On Mon, Jul 24, 2000 at 02:09:50PM -0700, Andre Hedrick <andre@linux-ide.org> wrote:
>
> Upon a more exact definintion, I will request a formal NCITS number.
quite frankly, why is all this necessary? Why are ata standards that much
different from any other standards?
> states: That which is not in the standard is not part of the standard.
Exactly. Gcc can do ansi-c, but that doesn't mean it is limited to it. The
german telecom adheres to ets-300-102 (euro-isdn), but of course this does
not mean that they are forced to disallow any other protocol on their
lines. The linux kernel can fully adhere to an ata stnadrad and _still_ be
able to send vendor-specific commands.
So why must an ata standard try to regulate something that simply is
outside of it's scope?
Everything you said so far boiled down basically to: "if you can send
non-standard commands using the kernel, the kernel is not ata compliant".
This sounds so 120% counter-productive, inhibiting *any* further
development (for example, that would mean that an ata-3 drive is
automatically incompatible to ata-2 or any earlier standard).
*puzzled*
and I thought the t13 people made slightly unconventional but still sane
standards ;)
-- -----==- | ----==-- _ | ---==---(_)__ __ ____ __ Marc Lehmann +-- --==---/ / _ \/ // /\ \/ / pcg@opengroup.org |e| -=====/_/_//_/\_,_/ /_/\_\ XX11-RIPE --+ The choice of a GNU generation | |- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.rutgers.edu Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/
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