8XXNT.TXT Driver File Contents (4150n400.exe)

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                                  8xxNT.TXT
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Installation Guide For The SDMS Driver SYMC8XX.SYS V4.05.00

This file describes the features and use of the Symbios SDMS device 
driver for the Windows NT 4.x operating system environment. It is 
divided into the following sections: 

Introduction for Windows NT 4.x 
     Features
     Description

Installing Your SYMC8XX.SYS Driver 
     New System Installation
     Existing System Installation 
          Windows NT 4.x 
    Performance Tuning for NT 4.0 
          Large Block Size Support 
          Maximum Number of Concurrent I/Os 
     Disk Mirroring 
     Command Line Options
     Troubleshooting 


******************** Introduction for Windows NT 4.x ******************** 

Windows NT 4.x is an operating system designed to run on processors 
using current technology. It provides a graphical user interface environment 
incorporating many high-level features (refer to the Microsoft Windows 
NT 4.x documentation for details). I/O requests in Windows NT 4.x 
are handled by an I/O manager. To address a SCSI peripheral, the I/O manager 
goes through the appropriate drivers. Class drivers for hard disk, floptical, 
CD-ROM, printer, and scanner peripherals are provided in Windows NT 4.x. 
Other class drivers, provided by peripheral manufacturers, may be added to 
support new devices. Tape device support is built into the operating system 
itself and does not require a class driver. Symbios/Microsoft provide a 
miniport driver, called SYMC8XX.SYS, to complete the path to a Symbios 
controller or processor with an optional SDMS SCSI BIOS. The following 
sections describe this driver and its installation. 


*  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  * Features *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  * 

o  Synchronous negotiation (including Fast/Ultra SCSI/Ultra2) 
o  Wide negotiation 
o  Tagged command queuing 
o  Supports multiple host adapters 
o  Supports multiple Logical Unit Numbers (LUNs) 
o  Disconnect/Reselect 
o  Scatter-Gather 
o  Differential support 
o  Supports SCSI pass-through functionality 
o  BUS device reset 
o  Scan order change (scans the bus from SCSI ID 0 to MAX SCSI ID [7 or 15]) 
o  Supports disk array configurations with no LUN 0 
o  Supports disk array configurations with non-contiguous LUNs 
o  Target initiated negotiation support 
o  Auto request sense 
o  Renegotiation of wide/sync parameters on request sense commands 
o  Maximum block size support: NT 4.0 - 1MB 
o  Full NVRAM support (wide/sync parameters, SCSI ID) 


*  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  * Description *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *

SYMC8XX.SYS is designed to Microsoft's specification for miniport drivers. 
This driver allows connection of SCSI devices including disk drives, CD-ROMs, 
and tape drives for PCI-based machines. To support a new SCSI device, the 
Windows NT 4.x architecture requires that a class driver for that type 
device be present (usually supplied by Microsoft, or possibly by the 
peripheral manufacturer). No changes to SYMC8XX.SYS are required. This driver 
is only supported under Windows NT 3.5 and later versions (including NT 4.0). 
It does not run under earlier versions of NT.

SCSI commands are passed directly from a Windows application to the SCSI 
devices by using the SCSI pass-through facility (refer to the Microsoft 
Windows NT 4.x documentation for details). This facility allows 
applications to directly control and access SCSI devices by filling in a data 
structure and calling in to the port driver.

The SYMC8XX.SYS driver supports Ultra SCSI protocol, providing twice the raw 
data transfer rate of Fast SCSI for disk drives and Symbios host adapters
that support Ultra SCSI. However, Ultra SCSI requires more stringent SCSI bus
cabling setups than Fast SCSI.

Note: The Symbios driver bundled in Windows NT 4.0 is named SYMC810.SYS. 
      When Windows NT selects the bundled Symbios driver during setup, 
      the driver information (that is, "Symbios C810 PCI SCSI Host 
      Adapter") is displayed. Although this implies that the driver only 
      supports the 53C810, it actually supports the 53C810, 53C810A, 53C815, 
      53C825, 53C825A, 53C860, 53C875, and 53C876. In fact, the Symbios  
      driver controls all of the 53C8xx controllers that are in the system.
      Please keep in mind that Windows NT 4.0 setup only displays the driver 
      information, not every controller found by that driver.

********************* Installing Your SYMC8XX.SYS Driver ******************** 

*  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  * New System Installation *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *

This procedure installs the SYMC8XX.SYS driver onto a Windows NT system. Use 
this procedure when installing NT onto an unused SCSI drive. NT automatically 
adds the driver to the registry and copies the driver to the appropriate 
directories.

