T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
7353.1 | | TARKIN::LIN | Bill Lin | Thu Feb 13 1997 18:16 | 8 |
| re: ODIXIE::SIMPSONT
What were the autodetected drive settings on the so-called working PCs?
Or were they set to a fixed hard disk type and work with a BIOS overlay
supplied by Maxtor? If the latter, do the same on the DIGITAL PCs. If
not, I have no idea.
/Bill
|
7353.2 | | BSS::PROCTOR_R | Sniffing the floral arrangement | Thu Feb 13 1997 18:47 | 7 |
| re: big disks:
I shudder to think what's going to happen when somebody tries to stuff
a 9.x GB disk into a PC. BIOS meltdown...
Man was never meant to fly! Big disks were never meant for PCs! mumble
mumble mumble...
|
7353.3 | 5.1GB..... ???? Wholly Molly ! | NETRIX::"[email protected]" | Steve Kaniowski | Thu Feb 13 1997 21:08 | 10 |
| Tom,
I'm quite certain that this drive is not supported....
I don't mean it to sound like a way out but, you may just have to tell the
customer
........ sorry...no can do....
Steve
[Posted by WWW Notes gateway]
|
7353.4 | checking further... | ODIXIE::SIMPSONT | PC = world's biggest con job! | Fri Feb 14 1997 09:11 | 17 |
| I'll call the customer today and try to get some additional
information. It's not easy to tell your customer that the DEC PCs that
the won't cut it, when everyone else seemingly can... This could wreak
havoc with the $250K PC order that they are ready to submit March 1st.
We have hundreds of these PCs deployed at dozens of sites world-wide.
This project with large disks is the next phase of their application
development.
re: .-1 Easy for you to say... Maybe you could make that phone call for
me...?
I hate PCs...
Thanks for the responses!
Tom
|
7353.5 | Big disks + DEC PCs | PCBUOA::GKELLEY | | Fri Feb 14 1997 10:21 | 18 |
| Its probably because when the BIOS was released that the largest IDE
drivers were about 2-3GB and the BIOS will only "see" drives of that
size (the other non-digital PCs may have set their parameters to
account for larger drives).
You can open an IPMT case to get the problem into engineering support
and we can see if there are any fixes that can be done to the BIOS to
support larger disks.
If you do open a case, provide as much detailed information on the
customer and configuration (existing drives by make and type) as
possible (ie. how many systems, types of systems, customer
requirements, etc.).
regards,
glen kelley
pcbu support engineering
|
7353.6 | additional info | ODIXIE::SIMPSONT | PC = world's biggest con job! | Mon Feb 17 1997 10:33 | 19 |
| Update:
Both systems seem to Auto Type the disk geometry correctly. The
calculated disk size after the the BIOS has detected the disk geometry
for both drives is 826MB.
4095 is the largest cyl value allowed for the Celebris, 6347 for the
for the Venturis (manually setting configurations). If you try to
enter 6348 cyl for the Venturis, the Setup program locks up...
The Celebris PC won't boot. The Venturis PC will boot, but only sees
3.2gb of the disk (6347 cyl).
Am I going to have the same problem on the Venturis FX 5133???
BTW: How do you open an IPMT case?
Regards,
Tom
|
7353.7 | A | PCBUOA::WHITEC | Parrot_Trooper | Mon Feb 17 1997 10:54 | 6 |
|
From the node, you are in Atlanta/Alpharetta.
The folks at the CSC can help with the IPMT case.
chet
|
7353.8 | reply to .07 | PCBUOA::GKELLEY | | Mon Feb 17 1997 13:56 | 11 |
| I've asked the enigneering folks about this and I should have an answer
sometime this week (Feb 17th). As to the IPMT, have your local MCS
folkd open a call (if this is a customer situation, that should count
as a reason).
As for the Venturis FX, I'll ask. Again, I don't know if they tested
disks that large (what to loan me yours for testing? :>).
regards,
glen
|
7353.9 | IPWHAT... | ODIXIE::SIMPSONT | PC = world's biggest con job! | Mon Feb 17 1997 14:16 | 22 |
| Actually, I was going to ask the customer to loan me their disk for
testing... They have the new disk and the Celebris/Venturis 590s, I
have the Venturis FX in our lab in Orlando FL. My customer is in Fort
Leavenworth KS...
