Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!rutgers!cs.utexas.edu!milano!cadillac!pebbles!ned From: ned@pebbles.cad.mcc.com (CME Ned Nowotny) Newsgroups: comp.sys.att Subject: About the new s4diag software... Keywords: 3B1 7300 s4diag compress Message-ID: <1626@cadillac.CAD.MCC.COM> Date: 7 Jul 89 16:34:27 GMT Sender: news@cadillac.CAD.MCC.COM Reply-To: ned%cad@MCC.COM (CME Ned Nowotny) Organization: MCC CAD Program, Austin, TX Lines: 36 References: I have recently grabbed a copy of the uuencoded and compressed s4diag from the net (Thanks, Thad.) and have a few questions. First, I have succesfully extracted the executable to build a new diagnostics disk and feel pretty comfortable with using it to build a new system disk. However, I would feel more comfortable if other people who have formatted out disks with more than 1024 cylinders would post the executable size and checksums for their s4diag software. Best of all, can anyone tell me the origins of this software? Next, does anyone have a reliable set of instructions for using s4diag in expert mode? Can the original s4diag run a disk surface test on more that 1024 cylinders? In other words, is there any chance that the limit in the original s4diag only applied to formatting disks? (Pretty unlikely, huh?) Now with regard to another comment I have seen. Someone claims that the stock compress program shipped with the PC7300 is compiled to only compress (and uncompress?) using up to 12-bit compression. However, I have had no problem uncompressing anything I have extracted from the net or files that I have compressed at work (on Suns and Vaxen) and tranferred to my machine at home. Was this person mistaken? (For what its worth, it is a good idea to get the compress softwre in the archives anyway. For one thing, you get the source. For another, you get man pages. The only problem I have had with the stock distribution was the need to link zcat to compress. Those with the 3.51 or later version of the 3B1/7300 OS may have had a different experience.) Ned Nowotny, MCC CAD Program, Box 200195, Austin, TX 78720 Ph: (512) 338-3715 ARPA: ned@mcc.com UUCP: ...!cs.utexas.edu!milano!cadillac!ned ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- "We have ways to make you scream." - Intel advertisement in the June 1989 DDJ.