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- From: esr@snark.thyrsus.com (Eric S. Raymond)
- Path: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!bloom-beacon.mit.edu!news.kei.com!ub!dsinc!gvls1!boojum!esr
- Newsgroups: comp.unix.sys5.r4,comp.unix.pc-clone.32bit,comp.unix.bsd,comp.os.linux.announce,news.answers
- Subject: PC-clone UNIX Software Buyer's Guide
- Message-ID: <1mNyMB#M8Cq89l95TspL02Q4l91QWtwq=esr@boojum.thyrsus.com>
- Date: 8 Aug 93 16:23:35 GMT
- Expires: 4 Sep 93 23:30:00 GMT
- Sender: esr@boojum.thyrsus.com (Eric S. Raymond)
- Followup-To: comp.unix.pc-clone.32bit
- Distribution: world
- Summary: A buyer's guide to UNIX versions for PC-clone hardware
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Lines: 3084
- Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu comp.unix.sys5.r4:4570 comp.unix.pc-clone.32bit:5809 comp.unix.bsd:13944 comp.os.linux.announce:1002 news.answers:11179
-
- Archive-name: pc-unix/software
- Last-update: 05 Aug 1993
- Supersedes: <1mMCxq#M0Qjdb97nrqX143kdlB7mTC0Z=esr@boojum.thyrsus.com>
- Version: 17.0
-
- [This is a reposting. Due to a script error, the 17.0 FAQ was previously
- posted with a bad Expires header.]
-
- You say you want cutting-edge hacking tools without having to mortgage your
- wife, your kids, and your dog? You say arrogant workstation vendors are
- getting you down? You say you crave fast UNIX on cheap hardware, but you don't
- know how to go about getting it? Well, pull up a chair and take the load off
- yer feet, bunky, because this is the PC-clone UNIX Software Buyer's Guide
- posting.
-
- Many FAQs, including this one, are available via FTP on the archive site
- rtfm.mit.edu in the directory pub/usenet/news.answers. The name under which
- this FAQ is archived appears in the Archive-name line above. This FAQ is
- updated monthly; if you want the latest version, please query the archive
- rather than emailing the overworked maintainer.
-
- What's new in this issue:
- * Further corrections to BSDI info
- * Esix cuts their prices by $200
- * Linux hardware compatibility info
-
- Gentle Reader: if you end up buying something based on information from
- this Guide, please do yourself and the net a favor; make a point of telling
- the vendor "Eric's FAQ sent me" or some equivalent. The idea isn't to hype
- me personally, I've already got all the notoriety I need from doing things
- like _The_New_Hacker's_Dictionary_ --- but if we can show vendors that the
- Guide influences a lot of purchasing decisions, I can be a more effective
- advocate for the net's interests, and for you.
-
- 0. CONTENTS
-
- I. INTRODUCTION. What this posting is. How to help improve it. Summary of
- the 386/486 UNIX market, including 8 SVr4 products, SCO UNIX (an SVr3.2),
- BSD/386, and Linux. What's new in this issue.
-
- II. GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS. A brief discussion of general hardware
- requirements and compatibility considerations in the base SVR4 code from UNIX
- Systems Laboratories (referred to below as the USL code). None of this
- automatically applies to SCO, LINUX, or BSD/386, which break out the
- corresponding information into their separate vendor reports.
-
- III. FEATURE COMPARISON. A feature table which gives basic price & feature
- info and summarizes differences between the versions.
-
- IV. VENDOR REPORTS. Detailed descriptions of the major versions and
- vendors, including information collected from the net on bugs, supported
- and unsupported hardware and the like.
-
- V. UPCOMING PORTS, FREEWARE VERSIONS, AND CLONES. Less-detailed descriptions
- of other products in the market.
-
- VI. HARDWARE COMPATIBILITY TABLES. A set of tables summarizes vendor claims
- and user reports on hardware compatibility.
-
- VII. FREEWARE ACCESS FOR SVR4 SYSTEMS. Information on the SVR4 binaries
- archive.
-
- VIII. FREE ADVICE TO VENDORS. Your humble editor's soapbox. An open letter
- to the UNIX vendors designed to get them all hustling to improve their products
- and services as fast as possible.
-
- IX. INTO THE FUTURE. Things to know about where the major vendors
- (especially USL) think they're going.
-
- X. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS AND ENVOI. Credit where credit is due. Some praises
- and pans. What comes next....
-
- Note: versions 1.0 through 4.0 of this posting had a different archive name
- (386-buyers-faq) and included the following now separate FAQs as sections.
-
- pc-unix/hardware -- (formerly HOT TIPS FOR HARDWARE BUYERS) Useful general
- tips for anybody buying clone hardware for a UNIX system. Overview of the
- market. Technical points. When, where, and how to buy.
-
- usl-bugs -- (formerly KNOWN BUGS IN THE USL CODE). A discussion of bugs
- known or believed to be generic to the USL code, with indications as to which
- porting houses have fixed them. None of this applies to the two BSD-based
- versions.
-
- Readers may also find material of interest in Dick Dunn's general 386 UNIX
- FAQ list, posted monthly to comp.unix.pc-clone.32bit and news.answers.
-
-
- I. INTRODUCTION
-
- The purpose of this posting is to pool public knowledge and USENET feedback
- about all leading-edge versions of UNIX for commodity 386 and 486 hardware. It
- also includes extensive information on how to buy cheap clone hardware to
- support your UNIX.
-
- This document is maintained and periodically updated as a service to the net by
- Eric S. Raymond <esr@snark.thyrsus.com>, who began it for the very best
- self-interested reason that he was in the market and didn't believe in plonking
- down several grand without doing his homework first (no, I don't get paid for
- this, though I have had a bunch of free software and hardware dumped on me as a
- result of it!). Corrections, updates, and all pertinent information are
- welcomed at that address.
-
- This posting is periodically broadcast to the USENET group comp.unix.sysv386
- and to a list of vendor addresses. If you are a vendor representative, please
- check the feature chart and vendor report to make sure the information on your
- company is current and correct. If it is not, please email me a correction
- ASAP. If you are a knowledgeable user of any of these products, please send me
- a precis of your experiences for the improvement of the feedback sections.
-
- At time of writing, here are the major products in this category:
-
- Dell UNIX Issue 2.2 abbreviated as "Dell" below
- ESIX System V Release 4.0.4 abbreviated as "Esix" below
- Micro Station Technology SVr4 UNIX abbreviated as "MST" below
- Microport System V Release 4.0 version 4 abbreviated as "uPort" below
- UHC Version 3.6 abbreviated as "UHC" below
-
- Consensys System V Release 4.2 abbreviated as "Cons" below
- Information Foundation System V Release 4.2 abbreviated as "IF" below
- Univel UnixWare Release 4.2 abbreviated as "Univel" below
-
- SCO Open Desktop 3.0 abbreviated as "ODT" below
-
- BSD/386 1.0 abbreviated as "BSDI" below
-
- Yggdrasil Linux/GNU/X abbreviated as "LGX" below
-
- The first six of these are ports of USL's System V Release 4. Until last year
- there was a seventh, by Interactive Systems Corporation. That product was
- canned after half of ISC was bought by SunSoft, evidently to clear the decks
- for Solaris 2.0 (a SunOS port for the 386). The only Interactive UNIX one can
- buy at present is an SVr3.2 port which I consider uninteresting because it's so
- far behind the others; I have ignored it.
-
- Note that ODT is SCO's full system with networking and X windows; what they
- call SCO UNIX is missing most of those trimmings.
-
- BSD/386 is *not* based on USL code, but on the CSRG NET2 distribution tape.
- Complete sources are included with every system shipped!
-
- LGX is a freeware OS built around Linux, a POSIX-emulating UNIX lookalike
- written from scratch by Linus Torvalds and others and currently in late beta.
- The information given here is based on the Yggdrasil Software CD-ROM
- distribution, which adds the GNU tools, X and other well-known freeware.
-
- (Yes, I know that other Linuxes are available, *with support*, from SLS (Soft
- Landing Software) and Cygnus. I know this, so please don't bug me about it
- unless you can provide enough info for another vendor entry, or at least
- a good pointer to someone at the vendor who will answer my questions.)
-
- AT&T's own 386 UNIX offering is not covered here because it is available and
- supported for AT&T hardware only.
-
- All the vendors listed offer a 30-day money-back guarantee, but they'll be
- sticky about it except where there's an insuperable hardware compatibility
- problem or you trip over a serious bug. One (UHC) charges a 25% restocking fee
- on returns. BSDI offers a 60-day guarantee starting from the date of receipt
- by the customer and says: "If a customer is dissatisfied with the product, BSDI
- unconditionally refunds the purchase price." Dell says "30 day money-back
- guarantee, no questions asked".
-
- Some other ports are listed in section V.
-
- II. GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS
-
- To run any of these systems, you need at least the following: 4 MB of RAM and
- 80MB of hard disk (SCO says 8MB minimum for ODT 3.0; Dell 2.2 also requires 8
- MB minimum). However, this is an absolute minimum; you'll want at least 8 MB
- of RAM for reasonable performance. And depending on options installed, the OS
- will eat from 40 to 120 meg of the disk, so you'll want at least 200 meg for
- real work. To run X you'll need a VGA monitor and card, and 12-16MB RAM would
- be a good idea.
-
- Installation from these systems requires that you boot from a hi-density 3.5
- floppy (some also supply a 5.25" boot disk, but the older floppy size is
- rapidly passing out of use). Most vendors offer the bulk of the system on a
- QIC 60 1/4-inch tape; otherwise you may be stuck with a hefty extra media
- charge and loading over 60 diskettes!
-
- CD-ROM is increasingly popular as a distribution medium; SCO and BSDI offer it,
- and LGX is *ony* distributed on CD-ROM. BSDI will even sell you a CD-ROM
- reader for US$225 (or you buy the same Mitsumi drive at Radio Shack or Best Buy
- for US$199+tax). In general, if the initial boot gets far enough to display a
- request for the first disk or tape load, you're in good shape.
-
- USL SVr4 conforms to the following software standards: ANSI X3.159-1989 C,
- POSIX 1003.1, SVID 3rd edition, FIPS 151-1, XPG3, and System V Release 4 ABI.
- 4.0.4 ports conform to the iBCS-2 binary standard. The SVr4 C compiler (C
- Issue 5) includes some non-ANSI extensions (however, note that as of mid-1992,
- no SVr4 ports other than AT&T's have been formally POSIX-certified).
-
- SCO conforms to the following standards: ANSI X3.159-1989 C, POSIX 1003.1 FIPS
- 151-1, XPG3, iBCS2, and SVID 2nd Edition. Despite the
- marketing droids hacking at its version number, SCO is not conformant to System
- V Release 4 or SVID 3rd Edition.
-
- All SVr4 versions include support for BSD-style file systems with 255-character
- segment names and fragment allocation. In general this is a Good Thing, but
- some SVr3.2 and XENIX binaries can be confused by the different size of the
- inode index. You need to run these on an old-style USG file system. SCO (as
- of SCO UNIX 3.2v4 and ODT 2.0) has an `EAFS' file system which adds symlinks
- and long filenames. Old SCO binaries can be confused by long filenames.
-
- All SVr4.0.3, SVr4.0.4 and SCO versions include the UNIX manual pages on-line.
- Dell stocks Prentice-Hall's SVr4 books and will sell them to you with your
- system (in lieu of printed manuals) at extra cost. You can order them direct
- from Prentice-Hall at (201)-767-5937. Warning: they ain't cheap! Buying the
- whole 13 volumes will cost you a couple hundred bucks. Microport has their own
- manual sets derived from the same USL source tapes as the Prentice-Hall set,
- included with their system; UHC bundles in the Prentice-Hall books themselves.
-
- The SVr4.2 versions, due to malignant idiocy by USL, typically do *not*
- include on-line man pages. However, IF has re-inserted them.
-
- SVr4 includes hooks for a DOS bridge that allows you to run DOS applications
- under UNIX (the two products that actually do this are DOS Merge and VP/ix).
- Most vendors do not include either of these with the base system, however.
-
- All these systems support up to 1024x768 by 256 color super-VGA under X. The
- 640x480 by 16 colors of standard VGA is no problem; everybody supports that
- compatibly. However, X servers older than the Xfree86 or X11R5 version (that
- is, MIT X11R4 or anything previous) are hard to configure for the clock timings
- of your controller and monitor scan frequency unless you have one of the
- standard combinations USL supports or your vendor has configured for it.
-
- There are a couple of known hardware compatibility problems the USL code
- doesn't yet address. See the companion "Known Bugs" FAQ.
-
-
- III. FEATURE COMPARISON
-
- To interpret the table below, bear in mind the following things:
-
- All these products except BSDI/386, Linux, and SCO ODT are based on the SVr4
- kernel from UNIX Systems Laboratories (USL), an AT&T spinoff now owned by
- Novell. Thus they share over 90% of their code and features. Product
- differentiation is done primarily through support policy, bug-fix quality and
- add-on software.
-
- The `USL support?' column refers to the fact that USL support is a separate
- charge from the source license. With the former, a porting house gets access
- to USL's own OS support people and their bug fix database, and the porting
- house's bug fixes can get folded back into the USL code.
-
- These systems come either in a "crippled" version that supports at most two
- simultaneous users, or an unlimited version. Generally the vendors do allow
- you to upgrade your license via a patch disk if your requirements change, but
- this invariably costs slightly more than the base price difference between
- 2-user and unlimited systems.
-
- The "run-time" system in the price tables below is a minimum installation,
- just enough to run binaries. The "complete" system includes every software
- option offered by the vendor; it does *not* bundle in the cost of the
- Prentice-Hall docs offered by some vendors as an option. You may well get
- away with less, especially if you're willing to do your own X installation.
-
- Starting with SCO UNIX 3.2v4.2 and Open Desktop/Server 3.0, SCO is
- selling 3 levels of license: 2-user, 16-user and unlimited. Our "complete"
- liating is for the unlimited system.
-
- (Note that these tiers of license are a consequence of USL's royalty policies:
- each vendor must pay a royalty to USL for each license sold, and the size of
- the royalty varies according to how many users are allowed.)
-
- Prices are for QIC-tape configurations, except SCO and LGX which are for the
- CD-ROM distrbution. Some vendors will supply the OS on floppies, but they
- don't enjoy doing so and may charge substantially more for a diskette version.
- Typically, CD-ROM distributions cost less than tapes.
-
- The `Upgrade plan' section refers only to upgrades from previous versions
- of the same vendor's software.
-
- The numbers under support-with-purchase are days counted from date
- of shipment. The intent is to help you get initially up and running.
-
- The engineer counts below are as supplied by vendors; .5 of an engineer
- means someone is officially working half-time. The `Uses USENET' column is
- `yes' if there is allegedly at least one person in the engineering department
- who reads USENET technical groups regularly and is authorized to respond to
- USENET postings reporting problems.
-
- The `DOS Bridge' row gives the version number of DOSMerge supplied with the
- system, if any. DosMerge 2.0 has roughly the caoabilities of DOS 3.0, though
- it is reported to be quite flaky and hard to configure. DOSMerge 2.2 has the
- capabilities of DOS 5.0, and DOS Merge 3.1 has the capabilities of DOS 5.0 +
- Windows running in "Standard" (286) mode.
-
- The AF_UNIX row tells which versions support UNIX-domain sockets. These
- are a separate namespace from the INET sockets, local to each machine and
- used by some applications because they cannot be spoofed over the network.
-
- The `ISO9660' column tells whether the OS can read ISO9660 filesystems.
- The `Rock Ridge?' column tells whether the Rock Ridge extensions for UNIX
- are known to be supported.
-
- A dash `-' means the given feature or configuration is not offered. A `yes'
- means it is currently offered; `soon' means the vendor has represented that it
- will be offered in the near future. A `no' means it's not offered, but there's
- some related information in the attached footnote.
-
-
- Table 1: BASE VERSION AND PRICE
- System Price (US$) Has Reduced price
- Base USL Run-time only Developer's printed upgrade from
- Vendor Version support 2-user Unlim 2-user Unlim docs? SVr3.2 SVr4
-
- SCO 3.2.2 - 595(g) 1595(g) 2290(g) 4590(g) y y -
- Cons 4.2 ?? 495 755 1270 1535 y - -
- Dell 4.0.4 y - - 995 1295(b) y(e) y (h)
- Esix 4.0.4 y - - - 895(g) - - -
- IF 4.2 y 299 819 995 1490 y - -
- Univel 4.2 y(u) 249 1299 599 1199 y - -
- MST 4.0.3 - 249 449 799 849 - - (h)
- uPort 4.0.4 y 500 1000 3000 3500 y(f) y (h)
- UHC 4.0.3 ??(a) 695 1090 1990 2385 y - -
- BSDI BSD - - 545(c) - 1045(c) - - -
- LGX Linux - - - - $60 - - -
-
- Table 2: SUPPORT FEATURES
- With 800 Support FTP Read # Engineers Support
- Vendor sale number? BBS? server? USENET? Support Devel. contracts
-
- SCO 0 y y y y 60+ 55+ per year
- Cons 30 y y(i) - - 6 ??(m) per year
- Dell 90 y - y y 5 10 per year
- Esix (j) - - y y ?? ?? (j)
- IF 90 y soon soon soon 2 2 custom
- Univel (j) y (v) soon y ?? ?? (j)
- MST 30 - - - - 2 3 per year
- uPort 30 - y - y 4 6 per year
- UHC 30 - soon - -(l) 2 27 per year
- BSDI 60 y - y y 1.5 6.5 per year
- LGX - - - - y ?? ?? -
-
- Table 3: DISTRIBUTION MEDIA
- Floppy disk --------- QIC tape ---------- -DAT- via
- 3.5" 5.25" 60MB 125MB 150MB 250MB 2GB CD-ROM network
- SCO y y y - - - - y -
- Cons y(n) y(n) y - y - - - -
- Dell - - - - - y y - y
- Esix y - y(w) - - - - y(w) -
- IF y y y - - - - - -
- Univel - - y(w) - - - - y(w) y(w)
- MST y y y y y - - - -
- uPort y y y - y - - - -
- UHC - - - y y - - - -
- BSDI y - - - - y y y -
- LGX - - - - - - - y -
-
- Table 4: X OPTIONS
- X/News MIT USL USL X11R5 Open Motif X
- X11R3 X11R4 Xwin3 Xwin4 Look Desktop
- SCO - - - - y(o) - 1.2.2 3.5
- Cons - - - - y - 1.1 -
- Dell - y - - y 4i 1.1.4 -
- Esix y - - y y 1.0 1.1.0 -
- IF - - - y - 4i 1.1.4 -
- MST - - y - - 2.0 1.1.2 3.0
- uPort - - - y - 4i 1.1.3 2.0
- UHC y - - - - 4i 1.1.3 -
- BSDI - - - - y - (p) -
- LGX - - - - y - (q) -
-
- Table 5: MISCELLANEA AND ADD-ONS
- DOS UNIX ISO9660 Rock
- Bridge? SLIP? PPP? sockets support Ridge?
