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.\" Copyright (c) 1996
.\" Julian Elischer <julian@FreeBSD.org>. All rights reserved.
.\"
.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
.\" are met:
.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
.\"
.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
.\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
.\"
.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
.\" ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
.\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
.\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
.\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
.\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
.\" SUCH DAMAGE.
.\"
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.\" $FreeBSD$
1997-03-07 02:50:01 +00:00
.\"
Add basic programmable early warning error injection to the sa(4) driver. This will help application developers simulate end of tape conditions. To inject an error in sa0: sysctl kern.cam.sa.0.inject_eom=1 This will return the next read or write request queued with 0 bytes written. Any subsequent writes or reads will go along as usual. This will also cause the early warning position flag to get set for the next position query. So, 'mt status' will show the BPEW (Beyond Programmable Early Warning) flag on the first query after an error injection. After that, the position flags will be as they are in the underlying tape drive. Also, update the sa(4) man page to describe tape parameters, which can be set via 'mt param'. sys/cam/scsi/scsi_sa.c: In saregister(), create the inject_eom sysctl variable. In sastart(), check to see whether inject_eom is set. If so, return the read or write with 0 bytes written to indicate EOM. Set the set_pews_status flag so that we fake PEWS status in the next position call for reads, and the next 3 calls for writes. This allows the user to see the BPEW flag one time via 'mt status'. In sagetpos(), check the set_pews_status flag and fake PEWS status and decrement the counter if it is set. share/man/man4/sa.4: Document the inject_eom sysctl variable. Document all of the parameters currently supported via 'mt param'. usr.bin/mt/mt.1: Point the user to the sa(4) man page for more details on supported parameters. MFC after: 3 days Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
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.Dd May 5, 2017
.Dt SA 4
.Os
.Sh NAME
.Nm sa
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.Nd SCSI Sequential Access device driver
.Sh SYNOPSIS
.Cd device sa
.Sh DESCRIPTION
The
.Nm
driver provides support for all
.Tn SCSI
devices of the sequential access class that are attached to the system
through a supported
.Tn SCSI
Host Adapter.
The sequential access class includes tape and other linear access devices.
.Pp
A
.Tn SCSI
Host
adapter must also be separately configured into the system
before a
.Tn SCSI
sequential access device can be configured.
.Sh MOUNT SESSIONS
The
.Nm
driver is based around the concept of a
.Dq Em mount session ,
which is defined as the period between the time that a tape is
mounted, and the time when it is unmounted.
Any parameters set during
a mount session remain in effect for the remainder of the session or
until replaced.
The tape can be unmounted, bringing the session to a
close in several ways.
These include:
.Bl -enum
.It
Closing a `rewind device',
referred to as sub-mode 00 below.
An example is
.Pa /dev/sa0 .
.It
Using the MTOFFL
.Xr ioctl 2
command, reachable through the
.Sq Cm offline
command of
.Xr mt 1 .
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.El
.Pp
It should be noted that tape devices are exclusive open devices, except in
the case where a control mode device is opened.
In the latter case, exclusive
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access is only sought when needed (e.g., to set parameters).
.Sh SUB-MODES
Bits 0 and 1 of the minor number are interpreted as
.Sq sub-modes .
The sub-modes differ in the action taken when the device is closed:
.Bl -tag -width XXXX
.It 00
A close will rewind the device; if the tape has been
written, then a file mark will be written before the rewind is requested.
The device is unmounted.
.It 01
A close will leave the tape mounted.
If the tape was written to, a file mark will be written.
No other head positioning takes place.
Any further reads or writes will occur directly after the
last read, or the written file mark.
.It 10
A close will rewind the device.
If the tape has been
written, then a file mark will be written before the rewind is requested.
On completion of the rewind an unload command will be issued.
The device is unmounted.
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.El
.Sh BLOCKING MODES
.Tn SCSI
tapes may run in either
.Sq Em variable
or
.Sq Em fixed
block-size modes.
Most
.Tn QIC Ns -type
devices run in fixed block-size mode, where most nine-track tapes and
many new cartridge formats allow variable block-size.
The difference between the two is as follows:
.Bl -inset
.It Variable block-size:
Each write made to the device results in a single logical record
written to the tape.
One can never read or write
.Em part
of a record from tape (though you may request a larger block and read
a smaller record); nor can one read multiple blocks.
Data from a single write is therefore read by a single read.
The block size used
may be any value supported by the device, the
.Tn SCSI
adapter and the system (usually between 1 byte and 64 Kbytes,
sometimes more).
.Pp
When reading a variable record/block from the tape, the head is
logically considered to be immediately after the last item read,
and before the next item after that.
If the next item is a file mark,
but it was never read, then the next
process to read will immediately hit the file mark and receive an end-of-file notification.
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.It Fixed block-size:
Data written by the user is passed to the tape as a succession of
fixed size blocks.
