On Mon, Dec 25, 2006 at 11:06:26PM -0300, Alejandro wrote: > People, I have a Debian PC with a hard disk with the following features: > IDE interface > ide: 1 > description: IDE interface > product: 82801FB/FW (ICH6/ICH6W) SATA controller
This is a Serial ATA interface, not IDE. > Disk: > description: SCSI disk > product: SAMSUNG SP0812C > vendor: ATA > physical id: 0.0.0 > bus info: [EMAIL PROTECTED]:0.0 > logical name: /dev/sda This is a Serial ATA interface, not SCSI. The kernel drivers used are in the SCSI stack. The ata_piix driver is making your SATA controller look like a SCSI card to the higher level SCSI disk driver. The kernel is moving to all IDE/SATA devices behaving this way. > Is it possible to have a SCSI disk connected to a IDE interface ??? Not without some horribly hacked black box in between. > And if I want to put a seconadry similar disk, do I have to treat it as > IDE or SCSI in order to see it on my system ? Physically or virtually? Physically, you need SATA (IDE will likely work too; most x86 motherboards still have an IDE port). On the software side, the kernel will automatically see the new SATA drive with the existing drivers. -- Rob Q: What's tiny and yellow and very, very, dangerous? A: A canary with the super-user password.
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