[rescue] SBUS Efficient Networks Inc fiber network adapter on a Sparcstation 4
Patrick Giagnocavo
xemacs5 at gmail.com
Wed Feb 28 11:12:52 EST 2024
How easy is it to put a stock SunOS on the ASX200? Could keep an eye out
for one ... will it take more than 16MB of RAM?
Cheers
Patrick
On Wed, Feb 28, 2024 at 2:35 AM Skeezics Boondoggle via rescue <
rescue at sunhelp.org> wrote:
>
> On Tue, 27 Feb 2024 17:58:02, Kenneth Seefried wrote:
>
> [...]
>> ATM is one of the very few network technologies I *never* say "I should
>> pull together the parts to build a network to play with".
>>
>>
> This made me laugh, because I wholeheartedly agree... having kinda done
> exactly that "back in the day." Not really on purpose, though. :-)
>
> A couple of decades ago (ouch) a friend gave me a pile of old ATM gear
> that was being decommissioned from a lab at the grad school where we
> worked. They'd done a bunch of research on streaming video (late
> '90s/early '00s) and QoS atop IPv4 and ATM (probably LANE, can't recall the
> details now). I picked up a couple of Fore Systems switches and several
> Fore Sbus and EISA cards. (They'd been using HP9000/700 series with ATM
> and cool Parallax XV700 video overlay cards for their testing -- naturally
> I snagged a 735 and the 755 as well!)
>
> I was surprised to learn that the ForeRunner ASX200 is actually a small
> rack-mountable 3-ish slot VME cage with a SPARCengine as the management
> card! The internal disk drive (!!) in one of the ForeRunners was bad, so I
> rebuilt it (sanely -- Fore's default installation was bonkers) and still
> have some transcripts:
>
> [...]
> ok banner
> SPARC CPU-3CE, No Keyboard
> ROM Rev. 2.10.1, 16 MB memory installed, Serial #764843.
> Ethernet address 8:0:20:b:ab:ab, Host ID: 800babab.
>
> ok boot disk
> Boot device: /iommu/sbus/espdma at 4,8400000/esp at 4,8800000/sd at 3,0 File and
> args:
> root on /iommu at 0,10000000/sbus at 0,10001000/espdma at 4,8400000/esp at 4
> ,8800000/sd at 3,0:
> a fstype 4.2
> Boot: vmunix
> Size: 1933312+470824+761352 bytes
> PAC ENABLED
> SunOS Release 4.1.3F (ASX_200) #740: Tue Jul 7 17:16:14 GMT-0400 1998
> Copyright (c) 1983-1992, Sun Microsystems, Inc.
> cpu = SPARC,CPU-3CE
> mod0 = TI,TMS390S10 (mid = 0)
> mem = 16004K (0xfa1000)
> avail mem = 11436032
> entering uniprocessor mode
> Ethernet address = 8:0:20:b:ab:ab
> espdma0 at SBus slot 4 0x8400000
> esp0 at SBus slot 4 0x8800000 pri 4 (onboard)
> sd0 at esp0 target 3 lun 0
> sd0: <Quantum GoDrive GLS127S cyl 675 alt 2 hd 9 sec 41>
> audio0 at obio 0x300000 pri 13 (sbus level 7)
> SUNW,bpp0 at SBus slot 4 0xc800000 pri 3 (sbus level 2)
> ledma0 at SBus slot 4 0x8400010
> le0 at SBus slot 4 0x8c00000 pri 6 (onboard)
> VME0 at SBus slot 0 0xfe00000 and obio 0x380000
> FORCE SPARC CPU-3CE (Rev. 0.3)
> FORCE Solaris 1.1F CPU-3CE VME Driver (nexus & memplus) Version 1.0
> Master Window: 0x10000000-0x1fffffff (a32map=0x1)
> Slave Window: 0x0-0xfffff (slavemap=0x80)
> A16 Mail Box: 0x0 (mbox=0x0)
> VME Interrupt Level Enable: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, (intenable=0xfe)
> [...]
> asx200 login: root
> Last login: Fri Sep 10 01:22:10 on ttya
> SunOS Release 4.1.3F (ASX_200) #740: Tue Jul 7 17:16:14 GMT-0400 1998
> asx200# df
> Filesystem kbytes used avail capacity Mounted on
> /dev/sd0a 43958 15241 24322 39% /
> /dev/sd0g 43958 36291 3272 92% /usr
> /dev/sd0f 13783 104 12301 1% /var
> asx200# ifconfig -a
> le0: flags=63<UP,BROADCAST,NOTRAILERS,RUNNING>
> inet 192.168.1.199 netmask ffffff00 broadcast 192.168.1.255
> ether 8:0:20:b:ab:ab
> asx0: flags=862<BROADCAST,NOTRAILERS,RUNNING>
> inet 1.1.1.1 netmask ff000000 broadcast 1.255.255.255
> ether 0:0:0:0:0:0
> qaa0: flags=60<NOTRAILERS,RUNNING>
> ether 0:0:0:0:0:0
> [...]
>
> IIRC, it was basically a stock SunOS 4 install, plus the usual custom
> kernel config to add Fore's drivers, startup scripts, and patches; the
> utilities were in /atm/bin but there was a menu/shell thing for management
> atop the Unix CLI. I learned enough about it to be dangerous, with an SS20
> and the two HPs eventually talking to the switch and making the lights
> blink furiously as I pushed some big files around to see how it stacked up
> against FDDI or FastEthernet. Good times.
>
> So for a while in the early Noughties my home network comprised a small
> FDDI ring for NFS traffic into my old Netapp F330s and Sun4 servers, the
> three aforementioned ATM clients hanging off the ForeRunner, thick-, thin-
> and twisted pair 10Mbit Ethernet hubs and switches connecting my older
> 32-bit NeXT, Sun, Tek, SGI, DEC and PERQ workstations, FastEthernet
> backbone tying all that to my Cisco switch cluster for the higher-end
> Sparcs and desktop daily drivers, Gigabit Ethernet (fiber and TP) to my
> F700 and F800 Netapps and the Ultras, 7Mbit ADSL line to the outside, a
> 1Mbit Farallon "homeline" Ethernet to my upstairs tenant, and even a UUCP
> feed over an old 33.6Kbaud fax modem for a small NNTP feed and to connect
> my mom's NeXT to her Postscript service bureau. I'm sure at one point or
> another I employed smoke signals, avian carriers, sneaker net with
> floppies, a station wagon full of magtapes, two cans with a string... and
> of course, throw in an obligatory ISDN jab here too.
>
> It was the "standing up in a canoe" of home networking setups, to be sure.
>
> But if that ATM kit hadn't been free, I definitely would never have gone
> out lookin' for it! :-)
>
> _______________________________________________
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>
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