Subject: Re: How to use CD-ROMs with SBC kernel
To: Frederick Bruckman <fb@enteract.com>
From: Leonard C. <leonardc9@usa.net>
List: port-mac68k
Date: 02/25/1999 20:32:23
>Most drives have a jumper to disable paritiy generation. You could
>probably get away with that on the CD drives. On the subject of jumpers,
>no more than three drives on a chain are supposed to supply term power.
>The only reason you supply term power from any drive is so that the active
>terminator will stay "active" until the drive is fully powered down--since
>the CD's are read only, it doesn't really matter, so you can disable term
>power on them as well. You might need to download the documentation for
>your drives. You didn't say what the physical configuration was, but those
>errors from id 5 (the end drive?) have me suspecting a termination issue.
I'm trying to get NetBSD running on a MacIIsi with 9 megs of RAM. There's
an internal 40 meg HD, along with 3 Media Vision external CD-ROM drives,
and a 340 meg external HD. The chain goes IIsi -> CDROM -> CDROM -> CDROM
-> external HD and terminated with an active terminator. I don't think
that it's a termination or cabling issue since this setup has worked fine
for me in the MacOS. I've also tried playing with all the permutations of
the non-SCSI-ID selecting DIP switches on the drives, but they don't seem
to have any effect.
The fact that NetBSD properly detects and uses the CD-ROM drives without a
hitch on the standard NCR driver seems to indicate that this may be a
software issue. The only problem is that the standard NCR driver causes
random bus errors. The SBC driver has made the system stable as a rock,
but unfortunately, without detection and access to my CD-ROM drives, it
does me little good.
Any ideas?
Leonard
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