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Top Forums Programming write() issue during a low level hdd access Post 302397219 by sponnusa on Sunday 21st of February 2010 01:21:43 PM
Old 02-21-2010
thanks for the reply.

I know O_DIRECT might work, and I tried with O_DIRECT, but it fails for some reason. I have tried with aligned the write buffer after getting the block size from the HDD. But it fails miserably and I don't know how to debug it. I stopped digging into it because it might branch my work. Smilie

gdb is not of much help here. I've tried jumping directly to a known bad sector location in the code for testing., but I could not get it to fail the write call. (btw, dmesg starts spewing errors after a certain write attempts on the bad sector). So, the libata is catching those errors and kernel is aware of it. But the program does not receive the error.

I have tried mapping raw devices for the hdds and executed the same operations without success.

Quote:
Has any body has any example code of writing to a hdd using O_DIRECT? Like atleast for a single sector or a file?
I wrote a small program which is working currently. Doing the testing.


I have been trying to get this to work for a long time with multiple failed options! Having sleepless nights too. Smilie

Last edited by sponnusa; 02-21-2010 at 03:06 PM.. Reason: updated the code for O_DIRECT
 

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pthread_rwlock_trywrlock(3)				     Library Functions Manual				       pthread_rwlock_trywrlock(3)

NAME
pthread_rwlock_trywrlock - Attempts to acquire a read-write lock for write access without waiting. LIBRARY
DECthreads POSIX 1003.1c Library (libpthread.so) SYNOPSIS
#include <pthread.h> int pthread_rwlock_trywrlock( pthread_rwlock_t *rwlock); PARAMETERS
Address of the read-write lock object to acquire for write access. DESCRIPTION
This routine attempts to acquire the read-write lock referenced by rwlock for write access. If any thread already holds that lock for write access or read access, this routine fails and returns [EBUSY] and the calling thread does not wait for the lock to become available. Results are undefined if the calling thread holds the read-write lock (whether for read or write access) at the time this routine is called. If the read-write lock object referenced by rwlock is not initialized, the results of calling this routine are undefined. Realtime applications can encounter priority inversion when using read-write locks. The problem occurs when a high-priority thread acquires a read-write lock that is about to be unlocked (that is, posted) by a low-priority thread, but the low-priority thread is preempted by a medium-priority thread. This scenario leads to priority inversion in that a high-priority thread is blocked by lower-priority threads for an unlimited period of time. During system design, realtime programmers must take into account the possibility of priority inversion and can deal with it in a number of ways, such as by having critical sections that are guarded by read-write locks execute at a high priority, so that a thread cannot be preempted while executing in its critical section. RETURN VALUES
If an error condition occurs, this routine returns an integer value indicating the type of error. Possible return values are as follows: Successful completion. The read-write lock could not be acquired for write access because it was already locked for write access or for read access. The value specified by rwlock does not refer to an initialized read-write lock object. The current thread already owns the read-write lock for write or read access. ERRORS
None RELATED INFORMATION
Functions: pthread_rwlock_init(3), pthread_rwlockattr_init(3), pthread_rwlock_rdlock(3), pthread_rwlock_wrlock(3), pthread_rwlock_unlock(3) Manuals: Guide to DECthreads and Programmer's Guide delim off pthread_rwlock_trywrlock(3)
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