Templeton's interface has been designed for compatability between operating system; you do not need to learn a new interface when changing operating systems. The current revision of Templeton is text-only (no graphical user interface). If there is a show of support, then I will create a GUI in future releases.
Note: Hard disk requirements are not listed. The Templeton executable is relatively small. However, the data copied from remote WWW sites may be large and you should probably have between 2 and 50 Megs of disk space for mirroring (depending on your usage).
templeton.exe
becomes templeto.exe
.
Required Files:
templeton.exe
. This file should be
placed in the tcpip/bin
directory.
Templeton.cfg
or
Templeto.cfg
. The file with the system defaults should be placed in
the tcpip/etc
directory.
os2/unix
subdirectory.
Templeton was compiled using:
EMX : revision = 50 EMXIO : revision = 50 EMXLIBC : revision = 50 EMXLIBCM : revision = 50 EMXLIBCS : revision = 50 EMXWRAP : revision = 50Please make sure your libraries are revision 50 or higher, using the
emxrev.cmd
command. Older libraries may cause Templeton to abort.
ANSI.EXE
at the command prompt. To enable the ANSI display,
either run "ANSI.EXE ON
" at the command prompt
or place "DEVICE=ANSI.SYS
" in your config.sys.
ANSI support comes standard with OS/2.
testcfg.sys
device driver. This comes with OS/2 and should
already be installed in your config.sys
file.
termcap.dat
is no longer required by Templeton.
templeton.exe
at the command prompt.
Currently there is no installation script for Templeton. This will be added in later releases.
Required Files:
twin95.exe
. This file should be
placed within a directory in your path.
Templeto.cfg
.
The file with the system defaults should be placed in
the the same directory as the executable.
twin95.exe
at the command prompt.
Under Windows 95, Templeton does not support long file names.
Registration currently is supported for specific machines only,
not IP addresses or subnets.
Release notes:
twin95.exe
may work with Windows NT (untested) but will
probably not work with Windows 3.1 or Win32s.
Not yet released.
Required Files:
tlinux
. This file should be placed
in the /etc/bin
or /etc/local/bin
(or your own favorite BIN)
directory. You may also wish to create a symbolic link from
tlinux
to templeton
.
templeton.cfg
. This file
should exist in the /etc
directory for the system defaults.
.templetonrc
configuration file in their home directories.
Release Notes:
Technically, the hostid of a Linux system is the IP address of the primary network interface. Because this "hostid" may change without notice (moving the computer, installing/removing new interface cards, dynamic IP addresses over PPP, etc.) Templeton must access /dev/mem in order to register a unique host ID. This requirement is only necessary for single host registration, not for registering an IP address or subnet.
To run Templeton, type tlinux
at the command prompt.
Optionally, the executable may be renamed to templeton
.
The Pwd64 executable is called pwd64
in the Linux 1.2.13 distribution.
Required Files:
tsunos
.
For a Solaris-native application, use tsolaris
.
You may also wish to create a symbolic link from
tsunos
(or tsolaris
) to templeton
.
(Release note: tsolaris
is currently unavailable due to a curses bug.)
The executable should be placed
in the /etc/bin
or /etc/local/bin
directory
(or somewhere in your PATH)
templeton.cfg
. This file
should exist in the /etc
directory for the system defaults.
.templetonrc
configuration file in their home directories.
tsunos
at the command prompt. Optionally,
this executable may be renamed to templeton
.
The Pwd64 executable is called pwd64
in the SunOS 4.1.3 distribution.