Linux-Hardware Digest #929, Volume #10            Wed, 4 Aug 99 15:13:38 EDT

Contents:
  Re: loading ppa module at bootup (Col 2.2)? (Craig Lambert)
  Re: Driver for IBM ServeRAID RAID Card FRU70G8489? (Margus Rohtoja)
  Kenwood 52X ATAPI CDROM ("GQ")
  Re: DLink NIC cards w/Linux?? (Johan Kullstam)
  Re: can't find module st, also 9Gig SCSI disks? OK? ("Gene Heskett")
  Updated CD-Writing HOWTO? ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
  DAQ-801 ("stephen.")
  Re: Networking with linux ("Charles")
  Re: Cacheable area... how was that? (Greg H)
  486SX 20MHz as Proxy Server/Firewall (Greg H)
  Fast Movie Machine Pro and Suse Linux 6.x ??? (TK)
  Re: UPS for multiple linux machines? ("Gabriel L. Somlo")
  Networking with linux (Dave Cotterill)
  Re: Cacheable area... how was that? (Mark Hahn)
  Re: [Q] OnStream ATAPI tape drive? (Wes Hamilton)
  Re: clock skew compilation problems (lilo)
  Re: SCSI vs. IDE (David C.)
  looking for a driver ("Chris K. Yang")
  Intel® PRO/100+ Dual Port Server Adapter (PILA8472) (Micke)
  Re: Not A Winmodem Problem (Roy Grimm)
  serial ports (henning hummert)
  Re: Networking with linux (Roy Grimm)

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

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Craig Lambert)
Crossposted-To: alt.os.linux.caldera
Subject: Re: loading ppa module at bootup (Col 2.2)?
Date: Wed, 04 Aug 1999 14:13:05 GMT

I edited the file etc/modules/2.2.5/default; however the ppa module
didn't load at boot time.

On Tue, 3 Aug 1999 15:53:27 -0700, "TURBO1010"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>Edit the /etc/modules/2.2.5/default and add the module in there.  That
>should load the module at boot.
>
>Craig Lambert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
>news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
>> Hi,
>>
>> Does anyone know how to load the ppa module in at bootime for col 2.2?
>> I've tried using COAS and the Kernel Configuration package; however it
>> gives me an error and says it cannot load the module. If I just insmod
>> ppa at the terminal emulation it loads fine; yet of course, I have to do
>> this everytime I go into linux.
>>
>> Thanks for any advice
>>
>> Craig Lambert
>>
>
>
>


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

From: Margus Rohtoja <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Driver for IBM ServeRAID RAID Card FRU70G8489?
Date: 4 Aug 1999 14:30:34 GMT


Tom Burba wrote:
> Is there a driver for IBM ServeRAID RAID Card FRU70G8489? I'm told it's a 
> Mylex with an IBM Label. TIA
> 
> ------------------  Posted via SearchLinux  ------------------
>                   http://www.searchlinux.com

No, it's not Mylex. Mylex DAC960 series cards use Intel i960 processor, 
while ServeRAID controllers use PowerPC 403 processors. Not 
compatible at all. Although, IBM was selling some Mylex cards couple of 
years ago (they were called PCI RAID Adapter)- maybe that's why you were 
told so. 
ServeRAID drivers are in works, don't know about release dates yet.

==================  Posted via SearchLinux  ==================
                  http://www.searchlinux.com

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

From: "GQ" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Kenwood 52X ATAPI CDROM
Date: Wed, 4 Aug 1999 01:05:40 -0700


Has anyone had experience with installing RedHat Linux 6.0 with a Kenwood
52X ATAPI CDROM?  I'm having troubles with getting the RedHat install to see
the drive.  I'm booting off a boot disk, and have burned Linux 6.0 on a CD
from a downloaded copy.

I'm trying to install on the following:
    P166
    128MB EDO
    2 GIG Partition (Win 98)
    2 GIG Partitioin (Linux 6.0)
    D-Link Netcard
    Netgear Netcard
    Canopus Total 3D Riva128 Vid Card
    Kenwood 52X ATAPI CD

The CDROM is on secondary IDE Channel, as master.  Both hard drives are on
the primary IDE Channel.

 I did get RedHat 5.2 installed on this same setup, but with an 8x Mitsumi
CDRom.  What do I need to do to get RedHat to recognize the Kenwood CDROM?

Thanks in adv.

____________________________________________________________________________
____
Geoff Quan



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

From: Johan Kullstam <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: DLink NIC cards w/Linux??
Date: 04 Aug 1999 10:04:11 -0400

Germ <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

> Hello all,
> 
> Just wondering if any of you hardware gurus out there have
> ever had any luck configuring a DLink NIC card with Linux.

i have a dlink card with a dec tulip 21140 chip.  it works great.

