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Has anyone been able to get reads/writes greater than 1 block to work on Serial ATA drives using either of these passthrough structures?
They seem to work up to 250 blocks only using PATA drives, but can only transfer 1 block using SERIAL ata drives.
Does anyone have any insight to this?
thanks
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By one block you mean 512 bytes? Seems a silly question, but "block" definition can change by simply walking into a new office.
What ATA command are you using and what does the TFR look like?
-- The personal opinion of Gary G. Little
"cappy2112" <cappy2112[ at ]gmail.com> wrote in message news:1178047906.745351.39680[ at ]h2g2000hsg.googlegroups.com...
[Quoted Text] > > Has anyone been able to get reads/writes greater than 1 block to work > on Serial ATA drives using either of these passthrough structures? > > They seem to work up to 250 blocks only using PATA drives, but can > only transfer 1 block using SERIAL ata drives. > > > Does anyone have any insight to this? > > thanks >
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On May 2, 7:18 am, "Gary G. Little" <gary.g.lit...[ at ]seagate.com> wrote:
[Quoted Text] > By one block you mean 512 bytes? Seems a silly question, but "block" > definition can change by simply walking into a new office. > > WhatATAcommand are youusingand what does the TFR look like?
The subject line refers to Serial ATA drives. Blocks and sectors mean the same with regards to hard drives. The task files are as follows 0 2 E8h 03 00 E0h 20h
Using parallel ATA drives, up to 250 sectors can be transferred in either direction, but not on SATA drives.
> -- > The personal opinion of > Gary G. Little > > "cappy2112" <cappy2...[ at ]gmail.com> wrote in message > > news:1178047906.745351.39680[ at ]h2g2000hsg.googlegroups.com... > > > > > Has anyone been able to get reads/writes greater than 1 block to work > > onSerialATAdrivesusingeither of these passthrough structures? > > > They seem to work up to 250 blocks onlyusingPATAdrives, but can > > only transfer 1 blockusingSERIALatadrives. > > > Does anyone have any insight to this? > > > thanks
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Next question is which OS?
READ SECTOR(S) in Windows XP, up through SP2, has a history of having timeout problems reading more than 1 sector. Do a search both here and on the NtDev list and you should see this discussed in earlier threads.Vista appears to have resolved the problem, but I have also seen this vary across different drives. I have several ATA discs that I use for testing: ST9120 (PATA), ST980 (PATA), and ST360 (SATA). The ST9120 gobbles up a 255 block read, but the ST980 and ST360 both evidence timeouts when number of blocks > 1, even though the data was read to completion. The firmware in all 3 drives has never been released, so the fact that the ST9120 succeeded could be more a function of that firmware.
-- The personal opinion of Gary G. Little
"cappy2112" <cappy2112[ at ]gmail.com> wrote in message news:1178153371.402975.320530[ at ]p77g2000hsh.googlegroups.com...
[Quoted Text] > On May 2, 7:18 am, "Gary G. Little" <gary.g.lit...[ at ]seagate.com> wrote: >> By one block you mean 512 bytes? Seems a silly question, but "block" >> definition can change by simply walking into a new office. >> >> WhatATAcommand are youusingand what does the TFR look like? > The subject line refers to Serial ATA drives. Blocks and sectors mean > the same with regards to hard drives. > The task files are as follows 0 2 E8h 03 00 E0h 20h > > Using parallel ATA drives, up to 250 sectors can be transferred in > either direction, but not on SATA drives. > > >> -- >> The personal opinion of >> Gary G. Little >> >> "cappy2112" <cappy2...[ at ]gmail.com> wrote in message >> >> news:1178047906.745351.39680[ at ]h2g2000hsg.googlegroups.com... >> >> >> >> > Has anyone been able to get reads/writes greater than 1 block to work >> > onSerialATAdrivesusingeither of these passthrough structures? >> >> > They seem to work up to 250 blocks onlyusingPATAdrives, but can >> > only transfer 1 blockusingSERIALatadrives. >> >> > Does anyone have any insight to this? >> >> > thanks > >
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[Quoted Text] > Next question is which OS?
