- These revisions no longer have cable detection capability.
- The UDMA support bit of register 0x4b has been dropped without an
replacement.
- According to Linux it's crucial for working ATAPI DMA support to
also set the reserved bit 1 of regsiter 0x53 with these revisions.
MFC after: 1 week
native, i.e. big-endian, format and convert as appropriate like we
also do with the multibyte fields of the other pages. This fixes
the output of acd_describe() to match reality on big-endian machines
without breaking it on little-endian ones. While at it, also convert
the remaining multibyte fields of the pages read although they are
currently unused for consistency and in order to prevent possible
similar bugs in the future.
MFC after: 1 week
Introduce ATA_CAM kernel option, turning ata(4) controller drivers into
cam(4) interface modules. When enabled, this options deprecates all ata(4)
peripheral drivers (ad, acd, ...) and interfaces and allows cam(4) drivers
(ada, cd, ...) and interfaces to be natively used instead.
As side effect of this, ata(4) mode setting code was completely rewritten
to make controller API more strict and permit above change. While doing
this, SATA revision was separated from PATA mode. It allows DMA-incapable
SATA devices to operate and makes hw.ata.atapi_dma tunable work again.
Also allow ata(4) controller drivers (except some specific or broken ones)
to handle larger data transfers. Previous constraint of 64K was artificial
and is not really required by PCI ATA BM specification or hardware.
Submitted by: nwitehorn (powerpc part)
normal in case of media read error and some ATAPI cases, when transfer size
is unknown beforehand. PCI ATA BM specification tells that in case of such
underrun driver should just manually stop DMA engine. DMA engine should
same time guarantie that all bus mastering transfers completed at the moment
of driver reads interrupt flag asserted.
This change should fix interrupt storms and command timeouts in many cases.
PR: kern/103602, sparc64/121539, kern/133122, kern/139654
long as I remember, and completely superseded by better maintained umass(4).
It's main idea was to optionally avoid CAM dependency for such devices, but
with move ATA to CAM, it is not actual any more.
No objections: hselasky@, thompsa@, arch@
Binary divider value 10 specified in datasheet is not a hex 0x10.
UDMA2 should be 33/2 instead of 66/4, which is documented as reverved,
UDMA4 should be 66/2 instead of 66/4, which is definitely wrong.
and Marvell handled. Instead of trying to attach two different drivers to
single device, wrapping each call, make one of them (atajmicron, atamarvell)
attach do device solely, but create child device for AHCI driver,
passing it all required resources. It is quite easy, as none of
resources are shared, except IRQ.
As result, it:
- makes drivers operation more independent and straitforward,
- allows to use new ahci(4) driver with such devices, adding support for
new features, such as PMP and NCQ, same time keeping legacy PATA support,
- will allow to just drop old ataahci driver, when it's time come.
These controllers provide combination of AHCI for SATA and legacy
PCI ATA for PATA. Use same solution as used for JMicron controllers.
Add IDs of Marvell 88SX6102, 88SX6111. 88SX6141 alike controllers
- Remove most of direct relations between ATA(4) peripherial and controller
levels. It makes logic more transparent and is a mandatory step to wrap
ATA(4) controller level into ATA-native CAM SIM.
- Tune AHCI and SATA2 SiI drivers memory allocation a bit to allow bigger
I/O transaction sizes without additional cost.
obsoleted in 1996 by ATA-2, and crashes some modern hardware like some
revisions of the Serverworks K2 SATA controller. Even very ancient
hardware seems not to require it. In the unlikely event this causes
problems, the previous behavior can be re-enabled by defining
ATA_LEGACY_SUPPORT at the top of this file.
Reviewed by: Alexander Motin <mav@freebsd.org>
and progif is evil. It doesn't work reliably[1] and we should honor BIOS
configuration by the user.
- If the SATA controller is enbled but combined mode is disabled, mask off
the emulated IDE channel on the legacy IDE controller.
Pointed out by: mav[1]
the work area was totally unsynchronized which means this driver only
had a chance of working on x86 when no bounce buffers were involved,
which isn't that likely given that support for 64-bit DMA is currently
broken throughout ata(4).
- Add necessary little-endian conversion of accesses to the work area,
making this driver work on big-endian hosts. While at it, use the
alignment-agnostic byte order encoders in order to be on the safe side.
