we *really* are.
It should be noted that there is a degenerate case where soft tape
location will be lost (not causing a frozen state- but causing
the loss of reporting fileno/blockno)- that's where you backspace
over a filemark- you stop backspacing as soon as you cross the
filemark, but you have no idea what the record number now is because
you have no idea how many records you are into the file you just
backed into. Such is life.
While I'm at it, also pick up residuals from writing filemarks.
PR: 24222
only CCB type but also extra flags- one of which can be "position
updated".
In other changes: Add in a SA_QUIRK_NO_CPAGE quirk so that it's possible
to avoid using a (broken) device's implementation of he DEVICE COMPRESSION
page.
Also do a couple of printout cleanups.
As per some discussion on FreeBSD-scsi, skip doing tape flushing
if we're reading tape logical block location (MTIOCRDSPOS).
MS will be treated as having this quirk. In the event that we falsely
identify one that doesn't need it, no harm will be done. Ken
suggested that we make this more generic since there may be more
needed in the future.
Reported by: TERAMOTO Masahiro <teramoto@comm.eng.osaka-u.ac.jp>
PR: kern/23378
Reviewed by: ken
field in CDB' error when attempting to start a caddy-type CD drive,
since those drives apparently in general refuse to load a medium. Since
we never advertised the feature to load the medium upon calling
cdstartunit() (i. e. upon receipt of a CDIOCSTART ioctl command), nobody
should have relied on it. Besides, nobody noticed so far at all that
this command is failing for caddy-type drives... Only few applications
seem to use it at all (among them is workman, which made me notice it).
Reviewed by: ken
CDs.
With audio CDs, you can't just do a READ(10) call on most drives without
first setting the blocksize with a mode select command. The disklabel code
does a read of the first sector of the media to find a label if it exists.
This caused drives to return an error when an audio CD was in the drive,
due to the problem described above.
The solution is to read the table of contents on the CD, and only attempt
to read the disklabel if the first track is a data track.
This works on all the various CD and DVD media I have tried, but further
testing (especially with Video CDs and other mode 2 media) will be
needed to determine if this is a universal solution.
Return ENOTSUP for any opcode that is not supported by the XPT
device.
Add back a missing local declaration that seems to have been deleted
by my last commit.
The XPT uses this to prevent tags from being used on parallel SCSI
interfaces immediately after a bus reset or BDR so that controllers
have an oportunity to renegotiate without tag messages in the way.
Somehow this got disabled... the functionality has been here for
quite some time.
Noticed by: my SCSI bus analyzer
This allows writing to DVD-RAM, PD and similar drives that probe as CD
devices. Note that these are randomly writeable devices, not
sequential-only devices like CD-R drives, which are supported by cdrecord.
Add a new flag value for dsopen(), DSO_COMPATLABEL. The cd(4) driver now
uses this flag instead of the DSO_NOLABELS flag. The DSO_NOLABELS always
used a "fake" disklabel for the entire disk, provided by the caller.
With the DSO_COMPATLABEL flag, dsopen() will first search the media for a
label, and if it finds a label, it will use that label. Otherwise it will
use the fake disklabel provided by the caller. This provides backwards
compatibility, since we will still have labels for ISO9660 media.
It also provides new functionality, since you can now have a regular BSD
disklabel on read-only media, or on writeable media (e.g. DVD-RAM).
Bruce and I both think that we should eventually (in a few years) get
away from using disklabels for ISO9660 media, and just use the whole disk
device (/dev/cd0). At that point disklabel handling in the cd(4) driver
could follow the "normal" model, as used in the da(4) driver.
Also, clean up the path in a couple of places in cdregister(). (Thanks to
Nick Hibma for catching that bug.)
Reviewed by: bde
because it only takes a struct tag which makes it impossible to
use unions, typedefs etc.
Define __offsetof() in <machine/ansi.h>
Define offsetof() in terms of __offsetof() in <stddef.h> and <sys/types.h>
Remove myriad of local offsetof() definitions.
Remove includes of <stddef.h> in kernel code.
NB: Kernelcode should *never* include from /usr/include !
Make <sys/queue.h> include <machine/ansi.h> to avoid polluting the API.
