/* * flushb.c --- This routine flushes the disk buffers for a disk * * Copyright 1997, 2000, by Theodore Ts'o. * * This program may be used under the provisions of the GNU Public * License, *EXCEPT* that a binary copy of the executable may not be * packaged as a part of binary package which is distributed as part * of a Linux distribution. (Yes, this violates the Debian Free * Software Guidelines of restricting its field of use. That's the * point. I don't want this program being distributed in Debian, * because I don't care to support it, and the maintainer, Yann * Dirson, doesn't seem to pay attention to my wishes on this matter. * So I'm deliberately adding this clause so it violates the Debian * Free Software Guidelines to force him to take it out. (What part * of THIS IS FOR MY OWN USE don't you understand? And no, I'm going * to write a man page for it either. And don't file a bug about it * or bug me about it.) If this doesn't work, I'll have to remove it * from the upstream source distribution at the next release. End of * Rant. :-) * * (BTW, use of flushb on some older 2.2 kernels on a heavily loaded * system will corrupt filesystems.) */ #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include "../misc/nls-enable.h" /* For Linux, define BLKFLSBUF if necessary */ #if (!defined(BLKFLSBUF) && defined(__linux__)) #define BLKFLSBUF _IO(0x12,97) /* flush buffer cache */ #endif const char *progname; static void usage(void) { fprintf(stderr, _("Usage: %s disk\n"), progname); exit(1); } int main(int argc, char **argv) { int fd; progname = argv[0]; if (argc != 2) usage(); fd = open(argv[1], O_RDONLY, 0); if (fd < 0) { perror("open"); exit(1); } /* * Note: to reread the partition table, use the ioctl * BLKRRPART instead of BLKFSLBUF. */ #ifdef BLKFLSBUF if (ioctl(fd, BLKFLSBUF, 0) < 0) { perror("ioctl BLKFLSBUF"); exit(1); } return 0; #else fprintf(stderr, _("BLKFLSBUF ioctl not supported! Can't flush buffers.\n")); return 1; #endif }