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1\documentclass{article}
2\def\version{$Id: cdrom-standard.tex,v 1.9 1997/12/28 15:42:49 david Exp $}
3\newcommand{\newsection}[1]{\newpage\section{#1}}
4
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8\textwidth=15.99cm \textheight=24.62cm % normal A4, 1'' margin
9
10\def\linux{{\sc Linux}}
11\def\cdrom{{\sc cd-rom}}
12\def\UCD{{\sc Uniform cd-rom Driver}}
13\def\cdromc{{\tt {cdrom.c}}}
14\def\cdromh{{\tt {cdrom.h}}}
15\def\fo{\sl} % foreign words
16\def\ie{{\fo i.e.}}
17\def\eg{{\fo e.g.}}
18
19\everymath{\it} \everydisplay{\it}
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21\catcode`\<=\active \def<#1>{{\langle\hbox{\rm#1}\rangle}}
22
23\begin{document}
24\title{A \linux\ \cdrom\ standard}
25\author{David van Leeuwen\\{\normalsize\tt david@ElseWare.cistron.nl}
26\\{\footnotesize updated by Erik Andersen {\tt(andersee@debian.org)}}
27\\{\footnotesize updated by Jens Axboe {\tt(axboe@image.dk)}}}
28\date{12 March 1999}
29
30\maketitle
31
32\newsection{Introduction}
33
34\linux\ is probably the Unix-like operating system that supports
35the widest variety of hardware devices. The reasons for this are
36presumably
37\begin{itemize}
38\item
39 The large list of hardware devices available for the many platforms
40 that \linux\ now supports (\ie, i386-PCs, Sparc Suns, etc.)
41\item
42 The open design of the operating system, such that anybody can write a
43 driver for \linux.
44\item
45 There is plenty of source code around as examples of how to write a driver.
46\end{itemize}
47The openness of \linux, and the many different types of available
48hardware has allowed \linux\ to support many different hardware devices.
49Unfortunately, the very openness that has allowed \linux\ to support
50all these different devices has also allowed the behavior of each
51device driver to differ significantly from one device to another.
52This divergence of behavior has been very significant for \cdrom\
53devices; the way a particular drive reacts to a `standard' $ioctl()$
54call varies greatly from one device driver to another. To avoid making
55their drivers totally inconsistent, the writers of \linux\ \cdrom\
56drivers generally created new device drivers by understanding, copying,
57and then changing an existing one. Unfortunately, this practice did not
58maintain uniform behavior across all the \linux\ \cdrom\ drivers.
59
60This document describes an effort to establish Uniform behavior across
61all the different \cdrom\ device drivers for \linux. This document also
62defines the various $ioctl$s, and how the low-level \cdrom\ device
63drivers should implement them. Currently (as of the \linux\ 2.1.$x$
64development kernels) several low-level \cdrom\ device drivers, including
65both IDE/ATAPI and SCSI, now use this Uniform interface.
66
67When the \cdrom\ was developed, the interface between the \cdrom\ drive
68and the computer was not specified in the standards. As a result, many
69different \cdrom\ interfaces were developed. Some of them had their
70own proprietary design (Sony, Mitsumi, Panasonic, Philips), other
71manufacturers adopted an existing electrical interface and changed
72the functionality (CreativeLabs/SoundBlaster, Teac, Funai) or simply
73adapted their drives to one or more of the already existing electrical
74interfaces (Aztech, Sanyo, Funai, Vertos, Longshine, Optics Storage and
75most of the `NoName' manufacturers). In cases where a new drive really
76brought its own interface or used its own command set and flow control
77scheme, either a separate driver had to be written, or an existing
78driver had to be enhanced. History has delivered us \cdrom\ support for
79many of these different interfaces. Nowadays, almost all new \cdrom\
80drives are either IDE/ATAPI or SCSI, and it is very unlikely that any
81manufacturer will create a new interface. Even finding drives for the
82old proprietary interfaces is getting difficult.
83
84When (in the 1.3.70's) I looked at the existing software interface,
85which was expressed through \cdromh, it appeared to be a rather wild
86set of commands and data formats.\footnote{I cannot recollect what
87kernel version I looked at, then, presumably 1.2.13 and 1.3.34---the
88latest kernel that I was indirectly involved in.} It seemed that many
89features of the software interface had been added to accommodate the
90capabilities of a particular drive, in an {\fo ad hoc\/} manner. More
91importantly, it appeared that the behavior of the `standard' commands
92was different for most of the different drivers: \eg, some drivers
93close the tray if an $open()$ call occurs when the tray is open, while
94others do not. Some drivers lock the door upon opening the device, to
95prevent an incoherent file system, but others don't, to allow software
96ejection. Undoubtedly, the capabilities of the different drives vary,
97but even when two drives have the same capability their drivers'
98behavior was usually different.
99
100I decided to start a discussion on how to make all the \linux\ \cdrom\
101drivers behave more uniformly. I began by contacting the developers of
102the many \cdrom\ drivers found in the \linux\ kernel. Their reactions
103encouraged me to write the \UCD\ which this document is intended to
104describe. The implementation of the \UCD\ is in the file \cdromc. This
105driver is intended to be an additional software layer that sits on top
106of the low-level device drivers for each \cdrom\ drive. By adding this
107additional layer, it is possible to have all the different \cdrom\
108devices behave {\em exactly\/} the same (insofar as the underlying
109hardware will allow).
110
111The goal of the \UCD\ is {\em not\/} to alienate driver developers who
112have not yet taken steps to support this effort. The goal of \UCD\ is
113simply to give people writing application programs for \cdrom\ drives
114{\em one\/} \linux\ \cdrom\ interface with consistent behavior for all
115\cdrom\ devices. In addition, this also provides a consistent interface
116between the low-level device driver code and the \linux\ kernel. Care
117is taken that 100\,\% compatibility exists with the data structures and
118programmer's interface defined in \cdromh. This guide was written to
119help \cdrom\ driver developers adapt their code to use the \UCD\ code
120defined in \cdromc.
121
122Personally, I think that the most important hardware interfaces are
123the IDE/ATAPI drives and, of course, the SCSI drives, but as prices
124of hardware drop continuously, it is also likely that people may have
125more than one \cdrom\ drive, possibly of mixed types. It is important
126that these drives behave in the same way. In December 1994, one of the
127cheapest \cdrom\ drives was a Philips cm206, a double-speed proprietary
128drive. In the months that I was busy writing a \linux\ driver for it,
129proprietary drives became obsolete and IDE/ATAPI drives became the
130standard. At the time of the last update to this document (November
1311997) it is becoming difficult to even {\em find} anything less than a
13216 speed \cdrom\ drive, and 24 speed drives are common.
