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SCOUG-HELP Mailing List Archives
Return to [ 13 | 
June | 
2003 ]
<< Previous Message << 
 >> Next Message >>
 
 
 
  
513  
=====================================================  
If you are responding to someone asking for help who  
may not be a member of this list, be sure to use the  
REPLY TO ALL feature of your email program.  
=====================================================  
This is a MIME-formatted message.  If you see this text it means that your  
mail software cannot handle MIME-formatted messages.  
--=_0_97539_1055543591  
Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed; charset=iso-8859-1  
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit  
Steven Levine writes:   
> In <20030613034257.17354.qmail@courtney.linkline.com>, on 06/12/03   
>    at 08:42 PM, waynec@linkline.com said:   
>   
>>Finding that "Selective Install for Networking" object would be a big  
>>help.   
>   
> You either lost it or never installed it. :-)  
You are probably right, I didn't know "Installation Utilities" weren't a   
default or that they provided those objects.   
>   
> IIRC, you can get the folder back with Selective Install.  Click on Next  
> until you get to the page listing Optional System Utilities.  Check it.   
> Click on More and select Installation Utilities.   
>   
> If that fails, just run \ibminst\npconfig.exe from either the hard drive  
> or the Warp4 CD.  
I'll try it.   
>   
>>What do you think I've been trying to do for the last three weeks?  
>   
> Don't ask. :-)  
I don't have to, really.... but I say again, I do not claim to be an expert   
on OS/2, never had any formal training on it.   
>   
>>For instance, I sent out several iptrace  
>>listings of my  "not able to find www.abcde.com" problem, including one  
>>to you  
>   
> That may well be true, but I sure can't find them, so you need to resend  
> them.  The last correspondence I have on your abcde problem was regarding  
> nslookup traps.  
Apparently I made the mistake of putting the term "www.xxxxxx.com" in my   
email to you (where "xxxxxx" was meant to be a substitute for whatever   
website I was trying to go to) and the email was probably intercepted by a   
spam filter and relegated to your spam file. I was not aware of this spam   
filter requirement. I sometimes find scoug posts in my own spam file, as   
well... now I know how it happens.   
I'll send the trace to you separately, but I suspect that's a futile effort   
and that it would be more productive for me to re-install the networking   
folders.   
>   
>>I  asked point blank (several times in my  
>>prior posts over the past days) how I  could re-install those folders to  
>   
> Keep in mind that while you may be frustrated by your inability to resolve  
> your problems, the folks on this list are busy as times and the help is  
> given for free.  
Yes, I am aware of that, and I appreciate the help... the problems have been   
so numerous that if I waited a day or two to get replies on each before   
trying anything else, it would be a year or two before I got through them.   
So I admit I have done a lot of muddling along, trying to make progress or   
at least make sense of the problems at hand. I've asked "big picture"   
questions frequently (purposely omitting details at times) because I needed   
to try to see the forest instead of the trees. This last issue is an   
example.   
>   
>>What "process"??? If you've got one, I sure wish you'd share it with me,   
>   
> I did.  It's the same process we used to get working boot diskettes for  
> you AMD box.  
Well, actually we never did get working boot diskettes for my AMD... I just   
thought we did at one point because they finally booted up. The problems I   
cited were on the AMD, which is the ONLY machine I have been trying to make   
the install diskettes for.... I already had a set that worked fine on the   
P2.  
>   
>>computer, and fixed on the other. I'm STILL struggling! (except today I  
>   
> I guess I'll say it again.  I don't know how to fix struggle.  If you  
> provide an explanation of the failure that I can understand, I or someone  
> else can usually provide a solution.  However, until we understand your  
> explanation of the problem, solutions are unlikely.  
Let me try again:   
1. I have the problem of building a Warp partition on the AMD that sees and   
understands the WDC 40gb ide drive that I added after cloning my old Warp   
from the P2 to the scsi on the AMD. I had also originally done a vanilla   
install of Warp from diskettes onto a second scsi partition before I got the   
40gb ide drive, but neither partition was bootable after the ide drive was   
attached.   
