On Thu, 2004-10-28 at 12:22 -0400, William Ballard wrote: > On Wed, Oct 27, 2004 at 11:23:07AM -0500, Ron Johnson wrote: > > > Anything promising using the PCI hotplug facility? > > > > Just out of curiosity, but why should *PCI* hotplug have anything > > to do with USB? > > # lspci | grep USB > 0000:00:1d.0 USB Controller: Intel Corp. 82801EB/ER (ICH5/ICH5R) USB > UHCI #1 (rev 02) > 0000:00:1d.1 USB Controller: Intel Corp. 82801EB/ER (ICH5/ICH5R) USB > UHCI #2 (rev 02) > 0000:00:1d.2 USB Controller: Intel Corp. 82801EB/ER (ICH5/ICH5R) USB > UHCI #3 (rev 02) > 0000:00:1d.3 USB Controller: Intel Corp. 82801EB/ER (ICH5/ICH5R) USB > UHCI #4 (rev 02) > 0000:00:1d.7 USB Controller: Intel Corp. 82801EB/ER (ICH5/ICH5R) USB2 > EHCI Controller (rev 02) > > USB and SCSI play very well together. Different components can be used > for purposes very differently from that for which they were originally > intended. > > Could you cut me a break? All your answers have been very > argumentative.
I prefer to think of my responses as "probing". The question about PCI hotplug was very honest, since PCI hotplug refers to pulling PCI cards out of live systems, and that, to my understanding, has nothing to do with USB (which is hotplug by definition). Note, though, that the hotplug package "includes support for PCI, Cardbus (PCMCIA), USB and Firewire devices and can automatically configure network interfaces." -- ----------------------------------------------------------------- Ron Johnson, Jr. Jefferson, LA USA PGP Key ID 8834C06B python -c 'print len(str(2**300000))' 90309
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