*BSD News Article 11449


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From: esr@snark.thyrsus.com (Eric S. Raymond)
Newsgroups: comp.unix.sys5.r4,comp.unix.pc-clone.32bit,comp.unix.bsd,comp.os.mach,news.answers
Subject: PC-clone UNIX Software Buyer's Guide
Summary: A buyer's guide to UNIX versions for PC-clone hardware
Message-ID: <1kY6Xj#4pmqPm1sVl0z9f60wp66Rk6v=esr@snark.thyrsus.com>
Date: 22 Feb 93 19:22:00 GMT
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Archive-name: pc-unix/software
Last-update: Tue Feb 22 14:43:26 1993
Version: 11.0

You say you want cutting-edge hacking tools without having to mortgage the
wife'n'kids?  You say arrogant workstation vendors are getting you down?  You
say you crave fast UNIX on cheap hardware, but you don't know how to go about
getting it?  Well, pull up a chair and take the load off yer feet, bunky,
because this is the PC-clone UNIX Software Buyer's Guide posting.

Many FAQs, including this one, are available via FTP on the archive site
rtfm.mit.edu (alias rtfm.mit.edu or 18.172.1.27) in the directory
pub/usenet/news.answers.  The name under which this FAQ is archived appears in
the Archive-nameline above.  This FAQ is updated monthly; if you want the
latest version, please query the archive rather than emailing the overworked
maintainer.

What's new in this issue:
   * Full info on Information Foundation System V Release 4.2
   * FTP access to precompiled SCO binaries.
   * possible serious problems with UHC.

Gentle Reader: if you end up buying something based on information from this
Guide, please do yourself and the net a favor; make a point of telling the
vendor "Eric's FAQ sent me" or some equivalent.  The idea isn't to hype me
personally, I've already got all the notoriety I need from doing things like
_The_New_Hacker's_Dictionary_ --- but if we can show vendors that the Guide
influences a lot of purchasing decisions, I can be a more powerful advocate for
the net's interests, and for you.

0. CONTENTS

  I.  INTRODUCTION.  What this posting is.  How to help improve it.  Summary of
the 386/486 UNIX market, including 6 SVr4 products, SCO UNIX (an SVr3.2), and 2
BSD ports.  What's new in this issue.

  II.  GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS.  A brief discussion of general hardware
requirements and compatibility considerations in the base SVR4 code from UNIX
Systems Laboratories (referred to below as the USL code).  None of this
automatically applies to SCO or the two BSD-like versions, which break out the
corresponding information into their separate vendor reports.

  III. FEATURE COMPARISON. A feature table which gives basic price & feature
info and summarizes differences between the versions.

  IV. VENDOR REPORTS.  Detailed descriptions of the major versions and
vendors, including information collected from the net on bugs, supported
and unsupported hardware and the like.

  V. UPCOMING PORTS, FREEWARE VERSIONS, AND CLONES.  Less-detailed descriptions
of other products in the market.

  VI. HARDWARE COMPATIBILITY TABLES.  A set of tables summarizes vendor claims
and user reports on hardware compatibility.

  VII. FREEWARE ACCESS FOR SVR4 SYSTEMS.  Information on the SVR4 binaries
archive.

  VIII. FREE ADVICE TO VENDORS.  Your humble editor's soapbox.  An open letter
to the UNIX vendors designed to get them all hustling to improve their products
and services as fast as possible.

  IX. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS AND ENVOI.  Credit where credit is due.  Some praises
and pans.  What comes next....

Note: versions 1.0 through 4.0 of this posting had a different archive name
(386-buyers-faq) and included the following now separate FAQs as sections.

  pc-unix/hardware -- (formerly HOT TIPS FOR HARDWARE BUYERS) Useful general
tips for anybody buying clone hardware for a UNIX system.  Overview of the
market.  Technical points.  When, where, and how to buy.

  usl-bugs -- (formerly KNOWN BUGS IN THE USL CODE).  A discussion of bugs
known or believed to be generic to the USL code, with indications as to which
porting houses have fixed them.  None of this applies to the two BSD-based
versions.

Readers may also find material of interest in Dick Dunn's general 386 UNIX
FAQ list, posted monthly to comp.unix.sysv386 and news.answers.


I. INTRODUCTION

The purpose of this posting is to pool public knowledge and USENET feedback
about all leading-edge versions of UNIX for commodity 386 and 486 hardware.  It
also includes extensive information on how to buy cheap clone hardware to
support your UNIX.

This document is maintained and periodically updated as a service to the net by
Eric S.  Raymond <esr@snark.thyrsus.com>, who began it for the very best
self-interested reason that he was in the market and didn't believe in plonking
down several grand without doing his homework first (no, I don't get paid for
this, though I have had a bunch of free software and hardware dumped on me as a
result of it!).  Corrections, updates, and all pertinent information are
welcomed at that address.

This posting is periodically broadcast to the USENET group comp.unix.sysv386
and to a list of vendor addresses.  If you are a vendor representative, please
check the feature chart and vendor report to make sure the information on your
company is current and correct.  If it is not, please email me a correction
ASAP.  If you are a knowledgeable user of any of these products, please send me
a precis of your experiences for the improvement of the feedback sections.

At time of writing, here are the major products in this category:

Dell UNIX Issue 2.2				abbreviated as "Dell" below
ESIX System V Release 4.0.4			abbreviated as "Esix" below
Micro Station Technology SVr4 UNIX		abbreviated as "MST" below
Microport System V Release 4.0 version 4	abbreviated as "uPort" below
UHC Version 3.6					abbreviated as "UHC" below

Consensys System V Release 4.2			abbreviated as "Cons" below
Information Foundation System V Release 4.2	abbreviated as "IF" below

SCO Open Desktop 2.0				abbreviated as "ODT" below

BSD/386	(0.3 beta)				abbreviated as "BSDI" below
Mach386						abbreviated as "Mach" below

The first six of these are ports of USL's System V Release 4.  Until last year
there was a seventh, by Interactive Systems Corporation.  That product was
canned after half of ISC was bought by SunSoft, evidently to clear the decks
for Solaris 2.0 (a SunOS port for the 386).  The only Interactive UNIX one can
buy at present is an SVr3.2 port which I consider uninteresting because it's no
longer cutting-edge; I have ignored it.

Earlier issues ignored SCO because (a) 3.2 isn't leading-edge any more and (b)
their `Version 4' is a 3.2 sailing under false colors.  Can you say deceptive
advertising?  Can you say bait-and-switch?  Can you say total marketroid-puke?
However, the clamor from netters wanting it included was deafening.  The day
SCO landed an unsolicited free copy of ODT on my doorstep I gave in.  I don't
expect to actually use it, but I summarize the relevant facts along with
everything else below.  Note that ODT is their full system with networking and
X windows; what they call SCO UNIX is missing most of those trimmings.

BSD/386 is *not* based on USL code, but on the CSRG NET2 distribution tape.
Complete sources are included with every system shipped!  Mach386 is basically
BSD tools with the monolithic Mach 2.5 kernel and does entail a USL license;
it's based on the Tahoe BSD distribution.  For a few extra bucks, you can
get Mach 3.0 (a true microkernel) with *source*!.

AT&T's own 386 UNIX offering is not covered here because it is available and
supported for AT&T hardware only.

All the vendors listed offer a 30-day money-back guarantee, but they'll be
sticky about it except where there's an insuperable hardware compatibility
problem or you trip over a serious bug.  One (UHC) charges a 25% restocking fee
on returns.  BSDI offers a 60-day guarantee starting from the date of receipt
by the customer and says: "If a customer is dissatisfied with the product, BSDI
unconditionally refunds the purchase price."  Dell says "30 day money-back
guarantee, no questions asked".

Some other ports are listed in section V.

II. GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS

To run any of these systems, you need at least the following: 4 MB of RAM and
80MB of hard disk (SCO says 8MB minimum for ODT 2.0; Dell 2.1 also requires 8
MB minimum).  However, this is an absolute minimum; you'll want at least 8 MB
of RAM for reasonable performance.  And depending on options installed, the OS
will eat from 40 to 120 meg of the disk, so you'll want at least 200 meg for
real work.  To run X you'll need a VGA monitor and card, and 12-16MB RAM would
be a good idea.

Installation from these systems requires that you boot from a hi-density floppy
(either 3.5" or 5.25").  Most vendors offer the bulk of the system on a QIC 150
1/4-inch tape; otherwise you may be stuck with loading over 60 diskettes!  BSDI
offers the distribution not only on QIC-150 tape but also on CD-ROM.  They'll
even sell you a CD-ROM reader for US$225 (or you buy the same Mitsumi drive at
Radio Shack or Best Buy for US$199+tax).  In general, if the initial boot gets
far enough to display a request for the first disk or tape load, you're in good
shape.

USL SVr4 conforms to the following software standards: ANSI X3.159-1989 C,
POSIX 1003.1, SVID 3rd edition, FIPS 151-1, XPG3, and System V Release 4 ABI.
4.0.4 ports conform to the iBCS-2 binary standard.  The SVr4 C compiler (C
Issue 5) includes some non-ANSI extensions (however, note that as of mid-1992,
no SVr4 ports other than AT&T's have been formally POSIX-certified). 

SCO conforms to the following standards: ANSI X3.159-1989 C, POSIX 1003.1 FIPS
151-1, XPG3, System V Release 3 ABI, and SVID 2nd Edition.  Despite the
marketing droids hacking at its version number, SCO is not conformant to System
V Release 4 or SVID 3rd Edition.

All SVr4 versions include support for BSD-style file systems with 255-character
segment names and fragment allocation.  In general this is a Good Thing, but
some SVr3.2 and XENIX binaries can be confused by the different size of
the inode index.  You need to run these on an AT&T-style file system.  SCO
UNIX 3.2v4 (thus, ODT 2.0 but not 1.1) has an `EAFS' file system which adds
symlinks and long filenames.  Old SCO binaries can be confused by long
filenames.

All SVr4 versions include the UNIX manual pages on-line.  Dell stocks
Prentice-Hall's SVr4 books and will sell them to you with your system (in lieu
of printed manuals) at extra cost.  You can order them direct from
Prentice-Hall at (201)-767-5937.  Warning: they ain't cheap!  Buying the whole
13 volumes will cost you a couple hundred bucks.  Esix, Microport and UHC
have their own manual sets derived from the same AT&T source tapes as the
Prentice-Hall set; Esix charges extra for them, but Microport and UHC both
include them with their systems.

SVr4 includes hooks for a DOS bridge that allows you to run DOS applications
under UNIX (the two products that actually do this are DOS Merge and VP/ix).
Most vendors do not include either of these with the base system, however.

All these systems support up to 1024x768 by 256 color super-VGA under X.  The
640x480 by 16 colors of standard VGA is no problem; everybody supports that
compatibly.  However, X servers older than the Roell or X11R5 version (that is,
MIT X11R4 or anything previous) are hard to configure for the clock timings of
your controller and monitor scan frequency unless you have one of the standard
combinations USL supports or your vendor has configured for it.

There are a couple of known hardware compatibility problems the USL code
doesn't yet address.  See the companion "Known Bugs" FAQ.


III. FEATURE COMPARISON

To interpret the table below, bear in mind the following things:

   All these products except BSDI/386, Mach386 and SCO ODT are based on the
SVr4 kernel from UNIX Systems Laboratories (USL), an AT&T spinoff.  Thus they
share over 90% of their code and features.  Product differentiation is done
primarily through support policy, bug-fix quality and add-on software.

   The `USL support?' column refers to the fact that USL support is a separate
charge from the source license.  With the former, a porting house gets access
to AT&T's own OS support people and their bug fix database, and the porting
house's bug fixes can get folded back into the USL code.

   These systems come either in a "crippled" version that supports at most two
simultaneous users, or an unlimited version.  Generally the vendors do allow
you to upgrade your license via a patch disk if your requirements, but this
invariably costs slightly more than the base price difference between 2-user
and unlimited systems.

   The "run-time" system in the price tables below is a minimum installation,
just enough to run binaries.  The "complete" system includes every software
option offered by the vendor; it does *not* bundle in the cost of the
Prentice-Hall docs offered by some vendors as an option.  You may well get
away with less, especially if you're willing to do your own X installation.

   Prices are for QIC-tape configurations.  Some vendors will supply the OS
on floppies, but they don't enjoy doing so and may charge substantially more
for a diskette version.

   The `Upgrade plan' section refers only to upgrades from previous versions
of the same vendor's software.

   The numbers under support-with-purchase are days counted from date
of shipment.  The intent is to help you get initially up and running.

   The engineer counts below are as supplied by vendors; .5 of an engineer
means someone is officially working half-time.  The `Uses USENET' column is
`yes' if there is allegedly at least one person in the engineering department
who reads USENET technical groups regularly and is authorized to respond to
USENET postings reporting problems.

   The `DOS Bridge' row gives the version number of DOSMerge supplied with the
system, if any.  DosMerge 2.0 has roughly the caoabilities of DOS 3.0, though
it is reported to be quite flaky and hard to configure.  DOSMerge 2.2 has the
capabilities of DOS 5.0.

   The AF_UNIX row tells which versions support UNIX-domain sockets.  These
are a separate namespace from the INET sockets, local to each machine and
used by some applications because they cannot be spoofed over the network.

   A dash `-' means the given feature or configuration is not offered.  A `yes'
means it is currently offered; `soon' means the vendor has represented that it
will be offered in the near future.  A `no' means it's not offered, but there's
some related information in the attached footnote.


[Note: the single table of issues 1 through 10 has been flipped on its side
and broken into 5 parts so that we can provide info in more products.]

		Table 1: BASE VERSION AND PRICE
				System Price (US$)	Has	Reduced price
	Base	USL	Run-time only	Developmer's	printed	upgrade from
Vendor	Version	support	2-user	Unlim	2-user	Unlim	docs?	SVr3.2	SVr4
	
SCO	3.2.2	-	 595	1295	3090	4290	y(f)	y	-
Cons	4.2	??	 495	 755	1270	1535	y	-	-
Dell	4.0.4	y	  -	  -	 995(b)	1295(b)	y(e)	y	(h)
Esix	4.0.4	y	 384	 784	  -	1607	y(e)	y	(g)
IF	4.2	y	 395	 890	 995	1490	y	-	-
MST	4.0.3	-	 249	 449	 799	 999	-	y	(h)
uPort	4.0.4	y	 500	1000	3000	3500	y(f)	y	(h)
UHC	4.0.3	??(a)	 695	1090	1990	2385	y	-	-
BSDI	BSD	-	  -	  -	  -	1045(c)	-	-	-
Mach386	Mach	-	  -	  -	  -	995(d)	-(s)	-	-

		Table 2: SUPPORT FEATURES
	With	800	Support	FTP	Read	 # Engineers	Support
Vendor	sale	number?	BBS?	server?	USENET?	Support	Devel.	contacts

SCO	30	y	y	y	y	60+	55+	per year
Cons	30	y	y(i)	-	-	6	??(m)	per year
Dell	90	y	-	y	y	5	10	per year
Esix	(j)	-	y	y	y	2	~20	(j)
IF	90	y	soon	soon	soon	2	2	custom
MST	30	-	-	-	-	2	3	per year
uPort	30	-	y	-	y	4	6	per year
UHC	30	-	soon	-	-(l)	2	27	per year
BSDI	60	-	-	y	y	1.5	6.5	per year
Mach	30	-	y	y	y	1	5	per year

		Table 3: DISTRIBUTION MEDIA
	Floppy disk	------------- QIC tape ------------		via
	3.5"	5.25"	60MB	125MB	150MB	250MB	2GB	CD-ROM	network
SCO	y	y	y	-	-	-	-	y	-
Cons	y(n)	y(n)	y	-	y	-	-	-	-
Dell	-	-	-	-	-	y	y	-	y
Esix	y	y	y	-	-	-	-	-	-
IF	y	y	y	-	-	-	-	-	-
MST	y	y	y	y	y	-	-	-	-
uPort	y	y	y	-	y	-	-	-	-
UHC	-	-	-	y	y	-	-	-	-
BSDI	y	y	y	-	-	y	-	y	-

