On 11/04/2019 03:40 PM, Mike Russo wrote:
The FTP command in Solaris 2.6, 7, and 8 doesn't even support passive
mode FTP, so even assuming you set up an FTP server on your Windows
host it wouldn't work. But you can set up SSH on Solaris 2.6 if you
have the proper packages. There are a lot of new packages out there on
this site: http://jupiterrise.com/tgcware/sunos5.6_sparc/stable/
<http://jupiterrise.com/tgcware/sunos5.6_sparc/stable/>
I would recommend getting the wget package for sure, since then you
can more easily download whatever else you want from this site. In
order to install SSH you'd have to get the openssl and openssh
packages (and maybe other packages like iconv and readline, definitely
the prngd package for random numbers) - maybe you should just download
that entire folder from that site and put it all into an ISO file and
attach it.
The hotjava browser works fine for downloading the tgcware packages. I
successfully installed sshd with dependencies and a few other toys. A
reboot after installing sshd is all that is needed to automatically
start up prngd, generate initial keys etc. Thank you Mike for the
pointer to the treasure trove.
I actually just found this site in a google search so I'm not sure how
their SSH packages need to be set up (aside from the usual pkgadd) but
once you get it installed and running, then in the QEMU host you can
direct port 22 to it and it will be easier to get files off and on.
--
Michael Russo, Systems Engineer
PaperSolve, Inc.
268 Watchogue Road
Staten Island, NY 10314
Your random quote for today:
Practice is the best of all instructors.
-- Publilius
-----Original Message-----
*From*: Supratim Sanyal <[email protected]
<mailto:supratim%20sanyal%20%[email protected]%3e>>
*To*: "Ramamurthy, Suresh" <[email protected]
<mailto:%22Ramamurthy,%20suresh%22%20%[email protected]%3e>>
*Cc*: [email protected] <[email protected]
<mailto:%[email protected]%22%20%[email protected]%3e>>
*Subject*: Re: [EXTERNAL]: Re: QEMU
*Date*: Mon, 04 Nov 2019 14:43:35 -0500
The bridge and tap are on the host. Sorry I missed the part about the
windows host - I don’t know how to do a bridge and tap on Windows,
others here may chime in.
I brought up a Solaris 2.6 Qemu guest on opensuse tumbleweed - it does
not come with a ssh daemon, only telnet is standard. So your options
might be reduced to FTP from your windows host (assuming you can get
to your guest over some network setup equivalent of tap) or burning CD
images to attach to your guest, etc.
---
Supratim Sanyal, W1XMT
39.19151 N, 77.23432 W
QCOCAL::SANYAL via HECnet <http://www.update.uu.se/%7Ebqt/hecnet.html>
On Nov 4, 2019, at 1:34 PM, Ramamurthy, Suresh
<[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Hi,
Thanks for the response.
I’m trying to create the bridge using the ip command. But my solaris
shell says ip command is not found. What should I do to resolve this?
Any pointers will be much appreciated.
Thanks
Suresh
*From:*Qemu-discuss
<[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>>
*On Behalf Of *Supratim Sanyal
*Sent:* Friday, November 1, 2019 8:30 PM
*To:* [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
*Subject:* [EXTERNAL]: Re: QEMU
On 11/01/2019 06:07 PM, Ramamurthy, Suresh wrote:
Hi,
I followed the steps in the link
https://learn.adafruit.com/build-your-own-sparc-with-qemu-and-solaris?view=all
<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__learn.adafruit.com_build-2Dyour-2Down-2Dsparc-2Dwith-2Dqemu-2Dand-2Dsolaris-3Fview-3Dall&d=DwMF-g&c=YlQJHsR4e2z6sq5iNUb1-8UzPbEw9OnHGjBjyVyvpyA&r=GqB057J8TQLQeCu2gv1UAIsoNRCpUTJ0cJTwlDtiAAk&m=nFHnarz_NBs068Wftv_z3NhXhPad6Ur6UqpAC-DVfLs&s=QPifXey-MJn9iPsp0BiT7NS8L282TVqJasfKI0bFCxY&e=>
and launched Solaris 2.6 as guest having Windows as host. Now I want
to copy files from host Windows to guest Solaris. Can you please
guide on how to transfer files between the host and guest using QEMU?
Thanks
Suresh
*KLA-Tencor is now KLA! **Learn more at kla.com
<https://www.kla.com/>*<https://www.kla.com/>
Enable sshd on Solaris if available and not enabled, forward port 22
in qemu command line and scp files over.
My preference would be to do a proper bridge from your NIC and a tap
interface for qemu's networking so that the Solaris VM is a full
fledged node on your network.
--
Supratim Sanyal, W1XMT
39.19151 N, 77.23432 W
QCOCAL::SANYAL via HECnet
--
Sent via Thunderbird/MX-Linux on an overheated Compaq Presario CQ61