Hopefully this will help: Device IDs Fundamental to the way a disk is referenced is the SCSI ID that it (the device) uses. Your boot Disk will have SCSI ID 0. Other hard disks can be assigned to SCSI ID's 2 and 4 and 6. The Internal Tape drive used SCSI ID 1, with the WORM drive taking SCSI ID 3. The Fairlight then assigns IDs to these devices as /scx0 where x = the SCSI ID; hence your boot disk will be /sc00 and a second disk assigned to SCSI ID 2 will be /sc20. You can access the devices from the shell command prompt using the command 'chd /scx0' Partitions Each disk device can (or will be) partitioned into a number of partitions called either /k partitions or /c partitions. This is similar to the way in which a PC disk can be split into c: d: and e: etc. partitions. (There is also the concept of Logical Units or LUNs, but this can confuse matters, so I'll leave it for now). K partitions hold the system files and mirror the size of the original 8" floppies (~1MB). Hence it is usual to find at least 3 /k partitions on a hard disk, each containing the files from one of the 3 Rev x boot floppy disks. C partitions on the other hand are where your sound data is stored and hence represent the bulk of a disk. You can have multiple c partitions on one physical disk as well, useful if you want to segregate your sounds. In terms of how these partitions are assigned, the nomenclature refrences the physical disk that the partition is assigned to. So for /sc00, the partitions will be named as follows: /k000 /k001 /k002 /k003 .... /c000 /c001 /c002 etc and for device /sc20, the partitions will be: /k200 /k201 /k202 ... /c200 /c201 /c202 etc. All of the partitions can be accessed from within the CMI software (using the odir command; for example odir /c200/fairlight_library opens the back-up library on my second disk), or from the shell using the chd command. If you need any further info, please shout. Whilst on the subject of Series III disks, I would like to say a huge thank you to Klaus Michael Indlekofer for his cmios9 tool and updating the tool to reach a state where it is able to be used to export and import complete /c partitions from other disks. I have now used this to back-up my Rev9.34 boot disk and image this to 3 other drives so I can now sleep well at night knowing my sound data is backed up to my PC and copied to a number of other disks that I can use in my Series III. Regards, Chris. --- In Fairlight-CMI@yahoogroups.com, "dirtyhalo007" <dirtyhalo007@y...> wrote: > > I am new to my CMI III/MFX and can fully access one drive, but do not know the ID of a > second drive I know to be installed, what is the operation to Identify the names of the > drives in the system? > > Anyone who can help me with this, I'd greatly appreciate it. This may be fundamental, but > I'm just learning and could use some friendly advice. > > Peace. > > Andrews > > DIRTY HALO www.dirtyhalo.com >
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Re: CMI III/MFX operation question, please.
2005-11-17 by chaworth012000
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