On Friday 27 January 2006 14:24, Bastian Blank wrote:
I finaly finished a rudimentary hardware configuration. It have some
similarities with the redhat and suse sysconfig. (This was the simplest
schema I found.)
- A config for ccwgroup contains a CCWGROUP_CHANS array:
On Fri, Mar 24, 2006 at 02:38:05PM +0100, Frans Pop wrote:
I've not been able get udev to set up the hardware though.
I've created a file '/etc/sysconfig/hardware/config-ccw-0.0.0a00' with:
CCWGROUP_CHANS=(0.0.0a00 0.0.0a01)
but that does not seem to do anything.
Hmm, I think I know the
On Friday 24 March 2006 15:05, Bastian Blank wrote:
After loading the ctc module, a hwup ccw 0.0.0a00 works fine.
The ctc module is loaded. I have it in /etc/modules.
A manual 'hwup ccw 0.0.0a00' does indeed do the trick.
The problem seems to be that loading the ctc module does not trigger the
On Fri, Mar 24, 2006 at 03:40:46PM +0100, Frans Pop wrote:
I guess you mean that ctc will be loaded as part of the processing of
/sys/bus/ccw/devices/0.0.0a00 so loading it manually in /etc/modules is
no longer needed?
Exactly.
But there is another problem left: A race condition happens if
On Fri, Mar 24, 2006 at 04:23:46PM +0100, Bastian Blank wrote:
# echo /sys/bus/ccw/devices/0.0.0a00/uevent
Should be
# echo /sys/bus/ccw/devices/0.0.0a00/uevent
Bastian
--
It would be illogical to kill without reason.
-- Spock, Journey to Babel, stardate 3842.4
On Mar 24, 2006, at 9:10 AM, Bastian Blank wrote:
On Fri, Mar 24, 2006 at 03:40:46PM +0100, Frans Pop wrote:
I guess you mean that ctc will be loaded as part of the processing of
/sys/bus/ccw/devices/0.0.0a00 so loading it manually in /etc/
modules is
no longer needed?
Exactly.
But there
Have we seen this in practice?
Because of the way the CTC driver is structured, one address is input
and one is output if you're speaking IP over it. It's not like using
CTC for RSCS where each address is bidirectional. So if only one of the
pair is there, I'd say that it's broken and you
Adam Thornton wrote:
I'm going to be devil's advocate here:
*I* always use the even address as the bottom one of the pair.
Is there anything mandating that that has to be the case?
Adam
Oh.. You're lacking imagination ! You could push that one just a tad
further !
1) Use non consecutive
On Mar 24, 2006, at 7:35 PM, Stephen Frazier wrote:
It would seem that for a hot plug CTC device. You would set it up
to test for the presence of the other one of the pair. If they are
not both present then dont do anything. Thus in your example when
0A00 became available nothing would
On Mar 24, 2006, at 8:39 PM, Ivan Warren wrote:
Adam Thornton wrote:
I'm going to be devil's advocate here:
Oh.. You're lacking imagination ! You could push that one just a
tad further !
I blame the total lack of cough syrup tonight for my failure of
imagination.
Adam
--
To
When using a real CTC, that is a wire cable between two separate
computers, (I haven't seen one of those in years either but they do
really exist) it is necessary to reverse the order on one. One machine
read=0A00 write=0A01 the other read=0A01 write=0A00. One machine has to
read what the
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