Re: [expert] Errors on startup

2000-02-25 Thread Brian T. Schellenberger


Not sure why it wants to check those two, but if you have a "typical"
modern PC system, you don't want to limit it to hda; you want hdc as
well, which will be your CD-ROM drive.

You could presumably just

  rm /dev/hdb* /dev/hdd*

if you wanted a crude approach to short-circuiting the bogus drive
checks.  You'd still get an error, presumably, but it ought to be a
much faster error.

On Fri, 25 Feb 2000, you wrote:
| For some reason, on startup, a couple of my boxes wand to scan for hdb and
| hdd devices.  There are none.  After that, it tries to run Hard Drive
| Optimization on those 2 non-existing devices and of course it fails.  Other
| then the fact that it takes a little longer to start up and displays those 2
| error, nothing seems to be affected.  Is there a setting somewhere (Other
| then CMOS) to tell linux not to bother checking for anything other then hda.
| 
| Thanks in advance.
| Mike Kirkpatrick
-- 
I am "Brian, the man from babble-on" (Brian T. Schellenberger).
I can be reached at [EMAIL PROTECTED] .
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Re: [expert] Errors on startup

2000-02-25 Thread Michael D. Kirkpatrick

Sorry, but that did not work.  I just got a different error upon startup.  The big
time waster is when it sits there trying to detect the non existent hard drives.
It takes longer at that step the it takes to completely come up...  The only real
difference in the error was it was unable to find the file instead of saying it
was unable to find the hard drive.  There has to be a setting somewhere where I
can disable the hard drive search for the two devices...  I am completely at a
loss here.  I triple checked my CMOS settings and re-installed RedHat 4 times now
to try to get rid of that.  No luck...  Any other suggestions?  I am willing to
try anything.

Thanks for quickly responding.

"Brian T. Schellenberger" wrote:

 Not sure why it wants to check those two, but if you have a "typical"
 modern PC system, you don't want to limit it to hda; you want hdc as
 well, which will be your CD-ROM drive.

 You could presumably just

   rm /dev/hdb* /dev/hdd*

 if you wanted a crude approach to short-circuiting the bogus drive
 checks.  You'd still get an error, presumably, but it ought to be a
 much faster error.



RE: [expert] Errors on startup

2000-02-25 Thread Steven Smith

Michael, this seems to indicate that there's a problem with your hard disk
partition table or possibly the hard drive itself.
-Original Message-
From: Michael D. Kirkpatrick [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Friday, February 25, 2000 12:07 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [expert] Errors on startup


Sorry, but that did not work.  I just got a different error upon startup.
The big
time waster is when it sits there trying to detect the non existent hard
drives.
It takes longer at that step the it takes to completely come up...  The only
real
difference in the error was it was unable to find the file instead of saying
it
was unable to find the hard drive.  There has to be a setting somewhere
where I
can disable the hard drive search for the two devices...  I am completely at
a
loss here.  I triple checked my CMOS settings and re-installed RedHat 4
times now
to try to get rid of that.  No luck...  Any other suggestions?  I am willing
to
try anything.

Thanks for quickly responding.

"Brian T. Schellenberger" wrote:

 Not sure why it wants to check those two, but if you have a "typical"
 modern PC system, you don't want to limit it to hda; you want hdc as
 well, which will be your CD-ROM drive.

 You could presumably just

   rm /dev/hdb* /dev/hdd*

 if you wanted a crude approach to short-circuiting the bogus drive
 checks.  You'd still get an error, presumably, but it ought to be a
 much faster error.



Re: [expert] Errors on startup

2000-02-25 Thread Michael D. Kirkpatrick

Here is what is in my fstab file:

/dev/hda8   /   ext2defaults1 1
/dev/hda1   /boot   ext2defaults1 2
/dev/hda6   /home   ext2defaults1 2
/dev/hda5   /usrext2defaults1 2
/dev/hda7   /varext2defaults1 2
/dev/hda9   swapswapdefaults0 0
/dev/fd0/mnt/floppy auto
sync,user,noauto,nosuid,nodev,unhide 0 0
none/proc   procdefaults0 0
none/dev/ptsdevpts  mode=0622   0 0

It looks correct to me.  I don't know why it tries to detect 2 additional hard
drives.  It would not be so bad if it would not take 1-2 minutes to do that.  On
top of that (To add insult to injury), it tries to optimize them and errors out...

Argh...  This only happens on 3 of my boxes.  I currently running 10 boxes and the
other 7 have no problems.  The only factor that is common between the 3 boxes are
they are the same type of computer.  I need to figure out how to manipulate the
boot routine to tell it not to try checking for 2 non-existing hard drives.  The 3
boxes that have the problem are PIII 550 with 512 Meg of ram and 2-27 GIG HDs.
They are the new boxes I just purchased.  The other 7 are old pieces of sh*t that
I picked up at $50 each.  They seem to have fewer problems then the new ones do...

John Aldrich wrote:

 Check your /etc/fstab file. Make sure only /dev/hda is
 defined (as far as HARD drives are concerned floppy and
 other devices in there should, of course, be left alone!)
 John



RE: [expert] Errors on startup

2000-02-25 Thread Stout, Wayne

You've probably already checked this, but the BIOSes aren't set to
autodetect on all 4 of the IDE drives, are they?

Just a though,

Wayne

-Original Message-
Argh...  This only happens on 3 of my boxes.  I currently running 10 boxes
and the
other 7 have no problems.  The only factor that is common between the 3
boxes are
they are the same type of computer.  



Re: [expert] Errors on startup

2000-02-25 Thread Axalon Bloodstone

On Fri, 25 Feb 2000, Michael D. Kirkpatrick wrote:

 For some reason, on startup, a couple of my boxes wand to scan for hdb and
 hdd devices.  There are none.  After that, it tries to run Hard Drive
 Optimization on those 2 non-existing devices and of course it fails.  Other
 then the fact that it takes a little longer to start up and displays those 2
 error, nothing seems to be affected.  Is there a setting somewhere (Other
 then CMOS) to tell linux not to bother checking for anything other then hda.
 
 Thanks in advance.
 Mike Kirkpatrick

Disable drive autodetection in your bios, make sure the secondary
controler(s) are enabled, and that all the drive jumpers are set correct
and the cables correctly seated. If it still hangs waiting for ide to
timeout,

Post your.
Bios version, Mainboard brand and revison, Harddrive layout brand and
revisions, and the dmesg output from when it's probeing.

-- 
MandrakeSoft  http://www.mandrakesoft.com/
--Axalon