#: 19674 S1/General Interest 02-Feb-94 05:34:59 Sb: #19666-NEW member Fm: Steve Wegert 76703,4255 To: M. Raabe 100327,1526 'fraid I'm not going to be of much help as my interests lie with the 6809 and 68070 chips. But that's not to say others in the forum won't jump in with information. Welcome aboard! *- Steve -* #: 19675 S3/Languages 02-Feb-94 06:39:33 Sb: #19670-Linker Crash #2 Fm: Bill Dickhaus 70325,523 To: Hannu Heikkinen 100315,1011 Hannu, There are people out here, but apparently there aren't many who have used the cross compiler. Is this a Microware product? Have you tried Microware product support? They don't frequent this forum, or CompuServe, for that matter, so they probably won't respond here. One thing that you might try, which would help narrow the problem down a little, is to merge some of those .R files together. If the problem is with too many files, this would be a workaround. Not knowing how large these .R files are, the problem could also be that one of the .R files is too large or that the combination of all the .R files is too large for the linker to keep track of. You might also check to make sure that one of the .R files didn't get corrupted somehow. -Bill- #: 19677 S7/Telecommunications 02-Feb-94 11:36:56 Sb: #19672-Novell Client for OS9 Fm: Gerhard Schumacher 100331,1572 To: Pete Lyall 76703,4230 Don't know why a NFS solution should be cleaner ... NeWLink uses a server NLM in the Novell Server just as Novell itself for the Mac clients. At the OS-9 systems, NeWLink needs much less resources than NFS/TCPIP and runs much faster (>450 kBytes netto with new machines!). Besides, it supports the most of the common RBF utilites (dsave, dir, fsave ....). Thus, NeWLink makes access to the Novell Netware quite transparent and effective. You are right, NFS is interesting in multi-platform environments, but for pure OS-9/Novell systems, NeWLink is a good choice. Press !>