Douglas Gilbert wrote:
Orion Poplawski wrote:
I got the following error trying to burn a DVD on an IBM USB2 DVD-R burner:
Nov 7 11:40:36 makani kernel: cdrom: This disc doesn't have any tracks
I recognize!
Nov 7 11:41:59 makani kernel: sr 0:0:0:0: SCSI error: return code =
0x8000002
Nov 7 11:41:59 makani kernel: sr0: Current: sense key: Data Protect
Nov 7 11:41:59 makani kernel: ASC=0x27 <<vendor>> ASCQ=0xff
This is on Fedora Core 4 and kernel 2.6.13-1.1532_FC4.
It turns out that this is because the drive did not have enough power
(it was not plugged into the separate ac adapter). I was able to
determine this by booting into Windows, which gave me a nice descriptive
error message.
I was wondering if it makes sense for the kernel drivers to know these
error messages and report better errors, of it should be left up to user
space tools.
I think that you can guess the answer to the above query.
Asc and/or ascq codes >= 0x80 (and <= 0xff) mark the
additional sense code as vendor specific.
Sorry, I'm a bad guesser. So, user space?
The ascq code looks suspicious. An asc/ascq tuple of
<0x27,0x0> ("Write protected") would tie in pretty well
with the sense key of "Data Protect". A better choice
might be <0x5e,0x0> "Low power condition on".
But we don't have any choice here right? Isn't this simply what the
drive returns to us? Are these codes passed on to user space?
Sorry, completely unfamiliar with the linux scsi stack. Just trying to
get the tools (dvd+rw-tools in this case) to return more informative
error messages and thought I'd start from the bottom.
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