that a command completion happened, all further processing is deferred to
a taskqueue. The taskqueue itself runs implicetely under Giant, but we
already used a taskqueue for the biodone() processing, so this at least
saves the contesting of Giant in the interrupt handler.
blocks now, which should eliminate problems with the driver failing to
attach due to insufficient contiguous RAM. Allow the FIB pool to grow
from the default of 128 to the max of 512 as demand grows. Also pad the
adapter init struct to work around the 2120/2200 DMA bug now that there
is no longer a FIB slab.
commands from below the first 8K of physical memory. A better fix
is to modify the busdma api to allow either inclusion ranges or
multiple exclusion ranges, but that debate is for another day.
MFC After: 2 days
ever connect a SCSI Cdrom/Tape/Jukebox/Scanner/Printer/kitty-litter-scooper
to your high-end RAID controller. The interface to the arrays is still
via the block interface; this merely provides a way to circumvent the
RAID functionality and access the SCSI buses directly. Note that for
somewhat obvious reasons, hard drives are not exposed to the da driver
through this interface, though you can still talk to them via the pass
driver. Be the first on your block to low-level format unsuspecting
drives that are part of an array!
To enable this, add the 'aacp' device to your kernel config.
MFC after: 3 days
check is complicated by the fact that the Adaptec 5400S cards claim to use
1.x firmware also. PERC2/QC 1.x firmware is not compatible with this driver
and will cause a system hang.
MFC after: 3 days
released management apps.
1. Implement poll(). This will check for queued aif's so that a
subsequent ioctl call to retrieve the next aif will not block.
2. Don't catch signals when sleeping on a fib sent from userland. This
causes a race and panic due to the pthread context switcher waking
up the tsleep at inopportune times.
3. Fix some whitespace nits.
MFC after: 3 days
1. Correctly handle commands initiated by the adapter. These commands
are defered to a kthread responsible for their processing, then are
properly returned to the controller.
2. Add/remove disk devices when notified by the card that a container was
created/deleted/offline.
3. Implement crashdump functionality.
4. Support all ioctls needed for the management CLI to work. The linux
version of this app can be found at the Dell or HP website. A native
version will be forthcoming.
MFC-after: 4.4-RELEASE
interrupt handler from the upper half, etc. This fixes some serious stability
problems that we were seeing on our production server. These patches have
been tested for almost 6 months and are a highly recommended MFC candidate.
Reviewed by: gibbs, merry, msmith
MFC after: 4 days
with the driver locking up under load.
- Restructure so that we use a static pool of commands/FIBs, rather than
allocating them in clusters. The cluster allocation just made things
more complicated, and allowed us to waste more memory in peak load
situations.
- Make queueing macros more like my other drivers. This adds queue stats
for free. Add some debugging to take advantage of this.
- Reimplement the periodic timeout scan. Kick the interrupt handler
and the start routine every scan as well, just to be safe. Track busy
commands properly.
- Bring resource cleanup into line with resource allocation. We should
now clean up correctly after a failed probe/unload/etc.
- Try to start new commands when old ones are completed. We weren't doing
this before, which could lead to deadlock when the controller was full.
- Don't try to build a new command if we have found a deferred command.
This could cause us to lose the deferred command.
- Use diskerr() to report I/O errors.
- Don't bail if the AdapterInfo structure is the wrong size. Some variation
seems to be normal. We need to improve our handing of 2.x firmware sets.
- Improve some comments in an attempt to try to make things clearer.
- Restructure to avoid some warnings.