Relay-Version: version B 2.10 5/3/83; site utzoo.UUCP Path: utzoo!watmath!clyde!cbatt!cbosgd!ucbvax!B.ISI.EDU!Info-IBMPC From: Info-IBMPC@B.ISI.EDU (Info-IBMPC Digest) Newsgroups: mod.computers.ibm-pc Subject: Info-IBMPC Digest V5 #77 Message-ID: <8608190902.AA02910@ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU> Date: Mon, 18-Aug-86 20:11:03 EDT Article-I.D.: ucbvax.8608190902.AA02910 Posted: Mon Aug 18 20:11:03 1986 Date-Received: Wed, 20-Aug-86 01:52:45 EDT Sender: korn@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU Reply-To: INFO-IBMPC@B.ISI.EDU Organization: The ARPA Internet Lines: 1003 Approved: info-ibmpc@usc-isib.arpa Info-IBMPC Digest Monday, August 18, 1986 Volume 5 : Issue 77 This Week's Editor: Richard Gillmann Today's Topics: Re: Superkey/newer PC-AT problem Follow Up on Trackball Follow Up Dos Trapping Interrupts Keyboards and spring pressure Additional volumes of PC Seminar proceedings IBM Professional FORTRAN ATPERF.C Bug: Video Memory direct.h Networking summary Summary on SIMULA for PC How EXEPACK works, sample .ASM file Today's Queries: Wendin Personal Operating Systems Query Data Line Noise Query PL/I Query Parallel Port Swap After Print Installation Query NEC V20 Problem with Old PC IRMA Card Query PSP hackers guide and Microsoft mouse info needed Programming Inquiry Statistical and Graphical Libraries Query Lotus 1A EGA Driver Wanted XLISP Query Yterm + AT&T 6300 Tandon Hard Disk Problem 3278/79 Cards and Structured Fields Query: PC Ltd. ATs 1meg Memory Query ---------------------------------------------------------------------- To: crash!pnet01!adamsd@nosc.arpa Cc: info-ibmpc@usc-isib Subject: Re: Superkey/newer PC-AT problem Date: Mon, 18 Aug 86 14:23:02 -0500 From: Mark Colan > Borland's Superkey is incompatible with the new ROM set on recent > AT's. Specifically, the internal keyboard codes--which apparently > only Superkey reads directly--have been changed around for some > random reason. Borland is apparently working on a fix, but in the > meantime, they told us that Superkey WILL work on newer AT's if > they are ordered with the Enhanced Keyboard, which apparently > costs the same as the standard keyboard. You do, however, have to > explicitly request it to recieve it with your machine. > If you just got your new AT and wonder what's wrong with > Superkey, see if your dealer will swap keyboards. If you're about > to purchase an AT, you should request the enhanced keyboard-- > especially since there may be other incompatibilities no one's > discovered yet. > P.S. I haven't tried it, but I suspect ProKey would also fail on > newer AT's for the same reason. I think this is incorrect information. I just phoned Borland to confirm that Superkey will not work on ANY of the new PC/AT's (ie, model 339), regardless of the keyboard type, because of the ROM BIOS change. At least, that's what they told ME. RoseSoft, has their act a little more together: the current version (4.0) of ProKey supports this new machine. On the other hand, the copy of ProKey I received last Friday came with an unformatted diskette rather than the expected interesting bits. Most of the dealers I have dealt with prefer to sell the new AT's with the Enhanced keyboard; they don't bother stocking the old one. There is also a different model number that distinguishes the two types of keyboard for the 339 (sorry, I don't have specifics here). In my case, I would have had to ask specifically for the OLD keyboard and then had to wait while they order it. I would recommend in any case that you double check with the dealer to ensure you get the one you want. BTW, I generally like the Enhanced keyboard, especially in terms of its "feel". It is quieter and requires less effort to get an action, so I find I can type a little faster. However, I DO NOT like the placement of many of the keys: ESCAPE, CAPS-LOCK/CONTROL, and the function keys. I bought ProKey so that I could put the keys back where they "belong". Incidentally, the AT keycaps are swappable, so when you rearrange the keys in software, you can echo the changes on your keyboard. Mark Colan MIT Project Athena ------------------------------ To: t7y%cornellc.bitnet@ucbvax.berkeley.edu Cc: info-ibmpc@usc-isib Subject: Follow Up on Trackball Follow Up Date: Mon, 18 Aug 86 14:31:16 -0500 From: Mark Colan I just phoned Honeywell/Disc because I'm very interested in this product as a replacement for a mouse (I hates MIECES to PIECES). They gave me some information which is