February 11, 2003 At the time of the initial port, I was not aware of a make facility for OpenVMS. So, I would just compile and link the various files by hand: $ cc netperf.c $ cc netlib.c $ cc netsh.c $ cc nettest_bsd.c $ cc netserver.c $ link/exe=netperf netperf.obj,netsh.obj,netlib.obj,nettest_bsd.obj $ link/exe=netserver netserver.obj,netsh.obj,netlib.obj,nettest_bsd.obj Installation for OpenVMS has a few differences from installation under say Unix. There is no inetd for VMS - however, there is the concept of an adding an auxilliary service that seems quite similar. To configure netperf for operation as an auxilliary service, you will need to edit/use the netserver_run.com file and alter the "path" to netserver accordingly. The version that ships is setup for where Rick Jones did his initial porting work and most likely is not apropriate for you :) $ define sys$output sys$sysroot:[netperf]hello_service.log $ define sys$error sys$sysroot:[netperf]hello_service.log $ run sys$sysroot:[netperf]netserver.exe Then it will be necessary to "define" netperf (netserver) as an auxilliary service. This will need to be customized as apropriate for your system $ tcpip set service netserver - _$ /port=12865 - _$ /protocol=tcp - _$ /user=system - _$ /limit=48 - _$ /process_name=netserver - _$ /file=sys$sysroot:[netperf]netserver_run.com And then it is necessary to enable the service: $ tcpip enable service netserver If you want to disable the service, you can issue the command $ tcpip set noservice netserver By default, OpenVMS is case-insensitive with commandlines, and will downshift everything to lower case. This does not interact well with netperf's use of command-line options like "-H" and "-h" with rather different meanings. To workaround that, the following defines are believed to be sufficient. $ define DECC$ARGV_PARSE_STYLE ENABLE $ define DECC$EFS_CASE_PRESERVE ENABLE $ define DECC$POSIX_SEEK_STREAM_FILE ENABLE $ define DECC$EFS_CHARSET ENABLE $ set process /parse_style=extended I do not know if this will be something one can also do for the netserver - presumeably one could put these things in the netserver_run.com file (guessing). At present though I've not tried that, and I'm also not sure that netserver has any upper-case options.