Deprecate <struct.h> with a warning. The warning turns into an error on
01-12-2000 and the file gets removed entirely on 01-01-2001.
Paritials reviews by: various.
Significant brucifications by: bde
type of software interrupt. Roughly, what used to be a bit in spending
now maps to a swi thread. Each thread can have multiple handlers, just
like a hardware interrupt thread.
- Instead of using a bitmask of pending interrupts, we schedule the specific
software interrupt thread to run, so spending, NSWI, and the shandlers
array are no longer needed. We can now have an arbitrary number of
software interrupt threads. When you register a software interrupt
thread via sinthand_add(), you get back a struct intrhand that you pass
to sched_swi() when you wish to schedule your swi thread to run.
- Convert the name of 'struct intrec' to 'struct intrhand' as it is a bit
more intuitive. Also, prefix all the members of struct intrhand with
'ih_'.
- Make swi_net() a MI function since there is now no point in it being
MD.
Submitted by: cp
(a NetBSD port for NEC PC-98x1 machines). They are ncv for NCR 53C500,
nsp for Workbit Ninja SCSI-3, and stg for TMC 18C30 and 18C50.
I thank NetBSD/pc98 and bsd-nomads people.
Obtained from: NetBSD/pc98
write caching is disabled on both SCSI and IDE disks where large
memory dumps could take up to an hour to complete.
Taking an i386 scsi based system with 512MB of ram and timing (in
seconds) how long it took to complete a dump, the following results
were obtained:
Before: After:
WCE TIME WCE TIME
------------------ ------------------
1 141.820972 1 15.600111
0 797.265072 0 65.480465
Obtained from: Yahoo!
Reviewed by: peter
- Make softinterrupts (SWI's) almost completely MI, and divorce them
completely from the x86 hardware interrupt code.
- The ihandlers array is now gone. Instead, there is a MI shandlers array
that just contains SWI handlers.
- Most of the former machine/ipl.h files have moved to a new sys/ipl.h.
- Stub out all the spl*() functions on all architectures.
Submitted by: dfr
newbus for referencing device interrupt handlers.
- Move the 'struct intrec' type which describes interrupt sources into
sys/interrupt.h instead of making it just be a x86 structure.
- Don't create 'ithd' and 'intrec' typedefs, instead, just use 'struct ithd'
and 'struct intrec'
- Move the code to translate new-bus interrupt flags into an interrupt thread
priority out of the x86 nexus code and into a MI ithread_priority()
function in sys/kern/kern_intr.c.
- Remove now-uneeded x86-specific headers from sys/dev/ata/ata-all.c and
sys/pci/pci_compat.c.
also mention the peripheral name, bus, target and lun of the device we
attempted to put in that slot. This gives the user a little more
information about what is going on.
Tested by: Andre Albsmeier <andre.albsmeier@mchp.siemens.de>
Discussed with: gibbs
for the Quantum "MAVERICK 540S" and "LPS525S".
Also, add common string variables, since we seem to have a few Quantum and
Micropolis drives in here.
Fix the 'quantum' variable usage in scsi_all.c that likely got broken when
someone staticized things in cam_xpt.c. (That particular problem would
cause Quantum Fireball ST drives to not get spun up if they were not
already spinning.)
Submitted by: Andre Albsmeier <andre.albsmeier@mchp.siemens.de>
Make the umass driver depend on this module.
Makes it possible to compile the kernel without SCSI support and load it
when for example a USB floppy is conencted.
to be obeying the original spec as to what the numeric value means.
Temperature flags are unaffected- these are still the 'pseudo-thermometers'
and overtemp/undertemp warnings will be caught and translated to SES objects
here.
