Date: Thu, 03 Oct 1996 14:47:33 -0400 From: Chris Shenton <cshenton@it.hq.nasa.gov> To: questions@freefall.freebsd.org Subject: Re: 2.2 -- COMPAQ / PCI Message-ID: <199610031847.SAA19657@wirehead.it.hq.nasa.gov> In-Reply-To: Your message of "Wed, 2 Oct 1996 12:31:07 -0700 (PDT)" References: <199610021931.MAA00443@freefall.freebsd.org>
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Matt Rosenberg <matt@server.wulaw.wustl.edu> said: More problems with COMPAQ and the PCI bus. I tried installing the latest version (2.2-960801SNAP) to try and solve the problem, but on the probe of the PCI bus on my COMPAQ ProLiant 5000 it fails to find any of the PCI devices other than the chipset and also shows the wrong amount of memory. ... and then it goes on to the ISA devices. My current FreeBSD system is in desparate need of upgrade, and I don't want to have to migrate to another flavor of UNIX. Hints? Suggestions? I set up an ISP recently and they had a couple Compaqs they wanted to use; can't remember the model, but the series with everything on the motherboard. Several folks warned me about trying to get Compaq's integrated hardware to work -- no docs, proprietary, all interrupts used, etc. Well, we finally were able to get both of 'em to work, but had to put in our own Adaptec SCSI controller, and ether card, and disable their internal ones. For this, we had to boot off the special Compaq CDROM and tweak things. Then we got hosed because there's some DIP-switch on the motherboard that has to be in one position to allow the CDROM to tell the system config to change, and another to tell it to not allow any more changes. What a hassle. Oh, and we could only get their graphics chip to run X11 at 640x480 cuz it has a paltry 256K or 512K RAM on it... cheap. But after installation (FreeBSD-2.1.5-RELEASE) I did a /usr/X11R6/bin/scanpci and -- wonder of wonders -- it told me there was a Lance Ethernet and NCR SCSI controller in there. These were the built-in devices. If I had known that, I probably could have used them instead of all the nonsense reconfiguring the system to handle my own hardware. I would have tried this but ran out of time on the project :-( I hope this helps. We wasted 32 hours trying to get the first one to run FreeBSD. :-( Never had any where near these problems on generic hardware. PS: We also had a problem with it not finding the right amount of memory (sometimes seeing 48M instead of 64M, or seeing a *huge* amount instead of 64M). I'm sorry but I can't remember what we did to fix this, but it might have had to do with the tweak CDROM thing to tell it how much was really installed. Sorry.
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