Index: arch/alpha/Kconfig =================================================================== RCS file: /var/cvs/linux-2.5/arch/alpha/Kconfig,v retrieving revision 1.13 diff -u -p -r1.13 Kconfig --- arch/alpha/Kconfig 5 May 2003 17:05:24 -0000 1.13 +++ arch/alpha/Kconfig 9 Jun 2003 20:26:39 -0000 @@ -753,67 +753,7 @@ source "drivers/block/Kconfig" source "drivers/md/Kconfig" - -menu "ATA/ATAPI/MFM/RLL support" - -config IDE - tristate "ATA/ATAPI/MFM/RLL support" - ---help--- - If you say Y here, your kernel will be able to manage low cost mass - storage units such as ATA/(E)IDE and ATAPI units. The most common - cases are IDE hard drives and ATAPI CD-ROM drives. - - If your system is pure SCSI and doesn't use these interfaces, you - can say N here. - - Integrated Disk Electronics (IDE aka ATA-1) is a connecting standard - for mass storage units such as hard disks. It was designed by - Western Digital and Compaq Computer in 1984. It was then named - ST506. Quite a number of disks use the IDE interface. - - AT Attachment (ATA) is the superset of the IDE specifications. - ST506 was also called ATA-1. - - Fast-IDE is ATA-2 (also named Fast ATA), Enhanced IDE (EIDE) is - ATA-3. It provides support for larger disks (up to 8.4GB by means of - the LBA standard), more disks (4 instead of 2) and for other mass - storage units such as tapes and cdrom. UDMA/33 (aka UltraDMA/33) is - ATA-4 and provides faster (and more CPU friendly) transfer modes - than previous PIO (Programmed processor Input/Output) from previous - ATA/IDE standards by means of fast DMA controllers. - - ATA Packet Interface (ATAPI) is a protocol used by EIDE tape and - CD-ROM drives, similar in many respects to the SCSI protocol. - - SMART IDE (Self Monitoring, Analysis and Reporting Technology) was - designed in order to prevent data corruption and disk crash by - detecting pre hardware failure conditions (heat, access time, and - the like...). Disks built since June 1995 may follow this standard. - The kernel itself don't manage this; however there are quite a - number of user programs such as smart that can query the status of - SMART parameters disk. - - If you want to compile this driver as a module ( = code which can be - inserted in and removed from the running kernel whenever you want), - say M here and read . The module - will be called ide. - - For further information, please read . - - If unsure, say Y. - -config IDE_MAX_HWIFS - int "Max IDE interfaces" - depends on IDE - default 4 - help - This is the maximum number of IDE hardware interfaces that will - be supported by the driver. Make sure it is at least as high as - the number IDE interfaces in your system. - source "drivers/ide/Kconfig" - -endmenu menu "SCSI support" Index: arch/arm/Kconfig =================================================================== RCS file: /var/cvs/linux-2.5/arch/arm/Kconfig,v retrieving revision 1.13 diff -u -p -r1.13 Kconfig --- arch/arm/Kconfig 5 May 2003 17:05:26 -0000 1.13 +++ arch/arm/Kconfig 9 Jun 2003 20:27:25 -0000 @@ -949,58 +949,7 @@ source "net/irda/Kconfig" source "net/ax25/Kconfig" - -menu "ATA/ATAPI/MFM/RLL support" - -config IDE - tristate "ATA/ATAPI/MFM/RLL support" - ---help--- - If you say Y here, your kernel will be able to manage low cost mass - storage units such as ATA/(E)IDE and ATAPI units. The most common - cases are IDE hard drives and ATAPI CD-ROM drives. - - If your system is pure SCSI and doesn't use these interfaces, you - can say N here. - - Integrated Disk Electronics (IDE aka ATA-1) is a connecting standard - for mass storage units such as hard disks. It was designed by - Western Digital and Compaq Computer in 1984. It was then named - ST506. Quite a number of disks use the IDE interface. - - AT Attachment (ATA) is the superset of the IDE specifications. - ST506 was also called ATA-1. - - Fast-IDE is ATA-2 (also named Fast ATA), Enhanced IDE (EIDE) is - ATA-3. It provides support for larger disks (up to 8.4GB by means of - the LBA standard), more disks (4 instead of 2) and for other mass - storage units such as tapes and cdrom. UDMA/33 (aka UltraDMA/33) is - ATA-4 and provides faster (and more CPU friendly) transfer modes - than previous PIO (Programmed processor Input/Output) from previous - ATA/IDE standards by means of fast DMA controllers. - - ATA Packet Interface (ATAPI) is a protocol used by EIDE tape and - CD-ROM drives, similar in many respects to the SCSI protocol. - - SMART IDE (Self Monitoring, Analysis and Reporting Technology) was - designed in order to prevent data corruption and disk crash by - detecting pre hardware failure conditions (heat, access time, and - the like...). Disks built since June 1995 may follow this standard. - The kernel itself don't manage this; however there are quite a - number of user programs such as smart