PR: 20475
related patches. These include:
* Mode page editting can be scripted. This involves two
things: first, if stdin is not a tty, changes are read from
stdin rather than invoking $EDITOR. Second, and more
importantly, not all modepage entries must be included in the
change set. This means that camcontrol can now gracefully handle
more intrusive editting from the $EDITOR, including removal or
rearrangement of lines. It also means that you can do stuff
like:
# echo "WCE: 1" | camcontrol modepage da3 -m 8 -e
# newfs /dev/da3
# echo "WCE: 0" | camcontrol modepage da3 -m 8 -e
* Range-checking on user-supplied input values. modeedit.c now
uses the field width specifiers to determine the maximum
allowable value for a field. If the user enters a value larger
than the maximum, it clips the value to the max and warns the
user. This also involved patching cam_cmdparse.c to be more
consistent with regards to the "count" parameter to arg_put
(previously is was the length of strings and 1 for all integral
types). The cam_cdbparse(3) man page was also updated to reflect
the revised semantics.
* In the process, I removed the 64 entry limit on mode pages (not
that we were even close to hitting that limit). This was a nice
side-effect of the other changes.
* Technically, the new mode editting functionality allows editting
of character array entries in mode pages (type 'c' or 'z'),
however since buff_encode doesn't grok them it is currently
useless.
* Camcontrol gained two new options related to mode pages: -l and
-b. The former lists all available mode pages for a given
device. The latter forces mode page display in binary format
(the default when no mode page definition was found in
scsi_modes).
* Added support for mode page names to scsi_modes. Allows names to
be displayed alongside mode numbers in the mode page
listing. Updated scsi_modes to use the new functionality. This
also adds the semicolon into the scsi_modes syntax as an
optional mode page definition terminator. This is needed to name
pages without providing a page format definition.
* Updated scsi_all.h to include a structure describing mode page
headers.
* Added $FreeBSD$ line to scsi_modes.
Inspired by: dwhite
Reviewed by: ken
Clean up the comments related to the high speed
sync rate table for SPI.
scsi_message.h:
Bring in some SCSI3 message terminology. All SCSI2 names
are still preserved for backwards compatibility.
Bring back the CAM_NEGOTIATE ccb flag. This flag indicates
that SPI transfer negotiation should occur concurrently with the
execution of this CCB. The flag is not yet used by the XPT but
is required for proper support of multi-initiator configurations
where topology scans cannot rely on a bus reset to invalidate
prior negotiations.
cam_xpt.c:
Don't allow DT transmission rates to be specified for devices
that don't have the DT feature listed in their inquiry data.
CAM_TAG_ACTION_VALID and CAM_DIR_MASK). Remove redundant
CAM_DEBUG line. Spiff up CAM_DEBUG printout for commands
and move the printout up to the top where we can see it,
even for the pending_ua/pending_ca cass. Add missing
newline in a CAM_DEBUG.
to splx(s) if cam_extend_get fails and we return ENXIO, reset ccb flags
when we push ATIOs back to the SIM, do some data increment fixes, set
priority of command based on whether CAM_DIS_DISCONNECT is set and related
changes).
Add in some more CAM_DEBUG_PERIPH debug statements and also add in support
for TARGIODEBUG which then will enable or disable CAM_DEBUG_PERIPH tracing
for an instance.
CAPACITY operation. SCSI-3 mandates this to be 2048, but some older
drives like my old Plasmon CD-R report weird numbers between 2048 and
up to 2352 bytes depending on the mode of the last track etc. This in
turn confuses stuff like the slice code since it refuses to work with
devices that do not have a blocksize which is a multiple of 512 bytes.
Reviewed by: ken
libcam/Makefile: Add scsi_da.c to libcam for the new
scsi_format_unit() function.
camcontrol.8: Update the man page for the new format
functionality, and take out the examples section
describing how to do it with 'camcontrol cmd'.
camcontrol.c: New format functionality. Note that unlike the
rest of the camcontrol subcommands, this one is
interactive by default. Because of the potential
destructiveness of the format command, I thought
it necessary to get confirmation from the user
before spamming a disk. You can disable the
interactive behavior, and the status meter with
command line arguments.
scsi_da.c: Add the new scsi_format_unit() cdb building
function and use #ifdef _KERNEL to make this file
compile in both the kernel and userland. The
format unit function is currently only defined in
the non-kernel case, because nothing in the kernel
is using it. If that changes, it should be
un-ifdefed and compiled in both cases.
scsi_da.h: New function declaration, CDB structure and format
data structures.
