These have long been favorite motherboards of mine, and I still have several in operation. They have two slots (yes, slots - slot 1 to be specific) for Pentium II or III processors. They also have onboard adaptec SCSI controllers. They used the Intel i440BX chipset. If it were not for the on-board scsi, I am sure they would have been junked years ago.
Here are some manuals as PDF files:
The BXDU and BXDS are identical, except that the DS does not do ultra speed SCSI.
There are two scsi channels (A and B), which can each support 15 targets, so in theory you can have 30 scsi devices in one of these systems. Channel B has a wide (68 pin) and a "regular" (50 pin) scsi connector. Channel A has a pair of wide (68 pin) connectors. Termination was always something to take care to get right. The bus should be terminated at each end (but because the controller has a pair of connectors for each bus, it may end up in the middle of the bus, and if so, should not have termination enabled. Termination (at the controller) can be selected from the BIOS menu in the "Integrated Peripherals" section. Channel A termination can be enabled or disabled. Typically it would always be enabled, it would only be disabled if both Channel A connectors were used and external terminators were in place at the end of both of those cables. Channel B termination can be both, high byte, low byte, or none. Typically this would be set to both, the only time it would not be would be when both connectors were used and terminated at their ends.
What works for me is to do the install on a scsi drive (as root), then add an IDE device later, but not on the primary IDE. I believe the bios will only ever try to boot from and IDE disk if it is the primary master, but don't try to come and sue me if this doesn't work out.
The other interesting thing is that you can boot from the CDROM or you can boot from the SCSI, but the bios has no selection that says to first try the CDROM then go to the SCSI if it ain't there. This means you have to change the bios settings to install and boot from the CDROM (or DVD), then change them back to boot from the scsi disk - and change them again if you ever want to boot from the CDROM, and so forth, ad nauseum. Fortunately, I usually just install from CDROM, change the setting, and live happily ever after.
Adventures in Computing / [email protected]