Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)
Date:      Sun, 22 Jan 2006 02:50:01 -0500 (EST)
From:      "Jeffrey H. Johnson" <CPE1704TKS@bellsouth.net>
To:        FreeBSD-gnats-submit@FreeBSD.org
Cc:        CPE1704TKS@bellsouth.net
Subject:   ports/92138: [NEW PORT] sysutils/cmstape: Read and write an IBM VM/SP CMS dump tape on UNIX
Message-ID:  <20060122075001.4353A39833@offworld.cqasys.com>
Resent-Message-ID: <200601220800.k0M80Gug034886@freefall.freebsd.org>

next in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help

>Number:         92138
>Category:       ports
>Synopsis:       [NEW PORT] sysutils/cmstape: Read and write an IBM VM/SP CMS dump tape on UNIX
>Confidential:   no
>Severity:       non-critical
>Priority:       low
>Responsible:    freebsd-ports-bugs
>State:          open
>Quarter:        
>Keywords:       
>Date-Required:
>Class:          change-request
>Submitter-Id:   current-users
>Arrival-Date:   Sun Jan 22 08:00:15 GMT 2006
>Closed-Date:
>Last-Modified:
>Originator:     Jeffrey H. Johnson
>Release:        FreeBSD 6.0-STABLE i386
>Organization:
>Environment:
System: FreeBSD offworld.cqasys.com 6.0-STABLE FreeBSD 6.0-STABLE #21: Wed Jan 18 22:35:45 EST 2006
>Description:

Add cmstape while I'm at it -- also searched google but it seems 1.1 is
the latest version existing.  Might be useful for hercules emulator users.

-x-

cmstape is a program to read and write IBM CMS "tapedump" tapes on UNIX.

cmstape reads and writes either a tape device or a file that has been
read off a tape by readtape(1).  (That is, a file that contains a 2-byte
VAX order (little-endian) tape block size before each data block).  This 
allows you to get the files off a tape with readtape(1) and transfer 
them over the network to the system where they will actually be extracted.  
You can also do the opposite:  create a tape dump file, transfer it over
the network, and write it to a tape device with writetape(1).

When writing a tape dump under UNIX, file names preceded by -Fnn cause
those files to be written in fixed instead of the default variable for-
mat. If nn is specified, it will be used for the record length, other-
wise 80 is assumed.  Under CMS, this switch is ignored;  the actual
record length and format maintained by the filesystem are used.

-x-

Generated with FreeBSD Port Tools 0.63
>How-To-Repeat:
>Fix:

--- cmstape-1.1.shar begins here ---
# This is a shell archive.  Save it in a file, remove anything before
# this line, and then unpack it by entering "sh file".  Note, it may
# create directories; files and directories will be owned by you and
# have default permissions.
#
# This archive contains:
#
#	cmstape
#	cmstape/files
#	cmstape/files/patch-aa
#	cmstape/Makefile
#	cmstape/distinfo
#	cmstape/pkg-descr
#	cmstape/pkg-plist
#
echo c - cmstape
mkdir -p cmstape > /dev/null 2>&1
echo c - cmstape/files
mkdir -p cmstape/files > /dev/null 2>&1
echo x - cmstape/files/patch-aa
sed 's/^X//' >cmstape/files/patch-aa << 'END-of-cmstape/files/patch-aa'
X*** Makefile.orig	Sun Jan 22 02:37:11 2006
X--- Makefile	Sun Jan 22 02:38:06 2006
X***************
X*** 4,13 ****
X  	$(CC) -o cmstape $(OBJS)
X  cmstape.o:	cmstape.c
X  ebcdic.o:	ebcdic.c
X  
X  install:	cmstape
X! 	install -s cmstape /usr/local
X! 	cp cmstape.1 /usr/man/manl/cmstape.l
X  clean:
X! 	rm -f *.o
X  
X--- 4,13 ----
X  	$(CC) -o cmstape $(OBJS)
X  cmstape.o:	cmstape.c
X  ebcdic.o:	ebcdic.c
X  
X  install:	cmstape
X! 	install -m 0755 -s cmstape ${PREFIX}/bin/cmstape
X! 	install -m 0644 cmstape.1 ${PREFIX}/man/man1/cmstape.1
X  clean:
X! 	rm -f *.o cmstape
X  
END-of-cmstape/files/patch-aa
echo x - cmstape/Makefile
sed 's/^X//' >cmstape/Makefile << 'END-of-cmstape/Makefile'
X# New ports collection makefile for:    cmstape
X# Date created:         22 January 2006
X# Whom:                 Jeffrey H. Johnson <CPE1704TKS@bellsouth.net>
X#
X# $FreeBSD: ports/sysutils/cmstape/Makefile,v 1.00 2006/01/22 02:41:20 trn Exp $
X#
X
XPORTNAME=	cmstape
XPORTVERSION=	1.1
XCATEGORIES=	sysutils
XMASTER_SITES=	ftp://ftp.unicamp.br/pub/unix-c/tapes/ \
X		http://ftp.br.xemacs.org/pub/unix-c/tapes/
XDISTNAME=	cmstape
XEXTRACT_SUFX=	.tar.Z
X
XMAINTAINER=	CPE1704TKS@bellsouth.net
XCOMMENT=	Read and write an IBM VM/SP CMS dump tape on UNIX
X
XALL_TARGET=	${PORTNAME}
XMAN1=		cmstape.1
X
X.include <bsd.port.mk>
END-of-cmstape/Makefile
echo x - cmstape/distinfo
sed 's/^X//' >cmstape/distinfo << 'END-of-cmstape/distinfo'
XSIZE (cmstape.tar.Z) = 20485
XMD5 (cmstape.tar.Z) = 20f9a9bc1f5842fb129a6e138fdf6a4d
XSHA256 (cmstape.tar.Z) = c0c111d4ecd0646f5a8cc1dea82db73c441d98370d39e61705eb6550836d1077
END-of-cmstape/distinfo
echo x - cmstape/pkg-descr
sed 's/^X//' >cmstape/pkg-descr << 'END-of-cmstape/pkg-descr'
Xcmstape is a program to read and write IBM CMS "tapedump" tapes on UNIX.
X
Xcmstape reads and writes either a tape device or a file that has been
Xread off a tape by readtape(1).  (That is, a file that contains a 2-byte
XVAX order (little-endian) tape block size before each data block).  This 
Xallows you to get the files off a tape with readtape(1) and transfer 
Xthem over the network to the system where they will actually be extracted.  
XYou can also do the opposite:  create a tape dump file, transfer it over
Xthe network, and write it to a tape device with writetape(1).
X
XWhen writing a tape dump under UNIX, file names preceded by -Fnn cause
Xthose files to be written in fixed instead of the default variable for-
Xmat. If nn is specified, it will be used for the record length, other-
Xwise 80 is assumed.  Under CMS, this switch is ignored;  the actual
Xrecord length and format maintained by the filesystem are used.
END-of-cmstape/pkg-descr
echo x - cmstape/pkg-plist
sed 's/^X//' >cmstape/pkg-plist << 'END-of-cmstape/pkg-plist'
Xbin/cmstape
END-of-cmstape/pkg-plist
exit
--- cmstape-1.1.shar ends here ---

>Release-Note:
>Audit-Trail:
>Unformatted:



Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?20060122075001.4353A39833>