From opensuse Mon Jun 15 04:20:46 2009 From: Felix Miata Date: Mon, 15 Jun 2009 04:20:46 +0000 To: opensuse Subject: Re: [opensuse] second hdd not recognized? Message-Id: <4A35CC1E.60403 () ij ! net> X-MARC-Message: https://marc.info/?l=opensuse&m=124503964416842 On 2009/06/15 12:42 (GMT+0900) Thomas Blasejewicz composed: > I installed OpenSUSE in one HDD and connected a second HDD, but this > does not seem to be recognized. > Neither setting the jumper switch on that HDD to "slave" nor "cable > select" does help. Are either of them Western Digital? Those have more complicated jumpering than all other brands. Be sure both are both jumpered compatibly with each other and with the cable. Cable select jumpering is only for use with cable select cables, which you usually can identify by a small hole near the motherboard connector if the cable does not have some sort of label identifying it as such. If jumpering is incorrect, one or both should not be recognized by the motherboard BIOS. If the BIOS can't recognize a drive, no OS installer should be able to either. > I tried (previously, with that HDD as master) to install another Linux You mean with the two drives reversed as to master and slave? With only the new drive installed? How exactly? Which cable connector(s) were used for each? What kind of cable? > version on that second HDD but failed. Failed how exactly? > Now I want to format that disk and try again. Formatting is something one does after partitioning, which can only be done if the drive can be recognized at all. > Trying a "new installation" somehow does not work. I get a number of > error messages. Please share them if you want help. > I suspect, that some files from the previous installation are left there > and are "in the way". > Therefore I imagined that formatting the disk might help ... > Where do I look for that disk? Boot into the BIOS to check first that the BIOS can find both, then do 'fdisk -l' after booting Linux to confirm Linux can find both. It may be easier to set the BIOS to disable quick boot so that during POST you can more easily see what disk(s) POST finds. > And when I find it, how do I format it? Let the installer worry about formatting, which it will do after the partitioning is configured. Alternatively, partition, then format, prior to beginning any Linux installation program. Then during installation you can tell the installer which partitions to use for which purposes. -- "Cast but a glance at riches, and they are gone, for they will surely sprout wings and fly off to the sky like an eagle." Proverbs 23:5 NIV Team OS/2 ** Reg. Linux User #211409 Felix Miata *** http://fm.no-ip.com/ -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org