		Table 4: X OPTIONS
	X/News	MIT	AT&T	AT&T	Roell	X11R5	Open	Motif	X
	X11R3	X11R4	Xwin3	Xwin4	X386		Look		Desktop
SCO	-	y(o)	-	-	-	-	-	1.1.4	3.0
Cons	-	-	-	-	-	y	-	1.1	-
Dell	-	y	-	-	-	y	4i	1.1.4	-
Esix	y	-	-	y	-	-	1.0	1.1.0	-
IF	-	-	-	y	-	-	4i	1.1.4	-
MST	-	-	y	-	y	-	2.0	1.1.2	3.0
uPort	-	-	-	y	-	-	4i	1.1.3	2.0
UHC	y	-	-	-	y	-	4i	1.1.3	-
BSDI	-	-	-	-	-	y	-	(p)	-
Mach	-	y	-	-	-	y	-	(e)	-

		Table 5: MISCELLANEA AND ADD-ONS
	DOS			UNIX
	Merge?	SLIP?	PPP?	sockets
SCO	2.2	y	y	??
Cons	-	-	y	-
Dell	2.2	y	-	y
Esix	-	y	n(r)	-
IF	-	-	-	??
MST	-	-	-	??
uPort	soon	y	-	??
UHC	-	soon	soon	??
BSDI	y	y	soon	??
Mach	-	y(d)	-	y

(a) UHC had a support contract at one time but may have let it lapse. I
    expect to have better information on this soon.
(b) This price is for customer-installed UNIX.  If it's factory-installed on
    Dell hardware, it's $500 less.
(c) $1045  is for credit-card tape orders; POs are $50 more; CD-ROM $50 less
    more.  Educational site licenses are available for $2K each.
(d) Previous issues alleged that "No unlimited licenses have been sold yet." 
    Feedback from the net indicates that all MtXinu systems now being sold
    are unlimited.
(e) Extra-cost option.
(f) With complete system only.
(g) Small media charge.  Note: if you upgrade from a 2-user to multi-user
    ESIX, you pay full price.
(h) Free with support contract, charge otherwise (charge ~$500).
(i) Support contract customers.
(j) Unlimited free phone support.
(k) Charges by the half-hour phone call.
(l) UHC says they used to be net-active and want to be again when they can
    afford the man-hours.
(m) Consensys explicitly refuses to release this information.
(n) There's an $80 media charge for the diskettes equivalent to the normal
    60MB distribution tape.
(o) SCO's own X11R4 implementation.
(p) Motif for BSDI is available from a third party.
(q) At present, you must buy Mach386 Autosupport to get SLIP.
(r) Mark Boucher <marc@cam.org> has written a PPP driver for ESIX
(s) Mach's user interface is 4.3BSD; the USENIX manuals may be used for it.
(t) Mach X11R5 is available through autosupport only.

The SCO information is included by popular demand for comparison purposes.
In the price figures, the `runtime' system is SCO UNIX 3.2v4; the `complete'
system is ODT with development tools.

In general, the SVr4 market breaks into two tiers.  The bottom tier is
Consensys and MST; low-ball outfits selling stock USL with minimal support for
real cheap.  The top tier is Dell, Esix, Microport and UHC; these guys are
selling support and significant enhancements and charge varying premiums for
it.  Your first, most basic buying decision has to be which tier best serves
your needs.

One further note: it *is* possible to buy some of these systems at less than
the list the vendor charges!  I found some really substantial discounts in one
mail-order catalog ("The Programmer's Shop"; call 1-(800)-421-8006 to get on
their mailing list, but be prepared to wade through a lot of DOS cruft).


IV. VENDOR REPORTS
    Vendor reports start here.  Each one is led by a form feed.

NAME:
   SCO Open DeskTop

VENDOR:
   The Santa Cruz Operation, Inc.
   400 Encinal Street
   PO Box 1900
   Santa Cruz,CA 95061-1900
   1-(800)-SCO-UNIX (sales)
   1-(800)-347-4381 (customer service and tech support)
   info@sco.com		--- product info by email, sales requests
   support@sco.com	--- support requests (support contract customers only)

SOFTWARE OPTIONS:
   SCO's package and option structure is (excessively) complicated.  At the
moment the `bundles' to keep track of are:

  SCO UNIX System V/386 Release 3.2 Version 4.0

  SCO UNIX networking bundle, consisting of:
    SCO UNIX System V/386 Release 3.2 Version 4.0
    SCO TCP/IP 1.2.0
    SCO NFS 1.2.0

  SCO Open Desktop 2.0:
    SCO UNIX System V/386 Release 3.2 Version 4.0
    SCO TCP/IP 1.2.0
    SCO NFS 1.2.0
    LAN Manager Client, PC-NFS daemon, PC-Interface server
    X (X11R4 server/clients, Motif 1.1.4, X.desktop 3.0)
    DOS Merge (2.2)

Note that Ingres (the database) has been removed from the ODT bundle since 1.1.
There is a special Ingres price for ODT customers, and Ingres has committed
to offering a 50% discount till the end of '92.

ADD-ONS:
   There are piles of them.  I was most impressed by the docs for the CodeView
debugger and MASM assembler, but the presence of ISAM support would probably be
more significant to the ordinary commercial user.
   SCO bundles with X also include 18 clients (what in marketingese are called
``personal productivity and groupware accessories and controls'') which
include: mail, help, edit, paint, term, print, login, clock, color, session,
mouse, lock, and admin (official names all prepended with "SCO") as well as
DOS, load, and calculator clients.

SUPPORT:
   You get 30 days of free phone support with purchase.
   ODT support is $895 per year.
   SCO has BBS coverage and a local support operation in the UK as well as the
US; BBS coverage only Germany.  Local support is, in theory, to be provided by
distributors.

FUTURE PLANS:
   IPX/SPX (Novell networking support) will be added soon.

HARDWARE COMPATIBILITY:
   See the appendix for details.  SCO provides a Hardware Compatibility
Guide with its software.

COMMENTS:
   The docs are impressive; you could get a hernia trying to lift them all.

TECHNICAL NOTES:
   There's an `MPX' kernel available from SCO that supports multiprocessing.
   Though this is a 3.2 kernel, SCO has added support for SVr4-like symbolic
links and long filenames to Version 4.
   SCO has a standard driver announcement protocol which allows the
utility hwconfig(C) to print out detailed configuration info on hardware
attached to the machine.
    SCO's cross-development and DOS emulation support is unusually rich.  It
includes lots of system utilities for I/O with a DOS filesystem, as well as
cross-development libraries and tools in the Development System.  Microsoft
Windows 3.0 and Windows 3.0 applications are supported (in real mode), and
future releases will support Windows 3.1 and associated applications.
Graphical MS-DOS applications are supported in CGA graphics mode within an X
window, and VGA graphics are supported in full-screen mode.

KNOWN BUGS
  SCO tar(1) chokes horribly on long filenames and symbolic links.
This is scheduled to be fixed in the next maintenance supplement, MSv4.2.
  SCO tar also fails to back up empty directories.
  Petri Wessman <Petri_Wessman@hut.fi> has reported that SCO 3.2.4 sometimes
gets into a state in which exec(2) succeeds called from a binary but exec
reliably fails called from a shell.

WHAT THE USERS SAY:
   XENIX is the UNIX port hackers love to hate, but at 70% of the market SCO
must be doing something right.  In general, SCO UNIX and XENIX are reputed to
be a very polished and stable systems.  Unfortunately, they also drive
developers crazy because of numerous tiny and undocumented divergences between
the SCO way and the USL-based releases.

REVIEWER'S IMPRESSIONS:
   The SCO support system is heavily bureaucratized and prone to thrash when
processing questions of unusual depth or scope.  While probably adequate for
the random business luser, hackers are likely to find the contortions
required to get to a master-level developer very frustrating.
   SCO in general has the fairly serious case of corporatitis you'd predict
from their relatively large size --- no-comment policies and
compartmentalization out the wazoo.
   On the other hand, they sent me an unsolicited free copy, and I got huge
amounts of useful technical and hardware-compatibility info "unofficially" from
SCOer Bela Lubkin <belal@sco.com>.  Gee.  Maybe I should flame vendors more
often... :-)


NAME:
   Consensys System V Release 4.2

VENDOR:
   Consensys
   1301 Pat Booker Road
   Universal City, TX 78148
   (800)-387-8951 (sales and support both)
   {dmentor,dciem}!askov!root

SOFTWARE OPTIONS:
   None.

ADD-ONS:
   Basically this is a stock USL Destiny system with the stock USL bugs. It
doesn't seem to carry over the Consensys 4.0.3 changes.

SUPPORT:
   You get free phone support until your system is installed, to a maximum of
30 days.  After that they charge per half-hour of phone time.  They like to
do support by fax and callback.  They'll sell support contracts by the year.
   They have a support BBS at (416)-752-2084.
   Knowledgeable customers report they're good about supporting the bits they
wrote (see below) but terrible at dealing with generic SVr4 problems.

HARDWARE COMPATIBILITY:
   See the appendix for details.

KNOWN BUGS:
   Trying to install the system administration package *after* first
installation of the OS doesn't work.  This is probably a generic 4.2 bug.

WHAT THE USERS SAY:
   During the life of their 4.0.3 release, Consensys had a dismal reputation on
USENET; horror stories of nonexistent followup on bugs abounded.
   However, David Mason <vid@zooid.guild.org> writes "they appear to be
installing a lot more telephone support.  In fact for a yearly fee they will
sell support and they apparently have been hiring people for a few months now.
Additionally, when I talked to a support person there, he seemed actually
willing to help me, as opposed to the hostile go-away attitude I encountered
shortly after we bought their SVR4 product 9 months or so ago. Maybe they are
learning."
   One 4.0.3. customer (J.J. Strybosch, <jjs@ubitrex.mb.ca>) reported that
Consensys charged his credit card for more than they quoted him.  If you deal
with them, watch your credit card statement carefully.

REVIEWER'S IMPRESSIONS:
   These people used to be the bad boys of the SVr4.0 market --- not a company
you wanted to deal with unless low price was the most important thing.  There's
some reason to believe they're trying to improve their act with 4.2; if so,
more power to them.
   Consensys explicitly refuses to say how many development engineers they have
on staff.  In this and some other matters they've adopted a corporate style
that appears defensive, evasive, secretive, and not conducive to trust.  I
couldn't make their V.P. of sales understand that this appearance is a serious
liability in dealing with UNIX techies and distinguishes them from the
competition in a distinctly negative way.


NAME:
   Dell UNIX System V Release 4 Issue 2.2.

VENDOR:
   Dell Computer
   9505 Arboretum Road
   Austin TX 78759
   (800)-BUY-DELL (info & orders)
   (800)-624-9896 (tech support: x6915 to go straight to UNIX support)
   info@dell.com    --- basic Dell info
   support@dell.com --- support queries

SOFTWARE OPTIONS:
   Basically, there aren't any.  You get the development system with all the
trimmings for a lower list than anybody else in the top tier.  Whaddya
want, egg in yer beer?

ADD-ONS:
   Dell bundles a DOS bridge (Locus 2.2, supporting DOS 5.0) with their base
system.  They also include cnews, mmdf, perl, elm, bison, gcc, emacs gdb, Tex,
network time protocol support, and other freeware, including a bunch of nifty X
clients!  Also included: the Xylogics Annex server for TCP/IP network access.
   FrameMaker is also included, but runs in demo mode only until you buy a
license token from Unidirect.

SUPPORT:
   Dell *does* support their UNIX on non-Dell hardware.  They are quite
definite about this.  They will deal with software problems reported from
non-Dell hardware, but you're on your own when dealing with hardware
incompatibility problems unless you can reproduce the problem on a
Dell PC.  However, it is also policy that if you lend them the offending
hardware, they will work with the vendor to come up with a fix, and if
they can't make that work they'll refund your money.
   You get 90 days of free phone support on a toll-free number, starting on
resceipt of your registration card (no card, no support).  Yearly service
contracts range are $350 per year for the limited license, $500 for the
unlimited.
   There are 6 engineers in their first line and 4 in their second-line support
pool.
   Dell accepts software problem reports from anyone, Dell or non-Dell
hardware and whether or not they have a support contract.  If you don't have
a support contract, don't count on getting a reply acknowledging the report.
   Dell maintains a pair of Internet servers (dell1.dell.com and
dell2.dell.com) which hold patches, updates and free software usable with
Dell UNIX.
   About upgrades, Dell says "If you have a support contract, the upgrade is
free, unless we've added something with significant royalty burden to us.  We
may make a charge at that point.  We didn't when we added Graphical Services
4.0 at the introduction of Dell UNIX 2.1.  If you don't have a contract, then
the cost is basically Media+Royalty+Admin+Shipping."

FUTURE PLANS:
   X.desktop 3.0 will be supported soon.  NeWS isn't going to happen at all;
they couldn't get it to work reliability.
   Dell has demonstrated a 486 port of NeXTSTEP at trade shows.
   Dell is going to move to Solaris someday.  However, policy is that they're
not going to phase out SVr4 until at least a year after their first *reliable*
version of Solaris, in order to provide an upgrade path.

TECHNICAL NOTES:
   The big plus in the Dell code is that they've fixed a lot of the annoying
bugs and glitches present in the stock USL tape.
   The installation procedure has been improved and simplified.  You can
install Dell UNIX through your network from another Dell box once you've booted
the hardware with a special disk provided.
   Both benchmarks and anecdotal reports make them significantly faster than a
stock USL system.  Interestingly, Dell's manager for UNIX development tells me
this is all due to bug fixes and careful choices of some OS parameters.
   A source at Dell has asked me to point out that Dell's SLIP can be
set up, configured, and stopped while UNIX is running; some other
versions (such as SCO's) require a reboot.  However, others claim that
SCO's can actually be reconfigured without a reboot and that the SCO
*manuals* are at fault here for misleading people.
   Dell device drivers are *very* unlikely to work on other SVR4 versions.
Dell includes some kernel extensions (not required, so other SVR4 device 
drivers should work) to make life in support a little easier.  A program
called showcfg will list all recognised device drivers and the IRQ,
I/O address, shared memory and so on.  The device driver has to register
this info.  Dell has told USL how to do this, it's up to them when or even
if they want to use this in a future release.
   Dell device drivers are also auto configuring, for the most part.  Check out
/etc/conf/sdevice.d/* and see how most of the devices are enabled, but with
zeroes in all fields for IRQ, I/O and memory.  Those are autoconfiguring
drivers.  Dell thinks that this makes life much easier; you only need to set
one of the configurations that they probe for!  The device registration helps
this, by eliminating possible overlapping memory or I/O address usage.  (On the
other hand, idconfig(1) is no longer helpful, when I/O, IRQ and mem are all
zero).  The 2.2 release adds a utility `setcfg' which can be used to remove
unneeded drivers, shrinking the kernel.
   Dell UNIX also has drivers for the Dell SmartVu found on some machines (a
little four character LED display on the front panel).  By default this shows
POST values, then disk accesses, finally "UNIX" when running and "DOWN" when
halted.  You can write to the device.
   Dell's SCSI tape driver includes ioctls to control whether hardware
compression is used.
   Some Dell systems have a reset button.  On the Laptops these are wired
directly to the CPU.  On the desktop and floor-standing systems Dell UNIX can
catch the interrupt; it's used to do a graceful (init 0) shutdown.  Other
UNIXes will do a processor reset when the button is pushed.
   About 95% of 2.2 was built using GNU cc for a significant performance
improvement over pcc.

