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- Test Instructions
- 1. Boot to DOS.
- 2. Execute 2000.EXE
- 3. Read the results on your monitor.
-
- If YMark2000 should recommend a manual reboot test, perform the following
- steps:
-
- 1. Create a DOS boot diskette and use it to boot the system you want to test.
- Be sure you are using DOS version 3.2 or higher.
- 2. Set the date into the Year 2000 using the DATE command and reboot the
- system. LEAVE THE BOOT DISKETTE IN THE DISKETTE DRIVE.
- 3. Check the date after the boot. If it is the same as the date set in
- step 2 then you will need to set the date one time only once.
- 4. Be sure to restore the computer's date to today's date!
-
-
- NSTL's Y2K test program, YMARK2000, performs the following tests:
-
- · Verify MC146818 RTC compatibility. This test ensures that the date
- and time indices are compatible to the MC146818 and the data is in
- packed BCD format. Some non-DOS based operating systems, like Unix,
- do not use the BIOS but use drivers to access the clock directly.
- This test ensures that the clock is a Motorola MC146818 compatible
- chip. If the chip is not compatible, then these "other" operating
- systems or programs that read the clock directly may fail.
-
- · Verify real-time progression from December 31st, 1999 to January 1st,
- 2000. If real-time support fails, then the ability to set the date
- manually is checked.
-
- · Verify recognition and support of the 2000 leap year.
-
- NSTL considered including a power cycle test to confirm the retention
- of century information. Although conceivable, it is highly unlikely
- that a BIOS reporting a correct century in real-time will fail after
- a power cycle. Nonetheless, a reboot test is an important part of the
- total Year 2000 test process.
-
-
- Batch file support:
-
- YMark2000 returns an error level that can be used in batch files.
- The error levels returned are:
-
- 0 The system is Year 2000 compliant
- 1 The hardware clock is not compatible to the MC146818
- 2 Progression to the next century is not supported
- 3 Progression to the next century is not supported and
- the hardware clock is not compatible to the MC146818
- 6 The year 2000 is not supported
- 7 The year 2000 is not supported and
- the hardware clock is not compatible to the MC146818
- 8 The leap year of 2000 is not supported
- 18 A manual Year 2000 reboot test is required since the system
- is using an Award BIOS.
- 19 BadProgression & BadRTC & Award 4.50G BIOS
- 22 BadY2K & Award 4.50G BIOS
- 23 BadY2K & BadRTC & Award 4.50G BIOS
- 26 BadLeapYear & BadProgression & Award 4.50G BIOS
- 27 BadLeapYear & BadProgression & BadRTC & Award 4.50G BIOS
-
- 255 The program failed to execute. Either the license agreement was not
- accepted, the RTC is not running, or an unknown command line
- parameter was issued.
-
-
- An explanation for the programmers. Error levels are indicated by bit
- fields. Since multiple errors can be detected, the sum of the error
- bits are returned. For example, error level 6 (The Year 2000 is not
- supported) is a combination of BadProgression and BadManualSet (2+4).
-
- struct {
- int BadRTC :1; // 1, The hardware clock is bad
- int BadProgression :1; // 2, Progression to 2000 does not occur
- int BadManualSet :1; // 4, Cannot manually set 2000
- int BadLeapYear :1; // 8, Error in leap year support
- int AwardBIOS :1; // 16, An Award BIOS is in use
- };
-
-
- Overview: The Year 2000
-
- Is your personal computer ready to handle the 21st century? You can't be sure
- unless your system is properly tested. National Software Testing Laboratories,
- a division of The McGraw-Hill Companies, has developed a program that can
- definitively tell whether a personal computer system will handle the transition
- to the next century.
-
- Software and operating systems retrieve the date from the computer. If the
- computer does not support the 21st century, neither will its software.
-
- This program tests the personal computer's ability to support the year
- 2000, not the operating system or software applications. Separate
- testing must be performed on software.
-
- The term "personal computer" in this document refers to any x86 based
- "industry standard" computer that contains a built-in real-time clock.
- "Industry standard" itself refers to IBM compatible or clone. In general,
- this applies to personal computers built since 1985. Operating systems are
- meant to include all flavors of DOS and Microsoft Windows.
-
-
- How the Computer Clock Works
-
- Every personal computer contains two clocks - a built-in hardware clock and
- a virtual clock. The hardware clock (real-time clock) runs whether the
- system is on or off. The virtual clock (system clock) is set to the real-
- time clock when the computer is turned on and exists only while the computer
- is operating. While the computer is up and running, the two clocks run
- independent of each other.