> It's a 10Megabit ISA(I forget the actual model number..)

get the model number.  look on the card and read chip numbers.  dlink
makes (and has made) lots of cards based on all manner of chipsets.
this information is vital.

> and I'm running Mandrake6(Redhat6).  I know it's not a supported
> card but Linux seems to find it fine, it just doesn't work.

why do think it's not supported?

-- 
johan kullstam

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

Date: 04 Aug 99 10:36:02 -0500
From: "Gene Heskett" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: can't find module st, also 9Gig SCSI disks? OK?
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.setup,comp.os.linux.misc

Unrot13 this;
Reply to: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Gene Heskett sends Greetings to Bob Surenko;

I have a similar problem in that if the tape is turned on, its
recognised during the boot, AND I get that message later.  If its not
turned on during the boiot, then there is no way to access it later, st
simply can't be found by modprobe.  Or mt for that matter. Its a PITA to
have to reboot to do a backup.  Somebody?  Kernel 2.2.10-ac12 BTW.

 BS> In comp.os.linux.hardware Lyndon F. Bartels <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
 BS> wrote:
 BS>: Hello,

 BS>: I have the following hardware/software setup.

 BS>: Intel P-II 350 CPU. 
 BS>: 192 Meg Ram.
 BS>: S3 Virge video card
 BS>: 3C509 ethernet card
 BS>: Adaptec 2940UW controller.
 BS>: 2  4.5G hard drives.
 BS>: Adaptec 2910 SCSI controller
 BS>: SCSI CD-ROM
 BS>: Exabyte 8200 tape drive.

 BS>: RedHat 6.0 Linux. As yet, with no updates.
 BS>: 2.2-5-15 kernel.

 BS>: When I boot the system, I get the following error message.

 BS>: Enabling Swap Space [OK]
 BS>: can't locate module st
 BS>: INIT: Entering run level 3 yadda yadda yadda.


 BS>: I'm assuming this has something to do with the tape drive? Any obviously
 BS>:  simple answers?

 BS>: Also, I'm planning on adding 2 9G drives to this system for data
 BS>: storage.  I have the OS and httpd server setup on the existing 4.5s. I'm
 BS>: merely adding  the 9Giggers. I read somewhere that either Adaptec
 BS>: doesn't like drives larger  that 8Gig, or that Linux doesn't. What's the
 BS>: skinny? Am I doomed?

 BS>: Thanks in advance,

 BS>: Lyndon

 BS> I've been having a similar problem. It seems Red Hat ships with SCSI Tape
 BS> support already in the kernel, but right at the end of
 BS> /etc/rc.d/rc.sysinit it has a if statment and attempts to load the SCSI
 BS> tape Module!

 BS> Anyway, Does your tape drive work? If so, just comment that stuff out in
 BS> rc.sysinit. 

 BS> I haven't fully tested this out yet because I think my tape drive is bad.
 BS> (Didn't work in Win98 either)

 BS> -- 
 BS> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
 BS> -----
 BS> - Bob Surenko                              [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 BS> - http://www.fred.net/surenko/             finger for PGP key
 BS> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
 BS> -----


Cheers, Gene
-- 
  Gene Heskett, CET, UHK       |Amiga A2k Zeus040 50 megs fast/2 megs chip
    Ch. Eng. @ WDTV-5          |A2091,GuruRom,1g Seagate,CDROM,Multiface III
                               |Buddha + 4 gig WDC drive, 525 meg tape
                               |Stylus Pro, EnPrint, Picasso-II, 17" vga
         RC5-Moo! 690kkeys/sec isn't much, but it all helps
email gene underscore heskett at iolinc dot net
-- 


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

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Updated CD-Writing HOWTO?
Date: Wed, 04 Aug 1999 13:57:18 GMT

I recently bought an HP CD-Writer 8100 ATAPI drive.  The CdWriting howto
I find everywhere online seems to deal only with old kernels.  I am
using RedHat 6 which, I believe, has kernel 2.2.  The HOWTOs say "if
you're using a kernel before xxx, do this.  If you're using a later
kernel, don't worry about it."  Can somebody give specific instructions
for what needs to be done to use an ATAPI CDR drive with kernel 2.2?


Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
Share what you know. Learn what you don't.

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

From: "stephen." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: DAQ-801
Date: Wed, 04 Aug 1999 22:52:49 +0800

I was planning to purchase an ISA bus ADQ-801 ADC data aquiisition
board.
and write a LINUX loadable module driver for it 
It has 8 ADC channels 2 DAC channels & 32 Digital I/O lines.

