On Thu, Apr 17, 2008 at 07:12:35AM +0900, Tejun Heo wrote:I suppose it might, although I could still see an older machine have a PCI controller as well as an ISA legacy controller on an ISA sound card, and might even have a CDROM drive connected to the sound card. Not very likely though, but not imposible. In that case you might detect the HD connected to the HD, but not the CDROM connected to the sound card. That might be confusing to the user. On the other hand anyone running such old hardware might just have a pretty good idea what they are doing and could run in expert mode and tell the installer to also load the generic driver. I still think the correct solution is to always try loading it, posibly with a boot option to make the installer not do so for any machines that have issues with that. Any such machines should then have bug reports filed so that the driver that runs their chipset's IDE controller in a native mode can ensure they reserve the legacy IDE ports so that nothing else (like the generic driver) can go poking at them. After all I thought the whole point of all the ports listed in /proc/ioports was to indicate which io ports were currently reserved by which driver so that no other driver could try to access them. If it doesn't in fact work that way then it probably should. -- Len Sorensen --
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