INFO-VAX Tue, 13 Mar 2007 Volume 2007 : Issue 144 Contents: Re: AMD's well may be running dry Re: AMD's well may be running dry Re: AMD's well may be running dry Re: AMD's well may be running dry Re: AMD's well may be running dry Re: AMD's well may be running dry Re: AMD's well may be running dry Re: AMD's well may be running dry Re: AMD's well may be running dry Re: AMD's well may be running dry Re: AMD's well may be running dry Re: Biofuels was: AMD's well may be running dry Biofules was: AMD's well may be running dry CO2 was: AMD's well may be running dry Re: Does HP still sell software for Alphas? Re: Does HP still sell software for Alphas? Re: errors Re: FTP Login (to remote site) puzzle Re: FTP Login (to remote site) puzzle Re: FTP Login (to remote site) puzzle Re: Getting PCSI-E-INVSPIDST1 when trying any "product" command Re: Getting PCSI-E-INVSPIDST1 when trying any "product" command Re: Getting PCSI-E-INVSPIDST1 when trying any "product" command Re: output from cron ssh to VMS? PEA0: errors Shopping cart that works on VMS TELNET - session timeout parameter(s) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 13 Mar 2007 06:05:04 GMT From: "Dave Weatherall" Subject: Re: AMD's well may be running dry Message-ID: On Tue, 13 Mar 2007 01:12:30 UTC, bill@cs.uofs.edu (Bill Gunshannon) wrote: > In article <45f5e64b$0$16288$88260bb3@free.teranews.com>, > "Neil Rieck" writes: > > > > Check this link for more information about what happened on Earth 250 > > Million years ago. > > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permian_extinction > > Damn. And nature did all that without man's help. Go figure. > > bill Bill nature isn't the problem. Nature was in 'balance' last time around and I seem to think that any inhabitants then would not have been too keen on what was happening. It may be that wamer temperatures are 'natural'. The problem is that the human action increases the imbalance and increases the likelihood of catastrophe if we continue as we are. No action because its 'natural' won't help avoid the effects. -- Cheers - Dave W. ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 13 Mar 2007 07:26:11 -0400 From: "Neil Rieck" Subject: Re: AMD's well may be running dry Message-ID: <45f67dc9$0$16280$88260bb3@free.teranews.com> "Bill Gunshannon" wrote in message news:55mc3uF25ogesU1@mid.individual.net... > In article <45f5e64b$0$16288$88260bb3@free.teranews.com>, > "Neil Rieck" writes: >> >> Check this link for more information about what happened on Earth 250 >> Million years ago. >> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permian_extinction > > Damn. And nature did all that without man's help. Go figure. > In the current theory, the initial CO2 release occurred as a result of large volcanic activity in Siberia. Now it is true that the industrial age of man has released quite a bit of CO2 already, but what would happen if a natural event, like a volcano, occurred? The combined effect of all these events could drive the planet's temperature higher which could melt permafrost and release oceanic methane hydrate which would make things even hotter. Let's all stop listening to politicians and start listening to scientists. Currently greater than 95% of more than 10,000 peer reviewed scientists believe that the global warming is here, and that it's man made. On the flip side, a majority of these scientists believe that Kyoto is flawed. Kyoto is a failed political response to the problem identified by scientists. Neil Rieck Kitchener/Waterloo/Cambridge, Ontario, Canada. http://www3.sympatico.ca/n.rieck/ -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com ------------------------------ Date: 13 Mar 2007 11:55:02 GMT From: bill@cs.uofs.edu (Bill Gunshannon) Subject: Re: AMD's well may be running dry Message-ID: <55nhomF25qftdU1@mid.individual.net> In article , "Dave Weatherall" writes: > On Tue, 13 Mar 2007 01:12:30 UTC, bill@cs.uofs.edu (Bill Gunshannon) > wrote: > >> In article <45f5e64b$0$16288$88260bb3@free.teranews.com>, >> "Neil Rieck" writes: >> > >> > Check this link for more information about what happened on Earth 250 >> > Million years ago. >> > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permian_extinction >> >> Damn. And nature did all that without man's help. Go figure. >> >> bill > > Bill > nature isn't the problem. Nature was in 'balance' last time > around and I seem to think that any inhabitants then would not have > been too keen on what was happening. It may be that wamer temperatures > are 'natural'. The problem is that the human action increases the > imbalance and increases the likelihood of catastrophe if we continue > as we are. No action because its 'natural' won't help avoid the > effects. Or man could abandon his arrogance, admit he is not the top of the food chain and accept that in the grand scheme of nature he is an insignificant little gnat. When nature is thru with us it will sweep us from the planet just like the dinosaurs and there is nothing we can do to lengthen or shorten that period of time. bill -- Bill Gunshannon | de-moc-ra-cy (di mok' ra see) n. Three wolves bill@cs.scranton.edu | and a sheep voting on what's for dinner. University of Scranton | Scranton, Pennsylvania | #include ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 13 Mar 2007 05:35:12 -0800 From: "Tom Linden" Subject: Re: AMD's well may be running dry Message-ID: On Tue, 13 Mar 2007 03:26:11 -0800, Neil Rieck wrote: > > "Bill Gunshannon" wrote in message > news:55mc3uF25ogesU1@mid.individual.net... >> In article <45f5e64b$0$16288$88260bb3@free.teranews.com>, >> "Neil Rieck" writes: >>> >>> Check this link for more information about what happened on Earth 250 >>> Million years ago. >>> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permian_extinction >> >> Damn. And nature did all that without man's help. Go figure. >> > > In the current theory, the initial CO2 release occurred as a result of > large volcanic activity in Siberia. > > Now it is true that the industrial age of man has released quite a bit > of CO2 already, but what would happen if a natural event, like a > volcano, occurred? The combined effect of all these events could drive > the planet's temperature higher which could melt permafrost and release > oceanic methane hydrate which would make things even hotter. > > Let's all stop listening to politicians and start listening to > scientists. Currently greater than 95% of more than 10,000 peer reviewed > scientists believe that the global warming is here, and that it's man > made. I suspect that is rubbish. I doubt that man's influence on the global temperature is even measureable. The temperature was actually warmer when the vikings were raiding the British Isles and as you might expect the sea level was correspondingly higher. There have been numerous scholarly articles on the climate of the earth for many years, and it would behoove you to study those before exposing your ignorance of these matters. Here is a starter. http://www.kednos.com/physics/climatology/iceage.html The irony of the political debate on this matter is that the earth is actually entering into a cooling period which will result in another Ice age in about 12,000 years. Before that, and for the next few hundred years we will likely have a repeat of the so-called mini-ice age from which we emerged 150 or so years ago, which was believed to have been cause by a shutdown of the Atlantic conveyor. > > On the flip side, a majority of these scientists believe that Kyoto is > flawed. Kyoto is a failed political response to the problem identified > by scientists. > > Neil Rieck > Kitchener/Waterloo/Cambridge, > Ontario, Canada. > http://www3.sympatico.ca/n.rieck/ -- Using Opera's revolutionary e-mail client: http://www.opera.com/mail/ ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 13 Mar 2007 14:09:33 +0000 (UTC) From: david20@alpha2.mdx.ac.uk Subject: Re: AMD's well may be running dry Message-ID: In article <55nhomF25qftdU1@mid.individual.net>, bill@cs.uofs.edu (Bill Gunshannon) writes: >In article , > "Dave Weatherall" writes: >> On Tue, 13 Mar 2007 01:12:30 UTC, bill@cs.uofs.edu (Bill Gunshannon) >> wrote: >> >>> In article <45f5e64b$0$16288$88260bb3@free.teranews.com>, >>> "Neil Rieck" writes: >>> > >>> > Check this link for more information about what happened on Earth 250 >>> > Million years ago. >>> > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permian_extinction >>> >>> Damn. And nature did all that without man's help. Go figure. >>> >>> bill >> >> Bill >> nature isn't the problem. Nature was in 'balance' last time >> around and