> I posted the same message as you some weeks ago.
Sorry for the wasted bandwidth then - I am usually subscribed to the list, but temporarily de-subscribed for the last week.
> People said me that
> after a -Y you must always do a -w. Yes, the manpage can say that the
> kernel should do a -w of needed...but perhaps the man page is out of
> date...people here should know more...
Hmmm, the man page may well be out of date.
However, I would have thought that anything that stalls the IDE queue was to be considered a bug. I've E-Mailed Mark Lord, (the hdparm maintainer), to get some more input on this.
The interesting thing is that it does automatically recover from a -Y on the laptop running 2.4.19, (as it did with 2.2.13).
> the -w is the hard soft reset i think ;)
Yeah, it's a device reset.
> I was told to use -y. And it works well. I dont know the differences
> between -y and -Y (apparently, it should do the same ;)
Well, as far as I know, -y is intended to be a fast recovery, whereas -Y is more or less a full shut down, somewhat analogous to the various levels of power saving implemented in DPMS-compliant "green" monitors.
Somewhat related to all this, I am interested in having a variable delay in the write-back caching, (yeah, I know, keeping data cached in RAM on a battery powered laptop is asking for it to get lost, but I'd like the option), that way I could spin the HD down and enjoy a much extended battery life.
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This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Thu Aug 15 2002 - 22:00:20 EST