I had failed to notice that sgsendccb() was using cam_periph_mapmem()
and thus was not passing down user pointers directly to drivers. In
practice this broke requests submitted from userland.
PR: 249395
Reported by: Trenton Schulz <trueos@norwegianrockcat.com>
Reviewed by: scottl
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26550
This is a fix to r334065.
Without this change I once got stuck I/O with endless partition switching:
(sdda0:aw_mmc_sim2:0:0:0): sddastart
(sdda0:aw_mmc_sim2:0:0:0): Partition 0 -> -525703168
(sdda0:aw_mmc_sim2:0:0:0): xpt_action: func 0x91d XPT_MMC_IO
(sdda0:aw_mmc_sim2:0:0:0): xpt_done: func= 0x91d XPT_MMC_IO status 0x1
(sdda0:aw_mmc_sim2:0:0:0): sddadone
(sdda0:aw_mmc_sim2:0:0:0): Card status: 00000000
(sdda0:aw_mmc_sim2:0:0:0): Current state: 4
(sdda0:aw_mmc_sim2:0:0:0): Compteting partition switch to 0
Note that -525703168 (an int) is 0xe0aa6800 in binary representation.
The partition indexes are actually stored as uint8_t, so that value
was converted / truncated to zero.
MFC after: 1 week
cam_sim_free(), cam_sim_release(), and cam_sim_hold() all assign
a mtx variable during declaration and then if NULL or the mtx is
held may re-asign the variable and/or acquire/release a lock.
Harmonize the code, avoiding double assignments and make it look
the same for all three function (with cam_sim_free() not needing
an extra case).
No functional changes intended.
Reviewed by: imp; no-objections by: mav
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26286
It allows to report GEOM::lunid for nda(4) same as for nvd(4). Since
NVMe now allows multiple LUs (namespaces) with multiple paths unique
LU identification is important. The serial_num field is filled same
as before with the controller serial number, while device_id is based
on namespace GUID and/or EUI64 fields as recommended by "NVM Express:
SCSI Translation Reference" and matching nvd(4) at the end.
MFC after: 1 week
In case we are failing to allocate mmcdata, we are returning with
a softc allocated but not attached to anything and thus leak the
memory.
Reviewed by: scottl
MFC after: 2 weeks
X-MFC: only if we also mfc other mmccam changes?
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25987
It allows to report to initiator LU identifying information, preset via
"ident_info" and "text_ident_info" options.
Unfortunately it is impossible to implement SET IDENTIFYING INFORMATION,
since we have no persistent storage it requires, so the information is
read-only for initiator and has to be set out-of-band.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
* Downgrade some CAM debug messages from _INFO to _DEBUG level;
* Add KASSERT for the case when we suspect incorrect CAM SIM initialization (using cam_sim_alloc() instead of cam_sim_alloc_dev());
* Use waiting version of xpt_alloc_ccb(), we are not in hurry;
* With the waiting version we cannot get NULL return, so remove the NULL check;
* In some csses, the name of mmcprobe_done has been written as mmc_probedone();
* Send AC_LOST_DEVICE if we, well, lost the device;
* Misc style(9) fixes.
Reviewed by: manu
Approved by: imp (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25843
We cannot sleep during cam proto_announce and sbuf sleeps so use
a static length buffer like nvme(4)
Reviewed by: kibab
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25949
This is a generic function start a scan request for the given
cam_sim.
Other driver can now just use this function to request a new rescan.
Submitted by: kibab
In xpt_release_device(), callout_stop() was being called without
holding the mutex (send_mtx) that is used to protect the callout.
So, move the mtx_unlock() call so that it is protected.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
Add ICL_NOCOPY flag to icl_pdu_append_data(), specifying that the method
can just reference the data buffer instead of immediately copying it.
Extend the offload KPI with optional PDU queue method, allowing to specify
completion callback, called when all the data referenced by above has been
transferred and won't be accessed any more (the buffers can be freed).
