Developer Toolbox
Less Than Last (v5.0) CD New Stuff Nexus
The materials listed on this page were new-to-the-toolbox
from the inception of the web-toolbox (v5.0, March, 1995)
up through Friday, May 12, 1995
END OF THE LINE. "New" items listed here were put in
place after release of the last/previous DT CD (v5.0). The next
more-recent-than-this New contents listing resides in the
>1month file. We
continue to wend our way out of the solar system on impulse
power. We have passed the gas giants and are presently
beyond 12 AU. Pluto is at 39.4AU. However as we move
farther away from SOL, its gravity lessens and our velocity
continues to increase. When we pass beyond the confines of
this system at 40 AU and increase our speed to warp 1, we
will begin to activate the full potentials of this
vessel. At that time, the ">1week" and ">1month" links will
begin to manifest their legitimate meaning.
source:
- A sample SCSI kernel-level
DAT driver controls a DAT tape drive and demonstrates how to
communicate with SGI's SCSI controller driver and issue commands to
a target drive and receive data from it.
- Code for the SGI Education Services Open
Inventor class.
- cineswipe,
allows you to record your GL or OpenGL based application's graphics
into a digital movie file (SGI, QuickTime, JPEG) without
touching the application itself. This functionality is exemplified
by a technique for substituting DSO functions in any DSO-based
application.
- DSOsecurity - DSO
Function Authentication.
An example of how to protect DSO function calls from being intercepted
or replaced. An application or licensing code developer can use
DSOauth in their application such that they can protect their DSO
function calls from being intercepted or replaced (eg. preventing
substitution of the gettimeofday call in a license verification
routine) without giving up any of the features of DSOs.
- lmwrap is a
module for porting IrisGL's
lmdef() and
lmbind()
calls to OpenGL.
- 2Dwrap, a
"before-after" porting example for Iris-to-Open-GL 2d primitives.
documents:
Copyright © 1995, Silicon Graphics, Inc.