When I try to use an IBM 9gb 10k rpm drive as the boot drive
in an Ultra 30, I get a Trap 3e message and then an OK prompt.
This occurs after a power-on boot, after a reset (and boot), after
a reset-all & boot. After the trap message and OK prompt, I can enter
boot again and it will boot and continue just fine.
This occures with any of several identical drives I've got, and it occurs
in either internal slot (ID = 0 or 1) or in an external 711 case.
The drive is an IBM Type: DRVS, COMP IEC-950
Mfg date around 14 Jul 99, firmware 0270.
Here's the exact messages that I get:
Sun Ultra 30 UPA/PCI (UltraSPARC-II 400MHz), No Keyboard
OpenBoot 3.27, 512 MB memory installed, Serial #9381808.
Ethernet address 8:0:20:8f:27:b0, Host ID: 808f27b0.
( after memory initialization )
Boot device: disk File and args:
Trap 3e
ok <---
if I enter 'boot' here, it works OK.
Anybody got any suggestions, besides use a Sun spec drive?
Charlie Smith
cha...@elektro.com
Columbus, Ohio
And, yes this U30 works fine with an UltraSparc II 400MHz processor :-)
>
> I've got a problem and could use help / suggestions.
>
> When I try to use an IBM 9gb 10k rpm drive as the boot drive
> in an Ultra 30, I get a Trap 3e message and then an OK prompt.
>
> This occurs after a power-on boot, after a reset (and boot), after
> a reset-all & boot. After the trap message and OK prompt, I can enter
> boot again and it will boot and continue just fine.
>
hmm, maybe possible that the drive doesn't spins up fast enough, or is jumpered to some wired settings.
I'm using almost exclusively IBM disks, 8-36 gig and they never showed such problem.
>
> And, yes this U30 works fine with an UltraSparc II 400MHz processor :-)
>
hmmm, interesting, how did you do that?
--
Barbie - Prayers are like junkmail for Jesus
I have seen things you lusers would not believe.
I've seen Sun monitors on fire off the side of the multimedia lab.
I've seen NTU lights glitter in the dark near the Mail Gate.
All these things will be lost in time, like the root partition last week.
Time to die.
bar...@toppoint.de http://www.amigaworld.com/barbie/index.html
There's a bug report that describes a similar problem with
IBM drives. The fix was to put something in NVRAMrc;
u10c(60)# eeprom nvramrc='probe-all install-console banner ? " Probing Ultra
SCSI controller to work around Trap 3e error" type cr ? " /pci@1f,0/pci@1/scsi@
1" " show-children" execute-device-method drop'
u10c(61)# eeprom nvramrc
nvramrc=probe-all install-console banner
" Probing Ultra SCSI controller to work around Trap 3e error" type cr
" /pci@1f,0/pci@1/scsi@1" " show-children" execute-device-method drop
u10c(62) eeprom use-nvramrc\?
use-nvramrc?=false
u10c(63)# eeprom use-nvramrc\?=true
Substitute your own SCSI controller path for /pci@....
Spaces are significant!
Use "Stop-N" on boot when this doesn't work.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Instead of the Solaris eeprom command shown, I ended up having to enter
the three lines of date using nvedit from openboot.
It works like a charm!
- Charlie Smith
cha...@elektro.com
Columbus Ohio, USA
:
Easy really. Move the system board jumper J3001 to positions 2-3.
The FE handbook on the Ultra 30 says this is for clock /2 mode
(167/200 MHz). However, the Ultra 60 page says the J3001 jumper
is /2 mode for 200MHz processors and /4 mode for 450MHz processors.
And the Ultra 2 page shows the coresponding jumper meaning /2 mode
for 167/200MHz and /4 mode for 400MHz.
I set auto-boot? false and set diag-switch? true and moved the jumper
and put in the 400MHz UltraSparc II (2 MB) - and then booted via a
serial port console setup. Sure enough, it recognized the 400MHz
processor and the clock mode was /4. Timing tests showed it was running
with the 400MHz module as it should.
cha...@infinet.com (Charlie Smith) writes:
>I received the answe for this in a private email from a Sun person.
>There is a known problem with IBM drives (didn't say which ones),
>here's the info I received:
Or a problem with the boot environment. Bug number is #4359255
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.
> I set auto-boot? false and set diag-switch? true and moved the jumper
> and put in the 400MHz UltraSparc II (2 MB) - and then booted via a
> serial port console setup. Sure enough, it recognized the 400MHz
> processor and the clock mode was /4. Timing tests showed it was running
> with the 400MHz module as it should.
This is the 501-5445/X1193A module? Man, if I had $2500 burning a hole in
my pocket...
- A.P.
--
Don't have X1193A listed in my FE handbook.
It's a 501-5237 / X1194A the same as goes in an Ultra 2.
When you see them, it's closer to $1000.
Charlie Smith