T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1475.1 | | MTWAIN::MACDONALD | WA1OMM Listening 52.525 | Tue Jun 14 1988 14:42 | 2 |
| It all depends on the type of device you are using -- ST-506 or
SCSI.
|
1475.2 | Just some examples... | VTHRAX::KIP | Explain the Universe and give 3 examples. | Tue Jun 14 1988 15:26 | 6 |
| One or the other or both would be just fine!!! :-)
Trying to get a "feel" for what types of entries are in Mountlists
for different hard drive configurations.
Thanks again...
|
1475.3 | | WJG::GUINEAU | | Tue Jun 14 1988 17:53 | 9 |
|
> Fast File System? If so, would you be kind enough to post it in
Why does the drive interface type matter for FFS? This should be transparent.
The file system talks in logical blocks, right? It's the device specific driver
that handles interface details (or am I missing a key point to mount lists?)
John
|
1475.4 | ...here's my MountList... | LEDS::ACCIARDI | I Blit, therefore I am... | Tue Jun 14 1988 21:41 | 42 |
|
/* C Ltd ST-277 N 32 Meg Hard Disk Drive */
DH0: Device = SCSI.device
FileSystem = l:FastFileSystem
Unit = 1
Flags = 17424434
Surfaces = 6
BlocksPerTrack = 26
Reserved = 2
Interleave = 0
LowCyl = 0 ; HighCyl = 405
Buffers = 9
GlobVec = -1
BufMemType = 0
#
/* C Ltd ST-277 N 32 Meg Hard Disk Drive */
DH1: Device = SCSI.device
Unit = 1
FileSystem = l:FastFileSystem
Flags = 17424434
Surfaces = 6
BlocksPerTrack = 26
Reserved = 2
Interleave = 0
LowCyl = 406 ; HighCyl = 811
Buffers = 9
GlobVec = -1
BufMemType = 0
#
SPEAKER: Handler = L:Speak-Handler
Stacksize = 6000
Priority = 5
GlobVec = -1
#
|
1475.5 | SPEAK: | WJG::GUINEAU | | Wed Jun 15 1988 08:21 | 8 |
|
Ed, Seeing how you have a (insert-greek-letter-here) version of V1.3,
Hows the new SPEAK: device? Does the translator speak english as we all
know it?
Joh
|
1475.6 | | LEDS::ACCIARDI | I Blit, therefore I am... | Wed Jun 15 1988 10:16 | 19 |
|
SPEAKER: is now a physical device. You can speak any text file
quite easily by using the standard AmigaDOG redirection symbol...
'Type >SPEAKER: FILE.TXT'
Maybe it's my imagination, but it does sound quite a bit better
than the old 'SAY' command. The voice still has a foreign accent,
but I think they may have modified the phoenomes or whatever it
is that needed to be modified. My wife can clearly understand every
word spoken, whereas she had trouble under 1.2. She used to use
'SAY' to proofread her documents.
Being an engineer, I'm expected to be illiterate, so I haven't much
need for proofreading.
//
\X/ Ed.
|
1475.7 | No "prep"? | VTHRAX::KIP | Explain the Universe and give 3 examples. | Wed Jun 15 1988 10:56 | 9 |
| Ed ---
Did you have to run "prep" on your C Ltd hard drives? If not, why
not? If so, how can you specify LowCyl = 0 when prep supposedly
uses the first couple of cylinders for the old file system (as I
understand it, anyway :-)
Thanks,
Kip
|
1475.8 | not needed for true SCSI | LEDS::ACCIARDI | I Blit, therefore I am... | Wed Jun 15 1988 11:21 | 5 |
| My Seagate has an imbedded SCSI controller, making it a so-called
'intelligent' drive. Only ST-506 type drives require the small
partition.
Ed.
|
1475.9 | | LEDS::ACCIARDI | I Blit, therefore I am... | Wed Jun 15 1988 11:23 | 8 |
| Sorry, I used a misnomer in .8; my Seagate has an imbedded SCSI
interface, not controller. I use the standard C Ltd SCSI board.
The main difference is that I don't need the OMTI adaptor.
By the way, the model drive I have is ST-277N. In Seagate-ese,
the N standed for imbedded SCSI interface.
