On Mon, Jan 27, 2003 at 12:55:03AM +0100, Mikkel wrote: > Hi > > How do i install Debian on my scsi HD?
It should be straightforward. The installation kernels seem to support most SCSI interface cards, so the installer will recognise your SCSI drive. When you get to "Partition a hard disk" you can choose /dev/sda for your first SCSI drive, /dev/sdb for the second... et voila. The fact that it's SCSI not IDE doesn't matter. If this doesn't work it probably means your SCSI card is not supported by the installation kernel, in which case come back to the list with the model of your SCSI card. If your BIOS can't boot from SCSI disks you'll need an IDE disk to boot from; it won't have to hold very much so any old IDE disk will do. Or you could boot from floppy, or even CD-ROM though I think that would be a pain. By and large Linux supports SCSI disks just as well as IDE, so you shouldn't have a problem. Pigeon -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]