sck@watson.ibm.com (Scott C. Kennedy) (04/18/91)
I am setting up my Amiga at home to slip into work via ka9q yet, I am having problems which is not covered in the documentation, I need to know what ka9q calls the Amiga Serial Port. If anyone has a clue I would be grateful, I have tried all of the obvious ie: ser, ser:, com, com:, sl0, sl0:, sl, sl:, aux:, etc.. etc... And none of these work. If anyone could also answer what is the best defaults for a 9600 baud modem on a clean line, I would also be happy. -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Scott C. Kennedy (sck@watson.ibm.com) | "All we are saying ... Distributed High Performance Computing | is give peace a chance..." I.B.M. Thomas J. Watson Research Facility | John Lennon - Dec. 8, 1980 ------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hartupee.XSIS@xerox.com (04/19/91)
Scott, Looks like we are trying to do the same thing. I plan to run a slip connection between my Amiga a home and a PC at work. Right now I have the Amiga and the PC sitting next to each other at home with a null modem cable hooked between them. This is from the doc: # Attach the PC asynch card normally known as "com1" (the first controller) # to operate in point-to-point slip mode at 9600 baud, calling it "sl0". # A 1024 byte receiver ring buffer is allocated. Outgoing packets larger # than 256 bytes are fragmented. attach asy 0x3f8 4 slip sl0 1024 256 9600 For the Amiga you can use this to match the PC: attach asy serial.device 0 slip sl0 1024 256 9600 Also on ab20.larc.nasa.gov in /incoming/amiga/ there is an AmigaNOSKit that can be a big help. Hope this helps. Ken
frank@escape.radig.de (Frank Segner) (05/03/91)
i don't know which version you are using, but my ka9q
(net.amiga -> 120120 Bytes) works well with a
startup-file named net.start (located where you've assigned 'tcpip:').
this file contains:
hostname franky
ip add 100.0.0.3
att asy 100.0.0.1 slip sl0 1024 512 9600
route add 100.0.0.1 sl0
start telnet
start ftp
start smtp
i hope this will work; but using telnet as a terminal is much slower
than a term prog (also the file transfer compared with z-modem)
in my case 100.0.0.3 means: amiga1000
100.0.0.1 means: unix host
frank
p.s.: it's usefull to create in 'tcpip:' : hosts.net and ftpusers
--
frank segner, homburger Str. 26, 6000 frankfurt/m. 90
frank@escape.vsse.in-berlin.de
*net working or not working*
--
frank segner, homburger Str. 26, W-6000 frankfurt/m. 90
EMAIL: frank@escape.vsse.in-berlin.de
*network or notwork*