On Monday 22 September 2003 13:35, Dane Elwell wrote: > Yeah, the -k1 option is supposed to keep options over a reset, but this > doens't seem to work for me. > > xerxes root # hdparm /dev/hda > > /dev/hda: > multcount = 16 (on) > IO_support = 0 (default 16-bit) > unmaskirq = 0 (off) > using_dma = 1 (on) > keepsettings = 1 (on) > readonly = 0 (off) > readahead = 8 (on) > geometry = 14946/255/63, sectors = 240121728, start = 0 > > Yet I'm still getting the same messages after a reboot. The keepsettings > flag also gets reset to 0 after a reboot. >
you made a mistake! -k does not keep the settings in the case of a reboot!! Reset means 'ide reset' When your device is 'reset' after an error, dma will be kept enabled instead of disabling everything to work around the error. A real 'reset' like a reboot erases everything and is something completly different Gl�ck Auf Volker -- Conclusions In a straight-up fight, the Empire squashes the Federation like a bug. Even with its numerical advantage removed, the Empire would still squash the Federation like a bug. Accept it. -Michael Wong -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
