to a device failed.
In theory, the same steps that happen when we get an AC_LOST_DEVICE async
notification should have been taken when a driver fails to attach. In
practice, that wasn't the case.
This only affected the da, cd and ch drivers, but the fix affects all
peripheral drivers.
There were several possible problems:
- In the da driver, we didn't remove the peripheral's softc from the da
driver's linked list of softcs. Once the peripheral and softc got
removed, we'd get a kernel panic the next time the timeout routine
called dasendorderedtag().
- In the da, cd and possibly ch drivers, we didn't remove the
peripheral's devstat structure from the devstat queue. Once the
peripheral and softc were removed, this could cause a panic if anyone
tried to access device statistics. (one component of the linked list
wouldn't exist anymore)
- In the cd driver, we didn't take the peripheral off the changer run
queue if it was scheduled to run. In practice, it's highly unlikely,
and maybe impossible that the peripheral would have been on the
changer run queue at that stage of the probe process.
The fix is:
- Add a new peripheral callback function (the "oninvalidate" function)
that is called the first time cam_periph_invalidate() is called for a
peripheral.
- Create new foooninvalidate() routines for each peripheral driver. This
routine is always called at splsoftcam(), and contains all the stuff
that used to be in the AC_LOST_DEVICE case of the async callback
handler.
- Move the devstat cleanup call to the destructor/cleanup routines, since
some of the drivers do I/O in their close routines.
- Make sure that when we're flushing the buffer queue, we traverse it at
splbio().
- Add a check for the invalid flag in the pt driver's open routine.
Reviewed by: gibbs
one error recovery action oustanding for a given peripheral.
This is bad for several reasons. The first problem is that the error
recovery actions would likely be to fix the same problem. (e.g., we
queue 5 CCBs to a disk, and the first one comes back with 0x04,0x02. We
start error recovery, and the second one comes back with the same status.
Then the third one comes back, and so on. Each one causes the drive to get
nailed with a start unit, when we really only need one.)
The other problem is that we only have space to store one CCB while we're
doing error recovery. The subsequent error recovery actions that got
started were over-writing the CCBs from previous error recovery actions,
but we still tried to call the done routine N times for N error recovery
actions. Each call to dadone() was done with the same CCB, though. So on
the second one, we got a "biodone: buffer not busy" panic, since the buffer
in question had already been through biodone().
In any case, this fixes things so that any any given time, there's only one
error recovery action outstanding for any given peripheral driver.
Reviewed by: gibbs
Reported by: Philippe Regnauld <regnauld@deepo.prosa.dk>
[ Philippe wins the "bug finder of the week" award ]
Add quirk entry for a Samsung drive that doesn't like experiencing
the queue full condition.
Bump the timeouts for all probe activities to 60s. We don't know
what the seletion timeout (or equivelent on other mediums) is
for controllers, which can make the transactions at the tail
end of a parallel probe take a while to complete. The DPT
seems to be a card that takes a long time to see a selection timeout.
cam_periph.c:
Don't call a device "gone" after a single selection timeout. We
need to come up with a better policy. Until that time, you'll
have to manually re-scan a bus via camcontrol for the system to
decide that a device is really gone. This should give devices
experiencing temporary insanity to escape death.