- Clear the reserved member of the SG list entries in order to be on the
safe side. [1]
Submitted by: yongari [1]
Reviewed by: yongari
MFC after: 3 days
requirements. It is busdma task, to manage proper alignment by loading
data to bounce buffers.
PR: kern/127316
Reviewed by: current@
Tested by: Ryan Rogers
The newbus lock is responsible for protecting newbus internIal structures,
device states and devclass flags. It is necessary to hold it when all
such datas are accessed. For the other operations, softc locking should
ensure enough protection to avoid races.
Newbus lock is automatically held when virtual operations on the device
and bus are invoked when loading the driver or when the suspend/resume
take place. For other 'spourious' operations trying to access/modify
the newbus topology, newbus lock needs to be automatically acquired and
dropped.
For the moment Giant is also acquired in some key point (modules subsystem)
in order to avoid problems before the 8.0 release as module handlers could
make assumptions about it. This Giant locking should go just after
the release happens.
Please keep in mind that the public interface can be expanded in order
to provide more support, if there are really necessities at some point
and also some bugs could arise as long as the patch needs a bit of
further testing.
Bump __FreeBSD_version in order to reflect the newbus lock introduction.
Reviewed by: ed, hps, jhb, imp, mav, scottl
No answer by: ariff, thompsa, yongari
Tested by: pho,
G. Trematerra <giovanni dot trematerra at gmail dot com>,
Brandon Gooch <jamesbrandongooch at gmail dot com>
Sponsored by: Yahoo! Incorporated
Approved by: re (ksmith)
requesting IDENTIFY from slave device first. This order is important
for proper cable type detection by master device.
PR: kern/136438
Approved by: re (kib)
modularize it so that new transports can be created.
Add a transport for SATA
Add a periph+protocol layer for ATA
Add a driver for AHCI-compliant hardware.
Add a maxio field to CAM so that drivers can advertise their max
I/O capability. Modify various drivers so that they are insulated
from the value of MAXPHYS.
The new ATA/SATA code supports AHCI-compliant hardware, and will override
the classic ATA driver if it is loaded as a module at boot time or compiled
into the kernel. The stack now support NCQ (tagged queueing) for increased
performance on modern SATA drives. It also supports port multipliers.
ATA drives are accessed via 'ada' device nodes. ATAPI drives are
accessed via 'cd' device nodes. They can all be enumerated and manipulated
via camcontrol, just like SCSI drives. SCSI commands are not translated to
their ATA equivalents; ATA native commands are used throughout the entire
stack, including camcontrol. See the camcontrol manpage for further
details. Testing this code may require that you update your fstab, and
possibly modify your BIOS to enable AHCI functionality, if available.
This code is very experimental at the moment. The userland ABI/API has
changed, so applications will need to be recompiled. It may change
further in the near future. The 'ada' device name may also change as
more infrastructure is completed in this project. The goal is to
eventually put all CAM busses and devices until newbus, allowing for
interesting topology and management options.
Few functional changes will be seen with existing SCSI/SAS/FC drivers,
though the userland ABI has still changed. In the future, transports
specific modules for SAS and FC may appear in order to better support
the topologies and capabilities of these technologies.
The modularization of CAM and the addition of the ATA/SATA modules is
meant to break CAM out of the mold of being specific to SCSI, letting it
grow to be a framework for arbitrary transports and protocols. It also
allows drivers to be written to support discrete hardware without
jeopardizing the stability of non-related hardware. While only an AHCI
driver is provided now, a Silicon Image driver is also in the works.
Drivers for ICH1-4, ICH5-6, PIIX, classic IDE, and any other hardware
is possible and encouraged. Help with new transports is also encouraged.
Submitted by: scottl, mav
Approved by: re
MAXPHYS. Current ataahci driver memory allocation scheme includes only
64 items in DMA S/G table, and so not guarantied to support transactions
with more then 252K data.
Approved by: re (kensmith)
MFC after: 2 weeks
is invalid because the ioctl happens without prior open. The ioctl
got introduced to provide backward compatibility for extended
partitions, but it ended up not being used because it didn't work
as expected. Since there are no consumers of the ioctl and the
implementation is broken, the best fix is to remove the code
entirely.
