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235 lines
13 KiB
Markdown
235 lines
13 KiB
Markdown
## A2SERVER
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The A2SERVER Odyssey
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A2SERVER has been a multi-year labor of love.
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Way back in 2010, my primary Apple II was a Mac Color Classic with an Apple
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IIe compatibility card.
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One of the things this card could do was emulate something called a
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Workstation Card, which appeared to let Apple II computers access files on a
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Mac file server. This was intriguing; I hadn't imagined it was possible.
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And it was also potentially valuable as a way of providing mass storage for an
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Apple II, with the bonus that other computers could easily access it as a
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means of getting stuff to and from an otherwise isolated machine.
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After some experimenting, I discovered that was exactly what it did, and I
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bought an actual Workstation Card for my IIe, because that would be much, much
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cooler. And it appeared that you could even *boot* the Apple II into ProDOS
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from the network, which blew my mind. Using AppleShare 3.0 on another Mac as a
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host, I made this happen, and there was much rejoicing.
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Then, I got an idea into my head: this is great and everything, but you still
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need an old Mac around. How great would it be if you could just have an
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always-on network drive for an Apple II, with all the storage you might ever
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need, and accessible from other computers on the LAN?
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(It's true that there were Compact Flash storage cards at the time, and I
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actually bought CFFA #16, but these didn't appeal to me quite as much because
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of their relative lack of accessibility on other platforms. I'd need some
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sort of CF extender to get the card outside the machine, then run CiderPress
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in a Windows emulator...)
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It so happens that I had purchased a Western Digital My Book World Edition,
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which was one of the first popular NAS products available. It was basically a
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small Linux computer in a drive enclosure, and it was widely hacked to make it
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do all kinds of tricks, one of which was providing native file sharing for
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Macs.
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This was possible by installing Netatalk, an open-source implentation of AFP
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(AppleShare). I immediately wondered if it would be possible to somehow get my
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IIe to talk to it. So I looked into it, and it appeared that Netatalk running
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on Linux still supported the older AppleTalk networking protocol required by
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an Apple II, and it even supported network boot into ProDOS.
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There was the issue of how to actually interface my Apple II to the network;
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this turned out to be relatively easy, by using an Apple-provide control panel
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for classic Macs called LocalTalk Bridge, which indeed bridged AppleTalk from
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its LocalTalk port (connected to an Apple II) to its Ethernet port (connected
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to my network, which was connected to the NAS). But this was clumsy, so I
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invested in an AsanteTalk, which is a dedicated (if finicky)
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LocalTalk-to-Ethernet bridge.
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What I discovered, after some time, was that a) the version of Linux that
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shipped on that NAS did not include support for AppleTalk networking, and b)
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the easily-installed Netatalk package didn't include the components required
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for network boot, which I absolutely wanted.
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I wasn't terribly Linux-savvy at the time, but I eventually figured out that
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to get network boot support, I would need to download Netatalk and compile it
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myself, from source. Ok. But once I learned that adding AppleTalk support
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overall would require recompiling a kernel for the drive, I kind of put the
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idea aside, figuring I'd bring it to KFest and hack on it with someone there
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who knows what they're doing.
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In the meantime, I decided to see if I could make things work exactly as I
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wanted with a "proper" Linux installation. Ubuntu Linux was well-known for
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its relative ease of use, so I installed that into VMWare Fusion running on my
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(modern) Mac. I installed the Netatalk package, and that worked -- though it
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was still missing the network boot component, and there were other issues like
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password login not working correctly.
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So I had to figure out how to recompile Netatalk to make it do what I needed.
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I managed to figure this out after much effort and studying of posts and
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contributions to comp.sys.apple2, but wasn't able to get it to actually
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netboot to ProDOS.
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So this led me to comp.sys.apple2, and there met two people who turned out to
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be two enormous contributors to A2SERVER: Steven Hirsch, who wrote much of the
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actual network boot support in Netatalk, and Geoff Body, who knows everything
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about the "boot blocks" that get transferred to the Apple IIe or IIgs during
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network startup. Both Steven and Geoff have also helped figure out and work
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around the idiosyncracies of many of the dedicated LocalTalk-to-Ethernet
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bridges, and have been essential contributors to the execution of A2SERVER.