It may be contiguous in memory, but it is
considered to be a series of independent blocks.
One may never write
an amount of data that is not an exact multiple of the blocksize.
One may read and write the same data as a different set of records.
In other words, blocks that were written together may be read separately,
and vice-versa.
.Pp
If one requests more blocks than remain in the file, the drive will
encounter the file mark.
As there is some data to return (unless
there were no records before the file mark), the read will succeed,
returning that data.
The next read will return immediately with a value
of 0.
(As above, if the file mark is never read, it remains for the next
process to read if in no-rewind mode.)
.El
Add support to physio(9) for devices that don't want I/O split and configure sa(4) to request no I/O splitting by default. For tape devices, the user needs to be able to clearly understand what blocksize is actually being used when writing to a tape device. The previous behavior of physio(9) was that it would split up any I/O that was too large for the device, or too large to fit into MAXPHYS. This means that if, for instance, the user wrote a 1MB block to a tape device, and MAXPHYS was 128KB, the 1MB write would be split into 8 128K chunks. This would be done without informing the user. This has suboptimal effects, especially when trying to communicate status to the user. In the event of an error writing to a tape (e.g. physical end of tape) in the middle of a 1MB block that has been split into 8 pieces, the user could have the first two 128K pieces written successfully, the third returned with an error, and the last 5 returned with 0 bytes written. If the user is using a standard write(2) system call, all he will see is the ENOSPC error. He won't have a clue how much actually got written. (With a writev(2) system call, he should be able to determine how much got written in addition to the error.) The solution is to prevent physio(9) from splitting the I/O. The new cdev flag, SI_NOSPLIT, tells physio that the driver does not want I/O to be split beforehand. Although the sa(4) driver now enables SI_NOSPLIT by default, that can be disabled by two loader tunables for now. It will not be configurable starting in FreeBSD 11.0. kern.cam.sa.allow_io_split allows the user to configure I/O splitting for all sa(4) driver instances. kern.cam.sa.%d.allow_io_split allows the user to configure I/O splitting for a specific sa(4) instance. There are also now three sa(4) driver sysctl variables that let the users see some sa(4) driver values. kern.cam.sa.%d.allow_io_split shows whether I/O splitting is turned on. kern.cam.sa.%d.maxio shows the maximum I/O size allowed by kernel configuration parameters (e.g. MAXPHYS, DFLTPHYS) and the capabilities of the controller. kern.cam.sa.%d.cpi_maxio shows the maximum I/O size supported by the controller. Note that a better long term solution would be to implement support for chaining buffers, so that that MAXPHYS is no longer a limiting factor for I/O size to tape and disk devices. At that point, the controller and the tape drive would become the limiting factors. sys/conf.h: Add a new cdev flag, SI_NOSPLIT, that allows a driver to tell physio not to split up I/O. sys/param.h: Bump __FreeBSD_version to 1000049 for the addition of the SI_NOSPLIT cdev flag. kern_physio.c: If the SI_NOSPLIT flag is set on the cdev, return any I/O that is larger than si_iosize_max or MAXPHYS, has more than one segment, or would have to be split because of misalignment with EFBIG. (File too large). In the event of an error, print a console message to give the user a clue about what happened. scsi_sa.c: Set the SI_NOSPLIT cdev flag on the devices created for the sa(4) driver by default. Add tunables to control whether we allow I/O splitting in physio(9). Explain in the comments that allowing I/O splitting will be deprecated for the sa(4) driver in FreeBSD 11.0. Add sysctl variables to display the maximum I/O size we can do (which could be further limited by read block limits) and the maximum I/O size that the controller can do. Limit our maximum I/O size (recorded in the cdev's si_iosize_max) by MAXPHYS. This isn't strictly necessary, because physio(9) will limit it to MAXPHYS, but it will provide some clarity for the application. Record the controller's maximum I/O size reported in the Path Inquiry CCB. sa.4: Document the block size behavior, and explain that the option of allowing physio(9) to split the I/O will disappear in FreeBSD 11.0. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
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.Sh BLOCK SIZES
By default, the driver will NOT accept reads or writes to a tape device that
are larger than may be written to or read from the mounted tape using a single
write or read request.
Because of this, the application author may have confidence that his wishes
are respected in terms of the block size written to tape.
For example, if the user tries to write a 256KB block to the tape, but the
controller can handle no more than 128KB, the write will fail.
The previous
.Fx
behavior, prior to
.Fx
10.0,
was to break up large reads or writes into smaller blocks when going to the
tape.
The problem with that behavior, though, is that it hides the actual on-tape
block size from the application writer, at least in variable block mode.
.Pp
If the user would like his large reads and writes broken up into separate
pieces, he may set the following loader tunables.
Note that these tunables WILL GO AWAY in
.Fx 11.0 .
They are provided for transition purposes only.
