In data domenica 24 dicembre 2023 00:53:11 CET, joe a ha scritto:
Trying to salvage/repurpose former VMware host, to see if a useful iSCSI target can be built on LEAP 15.5. Dr. Frankenstein has granted me license to use some of his techniques. Call me Igor.
Creeping along, gathering bits from various Cyber crypts in the "Laboratory", I find the beastie will not boot from DVD or the Floppy, but willingly boots the former VMware drive.
The HD's are all "SATA" type, the DVD is IDE and the Floppy is, well, floppy. Well, the cable is anyway. The boot priority is DVD first, FD second, HD third.
Upon boot, it acts as if the DVD and FD are not installed. I tried another physical DVD, and cables for DVD and FD. Not a hint of activity on the drives, except during power on and POST.
If I remove the HD's from the boot sequence, leaving only the DVD and FD, there is still no observable activity on the drives (seeking sounds, LED blinks, NADA) and the process halts with F1, no boot found, press a key.
This used to work fine, I know, as I installed VMWARE via DVD, oh, so long ago. Gasp, I wax nostalgic. Which is quite different than waxing Brazilian. So I'm told
TIA. In advance.
joe a.
Welcome to Jurassic Park! (but I appreciate you effort, I tried the same at times). The mainboard is very old. First: what OS do you wish to install (TW or Leap?). Any POST? I will departure by the idea that you have only one IDE device attached and that it is cable select. You may set via jumper the DVD to master instead, some old models have problems with cable select in rare circumstances. If two devices are present use either cable select for ALL devices or master slave (in this case double check that the colour coding is correct on the cables (must be "black" plug for the master). First: check the installation medium, try a second burn if you have one. Burn at very low speed. Second: Did you push the machine (overclocking?) then you need to set default values in speed, especially RAM settings can blow the slow IDE to fail in boot. Third: Note that some mainboards have a resource restraint so that when fully packed with SATA they may fail to boot from an IDE, you could check in the bios which SATA ports are capable to boot and if possible, temporarily remove one of the cables until the boot / install is done and join it afterwards. After this: As far as I see you have only one IDE, as first step go into the BIOS and deactivate the floppy. Set DVD first. If USB is authorized to boot, try either a mobile usb DVD for install (do NOT use a HUB when installing, do it only and always on a physical usb plug of the mainboard. If the OS is not available on USB key, and the other steps did not give result, you could try to change the IDE cable (I would normally advise to change controller but you have only one as far as I see on the layout). So first: medium, default chipset timing, no floppy, if still not then one sata taken off during install, if not possible try to change cable, try USB without hub. Then once you are done with all this, you may tell results. Seasonal greetings.