I called the 800 354-9000 number and asked for PC help. They sent me
to another number that had Celebris/Venturis "specialists". (800
554-3333). I asked the specialist about opening a IPMT case and he did
not know what I was talking about... FWIW Ref# C970217-725 His
suggestion was to reformat the disk on the Celebris and see if that
fixes it. Since today is a Government holiday, I have to wait till
tomorrow. It really sounds to me like the BIOS is the problem. I
doubt that reformatting will help, but I'm not too proud to try it.
I'll call the local MCS folks and ask about the IPMT.
Thanks!
Regards,
Tom
|
7353.10 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Feb 17 1997 15:36 | 5 |
| I'm pretty sure that 800-554-3333 gets you to non-Digital people contracted
to provide support, and the word from customers is that they're rather
clueless.
Steve
|
7353.11 | Raising IPMT case | NETRIX::"[email protected]" | Steve Kaniowski | Mon Feb 17 1997 20:28 | 13 |
| Tom,
All you have to do is log a service call with MCS. Explain the situation to
Technical support and they will escalate to Regional Support who in turn raise
an IPMT case. You maybe able to talk to region before this happens so they are
aware of the history and speed up the process. Also, guide them to this notes
conference.
Hope this helps
Steve Kaniowski
Regional support
[Posted by WWW Notes gateway]
|
7353.12 | you're SOOL | ODIXIE::SIMPSONT | PC = world's biggest con job! | Tue Feb 18 1997 13:58 | 19 |
| Well, I escalated the call and the final answer is, sorry - not
supported.
Does anyone know if the problem is strictly a BIOS issue or is there a
problem with the CMD chip set too?
Pretty sad considering that the customer has several 3 year old no-name
486-33 PCs (with AMI BIOS) that support it just fine. Really makes us
look bad... I think it says ALOT about our choice of BIOS vendors.
Now to break the news to my customer...
I REALLY hate PCs...
Thanks for all the help.
Regards,
Tom
|
7353.13 | A change of note venue.. | BSS::PROCTOR_R | Sniffing the floral arrangement | Tue Feb 18 1997 16:17 | 14 |
| > I HATE PCs...
I think we oughta start a note:
"WHY I HATE PCs"
or
"Why is a PC better than your spousal unit or
[gender-specific-label] friend?"
|
7353.14 | Large HDD and BIOS | PCBUOA::GKELLEY | | Wed Feb 19 1997 16:24 | 8 |
| Tom,
I've asked engineering to look at this and see if there is a quick fix.
If there is, I'll let you know.
regards,
glen kelley
|
7353.15 | any help is good! | ODIXIE::SIMPSONT | PC = world's biggest con job! | Wed Feb 19 1997 17:49 | 23 |
| Glenn,
Thanks! I really appreciate the help. Apparently the customer is also
talking to PCBU support directly. I think one reason that the customer
is pushing the issue is because he would like to see if Digital will
"do the right thing" by their customers and provide the necessary support.
This, of course, will influence their future buying decisions.
The customer could easily work around this problem by using an add-in
EIDE adapter (which I have already suggested to them). They are pretty
cheap until you consider that you will have to retrofit 400-500 PCs in
15 states and 3 different countries...
The Disk Manager that comes with the drive allows the disk to be used
with the Venturis PC ok, but apparently not the Celebris. They are trying
to find a solution that is low cost (no cost?) and minimizes their
configuration management problems. They would prefer not to use the
Disk Manager program because it uses memory resources and is one more
piece of software that has to be installed and tracked...
Regards,
Tom
|
7353.16 | | TARKIN::LIN | Bill Lin | Wed Feb 19 1997 18:11 | 23 |
| re: .15 by ODIXIE::SIMPSONT
I'm sure we'll "do the right thing" if we can...
Just a few side comments if _I_ were the customer. _I_ would be
perfectly happy with getting 3.2GB for the time being until I upgraded
the system boxes sometime in the future. Let's face it, 3.2GB is a LOT
of space, and these disks are getting very cheap. What kind of backup
scheme has the customer set up for archiving their valuable data? Or
is the data throw-away? I would be more concerned with that than
temporarily losing a couple of GB (which may or may not be used anytime
soon).
