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SETCD

NAME

setcd − set various flags to control the behaviour of your cdrom device.

SYNOPSIS

setcd [-hirs] [-ceflot 0|1] [-dx arg] [device ...]

DESCRIPTION

Setcd is a program that allows you to control the behaviour of your Linux cdrom device. There are a number of ways you can control the behaviour of your cdrom drive: should it try to close the tray upon mounting a cdrom when your happened to have left the tray open, or should it eject the tray (or caddy) upon unmounting the cdrom? Should it lock the door when some process uses the cdrom or not? Should the kernel try to ensure that there actually is a cd in the drive, and that it is of the right type (i.e., a data cd in case of a mount, or an audio cd in case of a play operation)?

Setcd can also inform you on the current configuration of the drive, and can give information on the status of the drive; whether or not a cd is loaded, what the type is (audio/data), and some basic information of the disc (total playing time for audio / volume name for data). Setcd can list/probe/configure several cdrom devices at once, independent of their low-level implementation. Finally, setcd can select a disc in a multi-disc cdrom player (juke-box), and set the operating speed of the player.

OPTIONS

Options come in three flavours: without arguments, with one boolean type argument and with a numeric argument. For boolean type arguments, 0 means ‘clear option,’ and 1 means ‘set option.’ Several options may be given at the same time. Following the options, a list of cdrom device names can be given, for which the operations will take place. If no device is given, the default value /dev/cdrom will be used.

-c 0|1

Clear/set auto-close flag. If the cdrom device is opened for data access (e.g., using mount(1) ) and the tray is found open, an attempt is made to close the tray. This is considered ‘desired’ behaviour but people with old cd player programs may disagree. A cd player that opens the device at regular intervals would have problems leaving the tray ejected, if there were no special arrangements taken to support cd player programs. In the new interface they can specify in their open(2) call that they wish to open the device just for issuing ioctl(2) calls. Instead of clearing this option, consider upgrading your cd player program.

-d drive

Selects the cd in slot number drive in case the cdrom player is a juke-box model.

-e 0|1

Clear/set EJECT_SW flag. This is basically identical to controlling the auto-close and auto-open flags simultaneously. The EJECT_SW flag enables closing the tray upon mounting a cdrom, and opening the tray upon unmounting it again. The option is included to support the old-style cdrom behaviour (many low-level driver have implemented the ioctl-command connected to this flag).

-f 0|1

Clear/set use-fflags flag. The new cdrom interface specifies a special interpretation of the O_NONBLOCK option in the open(2) call for cdrom devices. When this option is used, and the use-fflags option is set, the cdrom driver will not attempt to do anything to make the open() call more successful; the tray is not closed upon opening, no cd type checking is performed, in fact the open() call will always succeed. This allows user-level programs to issue ioctl() commands regardless of the state in which the drive is. Setting this option is the preferred state. Users may wish to clear this option in case they have an old cd player program that does not support the O_NONBLOCK option, but have a new style cdrom driver (i.e., IDE, SCSI or cm206).

-h

Print copyright information and terse help.

-i

Give information on the cdrom drive. The status of the drive is checked, possible outcome is (a) no disc inserted, (b) tray is open, (c) drive is not ready, (d) disc is found. In the last case, an attempt is made to determine the type of disc (audio or one of 4 types of data disc), and for both "audio" and "data disc type 1|2" some additional information is given. Currently for data discs this is the volume name, publisher and data preparer. For audio discs the extra information is very terse, you may enjoy a full-fledged audio cd player program better.

-l 0|1

Clear/set locking flag. When this flag is set, the drive door is locked while the cdrom devices is opened, e.g., when a cdrom is mounted. Not locking the door is undesired behaviour, because this may lead to file system corruption if a cdrom is removed while being mounted.

-o 0|1

Clear/set auto-open flag. When this flag is set, and the last process that uses the cdrom device closes the device, an attempt is made to eject the tray. Care is taken, that processes that used the O_NONBLOCK option in opening the device, will not cause such an auto-eject. Yet, we consider this auto-eject behaviour undesired. In most cases, this behaviour is combined with the auto-close behaviour, in which case the option "-e" is the preferred usage.

-r

Resets all options to a default behaviour. Using this option is equivalent to "-c1 -f1 -l1 -o0 -t1", i.e., all options set in a way we consider ‘desired.’ For the current development kernel, this is identical to the default settings apart from the type-checking flag, because this flag relies on a very modern kernel, libc and cdrom players.