- SCO 3.1 y y n y -
- Cons - - y - y -
- Dell 2.2 y - y - -
- Esix - y n(r) - soon -
- IF - - - ?? y -
- Univel y - - ?? y -
- MST - - - ?? - -
- uPort soon y - ?? - -
- UHC - soon soon ?? ?? -
- BSDI y y y y y y
- LGX y soon - y y y
-
- (a) UHC had a support contract at one time but may have let it lapse. I
- expect to have better information on this soon.
- (b) This price is for customer-installed UNIX. If it's factory-installed on
- Dell hardware, it's $500 less.
- (c) $1045 is for credit-card tape orders; POs are $50 more; CD-ROM $50 less
- Educational site licenses are available for $2K each.
- (e) Extra-cost option.
- (f) With complete system only.
- (g) Price is for CD-ROM; add $100 for tape, $200 for floppies.
- (h) Free with support contract, charge otherwise (charge ~$500).
- (i) Support contract customers.
- (j) Unlimited free phone support.
- (k) Charges by the half-hour phone call.
- (l) UHC says they used to be net-active and want to be again when they can
- afford the man-hours.
- (m) Consensys explicitly refuses to release this information.
- (n) There's an $80 media charge for the diskettes equivalent to the normal
- 60MB distribution tape.
- (o) SCO's own X11R5 implementation.
- (p) Motif for BSDI is available from a third party.
- (q) Motif for Linux is available from MetroLink for $199; see the Hardware
- Guide for contact info.
- (r) Mark Boucher <marc@cam.org> has written a PPP driver for ESIX
- (t) You can get a MUI module supporting Motif for $95 extra.
- (u) Univel is half-owned by USL.
- (v) Patches are available on Compuserve and FTP; SCO also has its own
- CompuServe forum.
- (w) 3.5" floppy drive required for booting
-
- In general, the SVr4 market breaks into two tiers. The bottom tier is
- Consensys and MST; low-ball outfits selling stock USL with minimal support for
- real cheap. The top tier is Dell, Esix, Microport, UHC, Univel and IF; these
- guys are selling support and significant enhancements and charge varying
- premiums for it. Your first, most basic buying decision has to be which tier
- best serves your needs.
-
- One further note: it *is* possible to buy some of these systems at less than
- the list the vendor charges! I found some really substantial discounts in one
- mail-order catalog ("The Programmer's Shop"; call 1-(800)-421-8006 to get on
- their mailing list, but be prepared to wade through a lot of DOS cruft).
-
-
- IV. VENDOR REPORTS
- Vendor reports start here. Each one is led by a form feed.
-
- NAME:
- SCO UNIX System V Release 3.2 Version 4.2
- SCO Open Desktop Lite Release 3.0
- SCO Open Desktop Release 3.0
- SCO Open Server Network System Release 3.0
- SCO Open Server Enterprise System Release 3.0
-
- VENDOR:
- The Santa Cruz Operation, Inc.
- 400 Encinal Street
- PO Box 1900
- Santa Cruz,CA 95061-1900
- 1-(800)-SCO-UNIX (sales)
- 1-(800)-347-4381 (customer service and tech support)
- info@sco.com --- product info by email, sales requests
- support@sco.com --- support requests (support contract customers only)
-
- SOFTWARE OPTIONS:
- All of SCO's products include printed documentation; however, special
- "limited documentation" editions of the multiuser Open Server offerings are
- available at lower cost for use in large multi-system installations, by VARs
- creating embedded applications, etc. The actual products used for the price
- table were:
-
- Run-time 2-user: SCO UNIX 3.2v4.2 2-user CD-ROM
- Run-time 16-user: SCO UNIX 3.2v4.2 16-user CD-ROM
- Run-time unlim-user: SCO UNIX 3.2v4.2 unlim-user CD-ROM
- Development 2-user: SCO Open Desktop Lite 3.0 CD-ROM
- + SCO Open Desktop Development System 3.0 CD-ROM
- Development 16-user: SCO Open Server Enterprise System 16-user CD-ROM,
- limited docs
- + SCO Open Desktop Development System 3.0 CD-ROM
- Development unlim-user: SCO Open Server Enterprise System unlim-user CD-ROM,
- limited docs
- + SCO Open Desktop Development System 3.0 CD-ROM
-
- Add $200 each to the last two for full docs. Aescription of ODT Lite
- appears below; basically, includes UNIX+TCP+X but not NFS, LAN Manager Client,
- or DOS Merge.
-
- In addition to all the other things, a bundle is currently on sale to
- qualified developers (which means "pick up the phone and call SCO to find out
- whether you're qualified"). The bundle offers ODT 2.0 Personal System
- (i.e. 2-user) and ODT 2.0 Development System plus the SCO Optimizing C
- Compiler, all on floppy + tape (QIC-60) media, for a total of $795. You do not
- have to be a member of a developer's program; that's the total cost. Down
- sides: 2-user system, limited quantities, limited support, must qualify, and
- down-rev software (but can be upgraded). Up sides: currently the only way to
- get the Intel Optimizing C Compiler, and a very good price (list price of the
- two ODT components is like $2500, not even considering icc).
-
- SCO's package and option structure is (excessively) complicated. At the
- moment the `bundles' to keep track of are:
-
- SCO UNIX System V/386 Release 3.2 Version 4.2 "UNIX"
- SCO Open Desktop Lite Release 3.0 "ODTL"
- SCO Open Desktop Release 3.0 "ODT"
- SCO Open Server Network System Release 3.0 "OSNS"
- SCO Open Server Enterprise System Release 3.0 "OSES"
-
- The "SEPARATE" column indicates whether and how that item is available
- separately, e.g. if you were building a system starting with SCO UNIX
- and adding unbundled components.
-
- UNIX ODTL ODT OSNS OSES SEPARATE
- SCO UNIX 3.2v4.2 x x x x x
- 2-user license available x x x
- 16-user license available x x x
- unlimited-user license available x x x "License pack"
- limited printed doc package avail x x Yes
- X11R5, Motif 1.2.2, X.Desktop 3.5 x x x R4/1.14/no xdt
- DOS Merge 3.1 x x Yes
- MS-DOS 5.0 x x Bundle w/Merge
- SCO LLI (net card) Drivers 3.1.1 x x x x Download
- SCO TCP/IP 1.2.1 x x x x Yes
- SCO NFS 1.2.1 x x x Yes
- SCO IPX/SPX 1.0.3 x Yes
- LAN Manager Client x **LAN Man Server
- PC-Interface server x From Locus
-
- SCO IPX/SPX is an implementation of the Novell IPX/SPX protocol stack.
- Applications exist which use this. The only application SCO provides is a
- network login service; this does not provide Novell filesystem client or
- server facilities.
-
- LAN Manager Client provides UNIX access to DOS / OS/2 LAN Manager
- filesystems; it is not a server. ** LAN Manager Server is available
- separately; it is not a client and the client portion of ODT cannot
- coexist in a system with LAN Man Server.
-
- PC-Interface server interfaces to Locus PC-Interface clients for DOS.
- There is a Locus PCI product for the Mac; a separate server product from
- Locus is required to interface to that.
-
- ADD-ONS:
- There are piles of them. I was most impressed by the docs for the CodeView
- debugger and MASM assembler, but the presence of ISAM support would probably be
- more significant to the ordinary commercial user.
- Development systems: UNIX development system includes compiler, tools,
- base UNIX libraries. ODT development system (which is for ODT, OSNS or
- OSES) provides that plus libraries for X, Motif, TCP, NFS, LAN manager,
- IPX/SPX, PC/Interface, and the "Software Mastering Toolkit" for
- producing installable distributions of your code.
- We now have an Intel Optimizing C Compiler package, a compiler from
- Intel which understands 486 and Pentium CPU pipeline behavior and
- produces code optimized for those processors.
- TCP, NFS and Merge are all available as add-ons to the base UNIX product
- (but pricing is more favorable in the above bundles). LAN Manager
- Server is available, provides file service to DOS, OS/2, Windows LAN
- Manager clients. VP/ix (alternative DOS compatibility service) is
- available.
- MPX: provides support for multiprocessor 386/486/Pentium machines with
- up to 30 processors (though I've not seen a live machine with more than
- 8 -- that waits on the hardware designers).
- SCO bundles with X also include 18 clients (what in marketingese are called
- ``personal productivity and groupware accessories and controls'') which
- include: mail, help, edit, paint, term, print, login, clock, color, session,
- mouse, lock, and admin (official names all prepended with "SCO") as well as
- DOS, load, and calculator clients. (The supplied clients have changed a
- bit for 3.0; I don't have details yet.)
-
- SUPPORT:
- SCO accepts software problem reports from anyone, Dell or non-Dell hardware
- and whether or not they have a support contract (email to support@sco.com). If
- you don't have a support contract, don't count on getting a reply acknowledging
- the report.
- Starting with the new releases, there is no warranty support period.
- Defective media etc. are warranted; but if you want to talk to someone on the
- phone about technical issues, you pay.
- My source thinks, but is not really sure, that you can still get questions
- handled via Internet mail or the sosco BBS system for a limited time, either 30
- or 60 days. Support contracts are available for various periods and with
- various levels of support.
- SCO has BBS coverage and a local support operation in the UK as well as the
- US; BBS coverage only Germany. Local support is, in theory, to be provided by
- distributors.
-
- HARDWARE COMPATIBILITY:
- See the appendix for details. SCO provides a Hardware Compatibility
- Guide with its software.
-
- COMMENTS:
- The docs are impressive; you could get a hernia trying to lift them all.
-
- TECHNICAL NOTES:
- There's an `MPX' kernel available from SCO that supports multiprocessing.
- Though this is a 3.2 kernel, SCO has added support for SVr4-like symbolic
- links and long filenames to Version 4.
- SCO has a standard driver announcement protocol which allows the
- utility hwconfig(C) to print out detailed configuration info on hardware
- attached to the machine.
- SCO's cross-development and DOS emulation support is unusually rich. It
- includes lots of system utilities for I/O with a DOS filesystem, as well as
- cross-development libraries and tools in the Development System. Microsoft
- Windows 3.0 and Windows 3.0 applications are supported (in real mode), and
- Windows 3.1 and applications in "standard" mode (which means the Windows kernel
- runs in '286 protected mode). Graphical MS-DOS applications are supported in
- CGA graphics mode within an X window, and VGA graphics are supported in
- full-screen mode.
- The SCO install process auto-configures a proper set of drivers for
- your configuration based on what it finds by polling the hardware.
-
- KNOWN BUGS
- SCO tar(1) chokes horribly on long filenames and symbolic links.
- This has been fixed in the MSv4.2 maintenance supplement.
- SCO tar also fails to back up empty directories. SCO provides "pax"
- (Portable Archive Exchange) which does what you expect.
- Petri Wessman <Petri_Wessman@hut.fi> has reported that SCO 3.2.4 sometimes
- gets into a state in which exec(2) succeeds called from a binary but exec
- reliably fails called from a shell.
-
- WHAT THE USERS SAY:
- XENIX is the UNIX port hackers love to hate, but at 70% of the market SCO
- must be doing something right. In general, SCO UNIX and XENIX are reputed to
- be a very polished and stable systems. Unfortunately, they also drive
- developers crazy because of numerous tiny and undocumented divergences between
- the SCO way and the USL-based releases.
-
- REVIEWER'S IMPRESSIONS:
- The SCO support system is heavily bureaucratized and prone to thrash when
- processing questions of unusual depth or scope. While probably adequate for
- the random business luser, hackers are likely to find the contortions
- required to get to a master-level developer very frustrating.
- SCO in general has the fairly serious case of corporatitis you'd predict
- from their relatively large size --- no-comment policies and
- compartmentalization out the wazoo.
- On the other hand, they sent me an unsolicited free copy, and I got huge
- amounts of useful technical and hardware-compatibility info "unofficially" from
- SCOer Bela Lubkin <belal@sco.com>. Gee. Maybe I should flame vendors more
- often... :-)
-
-
- NAME:
- Consensys System V Release 4.2
-
- VENDOR:
- Consensys
- 1301 Pat Booker Road
- Universal City, TX 78148
- (800)-387-8951 (sales and support both)
- {dmentor,dciem}!askov!root
-
- SOFTWARE OPTIONS:
- None.
-
- ADD-ONS:
- Basically this is a stock USL Destiny system with the stock USL bugs. It
- doesn't seem to carry over the Consensys 4.0.3 changes.
-
- SUPPORT:
- You get free phone support until your system is installed, to a maximum of
- 30 days. After that they charge per half-hour of phone time. They like to
- do support by fax and callback. They'll sell support contracts by the year.
- They have a support BBS at (416)-752-2084.
- Knowledgeable customers report they're good about supporting the bits they
- wrote (see below) but terrible at dealing with generic SVr4 problems.
-
- HARDWARE COMPATIBILITY:
- See the appendix for details.
-
- KNOWN BUGS:
- Trying to install the system administration package *after* first
- installation of the OS with v4pkg doesn't work. You can work around this
- by using `pkgadd -d ctape1'.
- David P. Cutter <dpc@shady.grail.com> writes: "The Consensys V.4.2
- upgrade from V.4 has a bug in the install procedure for the Xwindow
- development package. Most/all of the X include files are missing and
- some random archives are missing. I called Consensys and they sent me
- an update disk - for free."
-
- WHAT THE USERS SAY:
- During the life of their 4.0.3 release, Consensys had a dismal reputation on
- USENET; horror stories of nonexistent followup on bugs abounded.
- However, David Mason <vid@zooid.guild.org> writes "they appear to be
- installing a lot more telephone support. In fact for a yearly fee they will
- sell support and they apparently have been hiring people for a few months now.
- Additionally, when I talked to a support person there, he seemed actually
- willing to help me, as opposed to the hostile go-away attitude I encountered
- shortly after we bought their SVR4 product 9 months or so ago. Maybe they are
- learning."
- One 4.0.3. customer (J.J. Strybosch, <jjs@ubitrex.mb.ca>) reported that
- Consensys charged his credit card for more than they quoted him. If you deal
- with them, watch your credit card statement carefully.
-
- REVIEWER'S IMPRESSIONS:
- These people used to be the bad boys of the SVr4.0 market --- not a company
- you wanted to deal with unless low price was the most important thing. There's
- some reason to believe they're trying to improve their act with 4.2; if so,
- more power to them.
- Consensys explicitly refuses to say how many development engineers they have
- on staff. In this and some other matters they've adopted a corporate style
- that appears defensive, evasive, secretive, and not conducive to trust. I
- couldn't make their V.P. of sales understand that this appearance is a serious
- liability in dealing with UNIX techies and distinguishes them from the
- competition in a distinctly negative way.
-
-
- NAME:
- Dell UNIX System V Release 4 Issue 2.2.
-
- VENDOR:
- Dell Computer
- 9505 Arboretum Road
- Austin TX 78759
- (800)-BUY-DELL (info & orders)
- (800)-727-8649 (tech support)
- support@dell.com --- support queries
-
- SOFTWARE OPTIONS:
- None.
-
- ADD-ONS:
- Dell bundles a DOS bridge (Locus 2.2, supporting DOS 5.0) with their base
- system. They also include cnews, mmdf, perl, elm, bison, gcc, emacs gdb, Tex,
- network time protocol support, and other freeware, including a bunch of nifty X
- clients! Also included: the Xylogics Annex server for TCP/IP network access.
- FrameMaker is also included, but runs in demo mode only until you buy a
- license token from Unidirect.
-
- SUPPORT:
- Dell *does* support their UNIX on non-Dell hardware. They are quite
- definite about this. They will deal with software problems reported from
- non-Dell hardware, but you're on your own when dealing with hardware
- incompatibility problems unless you can reproduce the problem on a
- Dell PC. However, it is also policy that if you lend them the offending
- hardware, they will work with the vendor to come up with a fix, and if
- they can't make that work they'll refund your money.
- You get 90 days of free phone support on a toll-free number, starting on
- resceipt of your registration card (no card, no support). Yearly service
- contracts range are $350 per year for the limited license, $500 for the
- unlimited.
- Dell accepts software problem reports from anyone, Dell or non-Dell
- hardware and whether or not they have a support contract. If you don't have
- a support contract, don't count on getting a reply acknowledging the report.
- Dell maintains a pair of Internet servers (dell1.dell.com and
- dell2.dell.com) which hold patches, updates and free software usable with
- Dell UNIX.
- About upgrades, Dell says "If you have a support contract, the upgrade is
- free, unless we've added something with significant royalty burden to us. We
- may make a charge at that point. We didn't when we added Graphical Services
- 4.0 at the introduction of Dell UNIX 2.1. If you don't have a contract, then
- the cost is basically Media+Royalty+Admin+Shipping."
-
- FUTURE PLANS:
- X.desktop 3.0 will be supported soon. NeWS isn't going to happen at all;
- they couldn't get it to work reliability.
- Dell has demonstrated a 486 port of NeXTSTEP at trade shows.
- Dell is going to move to Solaris someday. Declared policy is that they're
- not going to phase out SVr4 until at least a year after their first *reliable*
- version of Solaris, in order to provide an upgrade path. However, there is
- some evidence that they're bailing out of 4.0 UNIX early; mainly, that it gets
- less and less play in the Dell catalog (the Spring '93 catalog didn't list a
- price) and Dell employees have been notably evasive on the subject of Dell
- UNIX's future.
- Dell employees have unofficially said that they are working on a new release
- (due shortly), called 2.2.1. It is a major bug fix release. Many bugs that
- were introduced by the gcc-2.1 compiler that was used in 2.2 are now gone, as
- 2.2.1 will be compiled with gcc-2.3.3 (or maybe later). This release
- supposedly fixes the "who -r" malloc overrun problem, the inetd bug with long
- /etc/passwd files and others as well.
-
- TECHNICAL NOTES:
- The big plus in the Dell code is that they've fixed a lot of the annoying
- bugs and glitches present in the stock USL tape.
- The installation procedure has been improved and simplified. You can
- install Dell UNIX through your network from another Dell box once you've booted
- the hardware with a special disk provided.
- Both benchmarks and anecdotal reports make them significantly faster than a
- stock USL system. Interestingly, Dell's manager for UNIX development tells me
- this is all due to bug fixes and careful choices of some OS parameters.
- A source at Dell has asked me to point out that Dell's SLIP can be
- set up, configured, and stopped while UNIX is running; some other
- versions (such as SCO's) require a reboot.
- Dell device drivers are *very* unlikely to work on other SVR4 versions.
- Dell includes some kernel extensions (not required, so other SVR4 device
- drivers should work) to make life in support a little easier. A program
- called showcfg will list all recognised device drivers and the IRQ,
- I/O address, shared memory and so on. The device driver has to register
- this info. Dell has told USL how to do this, it's up to them when or even
- if they want to use this in a future release.
- Dell device drivers are also auto configuring, for the most part. Check out
- /etc/conf/sdevice.d/* and see how most of the devices are enabled, but with
- zeroes in all fields for IRQ, I/O and memory. Those are autoconfiguring
- drivers. Dell thinks that this makes life much easier; you only need to set
- one of the configurations that they probe for! The device registration helps
- this, by eliminating possible overlapping memory or I/O address usage. (On the
- other hand, idconfig(1) is no longer helpful, when I/O, IRQ and mem are all
- zero). The 2.2 release adds a utility `setcfg' which can be used to remove
- unneeded drivers, shrinking the kernel.
