On Wed, Feb 13, 2008 at 02:41:07AM +0100, Rene Herman wrote:There are any number of things you can do when the system is booted, but the only thing you can do when the system won't boot is use kernel boot options.On 13-02-08 01:15, Greg KH wrote:
I'm reworking the pci device list logic (we currently keep all PCIWhile details escape me somewhat again at the monment, a few months ago I was playing around with a PCI Promise IDE controller and needed ide=reverse to save me from having to switch disks around to still have a bootable system.
devices in 2 lists, which isn't the nicest, we should be able to get
away with only 1 list.)
The only bother I've found so far is the pci_get_device_reverse()
function, it's used in 2 places, IDE and the calgary driver.
I'm curious if we really still support the ide=reverse option? It's a
config option that I don't think the distros still enable (SuSE does
not). Is this still needed these days?
In digging, we changed this option in 2.2.x from being called
"pci=reverse" and no one else seems to miss it.
Any thoughts?
Or some such. Not too clear anymore, but I remember it saved the day.
You couldn't just change the boot disk in grub?
Or use an initramfs and /dev/disk/by-id/ to keep any future moves
stable?