KNOWN BUGS:
   Uucico fails when sending more than 12 files to another machine.  Fixed
in 2.2; a patch is available free from Dell for earlier versions.
   Performance monitoring of uucp transfers doesn't work. Creating
/var/spool/uucp/.Admin/perflog results in uucico logging statistics to the file
correctly. However, using uustat -tsysname results in either a memory error or
you just being returned to the shell with no output.  This bug is known to
Dell and being worked on now.
   Merge is seriously buggy in many areas. It takes ages to start up in an
xterm and then sometimes crashes in the process. Attempting to use its
simulated expanded memory results in the system becoming slowly corrupted which
later results in virtual terminals disappearing and the system gradually
locking up. Really fun stuff! And it can only cope with 1.44M discs.  These
are generic Merge problems, not really Dell's but Locus's fault.
    There are some dropped stitches in the supplied USENET tools.  The nntp
server has been compiled for a dbm history file while c-news has been compiled
for dbz.  With nntpd this only shows on the ARTICLE <message-id> command which
either returns that the article with that id can't be found or crashes the
server.  Also, they forgot to include the nntpd manual page or nntpxfer.  A
Dell source thinks these things have been corrected in 2.2.
    Dell's device driver autoconfiguration doesn't properly set up the mouse
port on the ATI Graphics Ultra card.  You need to either remove all other
mouse drivers or use the DOS install program to manually force the mouse IRQ
to 5.

HARDWARE COMPATIBILITY:
   Dell doesn't maintain a list of non-Dell motherboards and systems known to
work.  And they're not willing to talk about the list they don't maintain,
because it would amount to endorsing someone else's hardware.
   Dell promises that you can bring its UNIX up on any Dell desktop or tower
featuring a 386SX or up (it's hard to get the product on to the notebooks).
Notebooks can't drive a QIC tape and there aren't drivers for the pocket
Ethernet or token-ring adapter.
   Jeffrey James Persch <using a friend's account> reports that he couldn't
get the X supplied with Dell UNIX 2.1 to work with a Microsoft bus mouse hooked
to the mouse port on a Compaq 486/33M or Systempro.
   Andrew Michael <Andrew.Michael@brunel.ac.uk> says "If you're buying Dell
UNIX for non-Dell hardware, first try booting the Dell floppy on it.  From
experience, some BIOS ROMs cause Dell SVR4 to lock up at the point where it
tries to talk to the hard disk.  If it gets to the point where it asks you
whether you want to install or not you can be pretty sure that all is well.  An
AMI or Phoenix BIOS is OK; be careful of anything else."
   See the appendix for more.

COMMENTS:
   Dell sells hardware, too :-).  They are, in fact, one of the most successful
clonemakers, and will cheerfully sell you a Dell computer with SVr4 pre-
installed.  Their systems are expensive by cloner standards (with as much as a
$1000 premium over rock-bottom street prices) but they have a rep for quality
and reliability their competition would probably kill for.
   You can get Dell product information by sending an email request to
info@dell.com.

WHAT THE USERS SAY:
   Most people who've seen or used it seem to think pretty highly of the
Dell product, in spite of minor problems.
   A user in England observes: "Dell is the only firm that I found supplying
Unix at the real monetary exchange rate, not the usual computer pounds=dollars
nonsense.  In the UK the 2 user version costs 699 pounds, which is pretty close
to the US price in dollars.  For those of us who don't live on the left-hand
side of the pond (there are a few of us!) that's a distinct advantage."  He
adds "Dell's UK support is pretty good.  Not as good as Sun, but then you don't
pay as much!  From previous experience, SCO support in the UK is, well, pretty
non-existent."

REVIEWER'S IMPRESSIONS:
   Dell is the clear market leader in SVr4s.  The combination of low price,
highest added value in features, and reputation for quality makes them very
hard to beat.  At this point, I've installed, used or seen running several of
the SVr4.0 systems, and Dell's stands out as the best.  Other vendors take
note -- to compete with Dell, you need to do what they do *better*.
   The only serious negative I've seen is that their support system seems to be
very badly overloaded, so you can end up on hold for a while when calling.  The
techs themselves are sufficiently cranked about this that they'll complain of
understaffing and corporate shortsightedness on the phone to a stranger.
   (Dell has recently doubled their support staff and fixed a bad bug in their
call-handling system that was freezing the queue for up to two hours at a
time.  This will certainly help matters.)
   On the other hand, Dell's UNIX development manager responded to the first
issue of this FAQ with about three hundred lines of intelligent, thoughtful and
extremely candid comment, including a whole pile of hardware-compatibility info
and a number of excellent suggestions for improving the FAQ.  He has 
continued to send voluminous, factual feedback to later issues --- an example
other UNIX vendors would do well to emulate!


NAME:
   ESIX System V Release 4.0.4

VENDOR
   Esix Computers
   1923 E. St. Andrew Place
   Santa Ana, CA 92705
   (714)-259-3020   (tech support is (714)-259-3000)
   support@esix.com
   info@esix.com

ADD-ONS:
   None.

SOFTWARE OPTIONS:
   ESIX can be bought in the following pieces:
							Unlim	2-user
   Base system						784	384
   Base system + Networking				866	396
   Development system					131	N/A
   GUI module (X, Motif, Open Look, X.desktop)		610	380

Note that the base system without networking cannot be upgraded to the
base system with networking; you'd have to replace at full cost.

SUPPORT:
   Purchase buys you unlimited free phone support.  However, be warned that
there are only two engineers assigned to the job and they are swamped.
   Esix offers a support BBS at (714)-259-3011 and 3013 (the 11 line
has a Trailblazer on it).  They plan to bring up an Internet server in
the near future.
   Patches are available via anonymous ftp to esix.everex.com.

FUTURE PLANS:
   They don't plan to support DOS Merge because it's still horribly buggy.
   They intend to do a USL System V Release 4.3 soon --- yes, 4.3!

TECHNICAL NOTES:
   Relative to 4.0.3, 4.0.4 includes numerous bug fixes, a rewritten SCSI
driver, and better SCO binary compatibilty.  The GUI package is significantly
different, changing from a home-grown ESIX implementation of X to a licenced
implementation of AT&T's xwin implementation (with ESIX support for additional
video cards added in.

HARDWARE COMPATIBILITY:
   See the appendix for details.  ESIX supports an unusually wide
range of peripherals.
   They advertise support for the Textronix X terminal.
   No one has reported any incompatibility horror stories yet.

KNOWN BUGS:
   According to Esix, this port uses the stock USL 4.0.3 libraries.  Thus it
must have the known bug with sigvec() and may have the rumored bug in the BSD-
compatibility string functions.
   James D. Cronin <jdc@tropel.gca.com> writes: When developing X applications
under Esix, watch out for mmap(2) failure.  This is caused by an incorrect
version of mmap() defined in libX11.a and libX11.so.  This bug existed in Esix
4.0.3, and continues in 4.0.4 and the recently shipped Xwindow bug fix it
(which seems to have more bugs than the original version).  One workaround is
to remove the offending file, XSysV.o, from libX11.a and link with the Bstatic
option.

COMMENTS:
   Esix will sell you manuals troffed off the SVr4 source tapes for somewhat
less than the cost of the Prentice-Hall books.  The content is almost identical
but the organization into volumes a little different.
   Unlimited free support sounds wonderful, and might be ESIX's strongest
selling point.  However, ESIX users on the net have been heard to gripe that in
practice, you get the support you've paid for from Esix --- that is, none.
That isn't at all surprising given Esix's staffing level.  If this guarantee is
to be more than a hollow promise, their technical support has to get more
depth.
   Evan Leibovich <evan@telly.on.ca> is a long-time netter who makes his living
as a consultant and owns an Esix dealership.  He says you can get ESIX at a
substantial discount from him or other dealers, also that dealers are supposed
to do first-line support for their customers (which he does, but admits other
dealers often fail to).  Evan is obviously devoted to the product and probably
the right guy to email first if you think you'd be interested in it.

WHAT THE USERS SAY:
   Ron Mackey <rem@dsiinc.com> writes "In general, we are pleased with ESIX.
We still have problems driving the serial ports at speeds greater than 9600
baud.  We also still see occasional PANICs.  These appear to be related to
problems with the virtual terminal manager."  This may be the generic USL asy
problem again.
   William W. Austin <uunet!baustin!bill> writes "The support from Esix seems
to be usable if (a) you are a hacker, (b) you know unix (sVr4 internals help a
lot), and (c) you get past the sales guy who answers the help line (Jeff
[Ellis] is *very* helpful).  If I were a computer-semi-literate, commercial
user who only wanted his printer to work, etc., I might be up a creek for some
problems (no drivers for some boards, no support for mouse tablets, etc., but
that's what VARs are for). All in all, the support is at least a little better
than what I expected for free -- in many cases it is *far* better than the
support I got from $CO (is SCO really owned by Ebenezer Scrooge?)"
   [Note: Jeff Ellis has since left.]
   A longer appreciation from Ed Hall <edhall@rand.org>: "I had a problem with
the ESIX X server.  I got through to technical support immediately, and was
promised a fix disk.  The guy on the phone was actually able to chat with on of
the developers to check to see if the disk would solve the problem.  The disk
came four days later."
   "On the other hand," he continues, "I get the feeling that ESIX has only
made a mediocre effort to shake out the bugs before releasing their system-- or
even their fixes.  For example, they `repaired' their X server, but the new
server only ran as root (it made some privileged calls to enable I/O
ports)--they quickly had to release a second update to fix this new problem.
They obviously fixed a lot of things in the new server, and performance is
improved quite a bit as well, but the stupid error they made in the first
"fixed" version should have been found with only the most minimal of testing."
   "They've done some work on the serial driver, but there are still some
glitches (occasional dropped characters on a busy system at 38400bps, and a
real doozy of a problem--a system panic--when doing simultaneous opens and
ioctl's on a tty0xh and ttyM0xh device.  This latter problem was due to my
using the M0xh and 0xh devices improperly, but panics are inexcusable.  No idea
if this is a SYSVR4 problem or due to their fixes.)"
   "So my impressions of them are mixed.  Perhaps I just lucked out in geting
such rapid response on my support call, but I was impressed by it nonetheless.
On the other hand, their QA needs work..."

REVIEWER'S IMPRESSIONS:
   The tech I spoke with at Esix seemed knowledgeable, bright, and very
committed to the product.  Nevertheless, when I asked what he thought
distinguished ESIX from the competition, he had no answer.
   This reinforced the feeling I got from the spec sheets that Esix has kind of
an also-ran mentality, with no market strategy or clear priority for improving
SVr4 that positions it against its competition.  It doesn't have Dell's
steak-with-all-the-trimmings appeal, it's not pushing price like Consensys or
support quality like UHC or performance like Microport.  (I'm told that
at one time, Everex was the price leader).
   When I asked Esix's chief marketroid about this, he said that he thinks
ESIX's best asset is that the product isn't going to go away, and muttered
unkind things about the possibility that Dell would deep-six their SVr4 in
favor of Solaris 2.0.  This does not a long-term strategy make.
   Despite numerous "repositionings" since I wrote the first version of this
comment in May 1992, and the fact that Everex has gone bankrupt and Esix has
been acquired by James River, I've seen no reason to change any of the above.

NAME
   Information Foundation System V Release 4.2

VENDOR:
   Information Foundation
   One Tabor Center, 1200 17th Street, Suite 1900
   Denver, CO 80202
   Phone: 1-(800)-GET-UNIX (sales)
   sales@if.com (sales)
   support@if.com (tech support)

SOFTWARE OPTIONS:
   The system is made up of the following pieces:

	F = Foundation Set
	U = Utilities Set
	A = Administration Set
	N = Networking
	C = C Development Tools
	S = C2 Auditing Tools
	W = Windowing Korn Shell

You can buy about any combination of these in a custom configuration.  There
are 5 "pre-mixed" packages ranging from the $395 UniStation to the $995
FullStation.

	UniStation	F,W          	$395
	NetStation	F,W,S,N      	$595
	AdminStation	F,W,S,N,U,A  	$895
	DevaStation	F,W,S,  U,  C	$795
	FullStation	F,W,S,N,U,A,C	$995

ADD-ONS:
   Unlimited User License	$495
   DOS-Merge            	$395
   GUI Development Set  	$895
   OSF/Motif            	$395
   Font Set             	$125

SUPPORT:
   Bug reports are accepted from any customer, at any time.
   90 days installation support; call (800)-284-UNIX.
   They will have patches available on an FTP server, a BBS, and via UUCP.
   Send in your registration card to get `passive support' (email notification
of bugs & fixes, BBS, UUCP & FTP access to patches.  There's also `active'
(phone) support, priced per annum depending on your configuration or on a
per-site basis.  IF says it will happily work out custom support plans for
large customers.

FUTURE PLANS:
   They plan to have 20 support engineers by the end of '93.
   Sometime in '93, a tasty selection of PD software (probably rather
resembling Dell's selections) will be appended to the distribution tape.

HARDWARE COMPATIBILITY:
   They've promised to email me a list of hardware known to work, which
will appear in a future posting.

KNOWN BUGS:
   Incorrect font handling in some help system titles.
   There are no man pages --- USL doesn't want to supply them because it's
pushing a hypertext browser called Finger Librarian.  If USL doesn't budge
soon IF is going to gen them itself.

WHAT THE USERS SAY:
   There aren't any users yet.

REVIEWER'S IMPRESSIONS:
   It's early days yet, but it looks to me like these guys are for real ans
will give Univel some serious competition.  They're behaving like they want to
lead the SVr4.2 market; they're one of only two outfits with both source and
USL Master Binary licences (the other is Univel).  Hiring Jeremy Chatfield away
from Dell was a smart move --- expect to see the successful elements of Dell
UNIX's formula repeated here.

NAME
   MST UNIX

VENDOR:
   Micro Station Technology, Inc.
   1140 Kentwood Ave.
   Cupertino, CA.  95014
   (408)-253-3898
   sales@mst.com (product info & orders)
   cs@mst.com (support)

ADD-ONS:
   None.

SOFTWARE OPTIONS:
   C Development System
   Networking
   X11R4 and X11R3
   Motif
   Open Look

SUPPORT:
   30 days of support free with purchase.
   1 year of fax/email support is $299, 1 year of phone support is $599.

FUTURE PLANS:
   They expect to upgrade to Motif 1.2 and X11R5 Summer '92.  No plans for
4.0.4 yet.

HARDWARE COMPATIBILITY:
   They've promised to email me a list of hardware known to work, which
will appear in a future posting.
   They decline to release information on hardware known *not* to work
for fear of offending vendors.

KNOWN BUGS:
   This port probably uses the stock USL 4.0.3 libraries.  Thus it probably
has the known bug with sigvec() and may have the rumored bug in the BSD-
compatibility string functions.
   The DOS support is only 2.0-compatible (< 32-meg DOS partitions).

COMMENTS:
   Another outfit offering stock USL real cheap.  They were actually the first
to try this (in Fall '91) and were the price leader until Consensys blew past
them.
   These guys really want to sell you preinstalled UNIX on their clone
hardware.  Configurations range from $1349 to $5599 and look like pretty
good value.

WHAT THE USERS SAY:
   I have one experience report from Ray Hill, <hill@ghola.nicolet.com>, who's
been running MST on a 486 for a month or so.  He says it works; elm, cnews, and
trn are up, so standard UNIX sources compile up and work fine.  His only
criticism is the relative skimpiness of the printed docs.
   Harlan Stockman <hwstock@snll-arpagw.llnl.gov> writes "MST has been very
helpful at every step of the way; phone and e-mail support have been timely."
   Geoffrey Leach <geoff@ibmpa.awdpa.ibm.com> warns that some of the files
(specifically, socket library headers) necessary to build X11R5 are bundled in
the networking option --- this may meen you have to buy it even if you don't
actually intend to network any machines.

REVIEWER'S IMPRESSIONS:
   Anyone who's been to a hobbyist computer expo in the last five years knows
that the low-price clone-hardware market is full of small, hungry companies run
by immigrants, often family businesses.  Their English is sometimes a little
shaky but (in my experience) they're honest and their product is good, and
their prices are *real* aggressive.
   MST seems to be one of these outfits.  Since Consensys ended their promo
MST is now the low-price leader in this market.


NAME:
   Microport System V Release 4.0 version 4

VENDOR:
   Microport, Inc.
   108 Whispering Pines Drive
   Scotts Valley, CA 95066
   (800)-367-8649
   sales@mport.com (sales and product info)
   support@mport.com (support)

SOFTWARE OPTIONS:
   Networking (TCP/IP, NFS)
   Software Development
   User Graphics Module (X GUIs)
   Graphics Development Module (X toolkits + man pages).
   DOS Merge

ADD-ONS:
   A few freeware utilities are included, notably kermit(1) and less(1).
   They include a single-user copy of a program called `JSB MultiView'.  It's a
character-oriented desktop program that front-ends conventional UNIX services
for character terminals and also provides a calendar service and
pop-up phone-book.  It's something like a character-oriented X windows; each
on-screen window looks like a terminal to the application.