Implement the above functionality in software iSCSI driver using mbufs
with external storage and reference counter. Note that some NICs (ixl(4))
may keep the mbuf in TX queue for a long time, so CTL has to be ready.
Add optional method to struct ctl_scsiio for buffer reference counting.
Implement it for CTL block backend, allowing to delay free of the struct
ctl_be_block_io and memory it references as needed. In first reincarnation
of the patch I tried to delay whole I/O as it is done for FibreChannel,
that was cleaner, but due to the above callback delays I had to rewrite
it this way to not leave LUN referenced potentially for hours or more.
All together on sequential read from ZFS ARC this saves about 30% of CPU
time and memory bandwidth by avoiding one of 3 memory copies (the other
two are from ZFS ARC to DMU cache and then from DMU cache to CTL buffers).
On tests with 2x Xeon Silver 4114 this allows to reach full line rate of
100GigE NIC. Tests with Gold CPUs and two 100GigE NICs are stil TBD,
but expectations to saturate them are pretty high. ;)
Discussed with: Chelsio
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Some automation tries to detect if nvd or nda is in used, and the presence of
both confuses it. Provide a knob to turn off nvd alias creation
(kern.cam.nda.nvd_compat=0) for these situations. The default is the same:
create the nvd compat link.
cs_cmdsn can be incremented with single atomic. expcmdsn/maxcmdsn set in
cfiscsi_pdu_prepare() based on cs_cmdsn are not required to be updated
synchronously, only monotonically, that is achieved with lock there.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
We any way have per-I/O space in CTL_PRIV_FRONTEND, while for PDU private
fields I have better use ideas. Plus to me such use of PDU fields looked
a layering violation.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
I don't see a point to copy io->scsiio.kern_total_len into the request
PDU private field. The io is going to stay with us till the end, and
kern_total_len field is not changed after being first initialized.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
ha_lso is a listening socket (unless bind() has failed), so should use
solisten_upcall_set(NULL, NULL), not soupcall_clear().
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Often, in traiging core files, one only has a traceback of where a
panic occurred. We have probe* and xpt* routines that live in both the
scsi and ata layers with identical names. To make one or the other
stand out, prefix all the probe and xpt routines in ata with an
'a'. I've left the scsi ones alone since they were there first and are
more numerous. I also rejected using #define to do this as being too
confusing. I chose this method because the CAM name for the probe
device was already 'aprobe'.
Normally, this doesn't matter because file scope protects one from
interfering with the other. However, due to the indirect nature of
CAM's state machine, you don't know if the following traceback is
SCSI or ATA:
xpt_done
probedone
xpt_done_process
xpt_done_td
fork_exit
nvme and mmc already have unique names.
MFC: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24825
While there, remove ifdef around cs_target check in cfiscsi_ioctl_list().
I am not sure why this ifdef was added, but without this check code will
crash below on NULL dereference.
Submitted by: Aleksandr Fedorov <aleksandr.fedorov@itglobal.com>
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24587
run it). Make sure that we do. Simplify the flow a bit, and fix a
comment since we do need to do these things.
Noticed by: cperciva (not sure why my invariants kernel didn't trigger)
- Make ctl_add_lun() synchronous. Asynchronous addition was used by
Copan's proprietary code long ago and never for upstream FreeBSD.
- Move LUN enable/disable calls from backends to CTL core.
- Serialize LUN modification and partially removal to avoid double frees.
- Slightly unify backends code.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
- maxio should be dp->d_maxsize. This is often MAXPHYS, but not always
(especially if MAXPHYS is > 1MB).
- Unlock the periph before returning. We don't need to relock it to
release the ccb.
- Make sure we release the ccb in error paths.
Reviewed by: cperciva
With these two ioctls implemented in the nda driver, nvmecontrol now
works with nda just like it does with nvd. It eliminates the need to
jump through odd hoops to get this data.
