"Steven S. Dick" wrote:
> However, having said that, it is quite obsolete, as is any ISA card.
It's the only one I have for free. I suppose I could go out and purchase a new
one, but it's not as painless yet as buying 10/100 NICs for $15.
>
>
> >I have a single SCSI drive attached to the cable. The SCSI adapter
> >itself is terminated @ the centronix port, the dip is Enabled for
> >hardware termination, and the drive is configured as Target 0.
>
> Thats a bit confusing. This is an internal drive? You should have
> exactly two terminators on the bus--including the dip switches.
> If the card has termination on, then you should not have a terminator
> directly on the centronix connector.
It is an internal drive. I wanted to put a terminator on the adaptor's centronix
port just to make sure that part was terminated. It wasn't clear to me what the
DIP was for on the adaptor.
> This is usually caused by setting your drive's scsi ID to the same
> ID that the card is set to.
When the system boots up and the adaptor scans its devices it correctly
identifies the drive as target 0. As a matter of fact, the adaptors diagnostics
for itself and the drive seem to run fine. Well, actually, they don't *seem* to
run fine they just run fine. It's only when Linux boots up and the aha1542
driver takes over that problems seem to appear.
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