[Coco] Glenside IDE Controller Question...

Randy Just randyjust at comcast.net
Tue Oct 23 13:59:00 EDT 2007


I am trying to follow the steps below. Where is makedesc located? I couldn't
find it in the /CMDS directory.

Thanks!




>Once you have a standard floppy-only NitrOS boot, the only other

>software you'll need is the Glenside drivers and utilities, BASIC-09,

>and a good text editor.

>

>Run detect_ide. Think about what it tells you. How many partitions

>are you going to create? As I said before, 1-sector clusters are

>good. NitrOS can handle bigger clusters, but some of the old OS-9

>software can cause problems because they all assume 1-sector

>clusters. Is the drive LBA compatible? There's a bug in makedesc

>concerning CHS partitions. It's documented with the software on my

>site and rtsi and maltedmedia but I didn't *fix* it in those files.

>

>There are two versions of the driver, one supports 5 partitions and

>the other supports 11. Choose which driver you will use. I've had

>much better luck with the drivers which have the zero-sector bug

>fixed.

>

>Then run makedesc. Something else not mentioned in the Glenside docs

>is that device descriptor names are 3 chars. max. Regular OS-9 naming

>convention for hard drives is H0, H1, etc.

>

>When you're done with makedesc you should have the device descriptors

>saved on your disk as h0.dd or whatever. Copy the descriptors into

>NITROS9/6809LII/MODULES/RBF. Copy the proper driver into the same

>directory. Note the file names.

>

>In NITROS9/6809LII/BOOTLISTS, make a copy of standard.bl. Call it

>original.bl or whatever. Edit standard.bl. In the RBF section, add

>the glenside driver and the descriptors.

>

>In ...6809LII/BOOTSCRIPTS, run the "mb" script to make a new bootdisk.

>When that's done, use dsave to copy the files on disk 1 to your new

>boot(use help to check the syntax of dsave, it has changed from the

>original). Add the glenside utilities.

>

>Reboot with your new boot disk. If the gods are pleased it'll boot

>and you can lformat /h0.

>

>No, this isn't the quickest or easiest way to make a new boot disk,

>perhaps, but it's the way with the most control and the most

>educational. Once you understand all of this, then you can play with

>ezgen or whatever.

>

>The last, and perhaps fussiest, step. When you've copied stuff onto

>/h0 and you're confident everything's working, you can make a new DD

>descriptor. Either use makedesc and be very careful to give it the

>same parameters as H0, or edit a copy of your H0.dd with ded, changing

>the name to DD (make sure the 0'th bit of the second "D" is set).

>Make a new bootdisk, replacing dd_ds40 with your new dd_ide. If you

>can get this to work, it's the next best thing to having a IDE aware

>boot ROM. When you boot NitrOS, it will load os9boot and cmds/grfdrv

>off the floppy, then switch to the ide drive for everything else.

>

>Willard

>--

>Willard Goosey goosey at sdc.org

>Socorro, New Mexico, USA

>"I've never been to Contempt! Isn't that somewhere in New Mexico?"

> --- Yacko

>

>

>--

>Coco mailing list

>Coco at maltedmedia.com

>http://five.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/coco





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