At 03:34 AM 9/15/2011, Doug Hardie wrote:
I encountered a situation today that I do not understand. This is a very
old i386 PC that does not have a usable CD drive. The existing drive uses
a very funky SCSI connector that I have nothing for. The system disk is
SCSI and there was one additional PATA drive used for additional
storage. The PATA drive failed. It won't even stick around in /dev for
more than a couple minutes after boot and there are lots of messages about
bad sectors. The data is completely backed up and the that drive is over
5 years old.
I removed the old drive and installed a new one. System will not
boot. It hangs in the BIOS. Never gets around to installing the SCSI
BIOS. My first guess was there was no boot sector on the SCSI
drive. That seems unusual since my other systems boot off the SCSI drives
just fine. This one used to also before I added the PATA drive. However,
if I put the dead drive back in along with the new one, then it
boots. This also implies that the boot sector was only on the PATA
drive. But the PATA drive is for all intents and purposes dead. So how
is it booting? Is there any way to look into the SCSI drive and see if
there is a boot sector there?
This is more a curiosity item as there are additional failures starting to
occur in that computer. We are going to replace it. Its around 10 years old.
Depending on your SCSI card BIOS, some allow you to set which LUN it
boots. You may want to explore the SCSI settings, and try to set the new
drive as the first boot device, then try removing the old drive.
-Derek
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