It's a known fact that Windows times out commands after 7 seconds, so
drives generally try and respond if they can before that happens. We
default to 5 seconds, which sometimes is a bit too short.
Jeremy Higdon reported here:
http://lkml.org/lkml/2007/1/1/145
that his drive takes longer than 5 seconds for a "read track
information" command, later confirming that it is about 6.7 seconds.
So just do the sane thing and change the default command timeout to 7
seconds to avoid other surprises.
Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <jens.axboe@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
/* used in the audio ioctls */
#define CHECKAUDIO if ((ret=check_for_audio_disc(cdi, cdo))) return ret
+/*
+ * Another popular OS uses 7 seconds as the hard timeout for default
+ * commands, so it is a good choice for us as well.
+ */
+#define CDROM_DEF_TIMEOUT (7 * HZ)
+
/* Not-exported routines. */
static int open_for_data(struct cdrom_device_info * cdi);
static int check_for_audio_disc(struct cdrom_device_info * cdi,
cgc->buffer = (char *) buf;
cgc->buflen = len;
cgc->data_direction = type;
- cgc->timeout = 5*HZ;
+ cgc->timeout = CDROM_DEF_TIMEOUT;
}
/* DVD handling */