- Dell UNIX also has drivers for the Dell SmartVu found on some machines (a
- little four character LED display on the front panel). By default this shows
- POST values, then disk accesses, finally "UNIX" when running and "DOWN" when
- halted. You can write to the device.
- Dell's SCSI tape driver includes ioctls to control whether hardware
- compression is used.
- Some Dell systems have a reset button. On the Laptops these are wired
- directly to the CPU. On the desktop and floor-standing systems Dell UNIX can
- catch the interrupt; it's used to do a graceful (init 0) shutdown. Other
- UNIXes will do a processor reset when the button is pushed.
- About 95% of 2.2 was built using GNU cc for a significant performance
- improvement over pcc.
- Yes, you *can* get rid of the obnoxious copyright notices emitted by
- the kernel and login(1). The Dell distribution provides a binary editor
- called fm which is really easy to use. To quiet down the boot sequence,
- fm /etc/conf/pack.d/kernel/os.o (after making a copy of it in case you
- foo up!) and look near address 0x1ee0b. The hex dump at that point should
- look like 1b 5b 31; this is the beginning of the foreground color change that
- makes the `X/Open XPG3' boot message blue. Patch a 00 into that spot and
- rebuild the kernel with idbuild. The login change is easier; fm /bin/login
- (again, making a copy in case you foo up!) and patch 00 on top of the `C' at
- 0x7b69 that begins the word `Copyright'. If you don't know what to do to
- recover from a trashed kernel or login utility, best you forget you ever read
- the above.
-
- KNOWN BUGS:
- Performance monitoring of uucp transfers doesn't work. Creating
- /var/spool/uucp/.Admin/perflog results in uucico logging statistics to the file
- correctly. However, using uustat -tsysname results in either a memory error or
- you just being returned to the shell with no output. This bug is known to
- Dell and being worked on now. It's still broken in 2.2.
- Merge is seriously buggy in many areas. It takes ages to start up in an
- xterm and then sometimes crashes in the process. Attempting to use its
- simulated expanded memory results in the system becoming slowly corrupted which
- later results in virtual terminals disappearing and the system gradually
- locking up. Really fun stuff! And it can only cope with 1.44M discs. These
- are generic Merge problems, not really Dell's but Locus's fault.
- There are some dropped stitches in the supplied USENET tools. The supplied
- perl binary is broken, and core-dumps on some fairly simple scripts. The nntp
- server has been compiled for a dbm history file while c-news has been compiled
- for dbz. With nntpd this only shows on the ARTICLE <message-id> command which
- either returns that the article with that id can't be found or crashes the
- server. Also, they forgot to include the nntpd manual page or nntpxfer.
- Dell's device driver autoconfiguration doesn't properly set up the
- mouse port on the ATI Graphics Ultra card (the Dell mmse driver has
- its IRQ hardwired to 5, contrary to what the manual says; the Ultra
- wants to use IRQ 2). You need to either remove all other mouse
- drivers or use the DOS install program to manually force the card's mouse IRQ
- to 5.
- Dell's drivers don't recognize a Western Digital Elite series ethernet
- boards hard or soft configured to use IRQ10. Other IRQs work OK.
- Out of the box, Dell's mail system is configured to use sendmail. The
- changes necessary to re-enable the SVr4 mailer are not obvious; in particular,
- /bin/rmail apparently needs to be linked back to /bin/mail, rather than
- /usr/ucb/binrmail. Also, /etc/mail/mailsurr needs to link back to
- /etc/mail/mailsurr.smtpd rather than /var/sendmail/mailsurr, and links
- /etc/rc2.d/S88smptd and /etc/rc0.d/K88smptd need to be created to
- /etc/init.d/smptd. Your editor's advice? Bag both and bring up smail 3.0.
- Dial-up SLIP does not lock the serial port correctly. When slipdialup starts
- up, it sets a lock in /var/spool/locks containing its process id. Once the
- connection has been successfully made, slipdialout then terminates. Any process
- with access to the port, such as ttymon, will then examine the lock file, see
- that the process no longer exists and remove the lock file. The slip connection
- will then fail to work, with slip and ttymon fighting over incoming
- characters.
-
- KNOWN NON-BUGS:
- Netters have reported that Dell's serial comm port cannot be made to work
- bidirectionally, neither with uugetty nor ttymon. This was reported
- by Bob Kirpatrick <bobk@dogear.spk.we.us> after systematic testing
- with the aid of Dell's support staff, and confirmed by Karl Denninger
- <karl@genesis.mcs.com>. Karl says "The only solution I have ever seen is
- to install something like SAS...the base ttyxx drivers are hosed, have been
- hosed, and continue to be hosed in this release." SAS is a freeware tty
- driver available for FTP from world.std.com in pub/kwc/sas-1.25.tar.Z.
- Your editor has discovered differently. Here's the recipe to
- direct connect a Dell box to another machine: Use uugetty -r -t60 *on
- a ttyXXh device*, then make sure your Devices file refers to
- ttyXXh,M.
-
- HARDWARE COMPATIBILITY:
- Dell doesn't maintain a list of non-Dell motherboards and systems known to
- work. And they're not willing to talk about the list they don't maintain,
- because it would amount to endorsing someone else's hardware.
- Dell promises that you can bring its UNIX up on any Dell desktop or tower
- featuring a 386SX or up (it's hard to get the product on to the notebooks).
- Notebooks can't drive a QIC tape and there aren't drivers for the pocket
- Ethernet or token-ring adapter.
- Andrew Michael <Andrew.Michael@brunel.ac.uk> says "If you're buying Dell
- UNIX for non-Dell hardware, first try booting the Dell floppy on it. From
- experience, some BIOS ROMs cause Dell SVR4 to lock up at the point where it
- tries to talk to the hard disk. If it gets to the point where it asks you
- whether you want to install or not you can be pretty sure that all is well. An
- AMI or Phoenix BIOS is OK; be careful of anything else."
- See the appendix for more.
-
- COMMENTS:
- Dell sells hardware, too :-). They are, in fact, one of the most successful
- clonemakers, and will cheerfully sell you a Dell computer with SVr4 pre-
- installed. Their systems are expensive by cloner standards (with as much as a
- $1000 premium over rock-bottom street prices) but they have a rep for quality
- and reliability their competition would probably kill for.
- You can get Dell product information by sending an email request to
- info@dell.com.
-
- WHAT THE USERS SAY:
- Most people who've seen or used it seem to think pretty highly of the
- Dell product, in spite of minor problems. However, recently there have been
- a few glaring exceptions, suggesting that Dell's support quality may be
- falling off.
- A user in England observes: "Dell is the only firm that I found supplying
- Unix at the real monetary exchange rate, not the usual computer pounds=dollars
- nonsense. In the UK the 2 user version costs 699 pounds, which is pretty close
- to the US price in dollars. For those of us who don't live on the left-hand
- side of the pond (there are a few of us!) that's a distinct advantage." He
- adds "Dell's UK support is pretty good. Not as good as Sun, but then you don't
- pay as much! From previous experience, SCO support in the UK is, well, pretty
- non-existent."
- Robert L. Holder <holder@flash.telesoft.com> writes "I found [the 30-day
- money-back guarantee, no questions asked] to be not true for the Dell product.
- I called them last month to place an order for Dell Unix. I did have some
- concerns so I asked about what money back guarantee they offered. I was told
- that they had a 30 day money back offer on Dell "hardware" but the Dell Unix
- product was not included. I used the 800 DELL number and spoke to a sales rep.
- In fact he left me on hold several times to confirm the story with the Dell
- Unix product." Perhaps there's been a policy change since Jeremy Chatfield's
- departure --- I'll have to check this out.
- And Christopher Perez <chris@triage.rain.com> was moved to write: "Dell's
- support sucks. Big time. In each and every time I called with a problem, I
- ended up solving the problem myself. Everyone I spoke with had the same story:
- `I've never heard of that one...'". He tells a horror story involving
- three months of network and UUCP configuration problems, with essentially no
- help from support. Dell would be wise to worry about this.
-
- REVIEWER'S IMPRESSIONS:
- Dell was until recently the clear market leader in SVr4s. The combination
- of low price, highest added value in features, and reputation for quality made
- them very hard to beat.
- However, they say they have no plans to move their source base to 4.2. Thus,
- they're at some risk of losing their lead to IF and Univel, especially since
- they lost Jeremy Chatfield (their former UNIX program manager) to IF.
- Dell denies rumors they are bailing out of the 4.0 market. Rumor had it
- that they've cut their support staff and that Dell UNIX wasn't going to be
- listed in Dell's Spring '93 catalog. Dell's UNIX program manager says that the
- omission of Dell Unix from the Fall catalog was a last-minute maneuver to make
- space for other software Dell marketing wanted to add, that it was a surprise
- to the UNIX group, and that Dell UNIX *would* be listed in the Spring catalog.
- She also claims first-line UNIX support staff has recently been *increased*.
- UNIX was listed, but with no price. And it appears that the UNIX support
- group has dispersed, with their most experienced people leaving the company.
- First-line UNIX support is now being handled by the "Networking Support" group,
- which isn't very clueful about UNIX.
- All the signs are that Dell is preparing to abandon its 4.0 product. Thus,
- I can no longer recommend Dell UNIX as a purchase.
-
- NAME:
- ESIX System V Release 4.0.4
-
- VENDOR
- Esix Systems, Inc.
- 100 Chaparral Court
- Suite 260
- Anaheim CA 92808
- (714)-998-9600
- support@esix.com
- info@esix.com
-
- ADD-ONS:
- None.
-
- SOFTWARE OPTIONS:
- ESIX can be bought in the following pieces:
- Unlim 2-user
- ITEM CD-ROM Tape Floppy
-
- Base system (+networking+devsys) 995 1095 1195
- GUI 495 595
-
- Note that the base system without networking cannot be upgraded to the
- base system with networking; you'd have to replace at full cost.
-
- SUPPORT:
- Purchase buys you unlimited free phone support. However, be warned that
- there are only two engineers assigned to the job and they are swamped.
- Patches are available via anonymous ftp to esix.everex.com.
-
- HARDWARE COMPATIBILITY:
- See the appendix for details. ESIX supports an unusually wide
- range of peripherals.
- They advertise support for the Textronix X terminal.
- No one has reported any incompatibility horror stories yet.
-
- KNOWN BUGS:
- According to Esix, this port uses the stock USL 4.0.3 libraries. Thus it
- must have the known bug with sigvec() and may have the rumored bug in the BSD-
- compatibility string functions.
- James D. Cronin <jdc@tropel.gca.com> writes: When developing X applications
- under Esix, watch out for mmap(2) failure. This is caused by an incorrect
- version of mmap() defined in libX11.a and libX11.so. This bug existed in Esix
- 4.0.3, and continues in 4.0.4 and the recently shipped Xwindow bug fix it
- (which seems to have more bugs than the original version). One workaround is
- to remove the offending file, XSysV.o, from libX11.a and link with the Bstatic
- option.
- In 4.0.3 there is a bug in the sc01 driver used for CD-ROMs that
- causes kernel panics. The fix is to upgrade to the 4.0.4 driver, which
- is most easily accomplished by upgrading to a 4.0.4 system.
-
- COMMENTS:
- Unlimited free support sounds wonderful, and might be ESIX's strongest
- selling point. However, ESIX users on the net have been heard to gripe that in
- practice, you get the support you've paid for from Esix --- that is, none.
- That isn't at all surprising given Esix's staffing level. If this guarantee is
- to be more than a hollow promise, their technical support has to get more
- depth.
- Evan Leibovich <evan@telly.on.ca> is a long-time netter who makes his living
- as a consultant and owns an Esix dealership (he now does Univel too). He says
- you can get ESIX at a substantial discount from him or other dealers, also that
- dealers are supposed to do first-line support for their customers (which he
- does, but admits other dealers often fail to). Evan is obviously devoted to
- the product and probably the right guy to email first if you think you'd be
- interested in it.
-
- WHAT THE USERS SAY:
- Ron Mackey <rem@dsiinc.com> writes "In general, we are pleased with ESIX.
- We still have problems driving the serial ports at speeds greater than 9600
- baud. We also still see occasional PANICs. These appear to be related to
- problems with the virtual terminal manager." This may be the generic USL asy
- problem again.
- William W. Austin <uunet!baustin!bill> writes "The support from Esix seems
- to be usable if (a) you are a hacker, (b) you know unix (sVr4 internals help a
- lot), and (c) you get past the sales guy who answers the help line (Jeff
- [Ellis] is *very* helpful). If I were a computer-semi-literate, commercial
- user who only wanted his printer to work, etc., I might be up a creek for some
- problems (no drivers for some boards, no support for mouse tablets, etc., but
- that's what VARs are for). All in all, the support is at least a little better
- than what I expected for free -- in many cases it is *far* better than the
- support I got from $CO (is SCO really owned by Ebenezer Scrooge?)"
- [Note: Jeff Ellis has since left.]
- A longer appreciation from Ed Hall <edhall@rand.org>: "I had a problem with
- the ESIX X server. I got through to technical support immediately, and was
- promised a fix disk. The guy on the phone was actually able to chat with on of
- the developers to check to see if the disk would solve the problem. The disk
- came four days later."
- "On the other hand," he continues, "I get the feeling that ESIX has only
- made a mediocre effort to shake out the bugs before releasing their system-- or
- even their fixes. For example, they `repaired' their X server, but the new
- server only ran as root (it made some privileged calls to enable I/O
- ports)--they quickly had to release a second update to fix this new problem.
- They obviously fixed a lot of things in the new server, and performance is
- improved quite a bit as well, but the stupid error they made in the first
- "fixed" version should have been found with only the most minimal of testing."
- "They've done some work on the serial driver, but there are still some
- glitches (occasional dropped characters on a busy system at 38400bps, and a
- real doozy of a problem--a system panic--when doing simultaneous opens and
- ioctl's on a tty0xh and ttyM0xh device. This latter problem was due to my
- using the M0xh and 0xh devices improperly, but panics are inexcusable. No idea
- if this is a SYSVR4 problem or due to their fixes.)"
- "So my impressions of them are mixed. Perhaps I just lucked out in geting
- such rapid response on my support call, but I was impressed by it nonetheless.
- On the other hand, their QA needs work..."
-
- REVIEWER'S IMPRESSIONS:
- Esix changed owners in early '93. Their parent company, Everex,
- went chapter 11. The Esix division was sold, intact, to James River
- (makers of the ICE UNIX-to-DOS bridge).
- James Hillegass, president/owner of James River, has told me that the
- new Esix is going to stress reliability and wide hardware support.
- Evan Leibovich writes: "What distinguishes Esix, at this time, is its
- reliance on VARs and resellers. Its newest brochures even say "for VARs only"
- (though these will be redone soon). Esix has benefitted by a decent VAR network
- which has not only given it a better route to end-users than the Dell or
- Consensys direct route. Also, these dealers and VARs have provided Esix with a
- handle on the marketplace that (I believe) many of the other vendors lack. Esix
- is no better, and no worse, than those in the field who sell, install and
- support it."
-
- NAME
- Information Foundation System V Release 4.2
-
- VENDOR:
- Information Foundation
- One Tabor Center, 1200 17th Street, Suite 1900
- Denver, CO 80202
- Phone: 1-(800)-GET-UNIX (sales)
- sales@if.com (sales)
- support@if.com (tech support)
-
- SOFTWARE OPTIONS:
- Here is the most recent IF module price list:
-
- FS-TAPE Enhanced UNIX Desktop TAPE & DOCS $299
- FS-DISK DISKETTE & DOCS $399
- FS-LICN LICENSE ONLY $249
-
- MS-TAPE Extended Multi User TAPE $390
- MS-DISK Module DISKETTE $365
- MS-DOCS DOCUMENTATION $130
-
- NS-TAPE Networking Module TAPE $250
- NS-DISK DISKETTE $250
- NS-DOCS DOCUMENTATION $25
-
- CS-TAPE C Development Module TAPE $335
- CS-DISK DISKETTE $300
- CS-DOCS DOCUMENTATION $155
-
- GS-TAPE GUI Development Module TAPE $995
- GS-DISK DISKETTE $1,095
- GS-DOCS DOCUMENTATION $200
-
- C2-DISK C2 Security Module DISKETTE & DOC $149
-
- SUPPORT:
- Bug reports are accepted from any customer, at any time.
- 90 days installation support; call (800)-284-UNIX.
- They will have patches available on an FTP server, a BBS, and via UUCP.
- Send in your registration card to get `passive support' (email notification
- of bugs & fixes, BBS, UUCP & FTP access to patches. There's also `active'
- (phone) support, priced per annum depending on your configuration or on a
- per-site basis. IF says it will happily work out custom support plans for
- large customers.
-
- FUTURE PLANS:
- They plan to have 20 support engineers by the end of '93.
- Sometime in '93, a tasty selection of PD software (probably rather
- resembling Dell's selections) will be appended to the distribution tape.
-
- HARDWARE COMPATIBILITY:
- They've promised to email me a list of hardware known to work, which
- will appear in a future posting.
-
- KNOWN BUGS:
- Incorrect font handling in some help system titles.
-
- WHAT THE USERS SAY:
- I haven't received any users yet.
-
- REVIEWER'S IMPRESSIONS:
- It's early days yet, but it looks to me like these guys are for real ans
- will give Univel some serious competition. They're behaving like they want to
- lead the SVr4.2 market; they're one of only two outfits with both source and
- USL Master Binary licences (the other is Univel). Hiring Jeremy Chatfield away
- from Dell was a smart move --- expect to see the successful elements of Dell
- UNIX's formula repeated here.
-
- NAME:
- Univel UnixWare Release 4.2
-
- VENDOR:
- Univel
- 2180 Fortune Drive
- San Jose, CA 95131
- (800)-4-UNIVEL
-
- SOFTWARE OPTIONS:
- The package comes in two versions; the Personal Edition is a
- limited-user workstation platform, with only Netware networking support
- bundled (TCP/IP is an option). Another add-on called Personal Utilities
- adds unlimited user capabilities, BSD compatability, and additional font
- support and demonstration applications.
-
- The Applications Server is an unlimited-user version which includes
- all of the above packages plus extra server facilities; TCP/IP and NFS is
- bundled.
-
- They offer a special bundle for developers for $695. Ask for details.
-
- ADD-ONS:
- The Development system is sold separately from the base system, and
- can work on either the Personal Edition or Application Server. Add-ons
- for the development system include the Motif API and a device driver
- development package.
- An encryption package provides kernel-level support for secure NFS and
- other DES encryption facilities.
-
- KNOWN BUGS:
- As yet, there are no known bugs specific to the Univel port. Some
- bugs generic to all SysVr4.2s are described in the companion usl-bugs
- posting.
-
- NAME
- MST UNIX
-
- VENDOR:
- Micro Station Technology, Inc.
- 1140 Kentwood Ave.
- Cupertino, CA. 95014
- (408)-253-3898
- sales@mst.com (product info & orders)
- cs@mst.com (support)
-
- ADD-ONS:
- None.
-
- SOFTWARE OPTIONS:
- C Development System
- Networking
- X11R4 and X11R3
- Motif
- Open Look
-
- SUPPORT:
- 30 days of support free with purchase.
- 1 year of fax/email support is $299, 1 year of phone support is $599.