Thanks to Nick Hibma for providing some valuable input on these changes.
to various pmap_*() functions instead of looking up the physical address
and passing that. In many cases, the first thing the pmap code was doing
was going to a lot of trouble to get back the original vm_page_t, or
it's shadow pv_table entry.
Inspired by: John Dyson's 1998 patches.
Also:
Eliminate pv_table as a seperate thing and build it into a machine
dependent part of vm_page_t. This eliminates having a seperate set of
structions that shadow each other in a 1:1 fashion that we often went to
a lot of trouble to translate from one to the other. (see above)
This happens to save 4 bytes of physical memory for each page in the
system. (8 bytes on the Alpha).
Eliminate the use of the phys_avail[] array to determine if a page is
managed (ie: it has pv_entries etc). Store this information in a flag.
Things like device_pager set it because they create vm_page_t's on the
fly that do not have pv_entries. This makes it easier to "unmanage" a
page of physical memory (this will be taken advantage of in subsequent
commits).
Add a function to add a new page to the freelist. This could be used
for reclaiming the previously wasted pages left over from preloaded
loader(8) files.
Reviewed by: dillon
Add a SA_QUIRK_NO_MODESEL type and use it for the OnStream real SCSI
device (not the broken one). This one is still broken in that it can't
be set to the same fixed block size it reports [ unflattering comments
about this company elided ].
If we're unable to set buffered mode on, complain, but drive on. It's
not a fatal error to not be in buffered mode.
<sys/bio.h>.
<sys/bio.h> is now a prerequisite for <sys/buf.h> but it shall
not be made a nested include according to bdes teachings on the
subject of nested includes.
Diskdrivers and similar stuff below specfs::strategy() should no
longer need to include <sys/buf.> unless they need caching of data.
Still a few bogus uses of struct buf to track down.
Repocopy by: peter
Exceptions:
Vinum untouched. This means that it cannot be compiled.
Greg Lehey is on the case.
CCD not converted yet, casts to struct buf (still safe)
atapi-cd casts to struct buf to examine B_PHYS
kernel. Justin agress that there is no other reasonable alternative to
do automatic rescans on connect.
The problem is that when a new device attaches to a SIM (SCSI host
controller) we need to send a XPT_SCAN_BUS command to the SIM using
xpt_action. This requires however that there is a peripheral available
to take the command (otherwise xpt_done and later bomb). The RESCAN
ioctl uses the same periph.
This enables a USB mass storage drive to do an automatic rescan on
connection of the drive.
The automatic dropping of a CAM entry on disconnection was already
working (asynchronous event).
The next thing to do is find someone to commit a change to vpo to do the
same thing. Just port umass_cam_rescan and friends across to that
driver.
Approved by: gibbs
(Much of this done by script)
Move B_ORDERED flag to b_ioflags and call it BIO_ORDERED.
Move b_pblkno and b_iodone_chain to struct bio while we transition, they
will be obsoleted once bio structs chain/stack.
Add bio_queue field for struct bio aware disksort.
Address a lot of stylistic issues brought up by bde.
- Mike Smith discovered a panic in the changer probe code if the probe
command (mode sense) fails. So we need to release the CCB used in the
probe before we unlock the peripheral. (i.e. the same fix mjacob put in
the CD and DA drivers)
- A newline was missing in a warning message. (PR kern/17512)
PR: kern/17512
Submitted by: Louis Mamakos <louie@uu.net> (newline fix)
field in struct buf: b_iocmd. The b_iocmd is enforced to have
exactly one bit set.
B_WRITE was bogusly defined as zero giving rise to obvious coding
mistakes.
Also eliminate the redundant struct buf flag B_CALL, it can just
as efficiently be done by comparing b_iodone to NULL.
Should you get a panic or drop into the debugger, complaining about
"b_iocmd", don't continue. It is likely to write on your disk
where it should have been reading.
This change is a step in the direction towards a stackable BIO capability.
A lot of this patch were machine generated (Thanks to style(9) compliance!)
Vinum users: Greg has not had time to test this yet, be careful.
an HBA. Garbage in this field confuses the driver in targdone().
o When completing a CCB on behalf of a user process, we need to
*de-queue* the ccb from our pending ccb list, not queue it again.
o All continue target I/O operations need to have a timeout set.
