Xref: utzoo comp.unix.xenix.sco:2069 comp.sys.att:12091 Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!rpi!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!mips!pacbell.com!tandem!netcom!cmilono From: cmilono@netcom.COM (Carlo Milono) Newsgroups: comp.unix.xenix.sco,comp.sys.att Subject: Re: UUCP Protocol Problems between AT&T Unix and SCO Xenix Message-ID: <1991Mar31.000149.9177@netcom.COM> Date: 31 Mar 91 00:01:49 GMT References: <192@mnopltd.UUCP> Organization: Netcom - Somewhere in the S.F. Bay Area Lines: 36 In article <192@mnopltd.UUCP> emory!mnopltd!neal writes: > >Lets not start any Xenophobic wars over this. Fair enough... >Our System is Xenix 2.3.2. (the HDB version) It converses with dozens >of other Unix and Xenix systems. > >We are trying to connect System X as a leaf node. It is running an >AT&T 386 running AT&T Unix 3.2.2. They do not as of yet converse with >anybody. After doing all the configurational poop, we find that >sessions fail in both directions. > >If Xenix calls AT&T Unix, we go through the login, startup, but fail to >establish the 'g' protocol. The sequence of log stuff is: [stuff deleted from the Uutry log] >Sounds like we have a protocol incompatibility between the two, and I don't see >anything left for me to adjust. Anyone seen it and/or a correction to either >uucp to fix? I have seen this quite a few times, especially with MNP Modems. Make sure that your Devices and Dialers files are correct - in every case, that is where the changes are made to correct the above mentioned trouble. It seems that the script that AT&T put in for their own 2224CEO gives you only *one* choice, yet the modem/BNU can be optioned for about six different modes (e,g,u). Hack away at those two files. One symptom is that 'cu' works fine both in/out, and that you can send files but not receive (on about 50% of the cases.) -- +--------------------------------------------------------------------------+ | Carlo Milono: cmilono@netcom.apple.com or apple!netcom!cmilono | |"When a true genius appears in the world, you may know him by this sign, | |that the dunces are all in confederacy against him." - Jonathan Swift | +--------------------------------------------------------------------------+