> On Mon, 7 Jun 1999, Mike Smith wrote:
> 
> > > 12.A, 21.*, and 23.* are known to be buggy...13.A doesn't appear to be.
> > > Since the current method of sorting out the revisions doesn't seem to 
> > > be perfect, would it be acceptible to consider them all buggy unless known
> > > not to be (i.e. compare ap->revision instead of ap->model)?
> > 
> > Uh, that's what the code does; if it's a Zip drive, it's considered to 
> > be buggy regardless of revision.  If the string compare isn't matching 
> > a drive in the field, it means that Iomega have changed the string and 
> > we need to know what the new drives are calling themselves.
> > 
> 
> I have an off-brand (NEC) Zip Drive with:
>      <IOMEGA  ZIP 100       ATAPI       Floppy/12.A>
> which does have buggy firmware; I also have another one with:
>      <IOMEGA  ZIP 100       ATAPI/13.A>
> that has no problem when I remove the 64 block limitation.
> 
> In this case, I would use strncmp instead of strcmp to test the first 27
> characters.

Gotcha, and that's definitely a good idea.

> So what you are saying is that we are limiting all Zip drives instead of
> being based solely on firmware revision?  Any reason for that?

No evidence suggesting that any revision ever worked or would work; the
simplest and safest technique is just to cap transfers at 32k - in
reality it doesn't affect performance at all, so there's no real need to
be extra-picky.

-- 
\\  The mind's the standard       \\  Mike Smith
\\  of the man.                   \\  msm...@freebsd.org
\\    -- Joseph Merrick           \\  msm...@cdrom.com




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