Making a G4 FW800 OS9 bootable.

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Re: Making a G4 FW800 OS9 bootable.

Postby Arthegall » 28 May 2012, 16:47

Progress! After last night's failure, I called to mind this oft-repeated basic information from lowendmac.com (taken in this case from their Wallstreet PDQ page. See the last paragraph in the overview section).

If you have a hard drive larger than 8 GB, you should partition is so that the first partition is under 8 GB in size (for simplicity, we suggest 7 GB). Failure to do this could eventually result in an unbootable computer, as all System files must be within the first 8 GB of drive space. These Macs can work successfully with larger drives for some time, but once a System files goes outside of the first 8 GB of space, you'll have nothing but problems.


I went back, partitioned my boot disk with a 1GB partition for MacOS 9 and then reinstalled everything using the same install disks.

This time, no question mark!
It started booting into OS9, and then crashed halfway through.

OS9_Boot_Progress.jpg
I'm sorry, Dave. I'm afraid I can't do that.


So, one issue resolved. Now to try the other install disk options I have available.
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Re: Making a G4 FW800 OS9 bootable.

Postby Bunsen » 29 May 2012, 01:29

Try booting with all extensions off - hold down the [shift] key while booting
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Re: Making a G4 FW800 OS9 bootable.

Postby uniserver » 29 May 2012, 01:40

yeah didn't someone say this would happen if you didn't have the correct video driver?
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Re: Making a G4 FW800 OS9 bootable.

Postby Bunsen » 29 May 2012, 02:00

viewtopic.php?p=163791#p163791
Mac OS 9 on the Mirrored Drive Doors /
I was at the Apple store today, and while talking to my genius, I mentioned my problem. He went out back and got me a shiny new set of system discs for my specific machine that they had hanging around . . . He also said that if one were to call AppleCare and explain the situation that they would burn a copy of the original system from the vault and it would be free except for postage.
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Re: Making a G4 FW800 OS9 bootable.

Postby Arthegall » 29 May 2012, 12:10

Gah! Booting with extensions off!? Duh!
I am SO out of practice with pre-OS X troubleshooting. Back in the day, the extensions-off reboot was as natural as breathing.
I'll try it after I reinstall the OS 9 software. I wiped the partition in anticipation of trying something else.

In other news, I've been running Apple Hardware Test 1.2.6, which I believe is the disk for the original MDDs.

Everything passes fine except my memory.
The FW800 board came with two 256mb sticks, a PC2100 stick which is incompatible with the new, 167mhz board, and a PC2600 stick.
The MDD board came with four 512mb sticks, all PC2700.

Using the MDD board, the FW800 RAM behaves as expected. I get a fail test on the PC2100 stick, and the PC2600 stick passes and functions fine.
But when I install the PC2700 RAM, Apple Hardware Test won't even boot successfully. I get the error screen below. I've tried with one stick, two sticks, and four sticks, and I get the same grey screen every time. Of course, running the computer in Panther, Tiger, and Leopard, I haven't noticed any problems at all. Only when trying to boot AHT 1.2.6.

AHT_Boot_Fail.jpg
I have no idea what this means.



I haven't spent too much time swapping sticks around because the machine came stock with 256MB, and I've got a working 256MB stick to play with until I get OS9 running, which is the immediate goal. But eventually, I'm going to want a problem-free install of max RAM as well.
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Re: Making a G4 FW800 OS9 bootable.

Postby Arthegall » 29 May 2012, 12:42

Bunsen wrote:Try booting with all extensions off - hold down the [shift] key while booting


Okay, so I just got taken to beginner school by the mod. Good call, Bunsen. Turning off extensions on startup allowed the boot to complete.
We are OS 9 live!

OS9_is_LIVE.jpg
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Couple of notes:

1) I'm running a MDD June 2003 single 1.25Ghz CPU/board combo inside what was originally a FW800 box. I'm using one 256MB stick of PC2600 RAM that was on the FW800 board.
2) I booted from my retail Tiger install disk, wiped and partitioned the drive, and installed Tiger.
3) I used the MDD OS9 disk to install an OS9 system folder. According to the documentation on that disk, the OS9 install is for Classic support only under OSX and will not support booting in OS9. But it does.
4) It crashes on startup unless extensions are off.

So all that's left is to find the extensions conflict.

Video-driver conflict has been suggested. I will look into that possibility and keep you all posted.
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Re: Making a G4 FW800 OS9 bootable.

Postby uniserver » 29 May 2012, 16:30

ok keep it commin… my dad is bringin me my mdd 1.25 dp tonight.
I've been remoting into it, but now ill have it in my grubby little hands.

ill try my ibook 9.22 disk tonight!
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Re: Making a G4 FW800 OS9 bootable.