that can query the status of - SMART parameters disk. - - If you want to compile this driver as a module ( = code which can be - inserted in and removed from the running kernel whenever you want), - say M here and read . The module - will be called ide. - - For further information, please read . - - If unsure, say Y. - source "drivers/ide/Kconfig" - -endmenu menu "SCSI support" Index: arch/cris/Kconfig =================================================================== RCS file: /var/cvs/linux-2.5/arch/cris/Kconfig,v retrieving revision 1.8 diff -u -p -r1.8 Kconfig --- arch/cris/Kconfig 5 May 2003 17:05:32 -0000 1.8 +++ arch/cris/Kconfig 9 Jun 2003 20:27:33 -0000 @@ -556,15 +556,7 @@ source "drivers/block/Kconfig" source "drivers/md/Kconfig" - -menu "ATA/IDE/MFM/RLL support" - -config IDE - tristate "ATA/IDE/MFM/RLL support" - source "drivers/ide/Kconfig" - -endmenu menu "SCSI support" Index: arch/h8300/Kconfig =================================================================== RCS file: /var/cvs/linux-2.5/arch/h8300/Kconfig,v retrieving revision 1.3 diff -u -p -r1.3 Kconfig --- arch/h8300/Kconfig 5 May 2003 17:05:34 -0000 1.3 +++ arch/h8300/Kconfig 9 Jun 2003 20:27:49 -0000 @@ -150,22 +150,7 @@ endmenu source "drivers/block/Kconfig" - -menu "ATA/IDE/MFM/RLL support" - -config IDE - tristate "ATA/ATAPI/MFM/RLL device support" - ---help--- - If you say Y here, your kernel will be able to manage low cost mass - storage units such as ATA/(E)IDE and ATAPI units. The most common - cases are IDE hard drives and ATAPI CD-ROM drives. - - It only makes sense to choose this option if your board actually - has an IDE interface. If unsure, say N. - source "drivers/ide/Kconfig" - -endmenu source "net/Kconfig" Index: arch/i386/Kconfig =================================================================== RCS file: /var/cvs/linux-2.5/arch/i386/Kconfig,v retrieving revision 1.22 diff -u -p -r1.22 Kconfig --- arch/i386/Kconfig 27 May 2003 17:21:14 -0000 1.22 +++ arch/i386/Kconfig 9 Jun 2003 20:28:16 -0000 @@ -1262,58 +1262,7 @@ source "drivers/pnp/Kconfig" source "drivers/block/Kconfig" - -menu "ATA/ATAPI/MFM/RLL device support" - -config IDE - tristate "ATA/ATAPI/MFM/RLL device support" - ---help--- - If you say Y here, your kernel will be able to manage low cost mass - storage units such as ATA/(E)IDE and ATAPI units. The most common - cases are IDE hard drives and ATAPI CD-ROM drives. - - If your system is pure SCSI and doesn't use these interfaces, you - can say N here. - - Integrated Disk Electronics (IDE aka ATA-1) is a connecting standard - for mass storage units such as hard disks. It was designed by - Western Digital and Compaq Computer in 1984. It was then named - ST506. Quite a number of disks use the IDE interface. - - AT Attachment (ATA) is the superset of the IDE specifications. - ST506 was also called ATA-1. - - Fast-IDE is ATA-2 (also named Fast ATA), Enhanced IDE (EIDE) is - ATA-3. It provides support for larger disks (up to 8.4GB by means of - the LBA standard), more disks (4 instead of 2) and for other mass - storage units such as tapes and cdrom. UDMA/33 (aka UltraDMA/33) is - ATA-4 and provides faster (and more CPU friendly) transfer modes - than previous PIO (Programmed processor Input/Output) from previous - ATA/IDE standards by means of fast DMA controllers. - - ATA Packet Interface (ATAPI) is a protocol used by EIDE tape and - CD-ROM drives, similar in many respects to the SCSI protocol. - - SMART IDE (Self Monitoring, Analysis and Reporting Technology) was - designed in order to prevent data corruption and disk crash by - detecting pre hardware failure conditions (heat, access time, and - the like...). Disks built since June 1995 may follow this standard. - The kernel itself don't manage this; however there are quite a - number of user programs such as smart that can query the status of - SMART parameters disk. - - If you want to compile this driver as a module ( = code which can be - inserted in and removed from the running kernel whenever you want), - say M here and read . The module - will be called ide. - - For further information, please read . - - If unsure, say Y. - source "drivers/ide/Kconfig" - -endmenu menu "SCSI device support" Index: arch/ia64/Kconfig =================================================================== RCS file: /var/cvs/linux-2.5/arch/ia64/Kconfig,v retrieving revision 1.12 diff -u -p -r1.12 Kconfig --- arch/ia64/Kconfig 27 May 2003 17:21:18 -0000 1.12 +++ arch/ia64/Kconfig 9 Jun 2003 20:28:46 -0000 @@ -589,59 +589,6 @@ source "drivers/md/Kconfig" source "drivers/message/fusion/Kconfig" - -menu "ATA/ATAPI/MFM/RLL support" - -config IDE - tristate "ATA/ATAPI/MFM/RLL support" - ---help--- - If you say Y here, your kernel will be able to manage low cost mass - storage units such as ATA/(E)IDE and ATAPI