DMA

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If you experience jumpy DVD playback, slow CD ripping, or a general slow down when accessing optical drive(s) it may be because DMA is not enabled. DMA, or Direct Memory Access, lets hard drives and CD/DVD drives access the system memory.

'''Warning: Enabling DMA can be dangerous in some cases. Usually issues are directly related to faulty hardware, poorly written drivers, or using settings that are unsupported by your system. USING HDPARM INCORRECTLY CAN CAUSE MAJOR DATA CORRUPTION AND/OR LOSS. Most systems newer than 4 years support DMA.'''

== Enabling DMA ==

To enable DMA, you need to use the {{{hdparm}}} command and the configuration file {{{hdparm.conf}}}.

These instructions assume that you are trying to enable DMA on `hdc`, usually the CD-rom drive.

 1. See the what the settings are on `/dev/hdc`
   {{{
   sudo hdparm /dev/hdc
   }}}
 1. If you get a line like {{{ using_dma = 1 (on)}}}, DMA is already enabled. Skip to step 4 to see if it has been enabled at boot time.
 1. Enable DMA on `/dev/hdc`
   {{{
   sudo hdparm -d1 /dev/hdc
   }}}
 1. You have now enabled DMA for the drive. However, in order for the settings to be automatically applied at boot there you need to edit the {{{/etc/hdparm.conf}}} script. To do this use this command: {{{sudo gedit /etc/hdparm.conf}}}

Add the following to the end of your hdparm.conf
   {{{
   /dev/hdc {
   dma = on
   }
   }}}

(another way avoiding edit of hdparm.conf file is to simply run {{{sudo hdparm -d1 -k1 /dev/hdc}}} to keep saved the dma flag).

== Troubleshooting ==

If your drives are configured in [Cable Select] mode and while running `hdparm` commands you receive errors related to timeouts or drive not ready, try changing the drive to be a master or slave device depending on your system configuration. This does require opening the case and as far as I know most drives are set to Cable Select from the manufacturer.

Sometimes step 3 above can fail with a "operation not permitted" message. You can fix this by editing the file /etc/modules:
For an intel cpu put the lines

{{{piix}}}

{{{ide-core}}}

above the line

{{{ide-cd}}}


For an amd cpu put the line

{{{amd74xx}}}

above

{{{ide-cd}}}


For a VIA Chipset put

{{{via82cxxx}}}

above

{{{ide-cd}}}

Then reboot and try steps 3-4 again....



== Further reading ==

The hdparm has a further options that may be more risky. They can be seen using the {{{man hdparm}}} command in the terminal.

For a detailed description of DMA visit the IEEE
http://standards.ieee.org/reading/ieee/std_public/description/busarch/1212.1-1993_desc.html

IDE, EIDE and UDMA http://www.spcug.org/reviews/bl0108.htm

CategoryDocumentation
#REFRESH 0 http://help.ubuntu.com/community/DMA

DMA (last edited 2008-08-06 16:20:37 by localhost)