On Tue, May 15, 2007 at 12:26:29PM +0100, Simon Arlott wrote:
> I've already suggested a sysfs attribute - or something equivalent - would
> be much better. It's just one function that a user might want to run multiple
> times (e.g. after adding scsi devices?) - why should loading a module be used
> for this?
It's easy to suggest a sysfs attribute. What you've failed to do is
suggest the pathname of the sysfs attribute, the contents of it, or the
semantics of it (read-only? read-write? write-only? blocking?)
My personal favourite would be to add a new verb to /proc/scsi/scsi, but
James dislikes that idea.
I'd *really* like to hear from distro people. What is the most
convenient way for you to implement "load all the scsi modules, then
wait until all devices are found"? James and I had thought that loading
a new module would be the easiest way for you, but it seems inconvenient
for you.
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- References:
- Re: why does x86 "make defconfig" build a single, lonely module?
- Re: why does x86 "make defconfig" build a single, lonely module?
- Re: why does x86 "make defconfig" build a single, lonely module?
- Re: why does x86 "make defconfig" build a single, lonely module?
- Re: why does x86 "make defconfig" build a single, lonely module?
- Re: why does x86 "make defconfig" build a single, lonely module?
- Re: why does x86 "make defconfig" build a single, lonely module?
- Re: why does x86 "make defconfig" build a single, lonely module?
- Re: why does x86 "make defconfig" build a single, lonely module?
- Re: why does x86 "make defconfig" build a single, lonely module?
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