Linux-Hardware Digest #560, Volume #9             Thu, 4 Mar 99 00:13:42 EST

Contents:
  RH5.2 / AudioPCI/ES1370/ES1371/SB128 mixer behaviour? (Markus Wandel)
  Using Linux on a 512K i386 with a 512K flash disk... ("Cameron Stevens")
  Re: Help! My printer won't print at all! (Gary Krupa)
  Re: Hard drive jumper settings (Richard Finney)
  Re: Linux SMP & GX Chipset (Supermicro P6DGU) ("William Taylor")
  DPT Raid Hardware ("Joseph Blackburn")
  E-Machine compatibility? ("John M. Janney")
  Re: help with modem?? ("Lawrence S. Lee")
  Sound card and modem under Red Hat 5.2 ("Miomir G. Radovanovic")
  Video4linux and Matrox MAVEN chips (Eddie)
  Re: HELP - Newbie setting up HP IID printer (James Inouye)
  Re: One Linux "system" bootable on two different machines? (Alex Yung)
  Re: linux and hard disk 10go (TS Stahl)
  Re: How to make the LS-120 (internal) work on linux ? (Pang Chi Chun)
  Re: Need a 16 meg Video card recommendation w/RedHat 5.2 support. ("Mark Swope")
  Re: need backpack CD-ROM advice ("Folcke-Wolfe")
  Re: Driver programming ("Robert J. Hansen")
  Re: Floppy and Cdrom drives problems. (Eric Lee Green)
  Re: liquid-cooling (Allen)
  Re: RedHat install crashes -- "buggy cmd640b" error (Harold Henry)
  i want to make driver for a NIC ([EMAIL PROTECTED])

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Markus Wandel)
Subject: RH5.2 / AudioPCI/ES1370/ES1371/SB128 mixer behaviour?
Date: 3 Mar 1999 14:44:39 GMT

I have a Soundblaster 128 under RH5.2 using the included es1370.o driver
(set up by sndconfig.)  Works well enough but the mixer acts really screwy.

For example, when it first comes up only the left channel works.  When I nudge
the master volume a little it's OK.  There is very strange interplay between 
the mute setting, the microphone gain, the aux output gain, etc.  It's usually
possible to get the settings you want but not in an intuitive way!  Weird!

I use the mixer control that came with KDE but the xmixer that was default with
KDE also acts weird so it's either an incompatibility between the driver and
the sound card, or between the driver and the mixer control panels.

Nobody else has mentioned this even though the SB128/AudioPCI topic comes up
about once a day in the newsgroups.

I've looked at the comments in the newer versions of es1370.c and they don't
mention anything about problems like this.  I can't try it because I don't want
to upgrade to 2.2 at this point.

Comments?

Markus

------------------------------

From: "Cameron Stevens" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Using Linux on a 512K i386 with a 512K flash disk...
Date: Wed, 3 Mar 1999 09:57:15 -0500

I'm trying to get this cool piece of hardware to run Linux. I don't even
know if it's possible (it's a FlashLite 386).

Any ideas?

Cam



------------------------------

Crossposted-To: alt.os.linux,comp.os.linux.misc,comp.os.linux.setup,linux.redhat.misc
From: Gary Krupa <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: Gary Krupa <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Help! My printer won't print at all!
Date: Wed, 3 Mar 1999 07:06:16 -0800


On Tue, 2 Mar 1999, Youngser Park wrote:

> I think it's depend on what kind of BIOS you have, PnP or
> not. Mine is PnP, and it has options "auto", "enable" or
> "disable". In "enable" option, you have a choice of "EPP",
> "Bi-directional", and something else (ECP?). I believe there
> is a problem (or some tricks) in Linux with PnP BIOS PCs, and
> you have to play with it. My laptop has non-PnP BIOS, and
> no problem at all with Linux.
> 
> Hope it helps.
> 
> 
> 

Youngser,

My BIOS has a PNP / PCI feature that allows me to
enable a pnp OS, or disable it. Also, individual
irqs may be pnp-enabled. The default is to disable
the pnp os, which is how I left it. Since I know
that I have an Intel PCI motherboard, this
appeared to be the safest choice. And I haven't
heard about linux becoming a plug and play system.