slightly more recent to your: 1. The XT keyboard version has gone up by $20 2. An AT keyboard version will be available around October 3. There is an RS232 version now, which presumably would work on the AT, but you would definitely need the RS232-to-AT async adaptor. Mark Colan MIT Project Athena ------------------------------ To: edj@andrew.cmu.edu Cc: info-ibmpc@usc-isib Subject: Re: Dos Trapping Interrupts Date: Mon, 18 Aug 86 14:38:08 -0500 From: Mark Colan It IS an annoyance that ^C does not work in all cases, but Ctrl-Break does. I'm gonna try to get ProKey to convince my computer that when I pressed ^C, I actually meant Ctrl-Break. Anybody tried that? Mark Colan MIT Project Athena ------------------------------ Date: Thu 14 Aug 86 22:22:44-EDT From: Joseph M. Newcomer Subject: keyboards and spring pressure To: info-ibmpc@B.ISI.EDU cc: LYONSN@A.ISI.EDU I see a number of AT keyboard clones advertised in the back of Byte; you might want to investigate them. If you have a keyboard from one of several companies that place the springs under the keytops instead of between the PC board and the plunger, you can buy different springs from them. Keytronics is one such; they have actually ten weights of springs (at least they did a few years ago) and we all had very heavy springs installed in that relatively useless shift-lock key so it could not be hit accidently. (It was near the control key and easy to hit incorrectly). Since Keytronics makes one of the AT-compatible keyboards, if it is of the spring-under-the-keytop flavor you might want to order heavier springs (I think we bought a package of 100 springs for a few dollars). Also, two springs can be installed under some keys to "stiffen" them to values outside the normal range (e.g., a 5-weight spring and a 10-weight spring can give a 15-weight spring even though there is no single spring this heavy; this is actually what we did to the shift-lock key). ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 11 Aug 1986 18:27 EDT From: Ben Yalow Subject: Additional volumes of PC Seminar proceedings To: The listing of IBM PC Seminar proceedings in #75 stopped with V3.3. There have been 5 issues since then. They are: (G320-9323) V3.4 IBM Asynchronous Communications Server Protocol (G320-9294) V3.5 IBM Personal Computer Voice Communications Option (G320-9295) V4.1 IBM Personal Computer XENIX, Version 2.00 (G320-9296) V4.2 IBM Personal Computer System Extensions IBM Personal Computer Enhanced Keyboard (G320-9297) V4.3 IBM PC Convertible As with the others, they should be available from the local IBM rep. Ben Yalow YBMCU%CUNYVM.BITNET@WISCVM.WISC.EDU (Internet) ------------------------------ Date: 14 August 1986 To: munnari!info-ibmpc-request@usc-isib.arpa From: kid%swanee.oz@seismo.css.gov (Mark Callaghan, Uni. of Western Australia) Subject: IBM Professional FORTRAN Less than a year ago, we bought IBM Professional FORTRAN from a dealer here in Perth for over $A1000. I have since learnt the hard way that it has many bugs, and the dealer tells me that IBM does not support its PC software. If we had bought the compiler from Ryan-McFarland, who actually wrote it, we would be entitled to incremental upgrades for minimal fees. Any upgrade for our V1.00 IBM compiler will cost us the full original purchase price! Is this IBM policy worldwide? Sorry if you've heard this story before, but I feel like I've been deserted and left holding the baby. If anyone can get me out of this hole at minimal cost I will be grateful. I will certainly avoid "IBM" labelled software in the future. Mark Callaghan. ARPA : kid%swanee.oz@seismo.css.gov UUCP : ...!{seismo,mcvax,ucb-vision,uks}!munnari!swanee.oz!kid [You might consider the Lahey F77 and Microsoft compilers as well as RM. -rag] ------------------------------ Date: 14 Aug 1986 17:02:28 PDT Subject: ATPERF.C Bug: Video Memory From: Craig Milo Rogers To: Info-IBMPC-Request@B.ISI.EDU The ATPERF.C file in the Info-IBMPC library has a bug in the routines which time video memory access. One routine uses segment B4000H, while the other uses segment B8000H. I edited the routines to use an assembly-time parameter for the address, and set it to B8000H, which is correct for my system. Users of this program are advised to review this parameter before compiling/assembling and running this program. The .C extension is a little deceptive -- the ATPERF file is actually the concatenation of two .C programs and two .ASM subroutine libraries. Users of the ATPERF and ATDISK