On Tue, 2005-09-06 at 22:54 -0400, James B. Byrne wrote: > On 6 Sep 2005 at 18:13, Rodrigo Barbosa wrote: > > > You will have to select the correct module for your controler, and > > configure it (/etc/modprobe.conf). lspci might give you the information > > you need to get started. > > Perhaps I am using the wrong terminology for my request. I am > seeking assistance in configuring linux to recognize and use a scsi > tape drive. The scsi controller was added to this system for the > sole purpose of supporting the tape unit long after the os was > loaded. I do not know how to tell the linux kernel to select and > load the necessary module to access the scsi controller and thence > the tape drive. That is why I sought a cookbook solution to this > problem. There must be somewhere, a well defined series of steps that > one goes through to identify, select, and configure the appropriate > module for a specific scsi adapter. I lack this knowledge and this > is what I seek. > > lspci yields this: > > 05:04.0 SCSI storage controller: Initio Corporation 360P (rev 02) > > /etc/modeprobe.conf contains this: > > alias eth0 e100 > alias snd-card-0 snd-intel8x0 > options snd-card-0 index=0 > install snd-intel8x0 /sbin/modprobe --ignore-install snd-intel8x0 && > /usr/sbin/alsactl restore >/dev/null 2>&1 || : > remove snd-intel8x0 { /usr/sbin/alsactl store >/dev/null 2>&1 || : ; > }; /sbin/modprobe -r --ignore-remove snd-intel8x0 > alias usb-controller ehci-hcd > alias usb-controller1 uhci-hcd > > SO. What do I put into modprobe.conf to get the system to recognize > the scsi controller? Is there a utility to detect and do this? I > appreciate all the assistance but I need a more basic, step by step, > explanation of how to go about this. Jim- If you run kudzu (Redhat's hardware config utility) by hand as root, does it see the card and attempt to configure it? kudzu should generate the proper magic in /etc/sysconfig/hwconf and in /etc/modprobe.conf. Based on a quick google, this should be supported by the initio module. If kudzu fails to do the magic, try modprobe initio You could also add an entry to /etc/modprobe.conf alias scsi_hostadapter initio modprobe scsi_hostadapter -- Sean