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The initial conversation is chronicled in perpetuity here:
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https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/comp.sys.apple2/b\_TzESci6Kg
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With their help, I finally succeeded in network booting my Apple IIe from my
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Linux virtual machine. The first proto-version of A2SERVER was a step-by-step
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guide to manually set it up, as posted here:
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https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/comp.sys.apple2/lkh4hXqmJbE
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I could have left it at that, but I didn't like it. It wasn't all THAT easy
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for a non-Linux person, network boot relied on Apple software from a "secret
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archive" and hand-hacked binary code from within the guide itself, and the
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final setup was hard-coded to a specific user name. I wanted a version that
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was general-purpose, easy for anyone to install, and which obtained any
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copyrighted software from 100% public, authorized sources.
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And which, in a perfect world, could be configured to netboot from "bare
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metal" -- that is, a bare computer with nothing but Linux would be able to
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boot an Apple IIe or IIgs with no operating system, software, or even any
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drives at all.
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I hadn't forgotten about wanting it to run on a NAS, either, but I figured
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I'd circle back to that, since it was so much easier working in a VM. For the
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time being, what I'd ship would be both a premade VM, and a complete
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installer script for actual Linux installations. And that would be A2SERVER.
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Then it was a matter of locating what I could, from anyone I could, to make it
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work. I discovered that the boot blocks and BASIC.SYSTEM -- the essential
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pieces for netbooting ProDOS 8 -- were ensconced with the GSOS "Disk 7"
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image available from Apple's Older Software downloads page. But that disk
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image was a DiskDoubler self-extracting archive. Fortunately, The Unarchiver
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could uncompress it, and is open-source, and builds on Linux. The disk image
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was actually an HFS disk, which Linux has support for, so I was able to mount
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it and copy the files out.
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Steven contributed a huge fix to the Netatalk source code so ProDOS dates get
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handled correctly. Geoff gave me patches to the Boot Blocks to fix a cleartext
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login bug and allow an on-demand startup option to boot into ProDOS 8 on a
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IIgs.
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Then I had to hack a bunch of stuff together. I wrote mkatinit to create the
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very specific user login files required for netboot; afpsync to simplify
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Netatalk's handling of new shared files introduced from Linux; afptype to
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allow setting the ProDOS (or classic Mac) file type of a file shared by
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Netatalk.
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These tools, plus a properly-compiled-and-configured Netatalk, made it
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possible for a Linux server to entirely download ProDOS 8 and set it up for
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network boot by an Apple II. Nothing had to be done on the Apple II side. Bare
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metal!
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I then shaped my guide into an actual executable script which could be
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downloaded from my web site and executed on any Ubuntu installation. I
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expanded the script to download and install the necessary tools, apply the
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necessary patches, and everything else I felt was needed for click-and-go
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server Apple II server setup, such as optional Windows file sharing (since one
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of the goals was easy file interchange with modern computers).
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And that was kinda that -- almost. I'd conquered the IIe, but the real Mt.
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Everest was bare metal GS/OS netboot. This was much more challenging: it meant
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I'd have to get the files out of the ProDOS-formatted GSOS installer disk
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images, with resource forks intact and made usable by Netatalk. This is what I
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wanted to show off when I introduced A2SERVER at KansasFest 2011.
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There was no off-the-shelf solution for this, so I spent pretty much every
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waking hour in Kansas City furiously creating cppo, which would copy files out
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of a ProDOS disk image. And...I failed. I just ran out of time before my
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presentation.
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So I installed a Network Startup instalation of GS/OS the conventional way --
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using the IIgs installer disks running on a IIgs, with the Netatalk shared
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volume as the target. (The CFFA3000, which was also introduced that same
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KansasFest, was absolutely invaluable for this.)
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And it worked. In my presentation, I was able to network boot Peter
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Neubauer's Apple IIe with nothing but the Workstation Card; and my IIgs with
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nothing but a RAM card.