1. Start the NT installation by booting from the Microsoft Setup floppy disk.

2. Press Enter when the Welcome to Setup screen appears.

3. On the Setup Method screen, choose Custom Setup by pressing C. (If Express 
   Setup is chosen, the installation program scans for SCSI adapters and 
   finds the Symbios PCI (53C810) driver (SYMC810.SYS for NT 4.0), 
   which is an older version of the SYMC8XX.SYS driver. 
   Let the installation continue. When installation completes, change 
   the driver. To change the driver, see the "Existing System Installation" 
   section.)

4. Press S to skip mass storage device detection. (If Enter is pressed, the 
   installation program scans for SCSI adapters and finds the Symbios PCI
   (53C810) driver (SYMC810.SYS for NT 4.0), which is an older version of 
   the SYMC8XX.SYS driver. Let installation continue.
   When the installation completes, change the driver. To change the driver,
   see the "Existing System Installation" section.)

5. When a screen displays the SCSI adapters found, choose S to configure 
   additional SCSI adapters.

6. Move the highlight bar to Other and press Enter. 

7. When prompted for the manufacturer-supplied hardware support disk, insert
   your Symbios Driver diskette containing the Windows NT driver and press
   Enter. The diskette is distributed with the board. To obtain the Windows
   NT driver from the Symbios Web Site to use as the installation disk, see
   "Obtaining Drivers from Symbios Web Site" for more information.

8. The Symbios PCI (53C8XX) Miniport driver, Symbios PCI <53C8XX>, is shown
   highlighted. Press Enter to proceed.

9. NT should now recognize the Miniport driver and the SCSI hardware. Press 
   Enter to continue.

   At this point, simply follow the Microsoft Windows NT installation 
   procedure.



*  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  * Existing System Installation *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *

This procedure installs the SYMC8XX.SYS driver onto an existing Windows NT 
system.

NOTE: Windows NT 4.x uses the Windows 95 user interface, resulting in minor 
      changes to the procedure for updating SCSI drivers. Procedures for both 
      NT 4.x and NT 3.5x are listed.


*   *   * Windows NT 4.x *   *   *

1. Boot NT and log on as Administrator.

2. Click the Start button, move to Settings, then to Control Panel, and 
   click.

3. Double-click on SCSI Adapters.

4. Click the Drivers tab. If NCRSDMS.SYS, NCRC810.SYS, NCRC8XX.SYS, or 
   SYMC8XX.SYS drivers are listed, select the driver(s) and choose Remove 
   before adding the new driver. Select OK when the Remove Driver message 
   prompts, "Are you sure you want to remove this driver?". Another message 
   may display saying "The SCSI Adapter has been marked as a boot 
   device ...". Click OK.

5. Click Add. A list of installed adapters is displayed.

6. Click the Have Disk button.

7. When prompted, insert your Symbios Driver diskette containing the Windows 
   NT driver. For the path to copy manufacturer's files from, enter 
  
     A:\WINNT\MINIPORT and select OK. 

8. On the Install Driver menu, the Miniport driver, Symbios PCI (53C8XX), is
   shown highlighted. If it is not highlighted, select it. Choose OK.

   At this point, the following message may occur:

   "The driver(s) for this SCSI Adapter are already on the system. Do you 
   want to use the currently installed driver(s) or install new one(s)?" 

   Selecting Current uses the driver already on the system, and selecting New 
   uses the driver on the floppy disk. Unless you want to use the older 
   version already on the system, choose New. If you chose Current, go to 
   step 10.

9. For the path to the OEM SCSI Adapter files, A:\WINNT\MINIPORT should be
   displayed.  Select Continue.

10. A System Settings Change message displays "You must restart your computer 
    before the new settings take effect. Do you want to restart your computer 
    now?" Choose OK to restart and reboot NT. If you choose Cancel, remember 
    that you must restart before the new driver is loaded.

11. Rebooting loads your new Miniport driver.



*  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  * Performance Tuning for NT 4.0 *  *  *  *  *  *  *

NT 4.0 has registry entries that can be used to increase the performance of 
SCSI I/O for certain configurations. The tunable parameters are large 
transfer block size support and a guaranteed number of concurrent I/O's for a 
particular SCSI bus.


*   *   * Large Block Size Support *   *   *

The SYMC8XX.SYS driver can support up to a 1MB transfer size in NT 4.0.
However, in NT 4.0 the default transfer size is 64K. 
To enable a larger transfer size, an entry must 
be added to the registry, using the file sym_256K.reg. This file will set
a 256K maximum, but it can be edited to set other desired maximum transfer
sizes.

There are two methods to add this registry setting. One is to locate the 
sym_256K.reg data file (supplied with the driver files) using Windows 
Explorer and double-click the file. The other method is to type at the 
command prompt:

     regedit sym_256K.reg

This will insert an entry in the registry to enable 256K block size support. 

