Date: Mon, 07 May 2001 05:44:35 -0400 From: "Andrew Hagen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "debian-user@lists.debian.org" <debian-user@lists.debian.org>, "Sebastiaan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >From a Google search, the document at this URI
<http://www.cmbi.kun.nl/swift/johnny/sys/ls120-linux.html> indicates that as early as kernels 2.0 something there was support for running an IDE LS-120 as an a: drive. The Linux hardware database entry at ======================== At least one fairly new distribution (I forget which) assumes that if /dev/hdc is an ls-120 that you want it mounted on /floppy, and that you do not want to use your /dev/fd0 floppy drive if you have one. No problem, just edit /etc/fstab. Perhaps it would be easier to copy the raw disk images (dd --help) to your hard disk and eat them there (or don't process them at all) rather than to concern yourself with what program can read the format of the floppies in the drive. Using /dev/fd0 and /dev/fd1 and /dev/hdc you might be able to copy those floppies at a pretty good rate. Write a script to automate and run it in different shells for each device, so everything can grind at once. In W$ the ls120 must(?) be /dev/hdc. I don't know whether there would be a problem operating another in linux as /dev/hdb, but I think you would have no trouble at all. That way hopefully you could copy four floppies at once. (I think you want your harddrive as /dev/hda and your cdrom as /dev/hdd.) -- DaveA (Debian User)===================== The journey of a thousand miles begins with but a single KITA. =================