-
- FUTURE PLANS:
- They expect to upgrade to Motif 1.2 and X11R5 Summer '93XS. No plans for
- 4.0.4 yet.
-
- HARDWARE COMPATIBILITY:
- They decline to release information on hardware known *not* to work
- for fear of offending vendors.
-
- KNOWN BUGS:
- This port probably uses the stock USL 4.0.3 libraries. Thus it probably
- has the known bug with sigvec() and may have the rumored bug in the BSD-
- compatibility string functions.
- The DOS support is only 2.0-compatible (< 32-meg DOS partitions).
-
- COMMENTS:
- Another outfit offering stock USL real cheap. They were actually the first
- to try this (in Fall '91) and were the price leader until Consensys blew past
- them.
- These guys really want to sell you preinstalled UNIX on their clone
- hardware. Configurations range from $1349 to $5599 and look like pretty
- good value.
-
- WHAT THE USERS SAY:
- I have one experience report from Ray Hill, <hill@ghola.nicolet.com>, who's
- been running MST on a 486 for a month or so. He says it works; elm, cnews, and
- trn are up, so standard UNIX sources compile up and work fine. His only
- criticism is the relative skimpiness of the printed docs.
- Harlan Stockman <hwstock@snll-arpagw.llnl.gov> writes "MST has been very
- helpful at every step of the way; phone and e-mail support have been timely."
- Geoffrey Leach <geoff@ibmpa.awdpa.ibm.com> warns that some of the files
- (specifically, socket library headers) necessary to build X11R5 are bundled in
- the networking option --- this may meen you have to buy it even if you don't
- actually intend to network any machines.
-
- REVIEWER'S IMPRESSIONS:
- Anyone who's been to a hobbyist computer expo in the last five years knows
- that the low-price clone-hardware market is full of small, hungry companies run
- by immigrants, often family businesses. Their English is sometimes a little
- shaky but (in my experience) they're honest and their product is good, and
- their prices are *real* aggressive.
- MST seems to be one of these outfits. Since Consensys ended their promo
- MST is now the low-price leader in this market.
-
-
- NAME:
- Microport System V Release 4.0 version 4
-
- VENDOR:
- Microport, Inc.
- 108 Whispering Pines Drive
- Scotts Valley, CA 95066
- (800)-367-8649
- sales@mport.com (sales and product info)
- support@mport.com (support)
-
- SOFTWARE OPTIONS:
- Networking (TCP/IP, NFS)
- Software Development
- User Graphics Module (X GUIs)
- Graphics Development Module (X toolkits + man pages).
- DOS Merge
-
- ADD-ONS:
- A few freeware utilities are included, notably kermit(1) and less(1).
- They include a single-user copy of a program called `JSB MultiView'. It's a
- character-oriented desktop program that front-ends conventional UNIX services
- for character terminals and also provides a calendar service and
- pop-up phone-book. It's something like a character-oriented X windows; each
- on-screen window looks like a terminal to the application.
-
- SUPPORT:
- The base price includes printed docs. This is effectively the same content
- as the Prentice-Hall SVr4 books; both are troffed off the SVr4 source tapes.
- They have been very lightly edited for the Microport environment.
- The base price includes 30 days or 1 year of phone support respectively
- depending on whether you bought the base or complete system. Support is
- said to be excellent for serious problems, not so good for minor ones (this
- is understandable if one assumes their support staff is very good but
- overworked, a hypothesis which is plausible on other evidence).
- They have a support BBS at (408)-438-7270 or 438-7521. However, the level
- of activity is low; one customer said (late February 1992) that they hadn't put
- anything useful on it in six months (Microport responds that they've been too
- busy hammering on r4 to spend lots of energy on it).
-
- FUTURE PLANS:
- DOS Merge will be folded into the system soon.
- Microport believes they have a lead in multiprocessing SVr4 UNIX and intend
- to push it.
- File-system support for CD-ROMs is coming.
-
- HARDWARE COMPATIBILITY:
- See the appendix for details.
- Math co-processors: Cyrix 20/25/33, Intel 80387 20/25/33, Weitek.
- No one has reported any incompatibility horror stories yet. Bernoulli boxes
- and Irwin tapes won't fly, but who cares.
-
- TECHNICAL NOTES:
- When I asked what differentiates Microport from the other SVr4 products,
- the answer I got is "performance". The Microport people feel they've put
- a lot of successful work into kernel tuning.
- And, indeed, benchmarks from independent sources show that Microport's
- fork(2) operation is quite fast. Other vendors show about 60 forks per
- second on the AIM Technologies SUITE II benchmarks; Microport cranks 80.
- This is the most dramatic performance difference the AIM tools reveal
- among any of these products. Microport's other benchmark statistics
- are closely comparable to those of its competitors.
- Microport also offers a multiprocessing SVr4 which will run on the
- Compaq SystemPro, the ALR PowerPro, the DEC 433MP, and the Chips &
- Technologies Mpax system.
- Microport has moved the socket headers and libraries necessary to build X
- out of the networking option package into the development system, so you
- don't have to buy an extra module to hack X.
-
- KNOWN BUGS:
- According to Microport, this port uses the stock USL 4.0.4 libraries. Thus
- it must have the known bug with sigvec() and may have the rumored bug in the
- BSD-compatibility string functions.
- David Wexelblat reports that "Microport's enhanced asy driver does not work
- correctly (or at all) for hardware flow control - you can't open the ttyXXh
- devices under any circumstances. This was true in 3.1, and is still true in
- 4.1. The good news is that SAS (Streams-FAS) works fine for modems. But SAS
- won't work with the USL serial mouse driver. So I've got asy on my mouse port
- and SAS on the other one on my dumb-card. [...] Microport is still prone to
- silly errors. The Motif development system, which is described in the release
- notes as being included with the Motif runtime system in the 'complete'
- package, is in fact missing from the tape. They have it available seperately,
- but I had to call them to get it. The 'pixed' application for X.desktop 3.0 is
- compiled with shared libraries that are not included with the release. Hence
- it does not work. I had to call them about this, too."
-
- COMMENTS:
- These people sold a lot of shrink-wrapped UNIXes years ago before going
- chapter 11. They're back, leaner and meaner (with a total staff of just
- 15).
- Microport says it's primarily interested in the systems-integration market,
- where customers are typically going to be volume buyers qualifying for deep
- discounts. Thus, they're relatively undisturbed by the certainty that their
- high price point is losing them sales to individuals.
-
- WHAT THE USERS SAY:
- I've received one good comprehensive experience report, largely favorable,
- from David Wexelblat <dwex@mtgzfs3.att.com>.
-
- REVIEWER'S IMPRESSIONS:
- Microport is a small, hungry outfit with a lot to prove; they've already
- gone bust once (I was a customer at the time :-() and they haven't yet
- demonstrated that they've got a better strategy this time out.
- They're perhaps a mite too expensive for the support quality they can offer
- with less than fifteen people, and kernel-tuning isn't going to win them a
- following on hardware that every year swamps those tweaks with huge increases
- in speed for constant dollars.
- And, like UHC, they have techies answering the phones and the techies have a
- clue. This certainly improves them as a bet for wizards and developers. If
- multiprocessing is important to you, and/or you're looking for a small outfit
- where you can develop personal working relationships with the tech people who
- matter, Microport might be a good way to go.
-
-
- NAME:
- UHC Version 3.6
-
- VENDOR:
- UHC Corp.
- 3600 S. Gessner
- Suite 110
- Houston, TX 77063
- (713)-782-2700
- support@uhc.com
-
- SOFTWARE OPTIONS:
- Networking package (TCP/IP).
- X + Motif
- X + Open Look
-
- ADD-ONS:
- None reported.
-
- SUPPORT:
- The base price includes printed docs. This is effectively the same content
- as the Prentice-Hall SVr4 books; both are troffed off the SVr4 source tapes.
- 30 days free phone support with purchase.
- All their engineers take tech-support calls for part of their day.
- They have 2 doing it full-time. The product manager is a techie himself
- and takes his share of calls.
- A support contract costs $1195 for one year. This includes 75% off
- on all upgrades.
- They are in the process of bringing up a BBS with a window into their
- bug report and fix/workaround database.
- It was emphasized to me that UHC wants to be known for the quality of
- their support, which they feel is the product's strongest differentiating
- feature.
-
- FUTURE PLANS:
- X11R5 by mid-May or thereabouts. They have it running now but don't
- consider it stable enough to ship.
-
- HARDWARE COMPATIBILITY:
- See the appendix for details.
- The asy driver in version 2.0 won't talk to the NS16550AFN UART, which
- is supposed to be pin-compatible with the standard 16450.
-
- KNOWN BUGS:
- This port probably uses the stock USL 4.0.3 libraries. Thus it probably
- has the known bug with sigvec() and may have the rumored bug in the BSD-
- compatibility string functions.
-
- COMMENTS:
- They claim that according to USL they have the largest installed base of
- SVr4 customers, and to have been first to market with a shrink-wrapped
- SVr4 (in 1990).
- UHC also claims to have performed and maintained IBM's official UNIX port
- for the MicroChannel machines.
- A subsidiary of Anam, "a holding company with a diversified portfolio".
- UHC now also sells and supports Univel UnixWare. They say their policy
- will be to continue sales and support of both UHC UNIX and UnixWare, as they
- feel the products are apprpriate for different markets.
-
- WHAT THE USERS SAY:
- The only comment I've yet seen on the UHC OS was an extended description of
- a successful installation by a satisfied netter. He made it sound like a good
- solid product.
- I have one absolutely incandescently glowing report on UHC support from a
- developer named Steve Showalter <shwasl@Texaco.COM>. He says: "We've been
- running UHC's OS for about a year now...been EXTREMELY happy with it. The
- support we receive is without a doubt, the finest we have received from any
- vendor."
- Duke Smith (c/o somesh@watson.bm.com) writes: "Another absolutely
- incandescently glowing report on UHC support: I called the Programmer's Shop
- about UHC & wound up talking to UHC tech support to find out if the sucker
- would run on my machine. The guy took considerable time to explain all the
- different things that might be causing the problem, and emphasized that the
- same hardware problems which were probably causing Consensys not to run would
- also hose UHC. This led me to contact ALR tech support (also a glower) who took
- all of 1-1/2 days (not including shipping) to do the necessary upgrades, on
- warranty because apparently their ads that it will run Unix are covered by
- warranty. The glowing thing about UHC is, the guy helped me get a competitor's
- port working, and I told him he was gonna get in dutch with the marketroids and
- his response was that maybe I would remember them the next time I or someone I
- knew needed a system. He's right. I'll use Consensys until I can afford
- something better for my own system (it's still better than DOS...), but from
- now on my clients will get pointed toward UHC, not Consensys, whose
- absent-parent attitude is going to keep them from ever becoming anything but
- the destitute hacker's Unix vendor."
- On the other hand, William G. Bunton <wgb@succubus.tnt.com>: "So, I give a
- thumbs up for the product. I give a thumbs down for the company, and it's
- enough that I'm taking my future business elsewhere." He tells a horror story
- about the 2.0 version involving a three-month runaround, a letter to their VP
- of marketing, and lots of broken promises. Apparently UHC does sometimes drop
- the ball.
- This is reinforced by Darryl V. McDaniel: "Based upon conversations with UHC
- and other people with UHC 4.0.3.6, UHC has a severe problem with revision
- control. Just because two customers have 4.0.3.6, doesn't mean that they all
- have the same version. It appears that UHC doesn't even know what they are
- shipping." The best evidence he gives is that he's never seen the mouse-
- middle-button problem which others (including your humble editor) have
- reported.
- He also says: "Man pages have wrong section numbers, confusion between
- compatibility package (SVR4, BSD, XENIX), etc. Man pages from DDDK overlay man
- pages of same root name. UHC acknowledges that this is their bug."
-
- REVIEWER'S IMPRESSIONS:
- I found both the people I talked to friendly, candid, technically
- knowledgeable, and willing to answer sticky questions. I came away with a very
- positive impression of the outfit's operating style.
- There are experienced UNIX developers who value dealing with a small,
- responsive outfit where they can develop good working relationships with
- individuals. UHC says it likes to sell to wizards and might be a good choice
- for these people.
-
-
- NAME:
- BSD/386
-
- VENDOR:
- Berkeley Software Design, Inc.
- 3110 Fairview Park Drive, Suite 580
- Falls Church, VA 22042 USA
- (800)-800-4BSD -- info & orders
- 703 204 8086 - Information/vox
- 703 204 8087 - Information/fax
- (719)-593-9445 - Rob Kolstad in Colorado Springs
- bsdi-info@bsdi.com
-
- SOFTWARE OPTIONS:
- None. You get an unlimited user license, binaries *and sources* for the
- entire system (this includes X11R5 and full BSD networking sources with both
- Internet and GOSIP OSI protocol stacks). What more could you want?
- Note that BSDI sells ``binary right to use licenses'' -- for
- additional binaries at your site for $200. Likewise, if you're a 3rd
- party software dude looking for a delivery platform, redistribution of
- binaries for turnkey systems starts at $200. Quantity discounts are
- available for both these schemes.
-
- SUPPORT:
- The purchase price include 60 days of phone support.
- A telephone-support contract is $595 per year; email-only support
- is $295/year; upgrade only is $195/year (+$50 each for QIC-tape
- installations, as opposed to CD-ROM). Alternatively, you can buy
- phone support at $20 per 12 minutes.
- There is a support email list.
-
- FUTURE PLANS:
- Capability to run SVr3.2 binaries (including SCO binaries) in 1993.
- Rob Kolstad sez: "We're pleased to be shipping V1.0 for BSD/386".
- Both AT&T's injunction request and its request for reconsider were
- both denied."
-
- HARDWARE COMPATIBILITY:
- See the appendix for details. New drivers are being added all the time.
- Most multiport serial boards aren't supported (they're working on it).
- BSD/386 supports the RISCOM/8 multiport serial card (SDL: 508-559-9005) and
- includes a driver for the MAXPEED serial cards.
-
- TECHNICAL NOTES:
- This version is *not* based even in part on USL code and has no AT&T or USL
- license restrictions. Rather, it derives from Berkeley UNIX (the CSRG
- Networking 2 release, somewhere between 4.3 and 4.4).
- Many of the BSD/386 tools, including the compiler, are GNU code.
- This system's libraries, header files and utilities conform to X3J11, POSIX
- 1003.1 and POSIX 1003.2 standards. POSIX Certification is schedule for late
- 1993.
-
- WHAT THE USERS SAY:
- Guy Dawson <guyd@hoskyns.co.uk> writes: "I've been using BSD/386 since July
- 92 and an *REALLY* happy with it. The system is complete - a full development
- environment. Getting the system is a great win. It's easy to install the
- components you want and to add/remove components later. Mount the cd and copy
- the files from the CD. The CD distribution is in ISO9660 format with Rock Ridge
- extensions. BSD/386 will mount both standard ISO9660 CDs and those with RR
- extensions. Installing the system from a CD-ROM is easy. I followed the BSDI
- guide line when configuring the system h/w and had no problems. It was as easy
- as DOS or Windows. My system is made up of a cheap motherboard and I/O cards -
- except for the SCSI controller and video card ( Adaptec and Orchid ). There are
- also other cards used by DOS/Windows in the machine that BSD/386 does not know
- about and does not get tripped up by them. They also supply a boot manager so
- that you can run multiple OSs. My system currently boots off an IDE drvice
- which has a 109Mb DOS partition and a 11MB BSD/386 /root filesystem. When
- BSD/386 boots it mounts the rest of the operation system from a SCSI disk. I've
- also connected the system into TCP/IP networks and interoperated with Suns and
- a VAX runinng TCP/IP on VMS. The system also serves as an NFS server to Unix
- boxes and PCs running PC-TCP."
-
- REVIEWER'S IMPRESSIONS:
- I expect this will become a hackers' favorite.
- All this, and sources too...I salivate. I am tempted. Not sure I'm ready
- to change OSs at the same time as I switch machines, though. SVr4's got better
- continuity with the 3.2 I'm running now. Ghu, what a dilemma!
-
-
- NAME:
- Yggdrasil Linux/GNU/X (LGX)
-
- VENDOR:
- (Linux is a freeware product, with sources and kernel and dizzying
- combinations of add-ons available via FTP on Internet. This entry is based on
- the low-cost commercial LGX distribution from Yggdrasil, which adds GNU and
- Xfree86.)
-
- Yggdrasil Computing, Inc.
- Post Office Box 8418
- Berkeley, CA 94707-8418
- (510)-526-7531 vox
- (510)-528-8508 fax
- yggdrasil@netcom.com
-
- USENETter Adam J. Richter formed Yggdrasil Computing Inc. to distribute a
- Linux-based USL-free UNIX clone on CD-ROM. He writes "The alpha release has
- been shipping since December 8th [1992]. The beta release is shipping and the
- first production release should ship in late March." For more info, check out
- the anonymous FTP area in netcom.com:~ftp/pub/yggdrasil.
-
- SOFTWARE OPTIONS:
- The Yggdrasil base product is a CD-ROM including:
- * The Linux 0.99.4 and 0.99.5 kernels.
- * An installation script.
- * TCP/IP and XFree86 X11R5 support.
- * MPEG full-motion video player for X.
- * Ghostscript (GNU freeware PostScript interpreter/previewer).
- * TeX, groff (GNU freeware nroff clone).
- * Tcl, Tk and Wish for rapid prototyping.
- * GNU C, C++, gdb, f2c, bison, flex, make, emacs, elvis (vi clone).
- * System V shared memory and IPC.
- * BSD-like file system with flexnames, symbolic links and FIFOs.
- * An ISO9660 CD-ROM filesystem with Rock Ridge extensions.
- * a XENIX-compatible file system.
- * a DOS filesystem and DOS emulator.
- * kermit and Z-modem telecommunications.
- * Taylor UUCP 1.3.
- The production CD-ROM is planned to be $60.
-
- ADD-ONS:
- Yggdrasil has a policy of filling the unused space on the CD-ROM with with a
- "Chef's Surprise" assortment of goodies. On the beta release CD-ROM, this
- consists of the X11R5 contrib director plus the Andrew 5.1 GUI source tree.
- On the production release, it will probably be a dump of a major Linux
- archive site.
-
- SUPPORT:
- If you need to ask, don't use this software. Linux is user-supported
- freeware; the only way to get support is to watch the net (especially the
- comp.os.linux newsgroup) and track the frequent new releases from Linus
- Torvalds and friends. This os actually better support than a lot of
- vendors offer.
- If you want to get actively involved, join the linux-activists mailing list;
- to subscribe, mail to "linux-activists-request@niksula.hut.fi". Up-to-the
- minute info is also available by fingering torvalds@kruuna.helsinki.fi.
- Also, watch the Linux FAQ in news.answers.
- The command set is basically the GNU toolkit, so it's maintained by FSF.
-
- FUTURE PLANS:
- Linux is now in late beta. Linus Torvalds is concentrating on kernel
- development; many other people are working on tools. Future plans include
- improved TCP/IP (ftp, telnet), more tape drivers, a compressed file system, and
- the ability to run Xenix binaries.