SUPPORT:
   The base price includes printed docs.  This is effectively the same content
as the Prentice-Hall SVr4 books; both are troffed off the SVr4 source tapes.
They have been very lightly edited for the Microport environment.
   The base price includes 30 days or 1 year of phone support respectively
depending on whether you bought the base or complete system.  Support is
said to be excellent for serious problems, not so good for minor ones (this
is understandable if one assumes their support staff is very good but
overworked, a hypothesis which is plausible on other evidence).
   They have a support BBS at (408)-438-7270 or 438-7521.  However, the level
of activity is low; one customer said (late February 1992) that they hadn't put
anything useful on it in six months (Microport responds that they've been too
busy hammering on r4 to spend lots of energy on it).

FUTURE PLANS:
   DOS Merge will be folded into the system soon.
   Microport believes they have a lead in multiprocessing SVr4 UNIX and intend
to push it.
   File-system support for CD-ROMs is coming.

HARDWARE COMPATIBILITY:
   See the appendix for details.
   Math co-processors: Cyrix 20/25/33, Intel 80387 20/25/33, Weitek.
   No one has reported any incompatibility horror stories yet.  Bernoulli boxes
and Irwin tapes won't fly, but who cares.

TECHNICAL NOTES:
   When I asked what differentiates Microport from the other SVr4 products,
the answer I got is "performance".  The Microport people feel they've put
a lot of successful work into kernel tuning.
   And, indeed, benchmarks from independent sources show that Microport's
fork(2) operation is quite fast.  Other vendors show about 60 forks per
second on the AIM Technologies SUITE II benchmarks; Microport cranks 80.
This is the most dramatic performance difference the AIM tools reveal
among any of these products.  Microport's other benchmark statistics
are closely comparable to those of its competitors.
   Microport also offers a multiprocessing SVr4 which will run on the
Compaq SystemPro, the ALR PowerPro, the DEC 433MP, and the Chips &
Technologies Mpax system.
   Microport has moved the socket headers and libraries necessary to build X
out of the networking option package into the development system, so you
don't have to buy an extra module to hack X.

KNOWN BUGS:
   According to Microport, this port uses the stock USL 4.0.4 libraries.  Thus
it must have the known bug with sigvec() and may have the rumored bug in the
BSD-compatibility string functions.
   David Wexelblat reports that "Microport's enhanced asy driver does not work
correctly (or at all) for hardware flow control - you can't open the ttyXXh
devices under any circumstances.  This was true in 3.1, and is still true in
4.1.  The good news is that SAS (Streams-FAS) works fine for modems.  But SAS
won't work with the AT&T serial mouse driver.  So I've got asy on my mouse port
and SAS on the other one on my dumb-card. [...] Microport is still prone to
silly errors.  The Motif development system, which is described in the release
notes as being included with the Motif runtime system in the 'complete'
package, is in fact missing from the tape.  They have it available seperately,
but I had to call them to get it.  The 'pixed' application for X.desktop 3.0 is
compiled with shared libraries that are not included with the release.  Hence
it does not work.  I had to call them about this, too."

COMMENTS:
   These people sold a lot of shrink-wrapped UNIXes years ago before going
chapter 11.  They're back, leaner and meaner (with a total staff of just
15).
   Microport says it's primarily interested in the systems-integration market,
where customers are typically going to be volume buyers qualifying for deep
discounts.  Thus, they're relatively undisturbed by the certainty that their
high price point is losing them sales to individuals.

WHAT THE USERS SAY:
   I've received one good comprehensive experience report, largely favorable,
from David Wexelblat <dwex@mtgzfs3.att.com>.

REVIEWER'S IMPRESSIONS:
   Microport is a small, hungry outfit with a lot to prove; they've already
gone bust once (I was a customer at the time :-() and they haven't yet
demonstrated that they've got a better strategy this time out.
   They're perhaps a mite too expensive for the support quality they can offer
with less than fifteen people, and kernel-tuning isn't going to win them a
following on hardware that every year swamps those tweaks with huge increases
in speed for constant dollars.  It may be that they're counting on the
multiprocessor version to be their bread-and-butter product; there, at least,
they're offering something that is so far unique and promises performance
levels unattainable with conventional hardware.
   And, like UHC, they have techies answering the phones and the techies have a
clue.  This certainly improves them as a bet for wizards and developers.  If
multiprocessing is important to you, and/or you're looking for a small outfit
where you can develop personal working relationships with the tech people who
matter, Microport might be a good way to go.
   They've offered to send me a copy of their OS gratis for review and
evaluation purposes.


NAME:
   UHC Version 3.6

VENDOR:
   UHC Corp.
   3600 S. Gessner
   Suite 110
   Houston, TX 77063
   (713)-782-2700
   support@uhc.com

SOFTWARE OPTIONS:
   Networking package (TCP/IP).
   X + Motif
   X + Open Look

ADD-ONS:
   None reported.

SUPPORT:
   The base price includes printed docs.  This is effectively the same content
as the Prentice-Hall SVr4 books; both are troffed off the SVr4 source tapes.
   30 days free phone support with purchase.
   All their engineers take tech-support calls for part of their day.
They have 2 doing it full-time.  The product manager is a techie himself
and takes his share of calls.
   A support contract costs $1195 for one year.  This includes 75% off
on all upgrades.
   They are in the process of bringing up a BBS with a window into their
bug report and fix/workaround database.
   It was emphasized to me that UHC wants to be known for the quality of
their support, which they feel is the product's strongest differentiating
feature.

FUTURE PLANS:
   X11R5 by mid-May or thereabouts.  They have it running now but don't
consider it stable enough to ship.

HARDWARE COMPATIBILITY:
   See the appendix for details.
   The asy driver in version 2.0 won't talk to the NS16550AFN UART, which
is supposed to be pin-compatible with the standard 16450.

KNOWN BUGS:
   This port probably uses the stock USL 4.0.3 libraries.  Thus it probably
has the known bug with sigvec() and may have the rumored bug in the BSD-
compatibility string functions.

COMMENTS:
   They claim that according to USL they have the largest installed base of
SVr4 customers, and to have been first to market with a shrink-wrapped
SVr4 (in 1990).
   UHC also claims to have performed and maintained IBM's official UNIX port
for the MicroChannel machines.
   A subsidiary of Anam, "a holding company with a diversified portfolio".

WHAT THE USERS SAY:
   The only comment I've yet seen on the UHC OS was an extended description of
a successful installation by a satisfied netter.  He made it sound like a good
solid product.
   I have one absolutely incandescently glowing report on UHC support from a
developer named Steve Showalter <shwasl@Texaco.COM>.  He says: "We've been
running UHC's OS for about a year now...been EXTREMELY happy with it.  The
support we receive is without a doubt, the finest we have received from any
vendor."
   Duke Smith (c/o somesh@watson.bm.com) writes: "Another absolutely
incandescently glowing report on UHC support: I called the Programmer's Shop
about UHC & wound up talking to UHC tech support to find out if the sucker
would run on my machine. The guy took considerable time to explain all the
different things that might be causing the problem, and emphasized that the
same hardware problems which were probably causing Consensys not to run would
also hose UHC. This led me to contact ALR tech support (also a glower) who took
all of 1-1/2 days (not including shipping) to do the necessary upgrades, on
warranty because apparently their ads that it will run Unix are covered by
warranty.  The glowing thing about UHC is, the guy helped me get a competitor's
port working, and I told him he was gonna get in dutch with the marketroids and
his response was that maybe I would remember them the next time I or someone I
knew needed a system. He's right. I'll use Consensys until I can afford
something better for my own system (it's still better than DOS...), but from
now on my clients will get pointed toward UHC, not Consensys, whose
absent-parent attitude is going to keep them from ever becoming anything but
the destitute hacker's Unix vendor."
   On the other hand, William G. Bunton <wgb@succubus.tnt.com>: "So, I give a
thumbs up for the product.  I give a thumbs down for the company, and it's
enough that I'm taking my future business elsewhere."  He tells a horror story
about the 2.0 version involving a three-month runaround, a letter to their VP
of marketing, and lots of broken promises.  Apparently UHC does sometimes drop
the ball.
   This is reinforced by Darryl V. McDaniel: "Based upon conversations with UHC
and other people with UHC 4.0.3.6, UHC has a severe problem with revision
control.  Just because two customers have 4.0.3.6, doesn't mean that they all
have the same version.  It appears that UHC doesn't even know what they are
shipping."  The best evidence he gives is that he's never seen the mouse-
middle-button which others (including your humble editor) have reported.
   He also says: "Man pages have wrong section numbers, confusion between
compatibility package (SVR4, BSD, XENIX), etc.  Man pages from DDDK overlay man
pages of same root name.  UHC acknowledges that this is their bug."

REVIEWER'S IMPRESSIONS:
   I found both the people I talked to friendly, candid, technically
knowledgeable, and willing to answer sticky questions.  I came away with a very
positive impression of the outfit's operating style.
   There are experienced UNIX developers who value dealing with a small,
responsive outfit where they can develop good working relationships with
individuals.  UHC says it likes to sell to wizards and might be a good choice
for these people.
    The second time I called (*after* I'd formed the above impressions) one of
their guys offered to trade me a copy of UHC UNIX with all the trimmings for an
autographed copy of _The_New_Hacker's_Dictionary_.  So they have taste, too.
I'm too ethical to let this sway my evaluations, but not too ethical to take
the software... :-)


NAME:
   BSD/386

VENDOR:
   Berkeley Software Design, Inc.
   3110 Fairview Park Drive, Suite 580
   Falls Church, VA 22042 USA
   (800)-800-4BSD
   (719)-593-9445
   bsdi-info@bsdi.com

SOFTWARE OPTIONS:
   None.  You get an unlimited user license, binaries *and sources* for the
entire system (this includes X11R5 and full BSD networking sources with both
Internet and GOSIP OSI protocol stacks).  What more could you want?

SUPPORT:
   The purchase price include 60 days of phone support.
   A telephone-support contract is $595 per year; email-only support is
$295/year; upgrade only is $185/year.


FUTURE PLANS:
   Capability to run SVr3.2 binaries (including SCO binaries) in 1993.
   The current release (0.3) is a fairly stable beta.  Rob Kolstad sez:
"Our current release (November 30, 1992) is titled Gamma 4 for
legal reasons.  Our 1Q1993 release will be big-fixes for even
better quality."

HARDWARE COMPATIBILITY:
   See the appendix for details.  New drivers are being added all the time.
   Most multiport serial boards aren't supported (they're working on it).
BSD/386 supports the RISCOM/8 multiport serial card (SDL: 508-559-9005) and
includes a driver for the MAXPEA serial cards.
   Rob Kolstad says BSDI has been very pleased with the cooperation
they've received from systems vendor Technology Power Enterprises.  He
says: "In a world of commodity products, they differentiate themselves
by good service.  When we (as operating system developers) have any
problems with their boxes, they're happy to help us out in finding and
fix problems -- even when the problem is hardware!"  Dave Ingalz of
that company has developed a BSD/386-ready configuration for people who
might wish to buy one; call 510-623-3834.

TECHNICAL NOTES:
   Alone among the 386 UNIX versions described here, this version is *not*
based even in part on USL code and has no AT&T license restrictions.  Rather,
it derives from Berkeley UNIX (the CSRG Networking 2 release, somewhere between
4.3 and 4.4).
   Many of the BSD/386 tools, including the compiler, are GNU code.
   This system's libraries, header files and utilities conform to X3J11, POSIX
1003.1 and POSIX 1003.2 standards.  POSIX Certification is schedule for the
first half of 1993.

COMMENTS:
   What these people are trying is audacious --- something functionally like
the SVr4 merge, but starting from a ported BSD kernel and with System V
compatibility hacks, rather than the other ways.  By all accounts the product
is in far better shape right now than one would expect for a beta pre-release,
which argues that the developers have done something right.

WHAT THE USERS SAY:
   The few who've seen this system display an evangelistic fervor about it.

REVIEWER'S IMPRESSIONS:
   I expect this will become a hackers' favorite.
   All this, and sources too...I salivate.  I am tempted.  Not sure I'm ready
to change OSs at the same time as I switch machines, though.  SVr4's got better
continuity with the 3.2 I'm running now.  Ghu, what a dilemma!
   When I mentioned that I'm doing elisp maintenance for GNU EMACS these days,
Rob Kolstad, one of the principal developers, offered me a copy and a year
of support if I'd field their (so far nonexistent) EMACS problems.


NAME
   Mach386

VENDOR:
   Mt. Xinu
   2560 Ninth Street
   Berkeley, CA 94710
   (510)-644-0146
   mtxinu-mach@mtxinu.com

ADD-ONS:
   Kernel sources!  You get can sources for the Mach 3.0 microkernel for
$195 over base price.

SOFTWARE OPTIONS:
   The base package includes: Mach 2.5 kernel and utilities, 4.3 BSD interface,
GNU utilities (GCC, GDB, GAS, EMACS, BISON), and on-line reference manuals (man
pages) for Mach and 4.3 BSD.  The following options are available:
   Networking (SUN NFS, TCP/IP networking from the Berkeley Tahoe release,
on-line NFS man pages).
   X (X11R4 with programmer's environment and complete X manual pages).
   On-line Documentation (Complete source for Mach and 4.3 documentation,
including Mach Supplementary Documents, System Manager's Documentation, 4.3 BSD
Programmer's Supplementary Documents, 4.3 BSD User's Supplementary Documents).
   Optional Microkernel Add-on, Mach 3.0 (Complete Mach 3.0 microkernel source
code; complete build environment with tools to modify and rebuild the Mach 3.0
microkernel; binary BSD server which runs on top of the microkernel in place
of the standard /vmunix kernel; source for an example of a server (POE)
running on top of the Mach 3.0 microkernel and sources for some utilities
which are kernel-dependent.

SUPPORT:
   You get 30 days phone support with purchase.
   A support contract is available for $150 quarterly or $500 per year; this
includes upgrades.  There is a support BBS open to contract holders only.
   An ftp server at autosupport.mtxinu.com carries patches, enhancements and
freeware adapted for the system.  That site also hists an NNTP server carrying
support newsgroups for MtXinu users.  This service is called "auto-support".  A
user writes: " They post bug reports/fixes, allow general user discussion, and
let registered users download updates. I have mixed feelings about
auto-support. The user activity on the news groups is pretty low, but Mt Xinu
responds to bug posts VERY quickly.  Major updaes seem to occur about every 2-3
months. The cost is $150.00/quarter or $500/year. If you want the sources to
the 386-AT drivers and the build environment for the kernel, you need to buy an
auto-support subscription."

FUTURE PLANS:
   They plan to move to OSF/1 this year.  X11R5 and Motif support are
also in the works.

HARDWARE COMPATIBILITY:
   See the Appendix for details.
   Color X windows is supported on VGA boards via extended 8-bit color mode.
   Toshiba and Toshiba-compatible floppy drives and controllers work.
   All current motherboards tested have worked.  There were a few problems with
early Compaq DeskPros.  They add "Please note that we do not support the
microchannel bus, EISA extended modes, IBM PS2, and some NCR machines.  We are,
however, considering new devices so let us know your interests!".

TECHNICAL NOTES
   This product is essentially a 4.3 port built on the Mach project's
microkernel technology.  

COMMENTS:
   Very appealing for the educational market --- lets CS students and hobbyists
tinker creatively with the guts of UNIX in a way that would be impossible under
more conventional UNIXes.  It's not clear who else will be interested in this.

