rg@gillxp (Richard J. Gill) (08/21/88)
I am in the process of transfering about 30MB of data from a CP/M machine to an NCR Tower (Sys V). (Thanks for the responses to <119@gillxp> regarding the transfer methodology.) Based on your comments, and on the commercial availabilty of an xmodem (a.k.a. modem7 ?) product for the Televideo 816 ("Lync" from Norton-Lambert), I have concluded that this is the transfer approach most likely to produce the desired results within my lifetime. I picked up a PD copy of xmodem from rpp386 (thanks, john) and have successfully compiled it on my Tower; best of all, it actually runs and shows me options to send and receive in various formats. It is not clear, however, exactly how it works. Is it expecting the other system to login and execute it (ala uucp)? How do I establish the communication with the other system? The commands lead me to believe that either end can initiate a file copy, but none of the options displayed refer to establishing a communication link. How do I do it? For testing, I have a clone PC available which has "PC Works" installed on it; that product claims to support xmodem file transfers. How do I test the software on the Tower to make sure it will work when we are ready to do the "real" transfer? As you might guess, my knowledge of the PC world and protocols like xmodem is sparse, so any thoughts or guidance will be appreciated. Thanks for your help. -- --- Dick Gill Gill & Piette / PSG (703)761-1110 ..uunet!gillxp!rg
heath@ncrcae.Columbia.NCR.COM (Robert Heath) (08/22/88)
Dick, If you have Rel. 2 of the TOWER 32/600 or -650 O.S., you should have the RZ(1) and SZ(1) commands. These implement standard XMODEM, YMODEM, and ZMODEM protocols for exchanging files with your PC. How to use them is documented in the on-line man pages for CU(1C), RZ(1), and SZ(1). As with most all XMODEM arrangements involving PC and UNIX, you generally: 1) log into UNIX using a terminal emulation program on your PC, 2) start the UNIX side of the transfer, 3) start the PC side of the transfer within your PC's terminal emulation program. Robert Heath