-
- HARDWARE COMPATIBILITY:
- See the Appendix for details. Besides what's listed there, the Yggdrasil
- release includes support for:
- * Adlib, Sound Blaster, Sound Blaster Pro, Sound Blaster Pro 2,
- Thunderboard, ATI Sterio F/X, and Media Vision ProAudioSpectrum 16 sound
- cards, and for playing audio CD tracks. Other Media-Vision cards are
- not supported yet.
- * Sony CDU-31A non-SCSI CD-ROM.
-
- TECHNICAL NOTES:
- Complete sources for everything are included!
- Linux claims to be "mostly" POSIX, System V and BSD-conformant (with the
- emphasis on POSIX). POSIX job control is supported. The buzz is that it's
- pretty easy to port stuff from other UNIXes; this is supported by the presence
- of the GNU toolset and lots of other freeware.
- Linux's X is Xfree86 (see below).
- You can actually boot and run LGX using a supplied floppy and the CD,
- without touching your hard drive. This is useful for evaluating the system.
-
- COMMENTS:
- Linux seems now to be the leading freeware UNIX, having overtaken 386BSD by
- virtue of a very large and active development community. It's changing fast
- enough that this entry is likely to be chronically behind the facts.
-
- WHAT THE USERS SAY:
- Tune into comp.os.linux for lots of feedback.
- Andries Brouwer <aeb@cwi.nl> writes: "I bought a PC and 30 diskettes, ftp'ed
- the SLS distribution, booted and installed, and everything worked fine from the
- very first moment, with the single exception of Xfree 1.2 that didn't like my
- ET4000/W32 card. Two weeks later Xfree 1.3 came along, and now X works fine as
- well. (However, now I have to wrestle with SLIP - that code is very buggy.)
- In short: apart from the networking stuff: a very complete system, and
- everything for free." Note, however, that the SLS distribution isn't the same
- one as the LGX distribution this entry is based on.
-
- REVIEWER'S IMPRESSIONS:
- If the idea of a free UNIX collectively developed by the net turns you on,
- this is the system to get involved with.
-
- KNOWN BUGS:
- If you're using an Ultrastor 14F controller, you must hard-reset the machine
- when you reboot; otherwise it won't be detected.
- If you set your machine name to something longer than 14 characters, login
- will not work. This appears to be due to a C library bug.
- The S3 X server has problems reading the config files generated by the X
- configuration script. Some working S3 config files are included.
-
- NOTE:
- Other Linuxes are available, *with support*, from SLS (Soft Landing
- Software) and Cygnus. I know this, so please don't bug me about it
- unless you can provide enough info for another vendor entry.
-
-
- V. UPCOMING PORTS, FREEWARE VERSIONS, AND CLONES.
-
- There's a free X distribution that's worth checking out in lieu of the
- vendor-maintained ports. It's called XFree86, and it's a souped-up version of
- the 1.2 X386 server supported for SVr4, 386BSD and Linux. It supports the
- following chipsets:
-
- ET4000 (Tseng)
- ET3000 (Tseng)
- PVGA1 (Paradise)
- WD90Cxx (Western Digital - Paradise PVGA1 Supersets)
- GVGA (Genoa)
- TVGA8900C (Trident)
- ATI18800,28800 (ATI SVGA - not 8514!)
-
- The Xfree maintainers recommend ET4000-based boards, except for recent
- Diamond models (Diamond won't give them interfacing info). There is
- no support for S3, ATI 8514 or TIGA chipsets.
-
- Source patches based on X11R5 PL17, from MIT, are available via anonymous FTP
- from export.lcs.mit.edu (under /contrib/XFree86) and at various other sites;
- binaries for various OSs are also widely available (consult the archie service
- on Internet, using the search string "xfree" to find a site near you).
-
- XFree86 is known to work under all the commercial ports covered above except
- Consensys's 4.2 (which will be supported in Release 1.2); also under Linux and
- 386BSD. The maintainers believe it will fly on any ISA/EISA clone box running
- SVr4.
-
- Send email to David Wexelblat <dwex@mtgzfs3.att.com> or to
- xfree86@physics.su.oz.au for further information.
-
- There are three other commercial SVr4 UNIX ports on the market for which I do
- not yet have detailed information. I hope to cover them in future issues.
-
- Solaris 2.1:
- Sun's port for 386/486 machines, just released. I hope to add a full vendor
- report on this nextish.
-
- PromoX UNIX:
- This is said to be a bare-bones port by an outfit that mainly sells hardware.
- The price advertised is $649 for a complete 2-user + devtools system.
-
- PromoX Systems
- 1050 East Duane Avenue, Suite B
- Sunnyvale, CA 94086
-
- Tel: (408) 733-2966
- Email: promox@cup.portal.com
-
- SORIX:
- This is a SVR4 UNIX port enhanced for real-time work, offered by Siemens AG.
-
- Siemens AG
- AUT 189
- Gleiwitzerstr. 555
- 8500 Nuremberg 1
-
- Tel: 0911/895-2203
-
- I don't yet know if this version is going to be sold in the US. In the info
- I have, prices are quoted in Deutschmarks.
-
- NeXTSTEP 486:
- NeXT has a 486 port of the NeXT environment scheduled for beta release in
- 4th quarter '92.
-
- There are some freeware alternative UNIXes available for the 386/486. None of
- these are yet complete and mature hacking environments, but they show promise
- (and require much less in minimum hardware to run). They are:
-
- 386BSD:
- Under development by Bill & Lynne Jolitz & friends (this is the same 386BSD
- project described in Dr. Dobbs' Journal some time back). This OS is based on
- the NET/2 tape from Berkeley, resembling the commercial BSD/386 release
- described above, and like it is distributed with full source. The aim is to
- produce a full POSIX-compliant freeware BSD UNIX. Version 0.1 is now out,
- including FP emulation, SCSI support, coexistence with DOS, and many more new
- features. Passwording has to be acquired separately due to US export
- regulations, but the system is otherwise fairly complete; I have seen it run.
- There's a lot of traffic in comp.os.386bsd about this project.
-
- Hurd:
- This is the long-awaited and semi-mythical GNU kernel. It's being worked on
- by the Free Software Foundation (the people who brought you emacs, gcc, gdb and
- the rest of the GNU tool suite) but it's not ready for prime time yet. It's
- said to be a set of processes layered over a Mach 3.0 kernel. The 386BSD and
- Linux developments both lean heavily on GNU tools.
-
- There is one other not-quite-freeware (cheapware?) product that deserves a
- mention:
-
- Minix:
- This is a roughly V7-compatible UNIX clone for Intel boxes, sold
- with source by Prentice-Hall for $169 (there's an associated book for
- a few bucks more). It's really designed to run in 16-bit mode on 8086
- and 286 machines, though the UK's MINIX center offers a 32-bit kernel.
- UUCP and netnews clones are available as freeware but not supplied
- with the base system. A large international community is involved in
- improving Minix; see comp.os.minix on USENET for details.
-
- These freeware and "cheapware" products exert valuable pressure on the
- commercial vendors. Someday, they may even force USL to unlock source to stay
- competitive...
-
- Finally, there is a class of commercial UNIX clones that claim to emulate UNIX
- or improve on it without being derived from AT&T/USL source. The major
- products of this kind for 80x86 machines seem to be Coherent, QNX and LynxOS.
- The following information about these has been supplied by various USENETters:
-
- COHERENT is a small-kernel UNIX-compatible multi-user, multi-tasking
- development O/S for $99.95 that uses less than 14Mb of disk space, runs on most
- 286-386-486 CPU systems, has a (pre-ANSI) C compiler and over 230 UNIX commands
- including text processing, program development, administrative and maintenance
- functions. The GNU tools are available as pre-compiled binaries and source
- from MWC. Coherent resides on a partition separate from DOS and can access the
- DOS file system with the DOS command. It has no network or Xwindows support,
- but netnews has been ported and it has its own newsgroup, comp.os.coherent. It
- is fully documented with both a comprehensive 1200 page manual and an on-line
- manual. Mark Williams Company provides excellent support including a UUCP
- access BBS and has just announced Release 4.0, the 386 version of COHERENT
- (which removed the 64K-address-space limit on the compiler). A big selling
- point of this system is its minimal HW requirements --- only 1MB of memory,
- a 10MB root partition, and monochrome (or better) monitor. As there's no FPU
- code yet, there's no point in buying a 486 for this puppy.
-
- QNX is a POSIX-compliant microkernel OS with real-time capability, targeted
- to mission critical, performance sensitive applications like factory
- automation, process control, financial transaction processing, and
- instrumentation. They claim an installed base of over 200K systems worldwide.
- The microkernel is only 7K and implements a message-passing model; other pieces
- can loaded in at runtime, supporting anything from a small real-time executive
- up to a full multi-user time-sharing system (including transparent DOS
- emulation supporting Windows 3.1 in protected mode). QNX networking supports
- standard protocol suites, but uses very fast, lightweight protocols for
- QNX-to-QNX node communications; QNX machines on a network can be treated for
- most purposes as a single large multiprocessor, and the OS itself can be
- distributed across multiple nodes. Here is contact information for the vendor:
-
- Quantum Software Systems Quantum Software Systems
- 175 Terrence Matthews Cr. Westendstr.19 6000 Frankfurt
- Kanata, Ontario K2M 1W8 am main 1
- Canada Germany
- voice: (613) 591-0931 x111 (voice) voice: 49 69 97546156
- fax: (613) 591-3579 (fax) fax: 49 69 97546110
- usenet: stuartr@qnx.com
-
- QNX support is offered via voice and FAX hotline and a BBS. There is also
- a newsletter and an annual international users' conference.
-
- LynxOS is a 386 UNIX specialized for real-time work, available from Lynx
- Real-Time Systems Inc. of Los Gatos, California. It includes TCP/IP, NFS, X,
- etc. Most of the development tools are GNU. The kernel is pre-emptable and
- supports threads and dynamically-loaded device drivers.
-
- VI. HARDWARE COMPATIBILITY TABLES
-
- These tables summarize vendor claims and user reports on which hardware will
- work with which port.
-
- The Linux info is partly from the Yggdrasil LGX distribution notes, partly from
- Garret Goebel's Linux Hardware Compatibility List; it should apply to
- Yggdrasil, Linux, and all other packagings of Linux.
-
- To save space in the tables below, we use the following *one-letter*
- abbreviations for the OS ports:
-
- S SCO UNIX version 3.2v4
-
- C Consensys System V Release 4.2
- D Dell UNIX Issue 2.1
- E ESIX System V Release 4.0.4
- I Information Foundation System V Release 4.2
- V Univel 4.2
- M Micro Station Technology SVr4 UNIX
- P Microport System V/4 version 4
- U UHC Version 3.6
-
- B BSD/386 1.0
-
- L Linux
-
- A `c' indicates that the hardware is claimed to work in vendor literature.
- A `y' indicates that this has been verified by a user report.
- A 'v' indicates that the board vendor supplies a driver or server.
- A `.' indicates that whether this combination works is unknown.
- An `n' indicates that the vendor advises that the combination won't work.
- A `*' points you at footnote info.
-
- A blank column indicates that I have received no vendor info on the
- hardware category in question.
-
- The following general caveats apply:
-
- * All ports support EGA, VGA, CGA and monochrome text displays.
-
- * All ports support generic ISA serial-port cards based on the 8250 or 16450
- UART. According to the vendors, the asy drivers on Dell, Esix, Microport,
- BSD/386 support the extended FIFO on the NS16550AFN UART chip.
- Indeed, Dell tech support will tell you this feature was present in the
- base USL code. UHC says its 4.0.4 drivers will talk to the 16550s.
- SCO has supported the 16550 since 3.2.2.
-
- * I have not bothered listing ordinary ST-506/IDE/RLL drives, though lists
- of them are given in vendor literature. This is a very mature commodity
- technology; anything you buy should work with one of the supported
- controllers unless it's defective.
-
- * Vendors' supported hardware lists are not models of clarity. Some items
- may be listed under a couple of different names because I don't know that
- they're actually the same beast. I have been very careful not to make
- assumptions where I am ignorant; thus, some hardware may appear less
- widely supported than it actually is.
-
- * These tables are grossly incomplete.
-
- Also, be aware that there is a fundamental design problem in the ISA
- architecture that can cause 8-bit boards used in a system with 16-bit
- boards to flake out even if they're actually compatible. Jeremy Chatfield
- (formerly of Dell, now of Information Foundation) describes it this way:
-
- "We've seen (and fixed) this with several card combinations. If you have an 8
- bit card and a 16 bit card in the same address range, then the address decoding
- on the ISA bus will find that the 128KB range includes a 16 bit card. It
- therefore programs itself for 16 bit I/O. If you then do I/O with the 8 bit
- card, every other data byte is garbage. You will also have a reboot problem,
- because the 16 bit card usually starts in 8 bit mode and has to be switched to
- 16 bit mode. If the switch back to 8 bit mode is not made, and the address
- range is the c0000-d0000 range, close to the VGA BIOS, the VGA BIOS accesses
- are screwed, because they are performed in 16 bit mode because of the above PC
- H/W architectural problem. We include a deinit sequence in all the 16 bit
- device drivers that causes a shutdown to reset the accesses to the safer 8 bit
- mode. Of course, after a panic, the machine still has boards set up in 16 bit
- mode, so you might observe the problem then.
-
- This affects *all* PC OS's. I have seen cases where DOS failed to reboot
- because of the same nonsense (network card in 16 bit mode in same address
- region as VGA BIOS). Clever programming can resolve in several ways."
-
- All the SVr4 systems inherit support for a fairly wide range of hardware from
- the base USL code (version 4.0.3 or 4.0.4); SCO UNIXes from 3.2.2 up, ODT
- and Linux also support all these devices:
-
- * All PC disk controllers (ESDI, IDE, ST-506 in MFM and RLL formats).
-
- * The Adaptec 1542B SCSI adapter. Note: you'll have to jumper your
- SCSI devices to fixed IDs during installation on most of these. For
- Linux you need to leave BIOS initialization on.
-
- * Western Digital's 8013EBT Ethernet card, and its equivalents
- the WD8003 and WD8013. SVr4v4 and Linux add the 3Com 3C503.
-
- * VGA adapters in 640x480 by 16 color mode.
-
- * "C" protocol serial mice like the Series 7 and Series 9 from Logitech and
- the PC-3 mouse from Mouse Systems (however, we've had one report of an
- ostensible PC-3 clone called the DFI200H not working).
-
- All SVr4 4.2 ports inherit support for these additional devices:
-
- * "M" and "M+" protocol mice like Microsoft's and the newer Logitechs.
-
- * SCSI WORM drives including the Toshiba and Maxtor RXT-800HS.
-
- * SCSI Optical Disks: Maxtor Tahiti-I and II, Sony SMOE501
-
- * SCSI CD-ROM drives: Toshiba XM-3201B, NEC CDR-82, Pioneer DRM-600,
- Sony CDU-8012.
-
- * ET3000-based SVGA boards at up to 1024x768x16, WD90C10-based boards
- at up to 1024x768x16, WD90C11-based boards at up to 1024x768x256.
-
- * IBM-compatible Token Ring cards
-
- The SCO versions support all these mice and token ring cards.
-
- If you can fill in any of the gaps, or convert a `c' to `y', send me email.
-
- S C D E I V M P U B L Systems
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- c . c c . . Acer (all 386/486 models)
- . . . . . c Acer 1200
- . . . . c . ACCELL 486/33 ISA and 386/40 ISA
- . c . . . . ADDA AD-428P-25, Portable 486/25, 486/33, AD-328D-25
- . c c c . . ALR Business VEISA 386/33-101
- c . c . . . ALR (all 386 and 486 models)
- y . . . . . applicationDEC 316,316+,325,325C,333,425,433MP
- c . c . . . Apricot LS, LS 386SX, XEN-S 386
- c . . . y . Arche 486, Master 486/33
- . . c c . . AST (models not specified)
- . c c c . . AST Premium (models not specified)
- c . c . . . AST Premium 386,386/33,486/25T*E*,486/33T*E*
- c . c c . . AT&T 6386 machines
- . . . . . c Bitwise (model not specified)
- . . c c . . Compaq (models not specified)
- . . . . . c Compaq Deskpro 386/20
- c c c c . . Compaq DeskPro 386/33.
- y . c . . . Compaq DeskPro 486s/20,486/25/486/33L,386/20,386/25
- y . c . . . Compaq Portable III 386, SystemPro
- c . c . y . Compaq SLT 386s/20
- . . c . y . CompuAdd 320
- c y y c y y y . . CompuAdd Model 333
- . . c . y . CompuAdd 320
- . . . . . c Comtrade (model not specified)
- c . c . . . DEC DS486, DECpc 433, DECpc 433T
- c . c . . . DECstation 320,325,425
- c y . c c . . Dell 310,325,325P,333P,316SX,316LT,320SX,320LT.
- c y . c c . . Dell 433P,425E,433E,425TE,433TE,4xx[DS]E,486[DP]xx.
