WorldsAway Development Hardware: Difference between revisions

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WorldsAway Development Hardware
WorldsAway Development Hardware
!Machine Name
!Machine Name
!Machine Type
!Machine Purpose
!Machine Purpose
!Notes
!Notes
|-
|altair
|
|
|This may have been the workstation of Jean-Luc Vaillant
|-
|-
|akasha
|akasha
|
|This seems to have been a staging area for new
|This seems to have been a staging area for new
client and server builds of the WorldsAway
client and server builds of the WorldsAway
Line 17: Line 24:
|-
|-
|a-tuin
|a-tuin
|
|The main production server that hosted the dreamscape,
|The main production server that hosted the dreamscape,
hallway/hotel and pride.
hallway/hotel and pride.
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|-
|-
|eridu
|eridu
|
|
|
|Possibly Chris Parry/laotzu's workstation.
|Possibly Chris Parry/laotzu's workstation.
|-
|-
|excelsior
|excelsior
|
|Not sure if this was for WorldsAway,
|Not sure if this was for WorldsAway,
or an internal Fujitsu Software Corporation
or an internal Fujitsu Software Corporation
Line 33: Line 43:
|-
|-
|goblin
|goblin
|
|A pager email gateway.
|A pager email gateway.
|
|
|-
|golf
|Sun SPARCStation
|
|Doug Marshall's workstation. Used for developing the "IVAN" world
management tool. "IVAN" stands for "Interverse Admin Network".
|-
|-
|ishtar
|ishtar
|Potentially a mail server.
|Sun SPARCcenter 2000
|email, home directories, file storage, etc
|Put into production usage on 30th July 1996.
|-
|ivanova
|Sun SPARCStation 20
|
|
|
|-
|-
|kirk
|kirk
|
|A server used by the QA team for testing.
|A server used by the QA team for testing.
|Usually used for QA testing, it was also used as a backup machine
|Usually used for QA testing, it was also used as a backup machine
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|-
|-
|kosh
|kosh
|Sun SPARCStation 20
|
|
|Possibly David Petersons workstation.
|Possibly David Petersons workstation.
Line 57: Line 83:
|
|
|
|
|Replaced by ishtar in July 1996 to perform tasks such
as nameservice, mail transport, backups, network management etc.
|-
|-
|morpheus
|morpheus
|
|A world building machine that went into production in mid 1997.
|A world building machine that went into production in mid 1997.
|
|-
|mundo
|
|
|
|
|-
|-
|mugwump
|mugwump
|
|
|
|Possibly David Eves workstation.
|Possibly David Eves workstation.
Line 69: Line 104:
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|tao
|
|
|Possibly Norman Morses's workstation.
|-
|-
|terra
|terra
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|-
|vishnu
|vishnu
|
|A production server that later became a billing server
|A production server that later became a billing server
in mid 1997.
in mid 1997.
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=== akasha ===
=== akasha ===
[[File:Akasha.png|thumb|John Onusko's workstation, named "akasha"]]
[[File:Akasha.png|thumb|John Onusko's workstation, named "akasha"]]
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Vestibulum ultrices blandit lacinia. Morbi eu tempus est. Vestibulum arcu massa, semper non pharetra sit amet, consectetur vehicula ipsum. Aliquam et purus velit. Etiam vestibulum pulvinar sagittis. Proin aliquam hendrerit eros. Cras diam velit, iaculis ut erat eget, sollicitudin maximus orci. Nullam sit amet pellentesque lorem, sed luctus est. Suspendisse ullamcorper justo id efficitur accumsan.
Akasha was John Onusko's workstation. John was the person who wrote a lot of the server side code for WorldsAway. Akasha was also used to host different client and server builds, as well as some server backups in the earlier days. This will be expanded upon in a future article update.


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==== Configuration ====
==== Configuration ====

Latest revision as of 17:38, 20 November 2023

Development Hardware

This article aims to detail all of the known WorldsAway development servers and workstations. This list may be incomplete, so if you have any information regarding these, please get in touch.

WorldsAway Development Hardware
Machine Name Machine Type Machine Purpose Notes
altair This may have been the workstation of Jean-Luc Vaillant
akasha This seems to have been a staging area for new

client and server builds of the WorldsAway

software.

John Onusko's workstation.
a-tuin The main production server that hosted the dreamscape,

hallway/hotel and pride.

eridu Possibly Chris Parry/laotzu's workstation.
excelsior Not sure if this was for WorldsAway,

or an internal Fujitsu Software Corporation

server.

goblin A pager email gateway.
golf Sun SPARCStation Doug Marshall's workstation. Used for developing the "IVAN" world

management tool. "IVAN" stands for "Interverse Admin Network".

ishtar Sun SPARCcenter 2000 email, home directories, file storage, etc Put into production usage on 30th July 1996.
ivanova Sun SPARCStation 20
kirk A server used by the QA team for testing. Usually used for QA testing, it was also used as a backup machine

if a-tuin was down for more than three hours. This was a red-line

option to be considered in case of catastrophic hardware failure on

a-tuin, not for 'routine' machine lock-ups.

kosh Sun SPARCStation 20 Possibly David Petersons workstation.
loki Replaced by ishtar in July 1996 to perform tasks such

as nameservice, mail transport, backups, network management etc.

morpheus A world building machine that went into production in mid 1997.
mundo
mugwump Possibly David Eves workstation.
snoopy
tao Possibly Norman Morses's workstation.
terra
vishnu A production server that later became a billing server

in mid 1997.

akasha

John Onusko's workstation, named "akasha"

Akasha was John Onusko's workstation. John was the person who wrote a lot of the server side code for WorldsAway. Akasha was also used to host different client and server builds, as well as some server backups in the earlier days. This will be expanded upon in a future article update.


Configuration

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Purpose

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a-tuin

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Configuration

  • 4 processors and room for further expansion (as of October 1996)

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Purpose

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Kirk

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Configuration

  • 2 processors which was the max capacity of the system (as of October 1996)
  • 32GB RAID configuration

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Purpose

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In January 1997, there were three QA WorldsAway servers in place on Kirk.

  • test - For QA test automation and performance analysis only - port 10060
  • qaone - For QA (QA only) - port 10070
  • qatwo - For development and production scripting - port 10080

Kosh

Configuration

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Purpose

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