Re: Device for parallel port zip drive?

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I'm trying to use an old parallel port Zip drive on Fedora 2. I downloaded the IOmegaware file for Linux from iOmega

I'm not sure what the IOmegaware file has to do with anything. According to the ZIP-drive HOW-TO, it's just a matter of loading standard modules in the right order (namely, before the parallel-port module gets loaded)


You can read more at
http://en.tldp.org/HOWTO/ZIP-Drive-4.html#ss4.1

My understanding from the docs is that if you have the ZIP drive attached at boot time, and your modules probe the "ppa" module before the "lp" module, you should have a "sda0" device which you can mount like any other drive. Granted, the drive may not be "a" if you have other SCSI devices on your system

My previous computer had a builtin Zip drive that worked fine, and my home machine has an external SCSI zip drive that worked fine on FC2.

I think the internal varieties (last I checked...I stripped my internal out of the machine in which I had one) show up as a standard IDE drive, and thus as simply /dev/hdb or /dev/hdc or /dev/hdd depending on where it landed in your IDE chain (I've even booted with it as the master device on the primary IDE, making it /dev/hda).


It should then have a fairly standard partition table, which you can view with fdisk, which should allow you to mount particular partitions, or even repartition it as you desire.

While you can't boot off a parallel-port ZIP drive, you can boot from a floppy (or CD if you want) which will load the parallel-port ZIP module, and then proceed to boot from that.

If all goes properly, you should have a device which exposes itself as either an IDE drive (/dev/hdXY) or SCSI drive (/dev/sdXY) which you can then mount with the usual "mount" command like

	bash> mount /dev/sda0 /mnt/zip

It should autodetect the type of filesystem (usually VFAT), but you can bung with that and change it to your favorite if you like, using fdisk/cfdisk and your favorite flavor of mkfs assuming you don't need to use the disk in Dos/Win32 systems.

HTH,

-tim








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