sometime around 1.51, the check for minphys dissappeared out of
transfers for disks..
we weren't hecking that the adapter could handle a transfer of
the size we were requesting..
Peter!?
:)
this explains the rash of failures I've seen reported recently
with "too many DMA segments" on raw devices
(added one for st as well)
o don't use polled mode after the device probe phase
o don't biodone() a NULL buffer pointer
o increase the timeout for scsi_read_capacity(); WORMs are slooow
o make WORMMs known to scsiconf at all
This brings the driver in a state where it at least doesn't
immediately panic, nor hangs the controller any more. Unfortunately,
at least the YAMAHA CDR100 i've been testing with answered my write
attempts with an "Incorrect command sequence" response. Perhaps other
CD burners might work however.
Reviewed by: dufault
This change forces the controller drivers to allocate a scsibus_data struct
via a call to scsi_alloc_bus(), fill in the adapter_link field, and optionally
modify any other fields of the struct. Scsi_alloc_bus() initializes all fields
to the default, so the changes in most drivers are very minimal. For drivers
that support Wide controllers, the maxtarg field will have to be updated to
allow probing of all targets (for an example, look at the aic7xxx driver).
Scsi_attachdevs() now takes a scsibus_data* as its argument instead of an
sc_link*. This allows us to expand the role of the scsibus_data struct for
other bus level configuration setings (max number of transactions, current
transaction opennings, etc for better tagged queuing support).
Reviewed by: Rodney Grimes <rgrimes>, Peter Dufault <dufault>, Julian Elischer <julian>
for the kernel, but gcc provides an inline version of it if the
kernel is compiled with -O.
The inline memcmp() is OK for small compares and is better than
the dumb kernel bcmp() in all cases, but it has been hiding the
library memcmp() which is 4 times faster for large compares.
This is performed by using a line similar to:
controller scbus0 at ahc0 bus 1
to wire scbus0 to the second bus on an adaptec 2742T controller.
Reviewed by: Peter Dufault(dufault@hda.com), Rod Grimes(rgrimes@FreeBSD.org)
probes). Apart from there being no reason to set SCSI_NOSLEEP on every
tape command, this prevents controller drivers from sleeping when resources
are fully utilized causing unecessary "Oops not queued" errors. This is
only noticed for controllers that can run out of resources like the
27/2842 adaptec controllers. Before this fix, it is almost impossible to
perform extended tape operations if more than one scsi disk is on the
bus with the tape drive with these controllers. This does not address a
similar problem that could occur if devices are probed while other targets
are active since SCSI_NOSLEEP will still be set in that case.
>Synopsis: Booting w/scsi tape in drive causes first use to fail
Booting with a tape in a SCSI tape drive will cause the first
use of the tape to fail with the following message:
st0: bad request, must be between 0 and 0.
Submitted by: mpp@legarto.minn.net (Mike Pritchard)
loading kernel
worm.o: Undefined symbol `_STUNIT' referenced from text segment
I copied the STUNIT definition from the old scsiconf.c into this file to
work around this problem.
Added CONTROL device that only does user-ioctl and nothing else;
Added protection so user-ioctl requires write access;
Clean up scsiconf.h a little. It needs more work.
user-level part has already been commited.)
Note that i've lost the "official" code for this; it went into the
system after 1.1.5.1. The commited code is my own version, but it has
proven to work for me for more than a year now.
flags parameter to all xxstart routines so that the correct information can
be passed down into the device specific routines. This is needed to ensure
that ccb/scb allocation routines don't hang.
Submitted by: John Dyson
function calls. Broken tracking of open partitions gets fixed as a side
effect. Races in sdopen() and sdioctl() become more numerous than before.
Close the device in sdsize(). Media removal could not have worked right
when unused swap devices were held open. There may now be a problem
with used swap devices not being held open.
Fix ancient operator precedence bug in sddump(). It may have been
possible to attempt dumping to unloaded media.
Remove NetBSD ifdefs. We're too different now, and the NetBSD driver was
already too different for them to be relevant.
Remove support for soft write protection. There are no ioctls to set it,
and this driver never set it either. It was used in the wd driver to
disable writing to unlabelled disk, but we want to support writing to
foreign partitions on unlabeled disks.
Clean up some formatting and restore some old-style function headers.
sd.c: Julian's removal of subdriver requests
st.c, scsi_tape.h: Julian's suport of compressed tape drives
Note: compressed tape drives are still not working fully.
scsiconf.h, scsi_base.c, scsi_driver.c: address problems in probes
and error console logs
Fix it so that calls to extend_get won't dereference 0 when "swap
on sd.." calls sdsize() on systems with no SCSI devices.
This probably really fixes Poul's "boot with no SCSI" problem.
tape drive. I traced it to sys/scsi/scsi_base.c where some code were added
to print the return values of the sense command. My tape drive returned a
extended flags value of 0x20, so the key that is the lower 4 bits, is 0.
The code uses "key-1" to index into a table and then the kernel go to never-
never land.
Here is a fix for this. Will somebody please apply it?
Submitted by: John Hay