on 6-6-2008 10:48 AM Ruslan Sivak spake the following:
I don't think their driver is better, as they regularly refresh their driver to the kernel maintainers. It is just that the newer cards take a bit of time to get to the disk images. Another thing you might be able to do is install to a drive that is not on the raid card and install their driver and migrate to the array.Victor Padro wrote:On Fri, Jun 6, 2008 at 12:20 PM, Ruslan Sivak <russ@xxxxxxxxxx <mailto:russ@xxxxxxxxxx>> wrote:Jeff wrote:On Fri, Jun 6, 2008 at 11:58 AM, Ruslan Sivak <russ@xxxxxxxxxx<mailto:russ@xxxxxxxxxx>> wrote:Tim Verhoeven wrote: On Fri, Jun 6, 2008 at 6:51 PM, Ruslan Sivak <russ@xxxxxxxxxx <mailto:russ@xxxxxxxxxx>> wrote:I successfully installed CentOS on 3ware 9650SEcontroller. Due to some issues with compatibility with my motherboard, I replaced it with a 9690SA. Now the system won't boot (although interestingly enough, it find the boot menu fine, just won't boot past a certain point in the bootup phase. I thought I would reinstall, but anaconda doesn't find the raid array. 3ware does have drivers on their site, but I'm not too sure how to get them on my system?That controller requires a newer version of the 3waredriver. I'm pretty sure the 5.2 will have that driver. So if you can wait a bit longer... Regards, TimFor production use, I can, but currently we are testingthese servers, and I would like to get them up and running. Is there a way to load a driver on an already running system, or load it for anaconda? Something similar to F6 in windows?Yes, anaconda supports the concept of a driver disk.http://www.centos.org/docs/2/rhl-ig-as-x86-en-2.1/ch-driverdisk.htmlAnd 3ware offers a disk image download for 9690SA/RHEL5.Thank you. I noticed that they said in the docs to install byusing linux dd. 3ware provides a zip file with the drivers, not a disk image, AFAIK. I burned the contents of the zip to a cd, but anaconda fails to recognize it. It keeps complaining about not being able to find a fat or a ext3 filesystem on the driver disk. I don't have a floppy drive, only a cdrom and a flash drive. Do I need to get a floppy drive in order for this to work? Russ _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing listCentOS@xxxxxxxxxx <mailto:CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx>http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centosPerhaps you can download RHEL 5.2 from Red Hat Network, if you are a customer there will be no problem but if you're not, maybe you can sign out for 30 day trial and then download the ISOs, burn it and test your box and share your results, it will be enough time for CentOS 5.2 to be available, so then you can be sure to run a production system.https://www.redhat.com/wapps/sso/rhn/login.html?redirect=http%3A%2F%2Frhn.redhat.com%2Frhn%2Fsoftware%2Fchannel%2Fdownloads%2FDownload.do%3Fcid=6949I got almost the same issue with an Asus mainboard...that's my 2 cents. Cya. Victor.It's probably a good idea for me to know how to do this from scratch. Plus I want to see if there's a difference in performance between the stock driver and the 3ware driver. I'm going to try giving 3ware a call to see how to install this. Their support is usually excellent.Russ
I just looked at their website, and they do have a driver disk image. If you don't have a floppy, you can usually do a network install and get the driver disk image also from the network.
It is in the install docs I believe. -- MailScanner is like deodorant... You hope everybody uses it, and you notice quickly if they don't!!!!
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