Re: Disk geometry from /sys

From: Mark Lord
Date: Tue Apr 22 2008 - 18:44:34 EST


Francis Moreau wrote:
Hello Mark

On Fri, Apr 18, 2008 at 3:22 PM, Mark Lord <lkml@xxxxxx> wrote:
That can sound a bit misleading. The complete story, for ATA/SATA drives,
is that the disk has two geometries: an internal physical one, with a
fixed number of heads and cylinders, but variable sectors/track
(which normally varies by cylinder zone).

Software *never* sees or knows about that geometry, so ignore it.

The second geometry, is the one that the drive reports to software
as its "native" geometry. This is what you see from "hdparm -I"
and friends, and this geometry is what has to be used by software
when using cylinder/head/sector (CHS) addressing for I/O operations.
The hardware interface has a limit of 4-bits for the head value,
so the maximum number of heads can never be more than 16.

Nobody uses CHS addressing for I/O operations, at least not on
any hardware newer than at least ten years old, so this geometry
is also unimportant for most uses.


Is it because IDE drives support several IO operation modes ?
..

The earliest IDE drives for Compaq used only CHS sector addressing mode.

Within four years, though, all new drives had support for the more sensible linear block addressing (LBA) mode, as well.

LBA has been mandatory in new drives since the early 1990s,
so there's really no point to CHS addressing any more,
except when fiddling with MS-DOS style partition tables
(which have both CHS and LBA values stored inside).

Cheers
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