ATA(4) | Device Drivers Manual | ATA(4) |
NAME¶
ata, ar, acd, ad, afd, ast — generic ATA/ATAPI disk controller driverSYNOPSIS¶
For ISA based ATA/ATAPI support:device isa
device ata In /boot/device.hints:
hint.ata.0.at="isa"
hint.ata.0.port="0x1f0"
hint.ata.0.irq="14"
hint.ata.1.at="isa"
hint.ata.1.port="0x170"
hint.ata.1.irq="15" For PC98 based ATA/ATAPI support:
device isa
device ata In /boot/device.hints:
hint.atacbus.0.at="isa"
hint.atacbus.0.port="0x640"
hint.atacbus.0.irq="9" For PCI based ATA/ATAPI support:
device pci
device ata To support ATA compliant disk drives:
device atadisk To support ATA software RAID's:
device ataraid To support ATAPI CDROM, DVD and CD/DVD burner drives:
device atapicd To support ATAPI floppy drives:
device atapifd To support ATAPI tape drives:
device atapist To turn ata(4) subsystem controller drivers into cam(4) interface modules (disables all native ata(4) APIs and periperal drivers):
options ATA_CAM The following tunables are settable from the loader:
- hw.ata.ata_dma
- set to 1 for DMA access, 0 for PIO (default is DMA).
- hw.ata.ata_dma_check_80pin
- set to 0 to disable the 80pin cable check (default is 1, check the cable)
- hw.ata.atapi_dma
- set to 1 for DMA access, 0 for PIO (default is DMA).
- hw.ata.wc
- set to 1 to enable Write Caching, 0 to disable (default is enabled). WARNING: can cause data loss on power failures and crashes.
- hint.atapci.X.msi
- set to 1 to allow Message Signalled Interrupts (MSI) to be used by specified PCI ATA controller, if supported.
- hint.ata.X.devX.mode
- limits initial ATA mode for specified device on specified channel.
- hint.ata.X.mode
- limits initial ATA mode for every device on specified channel.
- hint.ata.X.pm_level
- controls SATA interface Power Management for specified
channel, allowing to save some power by the cost of additional command
latency. Possible values:
- 0
- interface Power Management is disabled, default value.
- 1
- device is allowed to initiate PM state change, host is passive.
- 2
- host initiates PARTIAL PM state transition every time port becomes idle.
- 3
- host initiates SLUMBER PM state transition every time port becomes idle.
DESCRIPTION¶
The ata driver provides access to ATA (IDE) and SerialATA disk drives, ATAPI CDROM/DVD drives, ZIP/LS120 ATAPI drives and ATAPI tape drives connected to controllers according to the ATA/ATAPI standards. The currently supported ATA/SATA controller chips are:- Acard:
- ATP850P, ATP860A, ATP860R, ATP865A, ATP865R.
- ALI:
- M5228, M5229, M5281, M5283, M5287, M5288, M5289.
- AMD:
- AMD756, AMD766, AMD768, AMD8111, CS5536.
- ATI:
- IXP200, IXP300, IXP400, IXP600, IXP700, IXP800.
- CMD:
- CMD646, CMD646U2, CMD648, CMD649.
- Cypress:
- Cypress 82C693.
- Cyrix:
- Cyrix 5530.
- HighPoint:
- HPT302, HPT366, HPT368, HPT370, HPT371, HPT372, HPT372N, HPT374.
- Intel:
- 6300ESB, 31244, PIIX, PIIX3, PIIX4, ESB2, ICH, ICH0, ICH2, ICH3, ICH4, ICH5, ICH6, ICH7, ICH8, ICH9, ICH10, SCH, PCH.
- ITE:
- IT8211F, IT8212F, IT8213F.
- JMicron:
- JMB360, JMB361, JMB363, JMB365, JMB366, JMB368.
- Marvell
- 88SX5040, 88SX5041, 88SX5080, 88SX5081, 88SX6041, 88SX6042, 88SX6081, 88SX6101, 88SX6102, 88SX6111, 88SX6121, 88SX6141, 88SX6145, 88SX7042.
- National:
- SC1100.
- NetCell:
- NC3000, NC5000.
- nVidia:
- nForce, nForce2, nForce2 MCP, nForce3, nForce3 MCP, nForce3 Pro, nForce4, MCP51, MCP55, MCP61, MCP65, MCP67, MCP73, MCP77, MCP79, MCP89.
- Promise:
- PDC20246, PDC20262, PDC20263, PDC20265, PDC20267, PDC20268, PDC20269, PDC20270, PDC20271, PDC20275, PDC20276, PDC20277, PDC20318, PDC20319, PDC20371, PDC20375, PDC20376, PDC20377, PDC20378, PDC20379, PDC20571, PDC20575, PDC20579, PDC20580, PDC20617, PDC20618, PDC20619, PDC20620, PDC20621, PDC20622, PDC40518, PDC40519, PDC40718, PDC40719.
- ServerWorks:
- HT1000, ROSB4, CSB5, CSB6, K2, Frodo4, Frodo8.
- Silicon Image:
- SiI0680, SiI3112, SiI3114, SiI3124, SiI3132, SiI3512.
- SiS:
- SIS180, SIS181, SIS182, SIS5513, SIS530, SIS540, SIS550, SIS620, SIS630, SIS630S, SIS633, SIS635, SIS730, SIS733, SIS735, SIS745, SIS961, SIS962, SIS963, SIS964, SIS965.
- VIA:
- VT6410, VT6420, VT6421, VT82C586, VT82C586B, VT82C596, VT82C596B, VT82C686, VT82C686A, VT82C686B, VT8231, VT8233, VT8233A, VT8233C, VT8235, VT8237, VT8237A, VT8237S, VT8251, CX700, VX800, VX855, VX900.
FILES¶
- /dev/ad*
- ATA disk device nodes
- /dev/ar*
- ATA RAID device nodes
- /dev/acd*
- ATAPI CD-ROM device nodes
- /dev/afd*
- ATAPI floppy drive device nodes
- /dev/ast*
- ATAPI tape drive device nodes
- /sys/i386/conf/GENERIC
- sample generic kernel config file for ata based systems
NOTES¶
Please remember that in order to use UDMA4/ATA66 and above modes you must use 80 conductor cables. Please assure that ribbon cables are no longer than 45cm. In case of rounded ATA cables, the length depends on the quality of the cables. SATA cables can be up to 1m long according to the specification. Static device numbering (enabled with theATA_STATIC_ID
kernel option) reserves a number for each possibly connected disk, even when
not present. This is useful in hotswap scenarios where disks should always
show up as the same numbered device, and not depend on attach order.
Native Command Queuing (NCQ) on SATA drives is not yet supported.
SEE ALSO¶
ahci(4), cam(4), ataraid(4), atacontrol(8), burncd(8), siis(4)HISTORY¶
The ata driver first appeared in FreeBSD 4.0.AUTHORS¶
Søren Schmidt ⟨sos@FreeBSD.org⟩.July 3, 2010 | Debian |