-s

Gives the current status of the option flags. Information on the following flag settings is giver, one per line: (a) auto-close, (b) auto-open, (c) use-fflags, (d) tray-locking, (e) type-checking.

-t 0|1

Clear/set cd type checking flag. When this option is set, the kernel will check the type of cd upon various operations. A system error "Wrong medium type" is given if the generic cdrom driver receives an open-for-data call while an audio cd is inside the drive, or a playing command is received while a data disc is in the drive. This behaviour is considered superior over kernel time-outs and other implementation-dependent behaviour found on the old-style cdrom interface. However, this feature is relatively new, and requires kernel version 2.1.27 or later, and libc-5.4.24 or later. Moreover, if you use an audio cd player program, it must use the O_NONBLOCK open flag (see option "-f"). These stringent constraints made the current kernels to have this option turned off, while people using setcd are considered modern and progressive enough to have this option selected by default using the "-r" option.

-x speed

Sets the head-rate of the cdrom player to speed times 150 KB/sec, or speed times real-time audio playback. The special value 0 is interpreted as auto-selection: data cd’s are read at maximum head-rate, while audio cd’s are played at normal speed. There are a few reasons for having the speed to be selectable. Badly pressed cdroms may benefit from less-than-maximum head rate. Modern cdrom drives can obtain very high head rates, but these drives tend to make an annoyingly loud noise. A lower speed may reduce this.

HISTORY

Traditionally, up to the 2.0 Linux kernel line, the behaviour of the cdrom access was determined by the low-level driver implementation, which varied between different brands of drives. Since kernel 1.3.late, an extra interface layer has been defined between the kernel and user level programs, that makes the behaviour of the cdrom drive independent of the low-level driver. The first driver to respect the new interface was, surprisingly, the outdated Philips/LMS cm206 in kernel 2.0. Nowadays, all new cdrom drives are either IDE or SCSI, and these drivers support the new cdrom interface in the kernel 2.1 line. We hope that the other ‘old’ cdrom divers will eventually support the new interface, so that the behaviour of Linux cdrom drives is truly uniform.

The new cdrom interface level was actually inspired after writing a volume daemon that automatically mounts a cdrom at the location /cdrom/volume upon insertion of the disc. I then found out that there was a need for finding out the status of the drive without trying to read data, and that the uniformity of cdrom drivers was a mess. The volume daemon has not been finished yet, but progress has been made in convincing the Linux cdrom driver community to comply to the proposed standard.

DIAGNOSTICS

Setting or clearing an option will result in a message indicating the new status of that option. Operations not supported by the underlying hardware, e.g., disc selection, will result in an error condition. Several other ioctls may result an error condition if the low-level drivers don’t support that particular ioctl.

FILES

/dev/cdrom

The default cdrom device. In most installations, this is a symbolic link to the only cdrom device on the system. In multi cdrom systems, the cdrom devices have to be explicitly named on the command line.

/usr/include/linux/ucdrom.h

The header file for the new cdrom interface. Please consult this file first if you want to use ioctl calls in your program to control the cdrom drives. Maybe you can get want you want by controlling the behaviour of the cdrom, instead of issuing direct commands. At any rate, use the O_NONBLOCK option if you open the device for ioctl-commanding.

/usr/include/fcntl.h

Location where O_NONBLOCK is defined.

/usr/src/linux/Documentation/cdrom/cdrom-standard.tex

A piece of proza originally written for cdrom driver developers. However, cd player program developers may benefit from the explanation of new ioctls defined in the new cdrom interface. You can view the documentation by issuing

latex cdrom-standard.tex
xdvi cdrom-standard

I am sorry that you’ll have to install TeX, latex and xdvi first, but you may have success in reading the plain latex source; after all, it is ASCII.

BUGS

Long-style options are not supported.

TO DO

CD medium catalog number could be given for audio cd’s. However, not many cd’s bare that kind of information.

Somehow convince the ‘old-style’ cdrom driver developers to adapt their drivers to the new interface, it shouldn’t be that much work.

Write texinfo documentation.

AUTHOR

Setcd is written by David A. van Leeuwen <david AT elseware DOT nl>, the author of the earlier mentioned new cdrom interface and the cm206 cdrom driver.

SEE ALSO

mount(1), open(2), ioctl(2).

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