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2 | Information regarding the Enhanced IDE drive in Linux 2.6 | |
3 | ||
4 | ============================================================================== | |
5 | ||
6 | ||
7 | The hdparm utility can be used to control various IDE features on a | |
8 | running system. It is packaged separately. Please Look for it on popular | |
9 | linux FTP sites. | |
10 | ||
11 | ||
12 | ||
13 | *** IMPORTANT NOTICES: BUGGY IDE CHIPSETS CAN CORRUPT DATA!! | |
14 | *** ================= | |
15 | *** PCI versions of the CMD640 and RZ1000 interfaces are now detected | |
16 | *** automatically at startup when PCI BIOS support is configured. | |
17 | *** | |
18 | *** Linux disables the "prefetch" ("readahead") mode of the RZ1000 | |
19 | *** to prevent data corruption possible due to hardware design flaws. | |
20 | *** | |
21 | *** For the CMD640, linux disables "IRQ unmasking" (hdparm -u1) on any | |
22 | *** drive for which the "prefetch" mode of the CMD640 is turned on. | |
23 | *** If "prefetch" is disabled (hdparm -p8), then "IRQ unmasking" can be | |
24 | *** used again. | |
25 | *** | |
26 | *** For the CMD640, linux disables "32bit I/O" (hdparm -c1) on any drive | |
27 | *** for which the "prefetch" mode of the CMD640 is turned off. | |
28 | *** If "prefetch" is enabled (hdparm -p9), then "32bit I/O" can be | |
29 | *** used again. | |
30 | *** | |
31 | *** The CMD640 is also used on some Vesa Local Bus (VLB) cards, and is *NOT* | |
32 | *** automatically detected by Linux. For safe, reliable operation with such | |
33 | *** interfaces, one *MUST* use the "ide0=cmd640_vlb" kernel option. | |
34 | *** | |
35 | *** Use of the "serialize" option is no longer necessary. | |
36 | ||
37 | ================================================================================ | |
38 | Common pitfalls: | |
39 | ||
40 | - 40-conductor IDE cables are capable of transferring data in DMA modes up to | |
41 | udma2, but no faster. | |
42 | ||
43 | - If possible devices should be attached to separate channels if they are | |
44 | available. Typically the disk on the first and CD-ROM on the second. | |
45 | ||
46 | - If you mix devices on the same cable, please consider using similar devices | |
47 | in respect of the data transfer mode they support. | |
48 | ||
49 | - Even better try to stick to the same vendor and device type on the same | |
50 | cable. | |
51 | ||
52 | ================================================================================ | |
53 | ||
54 | This is the multiple IDE interface driver, as evolved from hd.c. | |
55 | ||
56 | It supports up to 9 IDE interfaces per default, on one or more IRQs (usually | |
57 | 14 & 15). There can be up to two drives per interface, as per the ATA-6 spec. | |
58 | ||
59 | Primary: ide0, port 0x1f0; major=3; hda is minor=0; hdb is minor=64 | |
60 | Secondary: ide1, port 0x170; major=22; hdc is minor=0; hdd is minor=64 | |
61 | Tertiary: ide2, port 0x1e8; major=33; hde is minor=0; hdf is minor=64 | |
62 | Quaternary: ide3, port 0x168; major=34; hdg is minor=0; hdh is minor=64 | |
63 | fifth.. ide4, usually PCI, probed | |
64 | sixth.. ide5, usually PCI, probed | |
65 | ||
66 | To access devices on interfaces > ide0, device entries please make sure that | |
67 | device files for them are present in /dev. If not, please create such | |
68 | entries, by using /dev/MAKEDEV. | |
69 | ||
70 | This driver automatically probes for most IDE interfaces (including all PCI | |
71 | ones), for the drives/geometries attached to those interfaces, and for the IRQ | |
72 | lines being used by the interfaces (normally 14, 15 for ide0/ide1). | |
73 | ||
74 | For special cases, interfaces may be specified using kernel "command line" | |
75 | options. For example, | |
76 | ||
