netsol,matthew writes: > I ran the rom-scan at dos, it says: > Found ROM header at C800:0000; anounces 32k image (27c256 EPROM) This message would suggest, that you properly installed and configured the EPROM. I just double-checked with the source code for rom-scan and I could not think of any hardware problem that might still go undetected (please, correct me, if anyone can think of anything else that rom-scan should check for). This is a list of other things, that I can imagine as having an effect on how your machine detects ROM extensions: 1) there are other ROM extensions that take effect earlier and override whatever the BOOT-Prom is trying to do. A typical candidate for this, would be a SCSI host adapter; but if there is one, you should see it in the rom-scan output. 2) your computer has problems with the way that the BOOT-Prom is hooking into system vectors. If you are using "etherboot", you could try defining NOINT19H in the configuration file and then rebuilding the boot image. While this change introduces a couple of other problems and is thus not generally recommended, it might help in your case --- if it does help, then please check that afterwards, the machine is running at full speed and that you can access all PCI devices; there are BIOS versions out there, which do not fully initialize the hardware if NOINT19H is set. 3) just to make sure, that you are not seeing a problem with weird PC motherboard design, you should also try moving the EPROM base address to some higher location (e.g. D800:0000). 4) can you please confirm, that the above line is the *only* output you get from rom-scan. Can you repeatedly run rom-scan and still see the same message? If it does not work all the time, your EPROM might have an access time that is too long; it should probably have something around 120ns. 5) check your system BIOS if it has any switches that might enable ROM extensions, caching for ROM extensions, shadowing, or any such thing. Play around with these options. 6) if none of the above helps, try posting as much information as possible about your machine. Maybe, someone else has a good idea when he sees a summary of your configuration. Good luck, Markus -- Markus Gutschke Internet: markus@infoscape.com Infoscape, Inc Phone: +1-415-537-3778 657 Mission Street, Suite 200 San Francisco, CA 94105 Disclaimer: The above message represents my personal opinion; It does not constitute an offical statement by Infoscape!
For requests or suggestions regarding this mailing list archive please write to netboot@gkminix.han.de.