.Bl -tag -width 12
.It kern.cam.sa.allow_io_split
.Pp
This variable, when set to 1, will configure all
.Nm
devices to split large buffers into smaller pieces when needed.
.It kern.cam.sa.%d.allow_io_split
.Pp
This variable, when set to 1, will configure the given
.Nm
unit to split large buffers into multiple pieces.
This will override the global setting, if it exists.
.El
.Pp
There are several
.Xr sysctl 8
variables available to view block handling parameters:
.Bl -tag -width 12
.It kern.cam.sa.%d.allow_io_split
.Pp
This variable allows the user to see, but not modify, the current I/O split
setting.
The user is not permitted to modify this setting so that there is no chance
of behavior changing for the application while a tape is mounted.
.It kern.cam.sa.%d.maxio
.Pp
This variable shows the maximum I/O size in bytes that is allowed by the
combination of kernel tuning parameters (MAXPHYS, DFLTPHYS) and the
capabilities of the controller that is attached to the tape drive.
Applications may look at this value for a guide on how large an I/O may be
permitted, but should keep in mind that the actual maximum may be
restricted further by the tape drive via the
.Tn SCSI
READ BLOCK LIMITS command.
.It kern.cam.sa.%d.cpi_maxio
.Pp
This variable shows the maximum I/O size supported by the controller, in
bytes, that is reported via the CAM Path Inquiry CCB (XPT_PATH_INQ).
If this is 0, that means that the controller has not reported a maximum I/O
size.
.El
.Sh FILE MARK HANDLING
The handling of file marks on write is automatic.
If the user has
written to the tape, and has not done a read since the last write,
then a file mark will be written to the tape when the device is
closed.
If a rewind is requested after a write, then the driver
assumes that the last file on the tape has been written, and ensures
that there are two file marks written to the tape.
The exception to
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this is that there seems to be a standard (which we follow, but do not
understand why) that certain types of tape do not actually write two
file marks to tape, but when read, report a `phantom' file mark when the
last file is read.
These devices include the QIC family of devices.
(It might be that this set of devices is the same set as that of fixed
block devices.
This has not been determined yet, and they are treated
as separate behaviors by the driver at this time.)
Add basic programmable early warning error injection to the sa(4) driver. This will help application developers simulate end of tape conditions. To inject an error in sa0: sysctl kern.cam.sa.0.inject_eom=1 This will return the next read or write request queued with 0 bytes written. Any subsequent writes or reads will go along as usual. This will also cause the early warning position flag to get set for the next position query. So, 'mt status' will show the BPEW (Beyond Programmable Early Warning) flag on the first query after an error injection. After that, the position flags will be as they are in the underlying tape drive. Also, update the sa(4) man page to describe tape parameters, which can be set via 'mt param'. sys/cam/scsi/scsi_sa.c: In saregister(), create the inject_eom sysctl variable. In sastart(), check to see whether inject_eom is set. If so, return the read or write with 0 bytes written to indicate EOM. Set the set_pews_status flag so that we fake PEWS status in the next position call for reads, and the next 3 calls for writes. This allows the user to see the BPEW flag one time via 'mt status'. In sagetpos(), check the set_pews_status flag and fake PEWS status and decrement the counter if it is set. share/man/man4/sa.4: Document the inject_eom sysctl variable. Document all of the parameters currently supported via 'mt param'. usr.bin/mt/mt.1: Point the user to the sa(4) man page for more details on supported parameters. MFC after: 3 days Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
2017-05-05 20:00:53 +00:00
.Sh PARAMETERS
The
.Nm
driver supports a number of parameters.
The user can query parameters using
.Dq mt param -l
(which uses the
.Dv MTIOCPARAMGET
ioctl) and the user can set parameters using
.Dq mt param -s
(which uses the
.Dv MTIOCPARAMSET
ioctl).
See
.Xr mt 1
and
.Xr mtio 4
for more details on the interface.
.Pp
Supported parameters:
.Bl -tag -width 5n
.It sili
The default is 0.
When set to 1, it sets the Suppress Incorrect Length Indicator (SILI) bit
on tape reads.
Tape drives normally return sense data (which contains the residual) when the
application reads a block that is not the same length as the amount of data
requested.
The SILI bit suppresses that notification in most cases.