77 | ide3=0x168,0x36e,10 /* ioports 0x168-0x16f,0x36e, irq 10 */ | |
78 | ||
79 | Normally the irq number need not be specified, as ide.c will probe for it: | |
80 | ||
81 | ide3=0x168,0x36e /* ioports 0x168-0x16f,0x36e */ | |
82 | ||
83 | The standard port, and irq values are these: | |
84 | ||
85 | ide0=0x1f0,0x3f6,14 | |
86 | ide1=0x170,0x376,15 | |
87 | ide2=0x1e8,0x3ee,11 | |
88 | ide3=0x168,0x36e,10 | |
89 | ||
90 | Note that the first parameter reserves 8 contiguous ioports, whereas the | |
91 | second value denotes a single ioport. If in doubt, do a 'cat /proc/ioports'. | |
92 | ||
93 | In all probability the device uses these ports and IRQs if it is attached | |
94 | to the appropriate ide channel. Pass the parameter for the correct ide | |
95 | channel to the kernel, as explained above. | |
96 | ||
97 | Any number of interfaces may share a single IRQ if necessary, at a slight | |
98 | performance penalty, whether on separate cards or a single VLB card. | |
99 | The IDE driver automatically detects and handles this. However, this may | |
100 | or may not be harmful to your hardware.. two or more cards driving the same IRQ | |
101 | can potentially burn each other's bus driver, though in practice this | |
102 | seldom occurs. Be careful, and if in doubt, don't do it! | |
103 | ||
104 | Drives are normally found by auto-probing and/or examining the CMOS/BIOS data. | |
105 | For really weird situations, the apparent (fdisk) geometry can also be specified | |
106 | on the kernel "command line" using LILO. The format of such lines is: | |
107 | ||
108 | hdx=cyls,heads,sects,wpcom,irq | |
109 | or hdx=cdrom | |
110 | ||
111 | where hdx can be any of hda through hdh, Three values are required | |
112 | (cyls,heads,sects). For example: | |
113 | ||
114 | hdc=1050,32,64 hdd=cdrom | |
115 | ||
116 | either {hda,hdb} or {hdc,hdd}. The results of successful auto-probing may | |
117 | override the physical geometry/irq specified, though the "original" geometry | |
118 | may be retained as the "logical" geometry for partitioning purposes (fdisk). | |
119 | ||
120 | If the auto-probing during boot time confuses a drive (ie. the drive works | |
121 | with hd.c but not with ide.c), then an command line option may be specified | |
122 | for each drive for which you'd like the drive to skip the hardware | |
123 | probe/identification sequence. For example: | |
124 | ||
125 | hdb=noprobe | |
126 | or | |
127 | hdc=768,16,32 | |
128 | hdc=noprobe | |
129 | ||
130 | Note that when only one IDE device is attached to an interface, it should be | |
131 | jumpered as "single" or "master", *not* "slave". Many folks have had | |
132 | "trouble" with cdroms because of this requirement, so the driver now probes | |
133 | for both units, though success is more likely when the drive is jumpered | |
134 | correctly. | |
135 | ||
136 | Courtesy of Scott Snyder and others, the driver supports ATAPI cdrom drives | |
137 | such as the NEC-260 and the new MITSUMI triple/quad speed drives. | |
138 | Such drives will be identified at boot time, just like a hard disk. | |
139 | ||
140 | If for some reason your cdrom drive is *not* found at boot time, you can force | |
141 | the probe to look harder by supplying a kernel command line parameter | |
142 | via LILO, such as: | |
143 | ||
144 | hdc=cdrom /* hdc = "master" on second interface */ | |
145 | or | |
146 | hdd=cdrom /* hdd = "slave" on second interface */ | |
147 | ||
148 | For example, a GW2000 system might have a hard drive on the primary | |
149 | interface (/dev/hda) and an IDE cdrom drive on the secondary interface | |
150 | (/dev/hdc). To mount a CD in the cdrom drive, one would use something like: | |
151 | ||
152 | ln -sf /dev/hdc /dev/cdrom | |
153 | mkdir /mnt/cdrom | |
154 | mount /dev/cdrom /mnt/cdrom -t iso9660 -o ro | |
