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Date:      Thu, 12 Apr 2001 19:00:42 -0500
From:      Andrew Hesford <ajh3@chmod.ath.cx>
To:        adriel <adriel@adriel.net>
Cc:        freebsd-stable@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: ATA_ENABLE_ATAPI_DMA gone?
Message-ID:  <20010412190042.A11761@cec.wustl.edu>
In-Reply-To: <20010412150542.M5028@adriel.net>; from adriel@adriel.net on Thu, Apr 12, 2001 at 03:05:42PM -0500
References:  <02db01c0c1b1$c1a0ffe0$0508a8c0@lofi.dyndns.org> <20010410123317.A73359@irrelevant.org> <200104101342.f3ADgsn15019@bmah-freebsd-0.cisco.com> <20010410153425.I5028@adriel.net> <20010410134934.Z15938@fw.wintelcom.net> <20010412150542.M5028@adriel.net>

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On Thu, Apr 12, 2001 at 03:05:42PM -0500, adriel wrote:
> I suppose my frustration comes from changing something that worked
> perfectly for no good reason, what exactly was wrong with compiling that
> flag in the kernel, and why was it deemed "obsolete".  I understand how
> to do it now, but my point remains, why was I forced to change, what
> advantage did I receive from this? I am not running -CURRENT.
> 
> the main problem in my situation is that I have a DMA hd sharing an IDE
> cdrom, if you dont enable the ATAPI_DMA then it wont allow dma on the
> hard drive either.  Maybe there is a good reason for this, but I still
> do not understand why something that was not breaking the system would
> be arbitrarily removed without any warning.  The only POSSIBLE advantage
> I could have seen with moving this to be sysctl only is that you could
> change it without rebooting, and even that is not the case.

Just because you don't run -CURRENT doesn't mean things aren't subject
to change. Nobody is forcing you to cvsup; you don't have to change
things if you don't want to.

To keep a static system, run -RELEASE.

-- 
Andrew Hesford
ajh3@chmod.ath.cx

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