Not that I know of, but I’d try:
sim> ATT XQ NAT:TCP=2023:10.0.2.10:23
and then on your host(kindle) do:
$ telnet localhost 2023
Or
$ telnet your-host-ip 2023
Clearly you’d need to be running a telnet daemon on the OS inside the simulator…
- Mark
From: Henry Bent [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, April 1, 2016 2:02 PM
To: Mark Pizzolato <[email protected]>
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Simh] SIMH VAX on a Kindle
Doesn't seem to work:
NAT args:
NAT network setup:
gateway
=10.0.2.2/24(255.255.255.0)<http://10.0.2.2/24(255.255.255.0)>
DNS =10.0.2.3
dhcp_start =10.0.2.15
Protocol[State] FD Source Address Port Dest. Address Port RecvQ SendQ
Eth: opened OS device nat:
...
4.2 BSD UNIX #1: Wed Jul 13 10:48:29 PDT 1983
...
virtua# ifconfig de0 10.0.2.10
virtua# ifconfig de0 -trailers
virtua# route add default 10.0.2.2 0
add 0.0.0: gateway 10.0.2.2, flags 1
myname# ftp 192.168.1.63<ftp://ftp%20192.168.1.63>
ftp: connect: Connection timed out
ftp> quit
myname# ftp 199.233.217.201<ftp://ftp%20199.233.217.201>
ftp: connect: Connection timed out
ftp>
It can't talk to my internal network or the outside world. What's the next
step? Is there a way to force NAT to use a specific interface on the host?
-Henry
On 1 April 2016 at 16:10, Mark Pizzolato
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
I'm surprised that the NAT(SLiRP) connectivity isn't useful here.
Meanwhile, a while back it was no problem to build the current codebase with
the ADK. I haven't tried in a few years, but there it s no reason it shouldn't
still work.
On 1 April 2016 at 15:54, Ray Jewhurst
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
I used to use the SIMH for the Android (which cost me about $13) but now that I
have Lollipop. It doesn't work anymore. I know I could hack my tablet but
it's connected through a Cell service provider so I'd rather not. I know the
terminal I used Better Terminal Emulator Pro which was required for the port.
On Fri, Apr 1, 2016 at 3:48 PM, Henry Bent
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
I ended up with a spare Kindle Touch and didn't need an ebook reader, so I
decided it might make a nice platform for SIMH. After jailbreaking and rooting
the Kindle, it's just Linux (and X11 for the Kindle interface) so
cross-compiling SIMH was easy. Networking over wifi obviously doesn't work (as
recently discussed here) but networking over USB does, so it's tethered to a
server for connection sharing. The performance is pretty good for such a small
device. It's about equivalent to a real VAX 4000/200, so approximately 5 VUP.
Certainly more than fast enough for 4.2BSD on a simulated 11/780! Next step is
to get some sort of console working - right now there's no way that I have
found to display console output on the screen.
-Henry
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Oh, somebody made SIMH a paid app? That's no fun... In theory it should be
easy enough to cross-compile binaries using the Android NDK. I'll look into it
at some point when I have a little bit of time. Of course networking isn't
going to work over wireless, but I suppose there's still plenty to do without
it.
-Henry
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