[BUGS] freebsd installation with SATA drivers

goku - goku3g at gmail.com
Sat Sep 27 09:49:49 EST 2008


Hi darren, what I did is looked at the bios.  What I noticed is that
the bios didn't pick up the hard drive. But what is even more strange
is the it would still work. So what o did is change out the sata
cable.  Now it see the hard drive. So I hope this will solve the
problem.
Thanks again for all your help.  It if craps out again I will post it. Hehehehe




On 9/26/08, Darren Worley <darren at worley.org.au> wrote:
> Jon,
>
> Have a real close look at the BIOS... and see what drives get recognized
> after it 'craps out' Some older BIOS's have dodgy sata chipset firmware when
> doing bridging between Sata and ATA, but generally if your drive is
> recognise in the BIOS, all should be good for F/BSD. No drivers needed at
> all. Sata is no difference in F/BSD to Pata. The devices still get
> recognised as /dev/ad? etc.  If the BIOS finds the drive, but you still get
> a 'cant find boot record/partition error', then search for the boot order
> priority in the BIOS. I am also assuming your not dual booting, and only had
> (if any) the standard F/BSD boot manager installed.
>
> When you said you bought a new drive & changed memory (definitely not a
> memory issue)... Did you successfully reinstall F/BSD v7 again on the new
> drive and did the same thing happen again twice? If so, look very closely at
> your Motherboard itself, as it might be time to retire it. Make sure your
> changes to your BIOS settings are being kept after successive reboots. If
> they disappear even once, then it _may_ be the 3V lithium  battery on the
> Motherboard needs to be replaced, but most likely an EEprom/Flash (depends
> on chipset board manufacturer etc). Usually the battery is used for the H/W
> Real Time Clock. If you replace the battery and your settings still don't
> get retained. Retire the Motherboard, as there is effective nothing you can
> do (neither easily or cost effectively).
>
> Hope this help.
> /~darren
>
>
>
>
>   _____
>
> From: bugs-bounces at bugs.au.freebsd.org
> [mailto:bugs-bounces at bugs.au.freebsd.org] On Behalf Of goku -
> Sent: Friday, 26 September 2008 5:48 PM
> To: BUGS - Generic chat
> Subject: Re: [BUGS] freebsd installation with SATA drivers
>
>
> Yes your right Edwin, but this is the problem.  I installed FreeBSD 7.0
> without any problem.  It recognized the SATA hard drive.  But after 2 days
> the whole system crapped out. It would just reboot and says that it is
> looking for the boot record. So I thought it was the drive at first so I
> bought another drive, then the same thing happened.  So I changed memory.
> Again the problem came back.  So I took it to my friend's computer shop. I
> showed him the message and he told me that I would need to install the SATA
> drivers for FreeBSD. I got the motherboard driver on a CD and looked at it.
> It has drivers for SUSE, REDHAT.  I know that FreeBSD support linux drivers.
> My question is that when installing FreeBSD is there a option in the menu to
> install 3rd party drivers?  Just like installing Windows there you hit the
> F6 to install 3rd party drivers.
>
> thanks
>
>
> On Thu, Sep 25, 2008 at 6:19 PM, Edwin Groothuis <edwin at mavetju.org> wrote:
>
>
> On Thu, Sep 25, 2008 at 05:43:30PM -1000, goku - wrote:
>> How do you install SATA driver when installing FreeBSD 7.0.  I can't seem
> to
>> find how to do it.
>
>
> Unless I'm fully mistaken, they should just come up as /dev/ad10 etc.
>
> Edwin
>
> --
> Edwin Groothuis      |            Personal website: http://www.mavetju.org
> edwin at mavetju.org    |              Weblog: http://www.mavetju.org/weblog/
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>
>

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