XP, SP2
> READ SECTOR(S) in Windows XP, up through SP2, has a history of having I used that command as an example. We are actually trying to issue download microcode x92, but I'm waiting for the FW to be released. In the mean time I thought I would try doing reads & writes.
Is there any documentation for ATA passthrough other than this? http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa510324.aspx
> timeout problems reading more than 1 sector. Do a search both here and on
> the NtDev list and you should see this discussed in earlier threads.Vista Is this a list or a newsgroup?
Thanks for the information! It's more than I got from Microsoft
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On May 3, 8:34 am, "Gary G. Little" <gary.g.lit...[ at ]seagate.com> wrote:
[Quoted Text] > Next question is which OS?
BTW- in your implementation of the ATA passthrough- are your structures or data buffers aligned to specific boundaries? The IOCTL ATA_Passthrough referes to cahce-aligned boundaries, but it doesn't specify what size that is.
>From Storage Devices: Windows Driver Kit IOCTL_ATA_PASS_THROUGH_DIRECT
"if the ATA command requests a data transfer operation, the caller must set up a cache-aligned buffer from which, or into which, the driver can transfer data directly. The IOCTL_ATA_PASS_THROUGH_DIRECT request is typically used for transferring large amounts of data (more than 16 KB)."
> READ SECTOR(S) in Windows XP, up through SP2, has a history of having > timeout problems reading more than 1 sector. Do a search both here and on > the NtDev list and you should see this discussed in earlier threads.Vista > appears to have resolved the problem, but I have also seen this vary across > different drives. I have several ATA discs that I use for testing: ST9120 > (PATA), ST980 (PATA), and ST360 (SATA). The ST9120 gobbles up a 255 block > read, but the ST980 and ST360 both evidence timeouts when number of blocks > > 1, even though the data was read to completion. The firmware in all 3 drives > has never been released, so the fact that the ST9120 succeeded could be more > a function of that firmware. > > -- > The personal opinion of > Gary G. Little > > "cappy2112" <cappy2...[ at ]gmail.com> wrote in message > > news:1178153371.402975.320530[ at ]p77g2000hsh.googlegroups.com... > > > On May 2, 7:18 am, "Gary G. Little" <gary.g.lit...[ at ]seagate.com> wrote: > >> By one block you mean 512 bytes? Seems a silly question, but "block" > >> definition can change by simply walking into a new office. > > >> WhatATAcommand are youusingand what does the TFR look like? > > The subject line refers to Serial ATA drives. Blocks and sectors mean > > the same with regards to hard drives. > > The task files are as follows 0 2 E8h 03 00 E0h 20h > > > Using parallel ATA drives, up to 250 sectors can be transferred in > > either direction, but not on SATA drives. > > >> -- > >> The personal opinion of > >> Gary G. Little > > >> "cappy2112" <cappy2...[ at ]gmail.com> wrote in message > > >>news:1178047906.745351.39680[ at ]h2g2000hsg.googlegroups.com... > > >> > Has anyone been able to get reads/writes greater than 1 block to work > >> > onSerialATAdrivesusingeither of these passthrough structures? > > >> > They seem to work up to 250 blocks onlyusingPATAdrives, but can > >> > only transfer 1 blockusingSERIALatadrives. > > >> > Does anyone have any insight to this? > > >> > thanks
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NtDev is one of several newsgroups where kernel/driver developers persist. Look at osronline.com and register there.
I believe we align to an 8 byte boundary, but that's more of a guess, as in that regard I tend to be more of a user than an implement.
My testing on WinXP SP2 indicated that the timeout error is really a lie. The amount of data I requested was indeed read. However, that will most likely cause addtiional code-consternation since with a known failure you should then verify any data that was read is indeed valid, if you can. Your FW binary should have internal checks such as CRC and or chesksum, but you have to know the format and algorhythms used.
Gary
"cappy2112" <cappy2112[ at ]gmail.com> wrote in message news:1178300733.205619.270950[ at ]l77g2000hsb.googlegroups.com...
