"Bhaskar, KS" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
 
 Thanks! A bit complicated but understandable. But Wine is needed to get the 
CPRS GUI going? IT is a pity that there is no GUI for unix systems....
 
 WHile your liveCD based on DSL is commendable, it is one of the most diffcult 
liveCDs to configure and run!
 
 Nandalal
      FOIAVistA SemiVivA 20060113 is now available and can be downloaded from
 Source Forge (http://sourceforge.net/projects/worldvista).  A SemiVivA
 package is an installation of VistA that is bundled with GT.M and ready
 for use if you alreay have a PC running Linux.
 
 Assuming that the distribution file is downloaded on your PC
 as /Distrib/VistA/FOIAVistASemiVivA20060113.tgz, you can install it with
 the following commands which must be executed as root:
 
   cd /usr/local
   tar zxvf /Distrib/VistA/FOIAVistASemiVivA20060113.tgz
 
 This OpenVistA SemiVivA is slightly different from (i.e., hopefully
 better than) its predecessors.
 
 When OpenVistA SemiVivA 20060113 is installed on your PC in a
 development environment, the intent is that the files distributed with
 this release will not normally be modified (unless, for example, you
 move to a new GT.M release and need to recompile and generate new object
 files) - please read http://tinyurl.com/738jk for a discussion of the
 model.
 
 This OpenVistA SemiVivA comes pre-configured as a Release.  You can
 still use the "vista" script to demo VistA, but I expect that you are
 more likely to use the "install" script to set up integration and
 development environments and the "run" script thence to run an installed
 environment.
 
 This OpenVistA also comes able to handle a direct connection from a CPRS
 GUI, as well as the latest CPRS GUI itself the program CPRSChart.exe
 in /usr/local/FOIAVistA20060113/CPRS_Gui).  To enable an installed
 environment to handle a CPRS GUI connection request, you will need to do
 the following:
 
 1. Choose a port, e.g., 9297.
 
 2. Identify the environment to handle the connection, and the userid for
 the server process (e.g., /home/kbhaskar/myVistA and kbhaskar).
 
 3. Add 2 lines to /etc/services, thus:
 
 cprs-gui      9297/tcp
 cprs-gui      9297/udp
 
 The second line is not required, but it is traditional to reserve TCP
 and UDP ports together.
 
 4. Determine whether you are running inetd or xinetd as the "Internet
 superserver".  If you are running inetd, you will need a line such as
 the following in your inetd.conf:
 
 cprs-gui stream tcp nowait kbhaskar /home/kbhaskar/myVistA/cprs_direct
 
 If you are running xinetd, you will need something like:
 
 service cprs-gui
     {
       disable            = no
       socket_type      = stream
       wait            = no
       user            = kbhaskar
      server            = /home/kbhaskar/myVistA/cprs_direct
     }
 
 (I don't use xinetd, so the above is my guess as to what the entry
 should be.)
 
 5. Restart inetd/xinetd (on Debian GNU/Linux systems, this is a line
 like /etc/init.d/inetd restart).
 
 6. You may need to configure your firewall to allow connections on port
 9297.
 
 A CPRS GUI client should now be able to connect.  If you have wine
 installed on your Linux machine, you can try running the CPRS GUI on
 Linux with (one line, look out for line breaks):
 
 wine /usr/local/FOIAVistA20060113/CPRS_Gui/CPRSChart.exe s=localhost
 p=9297 SPLASH=OFF CCOW=DISABLE
 
 Good luck.
 
 I promised to document the process of creating a SemiVivA package from a
 FOIA release, and I have copious notes that I need to convert into
 something readable.  I will do that after I create FOIAVistA VivA
 20060113.
 
 Regards
 -- Bhaskar
 
             

        SPONSORED LINKS   
                                                    Software distribution       
                                Salon software                                  
     Medical software                                                           
          Software association                                       Software 
jewelry                                       Software deployment               
                                                  
      
---------------------------------
   YAHOO! GROUPS LINKS 
 
    
    Visit your group "openhealth" on the web.
    
    To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
    
    Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of Service. 
 
    
---------------------------------
 
 
     


                
---------------------------------
 
 What are the most popular cars? Find out at Yahoo! Autos 

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/openhealth/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 


Reply via email to