On Wed, 18 Oct 1995 13:04:31 GMT jeff brown said: >What kind of experience is out there upgrading from 4.x to 5.x MPEix? Did >any of the new POSIX items create unexpected headaches? This has been asked numerous times before. You say "4.x" but if that means "4.5" then you've already had most of the trauma :-) Let's assume 4.0. Disk usage increases substantially. Performance may be impacted on small memory systems. There are some patches to get (notably PowerPatch 2, a.k.a. Express 2). No update in my entire life has been uneventful, but considering the added functionality between 4.0 and 5.0, HP has done an outstanding job despite my sometimes critical remarks here. It is probably a good idea to ask here about the update, or review the archives for material, and I won't re-iterate them here (others probably will). But I can say: * Get the necessary software. READ THE DOCUMENTATION AND THE NOTES. Most all of the problems are noted in the documentation (like checking your DDS firmware revision if applicable). * Verify your SLT (as documented), your available disc space, and for the very paranoid, VSTORE verify your FOS and SUBSYS tapes. * Order the latest PowerPatch; and if you have access to an engineer as with PSS level support, get reactive patches for your products; most notably networking products (NMS, NST, FTP, etc) and MPE patches. Never install a virgin push this late in the game since patches are available. * Most existing things still work. Most patches are for new things. I know of three things that broke that worked fine before, and aren't otherwise documented in the standard materials: * COBOL files opened for I-O mode: if you READ a record then WRITE it, it updates the record you read. This doesn't fly on 5.0, you have to change the WRITE to a REWRITE. * Fortran/iX runtime library changed. We had one case of unresolved external in a program we don't have the source for (3rd party - SPSS). * Compiled C/iX programs under 5.0 will likely not run on pre-5.0 systems. There have been some other quirks, but most are fairly well documented or else deal with new functionality. [\] Jeff Kell <[log in to unmask]>