programs should compile the C routines using a SMALL programming model, or the C code and the ASM code may not get along well together. Craig Milo Rogers [The library file has been updated. -rag] ------------------------------ Date: Thu 14 Aug 86 22:31:39-EDT From: Joseph M. Newcomer Subject: direct.h To: info-ibmpc@B.ISI.EDU As I stated in the release notes for grep.c, I used the Blaise Pascal Ctools functions to get first and next directory items; this is where direct.h was defined. Since it is proprietary, I cannot send it out to anyone. However, both Microsoft C and Lattice C 3.0 have directory-first and directory-next functions (with slightly different names and structures) so there are several options: Use your C interface functions, putting my code in #ifdef BLAISE #endif and yours in an appropriate conditional for your C, so the value of the code is enhanced; if Lattice, MicroSoft, MW and DeSmet users all do this the package will eventually be more useful Write a DOS gate call under the same rules as above Write a direct.h file that has conditionals for your C so that eventually the IBMPC library gets a public domain and universally applicable such library. I'm disqualified because I've seen the Blaise C source code. Buy the Blaise CTOOLS package. Note that the basic package now overlaps significantly with functionality of Lattice and Microsoft C, but they've enhanced it with window and communication functions. I can answer questions about doing various conversions, but I just didn't have the time to write all the low-level DOS calls, especially when I've already paid for a nice subroutine package to save me doing exactly that. ------------------------------ From: lotto%lhasa.UUCP@harvard.HARVARD.EDU Date: 15 Aug 86 09:05 EDT To: endor!info-ibmpc@usc-isib.arpa Subject: Networking summary >From: Me >We have set up a number of IBM machines (PC's, XT;s and AT's) on an >ethernet using the 3-COM boards (new short boards w/o 80x86 processer >or xs. memory). Our "usual" application of the network is to >interconnect the PC's w/ local VAXen and SUNs using TCP/IP or DECnet. > >One group that owns a few of these machines would like to implement >local disk sharing. We rejected the (particular) 3-COM software that this is EtherShare 2.4 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ >came with the boards offhand because it requires specially formatted >sections of the disk. Instead, we want a network that uses the MSDOS >filesystem under DOS 3.1 or 3.2. NFS looks like it could do the trick, >or perhaps some 3-COM hardware adaptation of the IBM Token-Ring net, >but we have not seen either of these working firsthand. From: harvard!SUN.COM!nowicki (Bill Nowicki) You could call your local Sun sales office for a demo of PC NFS. It was developed by our East Coast Division, in the Boston area. Call Sun New England, 617-863-8870 or 800-821-4643 for specifics. From: harvard!ut-sally!oakhill!tomc (Tom Cunningham) I saw your note on the net about a group wanting to implement local disk sharing. I'm not sure this is what you are looking for, but Sun sells a package called PC-NFS that makes a server disk/directory look like a PC disk (e.g. the E: "drive" on my AT maps to a Sun server filesystem). Since the PC is a client on the net there is no sharing of the PC's physical drives, but files can be shared via the server. The system does implement true file access capability, in that applications are unaware they are accessing a server disk (operates like a RAM disk). Sun sells just the software ($395/PC I believe) and a software/hardware combination, which is just the software with an off-the-shelf 3COM Ethernet board; since you already have the boards, you're halfway there. The package also provides other services, such as network print spooling, file conversion utilities, net status commands, installation procedures, etc. etc. You should probably contact Sun for more information; just ask about PC-NFS. And, of course, I am in no way connected with Sun; just a satisfied customer. From: harvard!ima!johnl The software that comes with your 3com boards is probably their old EtherShare stuff that gives you remote disk volumes. Their new 3-plus software is an implementation of MS-net which is functionally about the same as the IBM token ring stuff, but for Ethernet and considerably smaller. I have fiddled with 3-plus and it seems to work pretty well. It's a lot faster than EtherShare, and has some spiffy extra features, like the ability