hd.c: remove BIOS/CMOS queries
authorH. Peter Anvin <hpa@zytor.com>
Wed, 11 Jul 2007 19:18:27 +0000 (12:18 -0700)
committerLinus Torvalds <torvalds@woody.linux-foundation.org>
Thu, 12 Jul 2007 17:55:54 +0000 (10:55 -0700)
An ST-506 disk these days is pretty much someone trying to pull ancient
data using an auxilliary controller.  Pulling data from the BIOS or CMOS
is just plain wrong, since it's likely to be the primary OS disk... and
would be user-entered data anyway.  Instead, require the user enters it
on the command line.

Signed-off-by: H. Peter Anvin <hpa@zytor.com>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
drivers/ide/legacy/hd.c

index 7f4c0a5050a1393e27e0c2ec3c9e7117d0546935..8f2db8dd35f75f7875e3cac91cbf6303de086e19 100644 (file)
@@ -719,74 +719,25 @@ static int __init hd_init(void)
        device_timer.function = hd_times_out;
        blk_queue_hardsect_size(hd_queue, 512);
 
-#ifdef __i386__
        if (!NR_HD) {
-               extern struct drive_info drive_info;
-               unsigned char *BIOS = (unsigned char *) &drive_info;
-               unsigned long flags;
-               int cmos_disks;
-
-               for (drive=0 ; drive<2 ; drive++) {
-                       hd_info[drive].cyl = *(unsigned short *) BIOS;
-                       hd_info[drive].head = *(2+BIOS);
-                       hd_info[drive].wpcom = *(unsigned short *) (5+BIOS);
-                       hd_info[drive].ctl = *(8+BIOS);
-                       hd_info[drive].lzone = *(unsigned short *) (12+BIOS);
-                       hd_info[drive].sect = *(14+BIOS);
-#ifdef does_not_work_for_everybody_with_scsi_but_helps_ibm_vp
-                       if (hd_info[drive].cyl && NR_HD == drive)
-                               NR_HD++;
-#endif
-                       BIOS += 16;
-               }
-
-       /*
-               We query CMOS about hard disks : it could be that 
-               we have a SCSI/ESDI/etc controller that is BIOS
-               compatible with ST-506, and thus showing up in our
-               BIOS table, but not register compatible, and therefore
-               not present in CMOS.
-
-               Furthermore, we will assume that our ST-506 drives
-               <if any> are the primary drives in the system, and 
-               the ones reflected as drive 1 or 2.
-
-               The first drive is stored in the high nibble of CMOS
-               byte 0x12, the second in the low nibble.  This will be
-               either a 4 bit drive type or 0xf indicating use byte 0x19 
-               for an 8 bit type, drive 1, 0x1a for drive 2 in CMOS.
-
-               Needless to say, a non-zero value means we have 
-               an AT controller hard disk for that drive.
-
-               Currently the rtc_lock is a bit academic since this
-               driver is non-modular, but someday... ?         Paul G.
-       */
-
-               spin_lock_irqsave(&rtc_lock, flags);
-               cmos_disks = CMOS_READ(0x12);
-               spin_unlock_irqrestore(&rtc_lock, flags);
-
-               if (cmos_disks & 0xf0) {
-                       if (cmos_disks & 0x0f)
-                               NR_HD = 2;
-                       else
-                               NR_HD = 1;
-               }
-       }
-#endif /* __i386__ */
-#ifdef __arm__
-       if (!NR_HD) {
-               /* We don't know anything about the drive.  This means
+               /*
+                * We don't know anything about the drive.  This means
                 * that you *MUST* specify the drive parameters to the
                 * kernel yourself.
+                *
+                * If we were on an i386, we used to read this info from
+                * the BIOS or CMOS.  This doesn't work all that well,
+                * since this assumes that this is a primary or secondary
+                * drive, and if we're using this legacy driver, it's
+                * probably an auxilliary controller added to recover
+                * legacy data off an ST-506 drive.  Either way, it's
+                * definitely safest to have the user explicitly specify
+                * the information.
                 */
                printk("hd: no drives specified - use hd=cyl,head,sectors"
                        " on kernel command line\n");
-       }
-#endif
-       if (!NR_HD)
                goto out;
+       }
 
        for (drive=0 ; drive < NR_HD ; drive++) {
                struct gendisk *disk = alloc_disk(64);