A/UX without Ethernet hardware
Kent Sandvik
ksand at Apple.COM
Sat Apr 13 08:25:04 AEST 1991
In article <1991Apr11.151740.24539 at truevision.com> pauls at truevision.com (Paul Scherf) writes:
>I have gotten a couple boxes full of A/UX software and documentation
>dropped on my desk. I managed to get A/UX installed and running,
>but my Mac (a IIfx) doesn't have Ethernet hardware.
>
>When my Mac ran only MacOS, I ran NCSA telnet to remote login to UNIX machines.
>I have been led to believe that NCSA telnet pushes TCP/IP (or UDP?)
>packets through Appletalk. (Is encapsulation the right term here?)
>I believe some sort of Appletalk/Ethernet bridge
>converts the packets back and forth between Appletalk and Ethernet format.
>I would like to have A/UX push TCP/IP (and UDP) packets through Appletalk.
>So I can run rlogin or telnet to the UNIX machines on the Ethernet.
>(I figure this will be slower than having a real Ethernet card.
>For rlogin/telnet, it might be fast enough.)
>Is there a way to accomplish this? Is ifconfig the right command?
>What does the A/UX kernel call the Appletalk interface?
Someone correct me if I'm totally lost in the weed, but MacOS MacTCP
drivers do the IP/DDP encapsulation. Now A/UX translates MacTCP parameter
block calls to low level socket calls, and there's no code for DDP/IP
encapsulation as such.
Maybe something like that would be easy to implement, especially if the
socket TCP/IP part would be streams based (which isn't the case just
now).
Kent Sandvik
--
Kent Sandvik, DTS junkie
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