i'm trying to send ATA commands to a physical disk in Windows, and get the response from the device.

Note: In this case i want to send the IDENTIFY DEVICE (0xEC) command. The device will respond with a 512-byte block of data. (In particular i'm interested in bit 0 of word 119 - the device's support for the TRIM command).

i know that i need to use CreateFile to open the device:

handle = CreateFile(
         "\\.\PhysicalDrive0", GENERIC_READ, FILE_SHARE_READ, 
         nil,            //no security attributes
         OPEN_EXISTING,
         0,              //flags and attributes
         nil             //no template file
      );

But after this i'm stymied about what to do.

i thought about sending 0xEC using [DeviceIoControl][4]:

//const ATACommand_IdentifyDevice = 0xEC;
uint bytesReturned = 0;

DeviceIoControl(handle, 
         0xEC,               //IO Control Code
         nil,                //input buffer not needed
         0,                  //input buffer is zero bytes
         @buffer,            //output buffer to store the returned 512-bytes
         512,                //output buffer is 512 bytes long
         out bytesReturned, 
         nil                 //not an overlapped operation
     );

But this is completely wrong. An IoControlCode sent to DeviceIoControl must be a valid IO_CTL, which are built using the macro:

#define CTL_CODE(DeviceType, Function, Method, Access) (
   ((DeviceType) << 16) | ((Access) << 14) | ((Function) << 2) | (Method)
)

Looking at the SDK, there are a number of valid Disk Management Control Codes, e.g.:

  • IOCTL_DISK_CREATE_DISK
  • IOCTL_DISK_GET_DRIVE_GEOMETRY
  • IOCTL_DISK_GET_DRIVE_GEOMETRY_EX
  • IOCTL_DISK_GET_PARTITION_INFO
  • IOCTL_STORAGE_QUERY_PROPERTY

But none of them are IDENTIFY DEVICE command, or return anything it returns.

So i believe i have to use some "raw" method of sending commands.


Searching around i came across and undocumented IOCTL

#define  DFP_RECEIVE_DRIVE_DATA   0x0007c088   

Which when you break down the IOCTL pieces, means:

Custom: (0)
Device Type: (7) FILE_DEVICE_DISK
Required Access: (3) METHOD_NEITHER
Custom: (0)
Function Code: (34)
Transfer Type: (0)

But there is no documentation anywhere on what the inputBuffer must contain, its size, and what its outputBuffer will contain, or its required. Nor can i figure out what functionCode 34 (0x22) is.


My question: How do i send raw ATA commands (e.g. 0xEC) to an ATA device, and read its response?

See also


Answer pieces

Open the drive with ReadWrite access:

handle = CreateFile(
         "\\.\PhysicalDrive0", 
         GENERIC_READ or GENERIC_WRITE, //IOCTL_ATA_PASS_THROUGH requires read-write
         FILE_SHARE_READ, 
         nil,            //no security attributes
         OPEN_EXISTING,
         0,              //flags and attributes
         nil             //no template file
      );

Setup an ATA_PASS_THROUGH_EX structure as our input buffer to use with IOCTL_ATA_PASS_THROUGH IO control code:

ATA_PASS_THROUGH_EX inputBuffer;
   inputBuffer.Length = sizeof(ATA_PASS_THROUGH_EX);
   inputBuffer.AtaFlags = ATA_FLAGS_DATA_IN;
   inputBuffer.DataTransferLength = 0;
   inputBuffer.DataBufferOffset = 0;
   //todo: put the ATA command (e.g. 0xEC) somewhere

uint inputBufferSize = sizeof(ATA_PASS_THROUGH_EX);

Setup an output buffer to hold our expected 512-byte response from the drive:

Byte[] outputBuffer = new Byte[512];
uint outputBufferSize = 512;

Call DeviceIoControl:

int ioControlCode = IOCTL_ATA_PASS_THROUGH; //or maybe IOCTL_ATA_PASS_THROUGH_DIRECT
uint bytesReturned = 0;

DeviceIoControl(handle, ioControlCode,
         inputBuffer, inputBufferSize,
         outputBuffer, outputBufferSize,
         out bytesReturned,
         nil      //not an overlapped operation    
      );

Close the file handle:

handle.Close();
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73% accept rate
i can't believe i wasted 8 hours, of my day off, on this. i just wanted to call EC and look at the results. – Ian Boyd Feb 21 '11 at 21:37
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2 Answers

up vote 5 down vote accepted

You need to use IOCTL_ATA_PASS_THROUGH/IOCTL_ATA_PASS_THROUGH_DIRECT, these are quite well documented. Also, you need GENERIC_READ|GENERIC_WRITE access for CreateFile.