Problem 1 is partially solved, in that I was finally able to build a new   
(from scratch) Warp partition on the ide drive from the Warp cdrom, the   
WarpUp cdrom and the tailored install diskettes, except that:   
a) The tailored install diskettes never did work "automagically", I still   
had to manually transfer a number of files onto the hard drive (they were on   
the install diskettes but were not transferred onto the hard drive during   
the install process). I also had to tailor the config.sys on the hard drive.   
This was a very lengthy reiterative process until I finally had the install   
diskettes seeing both drives (u160 scsi and 40gb ide), and creating an   
installable partition on the ide drive, and then, after the Warp install,   
getting it to boot up.   
b) This new Warp ide partition is a "vanilla" Warp, with none of the   
installed programs and customizations I have on my old Warp partition, so I   
now have the problem of figuring out how to get those things onto the new   
Warp.   
c) This new Warp ide partition is very close to the front of the drive, far   
closer than I'd like, because I wanted to leave lots of room for a future   
WinXP partition. Right now I have a 4000mb empty primary partition at the   
front, followed by a 7mb Boot Manager partition, followed by a 1992mb hpfs   
logical Warp partition, followed by freespace. That seemed to be as far from   
the beginning of the drive that fdisk would allow me to build an installable   
partition.   
If I could solve b) I could run Warp off the scsi drive and let WinXP have a   
bigger partition on the ide drive. I purposely built this ide Warp partition   
to prove that I could do it, and to see if a brand new Warp would eliminate   
the "www.abcdefg.com not found... " problem... see 3, below). It did not   
have problem 3, but I also have to solve b) and c) in order to put that   
knowledge to good use.   
2. I had the unrelated problem of not being able to connect to the Netware   
server on a third computer, a PS/2. This turned out to be a hardware problem   
in that I had an ethernet cable plugged into a port that (I have since found   
out) is shared with the "uplink" port on my LinkSys router (the LinkSys   
literature tells you to plug the server into the "uplink" port), and using   
that associated port is a "no-no" that I did not know was a "no-no".   
Problem 2 is solved.   
3. On the P2 I have the "www.abcdefg.com not found. Please check the name   
and try again." problem. This problem was, of course, propogated to the AMD   
when I first cloned the Warp partition onto the AMD's scsi drive as   
"scsiWarp".   
I know all that is confusing... essentially right now I have 2 computers I'm   
working on:   
The P2, which has been my primary computer, still has the "www.abcdefg.com   
not found ..." problem, and is obviously missing the installation utilities.   
It has a lot of customizations and programs I'd like to keep.   
The AMD, my recent addition, which now has:   
1. A vanilla Warp fp15+ partition on the ide drive but in the wrong place, I   
want to leave much more room for a future WinXP.   
2. A vanilla Warp fp15+ maintenance partition on the scsi drive, which   
stopped booting once I installed the ide drive. I haven't made a concerted   
effort to get this partition working again.   
3. A cloned scsiWarp partition that has all the problems, installed   
programs, and customizations of the Warp on the P2.   
In the future I want;   
A) the AMD to be bootable either from scsiWarp (with all my customizations   
and installed programs), or from WinXP   
B) the P2 updated to eliminate the "www.abcdefg.com not found ..." problem,   
and updated/fixed so it is more maintainable (ie, the missing "Selective   
Install for Networking" and other stuff)   
C) a set of install diskettes that actually work without requiring a lot of   
manual revisions to the resultant hard drive libraries.   
How about some "big picture" advice on how to proceed, with enough detail to   
get me started?   
>   
>>diskette's config.sys),  AND with an fdisk that sees the entire ide  
>>drive, AND the scsi drive. I  still haven't successfully created a set  
>>that does ALL of that.   
>   
> For which system?  Again you are not being clear.  We have, so far, worked  
> with you an at least 3 different systems.  You may know which system you  
> are talking about and exactly what you think you have on the diskettes and  
> in config.sys.  I can only guess and I tend to be a bad guesser.  
See my comments above; diskette contents will be attached as files to this   
email.   
>   
>>had no  communications folders on it at all... go figure! (my guess... it  
>>altered  the corresponding folders on a different partition, or didn't  
>   
> Like I said, I'm a bad guesser.  
