On 3 Feb, this message from Andrew Sharp echoed through cyberspace: > No, I'm getting no output on the monitor.
Important side-note: control video hardware as initialized by OF is notoriously bad at doing monitor timings. By default (i.e. after a PRAM reset) it sets up some weird mode that resembles [EMAIL PROTECTED], but isn't. Depending on your monitor, it may or may not sync to this sh... My old Phlips 17B does, my newer Dell P990 doesn't. If that is your problem, get yourself a serial console, reset PRAM, and boot with cmd-opt-O-F into OF, set your terminal to 38400 and conectit with a null-modem cable to the modem port. You should have the OF user interface there. >From there, do like this (from a mail from some time ago...): ______________________________ Fixes for Apple OpenFirmware 1.0.5 Alan Mimms ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) Sun, 17 Aug 1997 19:08:19 +0000 Hi. I have finally had enough with the buggy screen and disk drivers in Apple's Open Firmware on PowerMac 7200, 7500, 7600, 8500, 9500, and probably some others I'm forgetting. So I have written some NVRAMRC based patches to Open Firmware to hack around the bugs enough for my purposes anyway. I hope the hacks may help you too. Start up and break into your Open Firmware -- Cmd-Opt-O-F during the boot beep held down until the "user interface" for Open Firmware comes up on your screen or, if you're smart, your serial port. The banner printed by Open Firmware shows the Open Firmware version. These patches ONLY apply to Open Firmware version 1.0.5. Other versions will crash if these patches can be applied at all! Type at the prompt: nvedit and hit control-L to see the cryptic stuff that is part of your Open Firmware's startup sequence. This stuff patches various bugs in the ROM. Hit control-N enough times that you no longer see a new line of gobbledegook every time several times in a row. This means you're at the bottom. Either paste the following into a terminal session (NOTE: must be at least a dozen or so ms delay between characters and maybe 100ms between lines to work right!) or else enter the following lines very very carefully: dev /bandit/gc/via-cuda ' write value &W : -&We &W swap - execute ; : P1 4D8 -&We false 548 -&We ; &W FC + ' P1 BLpatch : P2 0C 2 ms ; &W E0 + ' P2 BLpatch device-end : wBoot begin boot-device ['] $boot catch drop ." -Waiting for boot-device" cr d# 500 ms key? until ; Note that ALL whitespace above except for the line indentation is REQUIRED. FORTH is a very very very strange "language". It may be safe to leave the line indentation as I have it above when pasting if you wish. It's wasteful but who cares? At the end of this laborious typing (or pasting) session hit control-C (yes that's right: control-C is the end of editing session character in Open Firmware). Then type at the prompt nvstore to save the changed NVRAMRC variable into NVRAM. The first block fixes a bug in the via-cuda driver in which not enough time is given for the device to settle when it is told to set the video controller's clocks up. The second block defines a FORTH word that can be used in place of the normal boot-command contents to wait for the disk to spin up before attempting to really boot. This avoids the standard "black screen the first time you power on the computer each day" problem. Then type at the prompt setenv boot-command wBoot This sets up the default command executed on auto-boot (normally on power on) to run the above disk spinup waiting hack. FYI: the reason I know about this stuff is that I worked for about two years as the Copland booting guy. Sheesh... Please don't inundate me with a bazillion questions about Open Firmware. I have a real job and it takes 60+ hours a week of my time. I get PAID to do it. I just did this to fix MY PPC Linux box and I wanted to help you folks out a teeny bit if I could. No, I don't work at Apple anymore. Cancelling Copland was the last straw. I worked there more than nine years. (sigh) Happy trails. a A copy of the universe is not what is required of art; one of the damned things is ample. -- Rebecca West, The Creators, by Daniel J. Boorstin ___________________________________________ Hope this helps Michel ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Michel Lanners | " Read Philosophy. Study Art. 23, Rue Paul Henkes | Ask Questions. Make Mistakes. L-1710 Luxembourg | email [EMAIL PROTECTED] | http://www.cpu.lu/~mlan | Learn Always. "