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Full Discussion: SAN Disk w/o Cluster
Special Forums Hardware Filesystems, Disks and Memory SAN Disk w/o Cluster Post 302333377 by cjcox on Monday 13th of July 2009 12:26:20 AM
Old 07-13-2009
You CAN have both be able to have ACCESS to the drive. However, it is NOT true that one can be read+write and the other read only. The only way this is safe is if one system is NOT using (and if possible, seeing) the drive at the same time. Why? Because manipulations to the drive can happen from the system that has read+write including modifications to meta data areas... and if that information is not communicated somehow to the other host, then even if it's supposedly "read only", you'll be messing up the internal representation on that host and possible cause issues, perhaps major issues.
 

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FD(4)							     Kernel Interfaces Manual							     FD(4)

NAME
fd - floppy disk DESCRIPTION
The fd* devices refer to the Floppy disk driver using the NEC PD765 floppy disk controller. These diskettes are arrays of 512 byte sec- tors, although Minix always works with two sectors at a time due to its 1024 byte block size. You can read or write any number of bytes however, Minix takes care of cutting and pasting incomplete blocks together. The driver is normally configured for two floppy disk devices fd0 and fd1. It can handle two more, but it is unlikely that the average PC can. On the first access to an fd device (by open(2) or mount(2)), the driver will execute a series of read tests to determine the floppy type. This works ok for all floppy types except the true 360k type, because it is indistinguishable from the 720k type. This only means that the size of the floppy is not estimated right. Bits 2-6 of the minor device number may be set to the floppy disk type to make it known to the driver what type of diskette it is reading or writing. The non-auto devices should be used for formatting, or when one wants to be absolutely sure that the device is accessed right. These devices exist for drive 0: type device minor media 0 fd0 0 autodetect 1 pc0 4 360k, 5.25" 2 at0 8 1.2M, 5.25" 3 qd0 12 360k in a 720k, 5.25" drive 4 ps0 16 720k, 3.5" 5 pat0 20 360k in a 1.2M, 5.25" drive 6 qh0 24 720k in a 1.2M, 5.25" drive 7 PS0 28 1.44M, 3.5" Type 4 may also be used for the rarely seen 720k, 5.25" floppies (type 2 made them obsolete fast.) Note that these "types" only describe the floppies from a software point of view, type 1 and 4 drives use the same parameters. If the format bit (bit 7) is set, then the driver interprets write commands as track formatting requests. This is used by the format(1) command. If the type bits are set to 28, 29, 30, or 31, then the driver uses a partition table found in sector 0 to partition the floppy. The par- titions of fd0 may be accessed as fd0a through fd0d. See hd(4) for a description of the partition table, and associated ioctl commands. FILES
/dev/fd[0-3], /dev/pc[0-3], /dev/at[0-3], /dev/qd[0-3], /dev/ps[0-3], /dev/pat[0-3], /dev/qh[0-3], /dev/PS[0-3], /dev/fd[0-3][a-d] SEE ALSO
format(1), hd(4), part(8). BUGS
The driver does not know the size of a 360k diskette in a 360k 5.25" drive, because it uses the 720k parameters for it. So it will happily try to read past the end making all kinds of interesting noises. It's a good thing these drives are practically obsolete. The partition table is only read when the drive motor is off and only for an auto or partition device. The driver assumes that a floppy in a drive with a running motor can't have been replaced all of a sudden. AUTHOR
Kees J. Bot (kjb@cs.vu.nl) FD(4)
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