Subject: Kegs and HFS Path: lobby!newstf02.news.aol.com!portc03.blue.aol.com!newsfeed.cwix.com!207.207.0.27!nntp2.giganews.com!news2.giganews.com.POSTED!not-for-mail Message-ID: <3798BFDB.7E79A05B@texas.net> From: phoenyx Organization: Kandi's Kreations X-Mailer: Mozilla 4.6 [en] (X11; I; Linux 2.2.10 i686) X-Accept-Language: en MIME-Version: 1.0 Newsgroups: comp.sys.apple2 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Lines: 72 NNTP-Posting-Date: Fri, 23 Jul 1999 14:15:08 CDT X-Trace: sv1-hEYAESk+7lqOT7/KgjVcISn/aC8GFwH4kXnxHaIiEFGbDHv7VoVbNDX22oyZRzGvlTf4XAZKjc33Gat!NjvJiSwORw== X-Complaints-To: abuse@GigaNews.Com X-Abuse-Info: Please be sure to forward a copy of ALL headers X-Abuse-Info: Otherwise we will be unable to process your complaint properly Date: Fri, 23 Jul 1999 14:17:47 -0500 Supertimer and I recently had a discussion about emulators. While it's true they are not the real thing at least one comes very close. Kegs on a *nix system. I run Kegs all the time on my Linux PC. The author says it has problems with sound and Linux. While it does have some problems, the sound is still usable. The last hurdle I had was access to an HFS volume. I knew Linux could handle HFS files since I have set up access to an HFS volume on a CD. I have been unable to get Kegs to access the CD by partition as it should. So I thought it might be something with the format. After some thinking I decided to try a read/write volume instead. So with a little trepidation I set out to find the tools I needed. As it turned out there are utilities for HFS volumes on the net. I downloaded them and compiled/installed them. After a little modification of my filesystem setup I was ready to setup the drive. I have my drive setup with 8 partitions for my Linux system. Mainly so I can reinstall with out losing particular software. (Such as my Kegs setup and my Apple disk images.) One of these I had dedicated to the /usr/src directory. I changed the filesystem so this partition was mounted as /hfs and moved the files back to the /usr/src directory where the belonged. I now had an empty partition to work with. You may also use a second hd if you have one, but you will need an empty partition for this to work right. I used the program in the utility set there is a shell program which you use to set up the initial HFS volume. Then you will have to execute another function to setup the partition table, I reccommend a single partition using all available blocks to avoid confusion under Linux. The utilities can mount more but Linux only sees the first partition. This allows you to access the volume directly from Linux with HFS support installed. I have Linux configured with the HFS support as part of the kernel so I don't have to always load the module. After the volume is partitioned you need to use the shell program to format it. this is all fairly quick. I had some problems when I originally set this up since I had two partitions but later changed them. I fixed this by formatting the single partition in the emulator. After the volume is setup edit the fstab file and set the partition type as hfs or Linux will complain. Reboot the system to mount the drive correctly. This is neccessary since you changed the partition type. Now that you're back from rebooting, edit the disk_conf file for kegs and use the example for loading a partition which Kent gives. The partition number on the suggested single drive setup is 1. Run the emulator and use it to format the new volume. This step may not be neccessary but you know it is a IIgs comapatble drive this way. You now have an HFS volume! My next step is to setup the latest version of GNO. The HFS utilities comes with quite a few command line functions but you will probably want to use the X program since it is easier for copying files back and forth. I have been successful with all the files I have tried so far. So Supertimer, chalk up one for the emulators. Hope this info helps someone. Phoenyx