English fork of the Japanese RaSCSI project. RaSCSI allows a Raspberry Pi to function as emulated SCSI devices (hard disk, CD-ROM, and others) for vintage SCSI-based computers and devices.
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Uwe Seimet cc1783c1cd
Improved remote connection error handling (#376)
* Improved remote connection error handling

* Improved error handling by adding a magic string to each message

* Interface comment update

* Interface comment update

* Improve error messages

* Clients send the magic word to authenticate

Co-authored-by: Daniel Markstedt <markstedt@gmail.com>
2021-10-25 16:04:10 -07:00
.github Disable the rpi build for develop and master (#330) 2021-10-14 13:20:57 -07:00
doc Added SHUT_DOWN command, split rascsi.cpp (#334) 2021-10-17 08:51:14 +02:00
docs Merge Hw 2p4 to develop (#109) 2021-06-08 19:06:29 -05:00
hw Merge Hw 2p4 to develop (#109) 2021-06-08 19:06:29 -05:00
src Improved remote connection error handling (#376) 2021-10-25 16:04:10 -07:00
test/robot Create new test cases for checking that the user can specify the TCP Port number (#154) 2021-07-27 18:40:00 -05:00
_config.yml
.gitignore OLED Screen: Inquire device status over the protobuf interface (#349) 2021-10-19 19:59:04 -05:00
easyinstall.sh Add checks for running services before stopping + stop&start monitor_rascsi when installing rascsi proper 2021-10-20 22:06:00 -07:00
LICENSE
lido-driver.img improved HD creator with partioning and formatting Drive with HFS. (#51) 2020-11-07 18:10:09 -06:00
README.md Update README.md 2021-10-25 17:42:38 -05:00

What is RaSCSI?

RaSCSI is a virtual SCSI device emulator that runs on a Raspberry Pi. It runs in userspace, and can emulate several SCSI devices at one time. There is a control interface to attach / detach drives during runtime, as well as insert and eject removable media. This project is aimed at users of vintage Macintosh and Atari computers from the 1980's and 1990's.

Please check out the full story with much more detail on the wiki!

How do I contribute?

RaSCSI is using the Gitflow Workflow. A quick overview:

  • The master branch should always reflect the contents of the last stable release
  • The develop branch should contain the latest tested & approved updates. Pull requests should be used to merge changes into develop.
  • The rest of the feature branches are for developing new features
  • A tag will be created for each "release". The releases will be named . (for the first release of the month). Hot fixes, if necessary, will be released as ... For example, the first release in January 2021 will be release "21.01". If a hot-fix is needed for this release, the first hotfix will be "21.01.1".

Typically, releases will only be planned every few months.

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