Add the nvmeX device to the XPT_PATH_INQ nvme specific
information. while one could figure this out by looking up the
domain🚌slot:function, it's a lot easier to have the SIM set it
directly since the sim knows this.
This was changed in the review process for the flags sysctl. The
reasons for the change are no longer valid as the code changed after
that. Cast the one place where it might make a difference (but I don't
think it does). This restores the ability to see flags for softc in
gdb.
Allocate a temporary buffer in the kernel to serve as the CCB data
pointer for a pass-through transaction and use copyin/copyout to
shuffle the data to/from the user buffer.
Reviewed by: scottl, brooks
Obtained from: CheriBSD
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: DARPA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24489
The handle_string callback for the ENCIOC_SETSTRING ioctl was passing
a user pointer to memcpy(). Fix by using copyin() instead.
For ENCIOC_GETSTRING ioctls, the handler was storing the user pointer
in a CCB's data_ptr field where it was indirected by other code. Fix
this by allocating a temporary buffer (which ENCIOC_SETSTRING already
did) and copying the result out to the user buffer after the CCB has
been processed.
Reviewed by: kib
Obtained from: CheriBSD
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: DARPA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24487
The handle_string callback for the ENCIOC_GET_ENCNAME and
ENCIOC_GETENCID ioctls tries to copy the size of the generated string
out to userland. However, the callback only has access to the kernel
copy of the structure populated by copyin(). The copyout() call
simply overwrites the value in the kernel's copy preventing the
subsequent overflow prevention logic from working.
Fix this by instead doing a copyout() of the updated length in the
caller after the callback returns.
Reviewed by: kib
Obtained from: CheriBSD
Sponsored by: DARPA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24456
copyin/copyout are sufficient to guard against bad addresses. They will return
EFAULT if the user is up to no good (by choice or ignorance). There's no point
in checking, since it doesn't even improve the error messages.
Noticed by: jhb
Reviewed by: brooks, jhb
SES specifications allows the string to be NULL-terminated, while previous
code was considering it as invalid due to incorrectly ordered conditions.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: iXsystem, Inc.
Broadcom 9400-8i8e HBAs report virtual SES device, where slots representing
external connectors are reported having no phys. Since sasdev_phys is NULL
there and proto_hdr is a union, ses_paths_iter() misinterpreted them as ATA.
Add explicit protocol check to properly differentiate them.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Two arguments were reversed in calls to cam_strvis() in
nvme_da.c. This was found by a Coverity scan of this code within Dell
(Isilon). These are also marked in the FreeBSD Coverity scan as CIDs
1400526 & 1400531.
Submitted by: robert.herndon@dell.com
Reviewed by: vangyzen@, imp@
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24117
generate for a race where a device goes away, we start to tear down
the periph state for the device, and then the device suddently
reappears. The key that makes it work is removal of periph from the
drv list before calling the deferred callback.
Hat tip to: mav@
Print the pointer to ccb so we can find it (for what good it does)
as well as the type of operation in flight when the cam_path has
been freed out from under us. This helps both core analysis as well
as automated systems that collect panic strings but little else.
declarations.
We typically don't use them elsewhere in the kernel, and they aren't
needed here: the actual functions are a few lines away and aren't
mutually recursive.
These are no longer needed now that it's embedded in cam_ccbq. They are also
unused.
Reviewed by: ken, chuck
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24008
It's used in exactly one place. In that place it's used so we can hold the lock
on the device associated with the path (since we do a xpt_path_lock and unlock
pair around the callback). Instead, inline taking and dropping the reference to
the device so we can ensure we can unlock the mutex after the callback finishes
if the path in the ccb that's queued to be processed by xpt_scanner_thread is
destroyed while being processed. We don't actually need the path itself for
anything other than dereferencing it to get the device to do the lock and
unlock.
This also makes the locking / use model for cam_path a little cleaner by
eliminating a case where we needlessly copy the object.
