> > > Why not build a custom 2.6 kernel with scsi drivers built-in? The > > > > Because this would be the first real test of Atari SCSI in 2.6, I guess. > > Should be fine for reading the CD though (depending on how prone the > > Falcon is to DMA clock problems; make sure to boot in ST-High > > resolution!). > > Yes, SCSI is disabled, but if you say it works, I can try. Thee is not much
Please do - if you have all my patches it should work (i.e. recover from timeout/reset cycles). I haven't been able to do much work on the kernel of late, but things should be looking up now. > to loose, the harddisk is empty anyhow. Is there another easy way to copy > files, like installation files, onto an empty Atari harddisk? I could not > get a CD-driver to work, I guess I copied most of the files with a floppy, > but the initrd is too large for that, I don't remember how I did that... split, perhaps. Or initialize the TOS partition first, then plug that disk into a PC (taking care that the cluster size is <= 4k IIRC!) and copy the files over. No idea where split might be found - I can't seem to find a copy anymore. Another option would be a SCSI Zip drive. > st-high is bad, I just switched to vga16. The installer uses a lot of > colours, it is difficult to navigate in just two colours. I ended up with > installing in estonian or finish... vga16 may be OK, depending on your Falcon. > > I guess it would - we'd at least know how well the custom kernel works :-) > > I just used the kernel that is currently in debian, the latest 2.6.18. My CD > is a snapshot from january, so it is not on there yet. If that 2.6.18 still has SCSI disabled, you'll need a new one (you do have a SCSI CD-ROM, do you?). Michael -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]