Does your BIOS have this option? And if it
doesn't, are you also running windows '95 (or
'98)?


Gary Krupa







------------------------------

From: Richard Finney <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.setup
Subject: Re: Hard drive jumper settings
Date: Wed, 3 Mar 1999 10:30:11 -0500

GO TO ...
http://www.mm.mtu.edu/drives/micropolis/new/4221WConfig.html

Man, there are a lot of jumpers on that baby!!
-rfinney


On Wed, 3 Mar 1999, Jack Bowling wrote:

> I wish to install an old Micropolis 4221 scsi hard drive on my kernel 
> 2.0.36 system. There is a row of about 15 double pins on the jumper 
> end of the drive but I have no spec sheet to tell me which are the 
> ones that select scsi ID. Does anyone know if there is a web page out 
> there that has jumper specs for older drives? I tried finding 
> something on altavista but couldn't dig up any hits.
> 
> ----------------
> Jack Bowling
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 
> 


------------------------------

Reply-To: "William Taylor" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
From: "William Taylor" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Linux SMP & GX Chipset (Supermicro P6DGU)
Date: Wed, 03 Mar 1999 07:13:31 GMT

I'm using a Tyan 1836 GX board with 2.0.36 and 2.2.1 with no problems in SMP
mode. I don't have ECC DIMMs though. I don't know how Linux handles ECC
errors (it should be transparent though). I don't think it logs memory
errors to syslogd though.

WT

Gianni Mariani wrote in message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
>
>Thanks for all the input.
>
>So, I suspect no-one has actually tried the Supermicro P6DGS
>in an SMP config with Linux.
>
>
>
>Vladimir Florinski wrote:
>
>> Mark Hahn wrote:
>> >
>> > > Linux doesn't support ECC. Save your money.
>> >
>> > this is FALSE.  completely.  ECC works perfectly, which is to say that
>> > Linux does not even need to know it's there.  if you mean that Linux
>> > doesn't decommission faulty pages reported by uncorrectable errors,
>> > that's true.  Linux also doesn't do any kind of active scrubbing.
>> > it's _highly_ questionable whether Linux even should bother with this
>> > sort of thing, given that the error rates for even 4G of ram are tiny.
>> >
>>
>> My mistake. I was thinking about parity. Such memory doesn't correct
errors but
>> simply sends an NMI and I think Linux doesn't catch it.
>> And yes, the Xeon is not really superior to Pentium II/Celeron. In the
>> simulations that I run they perform about the same.
>> --
>>
>> Vladimir
>



------------------------------

From: "Joseph Blackburn" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.development.system
Subject: DPT Raid Hardware
Date: 4 Mar 1999 03:36:19 GMT

Has anyone gotten the DPT Raid driver in 2.2.2. working on a Smart V?
Thanks

------------------------------

From: "John M. Janney" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: E-Machine compatibility?
Date: Thu, 04 Mar 1999 03:43:31 GMT

The e-Machines look very attractive (features for a great price), but does
anyone have any experience with them in regards to how "Linux friendly" they
are?

I'm planning on buying one and installing RedHat Linux 5.2 (on boot, of
course, so I can get my mythical Windows98 refund).

Thanks,
john



------------------------------

From: "Lawrence S. Lee" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: help with modem??
Date: Wed, 03 Mar 1999 23:07:51 -0500

Well, to relate against Red Hat (the steps could be close enough), first
check against http://www.o2.net/~gromitkc/winmodem.html to check on the
status of that modem's support under Linux.

Next, you will need to figure out what IRQ and base address the modem is
on. You may already know this, you may be able to set this with jumpers on
your modem, or you may be able to get this information from Windows (e.g.
control panel -> device manager -> modem -> resources (or something like
that)).