I seem to think that any inhabitants then would not have >> been too keen on what was happening. It may be that wamer temperatures >> are 'natural'. The problem is that the human action increases the >> imbalance and increases the likelihood of catastrophe if we continue >> as we are. No action because its 'natural' won't help avoid the >> effects. > >Or man could abandon his arrogance, admit he is not the top of >the food chain and accept that in the grand scheme of nature he >is an insignificant little gnat. > >When nature is thru with us it will sweep us from the planet just >like the dinosaurs and there is nothing we can do to lengthen or >shorten that period of time. > Well the dinosaurs were in the ascendancy for over 150 Million years whereas the mammals have so far managed less than 65 Million. Our own species Homo Sapiens has been around for about 150000 years. Homo Erectus seems to have been around for more like a Million years. If it hadn't been for an asteriod hit the dinosaurs might still be going strong. Unlike the dinosaurs there is at least a possibility that in a few decades time we might be able to stop such an asteriod. Alternatively today we are perfectly capable of shortening our stay on Earth. David Webb Security team leader CCSS Middlesex University >bill > >-- >Bill Gunshannon | de-moc-ra-cy (di mok' ra see) n. Three wolves >bill@cs.scranton.edu | and a sheep voting on what's for dinner. >University of Scranton | >Scranton, Pennsylvania | #include ------------------------------ Date: 13 Mar 2007 10:15:55 -0500 From: koehler@eisner.nospam.encompasserve.org (Bob Koehler) Subject: Re: AMD's well may be running dry Message-ID: In article <45f53e94$1_1@glkas0286.greenlnk.net>, "chris" writes: > how long is the support for open vms on itaniums, is it true DOD wanted > support till 2020 for their applications? > Nobody knows. It's like asking how long GM expects to continue support for the last Chevy. Niether Itanium nor Chevrolet are making any end of life plans. ------------------------------ Date: 13 Mar 2007 10:18:19 -0500 From: koehler@eisner.nospam.encompasserve.org (Bob Koehler) Subject: Re: AMD's well may be running dry Message-ID: In article , JF Mezei writes: > > And bob, you mention animals generating 18% of world's CO2 emissions. The USA > generates 25% of the world's emissions. Must be all them steer in Texas. ------------------------------ Date: 13 Mar 2007 10:21:20 -0500 From: koehler@eisner.nospam.encompasserve.org (Bob Koehler) Subject: Re: AMD's well may be running dry Message-ID: In article , JF Mezei writes: > > Divert that surplus to production of fuel and not only could the respective > government stop highly subsidizing their farmers, but there would no longer be a > surplus of wheet/corn, allowing farmers in developping nations to make a living > from their crops and greatly help the plight of those countries. > If all the land currently in production in the US and all the land intentionally allowed to lay fallow were used for nothing other than to grow bio-fuels (meaning we'd import ALL our food instead of being one of the world's largest food exporters), we could not make enough bio-fuels to stop importing oil. ------------------------------ Date: 13 Mar 2007 10:46:29 -0500 From: koehler@eisner.nospam.encompasserve.org (Bob Koehler) Subject: Re: AMD's well may be running dry Message-ID: In article <55mc3uF25ogesU1@mid.individual.net>, bill@cs.uofs.edu (Bill Gunshannon) writes: > > Damn. And nature did all that without man's help. Go figure. > I don't care who did it. I don't care what's happening on Mars with respect to global warming. I just want to do what we can to aleviate it so all my great grandchildren don't starve. ------------------------------ Date: 13 Mar 2007 10:47:42 -0500 From: koehler@eisner.nospam.encompasserve.org (Bob Koehler) Subject: Re: AMD's well may be running dry Message-ID: In article , "Tom Linden" writes: > > I suspect that is rubbish. I doubt that man's influence on the global > temperature is even measureable. The measurements have been made. You might not like some of the theories, but the facts are real. ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 13 Mar 2007 07:39:47 -0800 From: "Tom Linden" Subject: Re: AMD's well may be running dry Message-ID: On Tue, 13 Mar 2007 07:47:42 -0800, Bob Koehler wrote: > In article , "Tom Linden" > writes: >> >> I suspect that is rubbish. I doubt that man's influence on the global >> temperature is even measureable. > > The measurements have been made. You might not like some of the > theories, but the facts are real. > I believe there is some scientific debate about these measurements, and they are not facts. It has nothing to do with what I like. -- Using Opera's revolutionary e-mail client: http://www.opera.com/mail/ ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 13 Mar 2007 07:23:58 -0800 From: "Tom Linden" Subject: Re: Biofuels was: AMD's well may be running dry Message-ID: On Tue, 13 Mar 2007 07:18:12 -0800, Tom Linden wrote: Let's get the spelling right:-) > On Tue, 13 Mar 2007 07:21:20 -0800, Bob Koehler > wrote: > >> In article , JF Mezei >> writes: >>> >>> Divert that surplus to production of fuel and not only could the >>> respective >>> government stop highly subsidizing their farmers, but there would no >>> longer be a >>> surplus of wheet/corn, allowing farmers in developping nations to make >>> a living >>> from their crops and greatly help the plight of those countries. >>> >> >> If all the land currently in production in the US and all the land >> intentionally allowed to lay fallow were used for nothing other than >> to grow bio-fuels (meaning we'd import ALL our food instead of being >> one of the world's largest food exporters), we could not make enough >> bio-fuels to stop importing oil. >> > How many calories does take to produce one liter of ethanol, and how many > calories can be extracted from that liter? > -- Using Opera's revolutionary e-mail client: http://www.opera.com/mail/ ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 13 Mar 2007 07:18:12 -0800 From: "Tom Linden" Subject: Biofules was: AMD's well may be running dry Message-ID: On Tue, 13 Mar 2007 07:21:20 -0800, Bob Koehler wrote: > In article , JF Mezei > writes: >> >> Divert that surplus to production of fuel and not only could the >> respective >> government stop highly subsidizing their farmers, but there would no >> longer be a >> surplus of wheet/corn, allowing farmers in developping nations to make >> a living >> from their crops and greatly help the plight of those countries. >> > > If all the land currently in production in the US and all the land > intentionally allowed to lay fallow were used for nothing other than > to grow bio-fuels (meaning we'd import ALL our food instead of being > one of the world's largest food exporters), we could not make enough > bio-fuels to stop importing oil. > How many calories does take to produce one liter of ethanol, and how many calories can be extracted from that liter? -- Using Opera's revolutionary e-mail client: http://www.opera.com/mail/ ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 13 Mar 2007 07:15:29 -0800 From: "Tom Linden" Subject: CO2 was: AMD's well may be running dry Message-ID: On Tue, 13 Mar 2007 07:18:19 -0800, Bob Koehler wrote: > In article , JF Mezei > writes: >> >> And bob, you mention animals generating 18% of world's CO2 emissions. >> The USA >> generates 25% of the world's emissions. > > Must be all them steer in Texas. > 160 Billion tons of CO2 goes into the atmosphere every year, man is responsible for about 6 of those -- Using Opera's revolutionary e-mail client: http://www.opera.com/mail/ ------------------------------ Date: 13 Mar 2007 08:31:36 +0100 From: peter@langstoeger.at (Peter 'EPLAN' LANGSTOeGER) Subject: Re: Does HP still sell software for Alphas? Message-ID: <45f66168$1@news.langstoeger.at> In article , rdeininger@mindspringdot.com (Robert Deininger) writes: >In article <1173710694.197321.86460@64g2000cwx.googlegroups.com>, "tadamsmar" wrote: >> >>I will probably by a DS10 shortly, but its not listed in that letter >>as a currently shipping system. > >DS10 systems have been out of production for several years now. The DS15 >is the replacement AlphaServer. And yesterday for the first time I saw a DS15 on EBAY (very cheap, yet) -- Peter "EPLAN" LANGSTOEGER Network and OpenVMS system specialist E-mail peter@langstoeger.at A-1030 VIENNA AUSTRIA I'm not a pessimist, I'm a realist ------------------------------ Date: 13 Mar 2007 10:40:37 -0500 From: koehler@eisner.nospam.encompasserve.org (Bob Koehler) Subject: Re: Does HP still sell software for Alphas? Message-ID: In article <1173704926.974418.6050@t69g2000cwt.googlegroups.com>, "tadamsmar" writes: > > Does HP still sell licenses and software for Alphas? > In fact I believe you can still order software for VAXen. It's not new, but you might need something you don't have. ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 13 Mar 2007 10:30:32 -0000 From: "chris" Subject: Re: errors Message-ID: <45f679fb_1@glkas0286.greenlnk.net> fixed, it was a mismatch with networks, the socket was set to 10meg, and the ES40 was set to full duplex 100meg, cranked down es40 to 10meg until networks can update socket "chris" wrote in message news:45f6641d$1_1@glkas0286.greenlnk.net... >I have an alpha node in a cluster which keeps crashing itself after a >couple of days, I have to manually reset it as its break_non_member in the >cluster. > > Ive noticed that there are 2 error counts on the PEA0: device, could this > be down to a poor network? > ------------------------------ Date: 13 Mar 2007 10:43:11 -0500 From: koehler@eisner.nospam.encompasserve.org (Bob Koehler) Subject: Re: FTP Login (to remote site) puzzle Message-ID: In article , "Display Name" writes: > > Anyone have experience logging in to a remote host using a scripted > approach? > Yes. The correct approach depends on who's IP stack you're using. Some will take /username and /password parameters but never take username and password from a non-interactive data stream. ------------------------------ Date: 13 Mar 2007 08:57:46 -0700 From: bclark@lrgh.org Subject: Re: FTP Login (to remote site) puzzle Message-ID: <1173801466.133979.144570@p10g2000cwp.googlegroups.com> On Mar 13, 3:26 am, p...@langstoeger.at (Peter 'EPLAN' LANGSTOeGER) wrote: > In article <45f5bf35$0$11128$ba620...@nova.planet.nl>, Wilm Boerhout writes: > > >But alas (for Fred B) COPY /FTP has no READCHECK or WRITECHECK > >qualifiers because the ftp client interface wouldn't know what to do > >with it. > > COPY/FTP also doesn't support filenames with wildcards or list of filenames. > > -- > Peter "EPLAN" LANGSTOEGER > Network and OpenVMS system specialist > E-mail p...@langstoeger.at > A-1030 VIENNA AUSTRIA I'm not a pessimist, I'm a realist many thanks, i have succeeded with the obvious; COPY/FTP is, in actual fact, the answer. ------------------------------ Date: 13 Mar 2007 09:05:09 -0700 From: bclark@lrgh.org Subject: Re: FTP Login (to remote site) puzzle Message-ID: <1173801909.609895.4040@8g2000cwh.googlegroups.com> On Mar 12, 3:34 pm, JF Mezei wrote: > Display Name wrote: > > Anyone have experience logging in to a remote host using a scripted > > approach? > > Dear Mr Name, > > depending on what FTP stack you have, you may need to do: > > $DEFINE/USER TT SY$INPUT > $DEFINE/USER SYS$COMMAND SYS$INPUT > $FTP destination > > > SEND chocolate.TXT > EXIT > $! > > The advantage of the above structure is that you can make multiple file > transfers with a single FTP connection. > > As Mr Hoff said, you can likely use COPY/FTP command which, for single file > transfers is far better. It also has the advantage of having symbol substitution > capabilities since the whole transaction is in a single DCL line. > > example: > $COPY/FTP/VERBOSE sys$login:login.com - > xdelta.zko.dec.com"username password"::login.tmp > > The remote file specification (after the ::) can be enclosed in double quotes , > and you can then specify a Unix syntax with "dir/dir/filename.ext" Indeed, as I have discovered (and tried to thank others in this group for) , the answer to my question is as you have said ; COPY/FTP is now among the other slings and arrows in my arsenal. Thanks for the feedback. ------------------------------ Date: 13 Mar 2007 00:36:05 -0700 From: mcbill20@yahoo.com Subject: Re: Getting PCSI-E-INVSPIDST1 when trying any "product" command Message-ID: <1173771365.381609.257400@h3g2000cwc.googlegroups.com> On Mar 12, 7:02 am, p...@langstoeger.at (Peter 'EPLAN' LANGSTOeGER) wrote: > In article <1173701935.133318.139...@8g2000cwh.googlegroups.com>, mcbil...@yahoo.com writes: > >On Mar 12, 6:04 am, p...