Add basic programmable early warning error injection to the sa(4) driver. This will help application developers simulate end of tape conditions. To inject an error in sa0: sysctl kern.cam.sa.0.inject_eom=1 This will return the next read or write request queued with 0 bytes written. Any subsequent writes or reads will go along as usual. This will also cause the early warning position flag to get set for the next position query. So, 'mt status' will show the BPEW (Beyond Programmable Early Warning) flag on the first query after an error injection. After that, the position flags will be as they are in the underlying tape drive. Also, update the sa(4) man page to describe tape parameters, which can be set via 'mt param'. sys/cam/scsi/scsi_sa.c: In saregister(), create the inject_eom sysctl variable. In sastart(), check to see whether inject_eom is set. If so, return the read or write with 0 bytes written to indicate EOM. Set the set_pews_status flag so that we fake PEWS status in the next position call for reads, and the next 3 calls for writes. This allows the user to see the BPEW flag one time via 'mt status'. In sagetpos(), check the set_pews_status flag and fake PEWS status and decrement the counter if it is set. share/man/man4/sa.4: Document the inject_eom sysctl variable. Document all of the parameters currently supported via 'mt param'. usr.bin/mt/mt.1: Point the user to the sa(4) man page for more details on supported parameters. MFC after: 3 days Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
2017-05-05 20:00:53 +00:00
See the SSC-5 spec (available at t10.org), specifically the section on the
READ(6) command, for more information.
.It eot_warn
The default is 0.
By default, the
.Nm
driver reports entering Programmable Early Warning, Early Warning and End
of Media conditions by returning a write with 0 bytes written, and
.Dv errno
set to 0.
If
.Va eot_warn
is set to 1, the
.Nm
driver will set
.Dv errno
to
.Dv ENOSPC
when it enters any of the out of space conditions.
.It protection.protection_supported
This is a read-only parameter, and is set to 1 if the tape drive supports
protection information.
.It protection.prot_method
If protection is supported, set this to the desired protection method
supported by the tape drive.
As of SSC-5r03 (available at t10.org), the protection method values are:
.Bl -tag -width 3n
.It 0
No protection.
.It 1
Reed-Solomon CRC, 4 bytes in length.
.It 2
CRC32C, 4 bytes in length.
.El
.It protection.pi_length
Length of the protection information, see above for lengths.
.It protection.lbp_w
If set to 1, enable logical block protection on writes.
The CRC must be appended to the end of the block written to the tape driver.
The tape drive will verify the CRC when it receives the block.
.It protection.lbp_r
If set to 1, enable logical block protection on reads.
The CRC will be appended to the end of the block read from the tape driver.
The application should verify the CRC when it receives the block.
.It protection.rdbp
If set to 1, enable logical block protection on the RECOVER BUFFERED DATA
command.
The
.Nm
driver does not currently use the
RECOVER BUFFERED DATA command.
.El
.Sh IOCTLS
The
.Nm
driver supports all of the ioctls of
.Xr mtio 4 .
.Sh FILES
.Bl -tag -width /dev/[n][e]sa[0-9] -compact
.It Pa /dev/[n][e]sa[0-9]
general form:
.It Pa /dev/sa0
Rewind on close
.It Pa /dev/nsa0
No rewind on close
.It Pa /dev/esa0
Eject on close (if capable)
.It Pa /dev/sa0.ctl
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Control mode device (to examine state while another program is
accessing the device, e.g.).
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.El
.Sh DIAGNOSTICS
Add basic programmable early warning error injection to the sa(4) driver. This will help application developers simulate end of tape conditions. To inject an error in sa0: sysctl kern.cam.sa.0.inject_eom=1 This will return the next read or write request queued with 0 bytes written. Any subsequent writes or reads will go along as usual. This will also cause the early warning position flag to get set for the next position query. So, 'mt status' will show the BPEW (Beyond Programmable Early Warning) flag on the first query after an error injection. After that, the position flags will be as they are in the underlying tape drive. Also, update the sa(4) man page to describe tape parameters, which can be set via 'mt param'. sys/cam/scsi/scsi_sa.c: In saregister(), create the inject_eom sysctl variable. In sastart(), check to see whether inject_eom is set. If so, return the read or write with 0 bytes written to indicate EOM. Set the set_pews_status flag so that we fake PEWS status in the next position call for reads, and the next 3 calls for writes. This allows the user to see the BPEW flag one time via 'mt status'. In sagetpos(), check the set_pews_status flag and fake PEWS status and decrement the counter if it is set. share/man/man4/sa.4: Document the inject_eom sysctl variable. Document all of the parameters currently supported via 'mt param'. usr.bin/mt/mt.1: Point the user to the sa(4) man page for more details on supported parameters. MFC after: 3 days Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
2017-05-05 20:00:53 +00:00
The
.Nm
driver supports injecting End Of Media (EOM) notification to aid
application development and testing.
EOM is indicated to the application by returning the read or write with 0
bytes written.
In addition, when EOM is injected, the tape position status will be updated
to temporarily show Beyond of the Programmable Early Warning (BPEW) status.
To see BPEW status, use the
.Dv MTIOCEXTGET
ioctl, which is used by the
.Dq mt status
command.
To inject an EOM notification, set the
.Pp
.Va kern.cam.sa.%d.inject_eom
.Pp
sysctl variable to 1.
One EOM notification will be sent, BPEW status will be set for one position
query, and then the driver state will be reset to normal.