Next you will need to use pnpdump and isapnp to allow Linux to initialize
that port, and possibly setserial if it turns out your modem isn't on a
standard IRQ/base addr. All those steps, which, admittedly I've glossed
over a little, _should_ get your modem up and running under Linux.

Actually as a question to the rest of the folks reading this... if your
modem's IRQ and base addr fall under one of the "standard" ttyS*
combinations AND you have a PnP modem, do you still have to run pnpdump
(and possibly setserial)? Or is that procedure only necessary when your
IRQ/base addr need to be customized?



Carl Hennicke wrote:

> by any chance anyone know how to get a 3Com US Robotics 56K Voice
> Faxmodem workin' on Slackware 3.6?  The modem's on ttyS2 (com3 right?),
> and I've tried minicom to just get a dial tone, and dial into my ISP,
> with no luck.  Can't figure out weather or not it's supported in Linux,
> it is a PnP, but not a WinModem.  Anyone know how to get it workin'?

--
[EMAIL PROTECTED]                         http://www.stevens-tech.edu/~llee
"My other car is a Millenium Falcon."



------------------------------

From: "Miomir G. Radovanovic" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Sound card and modem under Red Hat 5.2
Date: Thu, 4 Mar 1999 04:31:20 +0100

How to install sound card and modem under Red Hat 5.2?
Installing process doesn't include these devices.

Thanks in advance.
            Miomir G. Radovanovic
            Belgrade, Serbia



------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Eddie)
Crossposted-To: linux.redhat.misc
Subject: Video4linux and Matrox MAVEN chips
Date: Thu, 04 Mar 1999 04:21:56 GMT

Anyone have any clue whether a driver exists, is going to exist, is possible , 
etc? (the Matrox Maven chip is included in the Matrox Marvel G200-TV)

Thanks,
        Eddie
replyto: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

------------------------------

From: James Inouye <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: HELP - Newbie setting up HP IID printer
Date: Wed, 03 Mar 1999 09:07:02 -0700
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Michel A. Lim wrote:

>
> however, the "postscript test page" takes about 8 minutes to print, and it
> comes out very messy.  you can make out some of the text and images, but it
> is predominantly trash.  the same is true when printing any postscript
> documents from corel wordperfect 8 or star office 5.
>

 From what I've found on the net about this printer, it doesn't look like it's

got support for PostScript internally.  But from what I understand, you can
use GhostScript to handle any PostScript documents for your printing needs.

If I am incorrect here, somebody please correct me.

James Inouye


------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Alex Yung)
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.misc,comp.os.linux.setup,comp.os.linux.x,comp.windows.x
Subject: Re: One Linux "system" bootable on two different machines?
Date: 3 Mar 1999 16:06:17 GMT
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Norm Dresner ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
: I need to create a Jaz disk that can be booted to linux on two different
: machines with two different motherboards, video cards, ...  The only
: constancy I can count on is that the SCSI Jaz drive will be the boot drive
: for both machines.

: I assume I can create two different kernels and choose which one to boot
: thru LILO -- an alternate would be to boot to DOS with a floppy which then
: uses the OS loader to load the right kernel.  Has anyone done this before?

: As for the video, I need to run X-window on both computers.  Can I reliably
: write a program which would look at the hardware and then copy/rename the
: right set of configuration and server files for the appropriate computer?

:       Thanks for any hints, suggestions, etc.

Are your SCSI controllers identical in both machines?  I have the same
setup as yours but the SCSI controllers are not the same.  You may want
to check out your "/proc" directory to see the subtle difference among
your machines.  In my case:
$ ls -l /proc/scsi/
total 0
dr-xr-xr-x   2 root     root            0 Wed Mar 03 09:37:28 1999 BusLogic/
-rw-r--r--   1 root     root            0 Wed Mar 03 09:37:28 1999 scsi

I have a startup script to check the existence of directory by SCSI
controller to determine what files I need to rename.  I am not sure why
you would need different kernel unless you don't use modules at all.
Your X setup may be straight forward depending on your distribution.  I
am using Debian.  Everything is in "/etc/X11".