So am I, but in retrospect, I seem to recall once in the distant past when I   
re-installed networking (apparently I had the right objects at that time)   
and it saw the network folders on another partition and either did not   
re-install that time, either, or it upgraded the other folders (can't   
remember which), hence my guess.   
>   
>>apparently  insists on it being very close to the beginning of the drive,  
>   
> Again insufficient information.  Define close.  Warp4 can only boot from  
> partitions located in the first 1024 logical cylinders.  
See above. Apparently 1024 logical cylinders is a very small portion of the   
40gb drive.   
>   
>>even though it  is a logical partition). Side note: I also learned fdisk  
>>apparently sees an  ntfs partition as if it were an hpfs partition. As I  
>   
> That's expected.  MS decided to use the same partition type code for NTFS.  
Wasn't expected by me, it was a revelation... so how do Warp and WinXP   
coexist?   
Wayne   
--=_0_97539_1055543591  
Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="disk1.lst"  
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"; name="disk1.lst"  
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit  
The volume label in drive A is DISK 1.  
Directory of A:\  
AHA164X  ADD    20022   8-12-96   1:29a  
AIC7870  ADD    39886   8-14-96   2:45a  
AIC7870  SNP     9104   8-12-96   2:42a  
AICU160  ADD   164332   6-01-00  11:29a  
AUDDRIVE SNP     6491   8-12-96   2:44a  
BSAUDIO  SNP     4920   8-12-96   2:44a  
BTSCSI   ADD    22591   8-12-96   1:40a  
BTSCSI   SNP     5731   8-12-96   2:33a  
BUILD    ID        10   5-31-01  10:29p  
CDINST   EXE    16832   8-12-96   2:00a  
CHINCDS1 FLT     4816   8-12-96   1:49a  
CLOCK01  SYS     4048   8-12-96   3:06a  
CLOCK02  SYS     4114   8-12-96   3:06a  
CONFIG   ORG     1477   7-01-97   9:00a  
CONFIG   SYS     1773   6-05-03   7:48p  
CONFIG   X        595   6-14-96  11:03a  
DAC960   ADD    20766   8-12-96   1:44a  
DAC960   SNP     3243   8-12-96   2:36a  
DPT20XX  ADD    24700   8-12-96   1:39a  
Press any key when ready . . .   
(Continuing A:\)  
DPT20XX  SNP     6706   8-12-96   2:33a  
FD16-700 ADD    30670   8-28-96   6:45a  
FD16-700 SNP     3625   8-28-96   6:47a  
FD7000EX ADD    21052   8-12-96   1:36a  
FD7000EX SNP     3956   8-12-96   2:32a  
FD8XX    ADD    30232   8-12-96   1:37a  
FD8XX    SNP     4446   8-12-96   2:32a  
FLASHPT  ADD    53783   8-14-96   2:48a  
FLASHPT  SNP     4158   8-12-96   2:33a  
IBM1FLPY ADD    35310   8-12-96   1:23a  
IBM1FLPY SNP     2391   8-12-96   2:36a  
IBM1S506 ADD    63586  12-20-02   7:43a  
IBM1S506 SNP     8932   8-22-96  10:49a  
IBM2ADSK ADD     9916   8-12-96   1:24a  
IBM2FLPY ADD    14420   8-12-96   1:24a  
IBM2SCSI ADD    32849   8-12-96   1:26a  
IBMATAPI FLT    31204  10-08-02   7:17a  
IBMIDECD FLT    24656  10-08-02   6:18a  
IBMINT13 I13     9982   8-12-96   1:26a  
IBMKBD   SNP     1404   8-12-96   2:28a  
IBMKBD   SYS     7726   8-12-96   2:01a  
IR       SNP     3632   8-12-96   2:44a  
ISAPNP   SNP    21372   8-14-96   2:57a  
Press any key when ready . . .   