.Sh SEE ALSO
.Xr mt 1 ,
.Xr cam 4
.Sh AUTHORS
.An -nosplit
The
.Nm
driver was written for the
.Tn CAM
.Tn SCSI
subsystem by
.An Justin T. Gibbs
and
.An Kenneth Merry .
Many ideas were gleaned from the
.Nm st
device driver written and ported from
.Tn Mach
2.5
2000-12-29 09:18:45 +00:00
by
.An Julian Elischer .
.Pp
Significant upgrades to sa(4) and mt(1). The primary focus of these changes is to modernize FreeBSD's tape infrastructure so that we can take advantage of some of the features of modern tape drives and allow support for LTFS. Significant changes and new features include: o sa(4) driver status and parameter information is now exported via an XML structure. This will allow for changes and improvements later on that will not break userland applications. The old MTIOCGET status ioctl remains, so applications using the existing interface will not break. o 'mt status' now reports drive-reported tape position information as well as the previously available calculated tape position information. These numbers will be different at times, because the drive-reported block numbers are relative to BOP (Beginning of Partition), but the block numbers calculated previously via sa(4) (and still provided) are relative to the last filemark. Both numbers are now provided. 'mt status' now also shows the drive INQUIRY information, serial number and any position flags (BOP, EOT, etc.) provided with the tape position information. 'mt status -v' adds information on the maximum possible I/O size, and the underlying values used to calculate it. o The extra sa(4) /dev entries (/dev/saN.[0-3]) have been removed. The extra devices were originally added as place holders for density-specific device nodes. Some OSes (NetBSD, NetApp's OnTap and Solaris) have had device nodes that, when you write to them, will automatically select a given density for particular tape drives. This is a convenient way of switching densities, but it was never implemented in FreeBSD. Only the device nodes were there, and that sometimes confused users. For modern tape devices, the density is generally not selectable (e.g. with LTO) or defaults to the highest availble density when the tape is rewritten from BOT (e.g. TS11X0). So, for most users, density selection won't be necessary. If they do need to select the density, it is easy enough to use 'mt density' to change it. o Protection information is now supported. This is either a Reed-Solomon CRC or CRC32 that is included at the end of each block read and written. On write, the tape drive verifies the CRC, and on read, the tape drive provides a CRC for the userland application to verify. o New, extensible tape driver parameter get/set interface. o Density reporting information. For drives that support it, 'mt getdensity' will show detailed information on what formats the tape drive supports, and what formats the tape drive supports. o Some mt(1) functionality moved into a new mt(3) library so that external applications can reuse the code. o The new mt(3) library includes helper routines to aid in parsing the XML output of the sa(4) driver, and build a tree of driver metadata. o Support for the MTLOAD (load a tape in the drive) and MTWEOFI (write filemark immediate) ioctls needed by IBM's LTFS implementation. o Improve device departure behavior for the sa(4) driver. The previous implementation led to hangs when the device was open. o This has been tested on the following types of drives: IBM TS1150 IBM TS1140 IBM LTO-6 IBM LTO-5 HP LTO-2 Seagate DDS-4 Quantum DLT-4000 Exabyte 8505 Sony DDS-2 contrib/groff/tmac/doc-syms, share/mk/bsd.libnames.mk, lib/Makefile, Add libmt. lib/libmt/Makefile, lib/libmt/mt.3, lib/libmt/mtlib.c, lib/libmt/mtlib.h, New mt(3) library that contains functions moved from mt(1) and new functions needed to interact with the updated sa(4) driver. This includes XML parser helper functions that application writers can use when writing code to query tape parameters. rescue/rescue/Makefile: Add -lmt to CRUNCH_LIBS. src/share/man/man4/mtio.4 Clarify this man page a bit, and since it contains what is essentially the mtio.h header file, add new ioctls and structure definitions from mtio.h. src/share/man/man4/sa.4 Update BUGS and maintainer section. sys/cam/scsi/scsi_all.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_all.h: Add SCSI SECURITY PROTOCOL IN/OUT CDB definitions and CDB building functions. sys/cam/scsi/scsi_sa.c sys/cam/scsi/scsi_sa.h Many tape driver changes, largely outlined above. Increase the sa(4) driver read/write timeout from 4 to 32 minutes. This is based on the recommended values for IBM LTO 5/6 drives. This may also avoid timeouts for other tape hardware that can take a long time to do retries and error recovery. Longer term, a better way to handle this is to ask the drive for recommended timeout values using the REPORT SUPPORTED OPCODES command. Modern IBM and Oracle tape drives at least support that command, and it would allow for more accurate timeout values. Add XML status generation. This is done with a series of macros to eliminate as much duplicate code as possible. The new XML-based status values are reported through the new MTIOCEXTGET ioctl. Add XML driver parameter reporting, using the new MTIOCPARAMGET ioctl. Add a new driver parameter setting interface, using the new MTIOCPARAMSET and MTIOCSETLIST ioctls. Add a new MTIOCRBLIM ioctl to get block limits information. Add CCB/CDB building routines scsi_locate_16, scsi_locate_10, and scsi_read_position_10(). scsi_locate_10 