I've run onto few posting on Google regarding DMA resetting itself but
no solution.
That is simply annoying, that the Linux-Kernel resets DMA.
You could try hdparm -k1 - but somethimes that doesn't help either.
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On Thu, 2006-03-23 at 20:18 +0100, Sven Köhler wrote:
I've run onto few posting on Google regarding DMA resetting itself but
no solution.
That is simply annoying, that the Linux-Kernel resets DMA.
You could try hdparm -k1 - but somethimes that doesn't help either.
Yes, I've tried -k1
On Thu, 2006-03-23 at 16:15 -0500, JimD wrote:
On Thu, 23 Mar 2006 12:54:44 -0700
Joseph [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Yes, I've tried -k1 too, it doesn't help.
It seems like kernel bug, I was able to duplicate resetting CD/DVD DMA
on both machines:
amd64 with BenQ DVD writer and
x86 with
On Thu, 2006-03-23 at 14:26 -0700, Joseph wrote:
Before ejecting put any CD / DVD disk IN and run:
dd if=/dev/hdc of=backup.iso or
cat /dev/hdc backup.iso
When finished run eject ...
to be specific: eject /dev/hdc
and
hdparm /dev/hdc
See if the parameter using_dma was reset.
--
On Thu, 23 Mar 2006 12:54:44 -0700
Joseph wrote:
On Thu, 2006-03-23 at 20:18 +0100, Sven Köhler wrote:
I've run onto few posting on Google regarding DMA resetting itself but
no solution.
That is simply annoying, that the Linux-Kernel resets DMA.
You could try hdparm -k1 - but
On Thu, 2006-03-23 at 17:25 -0500, JimD wrote:
On Thu, 23 Mar 2006 14:26:20 -0700
Joseph [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Before ejecting put any CD / DVD disk IN and run:
dd if=/dev/hdc of=backup.iso or
cat /dev/hdc backup.iso
When finished run eject ...
and
hdparm /dev/hdc
See
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