(Continuing A:\)  
JAZZ16   SNP     2878   8-12-96   2:44a  
JJSCDROM DMD    39428   9-11-01  12:37p  
KBDBASE  SYS    29013   8-12-96   2:04a  
LMS206   ADD    38732   8-06-96  12:19p  
MOUSE    SNP     3744   8-12-96   2:29a  
NETDET1  SNP    11278   8-15-96   7:03p  
NETDET2  SNP    14414   8-22-96  10:54a  
OS2DASD  DMD    40956   9-06-02  10:38a  
OS2LOGO         60979   8-06-96  11:56a  
PARALLEL SNP     3040   8-22-96  10:58a  
PAS16    SNP     4798   8-12-96   2:32a  
PCIBUS   SNP     2496   6-09-97  12:31p  
PCMCIA   SNP     3908   8-12-96   2:43a  
PNP      SYS     2152   8-14-96   2:56a  
QL10OS2  ADD    37420   8-10-96   6:28p  
QL10OS2  SNP     6540   8-14-96   3:00a  
QL40OS2  ADD    24038   8-12-96   1:44a  
QL40OS2  SNP     4800   8-12-96   2:43a  
QL510    ADD    19272   8-09-96  12:15a  
QL510    SNP     4848   8-12-96   2:43a  
README   INS    32845   8-28-96   3:04a  
RESERVE  SYS     5704   8-12-96   1:14a  
RESOURCE SYS    39992   8-12-96   1:10a  
Press any key when ready . . .   
(Continuing A:\)  
RESRV    SNP     5259   8-12-96   2:39a  
SBCD2    ADD    18836   8-12-96   1:50a  
SBCD2    SNP     2843   8-12-96   2:33a  
SCREEN01 SYS    12104   3-23-01   8:14p  
SCREEN02 SYS    11436   8-12-96   1:25a  
SERIAL   SNP     3276   8-12-96   2:28a  
SNDBLAST SNP     6776   8-12-96   2:32a  
SNDGALAX SNP     4640   8-12-96   2:32a  
SNOOP    LST      706   6-04-03   3:26p  
SNOOP    ORG      596   8-25-96  12:00p  
SONY31A  ADD    32738   8-12-96   1:53a  
SONY31A  SNP     8150   8-12-96   2:36a  
SONY535  ADD    19544   8-12-96   1:54a  
TMV1SCSI ADD    21644   8-12-96   1:21a  
XDFLOPPY FLT    14820   3-04-96   5:35p  
       80 file(s)    1378102 bytes used  
                       49664 bytes free  
--=_0_97539_1055543591  
Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="disk2.lst"  
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"; name="disk2.lst"  
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit  
The volume label in drive A is DISK 2.  
Directory of A:\  
ANSICALL DLL      512   8-12-96   3:00a  
BKSCALLS DLL      512   8-12-96   3:00a  
BMSCALLS DLL      512   8-12-96   3:02a  
BUILD    ID        10   6-01-01   6:28p  
BUNDLE         366082   8-29-96  11:05p  
BVHINIT  DLL    10540   8-12-96   2:08a  
BVSCALLS DLL      512   8-12-96   2:59a  
CDBOOT   EXE     8696   8-27-96  12:55p  
CDFS     IFS    43369   8-12-96   2:43a  
CMD      EXE    74640   8-09-96  12:15a  
COUNTRY  SYS    36185   8-09-96  12:29a  
DEL      LST    46423   8-27-96  11:10a  
DISK     NUM       30   8-14-96   9:30p  
DOS      SYS     1142  12-04-95  11:22p  
DOSCALL1 DLL   123744   8-08-97   4:54p  
FDISK    COM   114878  11-15-00   7:37p  
FIXVGA          30863   3-28-01   7:53a  
FIXVGA   CMD      417   3-27-01   4:31p  
HARDERR  EXE     9415   8-13-96  11:05a  
Press any key when ready . . .   