Any maximum block size between 64K and 1MB (-8KB) can be set by editing the
sym_256K.reg file. The formula to calculate the proper value for 
MaximumSGList is:

     MaximumSGList = (Maximum Block Size)/4K +1

For 256K: 256K/4K = 64, add 1 for 65 (decimal) or 0x41. The maximum value 
allowed for MaximumSGLIst is 255 or 0xFF. This denotes an absolute maximum 
transfer size of 1040384, which is 8K less than 1MB (1040384/4K = 0xFE, add 
1 for 0xFF or 255). Be sure to read the information in the sym_256K.reg data 
file before editing it.

The system must be rebooted for the new registry setting to be effective.

To reset the maximum block size to the default of 64K, follow the 
instructions above, except use symdfblk.reg as the data file.


*   *   * Maximum Number of Concurrent I/O's (Guaranteed) *   *   *

NT (both 3.51 and 4.0) only guarantee a maximum of 32 concurrent I/O's active 
on a particular SCSI bus. However, due to the method of memory allocation, 
the actual limit of concurrent I/O's can vary greatly between various drivers 
or versions of drivers. This can have a huge impact on performance 
benchmarking between different driver versions or adapter vendors. In effect, 
one adapter may actually be able to have 70 or 80 I/O's outstanding, while 
another adapter could only have 32. This can also affect systems with high 
performance storage subsystems, such as disk arrays.

Note: Only NT 4.0 uses this setting.

In order to have a guaranteed number of concurrent I/O's, an entry must be 
added to the registry, using the file sym100io.reg.

There are two methods to add this registry setting. One is to locate the 
sym100io.reg data file (supplied with the driver files) using Windows 
Explorer and double-click the file. The other method is to type at the 
command prompt:

     regedit sym100io.reg

This will insert an entry in the registry to guarantee a maximum of 100 
concurrent I/O's per adapter.

If a maximum other than 100 is desired, the sym100io.reg file can be edited. 
However, setting this value to a high number uses increasing amounts of 
non-paged pool memory, a critical NT resource. High values for this setting 
can degrade system performance. Be sure to read the information in the 
sym100io.reg data file before editing it.

The system must be rebooted for the new registry setting to be effective.

To reset the guaranteed number of concurrent I/O's to the default of 32, 
follow the instructions above, except use symdefio.reg as the data file. 


*    * Auto Request Sense *    *

Enabling and Disabling Auto Request Sense is found in the section titled 
"Troubleshooting."

*  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  * Disk Mirroring *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *

Note: This section applies only to Intel x86-platforms where the Symbios 4.xx 
PCI SCSI BIOS is used.

Symbios 4.xx PCI SCSI BIOS loads only one image in the memory when the 
system boots regardless of how many host bus adapters (HBAs) are used in the 
system. All of the disk drives on all HBAs will be recognized through the 
INT13h function call. Because of this implementation, disk mirroring under 
NT needs to be done via the following instructions which might be different 
from Microsoft's documentation.

Here's how to create an NT Fault Tolerant (FT) floppy so that you can boot 
from the mirrored partition in case the primary partition fails.

1. Format a floppy disk in drive A: using NT (File Manager or Windows 
   Explorer) for use as a Fault Tolerant boot floppy.

2. From the root directory of the primary partition, copy NTLDR, 
   NTDETECT.COM, and BOOT.INI to this floppy disk.

3. Temporarily remove the read-only attribute of the BOOT.INI file so that it 
   can be modified and saved.

4. Edit BOOT.INI on the FT floppy and modify the following line where you 
   want to boot the mirrored partition.

        multi(0)disk(0)rdisk(x)partition(y)\<winnt_directory>

   where    
     multi(0) and disk(0) should always remain same.

     x = (the drive number of the mirrored partition in the INT13 
     chain - 80h).

     The drive number of the mirrored partition can be found during system 
     bootup of the Symbios 4.xx PCI SCSI BIOS when the primary partition does
     not exist. It should say either BOOT (=80h), 81h, 82h, and higher. 
     Therefore the value of x would be 0 when BOOT, 1 when 81h, 2 when 
     82h, etc.

     y = the partition number on the drive (starts at 1 which equals single 
     partition on the drive)

   For example, let's say there are two Symbios 8xx HBAs in the system. The
   first HBA, HBA #0 which is the boot path, has two SCSI hard drives on ID 0
   and ID 5. The second HBA, HBA #1, has two SCSI hard drives on ID 2 and ID 
   4. Assuming that the SCSI bus scan starts from ID 0 and goes up, the drive 
   number of INT13h will look like this:

       HBA #0, ID 0= BOOT (which is 80h)    
       HBA #0, ID 5= 81h    
       HBA #1, ID 2= 82h    
       HBA #1, ID 4= 83h    

   Now NT is installed on the boot drive, HBA #0 ID 0, and a mirrored 
   partition is established on HBA #1 ID 2. If the primary partition fails, 
   for example due to power failure, then the drive number of INT13h will 
   change:

       HBA #0, ID 5= BOOT (which is 80h)   
       HBA #1, ID 2= 81h    
       HBA #1, ID 4= 82h    

   Therefore, the following line should be used in the BOOT.INI on the NT 
   Fault Tolerant boot floppy to boot from the mirrored partition, HBA #1
   ID 2. Note that rdisk(1) was calculated from x=81h-80h.

        multi(0)disk(0)rdisk(1)partition(1)\<winnt_directory> 

5. Save the BOOT.INI and restore the "read-only" attribute.


*  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  * Troubleshooting *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  * 
The following are some potential problems and their suggested solutions:

*   *   * Problem *   *   *

During installation, no SCSI devices are found.