------------------------------

From: TS Stahl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.help
Subject: Re: linux and hard disk 10go
Date: Wed, 03 Mar 1999 10:17:40 -0600


pcgyver wrote:

> hello!
>
> i 'am a new user of linux.
> i have a k6-2 350mhz with a ASUS P5A motherboard and a 10Go IBM hard
> disk.
> i have installed linux red hat 5.1 on.
> my lilo.conf have the line append="hda=19650,16,63" .
> when i want reboot my system,, it want not unmounted the hda5(my linux
> native partition) and i must
> reset my system.
> at loading, it do a fschk.ext2 -a  /dev/hda function and boot normaly.
> but at rebooot...... i must reset...
>
> and when i want to change my kernel, lilo don't want to take my modif..
>
> what can i do?? please help!!!!
>
> thanks

I'm sorry, I don't really follow your problem.  I believe you made a change
to lilo.conf and want it applied.  If this is the case, make your changes
to lilo.conf and simply type  'lilo'.
A single 10 gig partition (assumption) devoted to linux also makes me feel
weird.  I would break that up into at least a boot, root, swap partition.
Just my 2 cents worth.


--
Scott Stahl
MIS Asst.
Illinois Housing Development Authority



------------------------------

From: Pang Chi Chun <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: How to make the LS-120 (internal) work on linux ?
Date: Wed, 03 Mar 1999 23:50:52 +0800

Thank you, garv.

My LS-120 is hdb and i can access it successfully.
I don't understand what should I do with dmesg. What information should
I learn from that and what can I use that information to make a boot
disk. And is it equivalent for a 1.44Mb disk and 120Mb disk in making
the boot disk ?

Sorry for so much questions...

thank you for advance.

yours,
cranfan

------------------------------

From: "Mark Swope" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: 
comp.os.linux.setup,comp.os.linux.x,linux.redhat.install,linux.redhat.misc
Subject: Re: Need a 16 meg Video card recommendation w/RedHat 5.2 support.
Date: Wed, 3 Mar 1999 10:16:57 -0600

I think that the STB 4400 using the nVidia TNT chipset
is supposed to work well in unaccelerated mode, but
to answer the question specifically, I don't think that this
will work with a straight RH5.2 install.  You need at least
XFREE86 v3.3.3 (I think) to support this chipset, using
the SVGA server.

mas

Charles and Deborah Tewksbury wrote in message
<7bfflc$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
>Has anyone tried n STB card?
>
>



------------------------------

From: "Folcke-Wolfe" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: need backpack CD-ROM advice
Date: Wed, 3 Mar 1999 10:51:27 -0500

Thanks for the help. He went ahead and got the MicroSolutuions one.. his
whole
family is going to use it.
Anyway took your advice re: boot disc.... worked fine

Thanks
Clu

Grant Guenther wrote in message ...
>On Mon, 1 Mar 1999 11:42:24 -0500, Folcke-Wolfe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>>I want install Redhat 5.2 on a friends computer (an old 486) that does not
>>have a CD-ROM. He wants to get a parallel port backpak CD-ROM. The
hardware
>>page states the device must use the version 2 protocol but none of the web
>>pages seem to go into this kind of detail.
>>
>>Does anybody have experience with one that works?
>
>The folks at RedHat have got themselves a little bit confused about
>support for the backpack.  The real problem is that the driver on their
>boot disk is old, obsolete and buggy (no, I'm not slagging them, I wrote
>it).  Unfortunately they don't have space on the disk to install the newer
>"PARIDE" drivers.
>
>However, if you go to the Linux parport web page:
>
> http://www.torque.net/parport/
>
>you'll find a link to a page with a replacement boot disk for RedHat 5.2.
>
>That boot disk supports several brands of parallel port CD-ROMs (many of
>which can obtained for significantly less than the MicroSolutions
products).
>
>The most economical solution might be to get an empty case from H45
(they're
>sold by Tiger Direct in the US) and put in an old ATAPI CD-ROM from your
>spares collection ;-)
>
>There's nothing wrong with the MSI backpacks, by the way - they are
>good value, and well built.  The irony is that one of them will set your
>friend back more than the value of his 486 !
>
>Anyway ... if you find a brand of PP CD-ROM and you aren't sure if the
>alternate boot disk supports it, please feel free to contact me.
>
>--------------------------------------------------------------------------
>Grant R. Guenther                                         [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>--------------------------------------------------------------------------



