Commodore says in their documentation
- is wrong or useless. There are other TCP/IP clients and
- daemons included, but they're mostly irrelevant to this
- review. The next release is suppose to also include Compressed
- SLIP for running IP over serial lines, so you'll be able to
- run X over serial lines.
-
- The X documentation consists of one mini three-ring binder
- that has about 31 pages of Amiga-specific instructions. It
- told you what you how much memory and disk space you needed
- to run X, and how to install the full and the minimal X
- configurations. Also, a very helpful "Common problems"
- section in the form of questions and answers was included.
- This section alone will save a lot of hair pulling. The
- rest of the 31 pages summarizes the various options of the
- X server and other random useful things. The manual is
- clear, concise, and generally well-written.
-
- The other hundred-odd pages of the manual are printed
- UNIX manual pages mainly from the MIT X distribution. The
- Amiga X server is also described here under Xamiga.
-
- Installing X was pretty easy: a script is included that
- lharcs the compressed files on the eight disks onto your
- hard drive. Configuration was pretty easy too because you
- just had to make an assign and add a path. Two scripts come
- with X to make running the X server easier. You can just run
- them and they will call Xamiga (the X server) with the
- right arguments. You will probably want to change them to
- your own tastes after a while.
-
- Before I received my color R4 server, I ran the monochrome
- server almost exclusively because the color R3 server was
- very slow. It takes about 2 to 3 seconds for the X server
- to get going before you see the familiar gray stipple. The
- first thing you notice is the HUGE X cursor staring you in the
- face. For anyone who's used X before, imagine doubling your
- cursor size and then dividing your viewing area by 4, so you
- get a cursor that's about 4 times bigger than normal. Fortunately,
- here's where the many options of the X server come in handy.
- First of all, you can interlace the cursor, so it looks normal.
- You can also pretend you have a larger screen than you really
- do and scroll around on a virtual screen of up to 1008 by 1024
- pixels. The scrolling is smooth and easy to deal with. You
- can also request an interlaced, a2024, a2025, Superhires, or
- Productivity screen. You can specify color swapping for
- exchanging black and white, what colors black and white actually
- are, what colors you want your cursor to be, how many colors
- you want, and what networking protocol you want to use.
-
- When you actually use the X server -- and I use it to run
- clients from Hewlett-Packards and Suns -- it's not unlike a real
- workstation running X. It's fast and responsive to the user.
- >From the things I've run, there doesn't seem to be any
- compatibility problems. The X server opens its own custom
- screen too, so you can drag the screen down with lots
- of X windows on it and impress all your friends (:-).
-
- I just got the R4 color X server a week ago, so I haven't
- had much of a chance to play with it. But it is definitely more
- usable than the R3 server. The server supports up to 16 colors,
- and runs pretty quickly in even 16-color mode. You can get
- up to 256 24-bit colors with GfxBase's GDA-1 video card or
- Ameristar's 1600GX. Because 16 colors wasn't anywhere near
- useful to me, and I didn't want to live with the speed loss,
- I generally use the X server in its monochrome mode. I did
- however, for fun, try some nasty color X programs and the server
- handled them with no problems. With some luck, perhaps I
- can have a follow-up review of the color X server with the GDA-1
- sometime near the end of summer.
-
- You don't have to run clients remotely because GfxBase gives
- you a lot of your own clients. Most of them are of the demo
- and utility types (ico, xclock, xcalc, ...), but there are
- also two window managers -- TWM and OLWM. All of the ppm/pbm
- utilities also come with X. A developer's kit is also available
- for compiling your own X programs. There are some clients on
- nic.funet.fi that were kindly ported by Bob Beauchemin, who has
- the kit. He says that they are easy to port. The server and
- clients are also impressive in that they respond to breaks and
- control-C's very well. They will always die gracefully when you
- send them a break or control-C.
-
- So far, the only way I've managed to crash the X server is to
- run out of memory. It kills itself gracefully and returns all
- memory when that happens. System requesters that popup on the
- X screen tend to be pretty ugly and leave footprints all over
- your windows. However, this can be fixed by a refresh. The
- top 10 or 20 pixels are unusable in X because the server uses
- that as its screen handles. All mouse button events that happen
- up there seem to be trapped and not passed on to the X server,
- so make sure your window handles are bigger than that or else
- don't put anything up there.
-
- In summary, GfxBase's X11R4 server is fast, system-friendly,
- and usable. Anyone who needs an X server should take a serious
- look at it.
- ---
- Andre Yew andrey@tybalt.caltech.edu (131.215.48.100)
- --
- Jason L. Tibbitts III | System Administration and User Support:
- "Blob Shop Programmers:| University of Houston Mathematics Dept.
- Because We're Bored!" | Moderator: comp.sys.amiga.reviews
- Disclaimer: Opinions are my own, not those of the UH System.
-
-