-
- The system clock is a 24 hour timer and has no real concept of days;
- whereas, the real-time clock tracks the time and date. In fact the system
- clock has no concept of traditional hours, minutes, and seconds. It merely
- increments a counter 18.2 times per second. The operating system, which is
- dependent upon the system clock for the time, converts the counter into
- hours, minutes and seconds. As for the date, the operating system, during
- initialization, reads the real-time clock via the BIOS then tracks the date
- independently based on the virtual system clock rolling over midnight.
-
- For some reason, the real-time clocks used in today's personal computers do
- not track centuries - only years, such as '96, are tracked. When the next
- century occurs, the real-time clock merely indicates year '00. It is the
- BIOS's responsibility to track the century and preserve that information in
- the real-time clock's nonvolatile CMOS memory.
-
- The BIOS assumes that the years 1900 through 1979 cannot occur, so when the
- year is within 00 - 79 and the century information is 19, the BIOS should
- set the century information to 20. If the BIOS does not track the century,
- the operating system will be given an invalid year and most likely will
- assume 1980. (Microsoft operating systems do not support dates earlier
- than 1980.)
-
- Caveats
-
- Since the two clocks run independently, the real-time clock can be set to
- any nonsensical value while the system is running and the operating system
- will not notice. Such will occur January 1, 2000 if your system does not
- support the year 2000 and it is left on. As long as the system is running,
- the operating system will correctly support the occurrence of the year 2000.
- Problems will occur, however, when the system is rebooted or powered off
- then on. This is the first caveat -- Setting the date and time just prior
- to the year 2000 and just letting the new year occur is not a valid test.
- The real-time clock may be invalid, but the date according to the operating
- system will be correct. The system must be powered off then on to complete
- this type of test but there is still a catch.
-
- The second caveat may occur when the operating system is used to set the
- date and time. The system clock will always be set by the operating system.
- However, not all operating systems will concurrently set the real-time clock
- along with the system clock. In this scenario, the above methodology may
- cause a system that correctly supports the year 2000 to fail if the operating
- system does not set the real-time clock as well.
-
- Frequently Asked Questions
-
- Q. Is this test program free?
- A. Yes. The program, 2000.EXE, provided by National Software Testing
- Laboratories, a division of the McGraw-Hill Companies, is publicly
- available.
-
- Q. What does YMARK2000 do?
- A. The program tests a personal computer for its ability to support the
- year 2000. The program tests only the BIOS and the real-time clock's
- functionality. Operating systems and applications must be tested
- separately.
-
- Q. A manual test on my PC shows Y2K compliance, but NSTL's test program
- says my system is non-compliant. Why the discrepancy?
- A. A manual test can not examine the real-time clock's ability to rollover
- to the 21st century in real time. If a manual test indicates support
- yet NSTL's test shows otherwise, chances are this is what you are
- experiencing. NSTL's program examines the hardware clock rolling over
- to the next century. A DOS level manual test with system reboot does
- not.
-
- Why is real time support important? For the majority of applications
- it is not important. But for applications that must record the date
- and time accurately, this is very important. The system clock (DOS's
- clock) is notoriously inaccurate and most applications, and certainly
- the operating system, use it. But for accurate time, the hardware clock
- is far better. Network operating systems, voice messaging systems,
- automated schedulers, etc. usually use the hardware clock since they run
- 24hrs a day.
-
- An assumption is made that DOS sets the real-time clock hardware as well
- as the system clock. This is true for later versions of MSDOS and PCDOS.
- It is not true for earlier versions and I don't know off-hand whether
- other DOS "compatible" operating systems set the hardware clock or not.
- Testing the hardware clock is more accurate since the operating system
- must initially obtain its date and time from the hardware anyway.
-
- To avoid uncertainty, NSTL's test bypasses the operating system
- completely and examines the clock interface at the level that DOS, and
- some applications, use. Thus, disclosure of more subtle problems are
- observed.
-
- Operating systems, such as Unix, do not use the BIOS but obtain the date
- directly from the RTC hardware. NSTL's Y2K test makes sure the year in
- the RTC is located at the standard location.
-
- NSTL's Y2K test does not examine DOS's time/date functions. The test
- interfaces solely with BIOS interrupt 0x1A, functions 2, 3, 4 and 5.
-
- The methodology is simple. The RTC date and time is set via the BIOS
- and allowed to roll over to the next day. The date is read via the
- BIOS and is examined and reported. The date and time being displayed by
- the program is what the BIOS is reporting in real time.
-
- The following methodology demonstrates what you are witnessing. It is a
- manual test, but it is a test of the hardware clock.
