Path: utzoo!mnetor!uunet!husc6!ukma!gatech!mcnc!decvax!ucbvax!utorphys.BITNET!SYSRUTH From: SYSRUTH@utorphys.BITNET Newsgroups: comp.os.vms Subject: RE: Micro vax 2 Message-ID: <8802171634.AA20450@gpu.utcs.toronto.edu> Date: 17 Feb 88 16:36:00 GMT Sender: usenet@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU Organization: The Internet Lines: 35 I seriously doubt if a unit number of 100 is supported by the proms and drivers. It should not be difficult to change the unit number on the disk, though - just a matter of setting a couple of switches at the back of the drive (unless RA81's are radically different from most other disks, which actually wouldn't surprise me). Of course everything has to be shut off while you are doing this. When you say the unit number was "chosen" do you mean someone there picked it, or that it came that way from the factory? Most drives I have seen only have two or three dip bits for the unit number so you can only select units of 0-7. And how did you manage to format the disk? If you set the unit number to anything reasonable, the uVAX proms will find it and boot off it automatically. I would expect DUA3: to be the highest number. It will even boot off DUBn: if the CSR on the board happens to be set for the second controller. All the uVAX does is look for the first DU-type disk with SYSBOOT.EXE on it. One thing you could try, which at least you don't mention having tried already, is the command >>> b dua100 (***NO colon!!) which is probably your only hope (it is entirely possible that just using dua by itself defaults to a unit of 0, regardless of the current value of R3). However if the machine won't boot off it all by itself, you don't want to leave it that way or it will never be able to do an automatic reboot after a crash or powerfail. Hope this helps. Ruth Milner Systems Manager University of Toronto Physics