From owner-freebsd-questions Wed May 10 08:35:33 1995 Return-Path: questions-owner Received: (from majordom@localhost) by freefall.cdrom.com (8.6.10/8.6.6) id IAA23940 for questions-outgoing; Wed, 10 May 1995 08:35:33 -0700 Received: from nak.berkeley.edu (nak.Berkeley.EDU [128.32.136.21]) by freefall.cdrom.com (8.6.10/8.6.6) with ESMTP id IAA23934 for ; Wed, 10 May 1995 08:35:32 -0700 Received: from olac.Berkeley.EDU by nak.berkeley.edu (8.6.10/1.40) id IAA07642; Wed, 10 May 1995 08:35:31 -0700 Received: by olac.Berkeley.EDU (5.0/SMI-SVR4) id AA08562; Wed, 10 May 1995 08:33:23 +0800 Date: Wed, 10 May 1995 08:33:22 -0700 (PDT) From: "Erik A. Pearson" X-Sender: epearson@olac To: Sean Kelly Cc: questions@FreeBSD.org Subject: Re: boot floppy image with fixed mcd driver In-Reply-To: <9505092041.AA18774@yarmouth.fsl.noaa.gov> Message-Id: Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII content-length: 1193 Sender: questions-owner@FreeBSD.org Precedence: bulk Sean, On Tue, 9 May 1995, Sean Kelly wrote: > The fixed boot.flp is available on ftp.freebsd.org in the file > > /pub/FreeBSD/incoming/boot-with-fixed-mcd-driver.gz > > Uncompress it and make a boot floppy from it like you did with the > original boot.flp. And good luck, because according to this latest > message from Terry Lambert, it might not help you: Unfortunately, this did not work. Oh, well. At this point I see two paths: 1. I've got a Future Domain TMC830 SCSI card and a drive for it -- which I could attach a SCSI drive to. However, FreeBSD doesn't seem to be able to see the drive. The docs say that FreeBSD is okay for the FD TMC8xx interface. Any clues? 2. Get a new Mitsumi drive (e.g. FX400, etc.). Do all the newer mitsumi drives work with FreeBSD? A big motivation is to use the stuff I have, since I'm just about to buy a new machine for windows programming -- and the new one is going to get all the whizzz-bang stuff. The FreeBSD machine doesn't need to be super-fast, since it will be used for perl programming, as a partner for network programming on the windows machine, and for general unix fun. (I wish it were the other way around!) Thanks, Erik.