home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.sgi.hardware
- Path: sparky!uunet!ftpbox!news.acns.nwu.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!darwin.sura.net!sgiblab!sgigate!odin!twilight!zola!anchor!olson
- From: olson@anchor.esd.sgi.com (Dave Olson)
- Subject: Re: Where is "sysinfo" on an Indigo? [ nvram ]
- Message-ID: <vctbdjg@zola.esd.sgi.com>
- Sender: news@zola.esd.sgi.com (Net News)
- Organization: Silicon Graphics, Inc. Mountain View, CA
- References: <1993Jan27.041554.6018@ringer.cs.utsa.edu>
- Date: Wed, 27 Jan 93 05:57:46 GMT
- Lines: 39
-
- In <1993Jan27.041554.6018@ringer.cs.utsa.edu> senseman@lucy.brainlab.utsa.edu (David M. Senseman) writes:
-
- | Just out of curiosity, where is "sysinfo" physically located
- | in an Indigo? The reason I ask is that I kind of expected
- | a copy protection scheme that uses "sysinfo" to break when
- | I swapped out my R3K cpu board with a R4K cpu board (and
- | power supplies). Suprisingly it didn't seem to affect the
- | copy protection scheme :)
-
- Presumably you mean the information *used* to generate the contents
- that sysinfo prints?
-
- It is based on different things on different systems, but frequently
- (not always) on the the ethernet address. The ethernet address comes
- from the NVRAM (initially, and the sysinfo info is generated at boot
- time, so later changes to the ethernet address don't affect it).
-
- On Indigo, the nvram is physically located on the backplane.
- (It is actually a serial EEROM for Indigo, and the 20,25,30, and 35;
- it is a socketed 8 pin DIP package).
-
- On the 20-35, it is on the PC board with the power switch; that is
- why the ribbon cable from the E-module to that board has so many
- conductors.
-
- On most of the ASD (power series and IP4) systems, it has traditionally
- been battery backed RAM on the I/O board.
-
- On systems with PROM passwords, you have to remove the nvram chip
- or the battery for the ram to defeat the password (which is OK, since
- if you have physical access, the prom password is meaningless).
-
- The new Indigo2 has the same nvram on the i/o connector board, but
- has a jumper to bypass the prom password. I'm not sure what Onyx
- has done.
- --
- Let no one tell me that silence gives consent, | Dave Olson
- because whoever is silent dissents. | Silicon Graphics, Inc.
- Maria Isabel Barreno | olson@sgi.com
-