- . . c . y . DynaMicro 486/33
- c . c . . . EasyData 386 model 333
- c . c . . . Epson Equity 386/20PC,386/25,386SX; Epson PC AX3,AX3/25
- . c c c . . Everex (models not specified)
- y . c . . . Everex 33,386/20,486,486/33
- . c c c . . Gateway 2000 (models not specified)
- . y . c c y c Gateway 2000 (486/33 ISA)
- . . c . y . . Gateway 2000 486/25
- . n . . . . Gatewat 486 VESA
- c . c . . . Groupil Uniprocessor 25MHz Tower
- c . c . . . GRiDCase 1530,1550SX
- . . . . . c Hewlett-Packard HP QS20
- . . c c c . High Definition Systems 486/25 ISA and 386 SX/16 ISA
- . . . . . c High Definition Systems 386/33 ISA
- . y c . . . High Definition Systems 386/40 ISA
- . . . . . c Hi Tech USA 486/33 ISA
- c . c . . . HP 486 Vectra series
- c . . . . . IBM PS/2 and PS/Valuepoint
- . . . . . c Insight 486DX/25
- c . c . . . IBC 486
- c . c . . . ITT 486
- . . . . . c Laser 386SX/2E
- y . c . . . Micro Way Number Smasher 486/33
- . . . . . c Microlink 486dx/50 localbus
- c . c . . . Mitac 386, MC3100E-02, S500
- c . c . . . Mitsuba 386
- c . c . . . Mitsubishi PC-386
- . . c . y . MORSE PAT 386PX 386/40
- . . c . y . MORSE KP 386T 386/33
- c . c . . . NCR 316,316SX,3386
- c . c . . . NEC 386/20,486/25, BusinessMate and PowerMate
- y . c . . . NEC 386/33 BusinessMate
- c . c . . . Noble 386
- c . c . . . Nokia Alfaskop System 10 m52, m54/55
- c . c . . . Northgate 33
- . c c c . . Northgate 386/33
- . y . c . . . Northgate 486/33
- c . c . . . Olivetti 386/486 machines
- c . c . . . Olivetti XP-9
- . . . . . c Osborne Computers (Australia) 486/33 EISA
- y . c . . . Packard-Bell 386x
- . . . . . c PACOMP 486/33
- . . . . . c Paradise (model not specified)
- c . c . . . PC Craft PCC 2400 386
- c . c . . . Phillips 386, P3464 486
- . c c c . . Primax (models not specified)
- c . c . . . SNI 8800-50, 8810-50, PCD series
- c . c . . . Schneider 386 25-340, 386SX System 70
- c . c . . . Siemens Data Systems Model WX200
- c . c . . . Starstation
- . . c . y . Tandy 3000
- c . c . . . Tandy 4000
- y . c . . . Tatung Force 386x
- c . c . . . Tatung Force TCS-8000 386, TCS-8600 386
- . c c c . . Tangent (models not specified)
- . y c . . . Tangent 386/25C
- . c c y . . Tangent 433E (486/33 EISA)
- . . c . y . Technology Advancement Group EISA 483/33
- . c c c . . Televideo (models not specified)
- c . c . . . Televideo 386/25
- c . c . . . Texas Instruments System 1300
- . . c . y . Texas Instruments System 80486/33Mhz
- c . c . . . Toshiba T3100,T3200,T5100,T5200,T8500,T8600
- . . . . . c Toshiba 1850 laptop
- . . c . y . TPE 486/33 & 486/50
- . c c c . . Twinhead (models not specified)
- y . c . . . Twinhead 800 (486/33)
- . . . . . c Tyan Pro-EISA, Opti EISA Chip-set
- . c c c . . Unisys (models not specified)
- c . c . . . Unisys PW2 Series 800/16,800/20,800/25
- c . c . . . Victor 386 25, V486T
- . . . . . c PACOMP 486/33
- . . . . . c Vobis Highscreen 486DX/33
- c . c . . . Wyse 386
- n . c . . . Wyse Decision 486/33 (intermittent crashes)
- c . c . . . Zenith 386 and 486 machines
- . . . . . c Zenon 486/33 Local Bus
- . . c . y . Zeos 486DX-50
-
- S C D E I V M P U B L Motherboards
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- c . . . AGI
- y y . . . A.I.R. 486/33EL w 256K cache
- . c . . ALR
- . c . . AMAX
- c . c . . AMI (model not specified)
- y c . c AMI Enterprise II (33 & 50)
- . . . c AMI Series 50 Super Voyager 486/33 DX
- y . . . Amptron AMD386/40
- . . y . Amptron ISA 486DX/33
- . c . . ARC
- . . . c C386 PEAK-DM
- n . c . . Cache Computer (model not specified)
- . . y . Cache Computer 386-33
- . c . . Chips & Technologies chipset
- y . c . . Chips & Technologies 33DX
- c c . . Club AT
- . . . c CONTAQ-386 Upgradable System Board
- . c . . DataExport
- y . c . . Dell
- . c n . c DTK (model not specified)
- y . n . . DTK 386/33
- . . c . EISA Tech 80386SX MHz
- y . . . . Eteq 386
- y n . . . Eteq 486
- . . . c ETEQ G486EB
- . c . . Free Technology (model not specified)
- . . . . Free Technology 486/33 EISA board
- y . . . . Free Technology 486/50DX
- . . . c G486PLB
- . . . c GS3486
- y y . . . Gigabyte GA-486US 33MHz 256K Cache
- . . . c HOT-307H 386-33/40 (OPTI chipset)
- c . . y . Intel 302 (386/25 + 387)
- . . y . Intel 403E (486/33 EISA)
- . . . c ISA486S
- . . . c M407 PC Chips motherboard
- . . . c Magitronic/VLSI V386SX-25Mhz
- . c . . Microlab
- c y c y c . Micronics 386/25
- c c y c . Micronics 486/33 ISA
- y . . . Micronics 486/33 EISA
- . . . c Micronics 80486 ASIC EISA
- . . . c Micronics EISA-II motherboard
- . c . . Mitac
- . . . . Modular Circuit Technology 386/SX 16Mhz
- y . . . . Motherboard Factory 386/40, 486/33 (Northgate's OEM)
- . . . c MST-386
- . . . c MST 486A (Armas Inc. ROC)
- . c . . Mylex (model not specified)
- c c . . Mylex MI-386/20
- y y y y . c Mylex MAE486/33
- . . . y NICE ISA 486SX/33
- y y . . y NICE 486DX/50 EISA
- y . c . . OPTI 486
- . c . . Orchid
- . c . . PC-craft
- . . . c PLB-486/50
- . . . c SUPER 486-33C
- . . . c Symphony 80486 PC/AT chipset
- . . . c T/B, UNICHIP chipset (works with SCSI)
- y y . . . TMC Research Corporation PAT38PC 25/386,33/386
- y . . . TMC Research Corporation PAT38PX 33/386,40/386
- . . . c UMC 80486
- . . y . Zida 486DX/50 ISA
-
- Notes:
-
- * These two tables probably way *understate* the compatibility of most ports.
- Most ISA or EISA motherboards will work with all of them. However, Jeff
- Coffler <coffler@jeck.amherst.nh.us> reports: "I couldn't get the Cache
- Computer CPU board to work at all with Dell UNIX, even though they claimed
- they work with SCO. Flaky, timing-related failures."
-
- * Quote from Kolstad, "The external caches on the most advanced
- boards are usually not tested well for UNIX-like applications. We
- see problems occasionally that disappear when the caches are disabled.
- Once reproducible, the vendors can usually repair the problem."
-
- * A source at UHC describes the DTK boards as "dogshit" --- he says they
- generate a lot of spurious interrupts that DOS is too cretinous to be
- bothered by but which completely tank UNIX. He says DTK seems uninterested
- in fixing the problem. Other correspondents confirm that this has been
- going on for several years. On the other hand, another correspondent says
- his company has 20 DTK machines running UNIX with no problems. We advise
- that you actually *see* any DTK board boot UNIX and run for a while before
- buying.
-
- * Dave Johnson <ddj@gradient.com> reports that since upgrading from a 386 to
- an Eteq 486, they've had lots of UHC random panics due to page faults in
- kernel mode. UHC is looking into this.
-
- S C D E I V M P U B L Video Cards Max Res ChipSet
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- . c y . . * . . Appian Rendition GRX 1024x768x256 TIGA34010
- c c y . . * . . Appian Rendition II, IIXE 1024x768x256 TIGA34010
- c c . . . . . . Appian Rendition III 1280x1024x256 TIGA34020
- . . . . c . . ARC V-16 (Paradise) ???? ????
- c . . . . . . AST motherboard video 1024x768x256 WD90C31
- c . . . . . . AST VGA Plus 800x600x16 WDC
- . . c c c c . AT&T VDC 600 (Paradise clone) SVGA ????
- . . c . . . . AT&T VDC400 CGA ???
- . . c c . . . AT&T VDC750 EGA ???
- c y . . . c . c ATI Ultra 1024x768x256 Mach 8
- c . . . . . . ATI UltraPlus & UltraPro 1024x768x256 Mach 32
- c y . . . c . c ATI Vantage 1024x768x256 Mach 8
- c . . . . . . ATI Wonder SVGA N Wonder
- c y c c c c n y ATI Wonder+ SVGA N Wonder
- c . c c . . . ATI Wonder XL 1024x768x256 ????
- . . . . c c . ATI (type not specified) ???? ????
- . y . . . . . . Boca SuperVGA 1024x768 ET4000
- c . . . . . . Bull ProStation 25i 1024x768x16 ????
- c . . . . . . Chips 451 800x600x16 N C&T451
- c . . . . . . Chips 452 1024x768x16 N C&T452
- c . . . . . . Cirrus Logic VGA 6410 800x600x16 ????
- c . . . . . . Cirrus Logic GD542X 1024x768x256 N ????
- c . . . . . . Compaq Advanced VGA 640x480x256 N ????
- c . . . . . . Compaq AG1024 1024x768x256 ????
- c . . . . . . Compaq LCD VGA 640x480x16g N ????
- c . . . . . . Compaq Plasma 640x400x2 N non-VGA
- c . . . . . . Compaq ProLinea 3 1024x768x16 N WD90C11
- c . . . . . . Compaq ProLinea 4 1024x768x256 N ET4000
- c . . . . . . Compaq ProSignia 1024x768x16 N WD90C11
- c . . . . . . Compaq QVision 1024x768x256 N ????
- c . . . . . . Compaq VGC 640x480x16 N ????
- c . . . . . . Compaq VGC 132 800x600x16 N ????
- . . . . . . c Compuadd Hi-Rez card w/1meg 1024x768 ET4000
- c . . . . . . Cornerstone SinglePage 1008x768x2 ????
- c . . . . . . Cornerstone PC1280 1280x960x2 ????
- c . . . . . . Cornerstone DualPage 1600x1280x2 ????
- c . . . . . . Cornerstone DualPage 150 2048x1538x2 ????
- c . . . . . . DEC 433w 1280x1024x256 TMS34020
- c . . . . . . DEC motherboard video 1024x768x256 N WD90C30
- c y . . . . . . Dell motherboard video 1024x768x256 WD90C31
- c . . . . . . Dell PoerLine 450 DX "Jaws" 1280x1024x256 ????
- . y . c c . c . Dell VGA 1024x768 ????
- c y c c c c y c Diamond SpeedStar 1024x768x256 ET4000
- c . . . . . c Diamond Stealth 1280x1024x16 S3
- c* . . c . . c Eizo MD-B07, MD-B10, Extra/EM 1024x768 ET3000
- . . . c . . y ELSA WINNER 1280x1024 82C480
- . c . . . . . Everex ViewPoint VRAM SVGA+ ????
- . c . . . . . Everex ViewPoint True Color SVGA+ ????
- . c . . . . . Everex UltraGraphics II EV-236 1664x1200 mono
- . . . . . . . Fastwrite VGA 800x600 ????
- . . c . . . . Genoa SuperEGA HiRes 1024x768 ????
- . . . c . . . Genoa 5200 1024x768 ????
- c c c c c c c Genoa 5300/5400 superVGA SVGA N ????
- c . . . c . c Genoa 6000, 6400 SVGA N ????
- c . . . . . . Genoa 7000 SVGA N ????
- c . . . . . . Grid 1530 laptop 640x400x2 CGA-like
- y c . . c . . Hercules monographics display 720x348 mono
- c . . . . . . HP UltraVGA 1280x1024x16 S3
- c . . . . . . IBM 8514/A 1024x768x256 8514/A
- c y . . . . . . IBM VGA VGA VGA
- c . . . . . . IBM XGA 1024x768x256 XGA
- c . . . . . . IBM XGA-2 1024x768x256 XGA-2
- c . . . . . . Imagraph ITX 1280x1024x256 TMS34020
- c . . . . . . Intel motherboard video 1024x768x256 N WD90C3x
- c . . . . . . Matrox MWIN1280 1280x1024x256 N 8514
- c . . . . . . Matrox PG-1281-CV 1024x768x256 ????
- c . . . . . . Matrox PG-1281 1280x1024x256 ????
- c . . . . . . Matrox PG-1281/s 1280x1024x16g ????
- . c . . . . . MaxLogic SVGA ????
- c . c v . . . Microfield T8 1280x1024 TIGA34020
- c . . v c . . Microfield V8 1280x1024 ????
- c . . . . . . Microfield I8 1280x1024x256 TMS34020
- . . . v . . . Microfield X-8 1280x1024 ????
- c . . . . . . Micronics MVC 1280x1024x256 82C41
- c . . . . . . Miro Magic 1280x1024x256 N 82C48
- c . . . . . . Miro Magic Plus 1280x1024x256 N 82C481
- c . . . . . . Miro Crystal 8.24 1280x1024x256 N 82C481
- c . . . . . . Miro Crystal 4.16 1024x768x256 N 82C481
- . . . . * . . Mylex GXE (EISA) 1280x1024 TIGA34020
- c . . . . . . NCR 77C22 1024x768x16 77C22
- c . . . . . . NCR 77C22E 1024x768x256 77C22E
- . . . . . . y Nth Engine/150 1280x1024 82C480
- c . . . . . . Number Nine GXi 1280x1024x256 N 34020
- . c . . . . . Oak Technology OTI-067 1024x768x256 ????
- c . . . . y . Oak Technologies Oak 077 1024x768x256 Oak 077
- c . . . . . . Olivetti EVC-1 (EISA) 1024x768x256 82c452
- c . . . . . . Olivetti LSX50X5 1024x768x256 N ET4000
- c . . . . . . Olivetti m300-28 1024x768x16 N OTI-067
- c . . . . . . Olivetti m300-30 1024x768x256 N WD90C31
- c . . . . . . Olivetti m300-40/m388-25/m400-* 1024x768x16 N C&T452A
- c . . . . . . Olivetti m400-60 1024x768x256 N Mach 8
- c . . . . . . Olivetti m480-xx 1024x768x16 N C&T453
- c . . . . . . Olivetti OVC 640x480x16 N ????
- . . . . . . c Optima Mega/1024 1024x768 ET4000
- c . c . . . . Orchid Designer SVGA ET3000
- c . . . . . c Orchid Fahrenheit 1280x1024x16 S3
- c . . . . . . Orchid Fahrenheit 1280 Plus/VA 1280x1024x16 S3
- c y . . c c c Orchid ProDesigner 800x600 ET3000
- c y y c c y . y Orchid ProDesigner II/1024 1024x768 N ET4000
- c . . . . . . Orchid ProDesigner II/e 800x600x256 N ET4000
- c * c c y . y Orchid ProDesigner IIs 1024x768 N ET4000
- c . c c . . . Paradise VGA Plus VGA PVGA1A
- . c c . c c c Paradise VGA Professional VGA PVGA1A
- c c . c . c . c Paradise VGA 1024 SVGA WD90C00
- c . . . . . . Paradise 8514/A SVGA+ 8514/A
- c . . v . . y PixelWorksWhirlWin 1280x1024 82C480
- . . c . . . . PerfectView SVGA ????
- c . . . . . . QuadRAM QuadVGA SVGA ????
- . . . . c c . Qume Crystal 1024x768 T4000
- c . . . . . . Renaissance Rendition II 1024x768 TMS34020
- y y y . . c . c Sigma Legend 1024x768x356 N ET4000
- . . c . c c . Sigma VGA/H 800x600 ????
- c c c . c c . STB EM-16 VGA, EM-16+ VGA SVGA ET3000
- c . c . . . . STB Extra-EM SVGA ET3000
- . c c . c . c STB PowerGraph w/1meg 1024x768x256 ET4000
- c . . . . . . STB Wind/X (BIOS 1.0) 1024x768x16 S3
- c . . . . . . STB Wind/X (BIOS 1.1) 1280x1024x16 S3
- . . . . . . c Swan SVGA with VCO chip 1024x768 ET4000
- . . c . . . . Tecmar VGA VGA Et3000
- c c c . . . . Tecmar VGA AD SVGA ET3000
- c . . . . . . Toshiba Grid 758 & 1500 laptop 640x400x2 CGA-like
- . . . . . . c TRICOM Mega/1024 1024x768 ET4000
- c . . . c . . Trident SuperVGA ???? T880
- c . c c . . c Trident TVGA 8900 1024x768x256 T8900
- c . . . . . . Trident Impact I & III 1024x768x256 T8900
- c . . . . . . Tseng Labs ET3000 VGA 1024x768x16 T3000
- c . . c c c . Tseng Labs ET4000 VGA 1024x768x256 T4000
- . c . . . . . Vectrix VX1024 (TI-34010) 1024x768 ????
- . . c . . . . Vega VGA 800x600 ????
- c . . . . . . Verticom MX/AT 800x600 ????
- c . . . . . . Video Dynamics SprintGXU 1280x1024x16 S3
- c . . . . . . Western Digital WD90C11 1024x768x16 N WD90C11
- c . . . . . . Western Digital WD90C30 1024x768x256 N WD90C30
- c . . . . . . Western Digital WD90C31 1024x768x256 N WD90C31
- c c . . c c . Video7 FastWrite VGA 800x600 x2, x16 ????
- c . c . c c . Video7 VRAM VGA 1024x768 Video7
- c . . . c c . Video7 VRAM II VGA SVGA Video7
- c . . . c c . Video7 VEGA EGA 640x380 Video7
- c . . . . . . Video7 VGA1024i SVGA Video7
- c y . . . . . . Zenith/Bull motherboard video 1024x768x256 N WD90C3x
- c . . . . . . Zenith WAM 1024x768x256 N 8514/A
-
- In this table, an `SVGA' resolution code signifies the following resolutions:
- 1024x768 at 2 and 16 colors, 800x600 at 2, 16, 256 colors, and 640x480 at 2,
- 16, 256 colors. SVGA+ adds 1280x1024 at 2 or 16 colors. Some non-interlace
- boards are marked with N. Greyscale boards are marked with a `g' suffix'.
-
- Caveats in interpreting the above table:
-
- * All super-VGA cards will work at VGA resolutions and below (that is, resolu-
- tions up to 640x480 in 16 colors).
-
- * Because color is of secondary importance for most UNIX applications, I list
- only the highest dot-density resolution of a board that supports more than
- one. Some boards have lower resolutions with more colors.
-
- * This list is not exclusive. Many (perhaps even most) dotted combinations
- will work. UHC claims that any SVGA based on an ET3000, ET4000, Paradise
- or Genoa chip-set will fly; Dell echoes this with regard to ET3000,
- ET4000, WD90C0xx cards, and the same is probably true of all other vendors.
-
- * The Renaissance GRX-II is the same board as the Appian Rendition II; the
- company changed its name. The II/XE is compatible with the Rendition GRX
- and the Appian Rendition II, it differs in architecture in that it supports
- more DRAM and runs a little faster than the older cards. All
- Rendition II type cards run at a maximum resolution of 1024x768-256,
- the Renditon III runs at 1280x1024-256 with its full VRAM set.
-
- * An ESIX reseller says all the TIGA34010-based video cards are pretty much
- alike and ESIX will drive any of them (the prudent user should probably ask
- to see the card working before committing). ESIX also supports 720x348
- resolution on cheap Hercules-compatible monochrome tubes, and the Everex
- UltraGraphics display at 1664x1200 resolution.
-
- * Beware the Trident and Oak chipsets. Many clone vendors bundle these with
- their systems because they're cheap, but they break the Roell server and
- some other X implementations. Also, they appear to argue with the WD8003EP
- net card, and no re-arrangement of the jumpers seems to fix it. Xfree86
- supports the Trident, but the developers say it's slow, and should be
- avoided. The Oak is not supported.
-
- * Third party server technology from companies like MetroLink can support
- higher performance, higher resolution TIGA and proprietary technology.
-
- * Dell's 2.2 adds X11R5 servers for VGA 640x480, 800x600 and for the Tseng
- Labs ET4000 and WD90C11 in up to 1024x768 16 or 256 colour. Appian
- Rendition II (formerly Renaissance) for 1024x768 TIGA 34010. Highest
- performance from the ATI Ultra 1024x768 256 colour, and highest resolution
- from the 1280x1024 256 colour JAWS (Dell proprietary card developed in
- association with Lotus and MicroSoft)
-
- * The Orchid ProDesigner IIs (top speed 80 MHz, not the 75MHz version) works
- with both X386-1.2D and X386-1.2E (beta). It works ok with the ESIX 4.0.3
- X11R4 stuff at any resolution under 1024x768. But the driver does *not*
- work with 1024x768 (timings are way off). The vanilla ProDesigner II does
- work correctly with both the X386 and the Esix X11's (R5 and R4,
- respectively). Note: this info may change in ESIX 4.0.4, which uses a
- different X.
-
- * The Qume Crystal is a private-label version of the Tseng Labs VGA card.