Spotted by: phk
Approved by: re (kensmith)
This removes unnecessary PCI #includes dependency for systems with ATA
controllers living at non-PCI buses.
Submitted by: Piotr Ziecik
Obtained from: Semihalf
routine and save the resources using a chipset-data structure. Use these
preallocated resources to setup resources for the SATA channels to avoid
asking the PCI bus to allocate the same BAR multiple times.
Tested by: bms
MFC after: 1 week
chipset-specific code to attach chipset-specific data.
- Use chipset-specific data in the acard and promise chipsets rather than
changing the ivars of ATA PCI devices. ivars are reserved for use by the
parent bus driver and are _not_ available for use by devices directly.
This fixes a panic during sysctl -a with certain Promise controllers with
ACPI enabled.
Reviewed by: mav
Tested by: Magnus Kling (kingfon @ gmail) (on 7)
MFC after: 3 days
- Generate fake channel interrupts even if channel busy with previous
request to let it finish. Without this, dumping requests were just queued
and never processed.
- Drop pre-dump requests queue on dumping. ATA code, working in dumping
(interruptless) mode, unable to handle long request queue. Actually, to get
coherent dump we anyway should do as few unrelated actions as possible.
Feature is controlled by hint.ata.X.pm_level tunable:
0 - PM disabled, old behaviour, default.
1 - device is allowed to initiate PM state change, host is passive.
2 - host initiates PARTIAL state transition every time port is idle.
3 - host initiates SLUMBER state transition every time port is idle.
PARTIAL state has up to 100us (50us for me) wakeup latency, but for my
ICH8M saves 0.5W of power per drive. SLUMBER state has up to 10ms (3.5ms
for me) wakeup latency, but saves 0.8W of power.
Modes 2 and 3 are implemented only for AHCI driver now.
Interface power management is incompatible with device presence detection
(host receives no signal from drive, so unable to monitor it), so later is
disabled when PM is used.
controllers may be configured as legacy IDE mode by modifying subclass and
progif without actually changing PCI device IDs. Instead of complicating
code, we always force AHCI mode while probing. Also we restore AHCI mode
while resuming per ATI/AMD register programming/requirement guides.
- Fix SB700/800 "combined" mode. Unlike SB600, this PATA controller can
combine two SATA ports and emulate one PATA channel as primary or secondary
depending on BIOS configuration. When the combined mode is disabled, this
channel disappears and it works just like SB600 PATA controller, however.
- Add more PCI device IDs for SB700/800 and adjust device descriptions.
SB800 shares the same PCI device IDs and added two more SATA IDs.
the ATA status register with a 4-byte read request. This updates it, and
subsequent 1-byte reads will return the correct result.
This commit adds a hack to do this, which is currently ifdef'd powerpc,
although Linux and Darwin do this unconditionally on all platforms.
Add ch_suspend/ch_resume methods for PCI controllers and implement them
for AHCI. Refactor AHCI channel initialization according to it.
Fix Port Multipliers operation. It is far from perfect yet, but works now.
Tested with JMicron JMB363 AHCI + SiI 3726 PMP pair.
Previous version was also tested with SiI 4726 PMP.
Hardware sponsored by: Vitsch Electronics / VEHosting.nl
both disks, or if we should suppress the slave drive. Default to
suppressing the slave, in the case that this REQIURED tuple turns out
to not actually be present...
ready status. Most of controllers managed to issue coommand and set BUSY
bit almost simultaneously, before we will read it, but at least JMicron JMB363
don't. Ignore timeout errors to keep old behavior when error there was
impossible.
For me this fixes timeout errors on the first command after channel attach
or reinit. Boot in my case is not affected, as there is much time passing
between reset and next command giving reset time to complete.
done in other places. Until we have no support for command queueing we have
no any benefit from FBS, while enabling it only here somehow leads to
"port not ready" errors on Intel 63XXESB2 controller.
Tested by: Larry Rosenman <ler AT lerctr.org>
and partially r188903. Revert breaks new drives detection on reinit to the
state as it was before me, but fixes series of new bugs reported by some
people.
Unconditional queueing of ata_completed() calls can lead to deadlock if
due to timeout ata_reinit() was called at the same thread by previous
ata_completed(). Calling of ata_identify() on ata_reinit() in current
implementation opens numerous races and deadlocks.
