Xref: utzoo comp.dcom.lans:6269 comp.sys.att:10642 Path: utzoo!utgpu!watserv1!watmath!att!att!dptg!ulysses!rick!rkd From: rkd@rick.att.com (Rajeev Dolas) Newsgroups: comp.dcom.lans,comp.sys.att Subject: Re: Questions about StarGROUP Software Message-ID: <366@rick.att.com> Date: 19 Oct 90 17:21:15 GMT References: <1990Oct16.173745.18064@mccc.uucp> Reply-To: rkd@rick.UUCP (Rajeev Dolas) Followup-To: comp.dcom.lans Organization: AT&T NSSC, So.Plainfield NJ Lines: 68 In article <1990Oct16.173745.18064@mccc.uucp> pjh@mccc.uucp (Pete Holsberg) writes: >I'm in the process of installing StarGroup software (Version 3.2) on a >386 running SV/386 R3.2.2 and a bunch of Zenith PCs running DOS, and >have run into a couple of small things. > >1. The "DOS Client Server Admin's Guide" mentions that it "...is >possible to configure a computer as a concurrent client/server..." but >neither it nor the "386 Server S/w Installation and Admin Guide" tell >how to do this. > The term "concurrent client/server" was/is almost exclusively used for DOS fileservers. You would not have the concurrent client/server as you asre using a unix file server. Unix machines can only be file servers unless the SimulTask Client program is installed on the Unix box. >2. The error messages section of the DOS guide mentions a "Simul-Task >Client S/W Installation & Config Guide." Does this suggest that a >client must be running DOS -- even if it's under Simultask -- to be a >client for a StarGROUP server? > Clients are of 2 types. One strictly running under DOS and the other is the simultask client. Simultask client needs 1) Simultask, 2) Simultask IEM tools program, 3) DOS, 4) simultask client interface program and 5) the regular DOS client program on the UNIX machine. >3. I have a DOS application installed in a shared directory tree and >I'd like to prevent users from writing to any of those directories. >However, it appears that the program itself writes temp files to its >"home" directory because making the directory read-only produces error >messages. What should I examine to determine if I can make the >application write its temp files somewhere else? > Look into the configuration section for that application. Check if you can change it's default "home" dir (an e.g. would be turbo-c, where most of the default dirs can be changed). If that cannot be done then create a menu for the users using the quick menu editor, link the application's dir and user's data dir thru quick menu and then change the "startup run location" to be the user's data dir, so by default the files created would be stored under the data dir. You could also set the trap option in the menu where by the user cannot quit out the menu. >Thanks, >Pete >-- >Prof. Peter J. Holsberg Mercer County Community College >Voice: 609-586-4800 Engineering Technology, Computers and Math >UUCP:...!princeton!mccc!pjh 1200 Old Trenton Road, Trenton, NJ 08690 >Internet: pjh@mccc.edu Trenton Computer Festival -- 4/20-21/91 Hope this helps! -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Rajeev Dolas. Systems Engineer. ..att!rick!rkd. __ _______ ___ _______ ------- AT&T CSTS / __ \ |__ __| / _ \ |__ __| -====------ StarGROUP | (__) | | | \ \ \_\ | | -======------ StarLAN/StarWAN | __ | | | / \ __ | | --====------- Technical Support | | | | | | | (\ / / | | ----------- S. Plainfield, NJ |_| |_| |_| \_____/ |_| ------- 800-922-0354 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------