Be aware that pre XP SP2 does not support these properly. Also, if you have a nForce based MB with nvidia drivers, your SATA drives will appear as SCSI and you can't use this passthrough.

In some cases, the SMART IOCTL's (e.g. SMART_RCV_DRIVE_DATA) will work on nForce drivers. You can use these to get IDENTIFY and SMART data, but not much else.

The open source smartmontools is a good place to start looking for sample code.

EDIT: Sample from an app talking to ATA devices.

EResult DeviceOperationManagerWin::executeATACommandIndirect(ATACommand & Cmd) {
    const uint32 FillerSize = 0;
    Utils::ByteBuffer B;
    B.reserve(sizeof(ATA_PASS_THROUGH_EX) + 4 + Cmd.bufferSize());
    ATA_PASS_THROUGH_EX & PTE = * (ATA_PASS_THROUGH_EX *) B.appendPointer(sizeof(ATA_PASS_THROUGH_EX) + FillerSize + Cmd.bufferSize());
    uint8 * DataPtr = ((uint8 *) &PTE) + sizeof(ATA_PASS_THROUGH_EX) + FillerSize;

    memset(&PTE, 0, sizeof(ATA_PASS_THROUGH_EX) + FillerSize);
    PTE.Length = sizeof(PTE);
    PTE.AtaFlags = 0;
    PTE.AtaFlags |= Cmd.requiresDRDY() ? ATA_FLAGS_DRDY_REQUIRED : 0;
    switch (Cmd.dataDirection()) {
    case ddFromDevice: 
        PTE.AtaFlags |= ATA_FLAGS_DATA_IN; 
        break;
    case ddToDevice:
        PTE.AtaFlags |= ATA_FLAGS_DATA_OUT;
        memcpy(DataPtr, Cmd.buffer(), Cmd.bufferSize());
        break;
    default:
        break;
    }
    PTE.AtaFlags |= Cmd.is48Bit() ? ATA_FLAGS_48BIT_COMMAND : 0;
    PTE.AtaFlags |= Cmd.isDMA() ? ATA_FLAGS_USE_DMA : 0;
    PTE.DataTransferLength = Cmd.bufferSize();
    PTE.TimeOutValue = Cmd.timeout();
    PTE.DataBufferOffset = sizeof(PTE) + FillerSize;
    PTE.DataTransferLength = Cmd.bufferSize();
    PTE.CurrentTaskFile[0] = Cmd.taskFileIn0().Features;
    PTE.CurrentTaskFile[1] = Cmd.taskFileIn0().Count;
    PTE.CurrentTaskFile[2] = Cmd.taskFileIn0().LBALow;
    PTE.CurrentTaskFile[3] = Cmd.taskFileIn0().LBAMid;
    PTE.CurrentTaskFile[4] = Cmd.taskFileIn0().LBAHigh;
    PTE.CurrentTaskFile[5] = Cmd.taskFileIn0().Device;
    PTE.CurrentTaskFile[6] = Cmd.taskFileIn0().Command;
    PTE.CurrentTaskFile[7] = 0;
    if (Cmd.is48Bit()) {
        PTE.PreviousTaskFile[0] = Cmd.taskFileIn1().Features;
        PTE.PreviousTaskFile[1] = Cmd.taskFileIn1().Count;
        PTE.PreviousTaskFile[2] = Cmd.taskFileIn1().LBALow;
        PTE.PreviousTaskFile[3] = Cmd.taskFileIn1().LBAMid;
        PTE.PreviousTaskFile[4] = Cmd.taskFileIn1().LBAHigh;
        PTE.PreviousTaskFile[5] = Cmd.taskFileIn1().Device;
        PTE.PreviousTaskFile[6] = 0;
        PTE.PreviousTaskFile[7] = 0;
    }

