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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438 439 440 441 442 443 444 445 446 | ide.txt -- Information regarding the Enhanced IDE drive in Linux 2.0.x =============================================================================== Supported by: Mark Lord <mlord@pobox.com> -- disks, interfaces, probing Gadi Oxman <gadio@netvision.net.il> -- tapes, disks, whatever Scott Snyder <snyder@fnald0.fnal.gov> -- cdroms, ATAPI, audio +-----------------------------------------------------------------+ | The hdparm utility for controlling various IDE features is | | packaged separately. Look for it on popular linux FTP sites. | +-----------------------------------------------------------------+ See description later on below for handling BIG IDE drives with >1024 cyls. Major features of ide.c & ide-cd.c ("NEW!" marks changes since 1.2.13): NEW! - support for IDE ATAPI *tape* drives, courtesy of Gadi Oxman (re-run MAKEDEV.ide to create the tape device entries in /dev/) NEW! - support for up to *four* IDE interfaces on one or more IRQs NEW! - support for any mix of up to *eight* disk and/or cdrom drives - support for reading IDE ATAPI cdrom drives (NEC,MITSUMI,VERTOS,SONY) - support for audio functions - auto-detection of interfaces, drives, IRQs, and disk geometries - "single" drives should be jumpered as "master", not "slave" NEW! (both are now probed for) - support for BIOSs which report "more than 16 heads" on disk drives - uses LBA (slightly faster) on disk drives which support it - support for lots of fancy (E)IDE drive functions with hdparm utility - optional (compile time) support for 32-bit VLB data transfers - support for IDE multiple (block) mode (same as hd.c) - support for interrupt unmasking during I/O (better than hd.c) - improved handshaking and error detection/recovery - can co-exist with hd.c controlling the first interface - run-time selectable 32bit interface support (using hdparm-2.3) NEW! - support for reliable operation of buggy RZ1000 interfaces - PCI support is automatic when rz1000 support is configured NEW! - support for reliable operation of buggy CMD-640 interfaces - PCI support is automatic when cmd640 support is configured - for VLB, use kernel command line option: ide0=cmd640_vlb - this support also enables the secondary i/f on most cards - experimental interface timing parameter support NEW! - experimental support for UMC 8672 interfaces NEW! - support for secondary interface on the FGI/Holtek HT-6560B VLB i/f - use kernel command line option: ide0=ht6560 NEW! - experimental support for various IDE chipsets - use appropriate kernel command line option from list below NEW! - support for drives with a stuck WRERR_STAT bit NEW! - support for removable devices, including door lock/unlock NEW! - transparent support for DiskManager 6.0x and "Dynamic Disk Overlay" - works with Linux fdisk, LILO, loadlin, bootln, etc.. NEW! - mostly transparent support for EZ-Drive disk translation software NEW! - to use LILO with EZ, install LILO on the linux partition rather than on the master boot record, and then mark the linux partition as "bootable" or "active" using fdisk. (courtesy of Juha Laiho <jlaiho@ichaos.nullnet.fi>). NEW! - auto-detect of disk translations by examining partition table NEW! - ide-cd.c now compiles separate from ide.c NEW! - Bus-Master DMA support for Intel PCI Triton chipset IDE interfaces - for details, see comments at top of triton.c NEW! - ide-cd.c now supports door locking and auto-loading. - Also preliminary support for multisession and direct reads of audio data. NEW! - experimental support for Promise DC4030VL caching interface card NEW! - email thanks/problems to: peterd@pnd-pc.demon.co.uk NEW! - the hdparm-2.7 package can be used to set PIO modes for some chipsets. For work in progress, see the comments in ide.c, ide-cd.c, and triton.c. Note that there is now a group actively working on support for the Promise caching IDE cards, such as the DC4030VL, and early results are encouraging. Look for this support to be added to the kernel soon. *** IMPORTANT NOTICES (for kernel versions after 1.3.21) *** ================= *** PCI versions of the CMD640 and RZ1000 interfaces are now detected *** automatically at startup when PCI BIOS support is configured. *** Linux disables the "pre-fetch" or "read-ahead" modes of these interfaces *** to prevent data corruption possible due to hardware design flaws. *** Use of