These were straight, original Celebris and Venturis, correct? If my
memory does not fail me, the EIDE controller chips are different
between the two (VLSI Technologies vs. SIS, respectively). I have a
haunting suspicion that bios tweaking will not fix the problem. Still,
I may be jumping the gun. Maybe we'll get lucky and a bios fix will be
found.
Good luck to us all and keep the faith.
/Bill
|
7353.17 | really need the space... | ODIXIE::SIMPSONT | PC = world's biggest con job! | Thu Feb 20 1997 10:08 | 18 |
|
Bill,
Good observations in general, however, in this application the disk is
replacing laser video disks that contain map data. The data does not
change except when they have to load a new map area. The data consumes
more than 3.2GB of disk space, so _they_ aren't satisfied...
The PC application runs perfectly fine on an 8mb, 90mHz pentium,
WFW OS. In fact, it really does not need that much power! The systems
are used for nothing else other than this application The PCs are simply
graphics display devices that display what the MicroVAX tells it to, so
no PC upgrades are anticipated in the near future. These PCs were
"upgrades" from Commodore AMIGA PCs...
Regards,
Tom
|
7353.18 | EIDE FLAW | ODIXIE::SIMPSONT | PC = world's biggest con job! | Mon Feb 24 1997 19:14 | 266 |
| I found an interesting article related to EIDE/big disk/DEC/CMD chip
sets, etc...especially if you are considering purchasing a big EIDE
disk drive for an older system!
This may be the real reason why trying to get BIOS support for big disks
is a problem...
=======================================
PCI EIDE Controller Flaws Discovered
BY ROEDY GREEN
Introduction
There are serious flaws affecting about one-third of all PCI
motherboards. The flaws affect any motherboard or EIDE controller
paddleboard containing the PC-Tech RZ-1000 PCI EIDE controller chip or
the CMD PCIO 640 PCI EIDE controller chip.
The flaws affect motherboards from ASUSTeK, AT&T, DEC, Dell, Gateway,
Intel, Micron, NEC, Zeos and others. Since Intel makes so many of the
motherboards sold under other brand names, the flaws affect many
machines, both 486 and Pentium PCI.
The flaws show up most frequently when you run a true multitasking
operating system such as OS/2 Warp or NT. They also show up under
Windows For WorkGroups in 32-bit mode during tape or floppy backup and
restore. In theory, the flaws could do damage under DOS, DESQview,
Windows and Windows For WorkGroups in 16-bit mode, but so far there
have been no damage reports. Windows-95 contains code to bypass the
flaws.
The RZ-1000 has two flaws. The CMD-640 has those same two flaws, plus
three others. To make matters worse, most motherboard manufacturers
using these two flawed chips connected them up incorrectly. There are
software bypasses for these flaws. However, the Warp fix for the
CMD-640 reduces performance by 50 percent.
What are the symptoms?
When you are using an IDE or EIDE hard disk attached to the EIDE
motherboard port, the flaws subtly corrupt your files by randomly
changing bytes every once in a while. The flaws introduce bugs into EXE
files, subtle errors into your spreadsheets, stray characters into your
word processing documents, changes to the deductions in last year's tax
return files, and random changes to engineering design files.
This corruption happens when you are simultaneously using your EIDE or
IDE hard disk and some other device, most commonly the floppy drive or
mag tape backup. The same sort of problem may occur on reading a CD-ROM
drive attached to an EIDE port.
Unfortunately, correcting the problem just stops further file
corruption. It will not help to clean up the existing damage to your
files. Right now, the focus is on bypassing the flaws. Preventing
further corruption is child's play compared with the nightmare of
trying to track down all the existing random errors in files. Backups,
even from day one, may be corrupt. If you have either of the flawed
chips, you will probably never be able to completely eliminate the
effects of past corruption.
Testing For The Flaws
I wrote two test programs that run under DESQview, Windows, Windows For
WorkGroups, Windows 95, NT and OS/2. EIDEtest verifies that your hard
disk is working properly, and CDtest verifies your CD-ROM. If these
tests fail, it proves you have a serious problem, but not necessarily
that you have the RZ-1000 or CMD-640 chip.
