I use ftpsrv from mTCP
and this command on the linux machine
curlftpfs :@/DRIVE_C ~//c
^^
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Hi,
On Tue, Aug 5, 2014 at 11:39 PM, Thomas Mueller wrote:
>
> I never used RUFUS or UNetBootIn, don't know if I could.
Do you have a modern Windows, e.g. XP? And I just blindly assume
UNetBootIn could work atop (your) Slackware 13.
> I was never able to install FreeDOS 1.1 from DOSBox.
Not su
Hi,
On Wed, Aug 6, 2014 at 7:37 AM, Mateusz Viste wrote:
>
> The TCP/IP stack used by NDN is
> somewhat exotic ("Sabretooth"), I never used it before. Looking at the
> various changelogs of NDN and Sabretooth I noticed that these guys have
> put lots of effort into developing their FTP support, s
Ha, it sounds like what I was getting last weekend - "socket error
10060". But I had this even while running against my local FTP server
with ProFTPD on the other end. And one time by some miracle it did
connect correctly and listed all files on my FTP server (but crashed
seconds later). I have
Just a small update:
I am not really confident to get NDN FTP working with external sites.
If I configure a nameserver in WATTCP.CFG I get Connection Error 10060 instead
of 10051. Name resolving is working, but the client fails to make a connection.
This seems to be a local problem. I tried thi
Depends how many library dependencies it has.
And if it uses Linux/win32 specific calls.
--
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On Tue, Aug 5, 2014 at 5:44 PM, Thomas Mueller wrote:
> First concern is making FreeDOS bootable, preferably with Syslinux. SYS.COM
> didn't work,
> even made the FAT32 file system unreadable. I need to save the first MB by
> dd from FreeBSD
> so as to be able to dd back in case the file syst
Okay.
I got Necromancer's Dos Navigator and its integrated graphical FTP Browser to
work - at least for the LAN.
(With a connection to two external FTP sites I still get Connection Error 10051)
To try this I run two VirtualBox FreeDOS guests.
Guest No. 1:
I used a plain FreeDO
Hi,
On Fri, Aug 1, 2014 at 7:23 AM, Mateusz Viste wrote:
>
> How do you transfer files between your main computer and your
> FreeDOS-powered machine ?
FYI
Recently I did make an extremely minimal bootable 1.44 MB floppy .img.
(.ZIP'd it is less than 400 kb.) It has almost nothing on it, by
Hi,
On Tue, Aug 5, 2014 at 5:44 PM, Thomas Mueller wrote:
>
> First concern is making FreeDOS bootable, preferably with Syslinux. SYS.COM
> didn't work,
> even made the FAT32 file system unreadable. I need to save the first MB by
> dd from FreeBSD
> so as to be able to dd back in case the fil
Hi,
On Mon, Aug 4, 2014 at 10:03 AM, Zbigniew wrote:
>
> Switching among many startup configurations is something we can't
> avoid in DOS.
I assume you mean CONFIG.SYS menus. The old old days where you needed
to rename / copy separate files in order to multi-boot such setups is
long gone. (Of co
from my previous message:
> My experience with USB sticks in FreeDOS is that the USB stick is treated
> like a fixed disk: must be in at boot time, and no changing USB sticks.
Bret Johnson responded:
> That depends on which drivers you're using. The BIOS, and most DOS USB
> drivers, do indeed
Am 05.08.2014 um 21:22 schrieb Mateusz Viste :
> On 08/05/2014 11:47 AM, Ulrich wrote:
>> Does the FTP of NDN really work with plain FreeDOS?
>> After reading the discussion here
>> http://www.bttr-software.de/forum/mix_entry.php?id=3628
>> I have the impression it only works under Win32. Please
On 08/05/2014 11:47 AM, Ulrich wrote:
> Does the FTP of NDN really work with plain FreeDOS?
> After reading the discussion here
> http://www.bttr-software.de/forum/mix_entry.php?id=3628
> I have the impression it only works under Win32. Please correct me if I am
> wrong.
