Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!usc!randvax!edhall From: edhall@rand.org (Ed Hall) Newsgroups: comp.unix.sysv386 Subject: Re: '386 Unix Wars (ISC and >1024 cyls) Keywords: sco unix interactive wars Message-ID: <1991Jan4.215554.27155@rand.org> Date: 4 Jan 91 21:55:54 GMT References: <1659@svin02.info.win.tue.nl> <1991Jan4.025218.21453@rand.org> <1663@svin02.info.win.tue.nl> Sender: news@rand.org Reply-To: edhall@rand.org Organization: The RAND Corporation, Santa Monica, CA, USA Lines: 30 Originator: edhall@ives In article <1663@svin02.info.win.tue.nl> debra@info.win.tue.nl writes: >In article <1991Jan4.025218.21453@rand.org> edhall@rand.org writes: >>This is false; ISC 2.0.1 supports disks with more than 1024 cylinders just >>fine (I'm using all 1070 of mine, using a WD1006 controller). The >>partitioning program gives a bogus indication that there is a 1024 >>cylinder upper-bound, but if you ask it for more, it will give it to >>you. > >So how did you do it? I told it to use up to cylinder 1223 (the last one >on my disk) and ISC 2.0.1 complained and told me my system did not support >more than 1024 cylinders and it changed the last cylinder back to 1023. The problem is in their disk partitioning program, which not only prints the bogus message saying you can't go above 1023, but also forces the partition display to reduce the upper bound to 1023. Just the same, you get what you asked for. This is as counter-intuitive as all hell--the only reason I even tried it was that it was mentioned in a net posting a year or two back. For the average user who isn't going to be silly enough to ignore two warning indications, 2.0.1 is as good as limited to 1024 cylinders. The only credit ISC gets from me on the matter is that they didn't manage to break the rest of the system with regards to disks larger than 1024 cyls. Be aware, however, that there are some disk controllers around that won't go above cyl 1023. Like I mentioned, the BIOS in my controller didn't allow for it, although the controller itself did. -Ed Hall edhall@rand.org