*   *   * Solution *   *   *

a. Ensure that the custom setup is chosen on the Setup Method screen.

b. Ensure that all devices are powered on and terminated correctly.

c. Check that no devices have duplicate SCSI IDs.

d. Make sure INT A is assigned for the PCI slot(s) where your SCSI host 
   adapter(s) are installed.

*   *   * Problem *   *   *

System crashes during installation with a message indicating inaccessible 
boot device.

*   *   * Solution *   *   *

a. This error is usually associated with an IRQ, DMA channel, I/O (chip) 
   address, or BIOS address conflict. Set the SCSI host adapter to use a 
   different interrupt.

b. This error is sometimes caused by a virus infecting the Master Boot Record 
   of the boot device. Use a write-protected DOS bootable flex containing 
   virus scanning and cleaning software to check for any viruses on the boot 
   device, and remove if any are found.

*   *   * Problem *   *   *

A disk drive is recognized as seven different devices when only one is 
physically connected to the SCSI bus.

*   *   * Solution *   *   *

a. This error is usually caused by older SCSI devices incorrectly indicating 
   to NT that they support multiple LUNs. Contact the device manufacturer for 
   a firmware upgrade.

*   *   * Problem *   *   *

Problems with SCSI devices installation or operation

*   *   * Solution *   *   *

a. If a SCSI device is not operating properly (either the device is not found 
   or a SCSI interface error occurs during scanning), it is possible that the 
   third-party device drivers do not support the auto request sense feature 
   of Symbios host adapters. Disable the auto request sense feature as 
   described below and try the device operation again.

b. Using the file "symno_ar.reg" (supplied with the Symbios NT driver 
   files), either double click the file in Windows Explorer or File Manager 
   or type "regedit symno_ar.reg" at the command prompt. This inserts a 
   registry entry that disables the auto request sense feature. The system
   system must be rebooted for this change to take effect.

c. To re-enable the auto request sense feature, use the file "sym_auto.reg" 
   and perform one of the update methods in step b. above.

*   *   * Problem *   *   *

Problems with certain SCSI devices when using an Ultra SCSI adapter.

*   *   * Solution *   *   *

a. Some SCSI devices do not function properly when the adapter attempts to 
   negotiate Ultra SCSI transfer rates. If a device is not operating 
   properly, check the transfer speed setting using the 4.xx PCI BIOS 
   Configuration Utility (press Control-C when the Symbios PCI BIOS 
   banner is displayed during the system boot process). Devices that do not 
   support Ultra SCSI should be set to a maximum of 10 MB/sec for narrow (8 
   bits), 20 MB/sec for wide (16 bits).

*   *   * Problem *   *   *

Problems with Ultra SCSI devices using Ultra SCSI protocol.

*   *   * Solution *   *   *

a. If the system is configured with a Symbios host adapter that supports Ultra
   SCSI and an Ultra SCSI device is on the SCSI bus, intermittent problems and
   possible system crashes can occur if the SCSI bus cable and terminators do 
   not conform to the Ultra SCSI specification.

b. Disable Ultra SCSI support for all devices via the SDMS 4.xx PCI BIOS 
   Configuration Utility (press Control-C when the Symbios PCI BIOS banner is
   displayed during the system boot process).

c. If the system operates properly without Ultra SCSI enabled, it is highly 
   likely that the SCSI bus cable and terminators are not configured 
   correctly for Ultra SCSI. See the Symbios host adapter User's Guide 
   for information on Ultra SCSI cabling requirements.


Download Driver Pack

How To Update Drivers Manually

After your driver has been downloaded, follow these simple steps to install it.

  • Expand the archive file (if the download file is in zip or rar format).

  • If the expanded file has an .exe extension, double click it and follow the installation instructions.

  • Otherwise, open Device Manager by right-clicking the Start menu and selecting Device Manager.

  • Find the device and model you want to update in the device list.

  • Double-click on it to open the Properties dialog box.

  • From the Properties dialog box, select the Driver tab.

  • Click the Update Driver button, then follow the instructions.

Very important: You must reboot your system to ensure that any driver updates have taken effect.

For more help, visit our Driver Support section for step-by-step videos on how to install drivers for every file type.

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