I'm sorry to tell you tha
> My experience with USB sticks in FreeDOS is that the USB stick is
> treated like a fixed disk: must be in at boot time, and no changing USB
> sticks.
That depends on which drivers you're using. The BIOS, and most DOS USB
drivers, do indeed work that way. My drivers treat flash drives as a rem
Enable usb in the bios then load Hamamatsu drivers into your config.sys.
Its a driver found on the web. Works very well. Everyone uses it for DOS.
It only works for flash memory and usb floppies.
If you have RS232 available then you can use xtalk to move file between
computers.
The DOS
On Mon, 04
Am 04.08.2014 um 16:10 schrieb Mateusz Viste :
>
> So no reason to be confused, the "DOS PC as FTP server" is a perfectly
> valid (and working) solution, just not fitting exactly in my (very
> personal) needs.
>
> The only thing I need to look for now is a user-friendly FTP client I
> could u
> Not booting from USB but reading FLASH on USB as a drive letter like a
> floppy.
> I do it all the time. I read the camera flash and play the movies and
> look at pictures
> on flash. Flash is usually drive E: Unfornunately you can only read one
> flash
> at a time unless you can run DUSE which o
On 8/4/2014 7:10 AM, Mateusz Viste wrote:
> BTW, I also tried the FTP client that comes with mTCP, but it proved to
> be hardly useable on my PC. Dunno what's wrong, the symptom is that it
> reacts very poorly to keyboard input, at every keypress, I have to wait
> like 1s or 2 for the character to
Hi Bret,
Of course most human problems can be avoided with good organization and
procedures. Most of my "file exchanging" needs could be aggregated into
blocks I could schedule. But I'd prefer to avoid such ultra-organization
during my hobby time :)
Anyway, there's one very specific case that
On Mon, Aug 4, 2014 at 11:03 AM, Zbigniew wrote:
>
> Switching among many startup configurations is something we can't
> avoid in DOS. I was pondering one day, whether could be possible to
> "reset" DOS without resetting entire machine... it would make such
> switch much faster. Just some kind of
> ... but if/when I need to synch files a few times a day between my
> PCes ...
I obviously don't understand your precise situation, but is it possible to
change your procedures so that you don't need to sync the PC's multiple times a
day? That is, just do the syncing once a day/week when you a
2014-08-04 16:23 GMT+02:00, Mateusz Viste :
> A samba share is another very valid approach, although IIRC there's not
> much 'free' alternatives there, and the only serious driver (from MS)
> consumes lots of conventional memory which I'd prefer to keep for other
> usages...
Switching among many
On 08/04/2014 04:10 PM, Zbigniew wrote:
> Still you can use ZIP/LS-floppies: 100 MB of place (no need for
> burning) means a lot of space for DOS-programs/data.
Yes, the place is not a problem itself, but if/when I need to synch
files a few times a day between my PCes, only networked transfers ar
2014-08-04 12:18 GMT+02:00, Mateusz Viste :
> Here below I list all methods that have been mentioned, along with a
> short comment on each.
>
> * Floppies/CD (Zbigniew, Rugxulo)
>- really slow. floppies are hard to get nowadays. Burning a CD every
> time I need to transfer a few KiBs of files
Hi Mike,
Yes, of course it's a totally cool solution. The problem is purely
conceptual - I already have a host that acts as a "server" for many
things, and have configured a local anonymous FTP server on it, so I'd
prefer to use this.
The DOS computer, like all other user-handled computers at
Hi,
I see - it still looks like some neat BIOS emulation thing, though. Does
it mean that the USB drive must be inserted before booting the PC (even
if not booting from the USB drive itself)?
I guess you're lucky to have some smart BIOS there ;)
Anyway, it's still 'sneakernet-like' technology,
On 8/4/2014 3:18 AM, Mateusz Viste wrote:
> * Running a mTCP FTP server on the DOS machine (Matej, Michael, Ulrich)
> - this is nice, although I'd prefer keeping the DOS PC as a simple
> 'client'.