If the tests pass, you still may have a problem since, especially under
DOS, DESQview and Windows, the flaws may only show up rarely. If you
run the tests under Windows 95 they will always pass, even if you have
the defective chip, because the operating system already bypasses the
flaws.
What Can You Do If You Have A Flaw?
Pester the manufacturer. Unfortunately, the EIDE controller chips are
soldered in. The only way to repair a flaw is to replace the whole
motherboard, recycling the socketed chips: the CPU, DRAM and SRAM
cache. It would be very expensive for computer and motherboard
manufacturers to fix a flaw.
Buy a new, unpopulated Triton PCI motherboard and recycle the CPU, DRAM
and SRAM cache chips from the old motherboard.
Run the controller in degraded mode. Some BIOSes have a feature to
disable the EIDE prefetch buffer. Vendors may offer a BIOS upgrade to
allow you to manually disable prefetch. The BIOS may also turn it off
automatically if either of the defective chips is present. This will
bypass both RZ-1000 flaws and two of the five CMD-640 flaws.
Buy a PCI EIDE paddleboard controller, such as the Promise 2300+ or the
BusLogic BT-910, to replace the one on the motherboard. You must
disable the EIDE controller on the motherboard. This fix will waste one
of your precious slots. Be careful. You could be leaping out of the
RZ-1000 frying pan into the CMD-640 fire, since paddleboards often use
the CMD-640.
Buy a SCSI hard disk and CD-ROM, and avoid using the EIDE ports
entirely. Under OS/2 and Linux, SCSI gives better performance, but
costs more. DOS, Windows, Windows For WorkGroups and Windows 95 are
unable to exploit the advanced features of SCSI, but at least avoid the
EIDE flaws when you go to pure SCSI.
Find a software work-around. There are fixes for Warp to bypass all the
flaws in the RZ-1000 and CMD-640. Fixpack 5 and pre-release Fixpack 9
do not bypass the flaws. Now that Intel and IBM have revealed the
technical details, all the operating system writers can patch their
EIDE drivers to bypass the flaws. There are also fixes for NT 3.1 and
3.5.
Get a BIOS upgrade. For DOS, DESQview, and Windows 3.1, to bypass the
flaws you may need a new BIOS: an EPROM chip. If you have a flash BIOS,
you can update it simply by downloading a file. Most BIOSes already
have code to bypass the flaws for DOS, DESQview and Windows. However,
more advanced operating systems bypass the BIOS, so even a smart BIOS
will not protect you. However, the BIOS CMOS settings may allow you to
disable prefetch, which also protects you in even true multitasking
operating systems.
Cut the trace. Cut the trace on the motherboard from the floppy
changeline to the EIDE controller. However, this only bypasses one of
the CMD-640's five flaws and one of the RZ-1000's two flaws.
Whatever method you use to bypass the flaws, retest with EIDEtest and
CDTest afterwards to be sure your fix worked and you caught all the
problems.
Cleaning Up The Mess
Once you have bypassed the flaws, you can start working on the problem
of cleaning up your files.
The first thing to do is to re-install your operating system and all
your application programs. This will replace any damaged EXE and DLL
files.
Catching errors in your data files is more difficult. Keep your eyes
peeled for any improbable spreadsheet results. You may have to hire a
programmer to write you some comb programs to sniff through your
databases, looking for suspicious values.
If you routinely use the verify feature of Lotus Magellan, it can
detect changes to files that should not have changed. This may help you
uncover some of the damage. The flaws are not polite enough to redate
the files they corrupt. :-)
If you have backups from before the time you bought the faulty machine,
you can restore them and re-key everything.
Most people will not be so fortunate. All their backups will also be
corrupt.
Most people with flaws will just have to put up with random errors
dotting their data files ever after.
What Are the Flaws?
IBM confirmed the RZ-100 has two different flaws:
In prefetch mode, multi-sector reads often fail.
The chip erroneously responds to floppy status commands and corrupts
the hard disk or CD-ROM I/O in the process.