Ed.
|
1475.10 | | WJG::GUINEAU | | Wed Jun 15 1988 13:41 | 8 |
|
Actually, drives which have a 50 pin SCSI connector on them, have embedded
SCSI. The interface type is SCSI, but the "controller" is also "embedded" or
Built-in.
John
|
1475.11 | Not a SCSI versus ST-506 Issue | TLE::RMEYERS | Randy Meyers | Wed Jun 15 1988 18:12 | 27 |
| Re: .7
> If so, how can you specify LowCyl = 0 when prep supposedly
> uses the first couple of cylinders for the old file system (as I
> understand it, anyway :-)
Only the Commodore disk controller requires that the first partition
of device 0 (but numbered 1 in the mountlist, sigh!) be used with the
old file system.
The Commodore controller as a "feature" automounts the old file system
on the first partition. I have a suspicion that this feature may have
been part of an early attempt at supporting boot from the hard drive.
Anyway, the old file system restriction only applies if you have the
Commodore controller and then only on the first partition of device
0. So, if you use the Commodore controller with a SCSI disk, and you
set the SCSI disk's id to be drive 1, you can use all of the drive
with the fast file system. Unfortunately, you can not do the same
trick with an ST-506 disk. I think the problem is that you can not
have a ST-506 disk drive 1 without having a ST-506 disk drive 0.
So, the requirement that the slow file system be mounted on the first
partition is not a SCSI versus ST-506 issue, but a Commodore controller
versus somebody else's controller. The issue seems to be a SCSI versus
ST-506 issue because there is a workaround for the Commodore controller
if you use SCSI disks.
|
1475.12 | hard to believe | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Thu Jun 16 1988 10:07 | 19 |
| re: .11
I have a hard time understanding this. Do you mean that the Commodore
controller (A2090) "knows" about the SFS disk format, and automatically
"mounts" the disk without assistance from the operating system?
If this is what you mean, I have a hard time believing it. Various
manufacturers (including IBM and DEC) have been making "smart"
controllers since at least 1964. Many of them have had autoboot,
but none of them, even the smartest, have known anything about the
file system. Autoboot controllers know enough to read the header
block (usually block 0) and find in it a pointer to the primary
boot image, which must be in a set of contiguous blocks. Non-autoboot
controllers (like tha A2090) don't even know that much.
There may be some reason why the first partition of unit 0 has to
be formatted SFS, I don't deny that. I just dispute the reason
for it.
John Sauter
|
1475.13 | BUFMEMTYPE ?? | VTHRAX::KIP | No Dukes. | Wed Jun 29 1988 13:59 | 5 |
| Does anyone know offhand which types of memory (CHIP, FAST, PUBLIC
or whatever) correspond to the numbers you can specify in the
BUFMEMTYPE field?
(Presupposing one does not have access to /exec/memory.h)
|
1475.14 | BufMemType numbers | TLE::RMEYERS | Randy Meyers | Wed Jun 29 1988 21:09 | 11 |
| Re: .13
> Does anyone know offhand which types of memory (CHIP, FAST, PUBLIC
> or whatever) correspond to the numbers you can specify in the
> BUFMEMTYPE field?
BufMemType=5 For fast, public memory
BufMemType=3 For chip, public memory
Buffer memory should always have the public bit set, but current hardware
and software can't tell the difference.
|
1475.15 | NEC DEM-204N mountlist ? | BANZAI::JANOSIK | Orange | Wed Jan 18 1989 10:34 | 8 |
| hi, i would like to know if anyone has a mountlist for an
NEC DEM-204N harddisk around. i got the disk from a friend
with no documentation, so i am not sure how to mount it.
thanks in advance
jj
|
1475.16 | | MTWAIN::MACDONALD | WA1OMM 7.093/145.05/223.58 AX.25 | Wed Jan 18 1989 11:23 | 2 |
| I have a NEC hard disk, but I'm not opening up my case to read the
model number. Is yours a 40 Mbyte? If so, I can give you the info.
|
1475.17 | it's a 20MB | BANZAI::JANOSIK | Orange | Wed Jan 18 1989 15:23 | 6 |
| no, unfortunatley, i was told it is a 20MB.
thanks
jj
|