-
- * Linux uses XFree86. See the section on XFree86 for supported cards.
-
- * The Mach8 chip is often called the 28880; the Mach 32 chip is often
- called the 68880.
-
- * SCO supports the Eizo MD-B07 only up to 800x600x16.
-
- S C D E I V M P U B L Mice
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- c y c c y y y c (Logitech-compatible) 3-button serial mice (C protocol)
- c y c c c n c (Logitech-compatible) 3-button bus mice (C protocol)
- . . . . . . y Appoint serial pen-mouse
- . . c . . n c ATI Wonder+ bus-mouse port
- y . . . . c c ATI Graphics Ultra bus-mouse port
- . . . . . . c Genius GM-F303
- . . . . . . c Genius GM-F303
- c . . . . . . HP C1413A Mouse
- y y . c . . . IBM PS/2 keyboard mouse
- c y y c c c n . Logitech MouseMan (M+ protocol)
- c y y . c c c c . Logitech Trackman (serial, M+ protocol)
- c y c . c n . Logitech Trackman (bus, M+ protocol)
- c . . . . . . Logitech hi-res Keyboard Mouse
- c y c c c c . Microsoft 2-button (serial, M protocol)
- c y c c c n . Microsoft 2-button (bus, M protocol)
- . n . . . . . . Mouse Systems III mice (see notes)
- c . . . . . . Olivetti Bus Mouse
- c . . . . . . Olivetti hi-res Keyboard Mouse
- c . . . . . . Quickshot QS-159
- . . . . . . . SummaMouse
- c . . . . . . Summagraphics Bitpad
-
- Notes:
-
- * See the discussion of mice at the beginning of this section for details.
- Off-brand mice that advertice compatibility with either Microsoft or
- Logitech aren't listed here.
-
- * BSD/386 says it supports all 1200-9600 baud serial mice, specifying Logitech
- as an example. This is probably true of all vendors.
-
- * X11R5 (X386 1.2) supports all of the known mice on SVR4 in a native mode,
- bypassing the mouse driver. This wasn't true with X11R4 (X386 1.1b).
- So if you're using X386 1.2 exclusively, you can use (say) a MouseMan
- regardless of which SVR4 you're using.
-
- * Dell 2.2 includes an auto-configuring mouse driver that's supposed to
- work with about anything. Non-factory-installed 2.2s may require a
- patch from support to handle the Logitech Mouseman.
-
- * Linux uses Xfree86 and thus supports most C and M-protocol mice in both
- serial and bus formats.
-
- * Mouse Systems III mice don't work with either Consensys V.4.2 and
- Xfree86. Someone out there put up a special driver to handle
- a MS III mouse. It's called Serial Mouse Fixer (SMF). This may
- be a USL-generic problem.
-
- S C D E I V M P U B L Multi-function controllers
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- c HP Multifunction
- c IDE-PLUS-V3 multi i/o board
- c IODE-3290U (IDE/FD/2S/1P/1G)
- c Laser Multi-IO/IDE Card
- c MCT-AIO Serial/Parallel/Game (16550AFN)
- c MIO-16 Multi IO Card
- c PTI-227B Super I/O Card (serial, parallel, IDE)
- c SUPER IDE I/O CARD, model PT-604
- c Super IDE/FDC MULTI I/O card Modem 827 Version 11
- c Super I/O MP57
- c Domain TMC950 SCSI/IDE controller/4 x floppy controller
-
- Notes:
-
- * This is a new section inspired by the Linux compatibility list. If you have
- any of these cards runnung under another UNIX, please tell me.
-
- S C D E I V M P U B L Multi-port serial cards
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- c . . . . AMI lamb 4 and 8-port
- v y c c . Arnet (models not specified)
- c y . . . Arnet 2,4 and 8-port and TwinPort
- c . c c y c AST 4-port
- . . . . c Async Accent 4 (see note)
- . . . . c BOCA ATI0
- v . . c . Central Data
- c . . c . Chase Research
- c c . c . Computone (models not specified)
- v y . . . Computone Intelliport
- c . . . . Computone ATvantage-X 8-port
- c . . . . Comtrol Hostess-4
- c . c c . Comtrol Hostess-8
- v . c y . Consensys PowerPorts
- c . . . . CTC Versanet 4AT and 8AT
- c c * c . . Cyclades RISC Based 8-16 ports
- c c c c . . Cyclades Intel-Based 8-16 ports
- c c c c . . Cyclades Cluster (ISA, EISA, MCA) 8-256 ports
- c y . . . Digiboard 4 and 8-port
- . y c c . Digiboard DigiChannel PC/8
- v . . . y . Digiboard Digichannel PC/Xe-16 (see note below)
- v y . y . Equinox
- . . . . c Gw2760 EX SUPER IO CARD
- c . . . . Kimtron Quartet 4-port
- y . c c c . Maxpeed
- c . . . . Olivetti RS232C Multiport board
- . . . . c PC-COMM 4-port card with 16550 uarts
- c . . . . Quadram QuadPort 1 and 5-port
- . . . . c . SDL RISCOM/8
- . . . . c ShineCom Multi-User catd LCS-8880 (AST 4-port clone)
- v y . c . Specialix
- v y . c . Stallion OnBoard
- . . . c . Stargate (models not specified)
- v . . . . Stargate OC4400 (4-port) and OC8000 (8-port)
- c . . . . Tandon Quad serial card
- . y . c . Technology Concepts
- c . . . . Unisys 4-port
-
- Notes:
-
- * Only SCO, Dell, Esix and Microport listed multiport cards at all.
- As some are `smart' cards which require special device drivers, you should
- *not* assume that a board is supported on a particular port unless the
- vendor explicitly says so.
-
- * SCO says it supports just about every dumb card out there which multiplexes
- multiple ports onto a single interrupt -- *except* the Bell Hub6; and SCO
- supports *no* intelligent multiport cards -- but the intelligent card vendors
- all have drivers for SCO.
-
- * Linux claims to support all "dumb" port cards.
-
- * The Chase, Computone, Intelliport and Specialix cards will run under
- SCO using a vendor-supplied driver.
-
- * The Maxpeed SS8-UX2 doesn't support RTS/CTS flow control, and requires
- its own config scripts rather than using inittab and gettydefs. The
- BSDI people think it works with their config stuff.
-
- * Peter Wemm <Peter-Wemm@zeus.dialix.oz.au> writes: "In 2.1, Dell's drivers
- (direct from Stallion) are flakey. I have been annoying the living daylights
- out of the developers (Stallion) here in AUS, and their new drivers have an
- `interaction' problem with the reboot mechanism in dell's kernel. A reboot
- causes the VGA card to be disabled." Jeremy Chatfield of Dell replies:
- "We haven't seen the problem he reports. Most likely the problem he's seeing
- is an icky [generic] one for UNIX on a PC." He then proceeds to detail
- the 8-16 clash described at the beginning of this section. Peter Wemm
- adds that the 2.8s.6 drivers supplied with Dell 2.2 seem to be good, but
- that you should *not* install the 2.8s.7 drivers; they interfere with
- the reboot mechanism.
-
- * Digiboard makes an SVr4 UNIX streams driver available via download for the
- Digichannel PC/Xe-16.
-
- * The Async 4 probe routine terminally confuses the Ultrastor 14 disk
- controller. Also, this driver is not part of the default beta build.
-
- * The Cyclades 8YS doesn't work with Dell 2.2 --- it fails to raise DTR.
- This may be due to Dell asy driver problems. Cyclades is working on a
- fix.
-
- S C D E I V M P U B L Disk controllers
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- . . . . . c 6280-15TX (ESDI)
- c c c c . y . Adaptec 2320/2322 (ESDI)
- c c . c . . . Adaptec ACB 2730C (RLL)
- c y . c . . . Adaptec ACB 2732C (RLL)
- c . . . . . Compag 32-bit Intelligent Drive Array Controller
- c . . . . . Compag 32-bit Intelligent Drive Array Controller-2
- c . . . . . Compag 32-bit Intelligent Drive Array Expansion
- . c . c . c . CCAT100A (IDE)
- . . c . . . Chicony 101B
- y y c c . . . Data Tech Corp 6280 (ESDI)
- . . . . . c DC600 Caching IDE controller (IDE)
- . . . . . c DTC150x XT (MFM)
- . . . . . c DTC-6180 (ESDI)
- . . . . . c DTC-6180-15T
- . . c . c . DTG 6282-24 (IDE)
- . c c c . . . Everex EV-346 (ST506)
- . c c c . . . Everex EV-348 (ESDI)
- . c c c . . . Everex EV-8120 (IDE)
- y c . . . . . Lark ESDI controller
- . c c c . . . OMTI 8240 (ST506)
- . . . . . . y Promise DC-99M (IDE)
- . c . . c . . PSI Caching controller (ESDI)
- . . . . . c Seagate ST22M controller w/floppy (MFM)
- c c . . . . . SMS OMTI 8620 and 8627 (ESDI)
- . y . . c . . Ultrastor 12C, 22F
- y y . c c c . Ultrastor 12F
- c c . . n . . Ultrastor 22C (caching EISA version of 12F)
- . y . c . . . Ultrastor 22CA
- c y c c . . c Western Digital 1003 (RLL)
- c . . . . . Western Digital 1005
- . . . . . c Western Digital 1006V-SR2
- c y . . . . Western Digital 1006V-MM2 (ST506)
- y y y c . c c Western Digital 1007 A,SE2 (ESDI)
- c . c . . . Western Digital 1009 SE1/SE2
-
- Notes:
-
- * All these ports should support all standard PC hard-disk controllers (ESDI,
- IDE,ST-506 in MFM and RLL formats).
-
- * Increasingly, IDE controllers are being built right onto motherboards.
- IDE controller cards as a market category are headed for obsolescence.
-
- S C D E I V M P U B L SCSI controllers
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- c . . . . . . . Adaptec 1510 (1520 without boot ROM)
- c . . . . . . . Adaptec 152x (non-bus mastering ISA host adapter)
- y y c c c y y c * y Adaptec 1540, 1542
- c n . . c . . . . Adaptec 1640 (MicroChannel version of 154x)
- c y c . c y c n c . Adaptec 1740,1742 (EISA) (1542 emulation mode)
- y y . c . * c y Adaptec 1740,1742 (EISA) (enhanced mode)
- v . . . c . . . Always IN2000
- v c . c c . . c BusLogic BT-542B
- v c . v c . . c BusLogic BT-742A (EISA) (mPort specifies Revision F)
- v . . c . . . . Buslogic BT-545S
- v . . v . . . . Buslogic BT-747S, 640A, 646S/D
- c . . . . . . . Compaq SCSI Option Adapter and Compression Adapter
- y . . . . . . . Corollary SCSI-CPU
- . . . c c c . . DPT PM2102 caching controller (MFM emulation)
- c . . c c . . . DPT PM2102 caching SCSI controller in SCSI mode
- c . c c . . . . DPT 2011, 2012A, 2012B
- . . . c . . . . Eclipse 720E
- . c . . . . . . Everex EV8118/8110
- c c . v . . . c Future Domain 1660, 1680, 885, 860
- . . . . . . . n Future Domain TMC-850
- c . . c . . . . Future Domain 1790/1795, 600, 700
- y . c c . . . . IBM HardFile (their SCSI host adapter for MicroChannel)
- v . . . c . . * Mylex DCE376 (EISA)
- y . . . . . . . Olivetti ESC-1 (EISA)
- . . . v . . . . Procomp Pro-Master
- . . . . . c . . PSI caching controller
- . . . . . . . c Seagate ST0x
- c . . . . . . . Storage Plus SCSI-AT "Sumo"
- . . . . c . . . Ultrastor 32k, 34f
- v . . v . . . c Ultrastor 14F, 34F
- v . . v . . . . Ultrastor 24F, 124F, 144F
- c y c . c c c . c Western Digital WD7000
- c y . . . . . . . Western Digital WD7000-EX (EISA version of WD7000)
- . . . v . . . . Zynx ZX401, ZX402
-
- Notes:
-
- * UHC started shipping a native-mode 1740/1742 driver in mid-April. It
- requires a full SCSI-2 tape drive.
-
- * BusLogic used to be known as BusTek. The BusLogic 542 is a clone of the
- Adaptec 1542. At least one respondent thinks it works better and faster
- with the Adaptec drivers than the Adaptecs do! The BusLogic 742 has more
- complicated antecedents; it's an EISA clone of the 1542, not necessarily
- compatible with the 1742.
-
- * There's a known bug in the Adaptec 1742 firmware that produces hangs
- when it's used with certain SCSI tape drives, including the popular
- Archive 2150S.
-
- * Bill Austin <uunet!baustin!bill> writes: "the 1740 patches on ESIX [4.0.3a]
- do work but only bring the speed up in enhanced mode by about 15% over
- standard (643Kb/s vs 535Kb/s) in writing, although the *read* speed
- has nearly tripled (2,833 Kb/s) (this is using "iozone 16"). This may give
- some idea of what improvement to expect from native-mode 1740 operation.
-
- * Wolfgang Denk <wd@pcsbst.pcs.com> reports that SCO ODT 2.0 running an Adaptec
- 1542 cannot work with the following Hewlett-Packard drives:
-
- HP 97536 SL
- HP 97536 S
- HP 97544
-
- A source at SCO says "This problem is known to us. In some
- not-yet-clearly-understood fashion, these HP drives interact badly with
- our implementation of scatter/gather disk transfer ordering. There are
- two different workarounds: you can turn off scatter/gather in the SCSI
- disk driver, or you can get updated drive control board ROMs from HP."
-
- * Under Linux, the Mylex DCE376 works in WD emulation mode only.
-
- S C D E I V M P U B L Network cards
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- c . . . . . . c . 3COM EtherLink I 3C501 and 3C502 (see note)
- c c y c c c . y c 3COM EtherLink II 3C503
- c . . c . . . c . 3COM EtherLink 16 (3C507)
- v . . . . . . . . 3COM Etherlink 3C509
- c . . c c . . . . 3Com 3C523 & 523B EtherLink/MC
- c . . . c . . . . 3Com 3C523 EtherLink/MC TP
- . . . . v . . . . Adax APC-MCX
- . . . . . . . . c Alta Combo
- . . . . . . . . c Artisoft Lantastic AE-2
- v . . . v . . . . Buslogic 560A, 560T, 760A, 763E
- . . . . . . . . c Cnet UTP 10baseT (NE 2000 emulation)
- c . . . . . . . c Cabletron
- v . . . v . . . . Codenoll CodeNet 8340, 9540, 9543, 9740, 9440, 9443
- c . . . . . . . . Compaq NwtFlex Ethernet/Token Ring Adapter
- c . . . . . . . . Compaq 32-bit DualSpeed Token Ring Adapter
- . . . . . . . . c D-link Ethernet II
- . . . . v . . . . DTK ELN-001B
- . . . . v . . . . Eclipse 720E
- . . c . . . . . . Everex EV-2015, EV-2016, EV-2026, EV-2027
- c . . . . . . . c HP 27245A EtherTwist Adapter Card/8 ISA TP
- c . . . . . . . c HP 27247A EtherTwist Adapter Card/16 ISA TP
- c . . . . . . . c HP 27250A ThinLAN Adapter Card/8 ISA BNC
- c . . . . . . . . HP 27248A EtherTwist EISA Adapter Card/32
- c . . c . . . . . IBM Token-Ring Network Adapter
- c . . . . . . . . IBM Token-Ring Network Adapter II (short and long card)
- c . . . c . . . . IBM Token-Ring Network Adapter 4/16
- c . . . . . . . . IBM Token-Ring Network Adapter/A
- c c . . . . . . . IBM Token-Ring Network 16/4 Adapter/A
- . . . . v . . . . Kodiak EISA
- . . . . . . . y . Lan Research LR-2000 (NE2000 compat)
- c . . . . . . . . Microdyne (Excelan) EXOS 205, 205T, 205T/16
- c . . . v . . . . Racal Datacomm NI6510 ISA and ES3210 EISA
- . y c c c c c . . Intel PC-586 aka iMX-LAN/586
- . . . . c . . . . Intel Ether Express 16 TP
- . . . . . . . c c Novell NE1000
- c . . . c . . c c Novell NE2000
- c . . . . . . . . Novell 3200
- . . . . v . . . . Proteon Pronet 4/16 Token Ring
- . . . . . . . . c SIIG Inc E-Lan/200 (NE 2000 compatible)
- y y y c . c c c y c SMC & Western Digital 8003 and 8013 and variations
- . y . . . . . . . WD TokenRing card
- . . . . v . . . . Zynx EISA-Action 7X301
-
- Notes:
-
- * Dick Dunn <rcd@raven.eklektix.com> opines "Somewhere along here, somebody
- needs to note that the 3C501 is a miserable-misbegotten-son-of-a-lame-she-
- camel-and-a-desperate-jackal Ethernet card, at least in UNIXland. It has
- serious problems in any serious multi-user system because of various
- hardware idiosyncrasies which are on the order of can't-walk-down-the-
- street-and-chew-gum." Do tell, Dick!
-
- * Linux is claimed to support all 8390-based Ethernet cards.
-
- S C D E I V M P U B L Tape drives
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- c y c . c y . c y Archive 2150S or Viper 150 21247 (SCSI, QIC-150)
- c c . c c . . . Archive Viper VP150E
- c . c . c c . . Archive Viper 60 21116
- c . c . c c . . Archive Viper 150 25099
- c . c . . . . . Archive FT60i (Scorpion 5945C)
- c . . . c c . . Archive Viper 2525 25462.
- y . . . c . . . Archive 60 - 525MB (QIC-02 and SCI)
- c . . . c . . . Archive 4mm 4520 DAT
- c . . . c c . . Archive Python models 25501-003, -005 and -008 (SCSI)
- c . . c . . . . Archive Python DDS 4520NT and 4521NT DAT drives
- c * . . c c . . Archive XL (5580 & friends)
- . . . . c c . . Archive 3800
- . . . . . c . . AT&T KS22762 and KS23495 (SCSI)
- c . . . . . . . Bell Technologies XTC-60
- . c . . . . . . Caliper CP150
- c . . . . . . . Cipher CP-60B, CP-125B
- . c . . . . . . Cipher ST150S-II
- c . . . . c . . Cipher ST150S2/90 (SCSI)
- n . . . c . . . CMS Jumbo - 60MB QIC-40
- . . . v . . . . CMS Powertape
- . . . c . . . . Control Data US-22762
- n . . . . c . . Emulex MT02/S1 +CCS INQ (SCSI)
- . c . . c . . . Everex Excel Stream 60, 125, 150
- . c . . c . . . Everex5525ES (SCSI)
- . c . . c . y . Everex EV-811, EV-831, EV-833
- c . . c c c c . Exabyte EXB-8200 (SCSI)
- c . . . . . c . Exabyte EXB-8500 (SCSI)
- . . . v . . . . GigaTrend UniDAT
- c . . . . . . . HP 35450A (SCSI)
- . . . c . c . . HP 88780 (SCSI)
- . . . . . c . . HPCIPHER M990 (SCSI)
- . . . . . c . . NCR H6210-STD1-01-46C632 (SCSI)
- c . . . . . . . Mountain 8mm Cartridge
- y . . . . n . . Mountain FileSafe 150MB (QIC-02)
- c . . . . . . . Mountain FileSafe 60-300MB (QIC-02)
- y y . . . . . y . Sankyo 525ES (SCSI)
- . . . . . c . . Sony SDT-1000 (SCSI)
- . . . . c . . . Tallgrass 150 - 525MB SCSI
- c . . c . . . . Tandberg DQIC (SCSI)
- . . . . . . . c Tandberg TDC-3600 (SCSI)
- y . . . . . . . Tandbrg TDC-3660 (SCSI)
- . . . . . . . . TUV DAT
- . . c c . . . c Wangtek 5099EN24 (60MB)
- c y . . . c . . . Wangtek 150SE (SCSI)
- y c . c c y . . Wangtek 5150ES (SCSI)
- c . . . c . . . Wangtek 60 - 525MB (QIC 02 and SCSI)
- c . . . c . . . Wangtek 6130 - HS 4mm DAT.
