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Date:         Tue, 10 Jul 2007 18:42:18 +1000
Reply-To:     d@dkvj.biz
Sender:       "SAS(r) Discussion" <SAS-L@LISTSERV.UGA.EDU>
From:         David Johnson <d@DKVJ.BIZ>
Subject:      Re: SAS dataset on Unix challenge
In-Reply-To:  <1184024742.036672.185050@e9g2000prf.googlegroups.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"

I have a lot more sympathy for sysadmins who frequently get questions from people asking them to provide some other service on the machine that has the potential to open it up to instability or subversion.

I was looking for papers on a subject the other day and came across one by Karsten Self, who we haven't seen on here for a long time. Shame, I think this might have been in his bailiwick.

Kind regards

David

-----Original Message----- From: SAS(r) Discussion [mailto:SAS-L@LISTSERV.UGA.EDU]On Behalf Of David Sent: Tuesday, 10 July 2007 9:46 AM To: SAS-L@LISTSERV.UGA.EDU Subject: Re: SAS dataset on Unix challenge

What version of SAS? On SAS 9 you should be able to open an IOM connection, assuming they haven't firewalled it. (That might also be the problem with SAS/SHARE and ODBC/OLEDB).

If you don't have an NFS or SAMBA server, try HTTP, FTP, Telnet, SSH, or even email. They must have _some_ sort of way of communicating with the Unix box, basically you need to tunnel over that. (That brings back memories of tunneling the zmodem protocol over VT100 to some ancient DEC machines).

(Why does the un-helpfulness of the sysadmins sound so familiar?)


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