At 20:24 07/02/02, Guest section DW wrote:
>On Thu, Feb 07, 2002 at 03:09:08AM +0000, Anton Altaparmakov wrote:
> > Below is a patch that fixes the io ports reservation of the floppy driver
> > as the one in the driver is actually incorrect and this clashes with the
> > (correct) reservation by the PNPBIOS driver.
> >
> > I asked a friend to check and on his Windows 2000 system the port
> > reservation was 0x3f2-0x3f5 + 0x3f7, i.e. it just excludes ports
> > 0x3f0-0x3f1, which are NOT used anywhere in the driver anyway.
>
>ports 0x3f0 and 0x3f1 are used on certain PS/2 systems
Can you point me to the code for the PS/2 systems in question? I fail to
see instances where anything less than 0x3f2 is used. Assuming such code is
present and I have just missed it, perhaps we can find a way to detect such
cases and only then register the ports.
>and on some very old AT clones
And we care because? AT = 80286 CPU in the definition I am aware of, which
Linux doesn't support and catering for unsupported hardware seems silly.
(-; But perhaps you meant something else by "AT clones"?
btw. Today I got a chance to check Windows XP Pro and that like Win2k only
uses ports 0x3f2-0x3f5 and 0x3f7. As I have never heard of anyone
complaining their floppy doesn't work with Windows (except for that Tyan
BIOS bug a few years ago that is...), it would appear it is quite safe to
do the same in the linux floppy driver...
FYI: Just skimmed through the WinXP floppy source (what a windows driver is
not closed source? YES, it is in the DDK, they obviously don't think it
worth hiding...(-:). Anyway, they never use 0x3f0-0x3f1 either AFAICS and
in fact there is an interesting comment in the source:
---quote from pdc.c---
The PC97(98) hardware specification defines only 3f2, 3f4, and 3f5 as
io port resources for standard floppy controllers (based on IBM PC floppy
controller configurations). In addition to these resources, fdc.sys
requires 3f7 for disk change detection and data rate programming and
optionally 3f3 for floppy tape support. In addition, some bioses define
aliased resources (e.g. 3f2 & 7f2, etc.)
---end of quote---
Best regards,
Anton
-- "I've not lost my mind. It's backed up on tape somewhere." - Unknown -- Anton Altaparmakov <aia21 at cam.ac.uk> (replace at with @) Linux NTFS Maintainer / WWW: http://linux-ntfs.sf.net/ ICQ: 8561279 / WWW: http://www-stu.christs.cam.ac.uk/~aia21/- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/
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