133
134\newsection{Standardizing through another software level}
135\label{cdrom.c}
136
137At the time this document was conceived, all drivers directly
138implemented the \cdrom\ $ioctl()$ calls through their own routines. This
139led to the danger of different drivers forgetting to do important things
140like checking that the user was giving the driver valid data. More
141importantly, this led to the divergence of behavior, which has already
142been discussed.
143
144For this reason, the \UCD\ was created to enforce consistent \cdrom\
145drive behavior, and to provide a common set of services to the various
146low-level \cdrom\ device drivers. The \UCD\ now provides another
147software-level, that separates the $ioctl()$ and $open()$ implementation
148from the actual hardware implementation. Note that this effort has
149made few changes which will affect a user's application programs. The
150greatest change involved moving the contents of the various low-level
151\cdrom\ drivers' header files to the kernel's cdrom directory. This was
152done to help ensure that the user is only presented with only one cdrom
153interface, the interface defined in \cdromh.
154
155\cdrom\ drives are specific enough (\ie, different from other
156block-devices such as floppy or hard disc drives), to define a set
157of common {\em \cdrom\ device operations}, $<cdrom-device>_dops$.
158These operations are different from the classical block-device file
159operations, $<block-device>_fops$.
160
161The routines for the \UCD\ interface level are implemented in the file
162\cdromc. In this file, the \UCD\ interfaces with the kernel as a block
163device by registering the following general $struct\ file_operations$:
164$$
165\halign{$#$\ \hfil&$#$\ \hfil&$/*$ \rm# $*/$\hfil\cr
166struct& file_operations\ cdrom_fops = \{\hidewidth\cr
167 &NULL, & lseek \cr
168 &block_read, & read---general block-dev read \cr
169 &block_write, & write---general block-dev write \cr
170 &NULL, & readdir \cr
171 &NULL, & select \cr
172 &cdrom_ioctl, & ioctl \cr
173 &NULL, & mmap \cr
174 &cdrom_open, & open \cr
175 &cdrom_release, & release \cr
176 &NULL, & fsync \cr
177 &NULL, & fasync \cr
178 &cdrom_media_changed, & media change \cr
179 &NULL & revalidate \cr
180\};\cr
181}
182$$
183
184Every active \cdrom\ device shares this $struct$. The routines
185declared above are all implemented in \cdromc, since this file is the
186place where the behavior of all \cdrom-devices is defined and
187standardized. The actual interface to the various types of \cdrom\
188hardware is still performed by various low-level \cdrom-device
189drivers. These routines simply implement certain {\em capabilities\/}
190that are common to all \cdrom\ (and really, all removable-media
191devices).
192
193Registration of a low-level \cdrom\ device driver is now done through
194the general routines in \cdromc, not through the Virtual File System
195(VFS) any more. The interface implemented in \cdromc\ is carried out
196through two general structures that contain information about the
197capabilities of the driver, and the specific drives on which the
198driver operates. The structures are:
199\begin{description}
200\item[$cdrom_device_ops$]
201 This structure contains information about the low-level driver for a
202 \cdrom\ device. This structure is conceptually connected to the major
203 number of the device (although some drivers may have different
204 major numbers, as is the case for the IDE driver).
205\item[$cdrom_device_info$]
206 This structure contains information about a particular \cdrom\ drive,
207 such as its device name, speed, etc. This structure is conceptually
208 connected to the minor number of the device.
209\end{description}
210
211Registering a particular \cdrom\ drive with the \UCD\ is done by the
212low-level device driver though a call to:
213$$register_cdrom(struct\ cdrom_device_info * <device>_info)
214$$
215The device information structure, $<device>_info$, contains all the
216information needed for the kernel to interface with the low-level
217\cdrom\ device driver. One of the most important entries in this
218structure is a pointer to the $cdrom_device_ops$ structure of the
219low-level driver.
220
221The device operations structure, $cdrom_device_ops$, contains a list
222of pointers to the functions which are implemented in the low-level
223device driver. When \cdromc\ accesses a \cdrom\ device, it does it
224through the functions in this structure. It is impossible to know all
225the capabilities of future \cdrom\ drives, so it is expected that this
226list may need to be expanded from time to time as new technologies are
227developed. For example, CD-R and CD-R/W drives are beginning to become
228popular, and support will soon need to be added for them. For now, the
229current $struct$ is:
230$$
231\halign{$#$\ \hfil&$#$\ \hfil&\hbox to 10em{$#$\hss}&
232 $/*$ \rm# $*/$\hfil\cr
233struct& cdrom_device_ops\ \{ \hidewidth\cr
234 &int& (* open)(struct\ cdrom_device_info *, int)\cr
235 &void& (* release)(struct\ cdrom_device_info *);\cr
236 &int& (* drive_status)(struct\ cdrom_device_info *, int);\cr
237 &int& (* media_changed)(struct\ cdrom_device_info *, int);\cr
238 &int& (* tray_move)(struct\ cdrom_device_info *, int);\cr
239 &int& (* lock_door)(struct\ cdrom_device_info *, int);\cr
240 &int& (* select_speed)(struct\ cdrom_device_info *, int);\cr
241 &int& (* select_disc)(struct\ cdrom_device_info *, int);\cr
242 &int& (* get_last_session) (struct\ cdrom_device_info *,
243 struct\ cdrom_multisession *{});\cr
244 &int& (* get_mcn)(struct\ cdrom_device_info *, struct\ cdrom_mcn *{});\cr
245 &int& (* reset)(struct\ cdrom_device_info *);\cr
246 &int& (* audio_ioctl)(struct\ cdrom_device_info *, unsigned\ int,
247 void *{});\cr
248 &int& (* dev_ioctl)(struct\ cdrom_device_info *, unsigned\ int,
249 unsigned\ long);\cr
250\noalign{\medskip}
251 &const\ int& capability;& capability flags \cr
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252\};\cr
253}
254$$
255When a low-level device driver implements one of these capabilities,
256it should add a function pointer to this $struct$. When a particular
257function is not implemented, however, this $struct$ should contain a
258NULL instead. The $capability$ flags specify the capabilities of the
259\cdrom\ hardware and/or low-level \cdrom\ driver when a \cdrom\ drive
853fe1bf 260is registered with the \UCD.
