NetBSD-Users archive
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index][Old Index]
Re: Why are drives called "wd0", "wd1", etc?
> From: Daniel Carrera <dcarrera%gmail.com@localhost>
Daniel Carrera wrote:
> Hello,
> In Linux, disks have device names like "hda" and "hdb" which I take to
> mean "hard drive a" and "hard drive b". Why does NetBSD use "wd0", "wd1"
> etc?
Probably Linux didn't look for compatibility with BSD names when
Linux started. People reinvent wheels. (eg: USA originated Cell
Phone re-named as Mobile in Britain & Handy in Germany)
One might also ask why does FreeBSD use /dev/da0 & /dev/ad0 & not
wd or hd: Answer: Some OS's & developers tend to adopt changed dev
name types when a major new alternate dev driver is introduced &
other OS developers for consistency keep the same name even if major
functional changes between versions.
> What does the "w" stand for?
Winchester Disc I've always presumed.
Why Linux calls whatever .. & BSD .. calls whatever else should
best be answered by manuals, else if asked & answered only on mail
list, it will get asked again. Best send a send-pr for any dev
name that interests you, asking them to add a small line to approriate
man 4 wd + whatever else, with a tiny line: "Historical derivation:
Cheers,
Julian
--
Julian Stacey, BSD Unix Linux C Sys Eng Consultants Munich http://berklix.com
Reply below, not above; Indent with "> "; Cumulative like a play script.
Format: Plain text. Not HTML, multipart/alternative, base64, quoted-printable.
Home |
Main Index |
Thread Index |
Old Index