Joerg Schilling wrote:
Arnold Maderthaner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Yes I'm running it as root on RHEL5.1 with newest cdrecord with the
patch that Joerg send.
Btw. after that "crash" the BD-RE drive cannot be used anymore. I had
to reboot the system.
If you need to reboot, you found a kernel bug.....
In the sense that the kernel could detect that the drive was in a
problem state and do the type of initialization which occurs at boot and
device probe time. There are other things possibly involved.
The kernel just passes commands, so the application might be sending
some command (not "wrong," just different than what the Windows
application uses) which locks up the firmware. To test you could leave
the system up and power cycle the drive (plug and unplug power cable).
Unlikely, but not impossible. You could call this an application bug or
a firmware bug, but if power cycle of the drive clears it, it is likely
to be firmware response to the command sent. If the kernel passes the
application command to the device, it's reasonably hard to see this as a
kernel bug in the usual sense.
It would be good to know what command the Windows application sends to
do the same function, it would help clarify the nature of the problem,
and obviously the solution.
--
Bill Davidsen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
"Woe unto the statesman who makes war without a reason that will still
be valid when the war is over..." Otto von Bismark