Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!usc!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!caen!hellgate.utah.edu!csn!boulder!tcr!news From: news@tcr.UUCP (John B. Sobernheim) Newsgroups: comp.unix.amiga Subject: Amiga 3000UX first impressions Keywords: Amiga unix 3000UX Message-ID: <157@tcr.UUCP> Date: 9 Jan 91 17:10:35 GMT Organization: The Computer Room, Denver Lines: 97 I have seen the light and it is called /usr/amiga/bin/fractal We received a 3000UX the other day. As far as I know this is a saleable unit (I am a dealer), one of the first. The following are my impressions of the machine so far. The Amiga 3000UX that we received is configured with 9 MB's of RAM, 1MB of Chip and 8MB's of Fast (using 1mbitx4 zips). It has a 200MB Hard Drive. The Ethernet Board was also included and installed. (From the brochure my dad got at Comdex, I had thought the Ethernet board would be an optional pheripheral). It comes with three manuals; Installing Amiga UNIX, Learning Amiga UNIX, and, Using Amiga UNIX. Unix. There is a short command reference manual included. There is a single page saying that this is a BETA release of the software and manuals and that the user is eligible for a free upgrade to version 1.0 of the software and manuals (For a $50.00 media replacement/shipping and handling charge :-). The version of Unix in this A3000UX was BETA 3j. An errata page listing known bugs and problems was also included. Finally, there were two 3.5" floppy disks (3000UX Boot & Root File System) and an install tape cartridge as well as the standard Amiga software and manuals. The system was preloaded with Unix. I set up the system with a 1950 Color Monitor and the A2232 multiple serial port card. By holding down both mouse buttons on boot, I was able to boot into AmigaDos 1.3 and 2.0. The Work: partition was set up as a circa 21MB partition. By rebooting the machine without holding down the mouse buttons, it booted into Unix. (On the first boot, it went through a configuration script asking about network setup, passwords, etc. I was absent through this procedure). When it got to the login prompt, I logged in as root, and used the SYSADM (Similar to FACE on 3.2x Unix) interface to add a new user and home directory called tcr. It created a /home/tcr directory and set up ksh as the default shell. First thing I did, as tcr, was lock up the console :-). I tried, and succeeded, to run Xwindows, but I forgot that I needed some sort of interface to it, ie. Xterm, Open Look, etc. After TURNING OFF THE POWER and going through a palm sweating fsck on reboot, I read the manual a little and found that we have virtual terminals in Amiga Unix. If you hit left-alternate-F1_through_F8, you can have eight (or ten, depending on how you configure it) virtual terminals into Amiga Unix. When I locked up the one virtual terminal by trying to run X, all I should of done was log in under another virtual terminal (left-alt-F2) and kill the task. Live and learn. Shortly after this, I found (by reading the manual) a script called oladduser which added all the stuff to my home directory and set up paths to allow me to run Open Look. I got Open Look up and spent the rest of the day, trying to get it up in more than one bit-plane. I was not successful. (If anyone knows what I need to do please mail me!) A couple of decent tech/unix guys came in and we all played with the machine some more. I asked them about my problems with X and they said, "right" :-). We found a neat thing in SysVR.4 where when doing a 'ls -al' it now shows links in the format of file -> file. (file [is linked to] file). There are a large number of man pages included in the installation, a variety of games including nethack and adventure in /usr/games, amiga specific files in /usr/amiga, troff, gcc and cc. The default $PATH doesn't seem to include the users current directory, which is interesting. (I think it has to do with /etc/profile and /usr/bin/ksh. ie. In /etc/ profile it says something like if shell is rsh or csh, do this, it doesn't do it if shell is ksh. Anyway I haven't gotten around to checking that out). I compiled hello.c with gcc and cc. A customer came in and we stuck a #pragma in to see if gcc would try and invoke nethack or something, it didn't appear to. Another customer found a man page for nawk (new Awk) but couldn't find the program itself. There is a spreadsheet included in the distribution. News software is included in the distribution, I didn't check to see what other communications software was included... kermit, umodem, etc. We played around with tty monitors and servers and got a login prompt out to a 2500 running vt100. My UnixPC, that's on the net, is all the way on the other side of the store and I haven't gotten up on it yet. /etc/ inittab has entries for the built in serial port and the A2232 multiple serial port card. The built in serial port is referred to as /dev/term/ser. /etc/inittab also has entries for all of the virtual screens calling a program called /usr/amiga/bin/getscr as the "getty". All this time I hadn't seen a single color other than the standard console screen of 640x200xblackxgold, the F2 - F8 Screens of varying resolutions and colors (ie. F5 is 640x400xblackxwhite) and the Open Look screen of 640x400xblackxwhite. A half hour after the store closed last night I ran it... /usr/amiga/bin/fractal. Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh! It is an Amiga. :-) There is a device called /dev/amiga that let's the developer access the Amiga's Hardware, I think.. the manual warns about it's usage however. Anyway, I hope this serves to whet ya'lls collective appetites. Any questions/problems I can help with, please mail me. If anyone would like, I can post files like /etc/inittab, directories, etc. -- John Sobernheim ...boulder!tcr!news || news@tcr.UUCP The Computer Room ...CIS 76625,1210 Denver, Colorado ...But moma, that's where the fun is! (Manfred Man)