IBM confirmed the CMD-640 has five different flaws. It has the same
prefetch problem as the RZ-1000. It has the same floppy status problem
as the RZ-1000. It does not support simultaneous I/O on the primary and
secondary EIDE ports. There is confusion over legacy and PCI mode.
Finally, it does not support 32-bit writes.
Test Programs
When requesting files on the Internet,you must generally use lower
case.
Below are the addresses for Roedy Green's EIDEtest and CDTest programs
for DOS, DESQview, Windows, Windows For WorkGroups, Windows 95, NT,
OS/2 and Warp. By the time you read this newer version, I will likely
have posted newer versions.
ftp://garbo.uwasa.fi/pc/diskutil/
ftp://ftp.cdrom.com/.4/os2/incoming/eidete16.zip
Intel's RZ-1000 chip detect program:
http://www.intel.com/procs/support/rz1000/rztest.exe
Intel's CMD-640 and RZ-1000 chip detect program, coming soon:
http://www.intel.com/procs/support/ctrltest/
IOTest from PowerQuest, the makers of Partition Magic, a Warp test for
the flaws.
http://www.powerquest.com/download/iotest.zip
Fixes
Warp bypass for the RZ-1000 chip flaws:
ftp://service.boulder.ibm.com/ps/products/os2/fixes/v3.0warp/english-us/pj19409/pj19409.zip
Warp bypass for the CMD-640 chip flaws:
ftp://ftpos2.cdrom.com/pub/os2/drivers/cmd640x.zip
Microsoft Windows NT 3.1 ATDISK.SYS fix for the CMD-640 chip:
http://www.microsoft.com/KB/softlib/mslfiles/pciatdsk.exe
Microsoft Windows NT 3.5 fix for the CMD-640 chip:
CMD's BBS at (714) 454-1134.
File 640XNT35.ZIP
Essays
Roedy Green's FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions) a 19-page unabridged
version of this article.
ftp://garbo.uwasa.fi/pc/diskutil/eidete16.zip
ftp://ftp.cdrom.com/.4/os2/incoming/eidete16.zip
PowerQuest essay:
http://www.powerquest.com/
Intel's FAQ
http://www.intel.com/procs/support/rz1000
PC-Tech's essay:
http://www.mei.micron.com/rz1000/rz1000.txt
Catch Pat Duffy's ([email protected]) essays each Sunday in:
comp.os.os2.misc, comp.os.os2.setup.misc, comp.os.os2.setup.storage and
comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.misc
Check out Pat Duffy's Web site at:
http://warp.eecs.berkeley.edu/os2/workbench/work.htm
ftp://ftp.netcom.com/pub/ab/abe/
Roedy Green is a computer consultant who prefers to work on Forth, C++,
Delphi, DOS, OS/2 and Internet Web projects. If you send $5 (US or
Canadian) to cover duplication, postage, and handling, he will send you
a diskette containing the relevant test programs, fixes, Internet
postings and essays. Send email to: [email protected] or discuss this
problem on the Internet newsgroup in: comp.os.os2.bugs.
You can also write via snail mail:
Roedy Green, Canadian Mind Products #601 - 1330 Burrard Street,
Vancouver, BC CANADA V6Z 2B8 (604) 685-8412
|
7353.19 | | TARKIN::LIN | Bill Lin | Tue Feb 25 1997 10:41 | 11 |
| I'm always happy to be proven wrong, especially if BOTH DIGITAL and the
customer will come out ahead. Ignore what I said a couple of replies
back. ;-)
This case is being worked as a helpdesk call and good progress is being
made. I fully expect a bios fix to be made available soon, but don't
wish to jump the gun.
I just wanted people to know that the issue is being seriously worked.
/Bill
|
7353.20 | FDISK PROBLEM? | ODIXIE::SIMPSONT | PC = world's biggest con job! | Thu Apr 17 1997 11:20 | 12 |
| Does anyone know of problems using FDISK on big disks??
My customer is now having difficulty using FDISK on the Maxtor 5.1gb
EIDE disk.
Just wondering if anyone else has had any experience with this
drive...on any PC. Can FDISK handle it or does it need to be tweaked
too?
