> On Oct 9, 2019, at 4:24 PM, Peter Allan <petermal...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> While I have been playing with running VMS on simulated VAXen, and RT-11 and 
> RSX-11M(+) on simulated PDP11s for many years, I have never tried RSTS on a 
> PDP11 - until now.
> 
> I have found installation tapes on rsts.org, but I also have a pre-built 
> system that I downloaded in January 2018 that I was hoping to start with. I 
> can't recall where I got it from.
> 
> The file name that I downloaded is RSTS_V10.1.zip and the contents of the zip 
> file are:
>   RQDiskV10_1.DSK
>   rsts_1193.ini
> 
> ...
> 
> Also, does anyone know how to get into a RSTS system when you have forgotten 
> the system password? Is this even possible? I know how to do it on VMS, but 
> RSTS is completely new to me.

Boot the system and start the OS.  Sufficiently recent versions will prompt 
"Proceed with system startup?".  Answer NO.  You'll be dropped into the DCL 
prompt, and you're logged in as user [1,2] with all privileges.  You can now 
change the passwords to be whatever you want.  Use the "set password" command 
to change the [1,2] password, or supply the account id -- like [42,17] as the 
argument on that command to set some other account's password.

No, you can't read the passwords, they are hashed.

For older versions (V8 and before) the story is different.  There the passwords 
ARE readable.  Older versions don't have a "Proceed" prompt, they typically go 
right into the startup sequence without asking, after you do the "START" 
operation in INIT.  But it works by simulating keyboard input to the console 
terminal, and you can disrupt that by leaning on the control-C key during the 
process.  It may take a few tries.

Once you're in, RUN $MONEY and in the dialog, tell it you want passwords 
printed.

Curiously, those old systems don't have a password change utility, though there 
does exist a syscall to perform that operation.

I should add support for these things to my "FLX" utility (a tool for 
manipulating RSTS disk images) but right now that isn't provided.

        paul



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