Thank you admins,
for your speedy responses to my query, especially
Stan Francis <scf@gimme.wwa.com>
Thomas Wardman <wardtj@uleth.ca>
rbhasin@hss.hns.com
cmc@shar.ernet.in (Ravi S K)
"Scott D. Yelich" <scott@scottyelich.com>
"Alfredo De Luca" <Alfredo.deLuca@systeam.it>
Casper Dik <casper@holland.sun.com>
Goodson Alex A <Alex.Goodson@astrazeneca.com>
"Satinder S Mangat" <mangat_satinder@jpmorgan.com>
Tim Fritz <tfritz1@tampabay.rr.com>
"Reichert, Alan" <aareichert@tasc.com>
Simon-Bernard Drolet <sbdrolet@M3iSystems.QC.CA>
John Malick <john@starinc.com>
sunsrv@blr.cmc.net.in
Jim Blevins <jblevins@nlc.com>
"Kulp, Scott (Scott)** CTR **" <skulp@lucent.com>
Shawn Brown <shawbrow@cisco.com>
Jens Fischer <fischjns@ina.de>
Arshad Hussain <arshad@cdacb.ernet.in>
Buddy Lumpkin <blumpkin@home.net>
The answer is to press STOP-N while booting restores the default NVRAM
settings. My problem was the orig sun keyboard I tried to use was out
of order ;-(
I took another one, did the trick, and it worked.
Thanks again & best wishes,
Guenter
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
My orig question was:
> accidentially the contents of the NVRAM values of an Ultra Enterprise 450
> server was lost. Also the settings for a serial console (old DEC VT220).
> Console settings are 9600,8,n,1 on Serial Port A. The Serial Ports are
> configured to RS-232, not RS-423.
> If I try to boot I only get one confusing line of Characters on my VT220
> ("ZZSSSIx.........") but no OBP prompt.
> Is it possible to restore the factory defaults of the NVRAM chip?
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- Dipl.-Ing. Guenter Millahn Brandenburg University of Technology Systems, Network & DB Admin CS Dept / DB & IS Research Group Voice: +49 (355) 69-2700/2272 P.O. Box: 10 13 44 Fax: +49 (355) 69-2766 D-03013 Cottbus GERMANY
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.2 : Fri Sep 28 2001 - 23:14:01 CDT