BlueSCSI firmware and initial README
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README.md
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VAXstation 2000 SCSI Patched ROMs
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=================================
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The VAXstation 2000 is a fantastic little "shoe box" VAX computer. A little
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slow maybe but a great entry to the wider world of DEC's VAX computers.
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However it is somewhat lacking in one area: storage. It has one (optional)
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internal hard drive (mine came with a 150MB RD54) and one (optional)
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external hard drive - both of the MFM variety. That's not a big amount of
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storage, and old MFM drives are as you probably know prone to stiction and
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bad blocks, if they even work at all.
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The VAXstation 200 does have a SCSI interface, however it was only intended
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to be used with the optional external TZK50 tape drive, and as such has never
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had any real support for adding hard drives, and it certainly cannot boot
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from a SCSI hard drive even if the operating system supported accessing one.
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But all is not lost. An experimental patch set for the VAXstation 200 was
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created (but never officially released) to add full SCSI support to both the
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internal ROMs and to VAX/VMS, but only one specific version. Which is what
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we have here.
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Using the patches is not the easiest thing in the world, since you need
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an already working installation of VAX/VMS 5.5-2 (yes, that exact version)
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in order to run the patches. And if you don't have a working hard drive
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to operate the VAXstation on, how are you going to get a working installation?
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The answer is to net-boot it with a VAX cluster. But doing so makes it
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rather hard to then make a standalone image. But it can be done with a bit
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of shoehorning. Which thankfully we have done for you. In the releases
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section you will find a set of BlueSCSI hard drive images that should allow you
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to boot a VMS installation (dka200) that is ready to be completed with
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your own details, along with the installation source files (dka300) which
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the installation will ask you for.
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Using it
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--------
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In short:
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1. You need to upgrade your ROMs using the four ROM images (b1-b4) in the ROMs
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directory. You will need four new 64kB EPROMs to burn the images to then
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replace the ROMs on your VAXstation 2000's motherboard.
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2. Connect the BlueSCSI to the SCSI bus (important: see belo), making sure to enable termination if
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you don't have the TZK50 tape drive attached or an external terminator.
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3. Boot from the dka2 device:
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```
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>>> boot dka2
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```
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4. Complete the installation following the on-screen prompts. When it asks for
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the installation media tell it `dka300`.
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5. Install the patched binaries into the installed os:
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```
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$ mount/over=id dka300
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%MOUNT-I-MOUNTED, VMS552 mounted on _DKA300:
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$ set def dka300:[scsi.bin]
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$ @install
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```
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Now the long version:
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Installing the ROMs is pretty straight forward. There's 4 EPROM chips on the motherboard
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which need replacing.
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{image here}
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Note the order, as marked on these ROMs.
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The BlueSCSI (which should be a BlueSCSI II Desktop version so you get the proper 50 pin
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IDC connector) will not work with the VAXstation out of the box due to the VAXstation
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being from the dawn of SCSI and not working in quite the same way as other systems
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(the joys of old computers...) so the BlueSCSI will need to be modified in order to work.
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The problem here is that the SEL pin and RST pin of the SCSI are weakly tied together inside the
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BlueSCSI, so when the RST pin is asserted by the SCSI initiator the SEL pin gets pulled
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low, which shouldn't happen. Most things don't care - but the VAXstation does, and when that
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happens it just gives up trying to do anything on the SCSI bus ever again. So we need
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to separate those two signals. This needs some careful SMD rework.
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1. Remove the resistor R61. This is the resistor that ties the two signals together.
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2. Connect the left hand pad of R61 to the pin GPIO17 of the Raspberry Pi Pico. This
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gives the MCU direct control over the SEL pin.
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3. Install modified firmware into the Pi Pico which moves the SEL functionality to
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GPIO 17.
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This modification uses one of the pins that was used for I2C for the SEL pin, so you will
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no longer be able to use the I2C connector on the BlueSCSI.
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