Re: Doom again, IPX this time

2002-11-14 Thread Stian Sletner
* At 2002-09-27T07:34+0400, Stas Sergeev wrote: : | Now you may want to try 1.1.3.4. As for dosemu's IPX, it is still a | nightmare in the hell from the DPMI's point of view, but the Packet | Driver was finally cured, so you can try playing doom via a packet | driver, loading an ipxodi from dos (m

dosemu and non-root users

2002-11-14 Thread Graeme Humphries
So, I had this "brilliant" idea to get some old DOS BBS games (like LORD) running under dosemu, and then allow access via telnet to them. However, I've run into some bizarre problems. I obviously don't want to run dosemu on a port on the internet as root. However, when I attempt to run LORD as

Re: Dosemu and Unix

2002-11-14 Thread Bart Oldeman
On Thu, 14 Nov 2002, Harry Binswanger wrote: > As I understand it, Dosemu is for Linux. But will it run under Unix (FreeBSD)? DOSEMU used to run on NetBSD. Nobody maintained it for over 5 years so the support code was dropped. You're free to resurrect it if you feel you're able to and can test it

Dosemu and Unix

2002-11-14 Thread Harry Binswanger
As I understand it, Dosemu is for Linux. But will it run under Unix (FreeBSD)? Harry Binswanger [EMAIL PROTECTED] - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-msdos" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.h

Re: non-interactive dos commands from linux command line

2002-11-14 Thread Bart Oldeman
On Thu, 14 Nov 2002, Alastair Hole wrote: > This is excellent - just the job... > > Next stage is the PHP web front end: > > When running this in a terminal, I see the usual output of dosemu - > version no. etc. > What happens to this output when the command is called from a system() > command or

Re: non-interactive dos commands from linux command line

2002-11-14 Thread Alastair Hole
This is excellent - just the job... Next stage is the PHP web front end: When running this in a terminal, I see the usual output of dosemu - version no. etc. What happens to this output when the command is called from a system() command or similar (in PHP?) - does it just disappear somehow, or

Re: non-interactive dos commands from linux command line

2002-11-14 Thread Bart Oldeman
On Thu, 14 Nov 2002, Alastair Hole wrote: > I am trying to run a DOS program non-interactively, directly from the > linux command line (eventually it needs to be called from a PHP script > to provide a web interface to the program, but that's another story): > > ./dosemu -home -D-a -I 2>/dev/null

Re: non-interactive dos commands from linux command line

2002-11-14 Thread Bart Oldeman
On Thu, 14 Nov 2002, Alastair Hole wrote: > Running the above command works fine apart from one crucial detail: > I have to MANUALLY hit enter to get DosEMU to start: > > DOSEMU will run on _this_ terminal. > To exit you need to execute 'exitemu' from within DOS, > because -C and 'exit

Re: Who knows what was changed in 1.1.3.3 or 1.1.3.4 about filelocking?

2002-11-14 Thread Michal Samek
On Pá, 2002-11-08 at 00:00, Bart Oldeman wrote: > Attached is a quick&dirty "proof of concept" 64-bit file offset patch. Of > course it will need to be changed to be compatible with older libc's and > kernels. > > Bart So I've started a patched dosemu but there is something very strange, when I

Re: Who knows what was changed in 1.1.3.3 or 1.1.3.4 about filelocking?

2002-11-14 Thread Michal Samek
On Pá, 2002-11-08 at 00:00, Bart Oldeman wrote: > Attached is a quick&dirty "proof of concept" 64-bit file offset patch. Of > course it will need to be changed to be compatible with older libc's and > kernels. > > Bart There is a small typo in your patch; mfs.c after patching, line 3796. I hope

non-interactive dos commands from linux command line

2002-11-14 Thread Alastair Hole
Re. Linux DOS emulator 1.0.2.1 I am trying to run a DOS program non-interactively, directly from the linux command line (eventually it needs to be called from a PHP script to provide a web interface to the program, but that's another story): ./dosemu -home -D-a -I 2>/dev/null 'keystroke "\rD: