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Date:      Tue, 9 Apr 2002 09:23:11 -0400 (EDT)
From:      Andrew Gallatin <gallatin@cs.duke.edu>
To:        "Craig Burgess" <craig@CheetahUSA.net>
Cc:        "alpha" <FreeBSD-alpha@FreeBSD.ORG>
Subject:   Re: OT: SRM boot options on UW 533au/as 1200
Message-ID:  <15538.60223.515581.842033@grasshopper.cs.duke.edu>
In-Reply-To: <JMEJIDBCLMMNOALABHFFMENPDCAA.craig@CheetahUSA.net>
References:  <JMEJIDBCLMMNOALABHFFMENPDCAA.craig@CheetahUSA.net>

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Make sure the video board is connected to the correct hose (eg, in a
PCI slot on hose 0).


Craig Burgess writes:
 > Strictly speaking, this is not a FreeBSD question because there's
 > no OS on the machine. Also strictly speaking it is an Ulitmate
 > Workstation which, according to everything i can find, is "nearly
 > identical" to the AS1200.
 > 
 > At boot the only thing that I can get to happen is the little LCD
 > window shows that it's testing CPUs and finally that CONSOLE is
 > STARTED. There is **no** indication that the keyboard is polled and
 > there is no response to attempted keyboard input. Nothing at all
 > shows up on a monitor -- there appears to be no video signal.  I
 > swapped video cards and keyboards to no effect. Is is possible that
 > the SRM has been set to boot serial terminal mode? If so, is there
 > a way to restore default or whatever it would take to use
 > keyboard/monitor? (Alternatively, if it can be done in terminal
 > mode, how does one install FreeBSD? What sort of cable gets used
 > connected to what? I am really ignorant here.)

From http://www.freebsd.org/releases/4.5R/hardware-alpha.html:

     If you want to run your Alpha machine without a monitor/graphics card
     just don't connect a keyboard/mouse to the machine. Instead hook up a
     serial terminal[emulator] to serial port #1. The SRM will talk 9600N81
     to you. This can also be really practical for debugging
     purposes. Beware: some/most (?) SRMs will also present you with a
     console prompt at serial port #2. The booting kernel, however, will
     display the boot messages on serial port #1 and will also put the
     console there. This can be extremely confusing.

Basically, you want to get a null modem cable & hook it to another
unix machine.  Then run kermit or tip.  (something like "tip com1" if
your remote host is a FreeBSD host & the null modem cable is connected
to com1 on it).  When you power on the alpha, you should see it send
output to the serial port.

Drew



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