On Thu, Apr 2, 2015 at 4:58 AM, James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: ... > Well, what do you know: HP has a computer museum full of obsolete > documentation. > > http://www.hpmuseum.net/collection_document.php oh wow... > If anyone can identify the programming specs for the HP-PB (or better > still the actual SCSI card) we might be in business. This doc will help a lot: 3000-900_9000-800_OnlineDiagnosticsSubManual_VolIII_LAN-SCSI-MUX_09740-90034_324pages_Jul91.pdf Look at Section 18 "SCSIPBA" - register descriptions starting on page 18-21. Register overview on 18-33 (page 216 of the PDF). And I finally found the name of the SCSI chip in the above doc: SPIFI (v3). The "Fast-Wide HVD" NIO card uses SPIFI v4. Knowing that name also helped find the Net BSD driver (again): http://lists.parisc-linux.org/pipermail/parisc-linux/2002-June/016557.html http://lists.parisc-linux.org/pipermail/parisc-linux/2002-June/016562.html http://lists.parisc-linux.org/pipermail/parisc-linux/2002-June/016563.html http://lists.parisc-linux.org/pipermail/parisc-linux/2002-June/016576.html and looks like NetBSD "newsmips" did support SPIFI-3: http://netbsd.mirrors.treibsand.com/ports/newsmips/ cheers, grant ps. It's embarrassing I couldn't remember the name of the SCSI chip: I worked on HPUX SPIFI-4 driver between 1994-1996. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-parisc" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html