(Continuing A:\)  
HPFS     IFS   141378   8-13-96  11:17a  
KBDCALLS DLL     1024   8-12-96   3:02a  
KEYBOARD DCP    28097   8-09-96  12:58a  
MARKETNG MSG     9086   8-12-96   1:42a  
MOUCALLS DLL     1024   8-12-96   3:02a  
MOUSE    SYS    18649   8-12-96   1:58a  
MSG      DLL      512   8-12-96   2:56a  
NAMPIPES DLL     1024   8-12-96   3:02a  
NLS      DLL      512   8-12-96   2:55a  
NPXEMLTR DLL    21812   8-12-96   3:21a  
OS2CDROM DMD    32152   5-23-00   9:04a  
OS2CHAR  DLL      512   8-12-96   2:58a  
POINTDD  SYS     1811   8-12-96   2:18a  
QUECALLS DLL     1024   8-12-96   2:57a  
RMINFO   DLL    22847   8-12-96   1:13a  
RMVIEW   EXE    32503   8-12-96   1:13a  
SCREEN01 SYS    12104   3-23-01   8:14p  
SESMGR   DLL     1536   8-12-96   2:52a  
SIPANEL1 DLL    37408   8-12-96   2:01a  
SYSINST1 EXE     4240   8-12-96   1:43a  
SYSINST2 EXE   159984   8-13-96   3:11a  
SYSLEVEL OS2      165   8-12-96   1:30a  
TEDIT    EXE     9390   8-09-96   1:02a  
Press any key when ready . . .   
(Continuing A:\)  
TEDIT    HLP      212   6-14-96  10:58a  
TESTCFG  SYS     9808   8-12-96   2:21a  
VIOCALLS DLL     2048   8-14-96   5:06a  
VTBL850  DCP    10478   8-09-96   1:00a  
       46 file(s)    1429822 bytes used  
                        7680 bytes free  
--=_0_97539_1055543591  
Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="disk3.lst"  
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"; name="disk3.lst"  
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit  
The volume label in drive A is DISK 3.  
The Volume Serial Number is D87C:2814.  
Directory of A:\  
BACKUP   EXE    35040  11-15-00   7:36p  
CHKDSK   COM    70720  11-15-00   7:33p  
CHKDSK32 DLL   139227  10-06-00   2:03p  
CHKDSK32 EXE     6417  10-06-00   1:52p  
DASD32   DMD    37467   6-28-02   8:56a  
DISKCOPY COM    46196  11-15-00   7:36p  
FDISK    COM   114878  11-15-00   7:37p  
FORMAT   COM    72064  11-15-00   7:35p  
IBM1FLPY ADD    35418  10-08-02   6:02a  
IBM1S506 ADD    63586  12-20-02   7:43a  
IBMATAPI FLT    31204  10-08-02   7:17a  
IBMIDECD FLT    24656  10-08-02   6:18a  
IDE16    DDP      434   7-19-01   9:29a  
IDE32    DDP      434   7-19-01   9:29a  
LOADDSKF EXE    14168   9-01-93   1:41p  
NLS      DLL      512  11-15-00   6:31p  
ODPANS   DLL    21968   8-12-96   2:14a  
ODPRTDRV EXE    12039   8-12-96   2:14a  
OS2CDROM DMD    40156  10-08-02   6:14a  
Press any key when ready . . .   
(Continuing A:\)  
OSDELETE EXE    68356   8-12-96   2:13a  
OSO001   MSG   175354  11-14-00   3:59p  
PATH_AMD CMD       31   6-03-03   5:07p  
RESTORE  EXE    39280  11-15-00   7:39p  
SHPIINST DLL    37304  10-19-00   8:57p  
TEDIT    EXE     9390   9-05-00   4:41p  
TEDIT    HLP    14595   6-03-03  11:45p  
UHPFS    DLL   104976  10-06-00   2:03p  
UNZIP    EXE   139827  11-04-97   2:19a  
VIOCALLS DLL     2048  10-19-00   2:01p  
       29 file(s)    1357745 bytes used  
                       82432 bytes free  
--=_0_97539_1055543591  
Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="disk1.snoop.lst"  
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"; name="disk1.snoop.lst"  
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit  
; snoop.lst - for Wayne - with excess SNPs disabled  
; Sat May 31 22:26:48 PDT 2003 SHL  
resrv.snp  