------------------------------

From: "Robert J. Hansen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.hardawe,comp.os.linux.questions
Subject: Re: Driver programming
Date: Wed, 03 Mar 1999 22:35:16 -0600

> Hello all.
> I'm looking for news, example, docs about drivers programming under linux
> S.U.S.E.
> If you know how do it, please share your knowledge.

Look for this book -- "Linux Device Drivers".  O'Reilly Press.

I may be a little off on the name, but I think that's it.

------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Eric Lee Green)
Subject: Re: Floppy and Cdrom drives problems.
Date: 4 Mar 1999 04:43:30 GMT
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

On Wed, 03 Mar 1999 17:03:12 +0000, David Kirkpatrick <> wrote:
>It looks like you cd to the mount directory but have not mounted
>the drive successfully.

Yep. Sounds like the problem.

That's why every Linux Hardware Solution comes with the "autofs" daemon set
up so that you can access the CD as /misc/cd and the floppy as /misc/floppy,
with none of that nasty mounting stuff needed (unless you want to!). 

The files /etc/auto.master and /etc/auto.misc are the secret. In
auto.master change the timeout to 5 (so that you can eject your CD
without waiting for the cows to come home), and in auto.misc uncomment
the entry for "floppy" and change its type from "ext2" to "vfat". Then
uncomment the entry for "e2floppy". Finally, do
"/etc/rc.d/init.d/autofs restart" to make it re-read its config file
(or just plain "start" if you don't have it enabled in your system
services in "linuxconf").  

Voila. Now you're as good as Windows 95 :-). The floppy will be
auto-mounted when you access it, auto-dismounted when you're finished
with it (i.e. close all files and cd to another directory). Just don't
eject the floppy while "df" shows it's still mounted! (Makes the Linux
kernel VERY upset!). The CD-ROM has no such problem, since it won't eject
if you're still using it (i.e., it's still mounted). 

--
Eric Lee Green         [EMAIL PROTECTED]     http://www.linux-hw.com/~eric
  "Software is like sex, it's better when it's free." -- Linus

------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Allen)
Subject: Re: liquid-cooling
Date: 4 Mar 1999 04:55:21 GMT

Don't forget the added benefit that evaporative cooling will transfer more heat
energy than convective, or radiated heat, because the phase change requires more
energy...  :-)

On 4 Mar 1999 03:21:46 GMT, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Christopher B Specker) wrote:

>I'm still looking these up as I go, but I have a short list.
>Acetone (boils about 56C and flammable, but common)
>Propionaldehyde (49C, again, flammable)
>1,3 difluoropropane (41.6 C)
>
>My favorite on the list is the last because it's going to be 
>the most inert and have the lowest boiling point.
>The nice thing about this is that boiling requires more heat
>than raising the temperature of a liquid, generally speaking.
>An additional bonus is that the bubbles of vapor will rise to
>the top of the liquid due to gravity, eliminating the need
>for a pump.

Allen


(email addy; user ID portion has a numeral one in place of word
onespoiler, and of course, delete the bogus secondary domain of nospam.)
fight spam everywhere!!!

                            
                The irony is that Bill Gates claims to making a
                         stable operating system and
             Linus Torvalds claims to be trying to take over the world.
                
