On Friday 12 January 2007 10:56, Jo Rhett wrote: > John Baldwin wrote: > > A BIOS driver number is the number you pass to the BIOS to access a drive. > > Typically drive 0x0 is a floppy drive and hard drives start at 0x80. > > Usually the SCSI BIOS will list the BIOS driver number during the POST > > messages and it will look like 80, 81, etc. There is no standard way > > as it is at the BIOS' discretion. > > How do I determine this? It doesn't list them during boot.
To some extent you are at the mercy of your BIOS writers, yes it sucks, and this why I like things like EFI and OpenFirmware over BIOS. > Say I boot off the CD, is there any commands I can use to determine what > the BIOS numbers are? They are da0 and da1 to freebsd. You can try using 'lsdev' in the loader from the CD. If a disk is called A: in the loader printfs it's drive 0, if it's C: it's drive 0x80, D: drive 0x81 (the drive letters may only be mentinoed in the printfs at teh start of the loader and not in lsdev, can't recall). > > To answer your question: you need to first make sure your SCSI BIOS is > > registering your second disk with the BIOS. Assuming it's mapped as > > drive 81, you can then use '1:da(1,a)'. If it shows up as drive 82, then > > use 2:da(1,a)', etc. > > How does one do so? It would have to be in your SCSI adapter's BIOS. They tend to have a BIOS setup you can enter during boot before the OS loads and you would have to poke around in there. -- John Baldwin _______________________________________________ [email protected] mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-stable To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