the "serialize" option is no longer necessary. *** *** The CMD640 is also used on some Vesa Local Bus (VLB) cards, and is *NOT* *** automatically detected by Linux. For safe, reliable operation with such *** interfaces, one *MUST* use the "ide0=cmd640_vlb" kernel option. *** Use of the "serialize" option is no longer necessary. This is the multiple IDE interface driver, as evolved from hd.c. It supports up to four IDE interfaces, on one or more IRQs (usually 14 & 15). There can be up to two drives per interface, as per the ATA-2 spec. Primary: ide0, port 0x1f0; major=3; hda is minor=0; hdb is minor=64 Secondary: ide1, port 0x170; major=22; hdc is minor=0; hdd is minor=64 Tertiary: ide2, port 0x???; major=33; hde is minor=0; hdf is minor=64 Quaternary: ide3, port 0x???; major=34; hdg is minor=0; hdh is minor=64 To access devices on the 2nd/3rd/4th interfaces, device entries must first be created in /dev for them. To create such entries, simply run the included shell script: /usr/src/linux/scripts/MAKEDEV.ide Apparently many releases of Slackware 2.2/2.3 have incorrect entries in /dev for hdc* and hdd* -- this can also be corrected by running MAKEDEV.ide ide.c automatically probes for the primary and secondary interfaces, for the drives/geometries attached to those interfaces, and for the IRQ numbers being used by the interfaces (normally IRQ14 & IRQ15). Interfaces beyond the first two are not normally probed for, but may be specified using kernel "command line" options. For example, ide3=0x1e8,0x3f0,11 /* ioports 0x1e8-0x1ef,0x3f0, irq 11 */ Normally the irq number need not be specified, as ide.c will probe for it: ide3=0x1e8,0x3f0 /* ioports 0x1e8-0x1ef,0x3f0 */ Any number of interfaces may share a single IRQ if necessary, at a slight performance penalty, whether on separate cards or a single VLB card. The IDE driver automatically detects and handles this. However, this may or may not be harmful to your hardware.. two or more cards driving the same IRQ can potentially burn each other's bus driver, though in practice this seldom occurs. Be careful, and if in doubt, don't do it! Drives are normally found by auto-probing and/or examining the CMOS/BIOS data. For really weird situations, the apparent (fdisk) geometry can also be specified on the kernel "command line" using LILO. The format of such lines is: hdx=cyls,heads,sects,wpcom,irq or hdx=cdrom where hdx can be any of hda through hdh, Three values are required (cyls,heads,sects). For example: hdc=1050,32,64 hdd=cdrom either {hda,hdb} or {hdc,hdd}. The results of successful auto-probing may override the physical geometry/irq specified, though the "original" geometry may be retained as the "logical" geometry for partitioning purposes (fdisk). If the auto-probing during boot time confuses a drive (ie. the drive works with hd.c but not with ide.c), then an command line option may be specified for each drive for which you'd like the drive to skip the hardware probe/identification sequence. For example: hdb=noprobe or hdc=768,16,32 hdc=noprobe Note that when only one IDE device is attached to an interface, it should be jumpered as "single" or "master", *not* "slave". Many folks have had "trouble" with cdroms because of this requirement, so ide.c now probes for both units, though success is more likely when the drive is jumpered correctly. Courtesy of Scott Snyder, the driver supports ATAPI cdrom drives such as the NEC-260 and the new MITSUMI triple/quad speed drives. Such drives will be identified at boot time, just like a harddisk. If for some reason your cdrom drive is *not* found at boot time, you can force the probe to look harder by supplying a kernel command line parameter via LILO, such as: hdc=cdrom /* hdc = "master" on second interface */ or hdd=cdrom /* hdd = "slave" on second interface */ For example, a GW2000 system might have a harddrive on the primary interface (/dev/hda) and an IDE cdrom drive on the secondary interface (/dev/hdc). To mount a CD in the cdrom drive, one would use something like: ln -sf /dev/hdc /dev/cdrom mkdir /cd mount /dev/cdrom /cd -t iso9660 -o ro If, after doing all of the above, mount doesn't work and you see errors from the driver (with dmesg) complaining about `status=0xff', this means that the hardware is not responding to the driver's attempts to read it. One of the following is probably the problem: - Your hardware is broken. - You are using the wrong address for the device, or you have the drive jumpered wrong. Review