9fans archive / 1995 / 12 / 68 /    prev next

From: jim mckie  jmk@pla...
Subject: More ATAPI questions
Date: Fri, 22 Dec 1995 15:23:28 -0500

Did you add the T device to your config file before you made the kernel?

You're right in that devatapi was originally written by Alberto Nava. I don't
recommend its use, it's not very robust, especially in the presence of
interrupts from the keyboard. And yes, it shouldn't be T, it should probably
be merged into the sbcd driver.

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From:	"Luther Huffman, Jr." <mail.infinet.com!lutherh>
To:	cse.psu.edu!9fans
Date:	Fri, 22 Dec 1995 18:19:54 -0500
Subject: More ATAPI questions
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I know that devatapi.c in the latest boddle for 9/pc is based on a 
driver by Alberto Nava. Didn't the original driver use a code '#T' 
for ATAPI drives? 
   The Plan 9 manual mentions kprof using '#T'. That would appear to 
me to cause a potential conflict if it weren't for the fact that, on 
my system, "ls '#T' ' doesn't show anything at all. 
   I've installed the boddle, added "cdrom0=type=atapi port=0x170 
irq=15" to plan9.ini. So  where's '#T'? And if it isn't '#T', what is 
the proper code?
   Along more trivial lines, is there a name for file names that 
begin with '#'? The documentation only refers to them as "roots of a 
file tree implemented by a kernel device driver". This is rather 
cumbersome, rather like "The Artist Formerly Known as Prince".