On Sat, 14 May 2005, Volker Armin Hemmann wrote:
is this not deafault?
Not on my system.
m16 sets to 16 ;) but: is m16 not the default setting?
Again not on my system.
I don't know, if there is any combination today, that makes probs, but not
using -u is wasting performance. Don't complain about st
Peter Karlsson wrote:
> On Sat, 14 May 2005, Grant wrote:
>
>> Thanks Peter. Is your "-u1" a typo?
>
>
> No. That option works fine, afaict, with my drive/chipset combination
> (maxtor/ich5).
>
> Best regards
>
> Peter K
Nice...
Any idea how to pull this off with S/ATA?
--
[Name ]
On Saturday 14 May 2005 10:25, Peter Karlsson wrote:
> On Fri, 13 May 2005, Peter Gordon wrote:
> > My understanding is that the kernel will automagically configure DMA
> > as appropriate if you build support for the IDE controller statically,
> > but hdparm is needed to initialize DMA stuff if you
On Sat, 14 May 2005, Grant wrote:
Thanks Peter. Is your "-u1" a typo?
No. That option works fine, afaict, with my drive/chipset combination
(maxtor/ich5).
Best regards
Peter K
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gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Peter Karlsson wrote:
There's a whole lot more one can do with hdparm. What the kernel _can_
do is enable dma only. hdparm is used to set other performance enhancing
options. My '/etc/conf.d/hdparm' contains 'hda_args="-d1A1m16u1a64"'
which means:
-d1 - enables dma for this drive (to ensure dma
> > My understanding is that the kernel will automagically configure DMA
> > as appropriate if you build support for the IDE controller statically,
> > but hdparm is needed to initialize DMA stuff if you build your IDE
> > controller's driver as a module. I'm not certain though. I tend to build
> >
On Fri, 13 May 2005, Peter Gordon wrote:
My understanding is that the kernel will automagically configure DMA
as appropriate if you build support for the IDE controller statically,
but hdparm is needed to initialize DMA stuff if you build your IDE
controller's driver as a module. I'm not certain th
> > Actually, is hdparm supposed to be used when specific IDE support is
> > not included in the kernel? It sounds like the kernel optimally
> > configures your device if that support is included. hdparm sounds
> > like it does the same thing.
>
> My understanding is that the kernel will automag
Quoting Grant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
Actually, is hdparm supposed to be used when specific IDE support is
not included in the kernel? It sounds like the kernel optimally
configures your device if that support is included. hdparm sounds
like it does the same thing.
My understanding is that the kerne
> > HDIO_SET_DMA failed: Operation not permitted
>
> Does the kernel you built for those have support for the appropriate IDE
> controller chipset? You can get this information with
> `lspci | grep IDE'. (lspci is part of the sys-apps/pciutils package.)
>
> For example on my system I have a VIA 8
> > HDIO_SET_DMA failed: Operation not permitted
>
> Does the kernel you built for those have support for the appropriate IDE
> controller chipset? You can get this information with
> `lspci | grep IDE'. (lspci is part of the sys-apps/pciutils package.)
>
> For example on my system I have a VIA 8
Grant wrote:
HDIO_SET_DMA failed: Operation not permitted
Does the kernel you built for those have support for the appropriate IDE
controller chipset? You can get this information with
`lspci | grep IDE'. (lspci is part of the sys-apps/pciutils package.)
For example on my system I have a VIA 82CXXX
Hello, I've been setting up hdparm on my systems and 3 out of 4 have
returned this when trying to set DMA:
HDIO_SET_DMA failed: Operation not permitted
but subsequent attempts have executed without error. 'hdparm -i
/dev/hda' does show the * character beside a udma mode in each
instance. Does a
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