On 7/19/06, <b class="gmail_sendername">gabrielle harrison and Paul van den Bergen</b> <<a href="mailto:gabpaul@melbpc.org.au">gabpaul@melbpc.org.au</a>> wrote:<div><span class="gmail_quote"></span><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;">
On Wed, 19 Jul 2006 15:01:22 +1000, Roman Kirillov <<a href="mailto:sigizmund@gmail.com">sigizmund@gmail.com</a>><br>wrote:<br><br>> On 7/19/06, Nigel Ridley <<a href="mailto:nigel@i-amfaithweb.net">nigel@i-amfaithweb.net
</a>> wrote:<br>>><br>>> I'm sending this again as it didn't seem to get thru the first time.<br>>><br>>> I have just put together an AMD K6 500 using two older small hard disks<br>>> - one
3.5 GB and the other 2.5 GB. They are about 6-7 years old.<br>>> after doing the initial install, then the upgrade (including KDE 3.5.3)<br>>> I rebooted and noticed in the boot messages a warning that dma is not
<br>>> enabled and that accessing the hard drive[s] might be slow (or something<br>>> like that). YES, they are slooooow.<br>><br>><br>> Hi Nigel,<br>><br>> Can you provide us with these HDDs models, etc? I think it's pretty safe
<br>> to<br>> enable DMA, 'coz for 2G+ models UDMA33 already worked, almost for each<br>> one.<br>> So you can try.<br>><br>> Roman<br><br>My first thought was to look up the specs for the HDD in question...
<br><br>other things to check is BIOS IDE settings.<br><br>you can also manually set the dma mode - though for the life of me I can't<br>recall how off the top of my head...<br>Oh. Now I know... atacontrol on FreeBSD... forget I said anything... :-)
<br><br>still, if it is possible in one versuation of unix it should theoretically<br>be possible in all ;-) right? *BG*<br><br>that reminds me - is there a inverse man page list somewhere?<br>perhapos this needs a new email... pardon me...
</blockquote><div><br>Mate, may be this will help you:<br><a href="http://www.ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=30949">http://www.ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=30949</a><br><br>BTW google is our friend :-)<br></div><br>
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