@langstoeger.at (Peter 'EPLAN' LANGSTOeGER) wrote: > >> If you upgrade/reinstall it, your problems will vanish... > > >I'd like to do that. However, when I mentioned rebuilding this machine > >the other network person was less than excited. I guess that in > >addition to Multinet and PMDF, this node has a few other undocumented > >responsibilities in our network including bootp and ntp. It also has a > >homegrown program for employee timekeeping. > > Ok. I did only one vms install in the last 20 years (when I switched > from single node system disk V4.7 to a clustered system disk with V4.6 > and upgrade again to V4.7) and this was the change of my employers ;-) > > The normal way is to update VMS. There might be products which won't > install on a new VMS version but continue to run on the new version > when installed and running on the old version (eg. ETHERNIM, DECmcc, ...) > > But there might be reason for installing VMS fresh. eg. getting rid > of old applications (installed with VMSINSTAL, having no deinstallation > routine and no listing which files belong to this application). YMMV Yeah, I wouldn't mind doing either one. However, my co-worker is against making any updates or changes to this machine. > > >> Yes, but do you know the old volume label? > >> And do you know if products were installed on non system disks in the past? > I have no idea what the original volume label was. > >I have no idea what the original volume label was. I tried the > >"register volume" command with "vaxvmssys" but the "register volume" > >command generates the same error that is is purportedly trying to fix. > > I'd expected that you also tried PRODUCT REGISTER VOLUME SYS SYS$SYSDEVICE > It doesn't matter what I specify for the volume name. Just using the "product" verb generates the same error that this post is referring to. > >The system got rebooted yesterday during the new daylight saving time > >fiasco. The problem is still there. > > DST fiasco? Is there a TZ patch for V7.2? I only know of the one for V7.3 > One more reason to upgrade to the latest/last OpenVMS VAX version... > When I said "DST fiasco" I was referring to the whole DST change in general, and the buggy Microsoft patches in particular, not VMS issues. We finally found a patch for the version of Multinet that we have and once we installed it we had no problems with VMS. Needless to say, the changes to our Windows Server 2003, Windows NT 4 Server and Windows XP boxes didn't go nearly as smooth. On one Win 2003 server, I ran windowsupdate, downloaded the specific DST patch and installed it, rebooted and set the time. I also ran TZEDIT to make sure the dates were set correctly. When I came in this morning I found that the server had reverted to non-DST time. The same was true of many of our XP desktops and NT 4 desktops. It turns out that to make many of them work correctly, even after you apply the patch and/or use TZEDIT to change the DST dates, you then need to bring up the clock window, uncheck the "automatically adjust clock for daylight saving changes" box, hit apply and then check the box and hit apply again. Otherwise they revert to non-DST time. I guess I was also referring to the unnecessary change of DST dates. Sigh...our tax dollars at work... > -- > Peter "EPLAN" LANGSTOEGER > Network and OpenVMS system specialist > E-mail p...@langstoeger.at > A-1030 VIENNA AUSTRIA I'm not a pessimist, I'm a realist ------------------------------ Date: 13 Mar 2007 07:33:14 -0700 From: mcbill20@yahoo.com Subject: Re: Getting PCSI-E-INVSPIDST1 when trying any "product" command Message-ID: <1173796394.812432.139040@n33g2000cwc.googlegroups.com> On Mar 12, 6:21 pm, "David B Sneddon" wrote: > On Mar 11, 12:09 pm, mcbil...@yahoo.com wrote: > > > > > Hello all. I have inherited a VAX 4000-50 that was set up by someone > > else quite a while back. The machine is running VMS 7.2 and Multinet > > 4.4 Rev A. > > > I tried to install the DFU utility from the VMS freeware and got the > > above listed error when trying the "PRODUCT INSTALL" command. I then > > tried a "PROD SHOW HISTORY" and got the same. I haven't been able to > > find much information on this error. I found one listing at HP.com and > > it indicates a possible problem with changing the volume name of a > > drive. This computer looks like they may have changed the volume name. > > The HP.com forum mentioned trying "PROD REGISTER VOLUME" to fix the > > problem. I tried that command but got the same error. Here is