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+++++++++++ On 3/03/02, Peter Skye wrote, in part:
 >
 >1) I've heard that you can force a motherboard to suppress its IDE boot
 >if you tell it there aren't any IDE drives.  The SCSI BIOS then boots
 >(or "allows the motherboard to boot"?) from the SCSI drive (which one if
 >there are several?) and the OS/2 drivers then "find" the IDE drives when
 >they are loaded by the CONFIG.SYS file.  Is this true?
 
 
This was the method for booting from SCSI when DOS was king.  Nowadays, all modern MBs allow you to choose/specify the boot order.
 
 
>2) Are there SCSI HA BIOS that _don't_ allow booting to a SCSI device?  >When buying a SCSI HA which has a BIOS, do you have to *verify* that it
 >allows you to boot through it?
 
 
NO and NO. The purpose of a SCSI BIOS is to boot a SCSI drive.   The OS loads drivers for other SCSI devices, and usually replacement drivers
 for the bootable SCSI HDs . The boot driver for the HD _IS_ the SCSI BIOS,
 just like the boot driver for an IDE drive is the MB BIOS.
 
 
>3) What is the impact of the driver order in the CONFIG.SYS file?  Does >it just affect the drive letter assignments or is there something else
 >to consider?
 
 
The DOS boot order, which I believe is carried over into OS/2, is primary  partitions first, extended next, and the lowest (drive 80 Hex) drive first.
 The SCSI BIOS and the BIOS boot order selection determines which physical
 drive is initialized first, SCSI, IDE, etc., SCSI ID 0 before SCSI ID1
 (unless changed in the SCSI BIOS setup).
 
 
 
 
 
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2002 ] 
 
 
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