WHAT THE USERS SAY:
   Eric Baur <ecb@ventoux.assabet.com> writes:
   "The system is a very faithful emulation of BSD43 on top of Mach.  For our
purposes it is a super deal. For about $2000.00 in hardware and $995.00 in
software we have a Mach development platform that integrates almost seamlessly
into our network development environment.  As a general-purpose UNIX (whatever
that means) Mach386 gives up a lot in features to the System V vendors.
(Virtual terminals, DOS emulation, etc etc) For the home hacker, it seems like
it would be a good deal. You obviously could never run "shrink-wrapped"
software, but most public domain and GNU stuff should port easily."
   Mark Holden <l00017@eeyore.stcloud.msus.edu> adds "Mt. Xinu's tech support
is absolutely top-notch, and I've found them quite willing to deal with matters
even after the official support runs out. [...] Not that Mach386 is without
its quirks.  I've had problems getting a Western Digital ethernet board to
work correctly, and things required a fair bit of tweaking to set things on a
smooth course, but then I've never worked with a BSD that didn't."

REVIEWER'S IMPRESSIONS:
   Right now, this product is a solution looking for a problem --- a solution I
find technically fascinating, to be sure.  But even the company admits to not
being sure who its market is.  I wish 'em luck.

KNOWN BUGS:
   Bugs reported in previous Guide issues with UUCP on bidirectional serial
lines have been fixed.
   Eric Baur reports: "Fortunately, I got the micro-kernel add-on only as an
example for Mach 3.0 development. It is not nearly as stable as the mach 2.5
based production kernel. Our 486/33 EISA machine usually hangs within minutes
after booting the 3.0 kernel...Mt Xinu is completely up front about the limits
of the 3.0 stuff and is very helpful about trying to debug it."

V. UPCOMING PORTS, FREEWARE VERSIONS, AND CLONES.

There's a free X distribution that's worth checking out in lieu of the
vendor-maintained ports.  It's called XFree86, and it's a souped-up version
of the 1.2 X386 server supported for SVr4, 386BSD, Mach386, and Linux.  It
supports the following chipsets:

ET4000			(Tseng)
ET3000			(Tseng)
PVGA1			(Paradise)
WD90Cxx			(Western Digital - Paradise PVGA1 Supersets)
GVGA			(Genoa)
TVGA8900C		(Trident)
ATI18800,28800		(ATI SVGA - not 8514!)

The Xfree maintainers recommend ET4000-based boards, except for recent
Diamond models.  There is no support for S3, ATI 8514 or TIGA chipsets.

Source patches based on X11R5 PL17, from MIT, are available via anonymous FTP
from export.lcs.mit.edu (under /contrib/XFree86) and at various other sites;
binaries for various OSs are also widely available (consult the archie service
on Internet, using the search string "xfree" to find a site near you).

XFree86 is known to work under all the commercial ports covered above except
Consensys's 4.2; also under Linux and 386BSD.  The maintainers believe it
will fly on any ISA/EISA clone box running SVr4.

Send email to David Wexelblat <dwex@mtgzfs3.att.com> or to
xfree86@physics.su.oz.au for further information.

There are three other commercial SVr4 UNIX ports on the market for which I do
not yet have detailed information.  I hope to cover them in future issues.

Solaris 2.1:
   Sun's port for 386/486 machines, just released.  I hope to add a full vendor
report on this nextish.

PromoX UNIX:
  This is said to be a bare-bones port by an outfit that mainly sells hardware.
The price advertised is $649 for a complete 2-user + devtools system.

  PromoX Systems
  1050 East Duane Avenue, Suite B
  Sunnyvale, CA 94086

  Tel: (408) 733-2966 
  Email: promox@cup.portal.com

SORIX:
  This is a SVR4 UNIX port enhanced for real-time work, offered by Siemens AG.

  Siemens AG
  AUT 189
  Gleiwitzerstr. 555
  8500 Nuremberg 1

  Tel: 0911/895-2203

I don't yet know if this version is going to be sold in the US.  In the info
I have, prices are quoted in Deutschmarks.

NeXTSTEP 486:
  NeXT has a 486 port of the NeXT environment scheduled for beta release in
4th quarter '92.

There are some freeware alternative UNIXes available for the 386/486.  None of
these are yet complete and mature hacking environments, but they show promise
(and require much less in minimum hardware to run).  They are:

386BSD:
   Under development by Bill & Lynne Jolitz & friends (this is the same 386BSD
project described in Dr. Dobbs' Journal some time back).  This OS is based on
the NET/2 tape from Berkeley, strongly resembles the commercial BSD/386 release
described above, and like it is distributed with full source.  The aim is to
produce a full POSIX-compliant freeware BSD UNIX.  Version 0.1 is now out,
including FP emulation, SCSI support, coexistence with DOS, and many more new
features.  Passwording has to be acquired separately due to US export
regulations, but the system is otherwise fairly complete; I have seen it run.
There's a lot of traffic in comp.unix.bsd about this project.

Linux:
   This is a POSIX-emulating UNIX lookalike, being written from scratch and
currently in beta.  At the moment, it's less complete than 386BSD because it
doesn't leverage as much pre-existing code, but the kernel and development
tools are up and usable.  Linux is changing so fast that more description would
probably be more misleading than enlightening.  There's an active linux group
on USENET, comp.os.linux, and a (now less active) linux-activists mailing list;
to subscribe, mail to "linux-activists-requests@niksula.hut.fi".  Up-to-the
minute info is also available by fingering torvalds@kruuna.helsinki.fi.

Hurd:
   This is the long-awaited and semi-mythical GNU kernel.  It's being worked on
by the Free Software Foundation (the people who brought you emacs, gcc, gdb and
the rest of the GNU tool suite) but it's not ready for prime time yet.  It's
said to be a set of processes layered over a Mach 3.0 kernel.  The 386BSD and
Linux developments both lean heavily on GNU tools.

Yggdrasil:
   USENETter Adam J. Richter has formed Yggdrasil Computing Inc. to distribute
a Linux-based USL-free UNIX(r) clone on CD-ROM.  He writes "The alpha release
has been shipping since December 8th [1992].  The beta release should come out
around the end of January [1993] and the first production release should ship
in late February or early March."  For more info, check out the anonymous FTP
area in netcom.com:~ftp/pub/yggdrasil.

There is one other not-quite-freeware (cheapware?) product that deserves a
mention:

Minix:
   This is a roughly V7-compatible UNIX clone for Intel boxes, sold
with source by Prentice-Hall for $169 (there's an associated book for
a few bucks more).  It's really designed to run in 16-bit mode on 8086
and 286 machines, though the UK's MINIX center offers a 32-bit kernel.
UUCP and netnews clones are available as freeware but not supplied
with the base system.  A large international community is involved in
improving Minix; see comp.os.minix on USENET for details.

These freeware and "cheapware" products exert valuable pressure on the
commercial vendors.  Someday, they may even force AT&T to unlock source to stay
competitive...

Finally, there is a class of commercial UNIX clones that claim to emulate UNIX
or improve on it without being derived from AT&T source.  The major products
of this kind for 80x86 machines seem to be Coherent, QNX and LynxOS.  The
following information about these has been supplied by various USENETters:

   COHERENT is a small-kernel UNIX-compatible multi-user, multi-tasking
development O/S for $99.95 that uses less than 14Mb of disk space, runs on most
286-386-486 CPU systems, has a (pre-ANSI) C compiler and over 230 UNIX commands
including text processing, program development, administrative and maintenance
functions.  The GNU tools are available as pre-compiled binaries and source
from MWC.  Coherent resides on a partition separate from DOS and can access the
DOS file system with the DOS command. It has no network or Xwindows support,
but netnews has been ported and it has its own newsgroup, comp.os.coherent.  It
is fully documented with both a comprehensive 1200 page manual and an on-line
manual.  Mark Williams Company provides excellent support including a UUCP
access BBS and has just announced Release 4.0, the 386 version of COHERENT
(which removed the 64K-address-space limit on the compiler).  A big selling
point of this system is its minimal HW requirements --- only 1MB of memory, 
a 10MB root partition, and monochrome (or better) monitor.

  QNX is a POSIX-compliant microkernel OS with real-time capability, targeted
to mission critical, performance sensitive applications like factory
automation, process control, financial transaction processing, and
instrumentation.  They claim an installed base of over 200K systems worldwide.
The microkernel is only 7K and implements a message-passing model; other pieces
can loaded in at runtime, supporting anything from a small real-time executive
up to a full multi-user time-sharing system (including transparent DOS
emulation supporting Windows 3.1 in protected mode).  QNX networking supports
standard protocol suites, but uses very fast, lightweight protocols for
QNX-to-QNX node communications; QNX machines on a network can be treated for
most purposes as a single large multiprocessor, and the OS itself can be
distributed across multiple nodes.  Here is contact information for the vendor:

Quantum Software Systems                      Quantum Software Systems
175 Terrence Matthews Cr.                     Westendstr.19 6000 Frankfurt
Kanata, Ontario K2M 1W8                       am main 1
Canada                                        Germany
voice:  (613) 591-0931 x111 (voice)           voice: 49 69 97546156
fax:    (613) 591-3579      (fax)             fax:   49 69 97546110
usenet: stuartr@qnx.com

QNX support is offered via voice and FAX hotline and a BBS.  There is also
a newsletter and an annual international users' conference.

LynxOS is a 386 UNIX specialized for real-time work, available from Lynx
Real-Time Systems Inc. of Los Gatos, California.  It includes TCP/IP, NFS, X,
etc.  Most of the development tools are GNU.  The kernel is pre-emptable and
supports threads and dynamically-loaded device drivers.

VI. HARDWARE COMPATIBILITY TABLES

These tables summarize vendor claims and user reports on which hardware will
work with which port.

To save space in the tables below, we use the following *one-letter*
abbreviations for the OS ports:

S	SCO UNIX version 3.2v4

C	Consensys System V Release 4.2
D	Dell UNIX Issue 2.1
E	ESIX System V Release 4.0.4
I	Information Foundation System V Release 4.2
M	Micro Station Technology SVr4 UNIX
P	Microport System V/4 version 4
U	UHC Version 3.6

B	BSD/386	(0.3 beta)
X	Mach386

A `c' indicates that the hardware is claimed to work in vendor literature.
A `y' indicates that this has been verified by a user report.
A `.' indicates that whether this combination works is unknown.
An `n' indicates that the vendor advises that the combination won't work.
A `*' points you at footnote info.

A blank column indicates that I have received no vendor info on the
hardware category in question.

The following general caveats apply:

* All ports support EGA, VGA, CGA and monochrome text displays.

* All ports support generic ISA serial-port cards based on the 8250 or 16450
  UART.  According to the vendors, the asy drivers on Dell, Esix, Microport,
  BSD/386 and Mach386 support the extended FIFO on the NS16550AFN UART chip.
  Indeed, Dell tech support will tell you this feature was present in the
  base USL code.  UHC says its 2.0 drivers *don't* talk to 16550s but
  says that will be fixed in March '92.  A user reports that SCO has
  supported the 16550 since 3.2.2.

* I have not bothered listing ordinary ST-506/IDE/RLL drives, though lists
  of them are given in vendor literature.  This is a very mature commodity
  technology; anything you buy should work with one of the supported
  controllers unless it's defective.

* Vendors' supported hardware lists are not models of clarity.  Some iterms
  may be listed under a couple of different names because I don't know that
  they're actually the same beast.  I have been very careful not to make
  assumptions where I am ignorant; thus, some hardware may appear less 
  widely supported than it actually is.

* These tables are grossly incomplete.

Also, be aware that there is a fundamental design problem in the ISA
architecture that can cause 8-bit boards used in a system with 16-bit
boards to flake out even if they're actually compatible.  Jeremy Chatfield
(formerly of Dell, now of Information Foundation) describes it this way:

"We've seen (and fixed) this with several card combinations.  If you have an 8
bit card and a 16 bit card in the same address range, then the address decoding
on the ISA bus will find that the 128KB range includes a 16 bit card.  It
therefore programs itself for 16 bit I/O.  If you then do I/O with the 8 bit
card, every other data byte is garbage.  You will also have a reboot problem,
because the 16 bit card usually starts in 8 bit mode and has to be switched to
16 bit mode.  If the switch back to 8 bit mode is not made, and the address
range is the c0000-d0000 range, close to the VGA BIOS, the VGA BIOS accesses
are screwed, because they are performed in 16 bit mode because of the above PC
H/W architectural problem.  We include a deinit sequence in all the 16 bit
device drivers that causes a shutdown to reset the accesses to the safer 8 bit
mode.  Of course, after a panic, the machine still has boards set up in 16 bit
mode, so you might observe the problem then.

This affects *all* PC OS's.  I have seen cases where DOS failed to reboot
because of the same nonsense (network card in 16 bit mode in same address
region as VGA BIOS).  Clever programming can resolve in several ways."

All the SVr4 systems inherit support for a fairly wide range of hardware from
the base USL code (version 4.0.3 or 4.0.4).  This includes:

* All PC disk controllers (ESDI, IDE, ST-506 in MFM and RLL formats).

* The Adaptec 1542B SCSI adapter.  Note: you'll have to jumper your
  SCSI devices to fixed IDs during installation on most of these.

* Western Digital's 8013EBT Ethernet card, and its equivalents
  the WD8003 and WD8013.  SVr4v4 adds the 3Com 3C503.

* VGA adapters in 640x480 by 16 color mode.

* "C" protocol serial mice like the Series 7 and Series 9 from Logitech and
  the PC-3 mouse from Mouse Systems (however, we've had one report of an
  ostensible PC-3 clone called the DFI200H not working).

SCO UNIXes from 3.2.2 up and ODT 1.1 also support all these devices.

All SVr4 4.2 ports inherit support for these additional devices:

* "M" and "M+" protocol mice like Microsoft's and the newer Logitechs.

* SCSI WORM drives including the Toshiba and Maxtor RXT-800HS.

* SCSI Optical Disks: Maxtor Tahiti-I and II, Sony SMOE501

* SCSI CD-ROM drives: Toshiba XM-3201B, NEC CDR-82, Pioneer DRM-600,
  Sony CDU-8012.

* ET3000-based SVGA boards at up to 1024x768x16, WD90C10-based boards
  at up to 1024x768x16, WD90C11-based boards at up to 1024x768x256.

If you can fill in any of the gaps, or convert a `c' to `y', send me email.

