vBulletin Search Engine Optimization
| |||||||
| Register | FAQ | Members List | Calendar | Search | Today's Posts | Mark Forums Read |
| ||||
| Is an application's use of UNIX Domain Sockets and/or pseudo terminals managed by the SCO 5.0.5 License Manager? I know TCP/IP utilities, such as telnet, rtelnet, ftp, etc, are licensed features, and that license is applied to the system. cj |
| |||
| CJ wrote: > Is an application's use of UNIX Domain Sockets and/or pseudo terminals > managed by the SCO 5.0.5 License Manager? I know TCP/IP utilities, > such as telnet, rtelnet, ftp, etc, are licensed features, and that > license is applied to the system. > > cj This is covered by TA #107560 in the SCO knowledge base. FTP does not use a user license, telnet does because it calls login. Not sure what you mean by rtelnet, rlogin perhaps? The utility itself does not use a license, it does call login which uses a license. Mike |
| ||||
| On Oct 12, 1:37 pm, scoace <m...@tkg.ca> wrote: > CJ wrote: > > Is an application's use of UNIX Domain Sockets and/or pseudo terminals > > managed by the SCO 5.0.5 License Manager? I know TCP/IP utilities, > > such as telnet, rtelnet, ftp, etc, are licensed features, and that > > license is applied to the system. > > > cj > > This is covered by TA #107560 in the SCO knowledge base. FTP does not > use > a user license, telnet does because it calls login. Not sure what you > mean by > rtelnet, rlogin perhaps? The utility itself does not use a license, it > does call > login which uses a license. > > Mike Thanks, Mike. I meant rlogin, not the annex rtelnet command, sorry. |