This little goody has calls to hdparms to set dma. So I arrogantly added 32bit
access as well! See what happens on reboot :-)
vi /etc/rcS.d/S55bootmisc.s
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Nate Duehr (<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>) wrote:
> On Tuesday 13 January 2004 06:20 am, Akira Kitada wrote:
>
>> Edit /etc/hdparm.conf file.
>> It's the file that hdparm script, which is in /etc/init.d,
>> read from to configure your hdd status.
>>
>> If you want to know more about it,
>> see /etc/
On January 13, 2004 12:58 pm, Nate Duehr wrote:
> On Tuesday 13 January 2004 06:20 am, Akira Kitada wrote:
> > Edit /etc/hdparm.conf file.
> > It's the file that hdparm script, which is in /etc/init.d,
> > read from to configure your hdd status.
> >
> > If you want to know more about it,
> > see /e
On January 13, 2004 12:57 pm, Nate Duehr wrote:
> On Tuesday 13 January 2004 05:36 am, Christian Schnobrich wrote:
> > What you can do is add you hdparm command to the system startup
> > scripts, so it will be executed at boot time.
>
> Some distros add an rc script for hdparm whenever it's install
On Tue, Jan 13, 2004 at 09:57:35AM -0700, Nate Duehr wrote:
> On Tuesday 13 January 2004 05:36 am, Christian Schnobrich wrote:
> > What you can do is add you hdparm command to the system startup
> > scripts, so it will be executed at boot time.
>
> Some distros add an rc script for hdparm whenever
David Baron([EMAIL PROTECTED]) is reported to have said:
> Thanks. What = 3?
>
See man hdparm (look for -c)
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On Tuesday 13 January 2004 06:20 am, Akira Kitada wrote:
> Edit /etc/hdparm.conf file.
> It's the file that hdparm script, which is in /etc/init.d,
> read from to configure your hdd status.
>
> If you want to know more about it,
> see /etc/init.d/hdparm script.
Doh. Open mouth insert foot. Disr
On Tuesday 13 January 2004 05:36 am, Christian Schnobrich wrote:
> What you can do is add you hdparm command to the system startup
> scripts, so it will be executed at boot time.
Some distros add an rc script for hdparm whenever it's installed. Debian
doesn't.
Others have hdparm or "harddisk
Thanks. What = 3?
On Tuesday 13 January 2004 15:23, Akira Kitada wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 13, 2004 at 03:44:49PM +0100, David Baron wrote:
> > Thanks for your reply. I do not have an /etc/hdparm.conf
> > I do have an /etc/default/hdparm which is a very verbose file with
> > everything!! commented out.
On Tue, Jan 13, 2004 at 03:44:49PM +0100, David Baron wrote:
> Thanks for your reply. I do not have an /etc/hdparm.conf
> I do have an /etc/default/hdparm which is a very verbose file with
> everything!! commented out. This is the file called out in the script.
>
> Would I simply uncomment the li
Thanks for your reply. I do not have an /etc/hdparm.conf
I do have an /etc/default/hdparm which is a very verbose file with
everything!! commented out. This is the file called out in the script.
Would I simply uncomment the line for 32 bit access?
On Tuesday 13 January 2004 14:20, Akira Kitada
On Tue, Jan 13, 2004 at 01:29:39PM +0100, David Baron wrote:
> My disk always come up with 16-bit access.
>
> Even after setting to 32-bit and also setting retain settings on reset, no
> avail!
>
> How to fix?
Edit /etc/hdparm.conf file.
It's the file that hdparm script, which is in /etc/init.d
On Tue, 2004-01-13 at 13:29, David Baron wrote:
> My disk always come up with 16-bit access.
>
> Even after setting to 32-bit and also setting retain settings on reset, no
> avail!
Do you mean, you've always got 16bit upon reboot? No worries, that is
the normal behaviour.
The 'reset' hdparm mea
My disk always come up with 16-bit access.
Even after setting to 32-bit and also setting retain settings on reset, no
avail!
How to fix?
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