patch-2.1.85 linux/Documentation/Configure.help
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- Lines: 90
- Date:
Mon Feb 2 14:51:31 1998
- Orig file:
v2.1.84/linux/Documentation/Configure.help
- Orig date:
Fri Jan 30 11:28:05 1998
diff -u --recursive --new-file v2.1.84/linux/Documentation/Configure.help linux/Documentation/Configure.help
@@ -658,6 +658,11 @@
want to compile it as a module, say M here and read
Documentation/modules.txt. If unsure, say Y.
+Boot support (linear, striped)
+CONFIG_MD_BOOT
+ To boot with an initial linear or striped md device you have to
+ select this. For lilo and loadlin options see Documentation/md.txt.
+
Support for Deskstation RPC44
CONFIG_DESKSTATION_RPC44
This is a machine with a R4400 100 MHz CPU. To compile a Linux
@@ -2737,29 +2742,54 @@
IBMMCA SCSI support
CONFIG_SCSI_IBMMCA
- If your computer sports an MCA bus system architecture (IBM PS/2)
- with an SCSI harddrive, say Y here. Please read
- Documentation/mca.txt. This driver is also available as a module ( =
- code which can be inserted in and removed from the running kernel
- whenever you want). The module will be called ibmmca.o. If you want
- to compile it as a module, say M here and read
- Documentation/modules.txt.
- Normally, all IBM MCA SCSI adapters are automatically detected. If
- that doesn't work right however, you can completely override
- auto-detection by specifying "ibmmcascsi=io1,io2,..." at the boot
- loader's command prompt or "io_port=io1,io2,... scsi_id=id1,id2,..."
- as a parameter of insmod. "io" and "id" are the I/O base address
- and the SCSI ID of each adapter, respectively.
- If you want to compile this driver as a module ( = code which can be
- inserted in and removed from the running kernel whenever you want),
- say M here and read Documentation/modules.txt. The module will be
- called ibmmca.o.
-
-reset SCSI-devices while booting
-CONFIG_SCSI_IBMMCA_DEV_RESET
- If you say Y here, each connected SCSI device will get a reset
- command at boot time. This can be necessary for some special SCSI
- devices. If unsure, say N.
+ This is support for the IBM SCSI adapter found in many of the PS/2
+ series. CONFIG_MCA must be set for this to work. If the adapter
+ isn't found during boot (a common problem for models 56, 57, 76, and
+ 77) you'll need to use the 'ibmmcascsi=<pun>', where <pun> is the id
+ of the SCSI subsystem (usually 7, but if that doesn't work check your
+ reference diskette). Owners of model 95 with a LED-matrix-display
+ can in addition activate some activity info like under OS/2, but more
+ informative, by setting 'ibmmcascsi=display' as additional kernel-
+ parameter.
+
+Standard SCSI-order
+CONFIG_IBMMCA_SCSI_ORDER_STANDARD
+ In the PC-world and in most modern SCSI-BIOS-setups, SCSI-harddisks
+ are assigned to the driveletters, starting with the lowest SCSI-id
+ (physical number - pun) to be drive C:, as seen from DOS and similar
+ operating systems. When looking into papers, describing the
+ ANSI-SCSI-standard, this assignment of drives appears to be wrong.
+ The SCSI-standard follows a hardware-hierarchy which says, that
+ id 7 has the highest priority and id 0 the lowest. Therefore, the
+ hostadapters are still today everywhere placed as SCSI-id 7 by
+ default. In the SCSI-standard, the driveletters express the priority
+ of the disk. C: should be the harddisk or a partition on it, with the
+ highest priority. This must therefore be the disk with the highest
+ SCSI-id (e.g. 6) and not the one with the lowest! IBM-BIOS kept the
+ original definition of the SCSI-standard as also industrial- and
+ process-control-machines, like VME-CPUs running under realtime-OSs
+ (e.g. LynxOS, OS9) do.
+ If you like to run Linux on your MCA-machine with the same assignment,
+ of harddisks, as seen from e.g. DOS or OS/2 on your machine, which
+ is in addition conform to the SCSI-standard, you must say 'y' here.
+ This is also necessary for MCA-Linux-users who want to keep downward-
+ compatibility to older releases of the IBM-MCA-SCSI-driver (older than
+ driver-release 2.00 and older than June 1997).
+ If you like to have the lowest SCSI-id assigned as drive C:, as modern
+ SCSI-BIOS do, which is not conform to the standard, but widely spread
+ and common in the PC-world of today, you must say 'n' here.
+
+Reset SCSI-devices at boottime
+CONFIG_IBMMCA_SCSI_DEV_RESET
+ By default, SCSI-devices are reset, when the machine is powered on.
+ However, some devices exist, like special-control-devices,
+ SCSI-CNC-machines, SCSI-printer or scanners of older type, that
+ do not reset, when switched on. If you say 'y' here, each device
+ along your SCSI-bus will get a reset-command after it has been
+ probed, while the kernel is booting. Say always 'n' here, if you
+ have no such strange SCSI-devices on your bus. If you say 'y' and
+ some more modern devices, like harddisks, do not like too much
+ resets, your system will hang when booting.
Always IN2000 SCSI support
CONFIG_SCSI_IN2000
FUNET's LINUX-ADM group, linux-adm@nic.funet.fi
TCL-scripts by Sam Shen, slshen@lbl.gov