- Legacy Linux drivers for the AMCC S5933 PCI controller. - acisternino/amcc-s5933-linux-drivers.
- Applied Micro Circuits Corporation (AMCC), the premier supplier of single chip solutions, has developed and pro. Duced the S5933 to solve the problem of interfacing applications to the PCI Local bus. The S5933, or ‘Matchmaker’, is. A powerful and flexible PCI controller supporting several levels of interface sophistication.
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4.0out of 1 votes
Pros
The installation is very straightforward, but configuring using the BIOS interface can be very time-consuming.
It works without any problems on WinXP x64, and has saved my bacon more than once.
It's also pretty flexible.
Cons
The BIOS configuration interface is quite fiddly, with selection and movement keys combined.
The firmware, drivers, and 'management' version numbers are complex, confusing, and difficult to manage.
Summary
The 9550 is functional and rock-solid, with no gotchas or glitches (at least, not in the 2+ years I've been using it). I use the 8-port half-height model (9550-LP8) in a Tyan H2000 motherboard on the 64-bit 100MHz PCI bus.
The support is excellent (as you'd expect for a hardware device costing more than most complete computer systems!). The support is focused, prompt, and the team at AMCC are extremely helpful, so that helps smooth over some of the more confusing aspects of the code support.
The only management interface is a html server on a secure loopback port, so as management software goes, it's pretty utilitarian, and painfully slow, with no 'OK' or 'Apply' buttons to be seen anywhere. If you hate .NET interfaces, you'll loathe the management interface on this controller. That said, it does let you see a huge amount of information, if you're happy to go clicking around on the group buttons at the top of the page. All the functions are there, you just have to dig a little. Unfortunately, some functions are circular, so if you open the 'Summary' page, then click on the unit link, that takes you to a drive list, with links for each drive that show you the SMART data and nothing else, and you have to close that page to get back to the main unit page. Each drive unit can be shown in 2 different ways depending on the way you use to get to the drive listings, and some of the drive links take you back to the unit page... You get the gist.
Speaking of HTML, the management tool (called 3DM2 to distinguish it from the BIOS UI, called 2BM) uses a secure http port, but the company's certificate supplied isn't trusted by any public authority, so unless you disable all trust verification in your web browser, you'll never be able to just log in to the 3DM2 page, you'll always be prompted to accept the untrusted certificate first. This doesn't apply to all browsers equally, of course - IE is the most difficult to use with 3DM2, but Firefox and Safari have the same problems.
The BIOS configuration is more difficult to use than you'd think, as movement keys are mixed up with function keys (space/enter vs tab/arrows), and if you forget to hit F8, all your changes will be lost and you'll have to start all over again. Same with hitting the ESC key - except that sometimes it closes the current function, sometimes it exits the BIOS UI completely - again, with no confirmation. If you know your way around RAID, you won't have any problems, but if you're not sure about how carving or striping or parity works, you're better off going with something a bit simpler, like the RocketRAID (which is what the 3ware controller replaced in this system).
The company seems to be focusing heavily on linux, and windows support definitely feels like an afterthought, so if you don't like or understand the command-line style of interface, you're better off sticking with the html interface.
The software, firmware, and driver numbering is inscrutable for non-linux admins (or non-developers) to understand. There are firmware revisions, codeset revisions, driver revisions, BIOS revisions, and manager revisions. And just when you thought you had it figured out, there are different version sequences for windows and linux, for command-line and windows-based, and for BIOS and 3DM2. There are different flash routines, some only work from DOS, some only work from linux, some work from within Windows. The online 'Version Checker' tool doesn't actually tell you what version of anything you actually have. You must type in the codeset number (or firmware number, which is different again) you want the version checker to report on, and when you type that in (like 03.00.00.019) it will tell you what firmware and BIOS and driver and manager versions should be in that version of the package.
Tier 1/2 realtime support is available, and the support team are very professional and extremely helpful, but once it gets past the basic problems, only ticketed web-based support is available. That's still better than forum support. And the AMCC people do treat you like a real customer, even if you're not a corporate high-flyer. That's unusual these days.
Would I buy another controller from AMCC? In a heartbeat. Would I recommend AMCC to another user? Only if they know enough about RAID to make jokes about JBOD. But from a business standpoint, the 9550 has literally saved my bacon once. It's also burned my bacon once, so this kind of hardware and software isn't for the faint-hearted!
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General | |
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Publisher | AMCC |
Publisher web site | http://www.3ware.com/3ware_home.htm |
Release Date | July 27, 2005 |
Date Added | July 27, 2005 |
Version | 3.0.0.80 |
Category | |
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Category | Drivers |
Subcategory | SCSI Drivers |
Operating Systems | |
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Operating Systems | Windows 98/NT/2000/XP |
Additional Requirements |
Download Information | |
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File Size | Not Available |
File Name | External File |
Popularity | |
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Total Downloads | 2,824 |
Downloads Last Week | 2 |
Microsoft Pci Drivers For Xp
Pricing | |
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License Model | Free |
Limitations | Not available |
Price | Free |
Pci Controller Driver Windows Xp
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The OS it came with (Windows 7 Ultimate) was dis-activated and I have had a lot of trouble finding the right RAID drivers to install any other OS over it. As the title suggests, it came with a 3WARE AMCC 9550SX controller with four slots (this model: http://www.tigerdirect.com/applications/SearchTools/item-details.asp?EdpNo=1740122). I've tried doing a clean installation of Windows 7 Pro, Windows server 2008, and Windows server 2012 so far, and every time I get to the point of selecting the installation drive, and it gives me an error that it can't see any hard drives and and the option to add the appropriate drivers. I made a full backup of the drivers that came with the machine (it had Windows 7 Ultimate installed), but when I try to select them from a flash drive the Windows installation won't take them.
I'm looking to run a few virtual machines on this server - probably Windows Server 2012 as a web server for some ASP.NET projects and Ubuntu Server as a home file server. I originally wanted to install VMWare's ESXI to use for this purpose, but it didn't like the RAID controller. So I decided to give Windows 7 Pro or Windows Server 2008 with VirtualBox or a similar program a try - and again, I'm stuck with these driver errors on installation.
My questions to the experts out there: does any one know where I can find these drivers? A google search returns some results, but it's all just junkware websites with no actual valid driver downloads available. I'm willing to try another RAID controller - preferably one with 8 ports so I can utilize all of the drive slots, but I don't want to break the bank for this. Could anyone recommend a comparable controller with readily available drivers that would fit these needs for a decent price? Also, I've read in other places that this controller may is more Linux-friendly. If that's the case I would be totally fine with installing Ubuntu Desktop 64 bit and running the virtual machines from there.
Thanks in advance for any advice!
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