netdet1.snp  
ibmkbd.snp  
ibm1flpy.snp  
ibm1s506.snp  
; SCSI Snoopers  
;aha6360.snp  
;aha154x.snp  
;aha174x.snp  
aic7870.snp  
;ql10os2.snp  
;ql40os2.snp  
;ql510.snp  
;ipsraid.snp  
;btscsi.snp  
;fd16-700.snp  
;fd8xx.snp  
;fd7000ex.snp  
;dpt20xx.snp  
;flashpt.snp  
;dac960.snp  
; Misc. Snoopers  
pcmcia.snp  
ir.snp  
netdet2.snp  
; CDROM Snoopers  
;mitfx001.snp  
sbcd2.snp  
;sony31a.snp  
; Audio Snoopers  
;sndgalax.snp  
;auddrive.snp  
;jazz16.snp  
;sndblast.snp  
;pas16.snp  
;bsaudio.snp  
; Misc. Snoopers  
parallel.snp  
mouse.snp  
serial.snp  
; Note: Place additional snoopers above this line  
pcibus.snp   
--=_0_97539_1055543591  
Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="disk1.config.sys.lst"  
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"; name="disk1.config.sys.lst"  
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit  
rem config.sys - for Wayne - with excess drivers disabled  
rem Sat May 31 22:26:40 PDT 2003 SHL  
basedev=aicu160.add /v  
basedev=ibm1s506.add /v   
set copyfromfloppy=1  
buffers=32  
iopl=yes  
memman=swap,delayswap  
protshell=sysinst1.exe  
set os2_shell=sysinst2.exe  
diskcache=D2,LW  
protectonly=yes  
libpath=.;\;\os2\dll;\os2\install;  
ifs=hpfs.ifs /d:64  
pauseonerror=no  
codepage=850  
devinfo=kbd,us,keyboard.dcp  
devinfo=scr,ega,vtbl850.dcp  
device=\dos.sys  
device=\mouse.sys  
set path=\;\os2;\os2\system;\os2\install  
set dpath=\;\os2;\os2\system;\os2\install  
set keys=on  
basedev=ibmkbd.sys  
basedev=ibm1flpy.add  
rem basedev=danis506.add /v  
basedev=ibm2flpy.add  
basedev=ibm2adsk.add  
basedev=ibm2scsi.add  
basedev=ibmint13.i13  
basedev=os2dasd.dmd  
rem basedev=danidasd.dmd  
rem basedev=jjscdrom.dmd  
device=\testcfg.sys  
basedev=xdfloppy.flt   
set os2_shell=cdinst.exe  
set saveconnect=1  
set cdrominst=1  
ifs=cdfs.ifs /q  
rem basedev=aha152x.add  
rem basedev=aha154x.add  
basedev=aha164x.add  
rem basedev=aha174x.add  
rem basedev=aic7770.add  
basedev=aic7870.add  
rem basedev=btscsi.add  
rem basedev=fd16-700.add  
rem basedev=fd8xx.add  
rem basedev=fd7000ex.add  
rem basedev=dpt20xx.add  
rem basedev=dac960.add  
rem basedev=flashpt.add  
rem basedev=ipsraid.add  
rem basedev=ql10os2.add  
rem basedev=ql40os2.add  
rem basedev=ql510.add  
basedev=chincds1.flt  
rem basedev=hitcds1.flt  
rem basedev=neccds1.flt  
rem basedev=sonycds1.flt  
rem basedev=toshcds1.flt  
basedev=ibmidecd.flt  
rem basedev=tmv1scsi.add  
basedev=sony535.add  
rem basedev=lms206.add  
rem 154569 basedev=lms205.add  
rem basedev=mitfx001.add  
basedev=sbcd2.add  
rem basedev=sony31a.add  
device=\os2cdrom.dmd  
set os2_shell=cdboot.exe  
set oemprogram=\ibminst\npconfig.exe  
set exitwhendone=1   
--=_0_97539_1055543591--  
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The Southern California OS/2 User Group
 P.O. Box 26904
 Santa Ana, CA  92799-6904, USA
Copyright 2001 the Southern California OS/2 User Group.  ALL RIGHTS 
RESERVED. 
 
SCOUG, Warp Expo West, and Warpfest are trademarks of the Southern California OS/2 User Group.
OS/2, Workplace Shell, and IBM are registered trademarks of International 
Business Machines Corporation.
All other trademarks remain the property of their respective owners.
 
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