On 07/22/2014 08:20 AM, Patrick Baggett wrote:
On Tue, Jul 22, 2014 at 9:55 AM, BERTRAND Joël
<joel.bertr...@systella.fr <mailto:joel.bertr...@systella.fr>> wrote:
Fred a écrit :
Hello,
A recent post mentioned having USB on a U10. I bought a StarTech
PCIUSB7 card because it is said to be Linux compatible. With
the PCI
USB card installed the U5 flashes the keyboard leds twice and does
nothing else. Stop-a doesn't do anything. It has debian 7.5.0
installed from the netinstall.iso. Do USB drivers have to be
manually
installed?
Hello,
I've never used an USB keyboard on U5 workstation. On
Blade2k, I have installed a USB2 adapter without any trouble.
But :
- keyboard has to be plugged on an openprom compatible USB card ;
- OpenPROM has to support USB keybord (and I'm not sure that
OpenPROM 3.xx supports this kind of keyboard...) ;
- your adapter has to be compatible with your PCI bus (2.2 or 2.3
for Blade 2k, maybe only 2.1 or 2.2 for your U5) ;
- you have to install a linux supported USB adapter.
Your keyboard led flashes without any USB communication
between U5 and keyboard. It only indicates it is powered and ready
even there is no possible communication.
Oh dear, I didn't mean use a USB keyboard on a Sun U10 -- I just used
simple things like flash drives. I would severely doubt that a U10
would "just work" for the reasons mentioned above.
Best regards,
JKB
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Hello,
The U5 does boot normally without the USB card. I want to use USB for a
flash drive. The keyboard is a standard Sun type and is plugged into
the normal keyboard connector.
The StarTech instructions say only PCI compatible (3.3/5V) and that the
card is Linux compatible. I will try the card in a PC. I am sure the
card is installed correctly. I tried it before with a previous version
of Debian with the same result. I have a SCSI card that came from a Sun
server that maybe can be used to test the PCI bus.
I doubt the OpenBoot monitor knows anything about USB but if this was
the problem it would not have worked in Patrick Baggett's U10 either. I
think OpenBoot would ignore the card if it didn't know what to do with
it. Under Solaris one had to do a boot -r to get OpenBoot to recognize
newly added hardware. Since Stop-a doesn't do anything I can't have
OpenBoot probe the PCI bus.
Best regards,
Fred
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