Postby Arthegall » 29 May 2012, 22:44

If you've ever used Ex Post Facto to install a not-officially-supported version of OS X on a machine, you know how I feel right now.
If you're looking for an OS 9 box, there definitely is merit to getting a machine that can boot from a retail OS 9.

They're much more common than whatever machine-specific install disk you need to make your machine behave properly.
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Re: Making a G4 FW800 OS9 bootable.

Postby Anonymous Freak » 30 May 2012, 00:04

I tried the "call Applecare" last year. My very first call, I got someone who said "sure, I just need the serial number so I can figure out which model you have." (And it was going to be $10 shipping *PER DISC* in the set.) Sadly, I didn't have the serial number on me.

I called four more times over the next week, and never got anyone who knew anything about that. I tried many different departments, education, business, consumer. On one call, I was transferred around four times. The best answer I got later was "use Sheepshaver."
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Re: Making a G4 FW800 OS9 bootable.

Postby Arthegall » 30 May 2012, 11:50

Okay, so I'm able to boot with all extensions on. I switched out the PC2700 RAM that was causing AHT to failboot, and put in the one 256MB PC2600 stick that passed AHT. So I'm at stock RAM levels right now, but, whatever.

After I did that I turned off all the extensions and worked up to a maximum successful set . . . which turned out to be all of them. I should have tried booting again with extensions after the RAM switch. Oh well. It works now anyways.

The problem is, the system folder I got from the install CD is gutted. No AppleTalk control panel. No Mouse control panel. No File Sharing extension. That's for starters, as they're what I need right now.

So, I'm in the process of cataloging everything (all control panels, extensions, etc.) in the system folder including version numbers.
I'm then going to catalog the system folder in my Wallstreet PDQ (a 9.2.2 International update downloaded from Apple and added to a 9.1 UK retail install).
I will see what the differences are an start adding things to the gutted system folder on my MDD and see what works and what crashes.

I will then take this hybridized, bastard, Borgified system folder, and *archive it*. I will then test it for a month or two using lots of software.
If everything works, I'll have me a new, custom OS 9.2.2 install for 2003 MDD machines.

I'll keep you all posted.

Update: File Sharing is live on the MDD-Borg, and it and the Wallstreet are now talking to one another.
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Re: Making a G4 FW800 OS9 bootable.

Postby uniserver » 30 May 2012, 15:20

interesting… did you have to delete that ATI accelerator extension to get it to boot with extensions on?
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Re: Making a G4 FW800 OS9 bootable.

Postby Arthegall » 30 May 2012, 17:51

This whole experience has gotten me thinking about how useful it would be to have an online wiki for the various versions and pieces of System 9.x.

It would list:
All the various versions of OS 9.x and when and how they were released.
Photos of CDs with part numbers, etc.
Box scans with system requirements, etc.

And, under each version of OS 9.x.x it would give a complete breakdown of what was in the system folder, control panels, extensions, etc. with version numbers.

And, it would have detailed information on important system components (like control panels and extensions). When they were first released, what they did, and which versions were used in which systems.

It would also have discussions of MacOS 9 compatibility with various software and of which machines were compatible with which versions and of how the OS was implemented differently between Old World and New World machines.

What a fantastically useful project that would be.
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Re: Making a G4 FW800 OS9 bootable.

Postby Arthegall » 30 May 2012, 17:53

To my knowledge, there was no ATI Accelerator extension, although I'm not looking at it ATM. I didn't have to turn off or disable any extensions to get it to work.
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Re: Making a G4 FW800 OS9 bootable.

Postby Arthegall » 31 May 2012, 02:05

Well, another incompatibility with OS 9 pops up.

It won't go to sleep properly. It goes to sleep, but the fans keep running (and as we all know, MDD fans are not quiet). It says there's a piece of hardware installed that's not compatible with sleep, and checking the system profiler, it appears to be a PCI card, of which there are none installed.

Could it be the graphics card itself? It's the GeForce4 MX, I think. It's whatever was the installed card on my FW800 board, and that being the lowend model, I think that's the one. I'll check later to be sure.

Any other ideas?
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Re: Making a G4 FW800 OS9 bootable.

Postby Byrd » 31 May 2012, 03:33

Could also be a USB device, eg. mouse/keyboard/printer not causing it to sleep
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Re: Making a G4 FW800 OS9 bootable.

Postby ClassicHasClass » 31 May 2012, 04:22

The AGP card always appears as a "PCI" card in the Profiler. As long as the video card is in the AGP slot, it should be able to sleep fine. Byrd is right; check USB devices.
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Re: Making a G4 FW800 OS9 bootable.

Postby CC_333 » 31 May 2012, 07:17

Hi,

Hmm... this sounds familiar.