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261
262Note that most functions have fewer parameters than their
263$blkdev_fops$ counterparts. This is because very little of the
264information in the structures $inode$ and $file$ is used. For most
265drivers, the main parameter is the $struct$ $cdrom_device_info$, from
266which the major and minor number can be extracted. (Most low-level
267\cdrom\ drivers don't even look at the major and minor number though,
268since many of them only support one device.) This will be available
269through $dev$ in $cdrom_device_info$ described below.
270
271The drive-specific, minor-like information that is registered with
272\cdromc, currently contains the following fields:
273$$
274\halign{$#$\ \hfil&$#$\ \hfil&\hbox to 10em{$#$\hss}&
275 $/*$ \rm# $*/$\hfil\cr
276struct& cdrom_device_info\ \{ \hidewidth\cr
277 & struct\ cdrom_device_ops *& ops;& device operations for this major\cr
278 & struct\ cdrom_device_info *& next;& next device_info for this major\cr
279 & void *& handle;& driver-dependent data\cr
280\noalign{\medskip}
281 & kdev_t& dev;& device number (incorporates minor)\cr
282 & int& mask;& mask of capability: disables them \cr
283 & int& speed;& maximum speed for reading data \cr
284 & int& capacity;& number of discs in a jukebox \cr
285\noalign{\medskip}
286 &int& options : 30;& options flags \cr
287 &unsigned& mc_flags : 2;& media-change buffer flags \cr
288 & int& use_count;& number of times device is opened\cr
289 & char& name[20];& name of the device type\cr
290\}\cr
291}$$
292Using this $struct$, a linked list of the registered minor devices is
293built, using the $next$ field. The device number, the device operations
294struct and specifications of properties of the drive are stored in this
295structure.
296
297The $mask$ flags can be used to mask out some of the capabilities listed
298in $ops\to capability$, if a specific drive doesn't support a feature
299of the driver. The value $speed$ specifies the maximum head-rate of the
300drive, measured in units of normal audio speed (176\,kB/sec raw data or
301150\,kB/sec file system data). The value $n_discs$ should reflect the
302number of discs the drive can hold simultaneously, if it is designed
303as a juke-box, or otherwise~1. The parameters are declared $const$
304because they describe properties of the drive, which don't change after
305registration.
306
307A few registers contain variables local to the \cdrom\ drive. The
308flags $options$ are used to specify how the general \cdrom\ routines
309should behave. These various flags registers should provide enough
310flexibility to adapt to the different users' wishes (and {\em not\/} the
311`arbitrary' wishes of the author of the low-level device driver, as is
312the case in the old scheme). The register $mc_flags$ is used to buffer
313the information from $media_changed()$ to two separate queues. Other
314data that is specific to a minor drive, can be accessed through $handle$,
315which can point to a data structure specific to the low-level driver.
316The fields $use_count$, $next$, $options$ and $mc_flags$ need not be
317initialized.
318
319The intermediate software layer that \cdromc\ forms will perform some
320additional bookkeeping. The use count of the device (the number of
321processes that have the device opened) is registered in $use_count$. The
322function $cdrom_ioctl()$ will verify the appropriate user-memory regions
323for read and write, and in case a location on the CD is transferred,
324it will `sanitize' the format by making requests to the low-level
325drivers in a standard format, and translating all formats between the
326user-software and low level drivers. This relieves much of the drivers'
327memory checking and format checking and translation. Also, the necessary
328structures will be declared on the program stack.
329
330The implementation of the functions should be as defined in the
331following sections. Two functions {\em must\/} be implemented, namely
332$open()$ and $release()$. Other functions may be omitted, their
333corresponding capability flags will be cleared upon registration.
334Generally, a function returns zero on success and negative on error. A
335function call should return only after the command has completed, but of
336course waiting for the device should not use processor time.
337
338\subsection{$Int\ open(struct\ cdrom_device_info * cdi, int\ purpose)$}
339
340$Open()$ should try to open the device for a specific $purpose$, which
341can be either:
342\begin{itemize}
343\item[0] Open for reading data, as done by {\tt {mount()}} (2), or the
344user commands {\tt {dd}} or {\tt {cat}}.
345\item[1] Open for $ioctl$ commands, as done by audio-CD playing
346programs.
347\end{itemize}
348Notice that any strategic code (closing tray upon $open()$, etc.)\ is
349done by the calling routine in \cdromc, so the low-level routine
350should only be concerned with proper initialization, such as spinning
351up the disc, etc. % and device-use count
352
353
354\subsection{$Void\ release(struct\ cdrom_device_info * cdi)$}
355
356
357Device-specific actions should be taken such as spinning down the device.
358However, strategic actions such as ejection of the tray, or unlocking
359the door, should be left over to the general routine $cdrom_release()$.
360This is the only function returning type $void$.
361
362\subsection{$Int\ drive_status(struct\ cdrom_device_info * cdi, int\ slot_nr)$}
363\label{drive status}
364
365The function $drive_status$, if implemented, should provide
366information on the status of the drive (not the status of the disc,
367which may or may not be in the drive). If the drive is not a changer,
368$slot_nr$ should be ignored. In \cdromh\ the possibilities are listed:
369$$
370\halign{$#$\ \hfil&$/*$ \rm# $*/$\hfil\cr
371CDS_NO_INFO& no information available\cr
372CDS_NO_DISC& no disc is inserted, tray is closed\cr
373CDS_TRAY_OPEN& tray is opened\cr
374CDS_DRIVE_NOT_READY& something is wrong, tray is moving?\cr
375CDS_DISC_OK& a disc is loaded and everything is fine\cr
376}
377$$
378
379\subsection{$Int\ media_changed(struct\ cdrom_device_info * cdi, int\ disc_nr)$}
380
381This function is very similar to the original function in $struct\
382file_operations$. It returns 1 if the medium of the device $cdi\to
383dev$ has changed since the last call, and 0 otherwise. The parameter
384$disc_nr$ identifies a specific slot in a juke-box, it should be
385ignored for single-disc drives. Note that by `re-routing' this
386function through $cdrom_media_changed()$, we can implement separate
387queues for the VFS and a new $ioctl()$ function that can report device
388changes to software (\eg, an auto-mounting daemon).
389
390\subsection{$Int\ tray_move(struct\ cdrom_device_info * cdi, int\ position)$}
391
392This function, if implemented, should control the tray movement. (No
393other function should control this.) The parameter $position$ controls
394the desired direction of movement:
395\begin{itemize}
396\item[0] Close tray
397\item[1] Open tray
398\end{itemize}
399This function returns 0 upon success, and a non-zero value upon
400error. Note that if the tray is already in the desired position, no
401action need be taken, and the return value should be 0.