implements the LOCATE command, as does the existing scsi_set_position() command. It just supports additional arguments and features. If/when we figure out a good way to provide backward compatibility for older applications using the old function API, we can just revamp scsi_set_position(). The same goes for scsi_read_position_10() and the existing scsi_read_position() function. Revamp sasetpos() to take the new mtlocate structure as an argument. It now will use either scsi_locate_10() or scsi_locate_16(), depending upon the arguments the user supplies. As before, once we change position we don't have a clear idea of what the current logical position of the tape drive is. For tape drives that support long form position data, we read the current position and store that for later reporting after changing the position. This should help applications like Bacula speed tape access under FreeBSD once they are modified to support the new ioctls. Add a new quirk, SA_QUIRK_NO_LONG_POS, that is set for all drives that report SCSI-2 or older, as well as drives that report an Illegal Request type error for READ POSITION with the long format. So we should automatically detect drives that don't support the long form and stop asking for it after an initial try. Add a partition number to the sa(4) softc. Improve device departure handling. The previous implementation led to hangs when the device was open. If an application had the sa(4) driver open, and attempted to close it after it went away, the cam_periph_release() call in saclose() would cause the periph to get destroyed because that was the last reference to it. Because destroy_dev() was called from the sa(4) driver's cleanup routine (sacleanup()), and would block waiting for the close to happen, a deadlock would result. So instead of calling destroy_dev() from the cleanup routine, call destroy_dev_sched_cb() from saoninvalidate() and wait for the callback. Acquire a reference for devfs in saregister(), and release it in the new sadevgonecb() routine when all devfs devices for the particular sa(4) driver instance are gone. Add a new function, sasetupdev(), to centralize setting per-instance devfs device parameters instead of repeating the code in saregister(). Add an open count to the softc, so we know how many peripheral driver references are a result of open sessions. Add the D_TRACKCLOSE flag to the cdevsw flags so that we get a 1:1 mapping of open to close calls instead of a N:1 mapping. This should be a no-op for everything except the control device, since we don't allow more than one open on non-control devices. However, since we do allow multiple opens on the control device, the combination of the open count and the D_TRACKCLOSE flag should result in an accurate peripheral driver reference count, and an accurate open count. The accurate open count allows us to release all peripheral driver references that are the result of open contexts once we get the callback from devfs. sys/sys/mtio.h: Add a number of new mt(4) ioctls and the requisite data structures. None of the existing interfaces been removed or changed. This includes definitions for the following new ioctls: MTIOCRBLIM /* get block limits */ MTIOCEXTLOCATE /* seek to position */ MTIOCEXTGET /* get tape status */ MTIOCPARAMGET /* get tape params */ MTIOCPARAMSET /* set tape params */ MTIOCSETLIST /* set N params */ usr.bin/mt/Makefile: mt(1) now depends on libmt, libsbuf and libbsdxml. usr.bin/mt/mt.1: Document new mt(1) features and subcommands. usr.bin/mt/mt.c: Implement support for mt(1) subcommands that need to use getopt(3) for their arguments. Implement a new 'mt status' command to replace the old 'mt status' command. The old status command has been renamed 'ostatus'. The new status function uses the MTIOCEXTGET ioctl, and therefore parses the XML data to determine drive status. The -x argument to 'mt status' allows the user to dump out the raw XML reported by the kernel. The new status display is mostly the same as the old status display, except that it doesn't print the redundant density mode information, and it does print the current partition number and position flags. Add a new command, 'mt locate', that will supersede the old 'mt setspos' and 'mt sethpos' commands. 'mt locate' implements all of the functionality of the MTIOCEXTLOCATE ioctl, and allows the user to change the logical position of the tape drive in a number of ways. (Partition, block number, file number, set mark number, end of data.) The immediate bit and the explicit address bits are implemented, but not documented in the man page. Add a new 'mt weofi' command to use the new MTWEOFI ioctl. This allows the user to ask the drive to write a filemark without waiting around for the operation to complete. Add a new 'mt getdensity' command that gets the XML-based tape drive density report from the sa(4) driver and displays it. This uses the SCSI REPORT DENSITY SUPPORT command to get comprehensive information from the tape drive about what formats it is able to read and write. Add a new 'mt protect' command that allows getting and setting tape drive protection information. The protection information is a CRC tacked on to the end of every read/write from and to the tape drive. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2015-02-23 21:59:30 +00:00
The owner of record for many years was
.An Matthew Jacob .
The current maintainer is
.An Kenneth Merry
2005-01-21 08:36:40 +00:00
.Sh BUGS
This driver lacks many of the hacks required to deal with older devices.
