Am 02.07.2015 um 16:18 hat Laurent Vivier geschrieben: > > > On 02/07/2015 16:03, Paolo Bonzini wrote: > > > > > > On 02/07/2015 15:58, Laurent Vivier wrote: > >> Since any /dev entry can be treated as a raw disk image, it is worth > >> noting which devices can be accessed when and how. /dev/rdisk nodes are > >> character-special devices, but are "raw" in the BSD sense and force > >> block-aligned I/O. They are closer to the physical disk than the buffer > >> cache. /dev/disk nodes, on the other hand, are buffered block-special > >> devices and are used primarily by the kernel's filesystem code. > > > > So the right thing to do would not be just to set need_alignment, but to > > probe it like we do on Linux for BDRV_O_NO_CACHE. > > > > I'm okay with doing the simple thing, but it needs a comment for non-BSDers. > > So, what we have to do, in our case, for MacOS X cdrom, is something like: > > ... GetBSDPath ... > ... > if (flags & BDRV_O_NOCACHE) { > strcat(bsdPath, "r"); > } > ...
I would avoid such magic. What we could do is rejecting /dev/rdisk nodes without BDRV_O_NOCACHE. Kevin