402
403\subsection{$Int\ lock_door(struct\ cdrom_device_info * cdi, int\ lock)$}
404
405This function (and no other code) controls locking of the door, if the
406drive allows this. The value of $lock$ controls the desired locking
407state:
408\begin{itemize}
409\item[0] Unlock door, manual opening is allowed
410\item[1] Lock door, tray cannot be ejected manually
411\end{itemize}
412This function returns 0 upon success, and a non-zero value upon
413error. Note that if the door is already in the requested state, no
414action need be taken, and the return value should be 0.
415
416\subsection{$Int\ select_speed(struct\ cdrom_device_info * cdi, int\ speed)$}
417
418Some \cdrom\ drives are capable of changing their head-speed. There
419are several reasons for changing the speed of a \cdrom\ drive. Badly
420pressed \cdrom s may benefit from less-than-maximum head rate. Modern
421\cdrom\ drives can obtain very high head rates (up to $24\times$ is
422common). It has been reported that these drives can make reading
423errors at these high speeds, reducing the speed can prevent data loss
424in these circumstances. Finally, some of these drives can
425make an annoyingly loud noise, which a lower speed may reduce. %Finally,
426%although the audio-low-pass filters probably aren't designed for it,
427%more than real-time playback of audio might be used for high-speed
428%copying of audio tracks.
429
430This function specifies the speed at which data is read or audio is
431played back. The value of $speed$ specifies the head-speed of the
432drive, measured in units of standard cdrom speed (176\,kB/sec raw data
433or 150\,kB/sec file system data). So to request that a \cdrom\ drive
434operate at 300\,kB/sec you would call the CDROM_SELECT_SPEED $ioctl$
435with $speed=2$. The special value `0' means `auto-selection', \ie,
436maximum data-rate or real-time audio rate. If the drive doesn't have
437this `auto-selection' capability, the decision should be made on the
438current disc loaded and the return value should be positive. A negative
439return value indicates an error.
440
441\subsection{$Int\ select_disc(struct\ cdrom_device_info * cdi, int\ number)$}
442
443If the drive can store multiple discs (a juke-box) this function
444will perform disc selection. It should return the number of the
445selected disc on success, a negative value on error. Currently, only
446the ide-cd driver supports this functionality.
447
448\subsection{$Int\ get_last_session(struct\ cdrom_device_info * cdi, struct\
449 cdrom_multisession * ms_info)$}
450
451This function should implement the old corresponding $ioctl()$. For
452device $cdi\to dev$, the start of the last session of the current disc
453should be returned in the pointer argument $ms_info$. Note that
454routines in \cdromc\ have sanitized this argument: its requested
455format will {\em always\/} be of the type $CDROM_LBA$ (linear block
456addressing mode), whatever the calling software requested. But
457sanitization goes even further: the low-level implementation may
458return the requested information in $CDROM_MSF$ format if it wishes so
459(setting the $ms_info\rightarrow addr_format$ field appropriately, of
460course) and the routines in \cdromc\ will make the transformation if
461necessary. The return value is 0 upon success.
462
463\subsection{$Int\ get_mcn(struct\ cdrom_device_info * cdi, struct\
464 cdrom_mcn * mcn)$}
465
466Some discs carry a `Media Catalog Number' (MCN), also called
467`Universal Product Code' (UPC). This number should reflect the number
468that is generally found in the bar-code on the product. Unfortunately,
469the few discs that carry such a number on the disc don't even use the
470same format. The return argument to this function is a pointer to a
471pre-declared memory region of type $struct\ cdrom_mcn$. The MCN is
472expected as a 13-character string, terminated by a null-character.
473
474\subsection{$Int\ reset(struct\ cdrom_device_info * cdi)$}
475
476This call should perform a hard-reset on the drive (although in
477circumstances that a hard-reset is necessary, a drive may very well not
478listen to commands anymore). Preferably, control is returned to the
479caller only after the drive has finished resetting. If the drive is no
480longer listening, it may be wise for the underlying low-level cdrom
481driver to time out.
482
483\subsection{$Int\ audio_ioctl(struct\ cdrom_device_info * cdi, unsigned\
484 int\ cmd, void * arg)$}
485
486Some of the \cdrom-$ioctl$s defined in \cdromh\ can be
487implemented by the routines described above, and hence the function
488$cdrom_ioctl$ will use those. However, most $ioctl$s deal with
489audio-control. We have decided to leave these to be accessed through a
490single function, repeating the arguments $cmd$ and $arg$. Note that
491the latter is of type $void*{}$, rather than $unsigned\ long\
492int$. The routine $cdrom_ioctl()$ does do some useful things,
493though. It sanitizes the address format type to $CDROM_MSF$ (Minutes,
494Seconds, Frames) for all audio calls. It also verifies the memory
495location of $arg$, and reserves stack-memory for the argument. This
496makes implementation of the $audio_ioctl()$ much simpler than in the
497old driver scheme. For example, you may look up the function
498$cm206_audio_ioctl()$ in {\tt {cm206.c}} that should be updated with
499this documentation.
500
501An unimplemented ioctl should return $-ENOSYS$, but a harmless request
502(\eg, $CDROMSTART$) may be ignored by returning 0 (success). Other
503errors should be according to the standards, whatever they are. When
504an error is returned by the low-level driver, the \UCD\ tries whenever
505possible to return the error code to the calling program. (We may decide
506to sanitize the return value in $cdrom_ioctl()$ though, in order to
507guarantee a uniform interface to the audio-player software.)
508
509\subsection{$Int\ dev_ioctl(struct\ cdrom_device_info * cdi, unsigned\ int\
510 cmd, unsigned\ long\ arg)$}
511
512Some $ioctl$s seem to be specific to certain \cdrom\ drives. That is,
513they are introduced to service some capabilities of certain drives. In
514fact, there are 6 different $ioctl$s for reading data, either in some
515particular kind of format, or audio data. Not many drives support
516reading audio tracks as data, I believe this is because of protection
517of copyrights of artists. Moreover, I think that if audio-tracks are
518supported, it should be done through the VFS and not via $ioctl$s. A
519problem here could be the fact that audio-frames are 2352 bytes long,
520so either the audio-file-system should ask for 75264 bytes at once
521(the least common multiple of 512 and 2352), or the drivers should
522bend their backs to cope with this incoherence (to which I would be
523opposed). Furthermore, it is very difficult for the hardware to find
524the exact frame boundaries, since there are no synchronization headers
525in audio frames. Once these issues are resolved, this code should be
526standardized in \cdromc.