Reviewed by: chuck, chs, ken
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24008
These flags have been unused for some time. Some of them were in the
CAM2 specification, but CAM has moved on a bit from that. Some were
used in the old Pluto VideoSpace (and AirSpace) systems which had the
video playback I/O scheduler in userspace, but have been unused since
then.
Reviewed by: chuck, ken
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24008
of xpt_done(). Add the missing XPT_ASYNC case to xpt_action_default. xpt_async
wants to use the side-effect of the xpt_done() routine to queue this to the
camisr thread so it can be done in that context. However, this breaks the
symmetry that you create a ccb and call xpt_action() for it to be
dispatched. Restore that symmetry by having it go through that path. As far as I
can tell, this is the only CCB that we create and call xpt_done() on directly.
Consistently omit /* FALLTHROUGH */ when we have a case statement that does
nothing. Since compilers don't warn about stacked case statements, and we were
inconsistent, resolve by removing extras.
r357614 added CTLFLAG_NEEDGIANT to make it easier to find nodes that are
still not MPSAFE (or already are but aren’t properly marked).
Use it in preparation for a general review of all nodes.
This is non-functional change that adds annotations to SYSCTL_NODE and
SYSCTL_PROC nodes using one of the soon-to-be-required flags.
Mark all obvious cases as MPSAFE. All entries that haven't been marked
as MPSAFE before are by default marked as NEEDGIANT
Approved by: kib (mentor, blanket)
Commented by: kib, gallatin, melifaro
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23718
handler to accept a poitner to a u_int. To make the type of the softc flags
stable and defined, make it a u_int. Cast the enum types to u_int for arg2 so
when passing to dabitsysctl it's a u_int.
Noticed by: emax@
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23785
It's valid for a periph to be removed with outstanding transactions on the
device. In CAM, multiple periphs attach to a single device. There's no interlock
to prevent one of these going away while other periphs have outstanding CCBs and
it's not an error either. Remove this overly agressive KASSERT to prevent
false-positive panics when devices depart.
know that if there are any outstanding CCBs, then when they dereference the path
that's freed at the bottom of camperiphfree there will be some flavor of
panic. This moves that eventual panic to a traceback of when we free the last
reference on the device, which is earlier but may not be early enough.
Rotating and unmapped_io are really da flags. Convert them to a flag so it will
be reported with the other flags for the device. Deprecate the .rotating and
.unmapped_io sysctls in FreeBSD 14 and remove the softc ints.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23417
Export the current flags. They can be useful to other programs wanting to do
special thigns for removable or similar devices.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23417
BIO_READ and BIO_WRITE, we've handled this expanded syntax poorly in
drivers when the driver doesn't support a particular command. Do a
sweep and fix that.
Reported by: imp
Filesystems which want to use it in limited capacity can employ the
VOP_UNLOCK_FLAGS macro.
Reviewed by: kib (previous version)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21427
Combined with earlier nstart/nend removal it allows to remove several locks
from request path of GEOM and few other places. It would be cool if we had
more SMP-friendly statistics, but this helps too.
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Since we are already using malloc()+copyin()/copyout() for smaller data
blocks, and since new asynchronous API does it always, I see no reason
to keep this ugly artificial size/alignment limitation in old API.
Tape applications suffer enough from the MAXPHYS limitations by itself,
and additional alignment requirement, often halving effectively usable
block size, does not help.
It would be good to use unmapped I/O here instead, but it require some
HBA drivers polishing first to support non-BIO unmapped buffers.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
While it works on nda, it fails on ada and/or da for at least zfs with a modify
after free issue on a trim BIO. Revert while I rework it to fix those devices.
React to the BIO_SPEED command in the cam io scheduler by completing
as successful BIO_DELETE commands that are pending, up to the length
passed down in the BIO_SPEEDUP cmomand. The length passed down is a
hint for how much space on the drive needs to be recovered. By
completing the BIO_DELETE comomands, this allows the upper layers to
allocate and write to the blocks that were about to be trimmed. Since
FreeBSD implements TRIMSs as advisory, we can eliminliminate them and
go directly to writing.
