to avoid sending extra READ CAPACITY requests by dastart(). Schedule periph
again on reprobe completion, or otherwise it may stuck indefinitely long.
This should fix USB explore thread hanging on device unplug, waiting for
periph destruction.
Reported by: hselasky
and da_default_timeout where their current hardcoded values matched the current
default value for said tunables.
PR: kern/169976
Reviewed by: pjd (mentor)
Approved by: mav
DISKFLAG_CANDELETE. While this change makes this layer consistent
other layers such as UFS and ZFS BIO_DELETE support may not notice
any change made manually via these device sysctls until the device
is reopened via a mount.
Also corrected var order in dadeletemethodsysctl
PR: kern/169801
Reviewed by: pjd (mentor)
Approved by: mav
MFC after: 2 weeks
Previously CTL would leave individual LUNs enabled in the target
driver, whether or not the port as a whole was enabled. It would
also leave the wildcard LUN enabled indefinitely.
This change means that CTL will enable and disable any active LUNs,
as well as the wildcard LUN, when enabling and disabling a port.
Also, fix a bug that could crop up due to an uninitialized CCB
type.
ctl.c: Before calling ctl_frontend_online(), run through
the LUN list and enable all active LUNs.
After calling ctl_frontend_offline(), run through
the LUN list and disble all active LUNs.
scsi_ctl.c: Before bringing a port online, allocate the
wildcard peripheral for that bus. And after taking
a port offline, invalidate the wildcard peripheral
for that bus.
Make sure that we hold the SIM lock around all
calls to xpt_action() and other transport layer
interfaces that require it.
Use CAM_SIM_{LOCK|UNLOCK} consistently to acquire
and release the SIM lock.
Update a number of outdated comments. Some of
these should have been fixed long ago.
Actually do LUN disbables now. The newer drivers
in the tree work correctly for this as far as I
know.
Initialize the CCB type to CTLFE_CCB_DEFAULT to
avoid a panic due to uninitialized memory.
Submitted by: Chuck Tuffli (partially)
MFC after: 1 week
ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: Coalesce cfcs_online() and cfcs_offline()
into a single function since these were
identical except for one line.
Make sure we hold the SIM lock around path
creation, and calling xpt_rescan().
scsi_ctl.c: In ctlfe_onoffline(), make sure we hold the
SIM lock around path creation and free
calls, as well as xpt_action().
In ctlfe_lun_enable(), hold the SIM lock
around path and peripheral operations that
require it.
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corporation
MFC after: 1 week
while doing a copyout. That can cause a panic, because copyout
can trigger VM faults, and we can't handle VM faults while holding
a mutex.
The solution here is to malloc a separate buffer to hold the OOA
queue entries, so that we don't risk a VM fault while filling up
the buffer and we don't have to drop the lock. The other solution
would be to wire the user's memory while filling their buffer with
copyout, but that would have been a little more complex.
Also fix a debugging parenthesis issue in ctl_abort_task() pointed
out by Chuck Tuffli.
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corporation
MFC after: 1 week
drivers.
The bug occurrs when a userland process has the driver instance
open and the underlying device goes away. We get the devfs
callback that the device node has been destroyed, but not all of
the closes necessary to fully decrement the reference count on the
CAM peripheral.
The reason is that once devfs calls back and says the device has
been destroyed, it is moved off to deadfs, and devfs guarantees
that there will be no more open or close calls. So the solution
is to keep track of how many outstanding open calls there are on
the device, and just release that many references when we get the
callback from devfs.
scsi_pass.c,
scsi_enc.c,
scsi_enc_internal.h: Add an open count to the softc in these
drivers. Increment it on open and
decrement it on close.
When we get a devfs callback to say that
the device node has gone away, decrement
the peripheral reference count by the
number of still outstanding opens.
Make sure we don't access the peripheral
with cam_periph_unlock() after what might
be the final call to
cam_periph_release_locked(). The
peripheral might have been freed, and we
will be dereferencing freed memory.
scsi_ch.c,
scsi_sg.c: For the ch(4) and sg(4) drivers, add the
same changes described above, and in
addition, fix another bug that was
previously fixed in the pass(4) and enc(4)
drivers.
These drivers were calling destroy_dev()
from their cleanup routine, but that could
cause a deadlock because the cleanup
routine could be indirectly called from
the driver's close routine. This would
cause a deadlock, because the device node
is being held open by the active close
call, and can't be destroyed.
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corporation
MFC after: 1 week
The problem was a race condition between the EDT traversal used by
things like 'camcontrol devlist', and CAM peripheral driver
removal.
