Evaluating Assisted Emulation for Legacy Executables

Abstract

Access to many born-digital materials can only be accomplished economically through the use of emulation where contemporaneous software is executed on an emulated ma- chine. For example, many thousands of CD-ROMs have been published containing proprietary software that cannot be reasonably recreated. While emulation is proven technology and is widely used to run both current and obsolete versions of Windows and Unix operating systems, it suffers a fatal flaw as a preservation strategy by requiring future users to be facile with today’s operating systems and software. We have previously advocated “assisted emulation” as a strategy to alleviate this shortcoming. With assisted emulation, a preserved object is stored along with scripts designed to control a legacy software environment and access to the object enabled through a “helper” application. In this pa- per we significantly extend this work by examining, for a large data set, both the cost of creating such scripts and the common problems that these scripts must resolve.

Details

Creators
Swetha Toshniwal; Enrique Areyan; Geoffrey Brown; Kevin Cornelius; Gavin Whelan
Institutions
Date
Keywords
ischool; toronto; canada; emulation; assisted emulation; digital preservation
Publication Type
paper
License
CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 AT
Download
774259 bytes

View This Publication