If there is allready a LINUX driver please let me know ?

Or If anyone Is interested in Helping or providing advise on this  
let me know 

I have - am reading LINUX DEVICE DRIVERS as a reference.( the book).

The website for the Manufacturer Quatech is www.quatech.com
they have PDF manuals on line.

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

From: "Charles" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.networking,redhat.networking.general
Subject: Re: Networking with linux
Date: Wed, 04 Aug 1999 16:12:03 GMT

You could get a media converter....  I know that there are places still
selling them...

Dave Cotterill <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:7o9mar$9o3$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> I'm currently managing a small 10mbps bus network and have recently been
> given the task of upgrading a section of it to 100mbps star network.  All
> machines must still be able to communicate with each other and I am
> therefore looking for help on the subject.  The best method I could come
> up with due to lack of hubs allowing a 10mbps BNC bus network to be
> connected to them is to use a linux machine with a 100mbps and a 10mbps
> card to forward all networking data to/from.  While installing a 100mbps
> hub for the upgraded machines.
>
> a) would this work?
> a2) if so how would I setup the linux box?
> b) Any better ideas of experiences would be greatly appreciated.
>
> Thanks for any information
> PS: The network is completely internal and the linux box currently is set
> up with IP Masqurading for internet access with an ISDN modem so that the
> windows boxes can access the net on demand.
>
> ------------------  Posted via SearchLinux  ------------------
>                   http://www.searchlinux.com



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

From: Greg H <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Cacheable area... how was that?
Date: Wed, 04 Aug 1999 16:35:14 GMT

Beat Rupp <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> Host bridge: Intel 82439TX (rev. 1)
> Bridge: Intel 82371AB PIIX4 ISA (rev 1)

> Something about Intel chipsets was bad earlier, they couldn't cache 
> more than 64mb. Probably this also happens on my computer??

   Well, here's a hint you asked for, but you might want to check
this for sure or maybe someone else could chime in.  As far as I
know, all 430?X chipsets have the 64 MB cacheable RAM limitation.
Yours appears to be one of them :-(

   Greg H.

-- 
ROT-13 encoded email address: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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

From: Greg H <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: 486SX 20MHz as Proxy Server/Firewall
Date: Wed, 04 Aug 1999 16:30:36 GMT

Hi all,

   Could anyone tell me with a large degree of certainty
whether or not a 48SX running at 25 Mhz could be used as
a proxy server/firewall on a small home network connected
to the 'Net via a cablemodem?
   This PC is an IBM PS/1 Consultant bought in 1992.  It
has a riser card instead of seperate ISA slots.

   Thanks!

   Greg H.

-- 
ROT-13 encoded email address: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (TK)
Subject: Fast Movie Machine Pro and Suse Linux 6.x ???
Date: Wed, 04 Aug 1999 17:33:43 GMT

Hi 4 all,

is it possible to use fast movie machine pro ( with mjpeg-option )
under suse linux ( 6.x ) ? If yes, how can I do this ? What drivers do
I need ?

Many questions and no answers ?! PLEASE HELP ME ....

Thanx in advanced , Thomas.

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

From: "Gabriel L. Somlo" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: UPS for multiple linux machines?
Date: Wed, 04 Aug 1999 09:46:36 -0600

Leon de Rooy wrote:
> 
> Hi,
> 
> Since you are using an APC UPS, do you know the pin-layout of the serial
> cable ? I recently bought an APC SmartUPS 2200, but unfortunately there was
> no serial cable in the box. I can't find the pin-layout on the internet.I
> would greatly appreciate it if you would post/email the layout.
> 
> Thanks,
> 
> Leon de Rooy
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]


A _Smart_ UPS is probably "smarter" than my regular BackUPS. This means
it's probably
able to send you text strings and numbers (e.g. minutes left 'till
shutdown).


The BackUPS uses only three pins of the serial connector:

DTR - the computer must keep this on 0 at all times. Setting it to 1
shuts down the UPS;
CTS - The UPS keeps this on 0, and sets it to 1 when the power goes
away;
CAR - The UPS keeps this on 0, and sets it to 1 just before the battery
is going to die.

The SmartUPS might be  backward compatible with this, but I don't know
that for sure...

