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Date:      Mon, 08 May 2000 14:15:36 -0700
From:      Doug Wellington <ddw@NSMA.Arizona.EDU>
To:        Mitch Collinsworth <mkc@graphics.cornell.edu>
Cc:        freebsd-scsi@freebsd.org, freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Problems with 36GB SCSI drives... 
Message-ID:  <200005082115.OAA17706@cortex.NSMA.Arizona.EDU>
In-Reply-To: Your message of "Mon, 08 May 2000 16:14:17 -0400." <200005082014.QAA70043@larryboy.graphics.cornell.edu> 

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Previously:
>[NT]
>NO, anything but that!

Yeah...  That's what *I* said...


>I hope you won't feel insulted if I ask if you've made extra certain
>that you don't have 2 devices using the same scsi address.  Not just
>by looking at the switch or jumper settings, but reading through the
>boot messages to make sure they're all registering differently.

No insult at all.  I'm actually hoping it's something really stupid that
I'm doing wrong!  As for the scsi addresses, I set the jumpers myself,
watched as each Adaptec board probed its address range and listed the drives
it found during boot and then checked the logs.  I even scribbled a little
matrix out with the adapters and scsi id numbers and checked each one off...

I originally had the scsi cards in different slots, but I thought there
was an IRQ problem, (you know, the AGP slot shares an IRQ with PCI slot #1
kinda thAng) so I swapped cards around and I don't think that's an issue...

Hmmmm, funny thing is that when I had the 2940 in slot #1, I was able to
get all the way to using vinum and trying the "init" command before it
failed...


>Maybe
>even try disconnecting power from the ones not currently being used to
>see if that gets you through disklabel.

Yeah, I'm down to where I have one external case turned on (with three
drives in it.  The other drives are turned off.  After lunch, I guess I'll
just open that case up and pull the power off of the other two drives.  After
that, I guess I'll have to try putting one of the disks on the internal
SCSI connector...

[Drumming fingers] I'm wondering if it's the motherboard...  Wish I had
another one to test.  (I have tried different 2940U2W boards already.)


>And double-check termination and cabling distance rules.

FWIW, the light on the active terminator is on.  I only have a three foot
cable going from the computer to the external box...


>(Somehow this doesn't sound like the sort of thing NT is going to solve.)

Well, the weird thing is that just for grins, I DID boot up NT once and I
was able to see and format one of the external disks...  That was one of
my first attempts to get past that boot up error message, before I started
using the built in (ctrl-A) adaptec formatting routines.  (Since I couldn't
boot from the FreeBSD CD or the internal hard disk, I had to try something
to get rid of the partitions on the disk...)  The problem is that since NT
worked, that makes me wonder if it is the motherboard after all...?

Is there a disk size limit with FreeBSD?  Is 36 GB too big?

SIGH...

Thanks,
-Doug

--
Doug Wellington                         System and Network Administrator
ddw@nsma.arizona.edu          The University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA     


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