527
528Because there are so many $ioctl$s that seem to be introduced to
529satisfy certain drivers,\footnote{Is there software around that
530 actually uses these? I'd be interested!} any `non-standard' $ioctl$s
531are routed through the call $dev_ioctl()$. In principle, `private'
532$ioctl$s should be numbered after the device's major number, and not
533the general \cdrom\ $ioctl$ number, {\tt {0x53}}. Currently the
534non-supported $ioctl$s are: {\it CDROMREADMODE1, CDROMREADMODE2,
535 CDROMREADAUDIO, CDROMREADRAW, CDROMREADCOOKED, CDROMSEEK,
536 CDROMPLAY\-BLK and CDROM\-READALL}.
537
538
539\subsection{\cdrom\ capabilities}
540\label{capability}
541
542Instead of just implementing some $ioctl$ calls, the interface in
543\cdromc\ supplies the possibility to indicate the {\em capabilities\/}
544of a \cdrom\ drive. This can be done by ORing any number of
545capability-constants that are defined in \cdromh\ at the registration
546phase. Currently, the capabilities are any of:
547$$
548\halign{$#$\ \hfil&$/*$ \rm# $*/$\hfil\cr
549CDC_CLOSE_TRAY& can close tray by software control\cr
550CDC_OPEN_TRAY& can open tray\cr
551CDC_LOCK& can lock and unlock the door\cr
552CDC_SELECT_SPEED& can select speed, in units of $\sim$150\,kB/s\cr
553CDC_SELECT_DISC& drive is juke-box\cr
554CDC_MULTI_SESSION& can read sessions $>\rm1$\cr
555CDC_MCN& can read Media Catalog Number\cr
556CDC_MEDIA_CHANGED& can report if disc has changed\cr
557CDC_PLAY_AUDIO& can perform audio-functions (play, pause, etc)\cr
558CDC_RESET& hard reset device\cr
559CDC_IOCTLS& driver has non-standard ioctls\cr
560CDC_DRIVE_STATUS& driver implements drive status\cr
561}
562$$
563The capability flag is declared $const$, to prevent drivers from
564accidentally tampering with the contents. The capability fags actually
565inform \cdromc\ of what the driver can do. If the drive found
566by the driver does not have the capability, is can be masked out by
567the $cdrom_device_info$ variable $mask$. For instance, the SCSI \cdrom\
568driver has implemented the code for loading and ejecting \cdrom's, and
569hence its corresponding flags in $capability$ will be set. But a SCSI
570\cdrom\ drive might be a caddy system, which can't load the tray, and
571hence for this drive the $cdrom_device_info$ struct will have set
572the $CDC_CLOSE_TRAY$ bit in $mask$.
573
574In the file \cdromc\ you will encounter many constructions of the type
575$$\it
576if\ (cdo\rightarrow capability \mathrel\& \mathord{\sim} cdi\rightarrow mask
577 \mathrel{\&} CDC_<capability>) \ldots
578$$
579There is no $ioctl$ to set the mask\dots The reason is that
580I think it is better to control the {\em behavior\/} rather than the
581{\em capabilities}.
582
583\subsection{Options}
584
585A final flag register controls the {\em behavior\/} of the \cdrom\
586drives, in order to satisfy different users' wishes, hopefully
587independently of the ideas of the respective author who happened to
588have made the drive's support available to the \linux\ community. The
589current behavior options are:
590$$
591\halign{$#$\ \hfil&$/*$ \rm# $*/$\hfil\cr
592CDO_AUTO_CLOSE& try to close tray upon device $open()$\cr
593CDO_AUTO_EJECT& try to open tray on last device $close()$\cr
594CDO_USE_FFLAGS& use $file_pointer\rightarrow f_flags$ to indicate
595 purpose for $open()$\cr
596CDO_LOCK& try to lock door if device is opened\cr
597CDO_CHECK_TYPE& ensure disc type is data if opened for data\cr
598}
599$$
600
601The initial value of this register is $CDO_AUTO_CLOSE \mathrel|
602CDO_USE_FFLAGS \mathrel| CDO_LOCK$, reflecting my own view on user
603interface and software standards. Before you protest, there are two
604new $ioctl$s implemented in \cdromc, that allow you to control the
605behavior by software. These are:
606$$
607\halign{$#$\ \hfil&$/*$ \rm# $*/$\hfil\cr
608CDROM_SET_OPTIONS& set options specified in $(int)\ arg$\cr
609CDROM_CLEAR_OPTIONS& clear options specified in $(int)\ arg$\cr
610}
611$$
612One option needs some more explanation: $CDO_USE_FFLAGS$. In the next
613newsection we explain what the need for this option is.
614
615A software package {\tt setcd}, available from the Debian distribution
616and {\tt sunsite.unc.edu}, allows user level control of these flags.
617
618\newsection{The need to know the purpose of opening the \cdrom\ device}
619
620Traditionally, Unix devices can be used in two different `modes',
621either by reading/writing to the device file, or by issuing
622controlling commands to the device, by the device's $ioctl()$
623call. The problem with \cdrom\ drives, is that they can be used for
624two entirely different purposes. One is to mount removable
625file systems, \cdrom s, the other is to play audio CD's. Audio commands
626are implemented entirely through $ioctl$s, presumably because the
627first implementation (SUN?) has been such. In principle there is
628nothing wrong with this, but a good control of the `CD player' demands
629that the device can {\em always\/} be opened in order to give the
630$ioctl$ commands, regardless of the state the drive is in.
631
632On the other hand, when used as a removable-media disc drive (what the
633original purpose of \cdrom s is) we would like to make sure that the
634disc drive is ready for operation upon opening the device. In the old
635scheme, some \cdrom\ drivers don't do any integrity checking, resulting
636in a number of i/o errors reported by the VFS to the kernel when an
637attempt for mounting a \cdrom\ on an empty drive occurs. This is not a
638particularly elegant way to find out that there is no \cdrom\ inserted;
639it more-or-less looks like the old IBM-PC trying to read an empty floppy
640drive for a couple of seconds, after which the system complains it
641can't read from it. Nowadays we can {\em sense\/} the existence of a
642removable medium in a drive, and we believe we should exploit that
643fact. An integrity check on opening of the device, that verifies the
644availability of a \cdrom\ and its correct type (data), would be
645desirable.