The biggest benefit from TRIMS coomes ffrom the drive being able t
ooptimize its free block pool inthe log run. There's little nto no
bene3efit in the shoort term. , sepeciall whn the trim is followed by
a write. Speedup lets us make this tradeoff.
Reviewed by: kirk, kib
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18351
Rather than a trim active flag, have a counter that can be used to
have a absolute limit on the number of trims in flight independent of
any I/O limiting factors.
Sponsored by: Netflix
For each of the different queue types, list the name of the
queue. While it can be worked out from context, this makes it more
useful and clearer.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Add rate limiters to trims. Trims are a bit different than reads or
writes in that they can be combined, so some care needs to be taken
where we rate limit them. Additional work will be needed to push the
working rate limit below the I/O quanta rate for things like IOPS.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Add two sysctls to control pacing of nvme
trims. kern.cam.nda.X.goal_trim is the number of upper layer
BIO_DEELETE requests to try to collecet before sending TRIM down too
the nvme drive. trim_ticks is the number of ticks, at mosot, to wait
for at least goal_trim BIOS_DELEETE requests to come in.
Trim pacing is useful when a large number off disjoint trims are
comoing in from the upper layers. Since we have no way to chain
toogether trims from the upper layers that are sent down, this acts as
a hueristic to group trims into reasonable sized chunks. What's
reasonable varies from drive to drive.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Excesively large TRIMs can result in timeouts, which cause big
problems. Limit trims to 1GB to mititgate these issues.
Reviewed by: scottl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22809
The current vnode layout is not smp-friendly by having frequently read data
avoidably sharing cachelines with very frequently modified fields. In
particular v_iflag inspected for VI_DOOMED can be found in the same line with
v_usecount. Instead make it available in the same cacheline as the v_op, v_data
and v_type which all get read all the time.
v_type is avoidably 4 bytes while the necessary data will easily fit in 1.
Shrinking it frees up 3 bytes, 2 of which get used here to introduce a new
flag field with a new value: VIRF_DOOMED.
Reviewed by: kib, jeff
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22715
The SES4r3 standard requires that element descriptors may only contain ASCII
characters in the range 0x20 to 0x7e. Some SuperMicro expanders violate
that rule. This patch adds a sanity check to ses(4). Descriptors in
violation will be replaced by "<invalid>".
This patch fixes "sesutil --libxo xml" on such systems. Previously it would
generate non-well-formed XML output.
PR: 241929
Reviewed by: allanjude
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Axcient
o Remove All Rights Reserved from my notices
o imp@FreeBSD.org everywhere
o regularize punctiation, eliminate date ranges
o Make sure that it's clear that I don't claim All Rights reserved by listing
All Rights Reserved on same line as other copyright holders (but not
me). Other such holders are also listed last where it's clear.
My changes in 351599 (kindly committed by avg) made the cd(4) media check
asynchronous to avoid a sleep while holding a mutex.
There was a difficult to reproduce bug with those changes that caused a
hang on boot on some single processor machines/VMs. Leandro Lupori
managed to reproduce the bug, diagnose it, and supplied a patch! Here is
his analysis, from the PR:
======
I was able to reproduce the problem described in comment#14.
Actually, I wasn't trying to reproduce it, I just started seeing it a few
weeks ago, in CURRENT.
I can reproduce it consistently, by using QEMU to run a PowerPC64 VM with a
single core/thread (-smp 1).
It happens only when there is no media in the emulated CD-ROM, a device
that QEMU adds by default, unless -nodefaults is specified in command line.
I've debugged it and this is what I've found:
1- After the CD probe is successful, GEOM will try to open the device,
which will end up calling cdcheckmedia(), that sets CD state to
CD_STATE_MEDIA_PREVENT.
