Newsgroups: comp.sys.sgi Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!helios.physics.utoronto.ca!aurora.physics.utoronto.ca!sysmark From: sysmark@physics.utoronto.ca (Mark Bartelt) Subject: point-to-point networks for PIs? Message-ID: <1991Mar28.195640.8677@helios.physics.utoronto.ca> Originator: sysmark@aurora.physics.utoronto.ca Sender: news@helios.physics.utoronto.ca (News Administrator) Nntp-Posting-Host: aurora.physics.utoronto.ca Reply-To: mark@cita.toronto.edu Organization: University of Toronto Physics/Astronomy/CITA Date: Thu, 28 Mar 1991 19:56:40 GMT One of the people in our group has a pair of 4D20s, one in his office and one at home (nice home computer, eh?). He's getting rather tired of lugging things back and forth via cartridge tape, so we're looking for alternatives. One can obtain a point-to-point leased line from TPC for a reasonable cost (well, how reasonable depends on the type of line), but we need to find out what sort of PI hardware/software support we can get. What we'd like to do is run the line at 56kb (or possibly 19.2 if the cost of the 56kb line is too prohibitive), using some type of plug-in synchronous (or async?) serial board in the SGI boxes. Unfortunately, our salesguy says that SGI doesn't provide anything along these lines. So it looks as if we'll need to look at third-party vendors. Does anybody have a recommendation (or non-recommendation, for that matter) for who we should be talking to? We'd clearly want someone who not only sells the board, but also provides a (working) device driver that we could configure into the kernel. What about modems? Anybody have any favourites? (I think that if you get a 56kb line from Bell Canada, cost of the modems is bundled in, so this question may be irrelevant.) Once the hardware and driver are in place, how about network support? I presume that what we'd want to do is use PPP (or maybe SLIP?) to run the point-to-point connection, and run gated in the office-end PI, which is also connected to our ethernet. Would all this be both necessary and sufficient to provide all the capabilities we'd want (e.g. telnet/ftp, plus NFS mounts (yeah, we *know* it'd be slow!))? Theories about what might/mightn't work are welcomed, but what we'd really like is to hear from someone who's actually done this. As usual, thanks in advance. Mark Bartelt 416/978-5619 Canadian Institute for mark@cita.toronto.edu Theoretical Astrophysics mark@cita.utoronto.ca