to dial in from home and use a dialin line as a very slow ethernet. From: harvard!cca!mirror!rs (Rich Salz) We do development for PC products on our Unix machines, a Pyramid and a 750. There seem to us to be the following major contenders: - PC NFS. True NFS client for the PC. Just announced a week or two ago; don't yet know about availability. (We were going to be a Pyramid beta site for it.) - Locus. We tried to get something real from these guys for a very long time and gave up. May now be real since ATT pumped lots of money into them. Not cheap -- they sell a fairly complex distributed OS. - PC/IP RVD. MIT guys gone commercial. You stick a huge file on your Unix machine, and a driver in your PC; voila a hard disk everyone can access on the ethernet. Their name is FTP Software, in Kendall Square. - 3COM. Ugh; XNS? No thanks. - Freedom Net, from Butler & Corliss in Research Triangle. Commercialization of Newcastle Connection. Nice, but cost was something like $500 per PC! From: Dale Smith Novel has some of the best networking software around for IBM-PCs and compatibles. This software will work on about any physical media, including ethernet (and 3COM boards). This stuff is called NETWARE and does sharing at the MSDOS file level. It really needs to have a disk server, but you can have each workstation be a server and still use the workstation to do useful work. It might do the trick for you. Hope this helps. Oh, you can get ahold of Novel at: 1170 N. Industrial Park Dr. Orem, Utah 84057 (801) 226-8202 or (800) 453-1267 From topaz!pyramid!hplabs!oliveb!3comvax!marcl I'm not sure what specially formatted sections of the disk you are referring to. Which version of the software did you reject (EtherSeries 2.4)? That may have required special formatting (I'm not that familiar with its internals). Our new networking software, called 3+ uses an MS-DOS file system and is a file based server implementation instead of a disk based server implementation (as EtherSeries is). It is faster than EtherSeries, and offers more sophisticated features, such as DOS 3.1 file sharing and record locking. I suggest you ask your dealer about 3+. It's quite nice. I use it every day. From: harvard!ihnp4!hplabs!hpcnof!jrc I work in the project that developed our implementation of Microsoft Networks for the 3-Com cards. Our product was marketed under the name OfficeShare and is available from HP sales offices (there are offices in Andover (617) 682-1500 and Lexington (617) 861-8960). We are running Microsoft Networks Remote File Access (RFA) over TCP/IP over IEEE 802.3 (blah blah blah networking standards that you probably don't care about, but mean that the file system is nearly transparent). Be sure to get the so called "performance" release which has well over twice the throughput of our original release (the marketing cats are shipping the performance stuff to all the original customers free of charge so it might be difficult for the field folks to tell the difference). From: harvard!cmcl2!philabs!linus!sunne!suneast!billp (William F. Pittore @ 617-863-8870x138) You might want to talk to Joe Schwartz at the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory who was a Beta tester of the PC-NFS product from Sun Microsystems. PC-NFS will allow PC users to transparently share files on a Sun or other NFS server. Local files on each PC cannot be shared since the NFS implementation on the PC is a client only implementation. PC-NFS also comes with software to allow you to use a printer that is connected to one of the servers and a version of Telnet to allow you to log onto the servers with a VT-100 front end. PC-NFS was developed here in Lexington,MA at Sun's East Coast Division. If you call the sales office here (863-8870) I'm sure they will be glad to send you literature and arrange a demo. Hope this is of some help. From: harvard!cmcl2!philabs!linus!sunne!suneast!geoff (Geoff Arnold) I posted info on PC-NFS to mod.newprod recently. I guess Sun's Lexington, MA office is the nearest sales office to you, and coincidentally PC-NFS was developed in the same building. Harvard SAO was one of our Beta sites. If you already have the 3C500/3C501 cards, the software and doc start at $395 qty. 1. We also sell the hardware and software as a package starting at around $1090 (we don't cut any great deals on 3Com boards.....). If you call your Sun rep s/he can set up a demo, and if you have any really detailed technical questions our support group can handle