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Interesting tidbit about Apple firmware hard drives

johnklos

68000
I thought this was an interesting discovery, so I figured some of you folks might like to know.

For ages I've used SCSI-IDE and SCSI-IDE-SATA adapters on various m68k Macs. I just had a 2 TB drive fail in a Quadra 610 so I decided to replace it. One of the spare drives I have lying around is a 640 gig Apple SATA hard drive from a Mac Pro. Normally, I'd have to use the patched Drive Setup program to first initialize, then the Apple HD SC Setup program from A/UX to create A/UX partitions for NetBSD, then the non-patched Drive Setup to update the driver to make it bootable.

This time, because it has the little Apple  logo on the drive, I decided to try the unpatched Drive Setup program. It worked! Even old m68k Macs will see an Apple firmware SATA drive on a SCSI bus. Neat!

 
That's quite interesting!

I guess whatever that little tag or identifier is, it has remained unchanged from the original 20SCs, and thus is still recognizible by the old utilities.

c

 
If I remember correctly, its just a little bit of text that says APPLE or APPL as an identifier in the very first part of the drive ROM.

 
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Well, apparently that command is still present in SATA firmwares, and the adapter somehow knows to translates it into it's SCSI equivalent.

c

 
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