the configuration instructions above. - Your IDE controller requires some nonstandard initialization sequence before it will work properly. If this is the case, there will often be a separate MS-DOS driver just for the controller. IDE interfaces on sound cards usually fall into this category. Such configurations can often be made to work by first booting MS-DOS, loading the appropriate drivers, and then warm-booting linux (without powering off). This can be automated using loadlin in the MS-DOS autoexec. If you always get timeout errors, interrupts from the drive are probably not making it to the host. Check how you have the hardware jumpered and make sure it matches what the driver expects (see the configuration instructions above). If you have a PCI system, also check the BIOS setup; i've had one report of a system which was shipped with IRQ 15 disabled by the BIOS. The kernel is able to execute binaries directly off of the cdrom, provided it is mounted with the default block size of 1024 (as above). Please pass on any feedback on the cdrom stuff to the author & maintainer, Scott Snyder (snyder@fnald0.fnal.gov). Note that if BOTH hd.c and ide.c are configured into the kernel, hd.c will normally be allowed to control the primary IDE interface. This is useful for older hardware that may be incompatible with ide.c, and still allows newer hardware to run on the 2nd/3rd/4th IDE ports under control of ide.c. To have ide.c also "take over" the primary IDE port in this situation, use the "command line" parameter: ide0=0x1f0 mlord@pobox.com snyder@fnald0.fnal.gov ================================================================================ Summary of ide driver parameters for kernel "command line": ---------------------------------------------------------- "hdx=" is recognized for all "x" from "a" to "h", such as "hdc". "idex=" is recognized for all "x" from "0" to "3", such as "ide1". "hdx=noprobe" : drive may be present, but do not probe for it "hdx=none" : drive is NOT present, ignore cmos and do not probe "hdx=nowerr" : ignore the WRERR_STAT bit on this drive "hdx=cdrom" : drive is present, and is a cdrom drive "hdx=cyl,head,sect" : disk drive is present, with specified geometry "hdx=autotune" : driver will attempt to tune interface speed to the fastest PIO mode supported, if possible for this drive only. Not fully supported by all chipset types, and quite likely to cause trouble with older/odd IDE drives. "idex=noprobe" : do not attempt to access/use this interface "idex=base" : probe for an interface at the addr specified, where "base" is usually 0x1f0 or 0x170 and "ctl" is assumed to be "base"+0x206 "idex=base,ctl" : specify both base and ctl "idex=base,ctl,irq" : specify base, ctl, and irq number "idex=autotune" : driver will attempt to tune interface speed to the fastest PIO mode supported, for all drives on this interface. Not fully supported by all chipset types, and quite likely to cause trouble with older/odd IDE drives. "idex=noautotune" : driver will NOT attempt to tune interface speed This is the default for most chipsets, except the cmd640. "idex=serialize" : do not overlap operations on idex and ide(x^1) The following are valid ONLY on ide0, and the defaults for the base,ctl ports must not be altered. "ide0=dtc2278" : probe/support DTC2278 interface "ide0=ht6560b" : probe/support HT6560B interface "ide0=cmd640_vlb" : *REQUIRED* for VLB cards with the CMD640 chip (not for PCI -- automatically detected) "ide0=qd6580" : probe/support qd6580 interface "ide0=ali14xx" : probe/support ali14xx chipsets (ALI M1439/M1445) "ide0=umc8672" : probe/support umc8672 chipsets Everything else is rejected with a "BAD OPTION" message. ================================================================================ Some Terminology ---------------- IDE = Integrated Drive Electronics, meaning that each drive has a built-in controller, which is why an "IDE interface card" is not a "controller card". IDE drives are designed to attach almost directly to the ISA bus of an AT-style computer. The typical IDE interface card merely provides I/O port address decoding and tri-state buffers, although several newer localbus cards go much beyond the basics. When purchasing a localbus IDE interface, avoid cards with an onboard BIOS and those which require special drivers. Instead, look for a card which uses hardware switches/jumpers to select the interface timing speed, to allow much faster data transfers than the