Hi Bart, Bart Van Assche <bvanassche@xxxxxxx> writes: > On 5/12/24 11:39, Andreas Hindborg wrote: >> + /// Set the logical block size of the device. >> + /// >> + /// This is the smallest unit the storage device can address. It is >> + /// typically 512 bytes. > > Hmm ... all block devices that I have encountered recently have a > logical block size of 4096 bytes. Isn't this the preferred logical > block size for SSDs and for SMR hard disks? Yes, that is probably true. This text was lifted from the entry on the sysfs attribute in `Documentation/ABI/stable/sysfs-block`, but maybe that needs to be updated as well. > >> + /// Set the physical block size of the device. >> + /// >> + /// This is the smallest unit a physical storage device can write >> + /// atomically. It is usually the same as the logical block size but may be >> + /// bigger. One example is SATA drives with 4KB sectors that expose a >> + /// 512-byte logical block size to the operating system. > > Please be consistent and change "4 KB sectors" into "4 KB physical block > size". OK, I will. I can CC the changes to `Documentation/ABI/stable/sysfs-block` then' > > I think that the physical block size can also be smaller than the > logical block size. From the SCSI SBC standard: > > Table 91 — LOGICAL BLOCKS PER PHYSICAL BLOCK EXPONENT field > ----- ------------------------------------------------------------ > Code Description > ----- ------------------------------------------------------------ > 0 One or more physical blocks per logical block (the number of > physical blocks per logical block is not reported). > n > 0 2**n logical blocks per physical block > ----- ------------------------------------------------------------ How does that work? Would the drive do a read/modify/write internally? Would that not make the physical block size as seen from the OS equal to the smaller logical block size? > >> +impl<T: Operations, S: GenDiskState> GenDisk<T, S> { >> + /// Call to tell the block layer the capacity of the device in sectors (512B). > > Why to use any other unit than bytes in Rust block::mq APIs? sector_t > was introduced before 64-bit CPUs became available to reduce the number > of bytes required to represent offsets. I don't think that this is still > a concern today. Hence my proposal to be consistent in the Rust block::mq API > and to use bytes as the unit in all APIs. I think that is very good idea. How do others feel about this? BR Andreas