I tried installation of A/UX 3.0.1 yesterday on an SE/30. The machine came to me at the weekend with 20MB ram showing up with Mode32 installed in 7.5.3; loathing 7.5.3, I wanted to see if A/UX would work and how fast or slow it would be on an SE/30.
The installation went without a hitch, but it was VERY slow in running. I was surprised to see that AppleShare Pro also installed just fine (I have this for an AWS95). The slow-as-cold-molasses quality, however, meant that I quickly relented and installed 6.0.8 just to see the SE/30 whizzing along as it was meant to do.
Having slept on it, however, I now regret that I didn't leave A/UX there a while longer. Yesterday, only 8MB of ram was recognized under A/UX. I had thought that A/UX overcame the 24-bit limitations of MacII era machines, was puzzled, but did not probe further. Having changed the configuration, I can no longer readily check, but I now wonder if the 8MB limit might have been due to an SE/30 defaulting to 24-bit mode in the A/UX Finder, rather than 32-bit mode (normal on a Quadra or presumably any 32-bit clean machine, and thus what I have previously seen)? In this case, as 8MB is very, very minimal for A/UX, starting it up the wrong way in 24-bit Finder mode might explain the slowness. (I did not get so far as to disable autologin, so I did not get so far as a proper A/UX login window. Ho hum. I should be more patient.)
Would anyone who knows the A/UX lore and so grasps what I am talking about care to comment on my speculations? I could spend another couple of hours doing a reinstallation and then going back and checking, but maybe you have already been there and done that...? Is the experiment worth repeating, or is an SE/30 really almost unusable under A/UX3.0.1?
The installation went without a hitch, but it was VERY slow in running. I was surprised to see that AppleShare Pro also installed just fine (I have this for an AWS95). The slow-as-cold-molasses quality, however, meant that I quickly relented and installed 6.0.8 just to see the SE/30 whizzing along as it was meant to do.
Having slept on it, however, I now regret that I didn't leave A/UX there a while longer. Yesterday, only 8MB of ram was recognized under A/UX. I had thought that A/UX overcame the 24-bit limitations of MacII era machines, was puzzled, but did not probe further. Having changed the configuration, I can no longer readily check, but I now wonder if the 8MB limit might have been due to an SE/30 defaulting to 24-bit mode in the A/UX Finder, rather than 32-bit mode (normal on a Quadra or presumably any 32-bit clean machine, and thus what I have previously seen)? In this case, as 8MB is very, very minimal for A/UX, starting it up the wrong way in 24-bit Finder mode might explain the slowness. (I did not get so far as to disable autologin, so I did not get so far as a proper A/UX login window. Ho hum. I should be more patient.)
Would anyone who knows the A/UX lore and so grasps what I am talking about care to comment on my speculations? I could spend another couple of hours doing a reinstallation and then going back and checking, but maybe you have already been there and done that...? Is the experiment worth repeating, or is an SE/30 really almost unusable under A/UX3.0.1?