The EDT traversal code holds the CAM topology lock, and wants
to show devices that have been invalidated. It acquires a
reference to the peripheral to make sure the peripheral it is
examining doesn't go away.
However, because the peripheral removal code in camperiphfree()
drops the CAM topology lock to call the peripheral's destructor
routine, we can run into a situation where the EDT traversal
increments the peripheral reference count after free process is
already in progress. At that point, the reference count is
ignored, because it was 0 when we started the process.
Fix this race by setting a flag, CAM_PERIPH_FREE, that I previously
added and checked in xptperiphtraverse() and xptpdperiphtravsere(),
but failed to use. If the EDT traversal code sees that flag,
it will know that the peripheral free process has already started,
and that it should not access that peripheral.
Also, fix an inconsistency in the locking between
xptpdperiphtraverse() and xptperiphtraverse(). They now both
hold the CAM topology lock while calling the peripheral traversal
function.
cam_xpt.c: Change xptperiphtraverse() to hold the CAM topology
lock across calls to the traversal function.
Take out the comment in xptpdperiphtraverse() that
referenced the locking inconsistency.
cam_periph.c: Set the CAM_PERIPH_FREE flag when we are in the
process of freeing a peripheral driver.
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corporation
MFC after: 1 week
The device reports support for SATA Asynchronous Notification in its
IDENTIFY data, but returns error on attempt to enable that feature.
Make SATA XPT of CAM only report these errors, but not fail the device.
MFC after: 1 week
Element Descriptor page if it is not supported. This removes one error
message from verbose logs during boot on systems with some enclosures.
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
safe in some cases to reduce CCB priority after it was scheduled with high
priority. This fixes reproducible deadlock when command sent through the
pass interface while ATA XPT recovers from command timeout.
Instead of that enforce priority at passioctl(). libcam provides no obvious
interface to specify CCB priority and so much (all?) code specifies zero
(highest) priority. This change limits pass CCBs priority to NORMAL run
level, allowing XPT to complete bus and device recovery after reset before
running any payload.
In particular, do not lock Giant conditionally when calling into the
filesystem module, remove the VFS_LOCK_GIANT() and related
macros. Stop handling buffers belonging to non-mpsafe filesystems.
The VFS_VERSION is bumped to indicate the interface change which does
not result in the interface signatures changes.
Conducted and reviewed by: attilio
Tested by: pho
System time is set later on boot process then initial bus scan by CAM.
Until that moment microtime() is equal to microuptime(), and if system
boots quickly, the value can be close to zero. That causes settle time
waiting even for buses that don't use reset during probe.
On my test system this reduces boot time by 1 second if USB enabled, or
by 4 seconds if USB disabled. CAM waited for ctl2cam0 bus "settle".
- Extend the lock to cover xpt_path_release() for the new path.
- While xpt_action() is called while holding right SIM lock for the new
bus, the old path release may require different SIM lock. So we have
to temporary drop the new lock and get the old one.
without holding SIM lock. It really doesn't need that lock, but adding it
removes that specific exception, allowing to assert locking there later.
Submitted by: ken@ (earlier version)
It is required to store extra recovery requests in case of bus resets.
On ATA/SATA this fixes assertion panics on HEAD with INVARIANTS enabled or
possible memory corruptions otherwise if timeout/reset happens when device
CCB queue is already full.
Reported by: gibbs@
MFC after: 1 week
returns zero while request status is not CAM_REQ_CMP. That could cause
partial device attach or other unexpected results.
Found by: Clang Static Analyzer
drivers:
- Remove scsi_low_pisa.*, they were unused.
- Remove <compat/netbsd/physio_proc.h> and calls to the stubs in that
header. They were empty nops.
- Retire sl_xname and use device_get_nameunit() and device_printf() with
the underlying device_t instead.
- Remove unused {ct,ncv,nsp,stg}print() functions.
- Remove empty SOFT_INTR_REQUIRED() macro and the unused sl_irq member.
NetBSD/pc98 was never merged into the main NetBSD tree and is no longer
developed. Adding locking to these drivers would have made the compat
shims hard to impossible to maintain, so remove the shims to ease
future changes.
These changes were verified by md5. Some additional shims can be removed
that do affect the compiled results that I will probably do in another
round.
Approved by: nyan (tentatively)
of this hardware still running (close to twenty years now).
2. Quiesece and use ENC_VLOG instead of ENC_LOG for most
complaints. That is, they're visible with bootverbose, but
otherwise quiesced and not repeatedly spamming messages
with constant reminders that hardware in this space is
rarely fully compliant.
MFC after: 1 month