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- Newsgroups: comp.sys.next.sysadmin
- Path: sparky!uunet!haven.umd.edu!news.umbc.edu!umbc4.umbc.edu!brian
- From: brian@umbc4.umbc.edu (Brian Cuthie)
- Subject: Re: Turning off SCSI devices and Rel 2.1
- Message-ID: <1992Jul27.025718.22038@umbc3.umbc.edu>
- Sender: newspost@umbc3.umbc.edu (News posting account)
- Organization: University of Maryland Baltimore Campus
- References: <1992Jul22.114709.9162@investor.pgh.pa.us> <4455@rosie.NeXT.COM>
- Date: Mon, 27 Jul 1992 02:57:18 GMT
- Lines: 68
-
- In article <4455@rosie.NeXT.COM> amm@NeXT.COM (Alan M. Marcum) writes:
- >Bob Peirce #305 writes
- >> I have an HSD scanner at the end of my SCSI chain. Since I don't
- >> use it all the time ... I like to turn it off...
- >> Something I haven't tried is to actually disconnect the scanner
- >> from the CD drive and plug the SCSI terminator in. That doesn't
- >> seem like a good thing to do on a running system...
- >
- >The SCSI bus is actually an active bus. To function correctly,
- >all devices on the bus should be powered on, the cables should
- >have the proper impedence, and the bus should be terminated at
- >both ends. A *very* short bus can be run with termination only
- >at one end (e.g., just the on-board disk, which has a terminator
- >on it).
- >
-
- This is bunk. The SCSI bus is driven by open-collector devices. A
- properly behaved SCSI peripheral may be left in the powered down state without
- any ill effects.
-
-
- >If a device doesn't receive power, it might not pass the bus
- >signals through correctly. If it's at the end of the chain, the
- >terminator probably requires power to operate correctly.
- >
-
- SCSI signals are not passed through a SCSI device. Rather the bus is
- tapped by each device on the bus. This is why it is called a "bus".
- Quite often the terminator power comes from the host, not the drive. This
- is true of *both* the near and far terminators.
-
-
- >For the same reason you shouldn't remove a device from the SCSI
- >bus while the system is running, your shouldn't power off a
- >SCSI device while the system is running. Yes, these things
- >MIGHT work. But, do you want to risk your data? We've seen
- >instances where an improperly terminated SCSI bus can lead
- >to data corruption on the internal hard disk....
- >
-
- This is good advice if for no other reason than you may choose to power
- up a device at the same time then NeXT decides to swap or something and
- who knows how well behaved a device going through power up is.
-
-
- >What to do? Talk with the scanner vendors and ask them to
- >provide a "standby" mode, where the SCSI bus receives the
- >proper power, but the scanning light is shut off. (Caveat:
- >there might be scanners which do this already, and there
- >might be SCSI devices which handle bus signals and termination
- >when powered off. Check with the device manufacturer to
- >be certain.)
- >--
- >Alan M. Marcum
- >NeXT Tech Support
- >amm@NeXT.COM
-
- Nothing personal, Alan, but is this the kind of answer I can expect from
- NeXT tech support at $225/Question ?
-
-
- -Brian
-
-
- --
- Brian Cuthie
- Systemix Software, Inc.
- brian@systemix.com
-