Many older
.Tn SCSI-1
devices may not work properly with this driver yet.
.Pp
Additionally, certain
tapes (QIC tapes mostly) that were written under
.Fx
2.X
2005-02-13 22:25:33 +00:00
are not automatically read correctly with this driver: you may need to
2005-01-21 08:36:40 +00:00
explicitly set variable block mode or set to the blocksize that works best
for your device in order to read tapes written under
.Fx
2.X.
.Pp
Significant upgrades to sa(4) and mt(1). The primary focus of these changes is to modernize FreeBSD's tape infrastructure so that we can take advantage of some of the features of modern tape drives and allow support for LTFS. Significant changes and new features include: o sa(4) driver status and parameter information is now exported via an XML structure. This will allow for changes and improvements later on that will not break userland applications. The old MTIOCGET status ioctl remains, so applications using the existing interface will not break. o 'mt status' now reports drive-reported tape position information as well as the previously available calculated tape position information. These numbers will be different at times, because the drive-reported block numbers are relative to BOP (Beginning of Partition), but the block numbers calculated previously via sa(4) (and still provided) are relative to the last filemark. Both numbers are now provided. 'mt status' now also shows the drive INQUIRY information, serial number and any position flags (BOP, EOT, etc.) provided with the tape position information. 'mt status -v' adds information on the maximum possible I/O size, and the underlying values used to calculate it. o The extra sa(4) /dev entries (/dev/saN.[0-3]) have been removed. The extra devices were originally added as place holders for density-specific device nodes. Some OSes (NetBSD, NetApp's OnTap and Solaris) have had device nodes that, when you write to them, will automatically select a given density for particular tape drives. This is a convenient way of switching densities, but it was never implemented in FreeBSD. Only the device nodes were there, and that sometimes confused users. For modern tape devices, the density is generally not selectable (e.g. with LTO) or defaults to the highest availble density when the tape is rewritten from BOT (e.g. TS11X0). So, for most users, density selection won't be necessary. If they do need to select the density, it is easy enough to use 'mt density' to change it. o Protection information is now supported. This is either a Reed-Solomon CRC or CRC32 that is included at the end of each block read and written. On write, the tape drive verifies the CRC, and on read, the tape drive provides a CRC for the userland application to verify. o New, extensible tape driver parameter get/set interface. o Density reporting information. For drives that support it, 'mt getdensity' will show detailed information on what formats the tape drive supports, and what formats the tape drive supports. o Some mt(1) functionality moved into a new mt(3) library so that external applications can reuse the code. o The new mt(3) library includes helper routines to aid in parsing the XML output of the sa(4) driver, and build a tree of driver metadata. o Support for the MTLOAD (load a tape in the drive) and MTWEOFI (write filemark immediate) ioctls needed by IBM's LTFS implementation. o Improve device departure behavior for the sa(4) driver. The previous implementation led to hangs when the device was open. o This has been tested on the following types of drives: IBM TS1150 IBM TS1140 IBM LTO-6 IBM LTO-5 HP LTO-2 Seagate DDS-4 Quantum DLT-4000 Exabyte 8505 Sony DDS-2 contrib/groff/tmac/doc-syms, share/mk/bsd.libnames.mk, lib/Makefile, Add libmt. lib/libmt/Makefile, lib/libmt/mt.3, lib/libmt/mtlib.c, lib/libmt/mtlib.h, New mt(3) library that contains functions moved from mt(1) and new functions needed to interact with the updated sa(4) driver. This includes XML parser helper functions that application writers can use when writing code to query tape parameters. rescue/rescue/Makefile: Add -lmt to CRUNCH_LIBS. src/share/man/man4/mtio.4 Clarify this man page a bit, and since it contains what is essentially the mtio.h header file, add new ioctls and structure definitions from mtio.h. src/share/man/man4/sa.4 Update BUGS and maintainer section. sys/cam/scsi/scsi_all.c, sys/cam/scsi/scsi_all.h: Add SCSI SECURITY PROTOCOL IN/OUT CDB definitions and CDB building functions. sys/cam/scsi/scsi_sa.c sys/cam/scsi/scsi_sa.h Many tape driver changes, largely outlined above. Increase the sa(4) driver read/write timeout from 4 to 32 minutes. This is based on the recommended values for IBM LTO 5/6 drives. This may also avoid timeouts for other tape hardware that can take a long time to do retries and error recovery. Longer term, a better way to handle this is to ask the drive for recommended timeout values using the REPORT SUPPORTED OPCODES command. Modern IBM and Oracle tape drives at least support that command, and it would allow for more accurate timeout values. Add XML status generation. This is done with a series of macros to eliminate as much duplicate code as possible. The new XML-based status values are reported through the new MTIOCEXTGET ioctl. Add XML driver parameter reporting, using the new MTIOCPARAMGET ioctl. Add a new driver parameter setting interface, using the new MTIOCPARAMSET and MTIOCSETLIST ioctls. Add a new MTIOCRBLIM ioctl to get block limits information. Add CCB/CDB building routines scsi_locate_16, scsi_locate_10, and