On Tue, 16 Feb 1999, Kent West wrote: > At 04:02 PM 2/16/1999 -0500, Raymond A. Ingles wrote: > >On Tue, 16 Feb 1999, Kent West wrote:
> >> This is my first experience with SCSI, so I don't know where to begin. > > > > First things first: what's the exact model name and number of the SCSI > >card? You need to make sure it's properly supported by Linux. [...] > Oh well, according to the Ctrl-A setup screen, it's an Adaptec AHA-2940 > Ultra/Ultra W. Fair enough. Those should be supported, but the driver you're using was made without any support from Adaptec and had to be reverse-engineered. It may have some bugs. That being said, have you used these SCSI disks with this adapter before, with DOS or Windows? Adaptecs have a reputation for being very sensitive to cabling issues. If the cables aren't set up just right, they can get flaky. Especially if you're doing Ultra SCSI, you have to make sure that you've got active termination, and it's terminated in the right places. The SCSI-HOWTO is currently unmaintained (something I'm hoping will be remdied soon) but still useful. Take a look at: ftp://sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/docs/HOWTO/unmaintained/SCSI-HOWTO This will give you enough information to make sure that the cables are set up right. After that, you need to look at how the card is set up in its BIOS (the Ctrl-A setup screen) and see if maybe you have an unsupported option enabled or something. Sincerely, Ray Ingles (248) 377-7735 [EMAIL PROTECTED] "Suffering is good for the soul, but it is usually best to wait until the body has no choice in the matter." - Stephen Donaldson