On Thu, Dec 31, 2009 at 3:37 PM, Don Quixote de la Mancha <quixote@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Thu, Dec 31, 2009 at 1:14 PM, Paul Johnson <pauljohn32@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> If one of you knows the similar recipe for esata, I would very much >> appreciate it. > > You'll need a driver for the SATA controller that is built into your > PC. I think Don is not quite right here. From what I can tell, the sata drivers are loaded and present and they also make the external thing work, it is the same stack. I have installed Fedora 12 to an external SATA device with no trouble. It works just like installing to an external USB. That proves the "principle" is good, and I just need to figure out if there is a way to figure out what their magic is and apply it in Centos. I am starting to think the problems I'm having with Centos are due to the somewhat-well-known problem with support for sata drives in the old kernels. In the 2.6.18 era, there were plenty of reports about sata drivers not being loaded early enough in the boot process. The symptom was that Fedora-7 or 8 would install on sata drives, but if there were several drives in the system, somehow one or more would not get recognized. This is at the level of technical detail where I just have to trust the experts in the linux kernel mailing list. From what I can tell it was apparently addressed in the 2.6.26 era. It could be I have some completely separate problem. I have not tried to update a kernel on a Centos system to use a Fedora-12 generation kernel. The whole point of using Centos is "stability", after all. But I'm temped to try. PJ -- Paul E. Johnson Professor, Political Science 1541 Lilac Lane, Room 504 University of Kansas -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines