sewilco@datapg.MN.ORG (Scot E Wilcoxon) (10/03/88)
[No changes since September posting] This article contains answers to frequently asked questions about the AT&T UNIX PC. It is regularly posted to comp.sys.att and unix-pc.general. The following items are addressed in this posting: 1. What are the AT&T UNIX PC, 7300, and 3B1? Which do I have? 2. I mailed the card to AT&T and did not get my Personal Calendar program. 3. How do I park the hard disk heads before moving the machine? 4. How do I open the case? 5. How can I put in a larger disk drive? 6. What is THE STORE! and how do I use it? 7. The On-Board Modem does not work with some other modems. 8. What is the operating system? 9. What third-party hardware is available? 10. How can I make a full-screen window? 11. Some AT&T serial boards do not work right. How are they identified? -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1. What are the AT&T UNIX PC, 7300, and 3B1? Which do I have? UNIX PC and 7300 were the AT&T marketing terms for the original machine, with 10 or 20MB hard disk. 3B1 is a more recent name, for the 40 and 67MB models. A 3B1 also has a different top cover, a slightly different motherboard than the original, more than 512K on the motherboard, and a higher-rated power supply. Convergent sold the machine under the S/50 name. "UNIX PC" refers to all machines in the family. The model number should be on the name plate on the bottom of the machine. When the keyboard is on the housing, the 7300 case is a slanted wedge shape. On a 3B1, the monitor is mounted on a square horizontal box protruding above the slanted top of the wedge. This is because the 40 and 67MB hard disk is taller than the 7300 hard disk. 2. I mailed the card to AT&T and did not get my Personal Calendar program. Many machines were shipped with the calendar program in /etc/fixes. You have to do a few things to install it. Append this to your /usr/lib/ua/Office file: Name=Calendar Default = Open Open=EXEC -d /usr/bin/pcal -c Help=EXEC -d /usr/bin/uahelp -h /usr/lib/ua/ua.hlp -t Calendar Append this to your /usr/lib/ua/Preferences file: Name=Calendar Default = Open Open=EXEC -d /usr/bin/pcal -p Help=EXEC -d /usr/bin/uahelp -h /usr/lib/ua/ua.hlp -t Calendar If you are using the pcal that is located in /etc/fixes: $ su Password: # mv /etc/fixes/pcal /usr/bin # mv /etc/fixes/pcal.hlp /usr/lib/ua # chown bin /usr/bin/pcal /usr/lib/ua/pcal.hlp # chgrp bin /usr/bin/pcal /usr/lib/ua/pcal.hlp # chmod 755 /usr/bin/pcal # chmod 644 /usr/lib/ua/pcal.hlp 3. How do I park the hard disk heads before moving the machine? The Miniscribe disk used in the 67MB machines parks the heads automatically, and loudly, when the power is turned off. Some 40MB drives also park automatically. To park the heads push the Cmd key and select Shutdown. After the machine is shut down, insert the Diagnostics floppy disk and boot from it. Select Park Disk Heads from the Diagnostics menu. 4. How do I open the case? The plastic case under the monitor has two sections. Different screws release the plastic case or only the top (the part above the keyboard storage area). Read the following two paragraphs before removing anything other than the first step: unplug everything from the back. (Oh, yeah: "No user serviceable parts inside") During reassembly be particularly careful with disk cables in rear. Six vertically-mounted screws hold the top of the plastic case to the bottom of the plastic case. When removing the top of the plastic case, there are three plastic hook-and-tab catches in the front of the machine. The top of the case must be moved outward slightly (usually with a screwdriver) along the joint to the right of the floppy drive in order to release the catches. This exposes only the drives and power supply. When removing the plastic case from the metal base, first find the keyboard retainer posts (they hold the keyboard to the base--one is next to the socket for the keyboard plug). Note the seam around the top of the retainer posts. Remove the covers from the posts, and you'll find a screw inside each. Remove those screws and the two horizontally-mounted screws in the rear of the machine. Removing the entire plastic case exposes all metal-mounted parts other than the monitor. To open the top of the metal shield pan, remove three screws in top of front. Disconnect monitor cable on left and ribbon connector to power supply on right. Release latch on each side and lift forward, then up. This exposes the motherboard. 5. How can I put in a larger disk drive? Upgrading from a 10 or 20MB to a 40 or 67MB drive may require a 3B1 power supply and a 3B1 full-height drive case top, dependent upon drive characteristics. Using more than 67MB requires either an SCSI board (see below) or making hardware changes to the motherboard (new chips, soldering wires, etc). 