Alpha Microsystems AM-6000 Owner's Manual Page 59

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System Administration Page 5-7
AM-6000 Computer Owner's Manual, Rev. 00
AM318 is the name of the interface driver for the circuit board the terminal is connected
to. There is a corresponding software driver file in the DVR: account called AM318.IDV.
1 is the octal number of the port the terminal is attached to. Each terminal must be
connected to a unique port.
19200 is the baud rate of the terminal.
ALPHA is the name of the terminal driver. ALPHA can be used for most Alpha Micro
terminals, but you may want to see if a more specific driver is available for your terminal.
200,200,200 are buffer sizes, expressed in number of characters. Different situations may
require other buffer sizes, but for now just use 200,200,200.
EDITOR=15 enables the line editor for this terminal. See the
AMOS User's Guide
for
more information on the line editor.
For a more extensive explanation of what each of these items represents, see the
System
Operator's Guide to the System Initialization Command File
.
5. Use the SETJOB statement to link the terminal you defined in the TRMDEF statement with the
job defined in the JOBALC statement. You can include parameters in the SETJOB statement to:
Define how much memory to allocate to a specific job.
Define the specific disk and account you want the specific job to log into each time the
computer boots.
Unlock the terminal’s keyboard (with the VER command).
SETJOB statements must be entered after the last system statements in the .INI file. Here is a
sample:
SETJOB JOB4,TERM2,256K,LOG DEMO,VER
See the
System Operator's Guide to the System Initialization Command File
for information on
SETJOB.
7. Add a WAIT command to give the computer time for the new job to process the above
commands before proceeding with the rest of the instructions in this TEST.INI file.
WAIT JOB4
8. When you have added SETJOB and WAIT statements for each job you're adding to the
computer, you're ready to perform a test reboot, using the procedure described earlier in this
chapter.
Changing User Memory
How much of the computer's total supply of memory is assigned to each job is determined by the
memory parameters in the SETJOB statement (or the MEMORY command). If you decide to add jobs or
alter memory allocations, you should first refer to the
System Operator's Guide
.
To see a display of the current memory allocations on your computer, use the SYSTAT command:
SYSTAT/N
RETURN
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