On Sat, Aug 24, 2013 at 3:00 PM, Chris Cappuccio wrote:
The errors you got are due to errors reported by the IDE controller
back to the pciide driver. That's a layer (or two) lower than the
filesystem itself. If moving the drive around fixed it, perhaps there
was a poor connection
On Fri, Aug 23, 2013 at 11:06 PM, Mike Larkin wrote:
At the boot prompt, what does mach mem show?
-ml
Hi Mike, here's the output from mach mem. It only has 1GB of memory.
Not sure why it's saying the total is 2GB.
Stan
Using drive 0, partition 3.
Loading.
probing: pc0 com0 com1
On Sat, Aug 24, 2013 at 10:08 AM, Brynet wrote:
This is likely a problem with the BIOS on the system, the memory map
has
duplicate entries..
You can attempt to manually fix this at boot using a variation of the
same command used to retreive the mappings:
boot mach mem =1023M
You can play
On Sat, Aug 24, 2013 at 11:00 AM, Brynet wrote:
z I meant removing both mappings and then adding a single 1023M mapping,
I
didn't expect it to work with 1M of RAM. ;-)
I figured that out after the fact :)
What is the new panic message? Does it enter ddb?
The bogus MAC addresses could
I finally got it to boot successfully. Not sure what was up with the
hard drive errors. Maybe the file system wasn't clean? After I put
the drive in the laptop and let it boot Ok, it's been booting Ok in the
IP380. I'll see if I can get the network ports to work later today.
Thanks again
I've been trying to get a more modern OS to run on an ancient Nokia
firewall by loading an OS on the drive in a Dell D610 and moving the
drive to the IP380. So far, I've had little success. I can get FreeBSD
8.1 to work if I disable USB support. That's the only OS I've been able
to get to
On Fri, Aug 23, 2013 at 6:04 PM, Ray Percival wrote:
Having worked for Check Point/Nokia.
They wine to great lengths to only make that hardware work with their
Free based OS. I wish you luck but realistically it's not likely.
OpenBSD works just fine on the newer Check Point boxes. They're far