ahhh, yes, acpi does have a problem w/ some systems for some reason.  I had
this EXACT issue w/ one of my scsi systems, took me forever to figure it
out.

Youll just have to take acpi out of the kernel, and all will be well.

kev

->-----Original Message-----
->From: Kevin Gordon [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
->Sent: Wednesday, March 12, 2003 3:01 PM
->To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
->Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
->Subject: [gentoo-user] [Fwd: gentoo-pentium3-1.4-rc3] "acpi=off"
->
->
->Hi Kevin
->Thank you for replying to my email. At present I have compiled the scsi
->card as a module and included it in modules.autoload does work. I also
->tried it compiled in the kernel.
->Either way I am only able to boot the kernel and get access to the scsi
->drive by including a parameter "acpi=off". I do not understand ACPI but
->it certainly fails my scsi drive. However the LiveCD auto detects the
->scsi drive 100%.
->
->Kevin
->
->From: Kevin Gordon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
->To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
->Subject: gentoo-pentium3-1.4-rc3
->Date: 12 Mar 2003 19:15:19 +1300
->
->Hi
->I have found the Live CD 100% ok. It handles my SCSI 100%.
->After installation, when I reboot to my hard drive, before "Gentoo
->Linux; http://www.gentoo.org"; is displayed I get:
->"SCSI subsystem driver Revision: 1.00"
->next with 2.4.20-gentoo-r1:
->"kmod: failed to exec /sbin/modprobe -s -k scsi_hostadapter, errno=2"
->whereas previously on 2.4.19-gentoo-r9:
->"sym53c8xx: at PCI bus 1, device, function 0"
->"sym53c8xx: 53c896 detected with Symbios NVRAM"
->Etc
->Etc
->Any advice would be much appreciated.
->
->Kevin Gordon
->
->
->
->
->
->--
->[EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
->


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