While it's possible that a USB device could cause it not to sleep, in my experience with an Nvidia GeForce 4MX on my Quicksilver, it won't sleep unless the proper drivers are in place.

When you go to the Monitors control panel, does it list various resolutions for your display, or only one?

If only one, the missing drivers are the problem. The OS 9.2.2 you installed may be working simply because it didn't have the drivers included in the package (I've found that images of OS 9.2.2 which are intended solely for use in Classic mode, it doesn't include much in the way of display drivers (presumably because they're not necessary in Classic mode)); OS 9.2.2 will still work just fine without them, of course (although I've found that (re)drawing of UI elements is slow at higher resolutions (it seems to default to the monitor's native resolution when there's no drivers)).

I think you can download the Nvidia drivers from Other World Computing (filename is nvidia3.1.sit, I think).

I'm glad it's working otherwise, though! Good job!!

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Re: Making a G4 FW800 OS9 bootable.

Postby BGoins12 » 31 May 2012, 10:58

If I am not mistaken, if you do NOT have one of the original MDD video cards installed, OS 9 will go wonky. Mine did with my 256MB nVidia FX5200. Mine would only display at 640x480? (I can't remember) and 256 colors. I put back in the original Radeon 9000 Pro, and it was fine.

EDIT - Wait... didn't the MDD come with the GeForce 4MX as an option?
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Re: Making a G4 FW800 OS9 bootable.

Postby Arthegall » 31 May 2012, 11:27

Ha! CC_333 wins the prize! Monitors shows only 1024x768 as an option, so even if it's not the sleep problem, I definitely need a driver update.

I know USB devices can cause the problem, in particular my thumb drive, but I've already dealt with that one, so I'm pretty sure it's the video card.

Update: The driver in question is called the Apple NVIDIA Driver and it was published by Apple. Apple NVIDIA Driver 3.0 v1.1 (Apr, 2002) can still be had from Apple's website.
http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1150

Update 2: The installer won't run on my machine, however.
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Re: Making a G4 FW800 OS9 bootable.

Postby CC_333 » 31 May 2012, 15:56

Arthegall wrote:Ha! CC_333 wins the prize!
I thought so! The symptoms you were describing seemed very familiar.

Arthegall wrote:Update 2: The installer won't run on my machine, however.
That's because you need version 3.5 of the drivers. 3.0 v1.1 (Apr, 2002) is meant to update older versions of OS 9 drivers on older models of computer using older models of Nvidia cards. The card from the MDD (particularly the 2003 model) needs version 3.5 or else it won't work. I speak from experience, because I spent hours trying to find those drivers when I got that card (and it was actually for a Sawtooth model, not Quicksilver. My mistake. However, the information and experience still apply.)

There's actually a mention of a similar problem (with a link to the drivers) on this forum over here.

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Re: Making a G4 FW800 OS9 bootable.

Postby protocol7 » 31 May 2012, 16:15

The Netboot image I mentioned on the previous page has 3.5.x nvidia drivers. You would probably have had the system up and running in one go if you'd used that.

But then you'd have missed out on the journey ;)
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Re: Making a G4 FW800 OS9 bootable.

Postby Anonymous Freak » 31 May 2012, 17:39

ClassicHasClass wrote:The AGP card always appears as a "PCI" card in the Profiler. As long as the video card is in the AGP slot, it should be able to sleep fine. Byrd is right; check USB devices.


Just to be technical, that's because AGP *IS* PCI, just with some extensions and a faster-pumped bus.
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Re: Making a G4 FW800 OS9 bootable.

Postby Arthegall » 31 May 2012, 18:32

All of you are being super helpful. I couldn't ask for a better community.

The 3.5 drivers dropped into the system folder and were recognized as extensions and placed accordingly. They do not cause a crash.
They also don't do any good. Still limited to 1024x768 in the Monitors control panel, still got fans running during sleep, still have a message in the system profiler that I have a PCI card incompatible with low-power mode. I also verified that it is a GeForce4 MX.

Trying the NetBoot now.

Update: After I add Disk Copy to the OS 9 "install" currently on the MDD.

Update 2: NetBoot 9 System folder = flashing question mark. I'll try a couple different MacOS ROM files and see if any of them make a difference.
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Re: Making a G4 FW800 OS9 bootable.

Postby protocol7 » 31 May 2012, 19:03

Hmm the Mac OS ROM is only 9.6.1. I must have been confusing it with the eMac disc as I could have sworn it was 10.2.x. Maybe drop in a newer one.
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Re: Making a G4 FW800 OS9 bootable.

Postby Arthegall » 31 May 2012, 19:14

Yeah, I actually dropped in the new ROM before I tried it the first time. I'll keep fiddling, but unless I can get my hand on better disks, I'm about to call this a failed experiment.
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