    DWORD BR; 
    if (!DeviceIoControl(FHandle, IOCTL_ATA_PASS_THROUGH, &PTE, B.size(), &PTE, B.size(), &BR, 0)) {
        FLastOSError = GetLastError();
        LOG_W << "ioctl ATA_PT failed for " << Cmd << ": " << FLastOSError << " (" << Utils::describeOSError(FLastOSError) << ")";
        return Utils::mapOSError(FLastOSError);
    }
    Cmd.taskFileOut0().Error = PTE.CurrentTaskFile[0];
    Cmd.taskFileOut0().Count = PTE.CurrentTaskFile[1];
    Cmd.taskFileOut0().LBALow = PTE.CurrentTaskFile[2];
    Cmd.taskFileOut0().LBAMid = PTE.CurrentTaskFile[3];
    Cmd.taskFileOut0().LBAHigh = PTE.CurrentTaskFile[4];
    Cmd.taskFileOut0().Device = PTE.CurrentTaskFile[5];
    Cmd.taskFileOut0().Status = PTE.CurrentTaskFile[6];
    Cmd.taskFileOut1().Error = PTE.PreviousTaskFile[0];
    Cmd.taskFileOut1().Count = PTE.PreviousTaskFile[1];
    Cmd.taskFileOut1().LBALow = PTE.PreviousTaskFile[2];
    Cmd.taskFileOut1().LBAMid = PTE.PreviousTaskFile[3];
    Cmd.taskFileOut1().LBAHigh = PTE.PreviousTaskFile[4];
    Cmd.taskFileOut1().Device = PTE.PreviousTaskFile[5];
    Cmd.taskFileOut1().Status = PTE.PreviousTaskFile[6];
    if (Cmd.dataDirection() == ddFromDevice) {
        memcpy(Cmd.buffer(), DataPtr, Cmd.bufferSize());
    }
    return resOK;
    }

EDIT: Sample without external dependencies.

IDENTIFY requires a 512 byte buffer for data:

unsigned char Buffer[512 + sizeof(ATA_PASS_THROUGH_EX)] = { 0 };
ATA_PASS_THROUGH_EX & PTE = *(ATA_PASS_THROUGH_EX *) Buffer;
PTE.Length = sizeof(PTE);
PTE.TimeOutValue = 10;
PTE.DataTransferLength = 512;
PTE.DataBufferOffset = sizeof(ATA_PASS_THROUGH_EX);

Set up the IDE registers as specified in ATA spec.

IDEREGS * ir = (IDEREGS *) PTE.CurrentTaskFile;
ir->bCommandReg = 0xEC;
ir->bSectorCountReg = 1;

IDENTIFY is neither 48-bit nor DMA, it reads from the device:

PTE.AtaFlags = ATA_FLAGS_DATA_IN | ATA_FLAGS_DRDY_REQUIRED;

Do the ioctl:

DeviceIOControl(Handle, IOCTL_ATA_PASS_THROUGH, &PTE, sizeof(Buffer), &PTE, sizeof(Buffer), &BR, 0);

Here you should insert error checking, both from DeviceIOControl and by looking at IDEREGS for device reported errors.

Get the IDENTIFY data, assuming you have defined a struct IdentifyData

IdentifyData * IDData = (IdentifyData *) (Buffer + sizeof(ATA_PASS_THROUGH_EX));
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Docs say, "If the caller's command might require direct access to memory, use IOCTL_ATA_PASS_THROUGH_DIRECT instead." How would i know if my command might require direct access to memory? – Ian Boyd Feb 21 '11 at 20:45
IDENTIFY won't. I'm using these interchangeably, but the DIRECT version would be faster for data transfers (READ/WRITE) commands – Erik Feb 21 '11 at 20:47
If you just need IDENTIFY/SMART data, go with the SMART ioctl, it's easier to use and works on more drivers. If you plan on going beyond IDENTIFY/SMART, go for the ATA ioctls and live with the nForce annoyance. – Erik Feb 21 '11 at 20:49
Also, and not to quibble, but i don't see any spot in ATA_PASS_THROUGH_EX structure to put the actual command code. – Ian Boyd Feb 21 '11 at 20:49
What's the ioctl of the SMART ioctl? Also, i wouldn't think ATA flash devices would support SMART, since it makes no sense. – Ian Boyd Feb 21 '11 at 20:51
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You need IOCTL_ATA_PASS_THROUGH Control Code

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What would i pass as the input buffer (or where in the input buffer do i put 0xEC?) – Ian Boyd Feb 21 '11 at 20:55
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