--- "isplist@xxxxxxxxxxxx" <isplist@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > I see now Roger... I had the wrong option wording. I > never saw it this way so > will give it a try and post my findings, thanks. that was exactly what I like to point if you mistake anything, the kernel just drop what you type, so you have to be very carefull about what to write. there is also the way to give more than one option to the same kernel module, usually the examples just show howto give only one option to the modules but in your case you have to pass _two_ options to the same kernel module, how do you do that? I guess I give you the way it should be done, but I am not sure at all :-( in past times I recall that you can pass several options with a ',' separator but I couldn't fine if it is the same with kernels 2.6.x .... scsi_mod.max_luns=256 scsi_mod.scsi_dev_flags=INLINE:TF200:0x242 see the '.' between the module name and its option? maybe, and just maybe, it make the trick there is also the posibility that, because the scsi_mod maybe be loaded as a module (not be an in-line module), that any of the options you pass at boot time has any use, so, why not to switch to the console F2 and unload scsi_mod and then loaded with the right options? if that do not works, then, my next try would be to install from network (PXE boot) so I can create-modify whatever file I like and add whatever option I like to the kernel at boot time without recreate the installer CD > > > On Thu, 1 Mar 2007 15:55:14 -0800 (PST), Roger Peña > wrote: > > > > > > --- "isplist@xxxxxxxxxxxx" <isplist@xxxxxxxxxxxx> > > wrote: > > > >> Is there anyone on this list who can make a > >> suggestion to RH??? I've been > >> asking about this for some time now and have no > idea > >> where to turn. > >> > >> I've been working with Qlogic on my LUN problem > for > >> a couple of weeks or so. I > >> posted asking about this here but it seems that > >> there aren't any answers here > >> either. > >> In order to see the volumes which I need to gain > >> access to, I need to install > >> RHEL and then do the following; > >> > >> Edit /etc/modprobe.conf > >> options scsi_mod max_luns=256 > >> dev_flags=INLINE:TF200:0x242 > >> mkinitrd -f /boot/initrd-`uname -r`.img `uname > -r` > >> Reboot; > > maybe something like: > > scsi_mod.max_luns=256 > > scsi_mod.scsi_dev_flags=INLINE:TF200:0x242 cu roger __________________________________________ RedHat Certified Engineer ( RHCE ) Cisco Certified Network Associate ( CCNA ) ____________________________________________________________________________________ Have a burning question? Go to www.Answers.yahoo.com and get answers from real people who know. -- Linux-cluster mailing list Linux-cluster@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-cluster