Christoph Pleger wrote:
Hello,
In the newest Ubuntu Release, my PATA-disk is called sda instead of
hda. Is that a general feature in newer kernel versions or is it a
special feature in Ubuntu?
General. SATA and now PATA drives map onto the /dev/sd range as do
SCSI, USB etc
It seems to be not that simple, at least not if both the old IDE
interface and the new libata interface are enabled as modules: In my
Ubuntu system, I created two kernel packages (from the same kernel
source and with the same configuration) and installed them. Afterwards,
I re-created the initial ramdisks, one with the Ubuntu feisty utilities
and one with Debian etch utilities. So, I had the same kernel with
different ramdisks. With the Ubuntu ramdisk, my harddrive was named sda,
but with the Debian ramdisk, it was named hda.
So, the name of the drive can depend on something which happens in the
ramdisk environment. Does anybody know what that is? And is there a
kernel command line parameter which restores the old behaviour?
And what about hdparm (setting 32bit I/O and multi-sector mode)? Suren
wrote that 32bit I/O makes no sense when using DMA. Maybe that's right,
but it does not correspond with my experiences. At least, I have the
"feeling" that my IDE disks work much faster since I enabled 32bit
support (DMA already was on before).
No, it has absolutely no effect in DMA mode.
Currently the DMA, multi-sector mode, etc. are not controllable with
hdparm with libata. libata is designed to use the fastest settings
possible by default. In a lot of cases this messing with hdparm was only
needed because of stupidity with the old IDE code (like DMA not being
automatically enabled if the low-level driver was built modular).
--
Robert Hancock Saskatoon, SK, Canada
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Home Page: http://www.roberthancock.com/
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