overflow the request queue. The reason we want to do this is that we
now push out completed CTIOs as we complete them- this gets the QLogic
working on them quicker. So we need to know whether we can put the entire
burrito out before we start.
We now support conjoint status with data for the last CTIO for both Fibre
Channel and SCSI. Leave the old code in place in case we need to go back
(minor 3 line ifdef).
Ultra-ultra important- *don't* set rq->req_seg_count for non-data
target mode requests in isp_pci_dmasetup. D'oh- this is actually
the tag value area for a CTIO. What *was* I thinking? Boy howdy
does both aic7xxx and sym get awfully unhappy when on reconnect
you give them a constant '1' for a tag value.
I was hanging after sending a xfer CTIO and a status CTIO for a non-discon
INQUIRY- the xfer CTIO was returned as completed OK, but the status CTIO
was dropped on the floor. All the fields looked good. I don't know why
it got dropped. But allowing status to go back with data xfer seemed to
work. I also noticed that with a non-disconnecting command that the
firmware handle in the ATIO is zero- this leads me to believe that the
f/w really can only handle one CTIO at a time in the discon case, and
it had no idea what to do with the second (status) CTIO.
This is a pretty invasive change, but there are three good
reasons to do this:
1. We'll never have > 16 bits of handle.
2. We can (eventually) enable the RIO (Reduced Interrupt Operation)
bits which return multiple completing 16 bit handles in mailbox
registers.
3. The !)$*)$*~)@$*~)$* Qlogic target mode for parallel SCSI spec
changed such that at_reserved (which was 32 bits) was split into
two pieces- and one of which was a 16 bit handle id that functions
like the at_rxid for Fibre Channel (a tag for the f/w to correlate
CTIOs with a particular command). Since we had to muck with that
and this changed the whole handler architecture, we might as well...
Propagate new at_handle on through int ct_fwhandle. Follow
implications of changing to 16 bit handles.
These above changes at least get Qlogic 1040 cards working in target
mode again. 1080/12160 cards don't work yet.
In isp.c:
Prepare for doing all loop management in outer layers.
for selecting unit). Instead, use the resource hints mechanism.
One unfortunate situation here is that there is no resource_quad_value
function- which is what I needed for WWN boot time replacement. Worse-
you can't store the hint as just plain
hint.isp.0.nodewwn="0x50000000aaaa0001"
because this gets interpreted as an int- incorrectly because it can't
be converted to an int. I can't even get this as a string. To work
around this particular case for nodewwn && portwwn setting, this
rather grotesque form will be used:
hint.isp.0.nodewwn="w50000000aaaa0001"
hint.isp.0.portwwn="w50000000aaaa0002"
At the same time, if we have no hinted WWN, set the default WWN (which, btw,
gets overridden if the card has valid NVRAM, which is usual) to
0x400000007F000009ull (which translates to NAA == IPv4, 127.0.0.9).
Eliminate more printf's and replace them either with device_printf or
isp_prt calls.
the unit number doesn't get reused.
Make sure that if we've compiled for ISP_TARGET_MODE we set the
default role to be ISP_ROLE_INITIATOR|ISP_ROLE_TARGET.
Do some misc other cleanups.
the drivers.
* Remove legacy inx/outx support from chipset and replace with macros
which call busspace.
* Rework pci config accesses to route through the pcib device instead of
calling a MD function directly.
With these changes it is possible to cleanly support machines which have
more than one independantly numbered PCI busses. As a bonus, the new
busspace implementation should be measurably faster than the old one.
Force alphas to prefer mem mapping as the default.
Basically, we have a pointer to a function which we can call which will
return us a pointer to firmware for the card we have. We call this function
(if it's non-NULL) with the address of our mdvec f/w pointer.
The way this works is that if ispfw (as a module or a static) is loaded,
it initializes the pointer in isp_pci, so we can call into to it to fetch
a pointer to a f/w set.
If ispfw is MOD_UNLOADed, it's retained a pointer to our mdvec f/w pointers,
which then get zeroed out so we don't have any references to data that's
now gone from kernel memory. Removing the f/w saves ~360KBytes.
Alas, there is no autounload mechanism that works for is here.
out of the PCI CLASS reg and store it in the softc. Use the getenv_quad
function to get a WWN override from the environment. Look for a config
value for same. Make slightly less lame the wwn seed construction.
have you is prototyped). Removed code versions in md struct- not used
any more. Allocate transfer dma maps and xflist stuff in mbxdmasetup based
upon isp->isp_maxcmds. Allow for multiple calls to mbxdmasetup (for
isp_reset cases).
isp_io_map, isp_no_fwload, isp_fwload, isp_no_nvram, isp_fcduplex
which are all bitmaps of isp instances that should or shouldn't
map memory space, I/O space, not load f/w, load f/w, ignore nvram,
not ignore nvarm, set full duplex mode. Also have an isp_seed value
that we can use to generate a pseudo seed for a synthetic WWN.
Other minor cosmetic cleanup. Add in support for the Qlogic ISP
2200. Very important change where we actually check now to see
whether we were successful in mapping request and response queues
(and fibre channel scratch space).
after some of the previous commits). Add in support for the 1240
dual channel ISP card. Try the dance of unmapping a PCI interrupt
if we don't configure (if that ever works it'll be helpful).
#define COMPAT_PCI_DRIVER(name,data) DATA_SET(pcidevice_set,data)
.. to 2.2.x and 3.x if people think it's worth it. Driver writers can do
this if it's not defined. (The reason for this is that I'm trying to
progressively eliminate use of linker_sets where it hurts modularity and
runtime load capability, and these DATA_SET's keep getting in the way.)