On Mon, Aug 01, 2005 at 07:48:31AM +0100, Russell King wrote: > On Mon, Aug 01, 2005 at 02:01:07AM +0100, Alan Cox wrote: > > On Sad, 2005-07-30 at 22:36 +0100, Russell King wrote: > > > Since PCMCIA cards are detected and drivers bound at boot time, we no > > > longer get hotplug events to setup networking for PCMCIA network cards > > > already inserted. Consequently, if you are relying on /sbin/hotplug to > > > setup your PCMCIA network card at boot time, triggered by the cardmgr > > > startup binding the driver, it won't happen. > > > > So eth0 now randomly changes between on board and PCMCIA depending upon > > whether the PCMCIA card was inserted or not, and your disks re-order > > themselves in the same situation. That'll be funny if anyone does a > > mkswap to share their swap between Linux and Windows. Gosh look there > > goes the root partition. > > > > I'm hoping thats not what you are implying. Especially for disks, > > network is much much less of an issue. > > If you have the socket driver as a module, as some (most?) distros do, > then of course such cards won't be detected at boot time. If PCMCIA > and the socket driver are built-in, along with the card driver, then > I guess this possibility may well exist - it does for NE2K cards.
Linus, Andrew, Please apply this for 2.6.13 - Thanks, Dominik Avoid registering PCMCIA CF cards before other IDE stuff. This means the risk of /dev/hd* being re-ordered is lessened. The _sane_ thing to assert any ordering is to use udev, nameif and so on, of course. Signed-off-by: Dominik Brodowski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Index: 2.6.13-rc4-git1/drivers/ide/legacy/ide-cs.c =================================================================== --- 2.6.13-rc4-git1.orig/drivers/ide/legacy/ide-cs.c +++ 2.6.13-rc4-git1/drivers/ide/legacy/ide-cs.c @@ -508,5 +508,5 @@ static void __exit exit_ide_cs(void) BUG_ON(dev_list != NULL); } -module_init(init_ide_cs); +late_initcall(init_ide_cs); module_exit(exit_ide_cs); - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/