We use 5 seconds throughout this driver.
o Remove some logging printfs.
o During abort processing, remove ccbs that are on the pending queue
from the pending queue, not the work queue.
256 bytes) caused it to break on many devices.
The SCSI spec says that for commands with 8-bit length fields, a value of 0
means 256 bytes. As it turns out, many devices don't deal with that
properly. Some interpret the 0 as 0, and return no data. Others return
more than 256 bytes of data, and cause an overrun.
The fix is to tell the device we've only allocated SHORT_INQUIRY_LENGTH (36
bytes) of inquiry data, instead of sizeof(struct scsi_inquiry_data).
camcontrol.c: Change inq_len in the call to scsi_inquiry() to
SHORT_INQUIRY_LENGTH, and add a long comment
explaining the reason for the change.
scsi_all.h: Add a comment above the definitinon of
SHORT_INQUIRY_LENGTH alerting people that it is
both the initial probe inquiry length, and the
minimum amount of data needed for scsi_print_inquiry()
to function.
scsi_all.c: Add a comment about SHORT_INQUIRY_LENGTH being the
minimum amount of data needed for
scsi_print_inquiry() to function.
Reviewed by: gibbs
Approved by: jkh
Reported by: "John W. DeBoskey" <jwd@unx.sas.com>
that there's sense to send with status (if the SIM does it), and
then clear any pending contingent allegiance state for this initiator
if the SIM actually did send the sense data.
Widen MAX_INITITATORS to 256- that's still not quite right, but will
accomodate the widest Fibre Channel support in FreeBSD now.
Obtained from:(partially) gibbs@freebsd.org
dynamic resource tables rather than relying on a duplicated cam-specific
table generated by config(8) in ioconf.c. This was a major holdup to
getting loader / userconfig driven configuration of scsi wiring.
full size. Define a SHORT_INQUIRY_LENGTH for use during initial
probing (covers the size used previously). Define some SPC-2 related
fields (and define the revision code for SPC-2) which includes some
further SPI-3 defines. Don't go all the way (256 bytes) for the structure-
stop 4 bytes short- because we haven't auditted the source base to find
any u_int8_t potential overflow issues. Add RBC (single byte device)
and OCR (Optical Character Reader) device type codes.
Approved by JKH.
Reviewed by: gibbs@freebsd.org, ken@freebsd.org
structure. Remove usage of the (now gone) pd_type tag of same.
Add an extra probing state such that if we successfully run an
initial inquiry (36 bytes), rerun another one with a longer data
size as informed by the 'additional length' field in the first
returned inquiry data (making sure not to get bigger than the
actual scsi_inquiry_data structure- which has also been modified-
see separate checkin of scsi_all.h). This allows devices such
as SAF-TE devices (which have identifying marks in offsets 48-53
in inquiry data) to be successfully found without special case
inquiry commands. There are also a lot of other things such as
version codes that are coming in in the SPC2 specification that it
would be useful to get our hands on.
Reviewed by: gibbs@freebsd.org, ken@freebsd.org
(at request of Ken Merry). Garbage collect items out of the ccb_getdev
structure and and a length field so that consumes will know how much
of the inq_data tag is valid. Clean up a few misspellings. Add
a CAM_SEND_STATUS target mode flag.
All of this necessitated a CAM_VERSION bump.
JHK approved.
Reviewed by: gibbs@freebsd.org, ken@freebsd.org
to be more platform independent. Add a ses_hlptxt structure definition
and retrieval ioctl for when we are able to retrieve object help text
SES Objects can have up to 64 KBytes of associated 'help' text- the
Sun A5000 uses this, for example, to give physical location information
(e.g., 'left power supply').
Clean up node creation in the EDT so that initialization follows member
declaration.
Sort registered paths by pathid so that we probe busses in order of
ascending pathid. This makes hardwiring of busses without wiring
individual targets do what the user expects. (submitted by tegge@FreeBSD.org)
Fix an EDT node leak. Target nodes would never go away.
Implement xpt_bus_deregister().
(prodded by some patches from T. Ichinoseki, but implemented differently.)