S C D E I M P U B X	Systems
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
c     .     c   .  	Acer (all 386/486 models)
..     .     .   c  	ACCELL 486/33 ISA and 386/40 ISA
..     c     .   .  	ADDA AD-428P-25, Portable 486/25, 486/33, AD-328D-25
..     c     c   .  	ALR Business VEISA 386/33-101
c     .     .   .	ALR (all 386 and 486 models)
c     .     .   .	applicationDEC 316,316+,325,325C,333,425,433MP
c     .     .   .	Apricot LS, LS 386SX, XEN-S 386
c     .     .   y	Arche 486, Master 486/33
..     .     c   .  	AST (models not specified)
..     c     c   .  	AST Premium (models not specified)
c     .     .   .	AST Premium 386,386/33,486/25T*E*,486/33T*E*
c     .     c   .  	AT&T 6386 machines
..     .     c   .  	Compaq (models not specified)
c     c     c   .  	Compaq DeskPro 386/33.
c     .     .   .	Compaq DeskPro 486s/20,486/25/486/33L,386/20,386/25
c     .     .   .	Compaq Portable III 386, SystemPro
c     .     .   y 	Compaq SLT 386s/20
..     .     .   y 	CompuAdd 320
c   y y   y y y .  	CompuAdd Model 333
..     .     .   y 	CompuAdd 320
c     .     .   .	DEC DS486, DECpc 433, DECpc 433T
c     .     .   .	DECstation 320,325,425
c   y .     c   .  	Dell 310,325,325P,333P,316SX,316LT,320SX,320LT.
c   y .     c   .  	Dell 433P,425E,433E,425TE,433TE,4xx[DS]E,486[DP]xx.
..     .     .   y 	DynaMicro 486/33
c     .     .   .	EasyData 386 model 333
c     .     .   .	Epson Equity 386/20PC,386/25,386SX; Epson PC AX3,AX3/25
..     c     c   .  	Everex (models not specified)
y     .     .   .	Everex 33,386/20,486,486/33
..     c     c   .  	Gateway 2000 (models not specified)
..     .     c   y y 	Gateway 2000 (486/33 ISA)
..     .     . y .	Gateway 2000 486/25
c     .     .   .	Groupil Uniprocessor 25MHz Tower
c     .     .   .	GRiDCase 1530,1550SX
..     .     c   c  	High Definition Systems 486/25 ISA and 386 SX/16 ISA
..     y     .   .	High Definition Systems 386/40 ISA
c     .     .   .	HP 486 Vectra series
c     .     .   .	IBC 486
c     .     .   .	ITT 486
y     .     .   .	Micro Way Number Smasher 486/33
c     .     .   .	Mitac 386, MC3100E-02, S500
c     .     .   .	Mitsuba 386
c     .     .   .	Mitsubishi PC-386
..     .     .   y 	MORSE PAT 386PX 386/40
..     .     .   y 	MORSE KP 386T 386/33
c     .     .   .	NCR 316,316SX,3386
c     .     .   .	NEC 386/20,486/25, BusinessMate and PowerMate
y     .     .   .	NEC 386/33 BusinessMate
c     .     .   .	Noble 386
c     .     .   .	Nokia Alfaskop System 10 m52, m54/55
c     .     .   .	Northgate 33
..     c     c   .  	Northgate 386/33
..   y .     .   .	Northgate 486/33
c     .     .   .	Olivetti 386/486 machines
c     .     .   .	Olivetti XP-9
y     .     .   .	Packard-Bell 386x
c     .     .   .	PC Craft PCC 2400 386
c     .     .   .	Phillips 386, P3464 486
..     c     c   .  	Primax (models not specified)
c     .     .   .	SNI 8800-50, 8810-50, PCD series
c     .     .   .	Schneider 386 25-340, 386SX System 70
c     .     .   .	Siemens Data Systems Model WX200
c     .     .   .	Starstation
..     .     .   y 	Tandy 3000
c     .     .   .	Tandy 4000
y     .     .   .	Tatung Force 386x
c     .     .   .	Tatung Force TCS-8000 386, TCS-8600 386
..     c     c   .  	Tangent (models not specified)
..     y     .   .	Tangent 386/25C
..     c     y   .	Tangent 433E (486/33 EISA)
..     .     .   y 	Technology Advancement Group EISA 483/33
..     c     c   .  	Televideo (models not specified)
c     .     .   .	Televideo 386/25
c     .     .   .	Texas Instruments System 1300
..     .     .   y 	Texas Instruments System 80486/33Mhz
c     .     .   .	Toshiba T3100,T3200,T5100,T5200,T8500,T8600
..     .     .   y 	TPE 486/33 & 486/50
..     c     c   .  	Twinhead (models not specified)
y     .     .   .	Twinhead 800 (486/33)
..     c     c   .  	Unisys (models not specified)
c     .     .   .	Unisys PW2 Series 800/16,800/20,800/25
c     .     .   .	Victor 386 25, V486T
c     .     .   .	Wang MX200, PC 380
c     .     .   .	Wyse 386
n     .     .   .	Wyse Decision 486/33 (intermittent crashes)
c     .     .   .	Zenith 386 and 486 machines
..     .     .   y 	Zeos 486DX-50
  
S C D E I M P U B X	Motherboards
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      c     .   .  	AGI
y     .     .   .	A.I.R. 486/33EL w 256K cache
      .     c   .  	ALR
      .     c   .  	AMAX
c     .     c   .  	AMI (model not specified)
      y     c   .	AMI Enterprise II (33 & 50)
      y     .   .	Amptron AMD386/40
      .     .   y 	Amptron ISA 486DX/33
      .     c   .  	ARC
    n .     c   .  	Cache Computer
      .     c   .  	Chips & Technologies chipset
    y .     c   .  	Chips & Technologies 33DX
      c     c   .  	Club AT
      .     c   .  	DataExport
    y .     c   .  	Dell
      .     c n .  	DTK (model not specified)
      y     . n .	DTK 386/33
      .     .   c  	EISA Tech 80386SX MHz		
    y .     .   .  	Eteq 386
y     n     .   .	Eteq 486
      .     c   .  	Free Technology (model not specified)
      .     .   . y	Free Technology 486/33 EISA board
    y .     .   .	Free Technology 486/50DX
y     y     .   .	Gigabyte GA-486US 33MHz 256K Cache
c     .     .   y	Intel 302 (386/25 + 387)
      .     .   y 	Intel 403E (486/33 EISA)
      .     c   .  	Microlab
      c   y c y c  	Micronics 386/25
      c     c y c y  	Micronics 486/33 ISA
      y     .   .	Micronics 486/33 EISA
      .     c   .  	Mitac
      .     .   .  	Modular Circuit Technology 386/SX 16Mhz
y     .     .   .  	Motherboard Factory 386/40, 486/33 (Northgate's OEM)
      .     c   .  	Mylex (model not specified)
      c     c   .  	Mylex MI-386/20
y     y   y y   .	Mylex MAE486/33
      y   y .   . 	NICE 486DX/50 EISA
    y .     c   .  	OPTI 486
      .     c   .  	Orchid
      .     c   .  	PC-craft
      y     .   .     	TMC Research Corporation PAT38PC 25/386,33/386
      y     .   .  	TMC Research Corporation PAT38PX 33/386,40/386 
  
Notes:

* These two tables probably way *understate* the compatibility of most ports.
  Most ISA or EISA motherboards will work with all of them.  However, Jeff
  Coffler <coffler@jeck.amherst.nh.us> reports: "I couldn't get the Cache
  Computer CPU board to work at all with Dell UNIX, even though they claimed
  they work with SCO.  Flaky, timing-related failures."

* Quote from Kolstad, "The external caches on the most advanced
  boards are usually not tested well for UNIX-like applications.  We
  see problems occasionally that disappear when the caches are disabled.
  Once reproducible, the vendors can usually repair the problem."

* A source at UHC describes the DTK boards as "dogshit" --- he says they
  generate a lot of spurious interrupts that DOS is too cretinous to be
  bothered by but which completely tank UNIX.  He says DTK seems uninterested
  in fixing the problem.  Other correspondents confirm that this has been
  going on for several years.  On the other hand, another correspondent says
  his company has 20 DTK machines running UNIX with no problems.  We advise
  that you actually *see* any DTK board boot UNIX and run for a while before
  buying.

* Dave Johnson <ddj@gradient.com> reports that  since upgrading from a 386 to
  an Eteq 486, they've had lots of UHC random panics due to page faults in
  kernel mode.  UHC is looking into this.

* Some of the cards marked `supported' for SCO require the AGA EFS (Advanced
  Graphics Adapters Extended Feature Supplement).  (EFS's may be downloaded
  for free via UUCP or FTP'd from uunet, but there is a media charge if they
  are ordered on physical media from SCO).

S C D E I M P U B X	Video Cards			Max Res		ChipSet
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
..   c y .   * . .	Appian Rendition GRX		1024x768x256  TIGA34010
c   c y .   * . .	Appian Rendition II, IIXE	1024x768x256  TIGA34010
c   c . .   . . .	Appian Rendition III		1280x1024x256 TIGA34020
..     . .   c . .	ARC V-16 (Paradise)		????		????
..     . c   c c .	AT&T VDC 600 (Paradise clone)	SVGA		????
..     . c   . . .	AT&T VDC400			CGA		???
..     . c   . . .	AT&T VDC750			EGA		???
c     . .   . . .	AST motherboard video		1024x768x256	WD90C31
c     . .   .    	AST VGA Plus			800x600x16	WDC
c   y . .   c . c	ATI Ultra			1024x768x256	Mach 8
c   y . .   c . c	ATI Vantage			1024x768x256	Mach 8
c y   c c   c n y	ATI Wonder+			SVGA N		Wonder
c     . c   . . .	ATI Wonder XL			1024x768x256	????
..     . .   c c .	ATI (type not specified)	????		????
..   y . .   . . .	Boca SuperVGA			1024x768 	ET4000
c     . .   . . .	Chips 451			800x600x16 N	C&T451
c     . .   . . .	Chips 452			1024x768x16 N	C&T452
c     . .   . . .	Compaq Advanced VGA		640x480x256 N	????
c     . .   . . .	Compaq Plasma			640x400x2 N	non-VGA
c     . .   . . .	Compaq LCD VGA			640x480x16 N	????
c     . .   . . .	Compaq VGC			640x480x16 N	????
c     . .   . . .	Compaq AG1024			1024x768x256	????
c     . .   . . .	Compaq QVision			1024x768x256	????
..     . .   . . c	Compuadd Hi-Rez card w/1meg	1024x768	ET4000
c     . .   . . .	Cornerstone SinglePage		1008x768x2	????
c     . .   . . .	Cornerstone PC1280		1280x960x2	????
c     . .   . . .	Cornerstone DualPage		1600x1280x2	????
c     . .   . . .	Cornerstone DualPage 150	2048x1560x2	????
c     . .   . . .	DEC 433w			1280x1024x256  TMS34020
c     . .   . . .	DEC motherboard video		1024x768x256	WD90C30
c   y . .   . . .	Dell motherboard video		1024x768x256	WD90C31
..   y . c   . c .	Dell VGA			1024x768	????
..   y c c   c y c y	Diamond SpeedStar		1024x768x256	ET4000
c     . .   . . c	Diamond Stealth			1280x1024x16	S3
c     . .   . . c	Eizo MD-B07, MD-B10, Extra/EM	1024x768 	ET3000
..     . .   . . y 	LSA WINNER			1280x1024	82C480
..     c .   . . .	Everex ViewPoint VRAM		SVGA+		????
..     c .   . . .	Everex ViewPoint True Color	SVGA+		????
..     c .   . . .	Everex UltraGraphics II	EV-236	1664x1200	mono
..     . .   . . .	Fastwrite VGA			800x600		????
..     . c   . . .	Genoa SuperEGA HiRes		1024x768	????
c     c c   c c c	Genoa 5300/5400	superVGA	SVGA N		????
c     . .   c . c	Genoa 6000, 6400		SVGA N		????
c     . .   . . .	Grid 1500 laptop		640x400x2     CGA-like
y     c .   c . .	Hercules monographics display	720x348		mono
c     . .   . . .	HP UltraVGA			1280x1024x16	S3?
c     . .   . . .	IBM 8514/A			1024x768x256	8514/A
c   y . .   . . .	IBM VGA				VGA		VGA
c     . .   . . .	IBM XGA				1024x768x256	XGA
c     . .   . . .	IBM XGA-2			1024x768x256	XGA-2
c     . .   . . .	Imagraph ITX			1280x1024x256  TMS34020
c     . .   . . .	Intel motherboard video		1024x768x256	WD90C3x
c     . .   . . .	Matrox MWIN1280			1280x1024x256 N	????
c     . .   . . .	Matrox PG-1281-CV		1024x768x256	????
..     c .   . . .	MaxLogic			SVGA		????
..     . c   . . .	MicroField T8			1280x1024     TIGA34020
..     . .   c . .	Microfield V-8			1280x1024	????
c     . .   . . .	Microfield I8			1024x768x256	????
c     . .   . . .	Miro Magic			1280x1024x256 N	82C48
..     . .   * . .	Mylex GXE (EISA)		1280x1024     TIGA34020
..     . .   . . y 	Nth Engine/150			1280x1024	82C480
c     . .   . . .	Number Nine GXi			1280x1024x256  TMS34020
..     c .   . . .	Oak Technology OTI-067		1024x768x256	????
c     . .   . y .	Oak Technologies Oak 077	1024x768x256	Oak 077
c     . .   . . .	Olivetti EVC-1 (EISA)		1024x768x256	82c452
..     . .   . . c	Optima Mega/1024		1024x768	ET4000
c     . c   . . .	Orchid Designer			SVGA		ET3000
c     . .   . . c	Orchid Fahrenheit		1280x1024x16	S3
c     y .   c c c	Orchid ProDesigner		800x600 	ET3000
c   y y c   y . y	Orchid ProDesigner II/1024	1024x768	ET4000
..     * c   y . .	Orchid ProDesigner IIs		1024x768	ET4000
c     . c   . . . y	Paradise VGA Plus		SVGA		PVGA1A
..     c c   c c c	Paradise VGA Professional	SVGA 		PVGA1A
c   c . c   c . c	Paradise VGA 1024		SVGA 		WD90C00
c     . .   . . .	Paradise 8514/A			SVGA+		????
..     . .   . . y 	PixelWorksWhirlWin		1280x1024	82C480
..     . c   . . .	PerfectView			SVGA		????
c     . .   . . .	QuadRAM QuadVGA			SVGA		????
..     . .   c c .	Qume Crystal			1024x768	T4000
c     . .   . . .	Renaissance Rendition II	1024x768      TMS34020
y   y y .   c . c	Sigma Legend			1024x768	ET4000
..     . c   c c .	Sigma VGA/H			800x600		????
c     c c   c c .	Sigma EM-16 VGA, EM-16+ VGA	SVGA		ET3000
c     . c   . . .	Sigma Extra-EM			SVGA		ET3000
..     c c   c . c	STB PowerGraph w/1meg		1024x768x256	ET4000
..     . .   . . c	Swan SVGA with VCO chip		1024x768	ET4000
..     . c   . . .	Tecmar VGA			VGA		Et3000
c     c c   . . .	Tecmar VGA AD			SVGA		ET3000
c     . .   . . .	Toshiba Grid 1500 laptop	640x400x2     CGA-like
..     . .   . . c	TRICOM Mega/1024		1024x768	ET4000
c     . .   c . .	Trident SuperVGA		????		T880
c     . c   . . c	Trident TVGA 8900		1024x768	T8900
..     . .   c c .	Tseng Labs VGA			1024x768	T4000
..     c .   . . .	Vectrix	VX1024 (TI-34010)	1024x768	????
..     . c   . . .	Vega VGA			800x600		????
c     . .   . . .	Verticom MX/AT			800x600		????
c     c .   c c .	Video7 FastWrite VGA		800x600 x2, x16	????
c     . c   c c .	Video7 VRAM VGA			1024x768	Video7
c     . .   c c .	Video7 VRAM II VGA		SVGA		Video7
c     . .   c c .  	Video7 VEGA			EGA 640x380	Video7
c     . .   . . .  	Video7 VGA1024i			SVGA		Video7
c   y . .   . . .  	Zenith/Bull motherboard video	1024x768x256	WD90C31

In this table, an `SVGA' resolution code signifies the following resolutions:
1024x768 at 2 and 16 colors, 800x600 at 2, 16, 256 colors, and 640x480 at 2,
16, 256 colors.  SVGA+ adds 1280x1024 at 2 or 16 colors.  Some non-interlace
boards are marked with N.

Caveats in interpreting the above table:

* All super-VGA cards will work at VGA resolutions and below (that is, resolu-
  tions up to 640x480 in 16 colors).

* Because color is of secondary importance for most UNIX applications, I list
  only the highest dot-density resolution of a board that supports more than
  one.  Some boards have lower resolutions with more colors.

* This list is not exclusive.  Many (perhaps even most) dotted combinations
  will work. UHC claims that any SVGA based on an ET3000, ET4000, Paradise
  or Genoa chip-set will fly;  Dell echoes this with regard to ET3000,
  ET4000, WD90C0xx cards, and the same is probably true of all other vendors.

* The Renaissance GRX-II is the same board as the Appian Rendition II; the
  company changed its name.  The II/XE is compatible with the Rendition GRX
  and the Appian Rendition II, it differs in architecture in that it supports
  more DRAM and runs a little faster than the older cards.  All
  Rendition II type cards run at a maximum resolution of 1024x768-256,
  the Renditon III runs at 1280x1024-256 with its full VRAM set.

* An ESIX reseller says all the TIGA34010-based video cards are pretty much
  alike and ESIX will drive any of them (the prudent user should probably ask
  to see the card working before committing).  ESIX also supports 720x348
  resolution on cheap Hercules-compatible monochrome tubes, and the Everex
  UltraGraphics display at 1664x1200 resolution.