                 Linux; The Official OS of the New Millennium
                      
                          http://www.linuxlink.com

------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Harold Henry)
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.development.system,comp.os.linux.setup
Subject: Re: RedHat install crashes -- "buggy cmd640b" error
Date: 3 Mar 1999 15:27:03 GMT

I have this card to and Have No problems using linux. However my CD is
connected to a cheap ide controller card I bought because there is only
one ide port on my cmd 640.

In article <7bibfl$at$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
        leslie barstow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Patrick,
> 
> I also have a CMD640 controller (a really cheap PCI/ISA multi-function
> card), and have had nothing but trouble with it.  Linux does better than
> most, but my secondary drive still reports short reads on imaginary sectors.
> MS-DOS won't even recognize the secondary controller - I have to initialize
> using Linux.
> 
> I am using RedHat (5.0), and the kernel comes with CMD640 support compiled
> in (that's why you're getting the "buggy cmd640" messages - if it weren't,
> you wouldn't get those messages).  This looks like a real problem, perhaps
> with the CMD640 workaround code, or perhaps with your system.  Your best
> bet is to get an add-on IDE card with BIOS, and go from there (actually,
> your best bet if you're shopping is to just get a new mainboard, CPU, and
> case for a couple hundred - you'll thank yourself in the morning)
> 
> Good Luck
> 
> In comp.os.linux.development.system
>    Patrick Mueller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 
>: I am trying to install RedHat 5.2 on a system I inherited. It is a (gasp!)
>: Packard Bell Model 3960CD; a P60 with 40MB RAM. I have disconnected the
>: proprietary CDROM, and hooked up a spare IDE (Panasonic 24x, I don't have the
>: model number here). They are both on the PCI IDE port: the 4.3GB HD as master,
>: the CD as slave.
>: [I should add that I also upgraded the 400MB HD to the 4.3GB].
> 
>: The kernel loads fine w/ only the HD, but once the CD is attached
>: to the chain,
>: the crash occurs. I have also tried a different CDROM (Creative 32x), but it
>: still crashes. Unfortunately, the other IDE connector is so badly placed, that
>: it and the floppy connector cannot both be used at the same time; so I can't
>: test if the "PCI IDE" connector is bad.
> 
>: Anyway, here's the guts of the problem -- I hope there's a guru out there who
>: can help me with this. The dump goes like this:
> 
>: ide0: buggy cmd640b interface on PCI(type 2) config=0x3e
>: ide1: not serialized, secondary interface not responding
>: cmd640: drive 0 timings/prefetch(on) preserved, clocks=2/3/3
>: cmd640: drive 1 timings/prefetch(on) preserved, clocks=4/16/17
>: divide error: 0000
> 
>: CPU: 0
>: EIP: 0010:[<0016f2d5>]
>: EFLAGS: 0010246
> 
>: <dump of the registers>
> 
>: Code: f7 74 24 0c 89 c1 66 89 4b 20 8b 7e 78 80 4b 0c 40 0f b6 43
> 
> 
>: I am checking w/ PBell, to see if there is a BIOS upgrade I can get to see if
>: that will help, but I am not confident that they offer much support
>: (especially for a relatively old box like this P60).
> 

-- 


------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: i want to make driver for a NIC
Date: Thu, 04 Mar 1999 03:57:34 GMT

I just recently learned C. a while ago i got an EigerLabs PCMCIA 10/100 combo
card for my CTX laptop. ($53, nice buy). Unfortunately, this card doesn't
have a driver in the standard pcmcia-cs package. Also, I have done a
considerable amount of searchng, and have been unable to find one.  So,
anyway, I understand c and pointers and linked lists and the whole bit. I
just don't get how it all ties together. What I'm trying to say is that I
understand the language, but I haven't done driver writing before for linux
and I'm wondering how it's done. Most people I have talked to say it's
relatively easy. So, if someone could fill me in I would appreciate it. I am
willing to work as much as it takes to get this job done. HOWTOs, handwritten
emails, IRC chats, whatever. Thanks.

please reply to email.

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