Regards,
Tom
|
7353.21 | what is the customer trying to do? | PCBUOA::WHITEC | Parrot_Trooper | Thu Apr 17 1997 12:00 | 12 |
|
The max partition size that can be designated through FDISK would be
2 gig, hardware notwithstanding, ie: the controller needs to support
greater than 1 gig partitions.
From NT you can do 4 gig, FAT partitions, but DOS won't recognize it.
Did the customer get any documentation with that disk that explains
the issues?
chet
|
7353.22 | workaround. | PCBUOA::WHITEC | Parrot_Trooper | Thu Apr 17 1997 12:01 | 3 |
| have the customer create several partitions on the drive.
chet
|
7353.23 | trying to partition | ODIXIE::SIMPSONT | PC = world's biggest con job! | Thu Apr 17 1997 18:37 | 23 |
| Thanks for the response.
I believe they are trying to partition the disk into 3 partitions, the
largest being 2gb.
I have to call and find out the details... fyi - Here is his query;
=================
tom;
got both bios upgrades and installed uneventfully.
both machines will now boot, which is a move in the right direction.
however,
we cannot seem to get the vanilla dos utility fdisk to partition the
drives successfully. it seems to recognize that there is a lot of disk
there, but won't create the extended (and logical) partitions that will
use the rest of the disk with dos 6.22
any ideas???
|
7353.24 | does the 2GB limit apply to both primary and extended ? | FIEVEL::FILGATE | Bruce Filgate SHR3-2/W4 237-6452 | Sat Apr 19 1997 17:44 | 4 |
| Before fat32 I was never able to use more than 4 GB drives, 2GB in
the primary partition, then 2 GB more in the extended.
Bruce
|
7353.25 | what type of system? | PCBUOA::GKELLEY | | Fri Apr 25 1997 16:14 | 4 |
| What type of system are these disks attached to? Some of the older PCs
did not have BIOS setup to recognize disks larger than 2.5GB.
glen
|
7353.26 | Celebris and Venturis 590s | ODIXIE::SIMPSONT | PC = world's biggest con job! | Mon Apr 28 1997 11:03 | 11 |
| You are correct these systems did not support big disks...
A BIOS update has been done for the Venturis and Celebris PCs so that
they will accomodate the Maxtor 5.1GB disks. The customer is trying to
test this and is running into problems using FDISK. The goal is to set
up 2 - 2.1gb partitions and one additional that uses the remaining
space. Actually, the smaller partition will be the system partition,
the 2 bigger ones are for data.
Regards,
Tom
|
7353.27 | Maxtor 5.1GB FDISK problems | PCBUOA::GKELLEY | | Thu May 01 1997 14:31 | 5 |
| I believe that there is a problem with the Maxtor 5.1GB drives and
FDISK. There is something on the Maxtor web page that explains how to
make it work.
glen
|
7353.28 | thanks | ODIXIE::SIMPSONT | PC = world's biggest con job! | Fri May 02 1997 10:49 | 4 |
| Thanks! I'll check it out.
Regards,
Tom
|
7353.29 | fix for matrox 5.1gb disk | PCBUOA::GKELLEY | | Thu May 08 1997 11:48 | 20 |
| here are the instructions for fixing the Maxtor 5.1GB disks to work
with the new BIOS:
These are the steps for setting up a >4.2GB drive (this is for people
who don't want to use a disk manager...like Ontrack).
This works in conjunction with the BIOS.
1. Autotype the drive in CMOS setup.
2. Manually adjust the number of heads from 16 to 15.
3. Multiply the number of cylinders by 16/15 (rounded down to whole
number). Since 16/15 is 1.06667, the simplest way to multiply
by 16/15 would be to multiply by 1.06667 (and then round down to
whole number).
4. Adjust the number of cylinders to this larger amount.
5. Write down these adjusted values for cylinders, heads and sectors.
6. Save changes to CMOS, partition and format the drive.
regards,
glen
|
7353.30 | ok-thanks! | ODIXIE::SIMPSONT | PC = world's biggest con job! | Thu May 08 1997 15:48 | 5 |
| Thanks! I'll make sure my customer gets this info.
Regards,
Tom
|