units. The most common - cases are IDE hard drives and ATAPI CD-ROM drives. - - If your system is pure SCSI and doesn't use these interfaces, you - can say N here. - - Integrated Disk Electronics (IDE aka ATA-1) is a connecting standard - for mass storage units such as hard disks. It was designed by - Western Digital and Compaq Computer in 1984. It was then named - ST506. Quite a number of disks use the IDE interface. - - AT Attachment (ATA) is the superset of the IDE specifications. - ST506 was also called ATA-1. - - Fast-IDE is ATA-2 (also named Fast ATA), Enhanced IDE (EIDE) is - ATA-3. It provides support for larger disks (up to 8.4GB by means of - the LBA standard), more disks (4 instead of 2) and for other mass - storage units such as tapes and cdrom. UDMA/33 (aka UltraDMA/33) is - ATA-4 and provides faster (and more CPU friendly) transfer modes - than previous PIO (Programmed processor Input/Output) from previous - ATA/IDE standards by means of fast DMA controllers. - - ATA Packet Interface (ATAPI) is a protocol used by EIDE tape and - CD-ROM drives, similar in many respects to the SCSI protocol. - - SMART IDE (Self Monitoring, Analysis and Reporting Technology) was - designed in order to prevent data corruption and disk crash by - detecting pre hardware failure conditions (heat, access time, and - the like...). Disks built since June 1995 may follow this standard. - The kernel itself don't manage this; however there are quite a - number of user programs such as smart that can query the status of - SMART parameters disk. - - If you want to compile this driver as a module ( = code which can be - inserted in and removed from the running kernel whenever you want), - say M here and read . The module - will be called ide. - - For further information, please read . - - If unsure, say Y. - -source "drivers/ide/Kconfig" - -endmenu - endif Index: arch/m68k/Kconfig =================================================================== RCS file: /var/cvs/linux-2.5/arch/m68k/Kconfig,v retrieving revision 1.13 diff -u -p -r1.13 Kconfig --- arch/m68k/Kconfig 5 May 2003 17:05:41 -0000 1.13 +++ arch/m68k/Kconfig 9 Jun 2003 20:28:57 -0000 @@ -655,58 +655,7 @@ source "drivers/md/Kconfig" source "drivers/input/Kconfig" - -menu "ATA/ATAPI/MFM/RLL device support" - -config IDE - tristate "ATA/ATAPI/MFM/RLL device support" - ---help--- - If you say Y here, your kernel will be able to manage low cost mass - storage units such as ATA/(E)IDE and ATAPI units. The most common - cases are IDE hard drives and ATAPI CD-ROM drives. - - If your system is pure SCSI and doesn't use these interfaces, you - can say N here. - - Integrated Disk Electronics (IDE aka ATA-1) is a connecting standard - for mass storage units such as hard disks. It was designed by - Western Digital and Compaq Computer in 1984. It was then named - ST506. Quite a number of disks use the IDE interface. - - AT Attachment (ATA) is the superset of the IDE specifications. - ST506 was also called ATA-1. - - Fast-IDE is ATA-2 (also named Fast ATA), Enhanced IDE (EIDE) is - ATA-3. It provides support for larger disks (up to 8.4GB by means of - the LBA standard), more disks (4 instead of 2) and for other mass - storage units such as tapes and cdrom. UDMA/33 (aka UltraDMA/33) is - ATA-4 and provides faster (and more CPU friendly) transfer modes - than previous PIO (Programmed processor Input/Output) from previous - ATA/IDE standards by means of fast DMA controllers. - - ATA Packet Interface (ATAPI) is a protocol used by EIDE tape and - CD-ROM drives, similar in many respects to the SCSI protocol. - - SMART IDE (Self Monitoring, Analysis and Reporting Technology) was - designed in order to prevent data corruption and disk crash by - detecting pre hardware failure conditions (heat, access time, and - the like...). Disks built since June 1995 may follow this standard. - The kernel itself don't manage this; however there are quite a - number of user programs such as smart that can query the status of - SMART parameters disk. - - If you want to compile this driver as a module ( = code which can be - inserted in and removed from the running kernel whenever you want), - say M here and read . The module - will be called ide. - - For further information, please read . - - If unsure, say Y. - source "drivers/ide/Kconfig" - -endmenu menu "SCSI device support" Index: arch/m68knommu/Kconfig =================================================================== RCS file: /var/cvs/linux-2.5/arch/m68knommu/Kconfig,v retrieving revision 1.10 diff -u -p -r1.10 Kconfig --- arch/m68knommu/Kconfig 27 May 2003 17:21:31 -0000 1.10 +++ arch/m68knommu/Kconfig 9 Jun 2003 20:29:06 -0000 @@ -532,22 +532,7 @@ source "drivers/pnp/Kconfig" source "drivers/block/Kconfig" - -menu "ATA/IDE/MFM/RLL support" - -config IDE - tristate "ATA/ATAPI/MFM/RLL device support" - ---help--- - If you say Y here, your kernel will be able to manage low cost mass - storage units such as ATA/(E)IDE and ATAPI units. The most common - cases are IDE hard drives and ATAPI CD-ROM drives. - - It only makes sense to choose this option if your board actually - has an IDE interface. If unsure, say N. - source "drivers/ide/Kconfig" - -endmenu menu "SCSI device support" Index: arch/mips/Kconfig =================================================================== RCS file: /var/cvs/linux-2.5/arch/mips/Kconfig,v retrieving revision 1.10 diff -u -p -r1.10 Kconfig --- arch/mips/Kconfig 5 May 2003 17:05:43 -0000 1.10 +++ arch/mips/Kconfig 9 Jun 2003 20:29:17 -0000 @@ -827,59 +827,7 @@ source "drivers/block/Kconfig" source "drivers/md/Kconfig" - -menu "ATA/ATAPI/MFM/RLL support" - depends on !SGI_IP22 && !DECSTATION - -config IDE - tristate "ATA/ATAPI/MFM/RLL support" - ---help--- - If you say Y here, your kernel will be able to manage low cost mass - storage units such as ATA/(E)IDE and ATAPI units. The most common - cases are IDE hard drives and ATAPI CD-ROM drives. - - If your system is pure SCSI and doesn't use these interfaces, you - can say N here. - - Integrated Disk Electronics (IDE aka ATA-1) is a connecting standard - for mass storage units such as hard disks. It was designed by - Western Digital and Compaq Computer in 1984. It was then named - ST506. Quite a number of disks use the IDE interface. - - AT Attachment (ATA) is the superset of the IDE specifications. - ST506 was also called ATA-1. - - Fast-IDE is ATA-2 (also named Fast ATA), Enhanced IDE (EIDE) is - ATA-3. It provides support for larger disks (up to 8.4GB by means of - the LBA standard), more disks (4 instead of 2) and for other mass - storage units such as tapes and cdrom. UDMA/33 (aka UltraDMA/33) is - ATA-4 and provides faster (and more CPU friendly) transfer modes - than previous PIO (Programmed processor Input/Output) from previous - ATA/IDE standards by means of fast DMA controllers. - - ATA Packet Interface (ATAPI) is a protocol used by EIDE tape and - CD-ROM drives, similar in many respects to the SCSI protocol. - - SMART IDE (Self Monitoring, Analysis and Reporting Technology) was - designed in order to prevent data corruption and disk crash by - detecting pre hardware failure conditions (heat, access time, and - the like...). Disks built since June 1995 may follow this standard. - The kernel itself don't manage this; however there are quite a - number of user programs such as smart that can query the status of - SMART parameters disk. - - If you want to compile this driver as a module ( = code which can be - inserted in and removed from the running kernel whenever you want), - say M here and read . The module - will be called ide. - - For further information, please read . - - If unsure, say Y. - source "drivers/ide/Kconfig" - -endmenu menu "SCSI support" Index: arch/mips64/Kconfig =================================================================== RCS file: /var/cvs/linux-2.5/arch/mips64/Kconfig,v retrieving revision 1.12 diff -u -p -r1.12 Kconfig --- arch/mips64/Kconfig 5 May 2003 17:05:47 -0000 1.12 +++ arch/mips64/Kconfig 9 Jun 2003 20:29:27 -0000 @@ -421,58 +421,7 @@ source "drivers/block/Kconfig" source "drivers/md/Kconfig" - -menu "ATA/ATAPI/MFM/RLL support" - -config IDE - tristate "ATA/ATAPI/MFM/RLL support" - ---help--- - If you say Y here, your kernel will be able to manage low cost mass - storage units such as ATA/(E)IDE and ATAPI units. The most common - cases are IDE hard drives and ATAPI CD-ROM drives. - - If your system is pure SCSI and doesn't use these interfaces, you - can say N here. - - Integrated Disk Electronics (IDE aka ATA-1) is a connecting standard - for mass storage units such as hard disks. It was designed by - Western Digital and Compaq Computer in 1984. It was then named - ST506. Quite a number of disks use the IDE interface. - - AT Attachment (ATA) is the superset of the IDE specifications. - ST506 was also called ATA-1. - - Fast-IDE is ATA-2 (also named Fast ATA), Enhanced IDE (EIDE) is - ATA-3. It provides support for larger disks (up to 8.4GB by means of - the LBA standard), more disks (4 instead of 2) and for other mass - storage units such as tapes and cdrom. UDMA/33 (aka UltraDMA/33) is - ATA-4 and provides faster (and more CPU friendly) transfer modes - than previous PIO (Programmed processor Input/Output) from previous - ATA/IDE standards by means of fast DMA controllers. - - ATA Packet Interface (ATAPI) is a protocol used by EIDE tape and - CD-ROM drives, similar in many respects to the SCSI protocol. - - SMART IDE (Self Monitoring, Analysis and Reporting Technology) was - designed in order to prevent data corruption and disk crash by - detecting pre hardware failure