HP3000-L Archives

September 1996, Week 4

HP3000-L@RAVEN.UTC.EDU

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Subject:
From:
Don Harrington <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Don Harrington <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Wed, 25 Sep 1996 13:31:01 -0700
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Well, you might try TERMDSM (it's under SYSDIAG, now, remember!) or
RESETting the port under OpenView.  These have worked for us, in the past.
 
 
On Wed, 25 Sep 1996, Dr. Ferenc Nagy wrote:
 
> Gentle List Members:
>
> > > Yesterday afternoon during a file transfer from PC to HP my : prompt was
> > > lost, so I was struggling with that.
> John A Beckett wrote:
> >
> > We had a similar situation yesterday.  After trying all the tricks HP
> > gives us, we used an old one that has often worked for us (both on the
> > Series III and the XL machines).  Go to another port, log on as
> > MANAGER.SYS, and do the following:
> >
> >    :FILE X;DEV=<TheBadPort>
> >    :SHOWJOB *X
> >
> > ...Then try it again.  Note: This only works if you weren't logged into
> > the port when it went bad.
> As I wrote, I was loggen in, and the file transfer was initialted from
> QUIET mode. Now I use another port, but the session on the bad port is
> still logged on. It is still living in QUIET mode. Neither ABORTJOB, nor
> Stan Sieler's BOUNCE could kill it.
>
> Why?
>                         TIA
>                                               Frank
>
>   |\  /~ ~~|~~~ Family : NAGY; first name : FERENC; title : Ph. D.
>   | \ |   -+-   Institute of Isotopes of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
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> `-'   '  `-'    E-mail : [log in to unmask]
>
> Fax: (36)-1-156-5045, work phone: (36)-1-275-4351, home phone: (36)-1-277-4229.
> Home address: H-1214 BUDAPEST Raketa u. 29. I. 3.
>
> There are 3 kinds of programming errors:  syntactical, semantical and mystical.
> The programmers have to suck up the users just as much as absolutely necessary.
>
 
 
Don  Harrington                         Boeing Commercial Airplane Group
(206) 931-4457 voice                    P. O. Box 3707 M/S 5J-34
(206) 931-9085 FAX                      Seattle, WA  98124-2207
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