T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
257.1 | need some more information | LEDDEV::DHATI | | Thu Mar 20 1997 16:56 | 9 |
| The command to change the settings is
>>> t tc0 setid f f
What OS are you booting up to? VMS will see all
the disks automatically but in unix you need to add
them
- sridhar.
|
257.2 | | NABETH::alan | Dr. File System's Home for Wayward Inodes. | Thu Mar 20 1997 20:36 | 14 |
| The need to update the configuration file on Digital UNIX
to include new disks depends on the version and what features
you expect the operating system to offer. If the CAM driver
has a clue that the controller exists, it will find all the
disks and has for years. On some versions, I've noticed that
the system disk is special and needs a clue from the configuration
file, but I think this was changed around V3.2. The ability
of iostat to get performance statistics for disks depended
on entries in the configuration file on some versions, but
in V4.0 you don't need to offer it a clue with non-zero LUNs
of an HSZ.
For modern versions all you need are entries for the controllers;
the devices will take care of themselves.
|
257.3 | it's VMS | NETRIX::"[email protected]" | jan Thomsen | Fri Mar 21 1997 02:46 | 15 |
| Hello!
As I wrote in my opening topic, this system is running VMS and to my
experience
VMS can not see any disks on the PMACZ-AA if one can not see the disks from
the
console command ">>> t tc0 cnfg". On the system where I had a problem VMS was
stuck in mounting disks sitting on the turbo-channel scsi's.
And then if the hardware cannot see any devices how is the OS able to see
it???
But thanks for the replies so forth.
Regards
Jan Thomsen
[Posted by WWW Notes gateway]
|
257.4 | without disks? | CERN::HOBBS | Congrats to the Ignoble Peace Prize winner! (http://www.eecs.harvard.edu/ig_nobel) | Fri Mar 28 1997 04:44 | 9 |
| I've used pizza boxes with PMAZC...
What happens without disks in the box? 1 disk, 2 disks, 3 disks?
Any chance the DIP switches are upside down (you think you have SCSI ID
0,1,2 but it's really 7,6,5)? Setting a disk to the host ID would cause
strange happenings.
-cw
|