From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: Hellwig.Geisse@mni.fh-giessen.de (Hellwig.Geisse@mni.fh-giessen.de) Date: Mon, 19 Jul 2004 20:56:43 +0200 (CEST) Subject: [TUHS] Lions' V6 source code In-Reply-To: <20040719121539.5ee28b65.macbiesz@optonline.net> Message-ID: Hi Maciek, a while ago you asked me some questions about extracting V7 files. I answered your mail the next day, and some days later wrote you another one, asking how you progressed, but for one reason or another never got an answer from you. So I suspect that my mail was blocked, perhaps by your spam filter. I therefore repeat the text here on the mailing list. All other readers, please excuse... I guess you are using my package "unix-v7-3", utility "exfs" in directory "extract". Usage is "exfs ", as you can see when executing the extractor without any arguments. is the name of a file in the host environment (e.g., Linux) which holds a binary image of a PDP-11 disk, preferrably an RP04 (I have only tested the extractor with this disk). Such an image is best generated by running the PDP11 simulator. is the number of the (raw) disk block where the partition starts from where you want to extract the file system (yes - even these old systems had disk partitions, but the sizes were hard-coded within the disk driver). If you have the disk image of an RP04 disk generated by UNIX V7 then you can look up the partitioning in the file "parts.txt", also in the "extract" subdirectory. The number listed in column "start" is the start block of the file system. BTW, do not expect to get something useful extracted from a swap partition - these partitions are not regular file systems. is the name of the destination directory in the host environment to which the extracted file system will be copied. The error "unknown inode type" that you got means that the extractor tried to analyze the inode part of the file system and could not identify the type of an inode (regular/directory/block or character special file). This indeed can be the result of an incorrect start block specification: some block which is not an inode block is interpreted as containing inodes, which fails horribly. I hope that helps. It is nice to see that there is actually anyone working with this stuff, so feel free to ask if you have further questions. Regards, Hellwig ---------------------------------- E-Mail: Hellwig.Geisse at mni.fh-giessen.de Date: 19-Jul-2004 Time: 20:40:50 This message was sent by XFMail ----------------------------------