On Thu, 19 Dec 2002, Tomas Szepe wrote:
> > > > > > > So. I /think/ that somehow the Promise controller isn't being
> > > > > > > initialized properly by the Linux kernel, UNLESS the mobo's BIOS
> > > > > > > inits it first?
> > > > > >
> > > > > > In some situations yes. The BIOS does stuff including fixups we mere
> > > > > > mortals arent permitted to know about.
> > > > >
> > > > > OTOH mere mortals are allowed to make full dump of PCI config ;)
> > > > >
> > > > > "D.A.M. Revok" <marvin@synapse.net>, can you send lspci -vvvxxx
> > > > > outputs when you boot with BIOS enabled and BIOS disabled?
> > > >
> > > > Promise knows this point.
> > > > Thus they moved the setting to a push/pull in the vendor space in the
> > > > dma_base+1 and dma_base+3 respectively.
> > > >
> > > > lspci -vvvxxx fails when the content is located in bar4 io space.
> > >
> > > Clearly Promise is the one storage vendor whose products are best avoided.
> >
> > I would not say this is the case. What is going on is people are wanting
> > to migrate to more of an internal hidden operation.
> >
> > Think about it from their side.
> > They want to make it easier to program the card.
>
> The result of their attempts has seemed to be the exact opposite
> so far, so I'd say they're either hiding a bit too much or the
> hardware doesn't cut it.
>
> Anyway, what are the chances of the 2.4.21-pre PDC driver getting
> fixed up so it works like it did in 2.4.18?
Well, there is an issue.
I have a consulting contract with Promise outstanding.
It is on my desk, but there is on issue I refuse to agree to period.
Nobody in the right mind agrees to disclose their entire IP portfolio, as
a contractor or consultant. This allow the client to box you into a
corner so tight, that anything in the future they can claim as their own
and tie it back to an contract collecting dust.
> > Linux is an OS that like to know what is going on all the time,
> > and the two clash.
>
> Are you suggesting something to the point of Windows not having
> to cope with the same issues? There has to be some kind of fundamental
> difference given Promise themselves successfully hosed the Linux driver
> the instant they touched it, while the Windows one just works. :)
So I am not fixing anything until this issue is resolved.
They pay for what you clearly have stated above.
As for the Windows issue, the scsi-mini-port is a whole differenct beast.
Everyone jokes and laughs at my quote:
"The world of Storage is nothing but a BIG LIE"
SCSI is a run,poke,sense,verify,transform world.
ATA is a run,check,return world.
That being said, as far as I can tell, the WDDK for mini-port only cares
about the state returned. So if you do not like the state your hardware
is in, you boost the return and hook a TDI callback or poll check.
It is obvious the OEM Windows driver has unlimited power to fake the
response.
At this point I expect any contract is dead, so use 2.4.18.
Cheers,
Andre Hedrick
LAD Storage Consulting Group
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This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Mon Dec 23 2002 - 22:00:23 EST