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180 comments
Tube🍂Time replied to Tube🍂Time

couldn't find a Sun 13W3 cable adapter so I'm doing this to get to VGA.

Pete / Syllopsium replied to Tube🍂Time

@tubetime What you need is a Belkin F1DE083UK - adapts to a PS/2 keyboard fine, also cheap, but I had no luck with the 13W3 to VGA connector - needed a separate adapter for that. There's also the Raritan APSSUN which may work better but was too expensive to ship to the UK, but not a problem for you?

Tube🍂Time replied to Tube🍂Time

four months later :blobsweats: i made the Video Snake Oil board that can adapt 13W3 (any type!) to VGA. you just wire up the little pads to whatever your machine needs.

Tube🍂Time replied to Tube🍂Time

i've also installed a ZuluSCSI. this neat little board is a lot cheaper than a SCSI2SD. i'm going to try and install Solaris using a CDROM ISO file. CD6_512.iso is placed on the SD card. it'll be ID 6, 512 bytes per sector.

Tube🍂Time replied to Tube🍂Time

well, it tries to boot from the CDROM but suffers a BAD TRAP. not sure why, maybe i need to update the IDPROM contents.

Tube🍂Time replied to Tube🍂Time

yeah i am guessing the machine type in the IDPROM is invalid so the installer runs the wrong code.

Tube🍂Time replied to Tube🍂Time

wrote a little FORTH program to update the contents of the IDPROM, and it looks like it has a valid host id now.

Stephen Bannasch (316 ppm) replied to Tube🍂Time

@tubetime ahh!! Boosted because of #Forth! Haven’t thought about it for a long time. Used to use it a bunch a long time ago. Once had a function named “exist”, later wrote a loop: “do I exist” … Simple pleasures.

Tube🍂Time replied to Tube🍂Time

forgot to add that i needed to do a "set-defaults" and a "setenv diag-switch? false"

Tube🍂Time replied to Tube🍂Time

uh oh, RAM parity error. i'm hoping U676 isn't seated all the way and that it is an easy fix.

Darren replied to Tube🍂Time

@tubetime I like how "WARNING" is all caps and "panic" is kept on the down-low with no caps.

I guess 'panic' has another meaning than what is coming to mind.

Tube🍂Time replied to Tube🍂Time

that did the trick. the SIMM sockets were very stuck. welcome to S O L A R I S!

Tube🍂Time replied to Tube🍂Time

spoke too soon. another parity error, this time at U677. why there? because that's where i moved the module that was at U676. think i will just pull that bank of RAM for now.

Chris Gerhard :bt: replied to Tube🍂Time

@tubetime you just need to port solaris 10 to it and then as long as the memory error is not in kernel memory the process would be killed and the location blacklisted.

Tube🍂Time replied to Tube🍂Time

it seems to run with 12MB RAM. no more parity errors this time. but now the installer hates my SCSI drive (a ZuluSCSI).

filesystem creation failed for / 🤔

Tube🍂Time replied to Tube🍂Time

i bet it is this issue. basically the ZuluSCSI returns values for disk geometry that somehow confuses the Solaris partition tool. one solution is to use a real SCSI hard drive and then dd it over to the ZuluSCSI once the install is completed.

github.com/ZuluSCSI/ZuluSCSI-f

/dev/rdsk/c5t1d0s2 replied to Tube🍂Time

@tubetime damn, I wonder if it’s some kind of Mac-compatibility that’s breaking on SPARC?

Xenotar replied to Tube🍂Time

@tubetime Try NetBSD, it can give better diagnostic messages, I think

Poul-Henning Kamp replied to Tube🍂Time

@tubetime

Many years ago I wrote a little tool called "scsi-ping" which gives you a working disktab entry for a SCSI disk.

It's still out there somewhere.

Eric Carroll replied to Tube🍂Time

@tubetime
It has been years since I last saw
le0 no carrier log messages.

Thanks for that!

