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Main Board => Discussions => Programming => Topic started by: dkaibjr on March 06, 2020, 02:34:28 PM

Title: Error 107 ProvideX 7.71 on SCO 6D2018
Post by: dkaibjr on March 06, 2020, 02:34:28 PM
This is my first post to this forum.

I have a customer running ProvideX (Ver:7.71/UNIX-SCO) on SCO 6 Definitive 2018.
The OS has >2GB files enabled and there is a file that is used daily that is over 4GB.
Last night while running a price update an error 107 occurred on a file that is near 2GB.
Both files are EFF files.
Is there a way to find out if a ProvideX 7.71 file can go beyond 2GB?

TIA,
Dan Kaib
Title: Re: Error 107 ProvideX 7.71 on SCO 6D2018
Post by: Mike King on March 06, 2020, 03:09:42 PM
ProvideX 7.71 for SCO6 was released a very long time ago and at the time there were some issues with EFF files handling large updates.

Since ProvideX 7.71 is no longer supported (nor do we support SCO) we would suggest you upgrade to PxPlus and probably transition to something like Redhat Linux (or Centos, Oracle Linux) or Debian (Ubuntu). 

The transition to PxPlus will allow you to have files (both VLR and EFF) > 2GB while switching to Linux will likely provide you a faster platform with more options for future development.

As for your question about ProvideX supporting files > 2GB, you indicated that you had a 4GB file already which indicates it does.


Title: Re: Error 107 ProvideX 7.71 on SCO 6D2018
Post by: dkaibjr on March 06, 2020, 04:37:54 PM
The customer is not in a position to get off of SCO6.

Is there something in the FID that indicates if a file can expand to larger than 2GB?

What else may cause an error 107?

Is there a way to resolve the error 107?

Is there a version of ProvideX above 7.71 available for sale that may resolve the EFF issue?

Thanks,
Dan Kaib
Title: Re: Error 107 ProvideX 7.71 on SCO 6D2018
Post by: Mike King on March 06, 2020, 05:00:26 PM
Regarding your questions:


Lastly, you might try converting to a VLR file with larger block sizes to see if the file fits in under 2GB.  This might allow you to continue to run for a while however long term you need to know that we don't support systems running on SCO.