Hello Stephen,
In fact, I did not use CDROM ;) I booted only kernel and basic image
from CDROM (so it was readed by BIOS). After OpenBSD booted, I never
tried to read from it. But I can try it if you want. I instaled
everything from network.
Mest regards,
Lukas
On Po, 2005-10-31 at 09:49
If you could try that would be good.
Thanks,
Stephen
Lukas( Macura wrote:
Hello Stephen,
In fact, I did not use CDROM ;) I booted only kernel and basic image
from CDROM (so it was readed by BIOS). After OpenBSD booted, I never
tried to read from it. But I can try it if you want. I instaled
Andrew Daugherity wrote:
I completely missed that you're running amd64 (I saw Intel Xeon, and
thought i386). You might try an i386 kernel (maybe the bsd.rd
installer, as you don't want to mix libs between i386 and amd64) to
see if the CD-ROM works there. If it works under i386, then it looks
On Fri, 28 Oct 2005 17:04:42 +1300, Stephen Nelson wrote:
I have found a PR4570 which seems to be a similar problem.
Interestingly, this was with an nForce4 chipset, whereas my chipset is
Intel.
There was a post 'Problem instaling OpenBSD on IBM xSeries 336' a few days
back. AFAIR, with a
I would really appreciate help with this. I would like to use this
machine to build a diskless firewall, but without being able to boot
from a CD I have problems.
I have checked and double-checked settings. I have checked that my
chipset (Intel 82801EB) is supported (it is) and I have checked
On 10/27/05, Stephen Nelson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Is there any way I can get the device to fall back to a legacy mode that
would allow me to get further?
I've seen some CD-ROM drives claim to support UDMA2 but not work
properly in UDMA mode. You could try setting the flags to disable DMA
on
On Wed, 26 Oct 2005 10:23:23 +1300, Stephen Nelson wrote:
When I attempt to mount a cd or read the disklabel, I get this error
from the kernel:
Oct 26 10:08:59 develop /bsd: cd0(pciide0:0:0): timeout
Oct 26 10:08:59 develop /bsd: cd0(pciide0:0:0): timeout
Oct 26 10:08:59 develop /bsd:
Andrew Daugherity wrote:
I've seen some CD-ROM drives claim to support UDMA2 but not work
properly in UDMA mode. You could try setting the flags to disable DMA
on it, see atapiscsi(4). 'boot -c' to enter UKC [see boot_config(8)];
'change atapiscsi' and set the flags accordingly.
This may or
How far did you go on your own to debug this ?
I'm new to OpenBSD and I don't know how to debug this any further. I'm open to
suggestions though and prepared to learn.
Did you try to swap the drive ?
Did you try to swap the cable ?
Do you have another OS on your system to try from there ?
I
On 10/27/05, Stephen Nelson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Any more ideas?
I have found a PR4570 which seems to be a similar problem.
Interestingly, this was with an nForce4 chipset, whereas my chipset is
Intel.
I completely missed that you're running amd64 (I saw Intel Xeon, and
thought i386).
When I attempt to mount a cd or read the disklabel, I get this error
from the kernel:
Oct 26 10:08:59 develop /bsd: cd0(pciide0:0:0): timeout
Oct 26 10:08:59 develop /bsd: cd0(pciide0:0:0): timeout
Oct 26 10:08:59 develop /bsd: type: atapi
Oct 26 10:08:59 develop /bsd: type: atapi
Oct 26
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