* Beware the Trident and Oak chipsets.  Many clone vendors bundle these with
  their systems because they're cheap, but they break the Roell server and
  some other X implementations.  Also, they appear to argue with the WD8003EP
  net card, and no re-arrangement of the jumpers seems to fix it.

* Third party server technology from companies like MetroLink can support
  higher performance, higher resolution TIGA and proprietary technology.

* Dell's 2.2 adds X11R5 servers for VGA 640x480, 800x600 and for the Tseng
  Labs ET4000 and WD90C11 in up to 1024x768 16 or 256 colour.  Appian
  Rendition II (formerly Renaissance) for 1024x768 TIGA 34010.  Highest
  performance from the ATI Ultra 1024x768 256 colour, and highest resolution
  from the 1280x1024 256 colour JAWS (Dell proprietary card developed in
  association with Lotus and MicroSoft)

* The Orchid ProDesigner IIs (top speed 80 MHz, not the 75MHz version) works
  with both X386-1.2D and X386-1.2E (beta). It works ok with the ESIX 4.0.3
  X11R4 stuff at any resolution under 1024x768. But the driver does *not*
  work with 1024x768 (timings are way off). The vanilla ProDesigner II does
  work correctly with both the X386 and the Esix X11's (R5 and R4,
  respectively).  Note: this info may change in ESIX 4.0.4, which uses a
  different X.

* The Qume Crystal is a private-label version of the Tseng Labs VGA card.

S C D E I M P U B X	Mice
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
c   y c c y y   y y	(Logitech-compatible) 3-button serial mice (C protocol)
c   y c c   c   n y	(Logitech-compatible) 3-button bus mice (C protocol)
..   . c .   .   n .	ATI Wonder+ bus-mouse port
y   . . .   .   c .	ATI Graphics Ultra bus-mouse port
c   . . .   .   . .	HP C1413A Mouse
y   y . c   .   . .	IBM PS/2 keyboard mouse
c   y y	c c c   n y	Logitech MouseMan (M+ protocol)
c   y y	. c c c c .	Logitech Trackman (serial, M+ protocol)
c   y c .   c   n y	Logitech Trackman (bus, M+ protocol)
c   . . .   .   . .	Logitech hi-res Keyboard Mouse
c   y c c   c   c y	Microsoft 2-button (serial, M protocol)
c   y c c   c   n y	Microsoft 2-button (bus, M protocol)
c   . . .   .   . .	Olivetti Bus Mouse
c   . . .   .   . .	Olivetti hi-res Keyboard Mouse
..   . . .   .   . c	SummaMouse
c   . . .   .   . .	Summagraphics Bitpad

Notes:

* See the discussion of mice at the beginning of this section for details.

* BSD/386 says it supports all 1200-9600 baud serial mice, specifying Logitech
  as an example.  This is probably true of all vendors.

* The MouseMan and TrackMan require a patch obtainable from SCO to run under
  ODT 1.1; they're fully supported in 2.0.

* X11R5 (X386 1.2) supports all of the known mice on SVR4 in a native mode,
  bypassing the mouse driver.  This wasn't true with X11R4 (X386 1.1b).
  So if you're using X386 1.2 exclusively, you can use (say) a MouseMan
  regardless of which SVR4 you're using.

* Dell 2.2 includes an auto-configuring mouse driver that's supposed to
  work with about anything.  Non-factory-installed 2.2s may require a
  patch from support to handle the Logitech Mouseman.

S C D E I M P U B X		Multi-port serial cards
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
c   . .     .     .	AMI lamb 4 and 8-port
..   y c     c     n	Arnet (models not specified)
c   y .     .     .	Arnet 2,4 and 8-port and TwinPort
c   . c     c     n	AST 4-port
..   . .     c     n	Central Data
c   . .     c     n	Chase Research
c   c .     c     n	Computone (models not specified)
c   y .     .     .	Computone Intelliport
c   . .     .     .	Computone ATvantage-X 8-port
c   . .     .     .	Comtrol Hostess-4
c   . c     c     n	Comtrol Hostess-8
..   . c     y     n	Consensys PowerPorts
c   . .     .     .	CTC Versanet 4AT and 8AT
c   y .     .     .	Digiboard 4 and 8-port
..   y c     c     n	Digiboard DigiChannel PC/8
..   . .     . y   .	Digiboard Digichannel PC/Xe-16 (see note below)
y   y .     y     n	Equinox
c   . .     .     .	Kimtron Quartet 4-port
y   . c     c   c n	Maxpeed
c   . .     .     .	Olivetti RS232C Multiport board
c   . .     .     .	Quadram QuadPort 1 and 5-port
..   . .     .   c .	SDL RISCOM/8
y   y .     c     n	Specialix
..   y .     c     n	Stallion OnBoard
..   . .     c     n	Stargate (models not specified)
c   . .     .     .	Stargate OC4400 (4-port) and OC8000 (8-port)
c   . .     .     .	Tandon Quad serial card
..   y .     c     n	Technology Concepts
c   . .     .     .	Unisys 4-port

Notes:

* Only SCO, Dell, Esix and Microport listed multiport cards at all.
  As some are `smart' cards which require special device drivers, you should
  *not* assume that a board is supported on a particular port unless the
  vendor explicitly says so.

* MtXinu says they have *no* multiport support right now.

* The Chase, Computone, Intelliport and Specialix cards will run under
  SCO using a vendor-supplied driver.

* The Maxpeed SS8-UX2 doesn't support RTS/CTS flow control, and requires
  its own config scripts rather than using inittab and gettydefs.  The
  BSDI people think it works with their config stuff.

* Peter Wemm <Peter-Wemm@zeus.dialix.oz.au> writes: "In 2.1, Dell's drivers
  (direct from Stallion) are flakey.  I have been annoying the living daylights
  out of the developers (Stallion) here in AUS, and their new drivers have an
  `interaction' problem with the reboot mechanism in dell's kernel.  A reboot
  causes the VGA card to be disabled."  Jeremy Chatfield of Dell replies:
  "We haven't seen the problem he reports.  Most likely the problem he's seeing
  is an icky [generic] one for UNIX on a PC."  He then proceeds to detail
  the 8-16 clash described at the beginning of this section.  Peter Wemm
  adds that the 2.8s.6 drivers supplied with Dell 2.2 seem to be good, but
  that you should *not* install the 2.8s.7 drivers; they interfere with
  the reboot mechanism.

* Digiboard makes an SVr4 UNIX streams driver available via download for the
  Digichannel PC/Xe-16.

S C D E I M P U B X	Disk controllers
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
c   c c     c . .	Adaptec 2320/2322 (ESDI)
c   c .     c . .	Adaptec ACB 2730C (RLL)
c   y .     c . .	Adaptec ACB 2732C (RLL)
c     .     . . .	Compag 32-bit Intelligent Drive Array Controller
c     .     . . .	Compag 32-bit Intelligent Drive Array Expansion
..   c .     c . c	CCAT100A (IDE)
..     .     c . .	Chicony 101B
y   y c     c . .	Data Tech Corp 6280 (ESDI)
..     .     c . c	DTG 6282-24
..   c c     c . .	Everex EV-346 (ST506)
..   c c     c . .	Everex EV-348 (ESDI)
..   c c     c . .	Everex EV-8120 (IDE)
y   c .     . . .	Lark ESDI controller
..   c c     c . .	OMTI 8240 (ST506)
..   c .     . c .	PSI Caching controller (ESDI)
c   c .     . . .	SMS OMTI 8620 and 8627 (ESDI)
..   y .     . c .	Ultrastor 12C, 22F
y   y .     c c c	Ultrastor 12F
c   c .     . n .	Ultrastor 22C (caching EISA version of 12F)
..   y .     c . .	Ultrastor 22CA
c   y c     c . .	Western Digital 1003 (RLL)
c     .     . . .	Western Digital 1005
..     y     . . .       Western Digital 1006V-MM2 (ST506)
y   y y     c . c	Western Digital 1007 A,SE2 (ESDI)
c     .     c . .	Western Digital 1009 SE1/SE2

Notes:

* All these ports should support all standard PC hard-disk controllers (ESDI,
  IDE,ST-506 in MFM and RLL formats).

S C D E I M P U B X	SCSI controllers
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
c     . .   . . . .	Adaptec 152x (non-bus mastering ISA host adapter)
y   y c c y y c c y	Adaptec 1540, 1542
c   n . .   . . . .	Adaptec 1640 (MicroChannel version of 154x)
c   y c . y c n c y	Adaptec 1740,1742 (EISA) (1542 emulation mode)
y   . y .   . * c .	Adaptec 1740,1742 (EISA) (enhanced mode)
..     . .   c . . .	Always IN2000
y     c .   c . . .	BusTek BT-542B
y     c .   c . . .	BusTek BT-742A (EISA) (mPort specifies Revision F)
c     . .   . . .	Compag SCSI Option Adapter and Compression Adapter
c     . .   . . . .	Corollary SCSI-CPU
..     . .   c c . .	DPT PM2102 caching controller (MFM emulation)
c     . .   c . . .	DPT PM2102 caching SCSI controller in SCSI mode
..     . c   . . . .	DPT 2011, 2012A, 2012B
..     c .   . . . .	Everex EV8118/8110
c     c .   . . . .	Future Domain 1660, 1680, 885, 860 
..     . c   . . . .	Future Domain TMC-7000 FASST2
y     . c   . . . .	IBM HardFile (their SCSI host adapter for MicroChannel)
..     . .   c . . .	Mylex DCE (EISA)
c     . .   . . . .	Olivetti ESC-1 (EISA)
..     . .   . c . .	PSI caching controller
c     . .   . . . .	Storage Plus SCSI-AT "Sumo"
..     . .   c . . .	Ultrastor 32k 12u
c   y c .   c c . .	Western Digital WD7000
c   y . .   . . . .	Western Digital WD7000-EX (EISA version of WD7000)

Notes:

* UHC started shipping a native-mode 1740/1742 driver in mid-April.  It
  requires a full SCSI-2 tape drive.

* The BusTek 542 is a clone of the Adaptec 1542.  At least one respondent
  thinks it works better and faster with the Adaptec drivers than the
  Adaptecs do!  The BusTek 742 has more complicated antecedents; it's an
  EISA clone of the 1542, not necessarily compatible with the 1742.

* There's a known bug in the Adaptec 1742 firmware that produces hangs
  when it's used with certain SCSI tape drives, including the popular
  Archive 2150S.

* Bill Austin <uunet!baustin!bill> writes: "the 1740 patches on ESIX [4.0.3a]
  do work but only bring the speed up in enhanced mode by about 15% over
  standard (643Kb/s vs 535Kb/s) in writing, although the *read* speed
  has nearly tripled (2,833 Kb/s) (this is using "iozone 16").  This may give
  some idea of what improvement to expect from native-mode 1740 operation.

* Wolfgang Denk <wd@pcsbst.pcs.com> reports that SCO ODT 2.0 running an Adaptec
  1542 cannot work with the following Hewlett-Packard drives:

        HP 97536 SL
        HP 97536 S
        HP 97544

  A source at SCO says "This problem is known to us.  In some
  not-yet-clearly-understood fashion, these HP drives interact badly with
  our implementation of scatter/gather disk transfer ordering.  There are
  two different workarounds: you can turn off scatter/gather in the SCSI
  disk driver, or you can get updated drive control board ROMs from HP."

S C D E I M P U B X	Network cards
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
c   . . .   . . c y	3COM EtherLink I 3C501 and 3C502
c   c y c   c . y c	3COM EtherLink II 3C503
c   . . c   . . c .	3COM EtherLink 16 (3C507)
c   . . c   . . . .	3Com 3C523 & 523B EtherLink/MC
c   . . .   . . . .	3Com 3C523 EtherLink/MC TP
..   . c .   . . . .	Everex EV-2015, EV-2016, EV-2026, EV-2027
c   . . .   . . . .	HP 27245A EtherTwist Adapter Card/8 ISA TP
c   . . .   . . . .	HP 27247A EtherTwist Adapter Card/16 ISA TP
c   . . .   . . . .	HP 27250A ThinLAN Adapter Card/8 ISA BNC
c   . . .   . . . .	HP 27248A EtherTwist EISA Adapter Card/32
c   . . c   . . . .	IBM Token-Ring Network Adapter
c   . . .   . . . .	IBM Token-Ring Network Adapter II (short and long card)
c   . . .   . . . .	IBM Token-Ring Network Adapter 4/16
c   . . .   . . . .	IBM Token-Ring Network Adapter/A
c   c . .   . . . .	IBM Token-Ring Network 16/4 Adapter/A
c   . . .   . . . .	Microdyne (Excelan) EXOS 205, 205T, 205T/16
c   . . .   . . . .	Racal Datacomm NI6510 ISA and ES3210 EISA
..   y c c   c c . c	Intel PC-586 aka iMX-LAN/586
..   . . .   . . c .	Novell NE1000
..   . . .   . . c .	Novell NE2000
y   y y c c c c c c	SMC & Western Digital 8003 and 8013 and variations
..   y . .   . . . .	WD TokenRing card

Notes:

* SCO support of SMC EtherCards and the 3C507 requires a patch available
  from their BBS.

* Dick Dunn <rcd@raven.eklektix.com> opines "Somewhere along here, somebody
  needs to note that the 3C501 is a miserable-misbegotten-son-of-a-lame-she-
  camel-and-a-desperate-jackal Ethernet card, at least in UNIXland.  It has
  serious problems in any serious multi-user system because of various
  hardware idiosyncrasies which are on the order of can't-walk-down-the-
  street-and-chew-gum."  Do tell, Dick!

S C D E I M P U B X	Tape drives
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
c   y c .   y . c .	Archive 2150S or Viper 150 21247 (SCSI, QIC-150)
c     c .   c . . c	Archive Viper VP150E
c     . c   c c . .	Archive Viper 60 21116
c     . c   c c . .	Archive Viper 150 25099
..     . c   . . . .	Archive FT60i (Scorpion 5945C)
c     . .   c c . .	Archive Viper 2525 25462.
y     . .   c . . .	Archive 60 - 525MB (QIC-02 and SCI)
c     . .   c . . .	Archive 4mm 4520 DAT
c     . .   c c . .	Archive Python models 25501-003, -005 and -008 (SCSI)
c     . .   . . . .	Archive Python DDS 4520NT and 4521NT DAT drives
c     * .   c c . c	Archive XL (5580 & friends)
..     . .   c c . .	Archive 3800
..     . .   . c . .	AT&T KS22762 and KS23495 (SCSI)
c     . .   . . . .	Bell Technologies XTC-60
..     c .   . . . .	Caliper CP150
c     . .   . . . .	Cipher CP-60B, CP-125B
..     c .   . . . .	Cipher ST150S-II
c     . .   . c . .	Cipher ST150S2/90 (SCSI)
n     . .   c . . .	CMS Jumbo - 60MB QIC-40
n     . .   . c . .	Emulex MT02/S1 +CCS INQ (SCSI)
..     c .   c . . .	Everex Excel Stream 60, 125, 150
..     c .   c . . .	Everex5525ES (SCSI)
..     c .   c . y .	Everex EV-811, EV-831, EV-833
c     . .   c c c .	Exabyte EXB-8200 (SCSI)
c     . .   . . c .	Exabyte EXB-8500 (SCSI)
c     . .   . . . .	HP 35450A (SCSI)
..     . .   . c . .	HP 88780 (SCSI)
..     . .   . c . .	HPCIPHER M990 (SCSI)
..     . .   . c . .	NCR H6210-STD1-01-46C632 (SCSI)
c     . .   . . . .	Mountain 8mm Cartridge
y     . .   . n . .	Mountain FileSafe 150MB (QIC-02)
c     . .   . . . .	Mountain FileSafe 60-300MB (QIC-02)
y   y . .   . . . .	Sankyo 525ES (SCSI)
..     . .   . c . .	Sony SDT-1000 (SCSI)
..     . .   c . . .	Tallgrass 150 - 525MB SCSI
c     . .   . . . .	Tandberg DQIC (SCSI)
..     . .   . . . c	TUV DAT
..     . c   . . . .	Wangtek 5099EN24 (60MB)
c   y . .   c . . .	Wangtek 150SE (SCSI)
y     c .   c y . .	Wangtek 5150ES (SCSI)
c     . .   c . . .	Wangtek 60 - 525MB (QIC 02 and SCSI)
c     . .   c . . .	Wangtek 6130 - HS 4mm DAT.
c     . .   y c . .	Wangtek 5125ES ES41, 5150ES ES41, 5150ES FA0 (SCSI)
..     . c   . . . .	Wangtek 5125EQ (125MB)
..     . c   . . . .	Wangtek 5150EQ (150MB)
c     . .   c c c .	Wangtek 5150ES SCSI-3 (SCSI)
c     . .   c . c .	WangTek 5150PK QIC-02 (QIC-150)
c   y . .   . . . .	Wangtek 5525 (SCSI)
c     . .   c c . .	Wangtek 6130-F (SCSI)
c     . .   c c . .	Wangtek KS23417, KS23465, KS24569 (SCSI)

Notes:

* All SVr4s inherit USL support for QIC-02, QIC-36 1/4", or SCSI tape
  interfaces, using QIC-24 (9-track, 60MB), QIC-120 (15-track, 125MB) or
  QIC-150 (18-track, 150MB) formats.