[Quoted Text] > On May 3, 8:34 am, "Gary G. Little" <gary.g.lit...[ at ]seagate.com> wrote: >> Next question is which OS? > > BTW- in your implementation of the ATA passthrough- are your > structures or data buffers aligned to specific boundaries? > The IOCTL ATA_Passthrough referes to cahce-aligned boundaries, but it > doesn't specify what size that is. > > >>From Storage Devices: Windows Driver Kit > IOCTL_ATA_PASS_THROUGH_DIRECT > > "if the ATA command requests a data transfer operation, the caller > must set up a cache-aligned buffer from which, or into which, the > driver can transfer data directly. The IOCTL_ATA_PASS_THROUGH_DIRECT > request is typically used for transferring large amounts of data (more > than 16 KB)." > > > >> READ SECTOR(S) in Windows XP, up through SP2, has a history of having >> timeout problems reading more than 1 sector. Do a search both here and on >> the NtDev list and you should see this discussed in earlier threads.Vista >> appears to have resolved the problem, but I have also seen this vary >> across >> different drives. I have several ATA discs that I use for testing: ST9120 >> (PATA), ST980 (PATA), and ST360 (SATA). The ST9120 gobbles up a 255 block >> read, but the ST980 and ST360 both evidence timeouts when number of >> blocks > >> 1, even though the data was read to completion. The firmware in all 3 >> drives >> has never been released, so the fact that the ST9120 succeeded could be >> more >> a function of that firmware. >> >> -- >> The personal opinion of >> Gary G. Little >> >> "cappy2112" <cappy2...[ at ]gmail.com> wrote in message >> >> news:1178153371.402975.320530[ at ]p77g2000hsh.googlegroups.com... >> >> > On May 2, 7:18 am, "Gary G. Little" <gary.g.lit...[ at ]seagate.com> wrote: >> >> By one block you mean 512 bytes? Seems a silly question, but "block" >> >> definition can change by simply walking into a new office. >> >> >> WhatATAcommand are youusingand what does the TFR look like? >> > The subject line refers to Serial ATA drives. Blocks and sectors mean >> > the same with regards to hard drives. >> > The task files are as follows 0 2 E8h 03 00 E0h 20h >> >> > Using parallel ATA drives, up to 250 sectors can be transferred in >> > either direction, but not on SATA drives. >> >> >> -- >> >> The personal opinion of >> >> Gary G. Little >> >> >> "cappy2112" <cappy2...[ at ]gmail.com> wrote in message >> >> >>news:1178047906.745351.39680[ at ]h2g2000hsg.googlegroups.com... >> >> >> > Has anyone been able to get reads/writes greater than 1 block to >> >> > work >> >> > onSerialATAdrivesusingeither of these passthrough structures? >> >> >> > They seem to work up to 250 blocks onlyusingPATAdrives, but can >> >> > only transfer 1 blockusingSERIALatadrives. >> >> >> > Does anyone have any insight to this? >> >> >> > thanks > >
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On May 7, 8:18 am, "Gary G. Little" <gary.g.lit...[ at ]seagate.com> wrote:
[Quoted Text] > NtDev is one of several newsgroups where kernel/driver developers persist. > Look at osronline.com and register there. > > I believe we align to an 8 byte boundary, but that's more of a guess, as in > that regard I tend to be more of a user than an implement.
Would it be possible to ask your developers which boundary alignment they use for both data buffers and structures ( I assume they are the same alignment, but since microsoft doesn't specify what the cache alignment size is, I need to inquire)
thanks
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8.
-- The personal opinion of Gary G. Little
"cappy2112" <cappy2112[ at ]gmail.com> wrote in message news:1178822221.558650.200820[ at ]e51g2000hsg.googlegroups.com...
[Quoted Text] > On May 7, 8:18 am, "Gary G. Little" <gary.g.lit...[ at ]seagate.com> wrote: >> NtDev is one of several newsgroups where kernel/driver developers >> persist. >> Look at osronline.com and register there. >> >> I believe we align to an 8 byte boundary, but that's more of a guess, as >> in >> that regard I tend to be more of a user than an implement. > > Would it be possible to ask your developers which boundary alignment > they use for both data buffers and structures ( I assume they are the > same alignment, but since microsoft doesn't specify what the cache > alignment size is, I need to inquire) > > thanks >
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