conditions (heat, access time, and - the like...). Disks built since June 1995 may follow this standard. - The kernel itself don't manage this; however there are quite a - number of user programs such as smart that can query the status of - SMART parameters disk. - - If you want to compile this driver as a module ( = code which can be - inserted in and removed from the running kernel whenever you want), - say M here and read . The module - will be called ide. - - For further information, please read . - - If unsure, say Y. - source "drivers/ide/Kconfig" - -endmenu menu "SCSI support" Index: arch/parisc/Kconfig =================================================================== RCS file: /var/cvs/linux-2.5/arch/parisc/Kconfig,v retrieving revision 1.18 diff -u -p -r1.18 Kconfig --- arch/parisc/Kconfig 12 May 2003 11:49:49 -0000 1.18 +++ arch/parisc/Kconfig 9 Jun 2003 20:29:37 -0000 @@ -237,12 +237,8 @@ source "drivers/parport/Kconfig" source "drivers/block/Kconfig" - -menu "ATA/IDE/MFM/RLL support" -config IDE - tristate "ATA/IDE/MFM/RLL support" source "drivers/ide/Kconfig" -endmenu + menu "SCSI support" Index: arch/ppc/Kconfig =================================================================== RCS file: /var/cvs/linux-2.5/arch/ppc/Kconfig,v retrieving revision 1.12 diff -u -p -r1.12 Kconfig --- arch/ppc/Kconfig 27 May 2003 17:21:39 -0000 1.12 +++ arch/ppc/Kconfig 9 Jun 2003 20:29:47 -0000 @@ -1182,55 +1182,7 @@ source "drivers/block/Kconfig" source "drivers/md/Kconfig" - -menu "ATA/IDE/MFM/RLL support" - -config IDE - tristate "ATA/IDE/MFM/RLL support" - ---help--- - If you say Y here, your kernel will be able to manage low cost mass - storage units such as ATA/(E)IDE and ATAPI units. The most common - cases are IDE hard drives and ATAPI CD-ROM drives. - - If your system is pure SCSI and doesn't use these interfaces, you - can say N here. - - Integrated Disk Electronics (IDE aka ATA-1) is a connecting standard - for mass storage units such as hard disks. It was designed by - Western Digital and Compaq Computer in 1984. Quite a number of - disks use the IDE interface. - - Fast-IDE is ATA-2 (also named Fast ATA), Enhanced IDE (EIDE) is - ATA-3. It provides support for larger disks (up to 8.4GB by means of - the LBA standard), more disks (4 instead of 2) and for other mass - storage units such as tapes and cdrom. UDMA/33 (aka UltraDMA/33) is - ATA-4 and provides faster (and more CPU friendly) transfer modes - than previous PIO (Programmed processor Input/Output) from previous - ATA/IDE standards by means of fast DMA controllers. - - ATA Packet Interface (ATAPI) is a protocol used by EIDE tape and - CD-ROM drives, similar in many respects to the SCSI protocol. - - SMART IDE (Self Monitoring, Analysis and Reporting Technology) was - designed in order to prevent data corruption and disk crash by - detecting pre hardware failure conditions (heat, access time, and - the like...). Disks built since June 1995 may follow this standard. - The kernel itself don't manage this; however there are quite a - number of user programs such as smart that can query the status of - SMART parameters disk. - - If you want to compile this driver as a module ( = code which can be - inserted in and removed from the running kernel whenever you want), - say M here and read . The module - will be called ide. - - For further information, please read . - - If unsure, say Y. - source "drivers/ide/Kconfig" - -endmenu menu "SCSI support" Index: arch/ppc64/Kconfig =================================================================== RCS file: /var/cvs/linux-2.5/arch/ppc64/Kconfig,v retrieving revision 1.11 diff -u -p -r1.11 Kconfig --- arch/ppc64/Kconfig 5 May 2003 17:05:54 -0000 1.11 +++ arch/ppc64/Kconfig 9 Jun 2003 20:29:57 -0000 @@ -268,55 +268,7 @@ source "drivers/pnp/Kconfig" source "drivers/block/Kconfig" - -menu "ATA/ATAPI/MFM/RLL support" - -config IDE - tristate "ATA/ATAPI/MFM/RLL support" - ---help--- - If you say Y here, your kernel will be able to manage low cost mass - storage units such as ATA/(E)IDE and ATAPI units. The most common - cases are IDE hard drives and ATAPI CD-ROM drives. - - If your system is pure SCSI and doesn't use these interfaces, you - can say N here. - - Integrated Disk Electronics (IDE aka ATA-1) is a connecting standard - for mass storage units such as hard disks. It was designed by - Western Digital and Compaq Computer in 1984. Quite a number of - disks use the IDE interface. - - Fast-IDE is ATA-2 (also named Fast ATA), Enhanced IDE (EIDE) is - ATA-3. It provides support for larger disks (up to 8.4GB by means of - the LBA standard), more disks (4 instead of 2) and for other mass - storage units such as tapes and cdrom. UDMA/33 (aka UltraDMA/33) is - ATA-4 and provides faster (and more CPU friendly) transfer modes - than previous PIO (Programmed processor Input/Output) from previous - ATA/IDE standards by means of fast DMA controllers. - - ATA Packet Interface (ATAPI) is a protocol used by EIDE tape and - CD-ROM drives, similar in many respects to the SCSI protocol. - - SMART IDE (Self Monitoring, Analysis and Reporting Technology) was - designed in order to prevent data corruption and disk crash by - detecting pre hardware failure conditions (heat, access time, and - the like...). Disks built since June 1995 may follow this standard. - The kernel itself don't manage this; however there are quite a - number of user programs such as smart that can query the status of - SMART parameters disk. - - If you want to compile this driver as a module ( = code which can be - inserted in and removed from the running kernel whenever you want), - say M here and read . The module - will be called ide. - - For further information, please read . - - If unsure, say Y. - source "drivers/ide/Kconfig" - -endmenu menu "SCSI device support" Index: arch/sh/Kconfig =================================================================== RCS file: /var/cvs/linux-2.5/arch/sh/Kconfig,v retrieving revision 1.10 diff -u -p -r1.10 Kconfig --- arch/sh/Kconfig 5 May 2003 17:05:58 -0000 1.10 +++ arch/sh/Kconfig 9 Jun 2003 20:30:09 -0000 @@ -657,58 +657,7 @@ source "drivers/block/Kconfig" source "drivers/md/Kconfig" - -menu "ATA/ATAPI/MFM/RLL support" - -config IDE - tristate "ATA/ATAPI/MFM/RLL support" - ---help--- - If you say Y here, your kernel will be able to manage low cost mass - storage units such as ATA/(E)IDE and ATAPI units. The most common - cases are IDE hard drives and ATAPI CD-ROM drives. - - If your system is pure SCSI and doesn't use these interfaces, you - can say N here. - - Integrated Disk Electronics (IDE aka ATA-1) is a connecting standard - for mass storage units such as hard disks. It was designed by - Western Digital and Compaq Computer in 1984. It was then named - ST506. Quite a number of disks use the IDE interface. - - AT Attachment (ATA) is the superset of the IDE specifications. - ST506 was also called ATA-1. - - Fast-IDE is ATA-2 (also named Fast ATA), Enhanced IDE (EIDE) is - ATA-3. It provides support for larger disks (up to 8.4GB by means of - the LBA standard), more disks (4 instead of 2) and for other mass - storage units such as tapes and cdrom. UDMA/33 (aka UltraDMA/33) is - ATA-4 and provides faster (and more CPU friendly) transfer modes - than previous PIO (Programmed processor Input/Output) from previous - ATA/IDE standards by means of fast DMA controllers. - - ATA Packet Interface (ATAPI) is a protocol used by EIDE tape and - CD-ROM drives, similar in many respects to the SCSI protocol. - - SMART IDE (Self Monitoring, Analysis and Reporting Technology) was - designed in order to prevent data corruption and disk crash by - detecting pre hardware failure conditions (heat, access time, and - the like...). Disks built since June 1995 may follow this standard. - The kernel itself don't manage this; however there are quite a - number of user programs such as smart that can query the status of - SMART parameters disk. - - If you want to compile this driver as a module ( = code which can be - inserted in and removed from the running kernel whenever you want), - say M here and read . The module - will be called ide. - - For further information, please read . - - If unsure, say Y. - source "drivers/ide/Kconfig" - -endmenu menu "SCSI support" Index: arch/sparc/Kconfig =================================================================== RCS file: /var/cvs/linux-2.5/arch/sparc/Kconfig,v retrieving revision 1.13 diff -u -p -r1.13 Kconfig --- arch/sparc/Kconfig 27 May 2003 17:21:58 -0000 1.13 +++ arch/sparc/Kconfig 9 Jun 2003 20:30:29 -0000 @@ -547,57 +547,7 @@ endmenu # Don't frighten a common SBus user if PCI -menu "ATA/ATAPI/MFM/RLL support" - -config IDE - tristate "ATA/ATAPI/MFM/RLL support" - ---help--- - If you say Y here, your kernel will be able to manage low cost mass - storage units such as ATA/(E)IDE and ATAPI units. The most common - cases are IDE hard drives and ATAPI CD-ROM drives. - - If your system is pure SCSI and doesn't use these interfaces, you - can say N here. - - Integrated Disk Electronics (IDE aka ATA-1) is a connecting standard - for mass storage units such as hard disks. It was designed by - Western Digital and Compaq Computer in 1984. It was then named - ST506. Quite a number of disks use the IDE interface. - - AT Attachment (ATA) is the superset of the IDE specifications. - ST506 was also called ATA-1. - - Fast-IDE is ATA-2 (also named Fast ATA), Enhanced IDE (EIDE) is - ATA-3. It provides support for larger disks (up to 8.4GB by means of - the LBA standard), more disks (4 instead of 2) and for other mass - storage units such as tapes and