them. And I'm always happy to discuss stuff over the net. From: Me again Thanks one and all for the information. We have decided on 3-COM 3+, despite testimonials for the Novell stuff simply because it uses the vanilla Network calls and disk formats. We figured that this will give us an edge in upward compat. issues and copy protection conflicts. Interesting point, most manufacturers of software that we contacted with copy-protected products (like PC-SAS and SPSS) are installing Novell netware themselves... Gerald Lotto - Harvard Chemistry Dept. UUCP: {seismo,harpo,ihnp4,linus,allegra,ut-sally}!harvard!endor!lhasa!lotto ARPA: lotto@harvard.ARPA CSNET: lotto%harvard@csnet-relay ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 15 Aug 86 17:08:21 -0100 From: unido!gmdzi!achim@seismo.CSS.GOV (Achim Klabunde) To: INFO-IBMPC@B.ISI.EDU Subject: summary on SIMULA for PC Some time ago I posted a query on SIMULA(*) and TeX for PC. This is the summary on SIMULA. The summary on TeX will be posted in about two weeks. Thanks to everybody who sent me information. SIMULA will be available for PC/AT and XT from simula a/s Dag Hammarskjoeldsvej 35 0585 Oslo 5 Norway It will be released October 1, 1986. It will run under MS/DOS 2.0 and upward and requires an arithmetic coprocessor (8087 or 80287). It is planned to make the system available under XENIX, too. The price for the system is Nkr 10.000 (educational Nkr 5.000). (Nkr is Norwegian Crowns) Information about the system can be found in SIMULA newsletter, Vol 14,No 2 & 3. The newsletter is also available from simula a/s. (*)SIMULA is a trademark of simula a/s,Norway. Achim Klabunde Gesellschaft fuer Mathematik und Datenverarbeitung P.O. 1240 D-5205 St. Augustin 1 West Germany UUCP: ...mcvax!unido!gmdzi!achim ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 11 Aug 86 15:53:12 PDT From: Ya'akov_Miles%UBC.MAILNET@MIT-MULTICS.ARPA To: info-ibmpc@USC-ISIB.ARPA Subject: How EXEPACK works, sample .ASM file Title EXEPACK 11-08-86 Page 80,132 ;EXEPACK - Shows how the Microsoft EXEPACK spacemaker works... RET_FAR MACRO DB 0CBH ENDM ; .RADIX 16 NUL EQU 00h LF EQU 0Ah CR EQU 0Dh myprog SEGMENT ASSUME cs:myprog,ds:NOTHING,es:NOTHING,ss:NOTHING BEGIN: MOV AX,0002h ;0000 B8 02 00 (SEG for data) MOV DS,AX ;0003 8E D8 (goes in DS) MOV DX,0000h ;0005 BA 00 00 (OFFSET String) MOV AH,09h ;0008 B4 09 (Print string) INT 21h ;000A CD 21 MOV AH,4Ch ;000C B4 4C (Exit_program) INT 21h ;000E CD 21 HLT ;0010 F4 ; ;*** PACK_1 paragraph aligns data segment (next) by adding 15 nulls PACK_1: DB NUL,0Fh,00h,0B1h ;0011 00 0F 00 B1 ; ;*** Data segment begins here at SEG 02h STRING: DB 'This is a' ;0015 54 68 69 73 20 69 73 20 61 DB ' test',CR,LF,'$' ;001E 20 74 65 73 74 0D 0A 24 ; ;*** PACK_2 moves the 17 bytes of data segment up into position PACK_2: DB 11h,00h,0B2h ;0026 11 00 B2 ; ;*** PACK_3 paragraph aligns stack segment (next) by adding 15 nulls PACK_3: DB NUL,0Fh,00h,0B0h ;0029 00 0F 00 B0 ; ;*** Stack segment begins here at SEG 04h DB 0Ah DUP("Stack",CR,LF) ;002D 53 74 61 63 6B 0D 0A ;0034 53 74 61 63 6B 0D 0A ;003B 53 74 61 63 6B 0D 0A ;0042 53 74 61 63 6B 0D 0A ;0049 53 74 61 63 6B 0D 0A ;0050 53 74 61 63 6B 0D 0A ;0057 53 74 61 63 6B 0D 0A ;005E 53 74 61 63 6B 0D 0A ;0065 53 74 61 63 6B 0D 0A ;006C 53 74 61 63 6B 0D 0A ;*** PACK_4 moves 70 bytes of stack up into position PACK_4: DB 46h,00h,0B2h ;0073 46 00 B2 ; ;*** PACK_5 paragraph aligns garbage segment (next) by adding 10 nulls PACK_5: DB NUL,0Ah,00h,0B0h ;0076 00 0A 00 B0 ; ;*** PACK_6 fills the garbage segment with 4096 ascii "?" characters PACK_6: DB "?",00h,10h,0B0h ;007A 3F 00 10 B0 ; ;*** PAD paragraph aligns EXEPAK segment (next), CS: --> segment EXEPAK PAD: DB 0FFh,0FFh ;007E FF FF myprog ENDS Page ;*********************************************************************** exepak SEGMENT ASSUME cs:exepak,ds:exepak,es:exepak,ss:work BOT: ; CS: --> BOT at unpack ;*********************************************************************** I_PC DW 0000h,0000h ;0000 00 00,00 00 (IP,CS:) FIXSEG DW 0000h ;0004 00 00 (Fixup == Load seg) RELOC DW TOP-BOT ;0006 34 01 (Bytes to relocate) I_SP DW 0046h,0004h ;0008 46 00,04 00 (SP,SS:) PACKED DW 0109h ;000C 09 01 (Segments to expan) DW 4252h ;000E 52 42 START: MOV AX,ES ;0010 8C C0 (Relocate this seg) ADD AX,0010h ;0012 05 10 00 PUSH CS ;0015 0E POP DS ;0016 1F MOV DS:FIXSEG,AX ;0017 A3 04 00 ADD AX,DS:PACKED ;001A 03 06 0C 00 MOV ES,AX ;001E 8E C0 MOV CX,DS:RELOC ;0020 8B 0E 06 00 MOV DI,CX ;0024 8B F9 DEC DI ;0026 4F MOV SI,DI ;0027 8B F7 STD ;0029 FD REPZ MOVSB ;002A F3 A4 PUSH AX ;002C 50 MOV AX,UNPACK-BOT ;002D B8 32 00 PUSH AX ;0030 50 RET_FAR ;0031 CB (JMP to relocated seg) UNPACK: MOV BX,ES ;0032 8C C3 MOV AX,DS ;0034 8C D8 DEC AX ;0036 48 MOV DS,AX ;0037 8E D8 MOV ES,AX ;0039 8E C0 MOV DI,000Fh ;003B BF 0F 00 MOV CX,0010h ;003E B9 10 00 MOV AL,0FFh ;0041 B0 FF (Pad char FFh) REPZ SCASB ;0043 F3 AE (Find pad bot) INC DI ;0045 47 (DI --> Code ) MOV SI,DI ;0046 8B F7 MOV AX,BX ;0048 8B C3 DEC AX ;004A 48 MOV ES,AX ;004B 8E C0 MOV DI,000Fh ;004D BF 0F 00 NEXT: MOV CL,04h ;0050 B1 04 MOV AX,SI ;0052 8B C6 NOT AX ;0054 F7 D0 SHR AX,CL ;0056 D3 E8 JZ L00E4 ;0058 74 0A MOV DX,DS ;005A 8C DA SUB DX,AX ;005C 2B D0 MOV DS,DX ;005E 8E DA OR SI,0FFF0h ;0060 81 CE F0 FF L00E4: MOV AX,DI ;0064 8B C7 NOT AX ;0066 F7 D0 SHR AX,CL ;0068 D3 E8 JZ CODE ;006A 74 0A MOV DX,ES ;006C 8C C2 SUB DX,AX ;006E 2B D0 MOV ES,DX ;0070 8E C2 OR DI,0FFF0h ;0072 81 CF F0 FF CODE: LODSB ;0076 AC (Get command code) MOV DL,AL ;0077 8A D0 DEC SI ;0079 4E ; LODSW ;007A AD (Get byte count) MOV CX,AX ;007B 8B C8 INC SI ;007D 46 MOV AL,DL ;007E 8A C2 AND AL,0FEh ;0080 24 FE (Force code even) CMP AL,0B0h ;0082 3C B0 JNZ MOVE ;0084 75 06 LODSB ;0086 AC (Code B0 ==> expand) REPZ STOSB ;0087 F3 AA JMP SHORT CHECK ;0089 EB 07 NOP ;008B 90 MOVE: CMP AL,0B2h ;008C 3C B2 (Code B2 ==> move) JNZ ERROR ;008E 75 56 REPZ MOVSB ;0090 F3 A4 CHECK: MOV AL,DL ;0092 8A C2 TEST AL,01h ;0094 A8 01 (Odd code ==> done) JZ NEXT ;0096 74 B8 FIXUP: MOV SI,OFFSET FIXUPS ;0098 BE 12 01 PUSH CS ;009B 0E POP DS ;009C 1F MOV BX,DS:FIXSEG ;009D 8B 1E 04 00 (BX=fix_seg) CLD ;00A1 FC XOR DX,DX ;00A2 33 D2 (Do first 64K) DO_64K: LODSW ;00A4 AD MOV CX,AX ;00A5 8B C8 JCXZ NU_64K ;00A7 E3 0E MOV AX,DX ;00A9 8B C2 ADD AX,BX ;00AB 03 C3 MOV ES,AX ;00AD 8E C0 DO_OFF: LODSW ;00AF AD MOV DI,AX ;00B0 8B F8 ADD ES:[DI],BX ;00B2 26 01 1D (do the fixup) LOOP DO_OFF ;00B5 E2 F8 NU_64K: CMP DX,0F000h ;00B7 81 FA 00 F0 JZ IPL ;00BB 74 06 ADD DX,01000h ;00BD 81 C2 00 10 (add 64K) JMP SHORT DO_64K ;00C1 EB E1 IPL: MOV AX,BX ;00C3 8B C3 (AX=fix_seg) MOV DI,DS:I_SP ;00C5 8B 3E 08 00 MOV SI,DS:I_SP+2 ;00C9 8B 36 0A 00 ADD SI,AX ;00CD 03 F0 (fix up SS:) ADD DS:I_PC+2,AX ;00CF 01 06 02 00 (CS:) SUB AX,0010h ;00D3 2D 10 00 MOV DS,AX ;00D6 8E D8 (DS --> PSP) MOV ES,AX ;00D8 8E C0 (ES --> PSP) MOV BX,I_PC-BOT ;00DA BB 00 00 CLI ;00DD FA (BX --> CS:IP) MOV SS,SI ;00DE 8E D6 MOV SP,DI ;00E0 8B E7 STI ;00E2 FB JMP DWORD PTR CS:[BX] ;00E3 2E FF 2F (New CS:IP) ERROR: MOV AH,40h ;00E6 B4 40 (Write message) MOV BX,0002h ;00E8 BB 02 00 (Handle #2) MOV CX,0016h ;00EB B9 16 00 (Write 22 bytes) MOV DX,CS ;00EE 8C CA MOV DS,DX ;00F0 BA FC 00 (Make DS=CS) MOV DX,OFFSET MSG ;00F2 BA FC 00 (Begin at MSG) INT 21h ;00F5 CD 01 MOV AX,4CFFh ;00F7 B8 FF 4C (Exit_bad_error) INT 21h ;00FA CD 21 ; MSG: DB "Packed " ;00FC 50 61 63 6B 65 64 20 DB "file is " ;0103 66 69 6C 65 20 69 73 20 DB "corrupt" ;010B 63 6F 72 72 75 70 74 FIXUPS: DB 01h,00h,01h,00h ;0112 01 00 01 00 DB 1E DUP(0) ;0115 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 TOP: exepak ENDS ; work SEGMENT STACK work ENDS ; END START ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 12 Aug 86 14:36 EDT From: Bruce H. McIntosh Subject: Wendin Personal Operating Systems Query To: Has anyone out there had any experience with Wendin products? I have been interested in their PCUNIX and PCVMS systems as a way of learning my way around an operating system, as they're advertised as coming with source code. Will they run on any machine capable of running DOS, or must they be run on a PC or clone? Any info or experiences anyone could share? Thank you very much! ------------------------------ Date: 12 Aug 1986 16:55:29 PDT Subject: Data Line Noise Query From: Richard Gillmann To: info-ibmpc@B.ISI.EDU Saw this ad from Computer Parts Galore: DE-TERMINATOR This is a unique board for cleaning up data line noise in the clones. This noise is caused by the 2 layer boards that most clones use. IBM uses a 4 layer board with much better noise suppression. Each data line is held (at) 2.7 volts with an R-R network that stops all + or - spikes from causing those crashes that often bother the clones. Especially helpful for use with TURBO motherboards or TURBO plug in boards. ($29.95 wired) Not being a hardware type, I have to wonder: is this a real cause for concern? And if so, which clones use 4 layer boards? ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 12 Aug 86 13:47:29 PDT From: Dan Berry To: info-ibmpc@isib Subject: PL/I Query Has anyone used the PL/I compiler for the IBM PC that is offered by Digital Research? How is it? Is it reliabble? How is the code it produces? I have heard that it compiles only the Ansi G subset of PL/I. Is this true? How does this subset compare with PL/1 for the IBM mainframes? More generally what is the best way to port a PL/1 program to the IBM PC? Thanks, Daniel M. Berry UCLA Computer Science Department [Digital Research's compilers are not being sold anymore as far as I know. Their PL/I compiler is the G-level subset and is the only PL/I compiler I've heard of for the PC. -rag] ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 13 Aug 86 21:56 EDT From: "Roger C. King" Subject: Parallel Port Swap After Print Installation To: info-ibmpc@B.ISI.EDU Using DOS 3.1 or 3.2, is there any way to redirect printer output to LPT2 after the print command has gone resident to LPT1? I find it hard to imagine that there is no way to do this for people having two parallel ports on two different printers. I have found a way to do this using BAsic, but there must be a way to do it from DOS. The mode command only redirects to com ports and cannot redirect one LPT to another. Roger King ------------------------------ Date: Thu 14 Aug 86 09:24:48-PDT From: Dwight Subject: NEC V20 Problem with Old PC To: INFO-IBMPC@B.ISI.EDU Someone here is trying to update their old PC withl a NEC V20. It doesn't work for him. The chip is OK on another and multiple V20's have been tried. The PC is the 5160 model. Any suggestions? ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 14 Aug 86 17:06 IST From: Amir Subject: Irma Card Query To: I use irma file transfer to transfer files between pc and mainframe and it allways gets stuck when passing big files. any suggestions ? Amir ------------------------------ From: lotto%lhasa.UUCP@harvard.HARVARD.EDU Date: 15 Aug 86 08:52 EDT To: endor!info-ibmpc@usc-isib.arpa Subject: PSP hackers guide and Microsoft mouse info needed I am interested in gathering together two sets of information. 1) If people would e-mail me any information they could get on the "RESERVED" sections of the PSP (address of parent PSP, etc.) which are undocumented, I will turn this into a map and post. Various bits and pieces of this info have been req'd around here quite frequently and we always have to do too mach digging to find it. 2) Microsoft mouse hardware interface. I understand how to use the driver, but I want information on the hardware interface. Other than what the jumpers on the interface board do, I cannot find a listing of the "instruction set" anywhere. I already know that there is enough interest in this to post a summary since the request has been put through the Usenet - but NO informative replies to date. Is this proprietary? My summary of PC-networking follows, I inquired a while ago about nets which use the DOS filesystem (w/o reformatting disks) and which use TCP/IP. Hope that you all find this information as useful as I did. Gerald Lotto - Harvard Chem. Dept. lotto@harvard.harvard.edu | lotto@harvunxw.bitnet | lotto@lhasa.uucp ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 15 Aug 86 13:36 EDT From: Elefante@RADC-MULTICS.ARPA Subject: Programming Inquiry To: info-ibmpc@B.ISI.EDU I'm looking for 4 contiguous bytes of static RAM storage--only 4 mind you--to be used as a communications area for a transient program that will be invoked multiple times and will need to store intermediate results for passage to later invocations. I've been using 4 bytes from the cassette data area (40:67-6b), but I doubt that's a good idea over the long term. I want the application to be thought of as well behaved (and I'd like it to behave well to boot). Any suggestions? (The DOS Environment seg will not do because the communications data will sometimes contain zero bytes). There are probably hundreds of bytes available for this kind of thing, but I just don't know where they are. A public reply might be helpful to others who will run into this kind of question in the future. Thanks in advance. Don Elefante ------------------------------ Date: 15 Aug 86 16:38:00 EDT From: "ANTHONY CATONE" Subject: Statistical and Graphical Libraries Query To: "info-ibmpc-request" Does anyone have experience with the various statistical and graphics libraries available for the PC? Our language of choice is IBM C, although Turbo Pascal is a (less attractive) option. Tony Catone The Wharton School University