Reputation:
I'm working on a high performance I/O program and I'm trying to find the best way to determine the _physical_
(and not the _logical_
) byte size of a device's disk blocks with C++. My research so far has led me to the following code snippet:
#include <iostream>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <errno.h>
int main(int argc, char ** argv)
{
// file information including block size of the device
struct stat info;
// device to get block size from
char * device = "/mnt/hdb1";
if (stat(device, &info))
{
printf("stat() error");
strerror(errno);
exit(1);
}
printf("Prefered block size for '%s' is %i byte\n", device, info.st_blksize);
return 0;
}
The man pages says the following about st_blksize
:
The st_blksize field gives the "preferred" blocksize for efficient file system I/O. (Writing to a file in smaller chunks may cause an inefficient read-modify-rewrite.)
, but it does not mention if st_blksize
is the logical or the physical disk block size.
So, is st_blksize
the physical disk block size, and if so, then is this the most POSIX OS portable way of detecting the physical disk block size.
Upvotes: 7
Views: 6026
Reputation: 94584
I wrote an answer, that while hopeful did not work correctly for block devices.
There is no POSIX mechanism for obtaining the fundamental physical block size of a device, you will have to resort to ioctl
, which is platform dependent.
For linux there's ioctl(fd, BLKPBSZGET, &block_size)
For Solaris there's the dkio
interface, which allows you to get the physical block size.
dk_minfo_ext media_info;
if (-1 != ioctl(fd, DKIOMEDIAINFOEXT, &media_info))
block_size = media_info.dki_pbsize;
For Mac OS X, it's ioctl(fd, DKIOCGETPHYSICALBLOCKSIZE, &block_size)
.
For FreeBSD, it should be iotcl(fd, DIOCGSECTORSIZE, &block_size)
.
Upvotes: 5