HP OpenVMS Systemsask the wizard |
The Question is: I had heard that TCP/IP services in os versions earlier than v5.5-2 were unstable and unreliable, but many of these problems were fixed in later versions. Is this correct? The Answer is : The OpenVMS Wizard encourages the use of the current releases and the current ECOs of all products, except where specific local requirements prevent this use. As part of the typical software development process, problems that are identified in older releases are typically fixed in later releases. This means that problems that have been encountered in earlier product releases are normally addressed by ECO kits and (more commonly) by new product releases -- there is a limit to the complexity of a problem that can be addressed by an ECO kit. If you choose to use an older product release, you may well spend time and effort resolving problems that have been addressed by more recent product releases. The OpenVMS New Features and Release Notes manuals for releases after V5.5-2, as well as the various ECO kits for OpenVMS and for TCP/IP Services, will provide you with some general information on problems that have been resolved in later product releases. There are other fixes and there are also product enhancements available in later product releases, obviously. OpenVMS and layered products typically provide good upward-compatibility. This means that user-mode code -- and kernel-mode code on OpenVMS VAX V6.0 and later -- is expected to be upward-compatible across OpenVMS upgrades. A need to rebuild user-mode code not expected and not typical. (Assuming the code lacks latent bugs, uses documented interfaces, etc.) The software upgrade process is of course itself not entirely without some risk -- once in a while, a new product release does provide a new bug. The earliest OpenVMS VAX release with Prior Version Support (PVS) is V5.5-2, with the current release (as of this writing in August 2001) being V7.3. Prior Version Support contracts for TCP/IP Services require particular versions for particular OpenVMS releases -- the OpenVMS FAQ has pointers to PVS information.
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