6. What is THE STORE! and how do I use it? THE STORE! is a computer with UNIX-PC software which can be downloaded to your machine via uucp. It is operated by AT&T. THE STORE! is absolutely unsupported, but the catalog is still on-line and there are some neat things available. How to get there: 1. The machine is named the shop with login shop in your L.sys(Systems) file. The phone number is (201) 957-4646. There is no password on this uucico-only login. 1200bps is supported as well as 2400bps (I think, Try it.) 2. Once you've built this entry, do the following: uucp shop!/store/STOREROOM/CATALOG+IN /usr/spool/uucppublic/CATALOG+IN This in an installable package. Do it and enjoy. WARNING: The CATALOG+IN file is huge and will cost you plenty bucks to capture if you are a long ways away from New Jersey. 7. The On-Board Modem does not work with some other modems. The OBM creates tones which confuse some MNP modems and the Telebit Trailblazer. The tones cannot be altered, but often a system which cannot call the UNIX PC OBM can be called by the UNIX PC OBM. The Telebit modems can be set to call the OBM. 8. What is the operating system? The operating system is based on UNIX System V revision 1, with Sys Vr2 and other extensions. The most recent version is 3.51, with a 3.51a "fix" disk available. Changes in 3.51a: New problem: Your machine will occasionally crash with a "panic: addr fault in kernel" message, but _only_ if you have installed 3.51a _and_ you use the OBM (On Board Modem). If you use a modem attached to any serial port, you'll never see the problem. Hardware flow control works, but is broken. HFC will consistently repeat a block of data in an entirely predictable way. The terminal emulator (/usr/bin/async_main) has fixes for: lockfiles not being removed, vt100 enter key mapping incorrect, slow performance when using 513 or vt100 emulation The UNIX(r) PC 3.51a Custom Kernel (/UNIX3.51a) has fixes for: tty driver does not return null character on break, break sent over modem freezes serial port, lp driver truncates lines to 132 chararters Kmap (/usr/lib/ua/kmap.610) corrects the misspelling of RollDn in the kmap file for the 610 terminal. Ksh (/bin/ksh) fixes: dumps core on long input lines while in emacs mode Modemcap (/usr/lib/uucp/modemcap) has an entry for the AT&T 4024 modem. The Phone Manager (/etc/ph) has fixes for: ph stops logging calls in .history, call screen pops up, ph dies after several calls The tam library (/usr/lib/libtam.a) has the following: newly developed applications linked with the new tam library can draw windows/contents in one pass instead of two The uucp (/usr/lib/uucp/uucico) has fixes for: uucico hangs at call completion, uucico turns modem speaker on, time stamps incorrect in LOGFILE 9. What third-party hardware is available? Digital Data Systems, Inc., Marietta, Georgia (404-425-5700) 42 and 62MB drives. 2MB RAM expansion board. IDT Systems, Inc., Newark, Delaware (302-731-1583) 3B1 HCD Kit (kit to modify 3B1 motherboard for larger disk). Motherboard RAM upgrade from 1/2MB to 2MB. 2MB RAM Expansion board (available soon). Bus Station (TM) SCSI adapter board (available soon). Vartech, Lisle, IL (312-810-1777) EIA (RS-232) "Combo" boards. 10. How can I make a full-screen window? The following entry in the file "Office" in your home directory creates a full-screen window with a UNIX shell. Name=Big-Screen UNIX Expert Default = Run Run=SH -wd Help=EXEC -d /usr/bin/uahelp -h /usr/lib/ua/ua.hlp -t "UNIX System" Prompt = Press Ctrl-D to exit 11. Some AT&T serial boards do not work right. How are they identified? The EIA boards (or EIA/RAM) in question are anything RELEASE F or higher. Check the revision release letter on the board, usually enscribed on the circuit side of the PC board on either edge. If it is letter F,G,H,I,...Z call AT&T at (800) 922-0354 (HOTLINE) and tell them you need the serial controller chip for the AT&T UNIX PC EIA boards that they are replacing. They will send you a Zilog 8530 SCC chip. You will replace the 40 pin chip in it's socket and you'll be set! Contributors and References: 1: BYTE, Vol 10 no 5 (May 1985) 1: gil@limbic (Gil Kloepfer Jr.) 2,8,9,11: lenny@icus.UUCP (Lenny Tropiano) 3: "Shutdown" (page 3-95) in AT&T UNIX PC Owner's Manual 6: Joe L. Wood 8: rjg@sialis.mn.org (Robert J. Granvin) 8: AT&T 3.51a fix disk -- Scot E. Wilcoxon sewilco@DataPg.MN.ORG {amdahl|hpda}!bungia!datapg!sewilco Data Progress UNIX masts & rigging +1 612-825-2607 uunet!datapg!sewilco "When Hurricane Gilbert comes through, I'll stay here to experience it." CBS:"What if you experience death?" "Well, I'll worry about that later."