nate: Thanks for your reply.
> these are really bad cards to use with under Linux. I noticed that. The problem is that it is hard to get motherboards with other built-in RAID controllers... :-/ > it looks to only support raid0, Too bad, the only reason I use RAID is to do mirroring. Anyway, I have now actually gotten the drivers from Promise to work (the drivers for "Red Hat"). It does some weird things - the array shows up multiple times in the disk list - but at least I was able to install the system and boot into it properly. What I did was to go to Promise, download their drivers, extract the relevant zip file (for FastTrak 100, RedHat uniprocessor), find the driver that most closely matched my setup (2.4.18-3/FastTrak.o) and put it on a vfat floppy as per the Debian installation instructions. I then loaded this module into the installation system, which made it find my array. I am going to try the native drivers from a newer 2.4 kernel later. For now I'm happy that I got it working so far. My problem now is that I cannot get LILO to boot my Windows installation. The only thing that happens is that I get an error message from NT saying that it cannot find the kernel. Does anyone know if I can do some special tweaking to get this to work? I'm booting NT from an NTFS partition, and Linux from a ext2 partition, which are the two first partitions on the array (sda1 and sda2). I put LILO in the MBR. Please Cc me, I do not subscribe to this list due to the volume. -- \\// Peter - I do not read or respond to mail with HTML attachments. Statement concerning unsolicited e-mail according to Swedish law: http://www.softwolves.pp.se/peter/reklampost.html -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]