> OpenBSD has an isp(4) driver, as 'man isp' will tell you. Nothing
> obviously ServeRAIDish in there, though.
FreeBSD's ServeRAID driver is ips, not isp. isp is for QLogic controllers.
Yes, my wrong, sorry. Of course, mean "ips".
So, who can say, what with it currently? May it be ported (as
Joachim Schipper wrote:
OpenBSD has an isp(4) driver, as 'man isp' will tell you. Nothing
obviously ServeRAIDish in there, though.
FreeBSD's ServeRAID driver is ips, not isp. isp is for QLogic controllers.
On Mon, May 22, 2006 at 08:35:35AM +0600, Anton Maksimenkov wrote:
> >Aside from the other comments, I'll add that aac(4) was disabled because
> >it was buggy and Adaptec wouldn't provide documentation.
> >Theo was quite clear about this at the time, see the 3.8 release notes.
>
> Ok, I remember a
Aside from the other comments, I'll add that aac(4) was disabled because
it was buggy and Adaptec wouldn't provide documentation.
Theo was quite clear about this at the time, see the 3.8 release notes.
Ok, I remember about situation with Adaptec... But what with "isp"
driver (from FreeBSD)? Afte
On Sun, May 21, 2006 at 11:54:21AM +0600, Anton Maksimenkov wrote:
> >Joachim Schipper wrote:
> >> 'not configured' typically means the kernel knows what it is, but
> >> doesn't know what to do with it.
> >More specifically, it means that the kernel knows the PCI device's ID
> >and vendor, but does
On 2006/05/21 11:54, Anton Maksimenkov wrote:
> Ok, I uncomment the aac driver in kernel, for testing reasons, and
> rebuild. The card is steel not recognized (by aac). I thinking about
> to try to add it to aac.
I don't think your card is an aac.
> WHERE TO GET THE MAGIC NUMBER for "pcidevs" fil
Joachim Schipper wrote:
> 'not configured' typically means the kernel knows what it is, but
> doesn't know what to do with it.
More specifically, it means that the kernel knows the PCI device's ID
and vendor, but doesn't have a driver to hook it to.
FreeBSD supports it with the ips driver and it a
Joachim Schipper wrote:
'not configured' typically means the kernel knows what it is, but
doesn't know what to do with it.
More specifically, it means that the kernel knows the PCI device's ID
and vendor, but doesn't have a driver to hook it to.
FreeBSD supports it with the ips driver and it
On Sun, May 21, 2006 at 12:39:30AM +0600, Anton Maksimenkov wrote:
> Hi.
>
> Reading through misc archives I found this post
> http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=openbsd-misc&m=112454454105020&w=2
> Currently I got number of IBM ServeRAID 4M controllers (plus
> batteries packs) in couple with some IB
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