- c . . . y c c . Wangtek 5125ES ES41, 5150ES ES41, 5150ES FA0 (SCSI)
- c . c . . . . . Wangtek 5125EQ (125MB)
- c . c c . . . . Wangtek 5150EQ (150MB)
- c . . c c c c c Wangtek 5150ES SCSI-3 (SCSI)
- c . . . c . c . WangTek 5150PK QIC-02 (QIC-150)
- c y . . . . . . c Wangtek 5525 (SCSI)
- c . . . c c . . Wangtek 6130-F (SCSI)
- c . . . c c . . Wangtek KS23417, KS23465, KS24569 (SCSI)
-
- Notes:
-
- * All SVr4s inherit USL support for QIC-02, QIC-36 1/4", or SCSI tape
- interfaces, using QIC-24 (9-track, 60MB), QIC-120 (15-track, 125MB) or
- QIC-150 (18-track, 150MB) formats.
-
- * A user says of Dell: it appears that anything using Wangtek QIC02/QIC36
- controllers works; this should include the Wangtek 525MB, Cipher ST150S2,
- and Archive 2150S drives.
-
- * UHC specifies the following tape controller/drive combinations: Wangtek
- PC-36 + Wangtek 5099-EN, Everex 811 + Wangtek 5150-EN, Bell Tech + Wangtek
- 5150-EN, Archive SC499-R + Archive External FT-60, Archive VP402 + Archive
- Viper 2150L, Everex 811 + Archive Viper 2150L, Bell Tech + Archive Viper
- 2150L, Archive VP402 + Archive Viper 2150L.
-
- * UHC claims that Any floppy tape supporting the QIC-107 physical and QIC-117
- logical interface specs and QIC-80 or QIC-40 recording formats should work.
- This is probably true of other vendors as well.
-
- * BSDI says it supports almost any Wangtek 1/4" standard 3M streamer with a
- QIC-02 or QIC-36 interface. However, they admit that the Archive SC402
- QIC-02 controller will not work. BSDI says it will support almost any SCSI
- tape unit, as well. A small patch was required to get the Sankyo E525ES to
- work.
-
- * Floppy tapes don't work on Dell; USL provides the support, but it collides
- with Dell's code for auto-detecting the density of a diskette.
-
- * SCO's tape compatibility table lists drive/controller pairs; not all drives
- listed have been included here. They allege that any QIC-02 drive should
- work. Unofficial sources inside SCO claim any SCSI drive ought to work.
-
- * A source at SCO says the CMS Jumbo is neither compatible with QIC40/QIC80
- nor Irwin "standards", vendor supplies their own driver which SCO does not
- support. He also said "CMS is in general fairly UNIX-hostile; don't buy
- their stuff if you have a choice." Tom Haapanen <tomh@wes.on.ca> adds
- simply "Ick. Stay away!" On the other hand, Jerry Rocteur <jerry
- @lncc.com> praises their hardware and says he found them quite helpful and
- knowledgeable. Your editor has no experience on which to base an opinion.
-
- * The Emulex MT02 is a QIC02 bridge controller for the SCSI bus -- lets you
- take an old QIC02 drive and run it on a SCSI bus. It is said to use a
- very old version of the SCSI spec; caveat emptor.
-
- * John Plate <plate@infotek.dk> writes: "According to a fax from the Archive
- manufacturer Maynard, [the XL 5580 drive only works with ESIX 4.0.3] if the
- tape drive is "drive" two! Which is the same as disabling the second floppy
- drive and then set a jumper on the tape drive."
-
- S C D E I V M P U B L Non-Winchester mass storage
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- . c . . . . . Bernoulli 90MB exchangeable SCSI
- . . . n . . . Chinon CD-ROMS
- c . . . . . Compaq Dual-Speed CD-ROM Drive
- c . . . . . DEC RRD42
- c . . . . . Hitachi CDR 1750s
- c . . . . . Hitachi CDR 3750
- . . . c . . Hitachi, Toshiba (models not specified)
- c . . . . . IBM External CD-ROM
- c . . . . . IBM Internal CD-ROM II Disk Drive 1104
- . . c . c . Maxtor RXT-800HS
- . . c . . . Maxtor Tahiti-I, Tahiti-II (floptical disk)
- . . c . . . NEC CDR-82 (SCSI CD-ROM)
- c . . . . . NEC CDR-73
- c . . . . . NEC CDR-73M
- c . . . . c NEC CDR-74
- c . . . . . NEC CDR-75
- c . . . . . NEC CDR-77
- c . . . . . NEC CDR-83
- c . . . . . NEC CDR-83M
- c . . . . . NEC CDR-84
- c . . . . . Olivetti CDR-5541
- v . c . . . Pioneer DRM-600 (SCSI CD-ROM)
- . . c . . . Sony CDU-8012 XM-3201B (SCSI CD-ROM)
- . . c . . . Sony SMO E501 (floptical disk)
- c . . . . c Sony CDU-541-01
- c . . . . . Sony CDU-6110-01
- . c . c . . Storage Dimensions XSE1-1000S1 optical disk
- . y . c . c SyQuest cartridge media
- . c . . . . . Tandata
- c . . . . . Texel DM-3024
- c . . . . . Texel DM-5024
- . c . c c . Toshiba TXM-3201A1 CD-ROM
- . . c . . . Toshiba XM-3201B (SCSI CD-ROM)
- . c . y c c . Toshiba TXM-3301B CD-ROM
- . . . c c . Toshiba WM-C050
- . c c c c . Toshiba WM-D070 WORM drive
- c . . . . . Toshiba XM-3101B
- c . . . . . Toshiba XM-3201B
- c . . . . . Toshiba XM-3301B
- c . . . . . Toshiba XM-3401B E1
-
- * Univel's Hardware Compatibility Guide claims that UnixWare works OK
- with Chinon CD-ROMs, but Dave Parker <dlparker@gator!dlpinc00> says they
- don't.
-
- VII. FREEWARE ACCESS FOR SVR4 SYSTEMS.
-
- US4BINR is an archive dedicated to binaries (executable compiled program)
- for UNIX System V Release 4 (SVR4) on 386/486 PC computer.
-
- Our goal is to provide easy access to precompiled programs. Those
- programs are (hopefully):
-
- Up to date.
- Documented.
- Useful or fun.
-
- Uploads annoucement are made in comp.unix.sysv386 and comp.unix.sys5.r4.
- US4BINR carries PD, Freeware, shareware, games, etc... US4BINR is a non profit
- organisation.
-
- US4BINR is available using anonymous ftp or email server.
-
- Anonymous ftp:
-
- Connect to wuarchive.wustl.edu and go to the
- /systems/svr4-pc directory.
-
- Mail server:
-
- To get help about the mail server, send the following message
- to request@us4binr.login.qc.ca
-
- reply Put_your_email_address_here
- help
- quit
-
- There is an archive of "custom" installable SCO UNIX binaries at:
-
- ftp.wimsey.com:pub/wimseypd
-
- It includes things like cnews, trn, elm, nntp, perl, gcc, etc. These
- are also sent out periodically on the biz.sco.binaries news group.
-
- VIII. FREE ADVICE TO VENDORS:
-
- As a potential customer for one of the SVr4 ports, it's to my advantage to
- have everybody in this market competing against one another as hard as
- possible. Accordingly, some free advice to vendors, which I'm broadcasting to
- all of them and the public so as to put just that much more pressure on each
- vendor. :-)
-
- SCO:
- You have a serious image problem with many hackers which you've exacerbated
- recently by falling behind the SVr4 leading edge and then engaging in what
- certainly appears to be an attempt to sucker careless buyers with deceptive
- product naming. But the reaction to this wouldn't be nearly so vehement if
- it didn't come on top of years of discontent with more technical choices.
- There's too much stuff in the SCO kernel and admin tools that's different from
- USL and *not better*; too much stuff that raises weird little compatibility
- problems that shouldn't be there. Verbum sap.
- This different-but-not-better problem is perfectly reflected by the one
- thing about the otherwise-excellent SCO documentation that sucks moldy moose
- droppings; the rearrangement and renaming of the reference manual sections.
- Your technical writers entertain a fond delusion that this helps nontechnical
- users, but all it really does is confuse and frustrate techies with experience
- on other UNIXes. Lose it.
-
- Everybody but SCO:
- SCO's documentation set is to die for (except in the one respect noted
- above), and they add a lot of value over the base UNIX with things like ODT DOS
- and CodeView. Only Dell comes even close to matching SCO in the nifty add-ons
- department, and even they have a lot of room for improvement. If you want to
- outcompete SCO, you have to be *better*; this means (at minimum) supporting a
- windowing debugger and ISAM libraries and DOS support that goes beyond 2.0.
-
- Consensys:
- Get a real support address. Bang-path accessibility doesn't impress anyone
- any more --- in fact, it looks faintly quaint. You guys ought to be
- support@consensys.com to follow the simple and logical convention SCO and Dell
- and ESIX and Microport and UHC have established.
- I think you have a serious attitude problem. So far, you're the only outfit
- out of nine to refuse to divulge information for the comparison tables. While
- you have a perfect right to do so, it smells bad --- as though you think you
- have weaknesses to hide. I tried to discuss this with your VP of sales (Gary
- Anderson) and got back very little but evasions, suit-speak, defensiveness, and
- attempts to divert me from the issues (and I don't mind admitting that the
- conversation made me pretty angry and didn't end very pleasantly). This man's
- behavior is all too consistent with reports of Consensys's dismissive behavior
- towards customers and continued refusal to acknowledge technical problems.
- In this corner of the industry we have a tradition of collegiality, mutual
- trust, informality, and candor. If you plan to be here for the long haul, you
- need to learn how to work with that rather than fighting it. Behaving like IBM
- will only get you hammered.
- 1993 PS: there are some signs of improvement, especially the staffing-up in
- support and a slightly friendlier attitude from your reps. And Gary Anderson
- is gone. But you've still got a ways to go in making up for past mistakes.
-
- Everybody but Yggdrasil:
- Mene, Mene, Tekel, Uparshin! A complete, working UNIX plus GNU tools plus X
- is now available for $60 --- *with sources*. Your prices have to drop by an
- order of magnitude, or your service has to get a whole hell of a lot better, if
- you're going to try and compete with that. Adapt or die.
-
- Dell:
- You had an enviable reputation and the best 4.0 product on the market. You
- blew it by throwing away your support group. Now you look to be preparing to
- dump the 4.0 product entirely for Solaris --- and doing it on the sly.
- If you want the market to trust you again, you've got to come clean
- about where the 4.0 release is going.
-
- Everybody but Dell:
- Despite recent troubles, Dell is still the outfit you have to beat if you
- want to lead this market. And forget "positioning" ---- that means doing
- everything they do *better* than they do; providing a more stable, more
- feature-rich, better-polished system at a lower price. That's not going to be
- easy, but don't con yourselves that you have a choice. Meet the ante, or
- fold.
- For starters, offer all the free software Dell does --- and *more*. All it
- will cost you is the media, right? Even if you have to plaster CONTRIBUTED
- SOFTWARE, NOT SUPPORTED on it, include perl, elm, bison, gcc, emacs, gdb, mush,
- patch, compress, etc on your distribution tapes. Heck, include some *games*
- (SCO includes games with UNIX but not the full ODT product; and makes some
- games available for download on their BBS).
- Nethack, empire, zork, stuff like that. Your engineers use and
- play with all this in-house anyhow, yes? And you're selling to guys
- just like your engineers. They'll love you for it. Trust me.
- Set up a `sales' address to take product queries if you don't already have
- one.
-
- Everybody but Dell and SCO:
- A Dell person warns that the kinds of tweaks to the source made by porting
- houses can break X/Open (XPG3) conformance. Dell and SCO test every build with
- VSX (the X/Open-approved XPG3 test suite) and Dell reports that it often finds
- places where seemingly innocuous bug fixes cause XPG3 violations. Other UNIX
- vendors would be well advised to do likewise.
- Set up an 800 number for tech support. Support customers hate spending time
- on hold, and they hate it like poison when they have to *pay* for the hold
- time. The more overloaded your support staff is, the more important this
- gets. Verbum sap.
-
- Esix:
- You went belly-up and got acquired. You've got to prove yourselves now,
- and it's going to be tough against the new low prices on Univel and other
- products. Tried-and-true isn't going to cut it; you need to come up with
- something brilliant. Good luck.
-
- Esix, MST, UHC:
- Get 800 numbers for product info, too.
-
- MST:
- Set up a support@mst.com alias to your cs address, see above. What would
- that take, a whole five minutes? :-)
- On present trends, your software prices are cheap enough; you'd probably
- get more sales mileage out of pulling down the hardware prices for your
- pre-configured systems.
-
- Everybody but MST and Microport:
- Set up a `sales' alias to your info and orders email address. A universal
- convention for this means just one less detail prospective customers need to
- remember.
-
- Microport:
- Your complete system is way overpriced relative to what other vendors in the
- top tier are selling. If I were a corporate customer, there is no *way* I
- could justify spending the $1K or $2K premium over Dell's price --- not when
- Dell has the rep it does for quality and features. You aren't offering
- anything but a crippled copy of JSB Multiview to justify that premium and
- that ain't enough.
- There's some evidence that you've got a technical lead on the competition.
- Push it; push it *hard*. You're first off the blocks with 4.0.4; keep that up,
- be first out with a stable 4.2 ESMP. Market yourselves as the leading-edge
- outfit, court the hard-core wizards as their natural ally, detail somebody
- who's fluent in English as well as C to listen and speak for you on USENET, and
- keep the promises you make there.
-
- UHC:
- You've decided to push support; that's good, but follow through by getting
- that 800 number. Don't lose those small-company virtues of candor and
- flexibility, trade on them. Your policy of having all techs clear up to the
- product manager take turns on the support lines is a damned good idea, stick
- with it. And I'm sufficiently impressed with what I've heard from your guys
- that I think you might be able to fight Microport for the friend-to-wizards
- mantle, too. Maybe you should try.
-
- Everybody except BSDI:
- BSD/386 includes *sources*. For *everything*. Be afraid; be very afraid.
- In effect, this recruits hundreds of eager hackers as uncompensated development
- and support engineers for BSDI. Don't fool yourselves that the results are
- necessarily going to be unfocused, amateur-quality and safe to ignore --- it
- sure didn't work that way for gcc or Emacs. The rest of you will have to work
- that much harder and smarter to stay ahead of their game.
-
- BSDI:
- Don't you get complacent either. The 386BSD and Linux distributions are
- breathing down *your* neck...
- The most effective things you can do to to seriously compete with SVr4
- vendors are: a) emphasize standards conformance --- POSIX, FIPS, XPG3, etc.,
- and b) follow through on your support promises. Just another flaky BSDoid
- system isn't really very interesting except to hobbyists, even with sources ---
- but if it were proven a reliable cross-development platform it could capture
- a lot of hearts and minds among commercial software designers.
-
- Everybody:
- Do something about your product names! Even the cases that don't appear
- to be deliberate deception are very confusing to the customer. If you're
- releasing an enhanced 4.0.3 or 4.0.4 that's what you ought to *call* it. I
- recommend:
-
- Consensys UNIX Version 1.2 --> Consensys UNIX 4.0.3 revision 1.2
- Dell UNIX Issue 2.1 --> Dell UNIX 4.0.3 revision 2.1
- ESIX System V Release 4.0.4 --> Esix UNIX 4.0.4 revision 4
- MST SVr4 UNIX --> MST UNIX 4.0.3
- Microport System V/4 version 4 --> Microport UNIX 4.0.4
- UHC Version 3.6 --> UHC UNIX 4.0.3 revision 6
-
- The fact is, all these idiosyncratic version-numbering systems do you no
- good and considerable harm. At worst, they make it look like you're trying to
- pull a scam by deceiving people about the level of the base technology. At
- best, they parade your internal revision number (which conveys no useful
- information unless one is an existing customer considering an upgrade already)
- and obscure the really important information. Do your product differentiation
- elsewhere, in substance rather than nomenclature; it's not useful here.
- You're *all* badly understaffed in support engineering, and it shows. Boy
- does it show --- in poor followup, long hold times, and user gripes. The first
- outfit to invest enough to offer really first-class quick-response support is
- going to eat everyone else's lunch. Wouldn't you like to be it?
-
-
- IX. INTO THE FUTURE.
-
- It's always tough to get vendors, especially vendors as big as USL, to
- be candid about current development and future directions. Here are some
- things I've gleaned from usually reliable sources:
-
- There's not going to be a SVR4.0.5. As far as USL is concerned there was
- SVR4.0 Version 3 (internally known as v7.4) and SVR4.0 Version 4 (internally
- known as w3.4). There won't be a SVR4.0 Version 5 because USL did SVR4.2
- (originally SVR4.1dt) next, and is currently working on SVR4/ESMP. Maybe
- there'll be a set of patches for SVR4.0 Version 4, but that's probably it.
-
- So if anybody tells you they are going to have `SVR4.0.5', be skeptical.
-
- There are significant kernel bug fixes going form SVR4.0.3 to SVR4.0.4, but no
- real functional changes. Watch out for the memory manager in SVR4.0.3.
-
- What some people call SVR4.3 isn't officially named that. At USL, it's
- called SVR4.2/ESMP (Enhanced Security, Multi Processor).
-
- There is an MP version of SVR4.0 that was done by the Intel Consortium
- (primarily NCR and Intel). It is often called SVR4.0/MP or sometimes SVR4.1.
- Vendors with MP versions of SVR4.0 are probably offering this, rather than a
- homegrown version.
-
-
- IX. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS AND ENVOI
-
- Many netters have sent me email contributing technical information,
- feedback, and comment. Thanks to all. It's in combinations of individual
- mission and collective cooperation like this one that the net really shines,
- and I'm grateful to everybody who's worked with me to improve the signal/noise
- ratio.
-
- The level of cooperation I've experienced from vendors' program managers,
- techies and marketing people since the first issue has generally been
- outstanding. Particular high marks go to Jeremy Chatfield (formerly of Dell,
- now of Information Foundation), Bela Lubkin at SCO, Kristen Axline at
- Microport, John Prothro and Sam Nataros at UHC, and Rob Kolstad at BSDI. By
- cooperating intelligently with this FAQ, they've done a great job of serving
- the market and representing their corporate interests.
- --
- Send your feedback to: Eric Raymond = esr@snark.thyrsus.com
-