hi Albert,

Thing is that I was thinking of a situation when I have data in a Sco
partition, can I bring that disk to a linux box connect it physically and
then mount it so that linux could see the files there in the HTFS ,
executing the binaries are different proposition and NFS mount is not in
question. So in that context I asked if Linux recognises HTFS file
systems.  Please clarify...

Thanks Deep

On Mon, 5 Apr 1999, Albi wrote:

> On Mon, Apr 05, 1999 at 06:30:25PM -0500, Manager wrote:
> > 
> > Is it possible to mount SCO filesys ( HTFS ) in linux ?
> 
> ------------ quote from my (2.x) kernel-source-help:
> ---------------------------
>  Linux Kernel v2.2.5 Configuration
>  
>    System V and Coherent filesystem support 
>    CONFIG_SYSV_FS:                                                         
>                                                                            
>    SCO, Xenix and Coherent are commercial Unix systems for Intel           
>    machines. Saying Y here would allow you to read to and write from       
>    their floppies and hard disk partitions.                                
>                                                                            
>    If you have floppies or hard disk partitions like that, it is likely    
>    that they contain binaries from those other Unix systems; in order      
>    to run these binaries, you will want to install iBCS2 (Intel Binary     
>    Compatibility Standard is a kernel module which lets you run SCO,       
>    Xenix, Wyse, UnixWare, Dell Unix and System V programs under Linux      
>    and is often needed to run commercial software that's only available    
>    for those systems. It's available via FTP (user: anonymous) from        
>    ftp://tsx-11.mit.edu/pub/linux/BETA).                                   
>                                                                            
>    If you only intend to mount files from some other Unix over the         
>    network using NFS, you don't need the System V filesystem support
>    (but you need NFS filesystem support obviously).                        
>                                                                            
>    Note that this option is generally not needed for floppies, since a     
>    good portable way to transport files and directories between unixes     
>    (and even other operating systems) is given by the tar program ("man    
>    tar" or preferably "info tar"). Note also that this option has          
>    nothing whatsoever to do with the option "System V IPC". Read about     
>    the System V filesystem in Documentation/filesystems/sysv-fs.txt.       
>    Saying Y here will enlarge your kernel by about 34 KB.                  
>                                                                            
> ------------ end quote ------------------------- 
> 
> so, that is yes! :)
>                                                                        
> -- 
> greetings, Albert.
> 
> Microsoft is not the answer. Microsoft is the question.
> NO (or Linux) is the answer.
> (Taken from a .signature from someone from the UK, source unknown)
> 

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