Christoph Hellwig <hch@xxxxxx> schrieb am Fri, 06. Nov 15:02: > On Thu, Nov 05, 2020 at 09:56:47PM +0100, Stefan Haberland wrote: > > > + /* do not manipulate hardware state for partitions */ > > > if (bdev_is_partition(bdev)) > > > - // ro setting is not allowed for partitions > > > - return -EINVAL; > > > - if (get_user(intval, (int __user *)argp)) > > > - return -EFAULT; > > > + return 0; > > > + > > > base = dasd_device_from_gendisk(bdev->bd_disk); > > > if (!base) > > > return -ENODEV; > > > - if (!intval && test_bit(DASD_FLAG_DEVICE_RO, &base->flags)) { > > > - dasd_put_device(base); > > > - return -EROFS; > > > - } > > > - set_disk_ro(bdev->bd_disk, intval); > > > > > > While testing this patch I just noticed that when I set a device readonly this is > > not going to be passed on to the partitions on this device any longer. > > > > This is caused by the removed call to set_disk_ro(). > > > > Is this intentional or was this removed by accident? > > It was unintentionally intentional :) > > The generic code used already by almost all drivers in mainline only > calls set_device_ro from blkdev_roset, that is it only sets the main > device read-only. dasd was the outlier here, and I didn't notice it > actually called set_disk_ro instead of set_device_ro. That being > said I think setting all the partitions read-only as well when the > full device is set read-only makes perfect sense. I'm just a little > worried it could cause regressions. Let me prepare a follow on patch > on top of the series that switches to that behavior. Makes sense. I am fine with that. With this in mind: Reviewed-by: Stefan Haberland <sth@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>