[rescue] OT: Linux and USB on Intel
Dave McGuire
mcguire at neurotica.com
Wed Apr 23 23:25:08 CDT 2003
On Wednesday, April 23, 2003, at 11:25 PM, Curtis H. Wilbar Jr. wrote:
>>>> We're talking about kernel architectures, not computer model
>>>> numbers.
>>>> A 4/600 is a sun4m. The 4/100, 4/200, 4/300, and 4/400 are sun4.
>>>
>>> I know... however, if memory serves me correct, Sun removed support
>>> for the VME buss (hence the 4/600) at the same time as the Sun4
>>> (4/[1234]00)
>>> line.... if not, it was one release later....
>>
>> Removing support for VMEbus isn't the same as removing support for
>> the 4/600. They work just fine with no VMEbus access whatsoever.
>
> If you mean in that they operate without access to the VMEbus, yes
> I understand that too. After all, I am using a 4/600 mainboard in a
> 4/110 chassis running Solaris 8.... don't need VME access. However
> is there a Solaris release that officially supports 4/600 without
> VME access ? I don't think so... I think Sun removed "support" for
> the 4/600 when they removed support for VME.
Ahh, that may be. But removing VME support isn't the same as
removing support for a
certain system type, which is what you said above.
They do make damn fine systems when shoved into a '110 chassis, don't
they? I'd never run Solaris on it in a million years though. (because
that's about how long it'd take to boot)
Believe it or not, one of those machines (in a '110 chassis) was my
main desktop machine for a long time, running SparcLinux on a pair of
SM61s with two CG6 framebuffers. That machine was *fast*.
-Dave
--
Dave McGuire "I'm willing to sacrifice my ass for the sake
St. Petersburg, FL of good food." -Kurt Huhn
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