----- Original Message ----- 
From: "nate" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <debian-user@lists.debian.org>
Sent: Monday, December 31, 2001 7:57 AM
Subject: Re: ADAPTEC 2040U2W PROBLEM


> <quote who="JM Vainio">
> > Hello!
> 
> > scsi bus is being reset for host 0 channel 0.
> > scsi host 0 channel 0 reset (pid17) timed out - trying harder
> > scsi bus is being reset for host 0 channel 0.
> > scsi host 0 abort (pid17) timed out - resetting
> > scsi bus is being reset for host 0 channel 0.
> > (scsi0:0:0:0) device reset, message buffer in use
> 
> > Is anyone here familiar with this kind of issues?
> 
> yep i had that occur on my 2 intel ISP2150 servers.
> the workaround is to tell the driver not to reset
> the card, its a kernel option you type when you
> boot the system at the boot: prompt. navigate through
> the help screens and it will be there, its something
> like
> 
> aic78xxx=no_reset
> 


Well, I found that option and I tried it. The result was that the installer did 
recognize the SCSI bus and every disk connected to it. But after that, the 
installer still went on resetting the bus (despite the fact that I had told the 
driver not to reset). That was to happen after the "partition check" of the 
SCSI disk 0. The installer did recognize the physical capacity and other 
harware capacities of the SCSI0 hard disk (such as the speed: 80.0Mb/s, and so 
on). But then there came the message:


partition check: 
sda:sda1<scsi:abort command due to timeout: pid 19, scsi0  [or something like 
that]


and after that, there was the same old message:


(scsi0:0:15:-1) unexpected busfree, LASTPHASE=0xa0, SEQADDR=0x167
scsi host 0 abort (pid 17) timed out - resetting


And then there were endless repetitions of resetting, just as before.

Now, I tried to boot the installer CD with no SCSI disk connected to the SCSI 
card. In that configuration (the SCSI card only, and the mainboard with IDE 
disks) the installer did proceed. Thus it means that I could probably install 
the SCSI card only, but without installing any SCSI devices. And as you see, 
this is a fatal problem if I am trying to install the operating system with 
some SCSI mass storages, especially if I try to install the system into a SCSI 
hard disk...

As I am not quite familiar with Linux, I have tried to install many different 
Linux distributions into my SCSI partition. I have not managed to install Linux 
Mandrake either, but in the Mandrake case the problem was that the installer 
hanged during the phase when it was time to choose the data security level. The 
strange thing was that even in that case I did manage to install the operating 
system into the IDE partition, but only if there was no SCSI card connected 
into the PCI slot.

In the Debian case, I manage to install the SCSI card itself (and it is to 
admit that that is some progress...:-), but I still do not manage to install 
the operating system if any kind of SCSI devide is present. How to proceed...?


Regards: Janne M. Vainio, Helsinki, Finland





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