original 8Mhz ISA bus allows. ATA = AT (the old IBM 286 computer) Attachment Interface, a draft American National Standard for connecting hard drives to PCs. This is the official name for "IDE". The latest standards define some enhancements, known as the ATA-2 spec, which grew out of vendor-specific "Enhanced IDE" (EIDE) implementations. ATAPI = ATA Packet Interface, a new protocol for controlling the drives, similar to SCSI protocols, created at the same time as the ATA2 standard. ATAPI is currently used for controlling CDROM and TAPE devices, and will likely also soon be used for Floppy drives, removable R/W cartridges, and for high capacity hard disk drives. How To Use *Big* ATA/IDE drives with Linux ------------------------------------------ The ATA Interface spec for IDE disk drives allows a total of 28 bits (8 bits for sector, 16 bits for cylinder, and 4 bits for head) for addressing individual disk sectors of 512 bytes each (in "Linear Block Address" (LBA) mode, there is still only a total of 28 bits available in the hardware). This "limits" the capacity of an IDE drive to no more than 128GB (Giga-bytes). All current day IDE drives are somewhat smaller than this upper limit, and within a few years, ATAPI disk drives will raise the limit considerably. All IDE disk drives "suffer" from a "16-heads" limitation: the hardware has only a four bit field for head selection, restricting the number of "physical" heads to 16 or less. Since the BIOS usually has a 63 sectors/track limit, this means that all IDE drivers larger than 504MB (528Meg) must use a "physical" geometry with more than 1024 cylinders. (1024cyls * 16heads * 63sects * 512bytes/sector) / (1024 * 1024) == 504MB (Some BIOSs (and controllers with onboard BIOS) pretend to allow "32" or "64" heads per drive (discussed below), but can only do so by playing games with the real (hidden) geometry, which is always limited to 16 or fewer heads). This presents two problems to most systems: 1. The INT13 interface to the BIOS only allows 10-bits for cylinder addresses, giving a limit of 1024cyls for programs which use it. 2. The physical geometry fields of the disk partition table only allow 10-bits for cylinder addresses, giving a similar limit of 1024 cyls for operating systems that do not use the "sector count" fields instead of the physical Cyl/Head/Sect (CHS) geometry fields. Neither of these limitations affects Linux itself, as it (1) does not use the BIOS for disk access, and it (2) is clever enough to use the "sector count" fields of the partition table instead of the physical CHS geometry fields. a) Most folks use LILO to load linux. LILO uses the INT13 interface to the BIOS to load the kernel at boot time. Therefore, LILO can only load linux if the files it needs (usually just the kernel images) are located below the magic 1024 cylinder "boundary" (more on this later). b) Many folks also like to have bootable DOS partitions on their drive(s). DOS also uses the INT13 interface to the BIOS, not only for booting, but also for operation after booting. Therefore, DOS can normally only access partitions which are contained entirely below the magic 1024 cylinder "boundary". There are at least seven commonly used schemes for kludging DOS to work around this "limitation". In the long term, the problem is being solved by introduction of an alternative BIOS interface that does not have the same limitations as the INT13 interface. New versions of DOS are expected to detect and use this interface in systems whose BIOS provides it. But in the present day, alternative solutions are necessary. The most popular solution in newer systems is to have the BIOS shift bits between the cylinder and head number fields. This is activated by entering a translated logical geometry into the BIOS/CMOS setup for the drive. Thus, if the drive has a geometry of 2100/16/63 (CHS), then the BIOS could present a "logical" geometry of 525/64/63 by "shifting" two bits from the cylinder number into the head number field for purposes of the partition table, CMOS setup, and INT13 interfaces. Linux kernels 1.1.39 and higher detect and "handle" this translation automatically, making this a rather painless solution for the 1024 cyls problem. If for some reason Linux gets confused (unlikely), then use the kernel command line parameters to pass the *logical* geometry, as in: hda=525,64,63 If the BIOS does not support this form of drive translation, then several options remain, listed below in order of popularity: - use a partition below the 1024 cyl boundary to hold the linux boot files (kernel images and /boot directory), and place the rest of linux anywhere else on the drive. These files can reside in a DOS partition, or in a tailor-made linux boot partition. - use DiskManager software from OnTrack, supplied free with many new hard drive purchases. - use EZ-Drive software (similar to DiskManager). Note though, that LILO must *not* use the MBR when EZ-Drive is present. Instead, install LILO on the first sector of your linux partition, and mark it as "active" or "bootable" with fdisk. - boot from a floppy disk instead of the hard drive (takes 10 seconds). If you cannot use drive translation, *and* your BIOS also restricts you to entering no more than 1024 cylinders in the geometry field in the CMOS setup, then just set it to 1024. As of v3.5 of this driver, Linux automatically determines the *real* number of cylinders for fdisk to use, allowing easy access to the full disk capacity without having to fiddle around. Regardless of what you do, all DOS partitions *must* be contained entirely within the first 1024 logical cylinders. For a 1Gig WD disk drive, here's a good "half and half" partitioning scheme to start with: geometry = 2100/16/63 /dev/hda1 from cyl 1 to 992 dos /dev/hda2 from cyl 993 to 1023 swap /dev/hda3 from cyl 1024 to 2100 linux To ensure that LILO can boot linux, the boot files (kernel and /boot/*) must reside within the first 1024 cylinders of the drive. If your linux root partition is *not* completely within the first 1024 cyls (quite common), then you can use LILO to boot linux from files on your DOS partition by doing the following after installing slackware (or whatever): 0. Boot from the "boot floppy" created during the installation 1. Mount your DOS partition as /dos (and stick it in /etc/fstab) 2. Move your kernel (/vmlinuz) to /dos/vmlinuz with: mv /vmlinuz /dos 3. Edit /etc/lilo.conf to change /vmlinuz to /dos/vmlinuz 4. Move /boot to /dos/boot with: cp -a /boot /dos ; rm -r /boot 5. Create a symlink for LILO to use with: ln -s /dos/boot /boot 6. Re-run LILO with: lilo A danger with this approach is that whenever an MS-DOS "defragmentation" program is run (like Norton "speeddisk"), it may move the Linux boot files around, confusing LILO and making the (Linux) system unbootable. Be sure to keep a kernel "boot floppy" at hand for such circumstances. A possible workaround is to mark the Linux files as S+H+R (System, Hidden, Readonly), to prevent most defragmentation programs from moving the files around. If you "don't do DOS", then partition as you please, but remember to create a small partition to hold the /boot directory (and vmlinuz) as described above such that they stay within the first 1024 cylinders. Note that when creating partitions that span beyond cylinder 1024, Linux fdisk will complain about "Partition X has different physical/logical endings" and emit messages such as "This is larger than 1024, and may cause problems with some software". Ignore this for linux partitions. The "some software" refers to DOS, the BIOS, and LILO, as described previously. Western Digital ships a "DiskManager 6.03" diskette with all of their big hard drives. Use BIOS translation instead of this if possible, as it is a more generally compatible method of achieving the same results (DOS access to the entire disk). However, if you must use DiskManager, it now works with Linux 1.3.x in most cases. Let me know if you still have trouble. My recommendations to anyone who asks about NEW systems are: - buy a motherboard that uses the Intel Triton chipset -- very common. - use IDE for the first two drives, placing them on separate interfaces. - place the IDE cdrom drive as slave on either interface. - if additional disks are to be connected, consider your needs: - fileserver? Buy a SC200 SCSI adaptor for the next few drives. - personal system? Use IDE for the next two drives. - still not enough? Keep adding SC200 SCSI cards as needed. Most manufacturers make both IDE and SCSI-2 versions of each of their drives. The IDE ones are usually faster and cheaper, due to the higher data transfer speed of PIO mode4 (ATA2), 16.6MBytes/sec versus 10Mbytes/sec for SCSI-2. In particular, I recommend Quantum FireBalls as cheap and exceptionally fast. The new WD1.6GB models are also cheap screamers. For really high end systems, go for fast/wide 7200rpm SCSI. But it'll cost ya! mlord@pobox.com |