2- Next, scsi_prevent() is executed and succeeds, the CD_FLAG_DISC_LOCKED
flag is set and CD state moves to CD_STATE_MEDIA_SIZE.
3- Next, scsi_read_capacity() is executed and fails, state is set to
CD_STATE_MEDIA_ALLOW, cdmediaprobedone() is called and wakes up
cdcheckmedia().
4- Then, when cdstart() is invoked to process CD_STATE_MEDIA_ALLOW, it
first checks if CD_FLAG_DISC_LOCKED is set, and if so skips directly to
CD_STATE_MEDIA_SIZE state. This will repeat the steps of bullet 3, entering
an infinite MEDIA_SIZE command loop.
When there is a least another core/thread, the GEOM thread that performed
the initial cdopen() will get scheduled again, closing the CD device, that
will call cdprevent(PR_ALLOW) that clears the CD_FLAG_DISC_LOCKED flag and
breaks the loop.
So, apparently, the problem is CD_STATE_MEDIA_ALLOW being skipped when
CD_FLAG_DISC_LOCKED is set. If I understand correctly, in this case, the
state should be advanced to CD_STATE_MEDIA size only when the current state
is CD_STATE_MEDIA_PREVENT.
=====
PR: kern/219857
Submitted by: Leandro Lupori <leandro.lupori@gmail.com>
MFC after: 1 week
I have some disks reporting "Logical unit is in process of becoming ready"
for about half an hour before finally reporting failure. During that time
CAM waits for the readiness during ~2 minutes for each request, that makes
system boot take very long time.
This change reduces wait times for the following requests to ~1 second if
previously long wait for that device has timed out.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
If we've found a device, we attempt to call xpt_action() on a ccb that's
already been released. Simply defer release until after we're done with it.
Reviewed by: imp, scottl
MFC after: 1 week
Before this change CAM used config_intrhook_establish() for this purpose,
but that approach does not allow to delay it again after releasing once.
USB stack uses root_mount_hold() to delay boot until bus scan is complete.
But once it is, CAM had no time to scan SCSI bus, registered by umass(4),
if it already done other scans and called config_intrhook_disestablish().
The new approach makes it work smooth, assuming the USB device is found
during the initial bus scan. Devices appearing on USB bus later may still
require setting kern.cam.boot_delay, but hopefully those are minority.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
When we do a daopen, we call dareprobe and wait for the results. The repoll runs
the da state machine up through the DA_STATE_RC* and then exits.
For removable media, we poll the device every 3 seconds with a TUR to see if it
has disappeared. This introduces a race. If the removable device has lots of
partitions, and if it's a little slow (like say a USB2 connected USB stick),
then we can have a fair amount of time that this reporbe is going on for. If,
during that time, damediapoll fires, it calls daschedule which changes the
scheduling priority from NONE to NORMAL. When that happens, the careful single
stepping in the da state machine is disrupted and we wind up sceduling multiple
read capacity calls. The first one succeeds and releases the reference. The
second one succeeds and releases the reference (and panics if the right code is
compiled into the da driver).
To avoid the race, only do the TUR calls while in state normal, otherwise just
reschedule damediapoll. This prevents the race from happening.
For the PROBEWP and PROBERC* states, add assertiosn that both the da device
state is in the right state, as well as the ccb state is the right one when we
enter dadone_probe{wp,rc}. This will ensure that we don't sneak through when
we're re-probing the size and write protection status of the device and thereby
leak a reference which can later lead to an invalidated peripheral going away
before all references are released (and resulting panic).
Reviewed by: scottl, ken
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22295
There are contexts where releasing the ccb triggers dastart() to be run
inline. When da was written, there was always a deferral, so it didn't matter
much. Now, with direct dispatch, we can call dastart from the dadone*
routines. If the probe state isn't updated, then dastart will redo things with
stale information. This normally isn't a problem, because we run the probe state
machine once at boot... Except that we also run it for each open of the device,
which means we can have multiple threads racing each other to try to kick off
the probe. However, if we update the state before we release the CCB, we can
avoid the race. While it's needed only for the probewp and proberc* states, do
it everywhere because it won't hurt the other places.