Emelia/Emi replied to Tube🍂Time

@tubetime fun, will probably have to do something similar to get my flea market find (a SparcStation IPX) running, turns out the console cable I bought is horribly broken (it has *really* high resistance between the pins on the DB-9 and the DIN for some reason) so the console output is "absolutely mangled" to the point of regularly dropping bits. The general structure is correct, and the occasional word (SelfTest FAILED surrounded by random mojibake-looking stuff) but it's utterly unusable. I probed it on the DB-9 end and it was barely signalling at all, even with the line driver set at the full +-12v of RS232. Almost as if the cable itself is actually *broken* internally...

@tubetime fun, will probably have to do something similar to get my flea market find (a SparcStation IPX) running, turns out the console cable I bought is horribly broken (it has *really* high resistance between the pins on the DB-9 and the DIN for some reason) so the console output is "absolutely mangled" to the point of regularly dropping bits. The general structure is correct, and the occasional word (SelfTest FAILED surrounded by random mojibake-looking stuff) but it's utterly unusable. I probed...

Paul Leyland replied to Tube🍂Time

@tubetime Brings back happy memories.

Should get my pizza box SparcStation out of the loft and see if it still works. Was running RH Linux last time it was fired up because I didn't have Sloaris installation media.

Mike Spooner replied to Tube🍂Time

@tubetime Check the RAM. Bad modules can cause the "bad trap" error in Solaris on SPARC, although other things can, too.

DELETED replied to Tube🍂Time

@tubetime ah the Zuluscsi

Weren't they the ones who got in a bit of hot water for basically copying the BlueSCSI design?

Tube🍂Time replied to DELETED

@DosFox i have no idea, there's way too much drama in the retrocomputing community these days

DELETED replied to Tube🍂Time

@tubetime hah that's true. The more expensive and desirable the computer, the more drama there is

Tube🍂Time replied to Jonathan ‘theJPster’ Pallant

@thejpster yes but these old workstations require 512 byte sectors for their cdroms in order to boot

jgeorge replied to Tube🍂Time

@tubetime I wonder if that would emulate an image that’s, say, 520 bytes per sector…

pikmin loamy clay replied to Tube🍂Time

@tubetime This inspires me - I have a VAXStation that uses a 3W3 video output (basically 13W3 without the digital pins) and it's impossible to find cables for it, but there are connectors for it around

Do you do any termination or anything active on the board? I've made an RGB port adapter before and got pretty bad ringing, but it could definitely just be the monitor I used since I had no other way of testing.

Tube🍂Time replied to pikmin loamy clay

@nkizz no termination, that is done in the VGA monitor (75 ohm)

Yves Luther replied to Tube🍂Time

@tubetime I need this board in my life. Twice. Maybe three. Where can I buy them?

Tube🍂Time replied to Yves

@yves i'll be releasing it on github soon. need to write documentation and so forth.

lymenzies replied to Tube🍂Time

@tubetime Does that work ok on a multi-sync monitor without sync-on-green?

Nick Poole replied to Tube🍂Time

@tubetime Laptop composite video output circa 2010

Tony Finch replied to Tube🍂Time

@tubetime oh THAT might explain the ghosting in the screenshot i saw first 😱

Tube🍂Time replied to Tony

@fanf yep exactly! we don't need signal integrity for this test.

Tom Slider replied to Tube🍂Time

@tubetime I haven't seen a 13W3 cable in a long time! That is quite a project!

iiiDIY replied to Tube🍂Time

@tubetime Fantastic.

Reminds me of the bare wire ends that I Scotch-taped into my Sega Saturn's video out port 20 years ago... but *significantly* more professional.

Chris Hanson replied to Tube🍂Time

@tubetime You only need the RGB if your display does sync-on-green. This is why I have a bunch of NEC LCD1990SX, they do sync-on-green and support a 1:1 aspect ratio in addition to stretching to fill the screen.

Paul Leyland replied to Tube🍂Time

@tubetime I have a few original Sun cables. Do you still need one?

Free but P&P extra. I'm in the UK.

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