@Glenn Anderson
Would you happen to know what the difference is between the DaynaPORT II & DaynaPORT (St.) II drivers shown below?
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My card is the DaynaPORT E/II-T, as shown in the photo I posted previously. I assume one of those two drivers must be correct, as they are the only two with "II" in the name. But the "St." part has me confused, and the documentation about that is utterly absent.
Just looking through the resources for the installer, installing "DaynaPORT II" installs a driver for board ID 298, which is what I believe the DaynaPORT E/II-T is, the EtherPort II has that board ID. Installing the "DaynaPORT (St.) II" installs a driver for board ID 8. I have two of the DaynaPORT E/II-3, and it has board ID 8.
My best guess at what the "St." is referring to has to do with the branding for the chips used on the boards. The older DP8390 is the "NIC" for "Network Interface Controller", the DP83901 is the "SNIC" for "Serial Network Interface Controller" (it integrates the DP8391 serial network interface IC), and the DP83902 is the "ST-NIC" (the T added because it integrated 10base-T). The DaynaPORT E/II-3 has a DP83902 ST-NIC. However that is a pretty obscure thing to put in the user interface for the installer.
I have another question, separate from the above...
The README says the following about DaynaPort SCSI...
View attachment 13789
I have installed that SCSI driver in order to get my BlueSCSIv2 PICO W to work, and it works well as I
describe here. But currently I have my NuBus card removed. And the above README seems to say I cannot use my E/II-T NuBus card at all if I have the SCSI/Link driver installed. Is this true?
Thanks.
A NuBus card with a SCSI ethernet is probably OK. You can't have more than one SCSI ethernet, or mix SCSI ethernet with Mac SE PDS cards, as they all want to have a driver named ".ENET0", and there is no way to handle more than one of those. For NuBus cards, IIsi, SE/30, LC PDS, CommSlot, built in ethernet, etc. there is a mechanism to handle more than one ethernet interface, and it shouldn't conflict with ".ENET0" ethernet driver.
Older versions of classic Mac OS, particularly if they don't have the newer AppleTalk installed, might have problems. However I think that Dayna installer installs a new enough AppleTalk. If you are trying to run something older than I think System 6.0.4 it could still be a problem.