646
647These two ways of using a \cdrom\ drive, principally for data and
648secondarily for playing audio discs, have different demands for the
649behavior of the $open()$ call. Audio use simply wants to open the
650device in order to get a file handle which is needed for issuing
651$ioctl$ commands, while data use wants to open for correct and
652reliable data transfer. The only way user programs can indicate what
653their {\em purpose\/} of opening the device is, is through the $flags$
654parameter (see {\tt {open(2)}}). For \cdrom\ devices, these flags aren't
655implemented (some drivers implement checking for write-related flags,
656but this is not strictly necessary if the device file has correct
657permission flags). Most option flags simply don't make sense to
658\cdrom\ devices: $O_CREAT$, $O_NOCTTY$, $O_TRUNC$, $O_APPEND$, and
659$O_SYNC$ have no meaning to a \cdrom.
660
661We therefore propose to use the flag $O_NONBLOCK$ to indicate
662that the device is opened just for issuing $ioctl$
663commands. Strictly, the meaning of $O_NONBLOCK$ is that opening and
664subsequent calls to the device don't cause the calling process to
665wait. We could interpret this as ``don't wait until someone has
666inserted some valid data-\cdrom.'' Thus, our proposal of the
667implementation for the $open()$ call for \cdrom s is:
668\begin{itemize}
669\item If no other flags are set than $O_RDONLY$, the device is opened
670for data transfer, and the return value will be 0 only upon successful
671initialization of the transfer. The call may even induce some actions
672on the \cdrom, such as closing the tray.
673\item If the option flag $O_NONBLOCK$ is set, opening will always be
674successful, unless the whole device doesn't exist. The drive will take
675no actions whatsoever.
676\end{itemize}
677
678\subsection{And what about standards?}
679
680You might hesitate to accept this proposal as it comes from the
681\linux\ community, and not from some standardizing institute. What
682about SUN, SGI, HP and all those other Unix and hardware vendors?
683Well, these companies are in the lucky position that they generally
684control both the hardware and software of their supported products,
685and are large enough to set their own standard. They do not have to
686deal with a dozen or more different, competing hardware
687configurations.\footnote{Incidentally, I think that SUN's approach to
688mounting \cdrom s is very good in origin: under Solaris a
689volume-daemon automatically mounts a newly inserted \cdrom\ under {\tt
690{/cdrom/$<volume-name>$/}}. In my opinion they should have pushed this
691further and have {\em every\/} \cdrom\ on the local area network be
692mounted at the similar location, \ie, no matter in which particular
693machine you insert a \cdrom, it will always appear at the same
694position in the directory tree, on every system. When I wanted to
695implement such a user-program for \linux, I came across the
696differences in behavior of the various drivers, and the need for an
697$ioctl$ informing about media changes.}
698
699We believe that using $O_NONBLOCK$ to indicate that a device is being opened
700for $ioctl$ commands only can be easily introduced in the \linux\
701community. All the CD-player authors will have to be informed, we can
702even send in our own patches to the programs. The use of $O_NONBLOCK$
703has most likely no influence on the behavior of the CD-players on
704other operating systems than \linux. Finally, a user can always revert
705to old behavior by a call to $ioctl(file_descriptor, CDROM_CLEAR_OPTIONS,
706CDO_USE_FFLAGS)$.
707
708\subsection{The preferred strategy of $open()$}
709
710The routines in \cdromc\ are designed in such a way that run-time
711configuration of the behavior of \cdrom\ devices (of {\em any\/} type)
712can be carried out, by the $CDROM_SET/CLEAR_OPTIONS$ $ioctls$. Thus, various
713modes of operation can be set:
714\begin{description}
715\item[$CDO_AUTO_CLOSE \mathrel| CDO_USE_FFLAGS \mathrel| CDO_LOCK$] This
716is the default setting. (With $CDO_CHECK_TYPE$ it will be better, in the
717future.) If the device is not yet opened by any other process, and if
718the device is being opened for data ($O_NONBLOCK$ is not set) and the
719tray is found to be open, an attempt to close the tray is made. Then,
720it is verified that a disc is in the drive and, if $CDO_CHECK_TYPE$ is
721set, that it contains tracks of type `data mode 1.' Only if all tests
722are passed is the return value zero. The door is locked to prevent file
723system corruption. If the drive is opened for audio ($O_NONBLOCK$ is
724set), no actions are taken and a value of 0 will be returned.
725\item[$CDO_AUTO_CLOSE \mathrel| CDO_AUTO_EJECT \mathrel| CDO_LOCK$] This
726mimics the behavior of the current sbpcd-driver. The option flags are
727ignored, the tray is closed on the first open, if necessary. Similarly,
728the tray is opened on the last release, \ie, if a \cdrom\ is unmounted,
729it is automatically ejected, such that the user can replace it.
730\end{description}
731We hope that these option can convince everybody (both driver
732maintainers and user program developers) to adopt the new \cdrom\
733driver scheme and option flag interpretation.
734
735\newsection{Description of routines in \cdromc}
736
737Only a few routines in \cdromc\ are exported to the drivers. In this
738new section we will discuss these, as well as the functions that `take
739over' the \cdrom\ interface to the kernel. The header file belonging
740to \cdromc\ is called \cdromh. Formerly, some of the contents of this
741file were placed in the file {\tt {ucdrom.h}}, but this file has now been
742merged back into \cdromh.
743
744\subsection{$Struct\ file_operations\ cdrom_fops$}
745
746The contents of this structure were described in section~\ref{cdrom.c}.
747A pointer to this structure is assigned to the $fops$ field
748of the $struct gendisk$.
749
750\subsection{$Int\ register_cdrom( struct\ cdrom_device_info\ * cdi)$}
751
752This function is used in about the same way one registers $cdrom_fops$
753with the kernel, the device operations and information structures,
754as described in section~\ref{cdrom.c}, should be registered with the
755\UCD:
756$$
757register_cdrom(\&<device>_info));
758$$
759This function returns zero upon success, and non-zero upon
760failure. The structure $<device>_info$ should have a pointer to the
761driver's $<device>_dops$, as in
762$$
763\vbox{\halign{&$#$\hfil\cr
764struct\ &cdrom_device_info\ <device>_info = \{\cr
765& <device>_dops;\cr
766&\ldots\cr
767\}\cr
768}}$$
769Note that a driver must have one static structure, $<device>_dops$, while
770it may have as many structures $<device>_info$ as there are minor devices
771active. $Register_cdrom()$ builds a linked list from these.