cdrom. UDMA/33 (aka UltraDMA/33) is - ATA-4 and provides faster (and more CPU friendly) transfer modes - than previous PIO (Programmed processor Input/Output) from previous - ATA/IDE standards by means of fast DMA controllers. - - ATA Packet Interface (ATAPI) is a protocol used by EIDE tape and - CD-ROM drives, similar in many respects to the SCSI protocol. - - SMART IDE (Self Monitoring, Analysis and Reporting Technology) was - designed in order to prevent data corruption and disk crash by - detecting pre hardware failure conditions (heat, access time, and - the like...). Disks built since June 1995 may follow this standard. - The kernel itself don't manage this; however there are quite a - number of user programs such as smart that can query the status of - SMART parameters disk. - - If you want to compile this driver as a module ( = code which can be - inserted in and removed from the running kernel whenever you want), - say M here and read . The module - will be called ide. - - For further information, please read . - - If unsure, say Y. - source "drivers/ide/Kconfig" - -endmenu endif Index: arch/sparc64/Kconfig =================================================================== RCS file: /var/cvs/linux-2.5/arch/sparc64/Kconfig,v retrieving revision 1.14 diff -u -p -r1.14 Kconfig --- arch/sparc64/Kconfig 27 May 2003 17:22:04 -0000 1.14 +++ arch/sparc64/Kconfig 9 Jun 2003 20:30:43 -0000 @@ -719,57 +719,7 @@ config BLK_DEV_INITRD endmenu -menu "ATA/ATAPI/MFM/RLL device support" - -config IDE - tristate "ATA/ATAPI/MFM/RLL device support" - ---help--- - If you say Y here, your kernel will be able to manage low cost mass - storage units such as ATA/(E)IDE and ATAPI units. The most common - cases are IDE hard drives and ATAPI CD-ROM drives. - - If your system is pure SCSI and doesn't use these interfaces, you - can say N here. - - Integrated Disk Electronics (IDE aka ATA-1) is a connecting standard - for mass storage units such as hard disks. It was designed by - Western Digital and Compaq Computer in 1984. It was then named - ST506. Quite a number of disks use the IDE interface. - - AT Attachment (ATA) is the superset of the IDE specifications. - ST506 was also called ATA-1. - - Fast-IDE is ATA-2 (also named Fast ATA), Enhanced IDE (EIDE) is - ATA-3. It provides support for larger disks (up to 8.4GB by means of - the LBA standard), more disks (4 instead of 2) and for other mass - storage units such as tapes and cdrom. UDMA/33 (aka UltraDMA/33) is - ATA-4 and provides faster (and more CPU friendly) transfer modes - than previous PIO (Programmed processor Input/Output) from previous - ATA/IDE standards by means of fast DMA controllers. - - ATA Packet Interface (ATAPI) is a protocol used by EIDE tape and - CD-ROM drives, similar in many respects to the SCSI protocol. - - SMART IDE (Self Monitoring, Analysis and Reporting Technology) was - designed in order to prevent data corruption and disk crash by - detecting pre hardware failure conditions (heat, access time, and - the like...). Disks built since June 1995 may follow this standard. - The kernel itself don't manage this; however there are quite a - number of user programs such as smart that can query the status of - SMART parameters disk. - - If you want to compile this driver as a module ( = code which can be - inserted in and removed from the running kernel whenever you want), - say M here and read . The module - will be called ide. - - For further information, please read . - - If unsure, say Y. - source "drivers/ide/Kconfig" - -endmenu menu "SCSI support" Index: arch/v850/Kconfig =================================================================== RCS file: /var/cvs/linux-2.5/arch/v850/Kconfig,v retrieving revision 1.11 diff -u -p -r1.11 Kconfig --- arch/v850/Kconfig 5 May 2003 17:06:09 -0000 1.11 +++ arch/v850/Kconfig 9 Jun 2003 20:31:00 -0000 @@ -270,16 +270,6 @@ source drivers/block/Kconfig menu "Disk device support" -config IDE - tristate "ATA/ATAPI/MFM/RLL device support" - ---help--- - If you say Y here, your kernel will be able to manage low cost mass - storage units such as ATA/(E)IDE and ATAPI units. The most common - cases are IDE hard drives and ATAPI CD-ROM drives. - - It only makes sense to choose this option if your board actually - has an IDE interface. If unsure, say N. - source "drivers/ide/Kconfig" config SCSI Index: arch/x86_64/Kconfig =================================================================== RCS file: /var/cvs/linux-2.5/arch/x86_64/Kconfig,v retrieving revision 1.17 diff -u -p -r1.17 Kconfig --- arch/x86_64/Kconfig 27 May 2003 17:22:13 -0000 1.17 +++ arch/x86_64/Kconfig 9 Jun 2003 20:31:28 -0000 @@ -415,58 +415,7 @@ source "drivers/parport/Kconfig" source "drivers/block/Kconfig" - -menu "ATA/ATAPI/MFM/RLL support" - -config IDE - tristate "ATA/ATAPI/MFM/RLL