Michael Schmitz dixit: > IDE disks on Falcon are quirky in that the IDE bus interface is little endian > by definition, but has been implemented in big endian bus byte order on > Falcon. > Data written to disk will end up byte swapped. Reading these disks on any > other > architecture requires that data be swapped back.
Is this true? I had the swapped data on a CF card first (since ARAnyM likes to swap them by default) but had to unswap them. I don’t remember if that was a Falcon or TT, though… Ragnar would know I think. > In the old days, the Linux IDE driver used to have a 'swap' option for just Wasn’t that just for ext2fs internal data structures (read: fs metadata) with data being written properly? This got, indeed, removed, but you do not need that any more either. >> All my efforts to boot linux ended in kernel panic: no init found. > > Looks as though there's nothing installed on the partition you are trying to Or forgot the ‘p’ flag to tar, or used the wrong root= option (there’s hda, nfhd8p, sda at least), or did not use an initrd with kernel >= 3.8 or something. There’s a ready-made ext2fs image in the same directory where I put the tarball. bye, //mirabilos -- “Having a smoking section in a restaurant is like having a peeing section in a swimming pool.” -- Edward Burr -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-68k-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/pine.bsm.4.64l.1312140119240.3...@herc.mirbsd.org