This is a discussion on Internal DDS3 causing SCSI bus issues on SB1K within the Sun Solaris Hardware forums, part of the Solaris Operating System category; --> Hi, I recently bought a 2nd hand DDS3 in a unipack 611 case, with the intention of installing it ...
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| Hi, I recently bought a 2nd hand DDS3 in a unipack 611 case, with the intention of installing it in the spare 5.25" bay below the DVD in my SB1K. Installation was ok from the perspective of power and 50 pin SCSI cabling however on the OBP I am getting persistent SCSI bus errors, presumably because the device is not set to its accustomed device '5' on the bus. The drive has (what appears to me) quite an unusual pin SCSI selection cable that was connected to the external SCSI selector in the unipack case (3 pins on top, one on the bottom). Having looked at sunsolve and the archives of this group I haven't found anything relevant. I would appreciate any pointers members of the group might be able to impart. Thanks and regards, Andrew |
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| Andrew Tyson wrote: > Hi, > > I recently bought a 2nd hand DDS3 in a unipack 611 case, with the > intention of installing it in the spare 5.25" bay below the DVD in my > SB1K. Installation was ok from the perspective of power and 50 pin SCSI > cabling however on the OBP I am getting persistent SCSI bus errors, > presumably because the device is not set to its accustomed device '5' on > the bus. The drive has (what appears to me) quite an unusual pin SCSI > selection cable that was connected to the external SCSI selector in the > unipack case (3 pins on top, one on the bottom). Having looked at > sunsolve and the archives of this group I haven't found anything > relevant. I would appreciate any pointers members of the group might be > able to impart. > > Thanks and regards, > Andrew I don't have a Blade 1000, but have fitted a DDS4 tape drive in a Ultra 80, which from the outside at least looks similar to the Blade 1000. But I've never looked inside a Blade 1000, and I am aware they are not too similar. Most DDS4 tape drives use 68-pin connectors. I'm told some HP ones will work on a narrow bus, but I bought a Sony DDS-4. Someone then said that whilst he got HP drives working on narrow, he was not able to on a Sony. I gave up and added a wide SCSI card inside mine, since there is no easy way of adding a wide device. I really don't believe the SCSI ID is critical. My internal DDS-4 is on SCSI ID=1, the DLT-8000 on SCSI ID=1 too (HVD, so different controller) and I have an external DDS-4, (which I will remove soon) on SCSI ID=6. So I have tapes on SCSI ID 1 and 6 with no hassle. # ls -l /dev/rmt/[0-2] lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 42 Jan 14 23:28 /dev/rmt/0 -> .../../devices/pci@1f,4000/scsi@3,1/st@6,0: lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 40 Feb 21 22:47 /dev/rmt/1 -> .../../devices/pci@1f,4000/scsi@2/st@1,0: lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 42 Feb 7 17:03 /dev/rmt/2 -> .../../devices/pci@1f,4000/scsi@5,1/st@1,0: If the drive came from a 611 box, I'd try it back in that on the external connector. I assume you did not buy it new, since DDS-3 is a bit old now. So it could be faulty. Also check termination carefully. I assume if it came from a 611 box it is not terminated. -- Dave K Minefield Consultant and Solitaire Expert (MCSE). Please note my email address changes periodically to avoid spam. It is always of the form: month-year@domain. Hitting reply will work for a couple of months only. Later set it manually. |
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| "Dave (from the UK)" <see-my-signature@southminster-branch-line.org.uk> writes: >I don't have a Blade 1000, but have fitted a DDS4 tape drive in a Ultra >80, which from the outside at least looks similar to the Blade 1000. But >I've never looked inside a Blade 1000, and I am aware they are not too >similar. There's a 2000 in this office with an exabyte unit installed in it. Works just fine. Proper termination needs to be checked. >I really don't believe the SCSI ID is critical. My internal DDS-4 is on >SCSI ID=1, the DLT-8000 on SCSI ID=1 too (HVD, so different controller) >and I have an external DDS-4, (which I will remove soon) on SCSI ID=6. >So I have tapes on SCSI ID 1 and 6 with no hassle. SCSI ID doesn't matter as long as it doesn't conflict with other devices (so avoid 7 [HBA] and 6 [DVD/CD, if installed) Casper -- Expressed in this posting are my opinions. They are in no way related to opinions held by my employer, Sun Microsystems. Statements on Sun products included here are not gospel and may be fiction rather than truth. |
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| On 2006-02-22 09:50:11 +0000, Andrew Tyson <atyson@please.do.not.spam.optus.net> said: > Hi, > > I recently bought a 2nd hand DDS3 in a unipack 611 case, with the > intention of installing it in the spare 5.25" bay below the DVD in my > SB1K. Installation was ok from the perspective of power and 50 pin SCSI > cabling however on the OBP I am getting persistent SCSI bus errors, > presumably because the device is not set to its accustomed device '5' > on the bus. The drive has (what appears to me) quite an unusual pin > SCSI selection cable that was connected to the external SCSI selector > in the > unipack case (3 pins on top, one on the bottom). Having looked at > sunsolve and the archives of this group I haven't found anything > relevant. I would appreciate any pointers members of the group might be > able to impart. > > Thanks and regards, > Andrew It's it;s owt like mine in my newly aquired SB1k then it's jumpered across the pins for SCSI ID 0 and SCSI ID 2 from which it identifies itself as SCSI ID 5! Mines an HP one as I think most are. HTH Ste |
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| Casper H.S. Dik wrote: > > Proper termination needs to be checked. Is that via the DIP switches? > SCSI ID doesn't matter as long as it doesn't conflict with other > devices (so avoid 7 [HBA] and 6 [DVD/CD, if installed) I understand that you can allocate any ID and 5 isn't special per se, however it occurred to me that without any jumpers the DDS3 would default to SCSI 0 on the bus - in conflict with the primary FC-AL drive. Andrew |
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