772
0a0c4114 773\subsection{$Void\ unregister_cdrom(struct\ cdrom_device_info * cdi)$}
1da177e4
LT
774
775Unregistering device $cdi$ with minor number $MINOR(cdi\to dev)$ removes
776the minor device from the list. If it was the last registered minor for
777the low-level driver, this disconnects the registered device-operation
778routines from the \cdrom\ interface. This function returns zero upon
779success, and non-zero upon failure.
780
781\subsection{$Int\ cdrom_open(struct\ inode * ip, struct\ file * fp)$}
782
783This function is not called directly by the low-level drivers, it is
784listed in the standard $cdrom_fops$. If the VFS opens a file, this
785function becomes active. A strategy is implemented in this routine,
786taking care of all capabilities and options that are set in the
787$cdrom_device_ops$ connected to the device. Then, the program flow is
788transferred to the device_dependent $open()$ call.
789
790\subsection{$Void\ cdrom_release(struct\ inode *ip, struct\ file
791*fp)$}
792
793This function implements the reverse-logic of $cdrom_open()$, and then
794calls the device-dependent $release()$ routine. When the use-count has
795reached 0, the allocated buffers are flushed by calls to $sync_dev(dev)$
796and $invalidate_buffers(dev)$.
797
798
799\subsection{$Int\ cdrom_ioctl(struct\ inode *ip, struct\ file *fp,
800unsigned\ int\ cmd, unsigned\ long\ arg)$}
801\label{cdrom-ioctl}
802
803This function handles all the standard $ioctl$ requests for \cdrom\
804devices in a uniform way. The different calls fall into three
805categories: $ioctl$s that can be directly implemented by device
806operations, ones that are routed through the call $audio_ioctl()$, and
807the remaining ones, that are presumable device-dependent. Generally, a
808negative return value indicates an error.
809
810\subsubsection{Directly implemented $ioctl$s}
811\label{ioctl-direct}
812
813The following `old' \cdrom-$ioctl$s are implemented by directly
814calling device-operations in $cdrom_device_ops$, if implemented and
815not masked:
816\begin{description}
817\item[CDROMMULTISESSION] Requests the last session on a \cdrom.
818\item[CDROMEJECT] Open tray.
819\item[CDROMCLOSETRAY] Close tray.
820\item[CDROMEJECT_SW] If $arg\not=0$, set behavior to auto-close (close
821tray on first open) and auto-eject (eject on last release), otherwise
822set behavior to non-moving on $open()$ and $release()$ calls.
823\item[CDROM_GET_MCN] Get the Media Catalog Number from a CD.
824\end{description}
825
826\subsubsection{$Ioctl$s routed through $audio_ioctl()$}
827\label{ioctl-audio}
828
829The following set of $ioctl$s are all implemented through a call to
830the $cdrom_fops$ function $audio_ioctl()$. Memory checks and
831allocation are performed in $cdrom_ioctl()$, and also sanitization of
832address format ($CDROM_LBA$/$CDROM_MSF$) is done.
833\begin{description}
834\item[CDROMSUBCHNL] Get sub-channel data in argument $arg$ of type $struct\
835cdrom_subchnl *{}$.
836\item[CDROMREADTOCHDR] Read Table of Contents header, in $arg$ of type
837$struct\ cdrom_tochdr *{}$.
838\item[CDROMREADTOCENTRY] Read a Table of Contents entry in $arg$ and
839specified by $arg$ of type $struct\ cdrom_tocentry *{}$.
840\item[CDROMPLAYMSF] Play audio fragment specified in Minute, Second,
841Frame format, delimited by $arg$ of type $struct\ cdrom_msf *{}$.
842\item[CDROMPLAYTRKIND] Play audio fragment in track-index format
843delimited by $arg$ of type $struct\ \penalty-1000 cdrom_ti *{}$.
844\item[CDROMVOLCTRL] Set volume specified by $arg$ of type $struct\
845cdrom_volctrl *{}$.
846\item[CDROMVOLREAD] Read volume into by $arg$ of type $struct\
847cdrom_volctrl *{}$.
848\item[CDROMSTART] Spin up disc.
849\item[CDROMSTOP] Stop playback of audio fragment.
850\item[CDROMPAUSE] Pause playback of audio fragment.
851\item[CDROMRESUME] Resume playing.
852\end{description}
853
854\subsubsection{New $ioctl$s in \cdromc}
855
856The following $ioctl$s have been introduced to allow user programs to
857control the behavior of individual \cdrom\ devices. New $ioctl$
858commands can be identified by the underscores in their names.
859\begin{description}
860\item[CDROM_SET_OPTIONS] Set options specified by $arg$. Returns the
861option flag register after modification. Use $arg = \rm0$ for reading
862the current flags.
863\item[CDROM_CLEAR_OPTIONS] Clear options specified by $arg$. Returns
864 the option flag register after modification.
865\item[CDROM_SELECT_SPEED] Select head-rate speed of disc specified as
866 by $arg$ in units of standard cdrom speed (176\,kB/sec raw data or
867 150\,kB/sec file system data). The value 0 means `auto-select', \ie,
868 play audio discs at real time and data discs at maximum speed. The value
869 $arg$ is checked against the maximum head rate of the drive found in the
870 $cdrom_dops$.
871\item[CDROM_SELECT_DISC] Select disc numbered $arg$ from a juke-box.
872 First disc is numbered 0. The number $arg$ is checked against the
873 maximum number of discs in the juke-box found in the $cdrom_dops$.
874\item[CDROM_MEDIA_CHANGED] Returns 1 if a disc has been changed since
875 the last call. Note that calls to $cdrom_media_changed$ by the VFS
876 are treated by an independent queue, so both mechanisms will detect
877 a media change once. For juke-boxes, an extra argument $arg$
878 specifies the slot for which the information is given. The special
879 value $CDSL_CURRENT$ requests that information about the currently
880 selected slot be returned.
881\item[CDROM_DRIVE_STATUS] Returns the status of the drive by a call to
882 $drive_status()$. Return values are defined in section~\ref{drive
883 status}. Note that this call doesn't return information on the
884 current playing activity of the drive; this can be polled through an
885 $ioctl$ call to $CDROMSUBCHNL$. For juke-boxes, an extra argument
886 $arg$ specifies the slot for which (possibly limited) information is
887 given. The special value $CDSL_CURRENT$ requests that information
888 about the currently selected slot be returned.
889\item[CDROM_DISC_STATUS] Returns the type of the disc currently in the
890 drive. It should be viewed as a complement to $CDROM_DRIVE_STATUS$.
