Re: [PATCH] block: delete super ancient PC-XT driver for 1980's hardware

From: Robert Hancock
Date: Sun Jan 06 2013 - 23:30:03 EST


On 01/04/2013 07:27 PM, Paul Gortmaker wrote:
This driver was for the 8 bit ISA cards that were installed in
the PC-XT machines of 1980 vintage. They supported the dual
ribbon cable MFM drives of 10-20MB capacity, and ran at a 3:1
interleave, giving performance on the order of 128kB/s.

By the introduction of the PC-AT (286) these controllers were
already scrapped in favour of 16 bit controllers with some onboard
RAM that could support a 1:1 interleave.

The git history doesn't show any evidence of runtime fixes that
would reflect active usage; instead just the usual tree-wide API
type changes/cleanups. Going back to in-source changelogs, the
last "runtime" fix that is evident is something I did over a
dozen years ago[1] -- and even back then, the hardware was long
since unavailable, so that ancient fix was also not runtime tested.

The time is long overdue for this to get flushed, so lets get
rid of it before anyone wastes more time doing builds and sparse
checks etc. on long since dead code.

Although this hardware is obviously long obsolete, it's conceivable that someone could still drag out an old MFM/RLL controller and run it on a non-completely-ancient PC with ISA slots in order to recover data from an old drive or something. Given that the code doesn't have wide-ranging effects beyond a couple of files, I'd lean towards keeping it unless there's some reason to believe it's hopelessly broken.
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/