Hope this helps,
Gabriel

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

From: Dave Cotterill <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.networking,redhat.networking.general
Subject: Networking with linux
Date: 4 Aug 1999 15:30:35 GMT

I'm currently managing a small 10mbps bus network and have recently been 
given the task of upgrading a section of it to 100mbps star network.  All 
machines must still be able to communicate with each other and I am 
therefore looking for help on the subject.  The best method I could come 
up with due to lack of hubs allowing a 10mbps BNC bus network to be 
connected to them is to use a linux machine with a 100mbps and a 10mbps 
card to forward all networking data to/from.  While installing a 100mbps 
hub for the upgraded machines.

a) would this work?
a2) if so how would I setup the linux box?
b) Any better ideas of experiences would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks for any information
PS: The network is completely internal and the linux box currently is set 
up with IP Masqurading for internet access with an ISDN modem so that the 
windows boxes can access the net on demand.

==================  Posted via SearchLinux  ==================
                  http://www.searchlinux.com

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

From: Mark Hahn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Cacheable area... how was that?
Date: 4 Aug 1999 17:48:41 GMT

> this for sure or maybe someone else could chime in.  As far as I
> know, all 430?X chipsets have the 64 MB cacheable RAM limitation.
> Yours appears to be one of them :-(

the TX is limited to 64M, but the HX wasn't, depending on whether
the board vendor provided optional external tag sram.

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

From: Wes Hamilton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: [Q] OnStream ATAPI tape drive?
Date: Wed, 04 Aug 1999 16:30:43 GMT

Unfortunately, it seems Arekia is not supporting the Onstream drive just 
yet...and may never since I'm told they consider it untested and of a 
design that doesn't adapt well to automatic tape loaders.

However, Seagate (Veritas) has come out with a linux user agent for Backup 
Exec that should do the same thing, and the Onstream does work with BE.

Best Regards,

Wes Hamilton


Stephen Nodvin wrote:
> I am using the 50G version sucessfully under WIN98.  The Onstream 
software 
> does caus crashes under W98 but it seems to be much less of a problem 
> since they released a software upgrade.
> 
> I would like to see Linux drivers also.  There may be a short-term 
> solution.
> 
> Arekia Backup ( http://www.knox-software.com/ ) has client and server 
> components that run on both WindowsNT and Linux.  I have not tried it 
yet 
> but the if the server version were on NT where the Onstream tape drive 
> were located, it could back up from the Linux clients over a network.
> 
> The best solution would be native Linux drivers for the Onstream tape 
> system
> 
> Regards,
> 
> Stephen Nodvin
> ===========================================================
> 
> Jeff McWilliams wrote:
> > 
> > In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Richard McClary wrote:
> > >When I was shopping for a tape system, I went to the RH site (among
> > >other places).  They mentioned that neither the ATAPI nor the SCSI
> > >drives would work with RH linux (as of a couple of months ago).
> > >
> 
> 
> ------------------  Posted via SearchLinux  ------------------
>                   http://www.searchlinux.com


==================  Posted via SearchLinux  ==================
                  http://www.searchlinux.com

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

From: lilo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: clock skew compilation problems
Date: Wed, 04 Aug 1999 09:35:13 -0700

Lloyd_Arthur SHANKS wrote:
> 
> Does anyone know what clock skew is? I have been having problems when
> trying to compile my kernel (2.2.1 or 2.0.36). The 'make' program reports
> that clock skew is present and the compilation may be incomplete.
> 
> Regards,
> 
> Lloyd

You most likely have some files in /usr/src/linux or maybe even
somewhere else that have some future date stamps on them. At least that
is what gave me the same error message. I found that I could safely
ignore the error message. ymmv. You could get creative with the find
command and see if in fact you do have any files with date stamps in the
future and touch them to bring them back.

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

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (David C.)
Subject: Re: SCSI vs. IDE
Date: 04 Aug 1999 12:05:05 -0400

Mark Hahn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>>
>>> this is mostly an old wive's tale.  ide and scsi are both equally
>>> well suited to "workstation" vs "server" workloads.
> 
>> no, its NOT a wives tale.  scsi still multitasks better since it
>> optimized i/o as requested by multiple quasi-simultaneous users.
> 
> no, you are wrong.  Linux does head-scheduling for IDE; this
> eliminates the supposedly different access pattern you're talking
> about.  and reality is that servers and workstations have quite
> similar patterns, since there's precious little difference between
> them.

Head-scheduling in the OS won't help once the request has been sent to
the drive.

-- David

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

From: "Chris K. Yang" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: looking for a driver
Date: Wed, 04 Aug 1999 10:56:10 +0800


==============D32462D226788A8C13EEA1E0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

anyone know how to get video card driver software (for Linux) for
a such one :

Daytona : sis6326  PCI/AGP


A email replay to below address would be greatly appreciated !