scsi_read_position_10(). scsi_locate_10 implements the LOCATE command, as does the existing scsi_set_position() command. It just supports additional arguments and features. If/when we figure out a good way to provide backward compatibility for older applications using the old function API, we can just revamp scsi_set_position(). The same goes for scsi_read_position_10() and the existing scsi_read_position() function. Revamp sasetpos() to take the new mtlocate structure as an argument. It now will use either scsi_locate_10() or scsi_locate_16(), depending upon the arguments the user supplies. As before, once we change position we don't have a clear idea of what the current logical position of the tape drive is. For tape drives that support long form position data, we read the current position and store that for later reporting after changing the position. This should help applications like Bacula speed tape access under FreeBSD once they are modified to support the new ioctls. Add a new quirk, SA_QUIRK_NO_LONG_POS, that is set for all drives that report SCSI-2 or older, as well as drives that report an Illegal Request type error for READ POSITION with the long format. So we should automatically detect drives that don't support the long form and stop asking for it after an initial try. Add a partition number to the sa(4) softc. Improve device departure handling. The previous implementation led to hangs when the device was open. If an application had the sa(4) driver open, and attempted to close it after it went away, the cam_periph_release() call in saclose() would cause the periph to get destroyed because that was the last reference to it. Because destroy_dev() was called from the sa(4) driver's cleanup routine (sacleanup()), and would block waiting for the close to happen, a deadlock would result. So instead of calling destroy_dev() from the cleanup routine, call destroy_dev_sched_cb() from saoninvalidate() and wait for the callback. Acquire a reference for devfs in saregister(), and release it in the new sadevgonecb() routine when all devfs devices for the particular sa(4) driver instance are gone. Add a new function, sasetupdev(), to centralize setting per-instance devfs device parameters instead of repeating the code in saregister(). Add an open count to the softc, so we know how many peripheral driver references are a result of open sessions. Add the D_TRACKCLOSE flag to the cdevsw flags so that we get a 1:1 mapping of open to close calls instead of a N:1 mapping. This should be a no-op for everything except the control device, since we don't allow more than one open on non-control devices. However, since we do allow multiple opens on the control device, the combination of the open count and the D_TRACKCLOSE flag should result in an accurate peripheral driver reference count, and an accurate open count. The accurate open count allows us to release all peripheral driver references that are the result of open contexts once we get the callback from devfs. sys/sys/mtio.h: Add a number of new mt(4) ioctls and the requisite data structures. None of the existing interfaces been removed or changed. This includes definitions for the following new ioctls: MTIOCRBLIM /* get block limits */ MTIOCEXTLOCATE /* seek to position */ MTIOCEXTGET /* get tape status */ MTIOCPARAMGET /* get tape params */ MTIOCPARAMSET /* set tape params */ MTIOCSETLIST /* set N params */ usr.bin/mt/Makefile: mt(1) now depends on libmt, libsbuf and libbsdxml. usr.bin/mt/mt.1: Document new mt(1) features and subcommands. usr.bin/mt/mt.c: Implement support for mt(1) subcommands that need to use getopt(3) for their arguments. Implement a new 'mt status' command to replace the old 'mt status' command. The old status command has been renamed 'ostatus'. The new status function uses the MTIOCEXTGET ioctl, and therefore parses the XML data to determine drive status. The -x argument to 'mt status' allows the user to dump out the raw XML reported by the kernel. The new status display is mostly the same as the old status display, except that it doesn't print the redundant density mode information, and it does print the current partition number and position flags. Add a new command, 'mt locate', that will supersede the old 'mt setspos' and 'mt sethpos' commands. 'mt locate' implements all of the functionality of the MTIOCEXTLOCATE ioctl, and allows the user to change the logical position of the tape drive in a number of ways. (Partition, block number, file number, set mark number, end of data.) The immediate bit and the explicit address bits are implemented, but not documented in the man page. Add a new 'mt weofi' command to use the new MTWEOFI ioctl. This allows the user to ask the drive to write a filemark without waiting around for the operation to complete. Add a new 'mt getdensity' command that gets the XML-based tape drive density report from the sa(4) driver and displays it. This uses the SCSI REPORT DENSITY SUPPORT command to get comprehensive information from the tape drive about what formats it is able to read and write. Add a new 'mt protect' command that allows getting and setting tape drive protection information. The protection information is a CRC tacked on to the end of every read/write from and to the tape drive. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic MFC after: 1 month
2015-02-23 21:59:30 +00:00
Partitions are only supported for status information and location.
It would be nice to add support for creating and editing tape partitions.