installing on a new PowerBook

Alex Vallens Vallens at Colorado.EDU
Mon Sep 25 10:32:22 EST 2000


I just got one of the brand new Pismo PowerBooks (supposedly identical
to the previous generation, but with larger HDs, 20 GB in my case). I
haven't been able to boot it at all. Everytime I boot, I get the
following kernel output regarding my drive:

hda: IBM-DJSA-220, ATA DISK drive
ide0 at 0x8x01f000-0x8e01f007, 0x8e01f160 on irq 19
hda: Enabling Ultra DMA 4
hda: IBM-DJSA-220, 19077MB w/1874kB Cache, CHS=38760/16/63, (U)DMA
Partition check:
    hda:<7>ohci-control thread code for 0xc06370e0 code at 0xc0167d18
hda: lost interrupt
hda: lost interrupt
hda: lost interrupt
hda: lost interrupt
 hda1hda: lost interrupt
 hda2 hda3hda: lost interrupt
 hda4 hda5hda: lost interrupt
 hda6 hda7hda: lost interrupt
 hda8 hda9hda: lost interrupt
 hda10 hda11
RAMDISK: Compressed image found at block 0
EXZT-fs warning: maximal count reached, runing e2fsck is recommended
VFS: Mounted root (ext2 filesystem)

hda: lost interrupt
hda: lost interrupt
hda: lost interrupt
hda: lost interrupt
hda: lost interrupt
hda: lost interrupt
hda: lost interrupt
hda: lost interrupt
<repeats indefinitely>


It finds the bus and the drive, but hangs trying to mount. So, I tried
to reinitialize the device map using pdisk. Unfortunately, pdisk run
under the MacOS is unable to recognize the device (I type "e
/dev/ata2.0" at the command prompt, but it says "pdisk: can't open file
'/dev/ata2.0'"). From the get info in MacOS, I know that the hard drive
is id 0 on bus 2 of the ata, so that command should be correct. pdisk,
however, only recognizes '/dev/ata0.0', which is the internal DVD-ROM
drive.

How can I get Linux to recognize the drive? Will downloading the newest
dev. kernel from Paul M's site help, or am I stuck? Why doesn't pdisk
recongnize my drive?

Alex


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