The race here happens because we reprobe dozens of times on boot when drives
have lots of partitions. We should consider caching this info for 1-2 seconds
to avoid this thundering hurd.
Reviewed by: scottl, ken
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22295
via 'diskinfo -v'. This avoids the need to track it down via CAM,
and should also work for disks that don't use CAM. And since it's
inherited thru the GEOM hierarchy, in most cases one doesn't need
to walk the GEOM graph either, eg you can use it on a partition
instead of disk itself.
Reviewed by: allanjude, imp
Sponsored by: Klara Inc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22249
Clang trunk recently gained this new warning, and complains about the
sizeof(trim->data) / sizeof(struct nvme_dsm_range) expression, since
the left hand side's element type (char) does not match the right hand
side's type. The byte buffer is unnecessary so we can remove it to clean
up the code and fix the warning at the same time.
No functional change.
Submitted by: James Clarke <jrtc27@jrtc27.com>
Reviewed by: imp
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21912
It is typical to have one, but no longer true for multi-actuator HDDs
with separate LUN for each actuator.
MFC after: 4 days
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
This is a rework of r344701, that noticed that number of bytes passes to
8 bit sector count field gets truncated. First decision was to not pass
anything, since ATA specs define the field as N/A. But it appeared to be a
problem for some SAT devices, that require information about data transfer
to operate properly. Some additional investigation shown that it is quite
a common practice to set unused fields of ATA commands (fortunately ATA
specs formally allow it) to supply the information to SAT layer. I have
found SAS-SATA interposer that does not allow pass-through without it.
As side effect, reduce code duplication by removing ata_do_28bit_cmd()
function, replacing it with more universal ata_do_cmd().
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
XPT_DEV_ADVINFO call should be protected by the lock of the specific
device it is addressed to, not the lock of SES device. In some weird
case, probably with hardware violating standards, it sometimes caused
NULL dereference due to race.
To protect from it further, add lock assertion to *_dev_advinfo().
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
This makes the media check process asynchronous, so we no longer block
in cdstrategy() to check for media.
PR: 219857
Obtained from: ken
MFC after: 3 weeks
Even if we do not expect retries, we better be sure, since otherwise it
may result in use after free kernel panic. I've noticed that it retries
SCSI_STATUS_BUSY even with SF_NO_RECOVERY | SF_NO_RETRY.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
It allows to read and write block descriptors alike to mode page parameters.
It allows to change block size or short-stroke HDDs or overprovision SSDs.
Depenting on -P parameter the change can be either persistent or till reset.
In case of block size change device may need reformat after the setting.
In case of SSD overprovisioning format or sanitize may be needed to really
free the flash.
During implementation appeared that csio_encode_visit() can not handle
integers of more then 4 bytes, that makes 8-byte LBA handling awkward.
I had to split it into two 4-byte halves now.
MFC after: 1 week
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
If not limited by write_same_max_lba option, split operation into several
2^^31 blocks chunks in a loop. For large disks it may take a while, so
setting write_same_max_lba may be useful to avoid timeouts.
While there, fix build with CAM_CTL_DEBUG.
MFC after: 2 weeks
The values to report can be set via LUN options. It can be useful for
testing, and also required for Drive Maintenance 2016 feature set.
MFC after: 2 weeks
CTL implements all defined feature sets except Drive Maintenance 2016,
which is not very applicable to such a virtual device, and implemented
only partially now. But may be it could be fixed later at least for
completeness.
MFC after: 2 weeks
ATA sanitize is functionally identical to SCSI, just uses different
initiation commands and status reporting mechanism.
While there, make kernel better handle sanitize commands and statuses.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.