On Tue, Oct 16, 2007 at 01:54:33PM -0600, Matthew Wilcox wrote:And worse yet, depending on what BIOS options you set at config time, or what might happen after you upgrade the BIOS, whether the drive looks like PATA or SATA could change over time. So if you have /dev/hda hard-coded in your /etc/fstab file, you could and probably will potentially lose after you change a BIOS option or take a BIOS upgrade causing the BIOS configs to get resent and disabling PATA emulation, such that your disk that had previously been /dev/hda now shows up as /dev/sda. (And this is something you will very badly *want* since your disk drive access will be **much** faster once you stop using PATA emulation.) Yet another reason why people who desperately are trying to cling to the good old days of stable device enumerations are going to be disappointed; the *type* of the drive can change over time, even for something as simple as a laptop's primary hard drive, which seem to be some people's favorite example. Unfortunately, people are just going to have to suck it up and get used to a much more complicated world. - Ted -
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