> On Jun 8, 2015, at 08:58, Peter Coghlan <cct...@beyondthepale.ie> wrote:
> 
> Standalone backup is a very small VMS environment.  You get a "$" prompt and
> the only command which it accepts is "BACKUP".  You don't get to mount 
> anything
> as BACKUP will perform any mounting needed itself.  I'm not sure but it is
> also possible that only BACKUP /IMAGE works.

Thanks!

My goal here is to figure out what's on the R80 and that RL02 pack, boot them 
if possible, and extract all of the delicious bytes for archival and 
examination on my modern machine(s) (primarily Mac). I'm trying to boot the 
standalone backup tape images because those are what I found that have the same 
version number as the label on top of the RL02 pack, and are in a format that I 
can do something with at the moment.

Now, the seller of the system stated that he last run OpenVMS 7.3 (if I recall 
correctly) on it, so it's possible that's what is on the R80.

The issue that I'm having at the moment is that when I try to boot from either 
that RL02 pack or the R80, VMB.EXE reports "%BOOT-F-Unable to locate BOOT 
file". I don't know yet whether there's something not-right about the contents 
of the hard drives, or I need to configure something (?) so VMB.EXE knows what 
to look for. The boot scripts on the console boot tape appear to set up VMB.EXE 
by shoving numbers into some registers prior to loading it, and I have not yet 
located any documentation about what the numbers mean. I can just see that 
they're different in each of the scripts. I've only tried the 
non-conversational boot scripts so far, since I learned about what the xxnGEN 
scripts were for after my last experimentation session.

I wonder if I might be able to back up the hard drives to an absurd number of 
emulated TU58 images, so that I could then examine those on my modern machine?

I could probably back up onto magtape, but I don't have another means to read 
the tapes yet. I have another tape drive (which needs repair) that I'll 
eventually include in my PDP-11/44 restoration, but that's a big project, far 
in the future.

I wonder if the VMS5.3 standalone backup might know how to back up to some 
network device? I have an ethernet card in the VAX, so that might be a way to 
get data off the machine for examination.

Any suggestions or clues would be greatly appreciated! I'm still learning how 
to tell the chickens from the eggs.


-- 
Mark J. Blair, NF6X <n...@nf6x.net>
http://www.nf6x.net/

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