the > > output from my system: > > > $ show dev d > > > Device Device Error Volume Free > > Trans Mnt > > Name Status Count Label Blocks > > Count Cnt > > HSD0$DIA0: Mounted 0 SYS > > 7709229 369 1 > > HSD0$DIA1: Mounted 0 USR > > 9310338 2 1 > > SIMSVC$DUA0: Online 0 > > > $ prod show hist > > ----------------------------------- ----------- ----------- > > -------------------- > > PRODUCT KIT TYPE OPERATION DATE AND > > TIME > > ----------------------------------- ----------- ----------- > > -------------------- > > %PCSI-E-OPENOUT, error opening _HSD0$DIA0 as output > > -PCSI-E-INVSPIDST1, destination device is not mounted or does not have > > an associ > > ated logical volume name > > %PCSI-E-S_OPFAIL, operation failed > > %PCSIUI-E-ABORT, operation terminated due to an unrecoverable error > > condition > > > Any suggestions would be appreciated. > > > Thanks, > > Bill > > What is the output from SHOW LOGICAL DISK$*/FULL > > Dave $ sh log /fu disk$* (LNM$PROCESS_TABLE) [kernel] [no protection information] (LNM$JOB_859545C0) [kernel] [shareable] [Quota=(7840,8192)] [Protection=(RWCD,RWCD,,)] [Owner=[SYSTEM,SMN_MCLAUGHL]] (LNM$GROUP_000001) [kernel] [shareable,group] [Protection=(RWCD,R,R,)] [Owner=[SYSTEM,*]] (LNM$SYSTEM_TABLE) [kernel] [shareable,system] [Protection=(RWC,RWC,R,R)] [Owner=[SYSTEM,AUTOCONFIG]] "DISK$ENG" [exec] = "DISK$USR" "DISK$SYS" [exec] = "SYS$SYSDEVICE" "DISK$USR" [exec] = "HSD0$DIA1:" [concealed,terminal] (LNM$SYSCLUSTER_TABLE) [kernel] [shareable] [Protection=(RWC,RWC,R,R)] [Owner=[SYSTEM,AUTOCONFIG]] ------------------------------ Date: 13 Mar 2007 16:30:12 +0100 From: peter@langstoeger.at (Peter 'EPLAN' LANGSTOeGER) Subject: Re: Getting PCSI-E-INVSPIDST1 when trying any "product" command Message-ID: <45f6d194@news.langstoeger.at> In article <1173796394.812432.139040@n33g2000cwc.googlegroups.com>, mcbill20@yahoo.com writes: >$ sh log /fu disk$* > >(LNM$SYSTEM_TABLE) [kernel] [shareable,system] > [Protection=(RWC,RWC,R,R)] >[Owner=[SYSTEM,AUTOCONFIG]] A strange UIC identifier you have for uic [1,4]. Normal would be "SYSTEM" (which you seem to have for [1,*]) > "DISK$SYS" [exec] = "SYS$SYSDEVICE" A strange logical. Normally I'd expect a "DISK$SYS" [exect = "HSD0$DIA0:" [concealed,terminal] from the $mount service. But you seem to define the logical in the startup. -- Peter "EPLAN" LANGSTOEGER Network and OpenVMS system specialist E-mail peter@langstoeger.at A-1030 VIENNA AUSTRIA I'm not a pessimist, I'm a realist ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 13 Mar 2007 16:34:44 GMT From: Rob Brown Subject: Re: output from cron ssh to VMS? Message-ID: On Tue, 13 Mar 2007, The Invisible Fire That Works In Public wrote: > The output file is empty. Using the ssh flag "-t" does not help. > (Neither does "-T"!) The mail message from cron says "Pseudo- > terminal will not be allocated because stdin is not a terminal." I don't know ssh, so I can't suggest how to fix it there. I'm pretty sure that modern versions of ckermit include the ssh protocol. I expect that kermit's scripting capabilities would allow you to capture the output locally. -- Rob Brown b r o w n a t g m c l d o t c o m G. Michaels Consulting Ltd. (780)438-9343 (voice) Edmonton (780)437-3367 (FAX) http://gmcl.com/ ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 13 Mar 2007 08:57:10 -0000 From: "chris" Subject: PEA0: errors Message-ID: <45f6641d$1_1@glkas0286.greenlnk.net> I have an alpha node in a cluster which keeps crashing itself after a couple of days, I have to manually reset it as its break_non_member in the cluster. Ive noticed that there are 2 error counts on the PEA0: device, could this be down to a poor network? ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 13 Mar 2007 10:14:36 -0400 From: Chuck Aaron Subject: Shopping cart that works on VMS Message-ID: If anyone is running web applications on VMS and using a shopping cart, can you tell me what shopping cart you are using or might recommend? Thanks. ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 13 Mar 2007 09:46:59 -0400 From: Chuck Aaron Subject: TELNET - session timeout parameter(s) Message-ID: What parameter(s) can you increase to extend the timeout period of a telnet session? Thanks. ------------------------------ End of INFO-VAX 2007.144 ************************