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Then I came back home. I completed cppo, and it worked, mostly; with that
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done, I then set about writing something to interpret the GS/OS installer
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scripts and cppo the right pieces to the right places. And...it worked too.
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Except that it didn't. It all started up, but the Finder had random
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filenames, the Trash was full when there was nothing in it. It was corrupt.
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Who knows why. I gave up.
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I wasn't satisfied with not being able to start up a IIgs at all if you
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didn't have the installer disks; so I made it netboot into ProDOS 8, from
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where you could use DSK2FILE (which the A2SERVER installer script offers to
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download) to convert the disk images to actual disks, which you could then use
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to make an AppleShare startup floppy, which you could THEN use to mount the
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shared volume and use it as a target for a full Network Startup install. Icky,
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and of possible benefit to no one (really, who doesn't have GS/OS install
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disks and a drive?), but it was some kind of solution. I packaged up the VM,
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put up these web pages, and decided it was Done.
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But the NAS thing itched at me. I wanted to be able to suggest an easily
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obtained product. By now, WD had replaced my NAS with the My Book Live, which
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featured a much faster processor, and was based on Debian Linux, which is what
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Ubuntu is derived from. This was a promising starting point. I figured out how
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to compile an AppleTalk kernel module for it. And then I already had these
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turnkey scripts ready to go, so I hacked, and hacked, and...I couldn't get it
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to work. I'd sometimes get gibberish for volume names, and network boot would
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load the boot blocks, and then never stop loading, filling the Apple II's
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memory with zeroes until it crashed. (My suspicion is that the big-endianness
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of the PowerPC CPU in the newer NAS may have been a factor.) Fixing that would
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have taken me deep into the packetized heart of Netatalk, which is beyond my
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pay grade. I gave up, and decided A2SERVER was Done. Again.
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Until I went to KansasFest 2012, and Eric Rucker showed me something I had
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never heard of: a Raspberry Pi. Somewhere, the gears started turning, and
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months later I checked it out, and saw that its primary operating system
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was...a Debian derivative. Could this be my long-sought-after NAS?
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It was. The install scripts ran with only a little tweaking. I did have to
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compile AppleTalk in the kernel, but eventually I had what I wanted. And it
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was only $35!
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I revisited the corrupted GS/OS installation. I couldn't put my finger on
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what was wrong. But I noticed that the Finder showed a different length on its
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source disk and after copying. So I followed its index blocks, and discovered
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that contained in those were 0000's. ProDOS knew to fill blocks with zeros,
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but cppo was dutifully copying Block 0, the ProDOS boot block, thereby
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corrupting the Finder. I fixed this, and then I HAD IT: Bare metal install
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GS/OS from Linux. Yeah, man.
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And, so, then it was just tweaking and refining and tweaking and refining. The
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big bummer as far as general use goes was that all the common
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LocalTalk-to-Ethernet bridges (Dayna, AsanteTalk, and Farallon) were partially
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or completely inoperable with a IIgs, and the Workstation Card required for a
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IIe is hardly in great abundance. But Geoff Body came up with a fix for the
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Farallon, I came up with a workaround for the AsanteTalk, and Steven Hirsch
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came up with an actual fix for both the AsanteTalk and the Dayna, meaning
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*all* of those bridges are now options for a IIgs owner!
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So this was it: bare IIgs (even without memory card, if you're OK with ProDOS
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8) + Raspberry Pi + readily available bridge = Apple II file server. Yeah!
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And I discovered that with a USB cable or RPi console cable, you could
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actually log in and control it with ProTERM. With Hugh Hood's clever ProTERM
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patch for 115,200 bps on a IIgs, I could actually see my Raspberry Pi start
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up...on my Apple II. I can't explain how joyous this made me.
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And, I wrote ProDOS 8 utilities to switch the IIgs boot mode, which is
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normally only possible under GS/OS.
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I could go on and on, but basically the ideas kept coming, and I think I was
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able I was able to polish most of A2SERVER's rough edges so that it could be
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fun and/or useful for a few people. I hope you enjoy it!
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