device support" - ---help--- - If you say Y here, your kernel will be able to manage low cost mass - storage units such as ATA/(E)IDE and ATAPI units. The most common - cases are IDE hard drives and ATAPI CD-ROM drives. - - If your system is pure SCSI and doesn't use these interfaces, you - can say N here. - - Integrated Disk Electronics (IDE aka ATA-1) is a connecting standard - for mass storage units such as hard disks. It was designed by - Western Digital and Compaq Computer in 1984. It was then named - ST506. Quite a number of disks use the IDE interface. - - AT Attachment (ATA) is the superset of the IDE specifications. - ST506 was also called ATA-1. - - Fast-IDE is ATA-2 (also named Fast ATA), Enhanced IDE (EIDE) is - ATA-3. It provides support for larger disks (up to 8.4GB by means of - the LBA standard), more disks (4 instead of 2) and for other mass - storage units such as tapes and cdrom. UDMA/33 (aka UltraDMA/33) is - ATA-4 and provides faster (and more CPU friendly) transfer modes - than previous PIO (Programmed processor Input/Output) from previous - ATA/IDE standards by means of fast DMA controllers. - - ATA Packet Interface (ATAPI) is a protocol used by EIDE tape and - CD-ROM drives, similar in many respects to the SCSI protocol. - - SMART IDE (Self-Monitoring, Analysis and Reporting Technology) was - designed in order to prevent data corruption and disk crash by - detecting pre-hardware failure conditions (heat, access time, and - the like...). Disks built since June 1995 may follow this standard. - The kernel itself doesn't manage this; however there are quite a - number of user programs such as smart that can query the status of - SMART parameters from disk drives. - - If you want to compile this driver as a module ( = code which can be - inserted in and removed from the running kernel whenever you want), - say M here and read . The module - will be called ide. - - For further information, please read . - - If unsure, say Y. - source "drivers/ide/Kconfig" - -endmenu menu "SCSI device support" Index: drivers/ide/Kconfig =================================================================== RCS file: /var/cvs/linux-2.5/drivers/ide/Kconfig,v retrieving revision 1.10 diff -u -p -r1.10 Kconfig --- drivers/ide/Kconfig 27 May 2003 17:23:16 -0000 1.10 +++ drivers/ide/Kconfig 9 Jun 2003 20:26:28 -0000 @@ -4,6 +4,63 @@ # Andre Hedrick # +menu "ATA/ATAPI/MFM/RLL support" + +config IDE + tristate "ATA/ATAPI/MFM/RLL support" + ---help--- + If you say Y here, your kernel will be able to manage low cost mass + storage units such as ATA/(E)IDE and ATAPI units. The most common + cases are IDE hard drives and ATAPI CD-ROM drives. + + If your system is pure SCSI and doesn't use these interfaces, you + can say N here. + + Integrated Disk Electronics (IDE aka ATA-1) is a connecting standard + for mass storage units such as hard disks. It was designed by + Western Digital and Compaq Computer in 1984. It was then named + ST506. Quite a number of disks use the IDE interface. + + AT Attachment (ATA) is the superset of the IDE specifications. + ST506 was also called ATA-1. + + Fast-IDE is ATA-2 (also named Fast ATA), Enhanced IDE (EIDE) is + ATA-3. It provides support for larger disks (up to 8.4GB by means of + the LBA standard), more disks (4 instead of 2) and for other mass + storage units such as tapes and cdrom. UDMA/33 (aka UltraDMA/33) is + ATA-4 and provides faster (and more CPU friendly) transfer modes + than previous PIO (Programmed processor Input/Output) from previous + ATA/IDE standards by means of fast DMA controllers. + + ATA Packet Interface (ATAPI) is a protocol used by EIDE tape and + CD-ROM drives, similar in many respects to the SCSI protocol. + + SMART IDE (Self Monitoring, Analysis and Reporting Technology) was + designed in order to prevent data corruption and disk crash by + detecting pre hardware failure conditions (heat, access time, and + the like...). Disks built since June 1995 may follow this standard. + The kernel itself don't manage this; however there are quite a + number of user programs such as smart that can query the status of + SMART parameters disk. + + If you want to compile this driver as a module ( = code which can be + inserted in and removed from the running kernel whenever you want), + say M here and read . The module + will be called ide. + + For further information, please read . + + If unsure, say Y. + +config IDE_MAX_HWIFS + int "Max IDE interfaces" + depends on ALPHA && IDE + default 4 + help + This is the maximum number of IDE hardware interfaces that will + be supported by the driver. Make sure it is at least as high as + the number of IDE interfaces in your system. + menu "IDE, ATA and ATAPI Block devices" depends on IDE!=n @@ -1083,3 +1140,4 @@ config BLK_DEV_IDE_MODES endmenu +endmenu