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Date:      Sun, 24 Jan 1999 00:02:21 +0100 (MET)
From:      "D. Rock" <rock@wurzelausix.CS.Uni-SB.DE>
To:        julian@whistle.com
Cc:        current@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: dirty fs after apm power off
Message-ID:  <199901232302.AAA06978@vodix.aremorika>

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This is what I also thought. But how do I turn off write caching on IDE
disks. I know how to do on SCSI bit (mode page 8 byte 2 bit 2 clear), but
I have absolutely no clue how this can be achieved on IDE disks.

I normally turn off write caching on all drives I install. The drive shouldn't
shuffle the carefully sorted file system blocks.

Daniel

> probably the drive needs write-caching turned off...
> 
> 
> On Sat, 23 Jan 1999, D. Rock wrote:
> 
> > I have noticed this behaviour on at least one machine.
> > If I shutdown the machine with apm power off, the filesystem is dirty and
> > has to been checked on the next reboot. It seems, the power is cut too fast.
> > I don't have any problems with reboots.
> > It seems the drive doesn't have the time to write the superblock back to disk.
> > 
> > I simply put a DELAY(4000000) in the apm_power_off() routine and the problem
> > fades away.
> > Any thoughts on doing this a configurable option? It doesn't break anything,
> > it only takes a few seconds longer for the machine to power off.
> > 
> > The drive is a Maxtor Diamond Max (90432D2) 4GB IDE drive in an Asus SP98
> > board.

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