> Also look in your boot logs to see what the SCSI driver is doing.
[...] Looking at dmesg, the only SCSI device I found mentioned was the integrated Promise FastTrack lite controller. Here's the sub-section: Journalled Block Device driver loaded SCSI subsystem driver Revision: 1.00 Promise FastTrak Series Linux Driver Version 1.2.0.14 scsi0 : FASTTRAK Vendor: Promise Model: 2+0 Stripe/RAID0 Rev: 1.10 Type: Direct-Access ANSI SCSI revision: 02 Attached scsi disk sda at scsi0, channel 0, id 0, lun 0 SCSI device sda: 160836354 512-byte hdwr sectors (82348 MB) sda: sda1 sda2 < sda5 sda6 sda7 sda8 sda9 sda10 sda11 sda12 sda13 sda14 > kjournald starting. Commit interval 5 seconds I decided to check again for the modules, just in case, and they seem to be loaded. From lsmod: scsi_mod 95760 2 [ft sd_mod] And from modinfo sg: filename: /lib/modules/2.4.7-10/kernel/drivers/scsi/sg.o description: "SCSI generic (sg) driver" author: "Douglas Gilbert" license: <none> parm: def_reserved_size int, description "size of buffer reserved for each fd" Cheers, Ricardo J. Méndez Castro Sheer Talent Developments ------------------------------------------------------------------------ "The middle of every successful project looks like a disaster." - Rosabeth Moss Cantor _______________________________________________ Redhat-list mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list