Hello, I have a Sun Ultra 2 running Solaris 8 in 64-bit mode. My scanner is a Microtek Scanmaker E3 with a SCSI Interface I have the Scanner connected to a second SCSI card (sbus). (Not the built-in one) When I run probe-scsi-all,
ok probe-scsi-all Target 4 scanner /sbus at 1f,0/dma at 3,81000/esp at 3,8000 Unit 0 I downloaded the general scsi driver (From ftp.berlios.de): scg-sparc-sol2.7 and copied it to /kernel/drv/scg Downloaded SCHILYscg.sparc.tar.Z uncompress SCHILYscg.sparc.tar.Z tar xpvf SCHILYscg.sparc.tar pkgadd -d ./ SCHILYscg Answered 'No' when asked to overwrite /kernel/drv/scg For 64-bit part of it: Downloaded scg-sparcv9-sol2.7.beta and copied it to /kernel/drv/sparcv9/scg Did a reconfiguration reboot: reboot -- -r After I did the reconfiguration reboot, I did a # modinfo | grep scg Got nothing. Tried /opt/csw/bin/sane-find-scanner: # No SCSI scanners found. If you expected something different, make sure that # you have loaded a kernel SCSI driver for your SCSI adapter. One thing I am wondering about is /kernel/drv/scg.conf I tried changing it to the following: # # Copyright (c) 1992, by Sun Microsystems, Inc. # #ident "@(#)sd.conf 1.1 95/05/03 J. Schilling" name="scg" class="scsi" target=4 lun=0; # I am wondering if this is correct. # ./sane-find-scanner -v This is sane-find-scanner from sane-backends 1.0.18 # sane-find-scanner will now attempt to detect your scanner. If the # result is different from what you expected, first make sure your # scanner is powered up and properly connected to your computer. searching for SCSI scanners: checking /dev/scg0a... failed to open (Invalid argument) checking /dev/scg0b... failed to open (Invalid argument) checking /dev/scg0c... failed to open (Invalid argument) checking /dev/scg0d... failed to open (Invalid argument) checking /dev/scg0e... failed to open (Invalid argument) checking /dev/scg0f... failed to open (Invalid argument) checking /dev/scg0g... failed to open (Invalid argument) checking /dev/scg1a... failed to open (Invalid argument) checking /dev/scg1b... failed to open (Invalid argument) checking /dev/scg1c... failed to open (Invalid argument) checking /dev/scg1d... failed to open (Invalid argument) checking /dev/scg1e... failed to open (Invalid argument) checking /dev/scg1f... failed to open (Invalid argument) checking /dev/scg1g... failed to open (Invalid argument) checking /dev/scg2a... failed to open (Invalid argument) checking /dev/scg2b... failed to open (Invalid argument) checking /dev/scg2c... failed to open (Invalid argument) checking /dev/scg2d... failed to open (Invalid argument) checking /dev/scg2e... failed to open (Invalid argument) checking /dev/scg2f... failed to open (Invalid argument) checking /dev/scg2g... failed to open (Invalid argument) checking /dev/sg/0... failed to open (Invalid argument) checking /dev/sg/1... failed to open (Invalid argument) checking /dev/sg/2... failed to open (Invalid argument) checking /dev/sg/3... failed to open (Invalid argument) checking /dev/sg/4... failed to open (Invalid argument) checking /dev/sg/5... failed to open (Invalid argument) checking /dev/sg/6... failed to open (Invalid argument) cannot stat `/dev/scsi/scanner/' (No such file or directory) cannot stat `/dev/scsi/processor/' (No such file or directory) # No SCSI scanners found. If you expected something different, make sure that # you have loaded a kernel SCSI driver for your SCSI adapter. Thanks, stephen ____________________________________________________________________________________ Be a better friend, newshound, and know-it-all with Yahoo! Mobile. Try it now. http://mobile.yahoo.com/;_ylt=Ahu06i62sR8HDtDypao8Wcj9tAcJ