155 | ||
156 | If, after doing all of the above, mount doesn't work and you see | |
157 | errors from the driver (with dmesg) complaining about `status=0xff', | |
158 | this means that the hardware is not responding to the driver's attempts | |
159 | to read it. One of the following is probably the problem: | |
160 | ||
161 | - Your hardware is broken. | |
162 | ||
163 | - You are using the wrong address for the device, or you have the | |
164 | drive jumpered wrong. Review the configuration instructions above. | |
165 | ||
166 | - Your IDE controller requires some nonstandard initialization sequence | |
167 | before it will work properly. If this is the case, there will often | |
168 | be a separate MS-DOS driver just for the controller. IDE interfaces | |
169 | on sound cards usually fall into this category. Such configurations | |
170 | can often be made to work by first booting MS-DOS, loading the | |
171 | appropriate drivers, and then warm-booting linux (without powering | |
172 | off). This can be automated using loadlin in the MS-DOS autoexec. | |
173 | ||
174 | If you always get timeout errors, interrupts from the drive are probably | |
175 | not making it to the host. Check how you have the hardware jumpered | |
176 | and make sure it matches what the driver expects (see the configuration | |
177 | instructions above). If you have a PCI system, also check the BIOS | |
178 | setup; I've had one report of a system which was shipped with IRQ 15 | |
179 | disabled by the BIOS. | |
180 | ||
181 | The kernel is able to execute binaries directly off of the cdrom, | |
182 | provided it is mounted with the default block size of 1024 (as above). | |
183 | ||
184 | Please pass on any feedback on any of this stuff to the maintainer, | |
185 | whose address can be found in linux/MAINTAINERS. | |
186 | ||
187 | Note that if BOTH hd.c and ide.c are configured into the kernel, | |
188 | hd.c will normally be allowed to control the primary IDE interface. | |
189 | This is useful for older hardware that may be incompatible with ide.c, | |
190 | and still allows newer hardware to run on the 2nd/3rd/4th IDE ports | |
191 | under control of ide.c. To have ide.c also "take over" the primary | |
192 | IDE port in this situation, use the "command line" parameter: ide0=0x1f0 | |
193 | ||
194 | The IDE driver is modularized. The high level disk/CD-ROM/tape/floppy | |
195 | drivers can always be compiled as loadable modules, the chipset drivers | |
196 | can only be compiled into the kernel, and the core code (ide.c) can be | |
197 | compiled as a loadable module provided no chipset support is needed. | |
198 | ||
199 | When using ide.c as a module in combination with kmod, add: | |
200 | ||
201 | alias block-major-3 ide-probe | |
202 | ||
203 | to /etc/modprobe.conf. | |
204 | ||
205 | When ide.c is used as a module, you can pass command line parameters to the | |
206 | driver using the "options=" keyword to insmod, while replacing any ',' with | |
207 | ';'. For example: | |
208 | ||
209 | insmod ide.o options="ide0=serialize ide1=serialize ide2=0x1e8;0x3ee;11" | |
210 | ||
211 | ||
212 | ================================================================================ | |
213 | ||
214 | Summary of ide driver parameters for kernel command line | |
215 | -------------------------------------------------------- | |
216 | ||
217 | "hdx=" is recognized for all "x" from "a" to "h", such as "hdc". | |
218 | ||
219 | "idex=" is recognized for all "x" from "0" to "3", such as "ide1". | |
220 | ||
221 | "hdx=noprobe" : drive may be present, but do not probe for it | |
222 | ||
223 | "hdx=none" : drive is NOT present, ignore cmos and do not probe | |
224 | ||
225 | "hdx=nowerr" : ignore the WRERR_STAT bit on this drive | |
226 | ||