891 This $ioctl$ can provide \emph {some} information about the current
892 disc that is inserted in the drive. This functionality used to be
893 implemented in the low level drivers, but is now carried out
894 entirely in \UCD.
895
896 The history of development of the CD's use as a carrier medium for
897 various digital information has lead to many different disc types.
898 This $ioctl$ is useful only in the case that CDs have \emph {only
899 one} type of data on them. While this is often the case, it is
900 also very common for CDs to have some tracks with data, and some
901 tracks with audio. Because this is an existing interface, rather
902 than fixing this interface by changing the assumptions it was made
903 under, thereby breaking all user applications that use this
904 function, the \UCD\ implements this $ioctl$ as follows: If the CD in
905 question has audio tracks on it, and it has absolutely no CD-I, XA,
906 or data tracks on it, it will be reported as $CDS_AUDIO$. If it has
907 both audio and data tracks, it will return $CDS_MIXED$. If there
908 are no audio tracks on the disc, and if the CD in question has any
909 CD-I tracks on it, it will be reported as $CDS_XA_2_2$. Failing
910 that, if the CD in question has any XA tracks on it, it will be
911 reported as $CDS_XA_2_1$. Finally, if the CD in question has any
912 data tracks on it, it will be reported as a data CD ($CDS_DATA_1$).
913
914 This $ioctl$ can return:
915 $$
916 \halign{$#$\ \hfil&$/*$ \rm# $*/$\hfil\cr
917 CDS_NO_INFO& no information available\cr
918 CDS_NO_DISC& no disc is inserted, or tray is opened\cr
919 CDS_AUDIO& Audio disc (2352 audio bytes/frame)\cr
920 CDS_DATA_1& data disc, mode 1 (2048 user bytes/frame)\cr
921 CDS_XA_2_1& mixed data (XA), mode 2, form 1 (2048 user bytes)\cr
922 CDS_XA_2_2& mixed data (XA), mode 2, form 1 (2324 user bytes)\cr
923 CDS_MIXED& mixed audio/data disc\cr
924 }
925 $$
926 For some information concerning frame layout of the various disc
927 types, see a recent version of \cdromh.
928
929\item[CDROM_CHANGER_NSLOTS] Returns the number of slots in a
930 juke-box.
931\item[CDROMRESET] Reset the drive.
932\item[CDROM_GET_CAPABILITY] Returns the $capability$ flags for the
933 drive. Refer to section \ref{capability} for more information on
934 these flags.
935\item[CDROM_LOCKDOOR] Locks the door of the drive. $arg == \rm0$
936 unlocks the door, any other value locks it.
937\item[CDROM_DEBUG] Turns on debugging info. Only root is allowed
938 to do this. Same semantics as CDROM_LOCKDOOR.
939\end{description}
940
941\subsubsection{Device dependent $ioctl$s}
942
943Finally, all other $ioctl$s are passed to the function $dev_ioctl()$,
944if implemented. No memory allocation or verification is carried out.
945
946\newsection{How to update your driver}
947
948\begin{enumerate}
949\item Make a backup of your current driver.
950\item Get hold of the files \cdromc\ and \cdromh, they should be in
951 the directory tree that came with this documentation.
952\item Make sure you include \cdromh.
953\item Change the 3rd argument of $register_blkdev$ from
954$\&<your-drive>_fops$ to $\&cdrom_fops$.
955\item Just after that line, add the following to register with the \UCD:
956 $$register_cdrom(\&<your-drive>_info);$$
957 Similarly, add a call to $unregister_cdrom()$ at the appropriate place.
958\item Copy an example of the device-operations $struct$ to your
959 source, \eg, from {\tt {cm206.c}} $cm206_dops$, and change all
960 entries to names corresponding to your driver, or names you just
961 happen to like. If your driver doesn't support a certain function,
962 make the entry $NULL$. At the entry $capability$ you should list all
963 capabilities your driver currently supports. If your driver
964 has a capability that is not listed, please send me a message.
965\item Copy the $cdrom_device_info$ declaration from the same example
966 driver, and modify the entries according to your needs. If your
967 driver dynamically determines the capabilities of the hardware, this
968 structure should also be declared dynamically.
969\item Implement all functions in your $<device>_dops$ structure,
970 according to prototypes listed in \cdromh, and specifications given
971 in section~\ref{cdrom.c}. Most likely you have already implemented
972 the code in a large part, and you will almost certainly need to adapt the
973 prototype and return values.
974\item Rename your $<device>_ioctl()$ function to $audio_ioctl$ and
975 change the prototype a little. Remove entries listed in the first
976 part in section~\ref{cdrom-ioctl}, if your code was OK, these are
977 just calls to the routines you adapted in the previous step.
978\item You may remove all remaining memory checking code in the
979 $audio_ioctl()$ function that deals with audio commands (these are
980 listed in the second part of section~\ref{cdrom-ioctl}). There is no
981 need for memory allocation either, so most $case$s in the $switch$
982 statement look similar to:
983 $$
984 case\ CDROMREADTOCENTRY\colon get_toc_entry\bigl((struct\
985 cdrom_tocentry *{})\ arg\bigr);
986 $$
987\item All remaining $ioctl$ cases must be moved to a separate
988 function, $<device>_ioctl$, the device-dependent $ioctl$s. Note that
989 memory checking and allocation must be kept in this code!
990\item Change the prototypes of $<device>_open()$ and
991 $<device>_release()$, and remove any strategic code (\ie, tray
992 movement, door locking, etc.).
993\item Try to recompile the drivers. We advise you to use modules, both
994 for {\tt {cdrom.o}} and your driver, as debugging is much easier this
995 way.
996\end{enumerate}
997
998\newsection{Thanks}
999
1000Thanks to all the people involved. First, Erik Andersen, who has
1001taken over the torch in maintaining \cdromc\ and integrating much
1002\cdrom-related code in the 2.1-kernel. Thanks to Scott Snyder and
1003Gerd Knorr, who were the first to implement this interface for SCSI
1004and IDE-CD drivers and added many ideas for extension of the data
96de0e25 1005structures relative to kernel~2.0. Further thanks to Heiko Ei{\sz}feldt,
1da177e4
LT
1006Thomas Quinot, Jon Tombs, Ken Pizzini, Eberhard M\"onkeberg and Andrew
1007Kroll, the \linux\ \cdrom\ device driver developers who were kind
1008enough to give suggestions and criticisms during the writing. Finally
1009of course, I want to thank Linus Torvalds for making this possible in
1010the first place.
1011
1012\vfill
1013$ \version\ $
1014\eject
1015\end{document}