-
- At the DOS command line, enter "2000 READ". The current date and time
- of the hardware clock is displayed. Set the date and time via DOS prior
- to the next century just as you do in your manual test. Enter
- "2000 READ" at the command line again to view the new date and time.
- Using the F3 key, re-issue the "2000 READ" command repeatedly and watch
- the time and date rollover midnight. I believe you'll find that the
- date goes to 1/1/1900. Power cycle the system. Once back at DOS, enter
- the "2000 READ" command again and you'll find that the date is now
- 1/1/2000.
-
- It is NSTL's position that a manual Y2K test is inadequate for this
- reason.
-
- Although NSTL may be biased, our Y2K program has a very strong track
- record. We know it to have been run on hundreds of PCs with accurate
- results. The Canadian government along with many major corporations
- currently use it for testing personal computers.
-
- Q. My computer does not support the year 2000, what can I do?
- A. Contact the system's manufacturer for a BIOS upgrade. (It is the BIOS
- that is responsible for supporting the next century.) If an upgrade is
- not available, the next best solution is to replace the system with one
- that does support the 21st century but that is expensive.
-
- Your system may maintain the new century if you set the date
- manually. Do a manual year 2000 test by setting the date to
- 1/1/2000 and rebooting the system. If DOS returns 1/1/2000, then
- you will need to manually set the date only once when the next
- century comes.
-
- It is possible to install special programs that will fix the problem,
- but that program must be executed every time the computer is booted.
- Unfortunately, the program will always be susceptible to unsuspecting
- persons believing it was not needed and thus removing the program. If
- supporting the 21st century is a must, this solution is not desirable.
-
- You can manually set the date every time you turn on the system or have
- the computer automatically retrieve the date from a network. You're
- human and most networks seem to exhibit human traits too; thus, you can
- forget, accidentally enter the wrong date, are unable to connect to the
- network, the network is down, etc....
-
- Q. Does Windows 95 correct the year 2000 problem on systems that fail
- this test.
- A. Not really. Windows 95 itself does. But Windows 95 is based on
- DOS and the DOS itself does not. Thus, the problem is most likely to
- affect DOS based applications that must run in dedicated DOS sessions.
-
- Q. Does Windows NT 4.0 correct the year 2000 problem on systems that
- fail this test.
- A. Yes, but only within the NT operating system. If other operating
- systems are run on the same system, the problem may still exist.
-
- Q. Can the failure to support the 21st century be corrected via a software
- patch?
- A. Not reliably. In order to correct this problem, the patch software must
- be loaded and executed everytime the computer is started and before date
- sensitive applications are run. Unfortunately, device drivers and TSRs
- are loaded after the operating system and can easily be bypassed. Also,
- the patch software must be loaded everytime the system is booted for the
- life of the computer which could extend well into the next century.
- Unsuspecting individuals, not knowing what the patch software is, could
- easily remove the patch software from CONFIG.SYS or AUTOEXEC.BAT files.
-
- Q. Does NSTL have any other Y2K services?
- A. Yes. NSTL has a Year 2000 System Compliance Program. Using YMARK 2000,
- NSTL will determine if a system is Year 2000 compliant. Systems meeting
- test standards will receive the NSTL Tested Year 2000 System Compliant
- logo. System vendors and marketers can use this seal in advertising,
- packaging, sales materials and other promotional materials. NSTL also
- offers consulting services and can recommend workarounds and solutions
- for software that does not support year 2000.
-
- While NSTL has made YMARK2000 available free of charge, NSTL's other
- services are all fee based. For more information on NSTL's commercial
- testing services e-mail year2000@nstl.com or call 610-941-9600.
-
- Q. What is NSTL?
- A. NSTL, a division of The McGraw-Hill Companies, is the leading,
- independent testing facility for the computer industry. Founded in
- 1983, NSTL pioneered the use of objective, comparative testing of PC and
- LAN hardware and software. NSTL offers custom compatibility,
- certification, performance, usability, BIOS and comparison testing
- services to hardware developers, software publishers, government
- agencies and corporations throughout the world. NSTL also publishes
- Software Digest and PC Digest and conducts testing for 60 business and
- trade publications worldwide.
-
- NSTL does not guarantee accuracy, adequacy or completeness of the services
- provided in connection with this program. NSTL MAKES NO WARRANTIES, EXPRESS
- OR IMPLIED, AS TO RESULTS TO BE OBTAINED BY ANY PERSON OR ENTITY FROM USE OF
- THE CONTENTS OF THIS PROGRAM. NSTL MAKES NO EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
- MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE OF ANY PRODUCT MENTIONED
- IN THIS PROGRAM.
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