227 | "hdx=cdrom" : drive is present, and is a cdrom drive | |
228 | ||
229 | "hdx=cyl,head,sect" : disk drive is present, with specified geometry | |
230 | ||
231 | "hdx=remap" : remap access of sector 0 to sector 1 (for EZDrive) | |
232 | ||
233 | "hdx=remap63" : remap the drive: add 63 to all sector numbers | |
234 | (for DM OnTrack) | |
b6209a90 BZ |
235 | |
236 | "idex=noautotune" : driver will NOT attempt to tune interface speed | |
237 | ||
1da177e4 LT |
238 | "hdx=autotune" : driver will attempt to tune interface speed |
239 | to the fastest PIO mode supported, | |
240 | if possible for this drive only. | |
241 | Not fully supported by all chipset types, | |
242 | and quite likely to cause trouble with | |
243 | older/odd IDE drives. | |
244 | ||
245 | "hdx=swapdata" : when the drive is a disk, byte swap all data | |
246 | ||
247 | "hdx=bswap" : same as above.......... | |
248 | ||
249 | "hdx=scsi" : the return of the ide-scsi flag, this is useful for | |
250 | allowing ide-floppy, ide-tape, and ide-cdrom|writers | |
251 | to use ide-scsi emulation on a device specific option. | |
252 | ||
253 | "idebus=xx" : inform IDE driver of VESA/PCI bus speed in MHz, | |
254 | where "xx" is between 20 and 66 inclusive, | |
255 | used when tuning chipset PIO modes. | |
256 | For PCI bus, 25 is correct for a P75 system, | |
257 | 30 is correct for P90,P120,P180 systems, | |
258 | and 33 is used for P100,P133,P166 systems. | |
259 | If in doubt, use idebus=33 for PCI. | |
260 | As for VLB, it is safest to not specify it. | |
261 | Bigger values are safer than smaller ones. | |
262 | ||
263 | "idex=noprobe" : do not attempt to access/use this interface | |
264 | ||
265 | "idex=base" : probe for an interface at the addr specified, | |
266 | where "base" is usually 0x1f0 or 0x170 | |
267 | and "ctl" is assumed to be "base"+0x206 | |
268 | ||
269 | "idex=base,ctl" : specify both base and ctl | |
270 | ||
271 | "idex=base,ctl,irq" : specify base, ctl, and irq number | |
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272 | |
273 | "idex=serialize" : do not overlap operations on idex. Please note | |
274 | that you will have to specify this option for | |
d6bc8ac9 | 275 | both the respective primary and secondary channel |
1da177e4 LT |
276 | to take effect. |
277 | ||
278 | "idex=four" : four drives on idex and ide(x^1) share same ports | |
279 | ||
280 | "idex=reset" : reset interface after probe | |
281 | ||
282 | "idex=dma" : automatically configure/use DMA if possible. | |
283 | ||
284 | "idex=ata66" : informs the interface that it has an 80c cable | |
285 | for chipsets that are ATA-66 capable, but the | |
286 | ability to bit test for detection is currently | |
287 | unknown. | |
288 | ||
289 | "ide=reverse" : formerly called to pci sub-system, but now local. | |
290 | ||
291 | "ide=nodma" : disable DMA globally for the IDE subsystem. | |
292 | ||
293 | The following are valid ONLY on ide0, which usually corresponds | |
294 | to the first ATA interface found on the particular host, and the defaults for | |
295 | the base,ctl ports must not be altered. | |
296 | ||
1da177e4 LT |
297 | "ide0=cmd640_vlb" : *REQUIRED* for VLB cards with the CMD640 chip |
298 | (not for PCI -- automatically detected) | |
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299 | |
300 | "ide=doubler" : probe/support IDE doublers on Amiga | |
301 | ||
302 | There may be more options than shown -- use the source, Luke! | |
303 | ||
304 | Everything else is rejected with a "BAD OPTION" message. | |
305 | ||
84913882 BZ |
306 | For legacy IDE VLB host drivers (ali14xx/dtc2278/ht6560b/qd65xx/umc8672) |
307 | you need to explicitly enable probing by using "probe" kernel parameter, | |
308 | i.e. to enable probing for ALI M14xx chipsets (ali14xx host driver) use: | |