* A user says of Dell: it appears that anything using Wangtek QIC02/QIC36
  controllers works; this should include the Wangtek 525MB, Cipher ST150S2,
  and Archive 2150S drives.

* UHC specifies the following tape controller/drive combinations: Wangtek
  PC-36 + Wangtek 5099-EN, Everex 811 + Wangtek 5150-EN, Bell Tech + Wangtek
  5150-EN, Archive SC499-R + Archive External FT-60, Archive VP402 + Archive
  Viper 2150L, Everex 811 + Archive Viper 2150L, Bell Tech + Archive Viper
  2150L, Archive VP402 + Archive Viper 2150L.

* UHC claims that Any floppy tape supporting the QIC-107 physical and QIC-117
  logical interface specs and QIC-80 or QIC-40 recording formats should work.
  This is probably true of other vendors as well.

* BSDI says it supports almost any Wangtek 1/4" standard 3M streamer with a
  QIC-02 or QIC-36 interface.  However, they admit that the Archive SC402
  QIC-02 controller will not work.  BSDI says it will support almost any SCSI
  tape unit, as well.

* Floppy tapes don't work on Dell; USL provides the support, but it collides
  with Dell's code for auto-detecting the density of a diskette.

* SCO's tape compatibility table lists drive/controller pairs; not all drives
  listed have been included here.  They allege that any QIC-02 drive should
  work.  Unofficial sources inside SCO claim any SCSI drive ought to work.

* A source at SCO says the CMS Jumbo is neither compatible with QIC40/QIC80
  nor Irwin "standards", vendor supplies their own driver which SCO does not
  support.  He also said "CMS is in general fairly UNIX-hostile; don't buy
  their stuff if you have a choice."   Tom Haapanen <tomh@wes.on.ca> adds
  simply "Ick.  Stay away!"  On the other hand, Jerry Rocteur <jerry
  @lncc.com> praises their hardware and says he found them quite helpful and
  knowledgeable.  Your editor has no experience on which to base an opinion.

* The Emulex MT02 is a QIC02 bridge controller for the SCSI bus -- lets you
  take an old QIC02 drive and run it on a SCSI bus.  It is said to use a
  very old version of the SCSI spec; caveat emptor.

* John Plate <plate@infotek.dk> writes: "According to a fax from the Archive
  manufacturer Maynard, [the XL 5580 drive only works with ESIX 4.0.3] if the
  tape drive is "drive" two!  Which is the same as disabling the second floppy
  drive and then set a jumper on the tape drive."

S C D E I M P U B X	Non-Winchester mass storage
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
..  c  . .   . .		Bernoulli 90MB exchangeable SCSI 
..     . .   c .		Hitachi, Toshiba (models not specified)
..     . c   . c		Maxtor RXT-800HS
..     . c   . .		Maxtor Tahiti-I, Tahiti-II (floptical disk)
..     . c   . .		NEC CDR-82 (SCSI CD-ROM)
..     . c   . .		Pioneer DRM-600 (SCSI CD-ROM)
..     . c   . .		Sony CDU-8012 XM-3201B (SCSI CD-ROM)
..     . c   . .		Sony SMO E501 (floptical disk)
..     c .   c .    	Storage Dimensions XSE1-1000S1 optical disk
..     y .   c .		SyQuest cartridge media
..  c  . .   . .		Tandata
..     c .   c c    	Toshiba TXM-3201A1 CD-ROM
..     . c   . .		Toshiba XM-3201B (SCSI CD-ROM)
..     c . y c c    	Toshiba TXM-3301B CD-ROM
..     . .   c c		Toshiba WM-C050
..     c c   c c    	Toshiba WM-D070 WORM drive


VII. FREEWARE ACCESS FOR SVR4 SYSTEMS.

US4BINR is an archive dedicated to binaries (executable compiled program)
for UNIX System V Release 4 (SVR4) on 386/486 PC computer.

Our goal is to provide easy access to precompiled programs. Those
programs are (hopefully):

    Up to date.
    Documented.
    Useful or fun.

Uploads annoucement are made in comp.unix.sysv386 and comp.unix.sys5.r4.
US4BINR carries PD, Freeware, shareware, games, etc...  US4BINR is a non profit
organisation.

To get more info, email the following message to request@us4binr.uucp
or request%us4binr.uucp@uunet.uu.net

	reply Put_your_email_address_here
	help
	quit

There is an archive of "custom" installable SCO UNIX binaries at:

	ftp.wimsey.com:pub/wimseypd

It includes things like cnews, trn, elm, nntp, perl, gcc, etc.  These
are also sent out periodically on the biz.sco.binaries news group.

VIII. FREE ADVICE TO VENDORS:

   As a potential customer for one of the SVr4 ports, it's to my advantage to
have everybody in this market competing against one another as hard as
possible.  Accordingly, some free advice to vendors, which I'm broadcasting to
all of them and the public so as to put just that much more pressure on each
vendor. :-)

SCO:
   You have a serious image problem with many hackers which you've exacerbated
recently by falling behind the SVr4 leading edge and then engaging in what
certainly appears to be an attempt to sucker careless buyers with deceptive
product naming.  But the reaction to this wouldn't be nearly so vehement if
it didn't come on top of years of discontent with more technical choices.
There's too much stuff in the SCO kernel and admin tools that's different from
USL and *not better*; too much stuff that raises weird little compatibility
problems that shouldn't be there.  Verbum sap.
   This different-but-not-better problem is perfectly reflected by the one
thing about the otherwise-excellent SCO documentation that sucks moldy moose
droppings; the rearrangement and renaming of the reference manual sections.
Your technical writers entertain a fond delusion that this helps nontechnical
users, but all it really does is confuse and frustrate techies with experience
on other UNIXes.  Lose it.

Everybody but SCO:
   SCO's documentation set is to die for (except in the one respect noted
above), and they add a lot of value over the base UNIX with things like ODT DOS
and CodeView.  Only Dell comes even close to matching SCO in the nifty add-ons
department, and even they have a lot of room for improvement.  If you want to
outcompete SCO, you have to be *better*; this means (at minimum) supporting a
windowing debugger and ISAM libraries and DOS support that goes beyond 2.0.

Consensys:
   I think you have a serious attitude problem.  So far, you're the only outfit
out of nine to refuse to divulge information for the comparison tables.  While
you have a perfect right to do so, it smells bad --- as though you think you
have weaknesses to hide.  I tried to discuss this with your VP of sales (Gary
Anderson) and got back very little but evasions, suit-speak, defensiveness, and
attempts to divert me from the issues (and I don't mind admitting that the
conversation made me pretty angry and didn't end very pleasantly).  This man's
behavior is all too consistent with reports of Consensys's dismissive behavior
towards customers and continued refusal to acknowledge technical problems.
   In this corner of the industry we have a tradition of collegiality, mutual
trust, informality, and candor.  If you plan to be here for the long haul, you
need to learn how to work with that rather than fighting it.  Behaving like IBM
will only get you hammered.
   1993 PS: there are some signs of improvement, especially the staffing-up in
support and a slightly friendlier attitude from your reps.  And Gary Anderson
is gone. But you've still got a ways to go in making up for past mistakes.

Consensys and Esix:
   Get a real support address.  Bang-path accessibility doesn't impress anyone
any more --- in fact, it looks faintly quaint.  You guys ought to be
support@esix.com and support@consensys.com to follow the simple and logical
convention SCO and Dell and Microport and UHC have established.

Dell:
   Don't get fat and lazy.  You've got the lead in the SVr4 market at the
moment and you've got the money and resources to keep it, *if* you use them.
If you staff up your UNIX support operation so customers don't get pissed off
by infinite hold, *and* keep your prices the lowest in the upper tier, no one
will be able to touch you.  Don't let Microport et al. get ahead of you in
releases and new technology, and try to reverse that creeping corporatitis (the
no-comment-on-unreleased-products policy is a bad sign).

Everybody but Dell:
   Forget your other competition.  Dell is the outfit you have to beat if you
want to lead this market.  And forget "positioning" ---- that means doing
everything they do *better* than they do; providing a more stable, more
feature-rich, better-polished system at a lower price.  That's not going to
be easy, but don't con yourselves that you have a choice.  Meet the ante,
or fold.
   For starters, offer all the free software Dell does --- and *more*.  All it
will cost you is the media, right?  Even if you have to plaster CONTRIBUTED
SOFTWARE, NOT SUPPORTED on it, include perl, elm, bison, gcc, emacs, gdb, mush,
patch, compress, etc on your distribution tapes.  Heck, include some *games*
(SCO includes games with UNIX but not the full ODT product; and makes some
games available for download on their BBS).
   Nethack, empire, zork, stuff like that.  Your engineers use and
play with all this in-house anyhow, yes?  And you're selling to guys
just like your engineers.  They'll love you for it.  Trust me.
   Set up a `sales' address to take product queries if you don't already have
one.

Everybody but Dell and SCO:
   A Dell person warns that the kinds of tweaks to the source made by porting
houses can break X/Open (XPG3) conformance.  Dell and SCO test every build with
VSX (the X/Open-approved XPG3 test suite) and Dell reports that it often finds
places where seemingly innocuous bug fixes cause XPG3 violations.  Other UNIX
vendors would be well advised to do likewise.
   Set up an 800 number for tech support.  Support customers hate spending time
on hold, and they hate it like poison when they have to *pay* for the hold
time.  The more overloaded your support staff is, the more important this
gets.  Verbum sap.

Esix:
   You're *boring*.  You seem to make a decent product, but there's nothing
I've seen about ESIX that'd make me say "I might want to buy ESIX because...".
Position yourselves; pick something like price or support quality or
reliability or add-on features and push it hard.  Warning: if you decide to
push support, *hire more engineers*.  Your rep for following up on support
problems is bad enough that your "unlimited free support" ain't much of a draw;
especially now that your two best support guys have quit.

Esix, MST, UHC:
   Get 800 numbers for product info, too.

MST:
   Set up a support@mst.com alias to your cs address, see above.  What would
that take, a whole five minutes? :-)
   If you don't start planning for 4.0.4 now, you'll get left behind this
spring and early summer whan all the other vendors move to it.
   On present trends, your software prices are cheap enough; you'd probably
get more sales mileage out of pulling down the hardware prices for your
pre-configured systems.

Everybody but MST and Microport:
   Set up a `sales' alias to your info and orders email address.  A universal
convention for this means just one less detail prospective customers need to
remember.

Microport:
   Your complete system is way overpriced relative to what other vendors in the
top tier are selling.  If I were a corporate customer, there is no *way* I
could justify spending the $1K or $2K premium over Dell's price --- not when
Dell has the rep it does for quality and features.  You aren't offering
anything but a crippled copy of JSB Multiview to justify that premium and
that ain't enough.
   There's some evidence that you've got a technical lead on the competition.
Push it; push it *hard*.  You're first off the blocks with 4.0.4; keep that up,
be first out with a stable 4.0.5.  Market yourselves as the leading-edge
outfit, court the hard-core wizards as their natural ally, detail somebody
who's fluent in English as well as C to listen and speak for you on USENET, and
keep the promises you make there.

UHC:
   You've decided to push support; that's good, but follow through by getting
that 800 number.  Don't lose those small-company virtues of candor and
flexibility, trade on them.  Your policy of having all techs clear up to the
product manager take turns on the support lines is a damned good idea, stick
with it.  And I'm sufficiently impressed with what I've heard from your guys
that I think you might be able to fight Microport for the friend-to-wizards
mantle, too.  Maybe you should try.

Everybody except BSDI:
   BSD/386 includes *sources*.  For *everything*.  Be afraid; be very afraid.
In effect, this recruits hundreds of eager hackers as uncompensated development
and support engineers for BSDI.  Don't fool yourselves that the results are
necessarily going to be unfocused, amateur-quality and safe to ignore --- it
sure didn't work that way for gcc or Emacs.  The rest of you will have to work
that much harder and smarter to stay ahead of their game.

BSDI:
   Don't you get complacent either.  The 386BSD distribution is breathing
down *your* neck...
   The most effective things you can do to to seriously compete with SVr4
vendors are: a) emphasize standards conformance --- POSIX, FIPS, XPG3, etc.,
and b) follow through on your support promises.  Just another flaky BSDoid
system isn't really very interesting except to hobbyists, even with sources ---
but if it were proven a reliable cross-development platform it could capture
a lot of hearts and minds among commercial software designers.

Everybody:
   Do something about your product names!  Even the cases that don't appear
to be deliberate deception are very confusing to the customer.  If you're
releasing an enhanced 4.0.3 or 4.0.4 that's what you ought to *call* it.  I
recommend:

	Consensys UNIX Version 1.2	--> Consensys UNIX 4.0.3 revision 1.2
	Dell UNIX Issue 2.1		--> Dell UNIX 4.0.3 revision 2.1
	ESIX System V Release 4.0.4	--> Esix UNIX 4.0.4 revision 4
	MST SVr4 UNIX			--> MST UNIX 4.0.3
	Microport System V/4 version 4	--> Microport UNIX 4.0.4
	UHC Version 3.6			--> UHC UNIX 4.0.3 revision 6

   The fact is, all these idiosyncratic version-numbering systems do you no
good and considerable harm.  At worst, they make it look like you're trying to
pull a scam by deceiving people about the level of the base technology.  At
best, they parade your internal revision number (which conveys no useful
information unless one is an existing customer considering an upgrade already)
and obscure the really important information.  Do your product differentiation
elsewhere, in substance rather than nomenclature; it's not useful here.
   You're *all* badly understaffed in support engineering, and it shows.  Boy
does it show --- in poor followup, long hold times, and user gripes.  The first
outfit to invest enough to offer really first-class quick-response support is
going to eat everyone else's lunch.  Wouldn't you like to be it?


IX. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS AND ENVOI

   Some of the material in this posting was originally assembled by Jason
Levitt <jason@cs.utexas.edu> of "Open Systems Today".  Grateful acknowledgement
is made to him for permission to re-distribute and update this information.

   Many netters sent me email contributing technical information, feedback,
and comment.  Thanks to all.  It's in combinations of individual mission and
collective cooperation like this one that the net really shines, and I'm
grateful to everybody who's worked with me to improve the signal/noise ratio.

   The level of cooperation I've experienced from vendors' program managers,
techies and marketing people since the first issue has generally been
outstanding.  Particular high marks go to Jeremy Chatfield (formerly of Dell,
now of Information Foundation), Kristen Axline at Microport, John Prothro and
Sam Nataros at UHC and Bela Lubkin at SCO, with very honorable mentions to Rob
Kolstad at BSDI.  By cooperating intelligently with this FAQ, they've done a
great job of serving the market and representing their corporate interests.

   So far, I've found that the technical merit of each of these eight products
(insofar as I have data to judge; I haven't actually used any of them yet)
seems to correlate pretty well with the degree of cooperation I've received.  I
wasn't explicitly expecting this result, but I'm not surprised by it either.
--
	Send your feedback to: Eric Raymond = esr@snark.thyrsus.com