SCO Merge User's Guide
About this book
About this book
Table of Contents
This book is for anyone who uses or administers a SCO Merge
system and wants to understand more about how
SCO Merge operates and how it can be customized.
It complements your UNIX
documentation, but it is not meant to be a complete
administrator's guide for the UNIX operating system.
For complete information on using the UNIX
operating system, including comprehensive
descriptions of commands, refer to the
Operating System User's Guide and the
System Administration Guide.
This book covers SCO Merge on both the OpenServer and the UnixWare 7 systems.
You will find the information you need more quickly
if you are familiar with:
Although we try to present information in the
most useful way, you are the ultimate judge of how
well we succeed.
Please let us know
how we can improve this book.
How this book is organized
This book explains how to use the various features of
SCO Merge on your UNIX system.
It contains the following chapters:
-
``About this book''
provides an overview of the contents of this guide
and gives a list of the notational conventions used.
-
Chapter 1, ``Getting started with DOS and Windows'',
shows you how to use
SCO Merge to start and stop a DOS or Windows session.
-
Chapter 2, ``Installing Windows'',
explains how to install and upgrade Microsoft® Windows.
-
Chapter 3, ``Working in the SCO Merge environment'',
describes the default DOS or Windows environment that
SCO Merge makes
available to you, including the ways in which it
differs from a stand-alone DOS or Windows environment.
-
Chapter 4, ``Configuring DOS and Windows sessions'',
shows you how to use the various
SCO Merge tools to change the default environment to suit your needs.
-
Chapter 5, ``SCO Merge resource administration'',
describes how to administer your system's
hardware resources for use with SCO Merge.
-
Chapter 6, ``Using SCO Merge from the command line'',
describes how to run and configure DOS and Windows sessions from the
command line.
-
Chapter 7, ``Mixing the DOS and UNIX'',
describes how to effectively use DOS and the UNIX system together.
-
Appendix A, ``National language support'',
describes SCO Merge features that
support local languages in an environment
shared by the DOS and UNIX operating systems.
-
Appendix B, ``Using remote terminals'',
describes how to use SCO Merge on remote X or remote serial terminals.
-
Appendix C, ``Serial terminal information'',
explains what is needed in a terminfo file so that you
can run DOS on a serial terminal.
-
Appendix D, ``Using Novell NetWare'',
explains how you can access NetWare servers from a SCO Merge session.
-
Appendix E, ``Tips for running and troubleshooting applications'',
contains tips for dealing with specific, known application problems.
Some additional or late-breaking information that did not make it
into the User's Guide may be available in the
Release Note.
Typographical conventions
This publication presents commands, filenames,
keystrokes, and other special elements as shown here:
- Example . . . . . . . . Used for:
-
- lp or lp(C)
-
commands, device drivers, programs, and utilities; the
letter in parentheses indicates the reference manual section
in which the command, driver, program, or utility is documented
- /new/client.list
-
files, directories, and desktops
- root
-
system, network, or user names
- filename
-
placeholders (replace with appropriate name or value)
- <Esc>
-
keyboard keys
Exit program?-
system output (prompts, messages)
- yes or
yes -
user input
- Cancel
-
button names
- Edit
-
menu names
- Copy
-
menu items
- File > Find > Text
-
sequences of menus and menu items
- $HOME
-
environment or shell variables
How can we improve this book?
What did you find particularly helpful in this book?
Are there mistakes in this book?
Could it be organized more usefully?
Did we leave out information you need or
include unnecessary material?
If so, please tell us.
To help us implement your suggestions, include
relevant details, such as book title, section name, page number,
and system component.
We would appreciate information on how to contact you in case we
need additional explanation.
To contact us, use the card at the back of the SCO OpenServer Handbook
or write to us at:
Technical Publications
Attn: CFT
The Santa Cruz Operation, Inc.
PO Box 1900
Santa Cruz, California 95061-9969
USA
or e-mail us at:
techpubs@sco.com or
...
uunet!sco!techpubs
Thank you.
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