[EMAIL PROTECTED]


==============D32462D226788A8C13EEA1E0
Content-Type: text/html; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

<!doctype html public "-//w3c//dtd html 4.0 transitional//en">
<html>
anyone know how to get video card driver software (for Linux) for
<br>a such one :
<p>Daytona : sis6326&nbsp; PCI/AGP
<br>&nbsp;
<p>A email replay to below address would be greatly appreciated !
<p><a href="mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]">[EMAIL PROTECTED]</a>
<br>&nbsp;</html>

==============D32462D226788A8C13EEA1E0==


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

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Micke)
Subject: Intel® PRO/100+ Dual Port Server Adapter (PILA8472)
Date: Wed, 04 Aug 1999 03:18:24 GMT

        'Lo All,

 Anyone know if the  "Intel? PRO/100+ Dual Port Server Adapter
(PILA8472)" card will work w/ RH6.0?  I'd prefer to hear from those
who have made it work or seen it work in a system they know.

        Micke

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

From: Roy Grimm <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Not A Winmodem Problem
Date: Wed, 04 Aug 1999 11:17:01 -0500

Chuanhao Chiu wrote:
> 
> How do I get my USR 56k modem to shut off the outgoing line when it's
> online, so I won't get disconnected if I accidentally pick up the phone,
> which is connected to the modem's outgoing jack.
> I've own more than a couple of modems and this is the only one that doesn't
> shut off the outgoing line when it's online.  It's a 56k voice faxmodem
> model 5685 (not a winmodem), I got it specifically for Linux.
> I went to 3com support and got nothing.
> Any help is appreciated, It's been driving me nuts.
> Thanks
> 
> Chuanhao Chiu

In order to save money, some modem manufacturers simply hard wired the
two phone jacks together.  You can plug the phone and the line into
either jack interchangably, since they share a common trace on the card
to the input of the modem chipset.  Unfortunately, you end up without
any ability for the modem to "cut off" the phone connection when you are
online.

There's no way for me to know for sure, since I've not used one myself
and haven't looked at the documentation but your model of modem may have
that limitation.  If your documentation says you can plug the phone and
the line into either jack, that is a good indication.  You may just have
to live with it.

Roy

-- 
"If it ain't broke, you're not tryin!" - Red Green

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

From: henning hummert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: alt.os.linux,msu.linux.misc,de.comp.os.linux,comp.os.linux.misc
Subject: serial ports
Date: Wed, 04 Aug 1999 14:41:36 -0400

hi,
i am trying to communicate with a digital camera via the serial port. i
am using redhat 5.1. problem is: i can send data to the camera via cua0,
but cannot receive any. cua1 is not responding in any way. ttyS1 either,
and for ttyS0 i get the strange answer from setserial: device/resource
busy??? busy with what???

i really hope somebody can give me a hint

h


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

From: Roy Grimm <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.networking,redhat.networking.general
Subject: Re: Networking with linux
Date: Wed, 04 Aug 1999 11:12:04 -0500

Dave Cotterill wrote:
> 
> I'm currently managing a small 10mbps bus network and have recently been
> given the task of upgrading a section of it to 100mbps star network.  All
> machines must still be able to communicate with each other and I am
> therefore looking for help on the subject.  The best method I could come
> up with due to lack of hubs allowing a 10mbps BNC bus network to be
> connected to them is to use a linux machine with a 100mbps and a 10mbps
> card to forward all networking data to/from.  While installing a 100mbps
> hub for the upgraded machines.
> 
> a) would this work?

Yes it would work.

> a2) if so how would I setup the linux box?

Configure the two network cards (10 and 100 mbps) in the linux system,
and adjust the routing setup if needed.  The two most helpfull documents
will be the Ethernet HOWTO and Networking Overview HOWTO.  You can find
them online at http://www.linux.org/help/howto.html.

> b) Any better ideas of experiences would be greatly appreciated.

Since you say you already have a linux system set up for routing between
a dial on demand ISDN connection, adding another network card and
updating the routing would be the course I would take.

Alternatively, you could find a 10Mbps hub with a 10Base2 connector and
a 10/100 ethernet switch and connect them to each other via a 10BaseT
connection.  But, that would load up the 10Mbps segment with all your
internet traffic from the 100Mbps side.  But, since ISDN can only do
128Kbps or so max in dual channel mode, that shouldn't be too much of an
issue...

> Thanks for any information
> 
> PS: The network is completely internal and the linux box currently is set
> up with IP Masqurading for internet access with an ISDN modem so that the
> windows boxes can access the net on demand.

Best of luck to you,
Roy

-- 
"If it ain't broke, you're not tryin!" - Red Green

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


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