If that's the MIPs code base, it is likely to not be there. I could be
forgetting something, but I remember that DECnet was released for the MIPS
products. It was on Tru64 and Ultrix, but is a 'layered product' so you
needed a license to install it and it needed to be a late enough version
that had switched to exposing a full OSI stack.
That said, I do not remember/know how well it functioned talking to any OSI
stack other than DECs.
On Wed, Aug 28, 2019 at 7:05 AM Jason Stevens <
jsteve(a)superglobalmegacorp.com> wrote:
I have OSF/1 1.0 running on gxemul …
Any idea on where/ how to configure OSI?
OSF/1 Release 1 (OSFMIPS) console
login: root
Last login: Thu Aug 29 06:03:07 on console
DEC OSF/1 V1.0 (Rev. 166); Sun Jun 07 19:23:34 CDT 1970
DEC OSF/1 V1.0 Worksystem Software (Rev. 161)
# find / -name 'osi*' -print
#
*From: *Peter Jeremy <peter(a)rulingia.com>
*Sent: *Wednesday, August 28, 2019 2:47 PM
*To: *Wesley Parish <wobblygong(a)gmail.com>
*Cc: *TUHS main list <tuhs(a)minnie.tuhs.org>
*Subject: *Re: [TUHS] If not Linux, then what?
On 2019-Aug-28 18:19:21 +1200, Wesley Parish <wobblygong(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
Speaking of OSI stacks, I know 4.4BSD Lite came
with some fragments of
one. OSI's dead and hardly mourned these
days, but did anyone in the
Unix world ever get beyond the 4.4BSD fragmentary
implementation?
There was ISODE
(
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_Development_Environment)
I recall experimenting with it but didn't actually use it in anger.
I know that DEC/Compaq/HP Tru64 Unix (nee OSF/1) came with a OSI stack -
we had customers who wanted/used FTAM and I was surprised to find it
came with the OS.
--
Peter Jeremy