The big driver change in 2.4.19-rc1 introduced a regression for many HPT370[A]
chips -- DMA stopped to work completely, only causing endless timeouts...
The culprit has been identified (at last!): it turned to be the code resetting
the DMA state machine before each transfer. Stop doing it now as this counter-
measure has clearly caused more harm than good.
This should fix the kernel.org bug #7703.
Signed-off-by: Sergei Shtylyov <sshtylyov@ru.mvista.com>
Signed-off-by: Bartlomiej Zolnierkiewicz <bzolnier@gmail.com>
* the register setting lists into the table indexed by the clock selected
* - set the correct hwif->ultra_mask for each individual chip
* - add Ultra and MW DMA mode filtering for the HPT37[24] based SATA cards
+ * - stop resetting HPT370's state machine before each DMA transfer as that has
+ * caused more harm than good
* Sergei Shtylyov, <sshtylyov@ru.mvista.com> or <source@mvista.com>
*/
#define DRV_NAME "hpt366"
/* various tuning parameters */
-#define HPT_RESET_STATE_ENGINE
+#undef HPT_RESET_STATE_ENGINE
#undef HPT_DELAY_INTERRUPT
static const char *quirk_drives[] = {