(from u_int8_t) in ccb_accept_tio structure. This
matches usage elsewhere and also allows me to
overload the tag id with the RX_ID for fibre
channel target mode.
Reviewed by: gibbs@freebsd.org
to be created at init time. The unit devices are created at
ctor when new instances are created and bound and destroyed
when that instance is closed. As such, there is just s single
static control dev_t for this driver (the per-unit dev_t's are
still in the softc).
When we have decommissionable periph drivers, a destroy_device
on the control device will have to called.
is an application space macro and the applications are supposed to be free
to use it as they please (but cannot). This is consistant with the other
BSD's who made this change quite some time ago. More commits to come.
is an application space macro and the applications are supposed to be free
to use it as they please (but cannot). This is consistant with the other
BSD's who made this change quite some time ago. More commits to come.
second LUN to show up.
mjacob's change (which is correct) in rev 1.21 of cam_periph.c to elminiate
infinite retries of the SCSI busy status bit seems to have broken probing
of Pioneer changers that aren't already quirked.
The right way to fix this is probably to change things around so we can
guarantee 100% sequential probing of LUN-based changers even if they aren't
quirked. This should fix things for now, though.
The same goes for CD drivers and tape drivers. In systems with mixed IDE
and SCSI, devices in the same priority class will be sorted in attach
order.
Also, the 'CCD' priority is now the 'ARRAY' priority, and a number of
drivers have been modified to use that priority.
This includes the necessary changes to all drivers, except the ATA drivers.
Soren will modify those separately.
This does not include and does not require any change in the devstat
version number, since no known userland applications use the priority
enumerations.
Reviewed by: msmith, sos, phk, jlemon, mjacob, bde
in samount. Make things a lot quieter in samount (and other places). Fix
ridiculous and not so ridiculous bugs in compression related code in both
sagetparams and sasetparams.
saprevent when we're doing an OFFLINE ioctl- saprevent
won't unlock the door, which then causes the unload to
fail on some units.
If we've already unloaded the tape, don't try and rewind and
unload in saclose. This is a slightly riskier change because
we're now going to depend on SA_FLAG_TAPE_MOUNTED to say whether
we've really unloaded the tape. This involved changing the
setting in sadone for tape errors to SA_FLAG_TAPE_FROZEN (which
is more accurate anyway-if you get an EIO you've probably lost
tape position anyway) where it used to just clear the mounted
flag.
camcontrol was setup to use the old scheme of going through the xpt(4)
device, which never worked properly (and has been disabled for a while).
camcontrol now sends BDRs through the pass(4) device, and XPT_RESET_DEV
CCBs are put on the device queue in the transport layer, as they should be.
Submitted by: luoqi
Reviewed by: ken
"rw" argument, rather than hijacking B_{READ|WRITE}.
Fix two bugs (physio & cam) resulting by the confusion caused by this.
Submitted by: Tor.Egge@fast.no
Reviewed by: alc, ken (partly)
Merge the contents (less some trivial bordering the silly comments)
of <vm/vm_prot.h> and <vm/vm_inherit.h> into <vm/vm.h>. This puts
the #defines for the vm_inherit_t and vm_prot_t types next to their
typedefs.
This paves the road for the commit to follow shortly: change
useracc() to use VM_PROT_{READ|WRITE} rather than B_{READ|WRITE}
as argument.
retry count for the ccb). This is probably not quite the right thing, but it
is better than silently hanging on (possibly broken) h/w which is what we
do now.
Reviewed by:Justin/Ken: they weren't entirely happy about it but didn't say no.
- Move intrhook stuff into kernel.h
- Remove all occurrences of #device <device.h>
- Add kernel.h were necessary (nowhere)
- delete device.h
This file contained the structures for cfdata (old style config) and is no
longer used. It was included by most drivers.
It confuses the remote debugger as the definition of 'struct device' in
device.h is found before the one in bus_private.h.
and add a config option that allows one to default to 1FM@EOD for tapes
otherwise unquirked or unknown as to which to prefer. Note that tcopy
will be broken for these tapes until tcopy is fixed.
have been there in the first place. A GENERIC kernel shrinks almost 1k.
Add a slightly different safetybelt under nostop for tty drivers.
Add some missing FreeBSD tags