Re: HDIO_DRIVE_CMD and hdparm

From: Christoph Hellwig
Date: Thu May 10 2007 - 08:41:59 EST


On Thu, May 10, 2007 at 02:12:59PM +0200, Geert Uytterhoeven wrote:
> Hi,
>
> `hdparm -t' uses HDIO_DRIVE_CMD(null) to flush the disk's buffer.
> When using it on my own block device (the new PS3 disk storage driver), hdparm
> gives the following error message:
>
> | HDIO_DRIVE_CMD(null) (wait for flush complete) failed: Inappropriate ioctl for device
>
> When using it on an ATA or SCSI device, no such error message is printed.
>
> According to the hdparm sources, hdparm expects the HDIO_DRIVE_CMD(null) ioctl
> to either succeed, or to fail with errno EINVAL.
>
> Apparently handling of ioctls is different for the different device types:
> - ATA/SATA handle HDIO_DRIVE_CMD(null) (and a few other variants)
> => fine for hdparm
> - SCSI doesn't handle HDIO_DRIVE_CMD(null), and returns EINVAL
> => fine for hdparm
> - If a block device doesn't support the ioctl, blkdev_driver_ioctl() returns
> ENOTTY
> => hdparm error message
>
> Which one is correct?
> - blkdev_ioctl()/blkdev_driver_ioctl() return -ENOTTY
> - scsi_cmd_ioctl() returns -ENOTTY
> - scsi_ioctl() returns -EINVAL
> - cdrom_ioctl() returns -ENOSYS to mean not handled, continue
> - some block layer routines return -ENOIOCTLCMD to mean not handled, continue

ENOTTY is the traditional unix errno value for this ioctl is not implemented.
ENOIOCTLCMD is a new fashioned code meaning about the same. In the block
layer the latter should be used as generic code should handlde this.

>
> My questions:
> 1. Does any of these have to be fixed?
> 2. Shall I add a dummy HDIO_DRIVE_CMD(null) handler to my block device to
> return -EINVAL?
> 3. Shall I just ignore the hdparm error message?

I suspect you can just ignore this. Even better send a patch to the hdparm
maintainer to deal with ENOTTY aswell.
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