of Pennsylvania ------------------------------ Date: Sat 16 Aug 86 09:24:14-PDT From: Michael Kahn Subject: Lotus 1A EGA Driver Wanted To: info-ibmpc@B.ISI.EDU Does anybody know if drivers for Lotus 1A and the EGA are available on the net or for purchase? I believe somebody once mentioned such drivers available from Compuserve?? but I have no access to files there. I'd appreciate any pointers - freeware, shareware, or payware. Thanks, Michael Kahn ------------------------------ Date: 17 AUG 86 22:54-Z From: HEAGATE%IRUCCVAX.BITNET@WISCVM.WISC.EDU To: INFO-IBMPC@USC-ISIB.ARPA Subject: XLISP Query I am using a modified version of Dave Betz's XLISP 1.4 on an IBM PC and on a unix machine. Can anybody direct me to sources of information about this program e.g. bulleting boards, fora (?? forums), bug fixes etc. Donal O'Mahony, Trinity Colllege, Dublin, Ireland. BITNET: HEAGATE@IRUCCVAX with first line FORHEA OMAHONY@TCD.CSVAX1 ARPANET: HEAGATE%IRUCCVAX.BITNET@WISCVM.ARPA with first line FORHEA OMAHONY@TCD.CSVAX1 ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 17 Aug 86 00:45:51 CDT From: CCRJW%UMCVMB.BITNET@WISCVM.WISC.EDU (Richard Winkel UMC Computing Services) To: INFO-IBMPC@USC-ISIB.ARPA Subject: Yterm + AT&T 6300 Query Has anyone had any luck with the above combination? A user here is having problems with it. It freezes up the machine, requiring a cold boot. Any suggestions? ------------------------------ Date: 18 Aug 86 07:16 GMT From: ghicks @ KOREA-EMH Subject: Tandon Hard Disk Problem To: info-ibmpc @ usc-isib I have had a Tandon hard disk drive since October 1985. Recently, this drive has developed an annoying twitch (almost as though a PLL needs adjustment.) The drive periodically 'twitches' as though hunting the last track it was sent to by the controller. The drive referred to is the Tandon 20mbyte 1/2 height drive. It has an EVEREX Systems Inc Name plate on the top with a serial number of 0501163A9. My question is: Does anyone know what type of periodic maintenance needs to be performed on these drives (ie adjustments, etc) to keep them in peak operating condition? I used to be a Navy computer repair technician and am aware that periodic maintenance needs to be done, but don't know what type to do nor how to do it. Can anyone give me the name and address of the Tandon representative in the US to whom I can write for information? Can anyone tell me where to go for more information? It's extremely difficult to do anything of this nature from this side of the pond (Korea...) Your assistance will be appreciated. Gragory Hicks GHicks@korea-emh JUSMAG-JP@korea-emh PS: I have been extremely satisified with this drive. It has not had a problems to date, and I would like to keep it that way. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 18 Aug 86 04:03 MST From: Andrew Donald Subject: 3278/79 Cards and Structured Fields To: info-ibmpc@USC-ISIB.ARPA I am using an IBM-PC as a dedicated processor in a prototype message switch I am developing. I would like to transfer data to and from an IBM mainframe using the IBM 3278/79 card and 'OEM data' structured fields. Unfortunately, neither of the available programming interfaces supports this. Doe anyone know how to program the card directly to send and receive this types of structure fields? Thanks Matthew Donald Aspect Computing ------------------------------ Date: Mon 18 Aug 86 09:00:08-PDT From: Comly Subject: Query: PC Ltd. ATs To: info-ibmpc@B.ISI.EDU I am currently looking into AT clones as a replacement for my old 64K IBM PC and have run into conflicting reports over one particular machine, the PC Ltd. AT (now the 286 - 8MHz). All the magazine articles I have read say these machines are wonderful. Meanwhile, all the people I have talked to who have dealt with PC Ltd. say their reliability is lousy. Has anyone in info-ibmpc-digest land had any experiences, good or bad, with PC Ltd. and/or their ATs? Thanks! - Andy Comly TEAM1@STAR.STANFORD.EDU ------------------------------ Date: Mon 18 Aug 86 09:03:58-PDT From: Lawrence Subject: 1meg Memory Query To: INFO-IBMPC@B.ISI.EDU I have a IBM clone type called "PCII" it has 1meg. on the motherboard. It's a switchable 4 to 8 mhz system. I have to run gwbasic since there isn't a basic onboard. I have dos 3.2 which I was told acknowledges ram memory pass 640k. Is there a command or patch I have to make for dos to see the total memory? ------------------------------ End of Info-IBMPC Digest ************************ -------