I am confused by this. Both the FTP client and FTP server are DOS EXE
programs. Why would runn
Not booting from USB but reading FLASH on USB as a drive letter like a
floppy.
I do it all the time. I read the camera flash and play the movies and
look at pictures
on flash. Flash is usually drive E: Unfornunately you can only read one
flash
at a time unless you can run DUSE which only works on a
Hi,
On Mon, Aug 04, 2014 at 12:18:58PM +0200,
Mateusz Viste wrote:
[...]
> Only problem is to have a humanly convenient way
> to use FTP from within FreeDOS.
How hard (if at all possible) would it be to port
lftp to FreeDOS? From the Description page on its
web site:
"LFTP is a sophisticat
Hi all,
Thank you all for your replies! I was assuming network transfers only,
as this seems the only proper way, and I've been surprised how many of
us still use non-networked file transfers methods :)
Here below I list all methods that have been mentioned, along with a
short comment on each.
I guess I'll jump into this ...
We have a DOS network (Little Big LAN - excellent) which connects our
DOS computers. One of the nodes is a computer in my office running DOS
and Linux (Ubuntu). Normally this computer is booting into the DOS
partition. We have backup routines (batch files) tha
Am 01.08.2014 um 14:23 schrieb Mateusz Viste :
> That's a question to those of you who happen to still keep an oldish
> hardware machine dedicated to DOS tasks...
>
> How do you transfer files between your main computer and your
> FreeDOS-powered machine ?
>
> Myself, I haven't found any real
Hi,
On Fri, Aug 1, 2014 at 7:23 AM, Mateusz Viste wrote:
>
> That's a question to those of you who happen to still keep an oldish
> hardware machine dedicated to DOS tasks...
>
> How do you transfer files between your main computer and your
> FreeDOS-powered machine ?
For my P166, I used to just
In my case, the FreeDOS box is an ancient notebook that multi-boots
Win2K Pro, a couple of flavors of Linux, and FreeDOS.
Getting stuff on the FreeDOS slice is a copy and paste from Win2K or Linux.
__
Dennis
https://plus.google.com/u/0/105128793974319004519
---
There are also CompactFlash Adapters for XTs, it may be a convinient
option for old hard drives that rarely work.
A friend of mine is making those boards ;-)
Alain
Em 01-08-2014 13:08, Dale E Sterner escreveu:
> Usb and flash chips work well on DOS. Load your files on a flash chip.
> A little
Usb and flash chips work well on DOS. Load your files on a flash chip.
A little work in moving the chip around but should work unless you don't
have usb.
cheers
DS
On Fri, 01 Aug 2014 14:23:41 +0200 Mateusz Viste
writes:
> Hello,
>
> That's a question to those of you who happen to still keep an
mTCP provides three options:
- an FTP client for DOS. Not "point and click" user friendly, but it
does what it is supposed to do.
- HTGET for downloading a file from an HTTP server
- an FTP server for DOS. This allows you to use a graphical FTP client
on another machine.
For when I want real
On Fri, 01 Aug 2014 14:23:41 +0200, Mateusz Viste wrote:
> That's a question to those of you who happen to still keep an oldish
> hardware machine dedicated to DOS tasks...
I usually don't (I triple-boot between FreeDOS, Haiku, and Windows on my
main PC), but when I do transfer files between a
2014-08-01 14:23 GMT+02:00, Mateusz Viste :
> Hello,
>
> That's a question to those of you who happen to still keep an oldish
> hardware machine dedicated to DOS tasks...
>
> How do you transfer files between your main computer and your
> FreeDOS-powered machine ?
On floppies :) or CD-s.
You can
Hello,
That's a question to those of you who happen to still keep an oldish
hardware machine dedicated to DOS tasks...
How do you transfer files between your main computer and your
FreeDOS-powered machine ?
Myself, I haven't found any really creative solution so far, and rely on
one of these:
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