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Text File | 1988-06-30 | 4.2 KB | 82 lines | [TEXT/MACA] |
- If you run a BBS on a Macintosh with a hard disk you've probably experienced
- the same problem I have when the power fails while you aren't around. I've
- found that Host can't boot back up when the power comes back on because
- the hard disk won't come back up to speed fast enough.
-
- Here's the problem. When you start up the Mac with a hard disk, the hard
- disk must be powered up at least a few seconds before the Mac so the hd
- can get up to speed before the Mac will know it's there and boot it.
- Well, when the power goes off everything dies at one time. That is, of
- course, unless you have a backup power supply, which I don't have.
-
- Now, when the power comes back on both the Mac and the hard disk fire up at
- one time. The drive won't have time to get to speed before the Mac is ready
- for it so the Mac just sits there with a little question mark waiting for
- somebody to feed it a disk even though the hard drive is purring right along.
- So, your bbs is going to be down until you arrive home (or get out of bed)
- and find it doing nothing. I figured there had to be a way to prevent this
- and my solution was finding a way to delay the Mac long enough for the hard
- disk to get wound up.
-
- Here's the solution I came up with and it should work for you. This is not
- for Mac IIs as I know nothing about them and how they start up.
-
- Enclosed with this file you will find a small application called "Rebooter."
- I have no idea of it's origin or it's original usefulness. I found it among
- a bunch of PD/shareware files somebody sent me on disk a long time ago.
- Rebooter will do just what it sounds like...when run it will restart the Mac!
- It will do nothing more.
-
- Anyway...Create yourself a floppy disk with at least a minimum System and
- Finder and put the rebooter program on that floppy disk. Then set Rebooter
- as the "startup application." Be sure that Red Ryder Host is set as the
- startup application on your hard disk. From now on always put the floppy
- disk containing rebooter into one of your floppy disk drives after you get
- Host up and running. I personally use the external floppy drive because it
- doesn't get as warm as the internal. I doubt that makes a lot of difference
- for any reason but it's the way I do it.
-
- Now what will happen if there's a power failure? When the power fails, the
- Mac just dies. It doesn't do anything like ejecting disks or anything as
- we would like. It dies with the floppy disk in the drive. As you know, the
- Mac will always look for a floppy disk to start up with before checking the
- hard drive (SCSI) ports. When the power comes back on, both the Mac and the
- hard disk power up at exactly the same time. The Mac does it's memory test
- thing for a few seconds, checks the floppy drives, and finds a bootable disk
- with a System file. It boots from that disk and then runs the rebooter
- program. All this is going on while the hard disk is getting up to speed.
- As soon as rebooter runs it does a restart on the Mac. BING!
-
- It will eject your floppy disk and do a restart. The Mac has to get started up
- all over again. By now, unless your hard drive is slow, it will have finally
- gotten the speed it needs for the Mac to recognize it. The Mac will now
- boot from it and run your bbs. It's only going to work one time for one
- power failure because the floppy will now have been ejected and wouldn't be
- there if it happens again but...
-
- It's just a bit of trickery to delay things long enough for your hard disk to
- get ready and it has worked great for me. I figured that if it was a help
- for me then you may benefit from it as well. Hope it helps solve one of the
- many little aggravations you live with for the pleasure (??) of running a
- bbs.
-
- There are no fees requested of any kind for this info or file. As I stated
- earlier, I don't even know the origin of the rebooter thing and certainly
- didn't write it. The information is my own and I consider it a pleasure to
- provide it if it helps anyone. As far as I'm concerned you may freely
- distribute this file but please keep it all together, unmodified, and
- charge no fees for it. I would at least like for other sysops to know where
- it came from and that is...
-
- One of the very first Mac BBSs in the country.
-
- Ralph Yount, sysop
- MacInternational BBS
- Lexington, SC
- 803-957-6870
- 24 hours - 2400 baud
- Running on a Mac Plus & Jasmine 80 hard disk
-
- GEnie address = RYOUNT
-
-