Subject: root on sd10a - what??
To: None <port-sun3@NetBSD.ORG>
From: der Mouse <mouse@Collatz.McRCIM.McGill.EDU>
List: port-sun3
Date: 12/20/1995 07:04:26
I'm running NetBSD/sun3 on a -3/150. Recently I got hold of a zip
drive, loaned from a friend specifically to see whether it worked in
this configuration.
It produces boot-time messages like this:
sd0 at scsibus0sd0(si0:5:0): illegal request, data = 00 00 00 00 24 00 00 00 00 00 ff fe 01 02 2d 00 00
sd0: could not mode sense (4); using fictitious geometry
: 96MB, 96 cyl, 64 head, 32 sec, 512 bytes/sec
but happily uses the (hand-crafted) SunOS disk label I put on the disk.
But the stupid thing is brain-dead and insists on being at SCSI ID 5 or
6. Now, half the point of this is to make it bootable, as a crash
recovery disk. So I built a kernel with the hard-wiring of sd0-3,
st0-1, cd0 yanked out, just "sd* at scsibus? target ? lun ?" and
similar for st and cd. Booted it from the zip disk, and...
si0 at vmes0 addr 0xff200000 level 2 vector 0x40
scsibus0 at si0
si0 targ 5 lun 0: <IOMEGA, ZIP 100, N*32> SCSI2 0/direct removable
sd0 at scsibus0sd0(si0:5:0): illegal request, data = 00 00 00 00 24 00 00 00 00 00 ff fe 01 02 2d 00 00
sd0: could not mode sense (4); using fictitious geometry
: 96MB, 96 cyl, 64 head, 32 sec, 512 bytes/sec
vmel0 at mainbus0
rd0 at mainbus0
rd1 at mainbus0
root on sd10a
swap on sd10b
dump on sd10b
panic: cannot mount root
Stopped at _Debugger+0x6: unlk a6
db>
Why did it decide it wanted to put root and swap on sd10, of all
places?? If I boot it with -a, and tell it to use sd0a/sd0b, it works.
The kernel is configured "config netbsd swap generic".
der Mouse
mouse@collatz.mcrcim.mcgill.edu