309 | ||
310 | * "ali14xx.probe" boot option when ali14xx driver is built-in the kernel | |
311 | ||
312 | * "probe" module parameter when ali14xx driver is compiled as module | |
313 | ("modprobe ali14xx probe") | |
314 | ||
1da177e4 LT |
315 | ================================================================================ |
316 | ||
317 | IDE ATAPI streaming tape driver | |
318 | ------------------------------- | |
319 | ||
320 | This driver is a part of the Linux ide driver and works in co-operation | |
321 | with linux/drivers/block/ide.c. | |
322 | ||
323 | The driver, in co-operation with ide.c, basically traverses the | |
324 | request-list for the block device interface. The character device | |
325 | interface, on the other hand, creates new requests, adds them | |
326 | to the request-list of the block device, and waits for their completion. | |
327 | ||
328 | Pipelined operation mode is now supported on both reads and writes. | |
329 | ||
330 | The block device major and minor numbers are determined from the | |
331 | tape's relative position in the ide interfaces, as explained in ide.c. | |
332 | ||
333 | The character device interface consists of the following devices: | |
334 | ||
335 | ht0 major 37, minor 0 first IDE tape, rewind on close. | |
336 | ht1 major 37, minor 1 second IDE tape, rewind on close. | |
337 | ... | |
338 | nht0 major 37, minor 128 first IDE tape, no rewind on close. | |
339 | nht1 major 37, minor 129 second IDE tape, no rewind on close. | |
340 | ... | |
341 | ||
342 | Run /dev/MAKEDEV to create the above entries. | |
343 | ||
344 | The general magnetic tape commands compatible interface, as defined by | |
345 | include/linux/mtio.h, is accessible through the character device. | |
346 | ||
347 | General ide driver configuration options, such as the interrupt-unmask | |
348 | flag, can be configured by issuing an ioctl to the block device interface, | |
349 | as any other ide device. | |
350 | ||
351 | Our own ide-tape ioctl's can be issued to either the block device or | |
352 | the character device interface. | |
353 | ||
354 | Maximal throughput with minimal bus load will usually be achieved in the | |
355 | following scenario: | |
356 | ||
357 | 1. ide-tape is operating in the pipelined operation mode. | |
358 | 2. No buffering is performed by the user backup program. | |
359 | ||
360 | ||
361 | ||
362 | ================================================================================ | |
363 | ||
364 | Some Terminology | |
365 | ---------------- | |
366 | IDE = Integrated Drive Electronics, meaning that each drive has a built-in | |
367 | controller, which is why an "IDE interface card" is not a "controller card". | |
368 | ||
369 | ATA = AT (the old IBM 286 computer) Attachment Interface, a draft American | |
370 | National Standard for connecting hard drives to PCs. This is the official | |
371 | name for "IDE". | |
372 | ||
373 | The latest standards define some enhancements, known as the ATA-6 spec, | |
374 | which grew out of vendor-specific "Enhanced IDE" (EIDE) implementations. | |
375 | ||
376 | ATAPI = ATA Packet Interface, a new protocol for controlling the drives, | |
377 | similar to SCSI protocols, created at the same time as the ATA2 standard. | |
378 | ATAPI is currently used for controlling CDROM, TAPE and FLOPPY (ZIP or | |
379 | LS120/240) devices, removable R/W cartridges, and for high capacity hard disk | |
380 | drives. | |
381 | ||
382 | mlord@pobox.com | |
383 | -- | |
384 | ||
385 | Wed Apr 17 22:52:44 CEST 2002 edited by Marcin Dalecki, the current | |
386 | maintainer. | |
387 | ||
4ae0edc2 | 388 | Wed Aug 20 22:31:29 CEST 2003 updated ide boot options to current ide.c |
1da177e4 | 389 | comments at 2.6.0-test4 time. Maciej Soltysiak <solt@dns.toxicfilms.tv> |