Problems I was touching here are still exist and should be addresed, but
probably in different way.
drivers' probe routines. It allows not to sleep and so not drop Giant inside
ata_identify() critical section and so avoid crash if it reentered on
request timeout. Reentering of probe call checked inside of it.
Give device own knowledge about it's type (ata/atapi/atapicam). It is not
a good idea to ask channel status for device type inside ata_getparam().
Add softc memory deallocation on device destruction.
kernel dumping case.
ata_completed() may initiate ata_reinit() on error, that may lead to drives
attach or detach. Attach and detach are sending requests to drives and sleep
waiting for results. But ata_finish() can be called directly from
interrupt handler where sleeping is prohibited, so we must break this chain
somewhere. This place seems to fit best.
- protect againtst recursions,
- add new devices detection using ata_identify().
Improve ata_identify():
- do not add duplicate device if device already exist.
Rework SATA hot-plug events handling. Instead of unsafe duplicate
implementation use common ata_reinit() to handle all state changes.
All together this gives quite stable and robust cold- and hot-plug operation,
invariant to false, lost and duplicate events.
ATA specification declares minimal reset time of 5us. SATA keeps it, but
requires devices to handle commands transmitted even one by one without
any gap.
as ATA RAID, but generic ATAPCI driver unable to detect drives there. AHCI
driver reported to handle them fine. Linux does the same.
Submitted by: Andrey V. Elsukov on stable@
ata_detach() to implement IOCATAATTACH/IOCATADETACH ioctls.
This will permit channel drivers to properly shutdown port hardware on channel
detach and init it on attach.
join allocate() and dmainit() atapci subdriver's channel initialization
methods into single ch_attach() method.
As opposite to ch_attach() add new ch_detach() method to deallocate/disable
channel.
to not allocate them after the recent ata channels enumeration changes.
It allows to save some resources, not bother user with unexisting hardware
and not check unimplemented ports status on every interrupt.
Works fine with AHCI and theoretically other MSI capable devices.
At this moment support disabled by default. To enable it, set
"hint.atapci.X.msi=1" device hint.
- specification claims that 1 second is just a maximum controller reset time;
implement controller reset properly to save almost 1 second of boot, and
about half second of resume time;
- enable channel interrupts only after channel status reset to fix duplicate
device creation on resume due to unwanted device connection event;
- as described in specification, wait for disk ready status after channel
power-up; it is not so important when disk already touched by BIOS, but
solves device not ready problems on resume and probably some other cases.
- uncomment channel stop/start on soft-reset as it is declared mandatory by
specification; it was commented due to some random drive detection problems
on VIA and JMicron controllers, but I hope it is fixed by previous point.
Move channel softc initialization from ata_XXX_probe() to ata_XXX_attach().
Instead of calculating ata channel number as position in child device list,
pass it's real number directly from controller probe routine using ivars.
It is simpler and IMHO more correct.
expected in acd_fixate().
This should fix various problems folks are having with 'burncd' reporting
"burncd: ioctl(CDRIOCFIXATE): Input/output error" during the fixate phase
when "fixate" is issued together with the "data" command.
PR: 95979
Submitted by: Jaakko Heinonen <jh@saunalahti.fi>
created by atapicam is being kept opened or mounted. This is probably just
a temporary solution until we invent something better.
Reviewed by: scottl
Approved by: rwatson (mentor)
Sponsored by: FreeBSD Foundation
Reported by: Jaakko Heinonen
storage class. This check was lost. It is not important for the most cases,
but as it was reported on current@, it does important for sis driver and
surely inportant for AHCI driver. So restore it there.
Submitted by: Toshikazu ICHINOSEKI, Andrey V. Elsukov
Discussed on: current@
configuration registers (which are not going to change) on every interrupt
looks expensive, especially when interrupt is shared. Profiling shows me 3%
of time spent by atapci0 on pure network load due to IRQ sharing with em0.
(still a power of 2) rather than 63k transfers. Even with 63k transfers
some machines (such as Dell SC1435's) were experiencing chronic data
corruption.
- Use the MIO method to talk to the Serverworks HT1000_S1 SATA controller
like all the other SATA controllers rather than the compat PATA
method. This lets the controller see all 4 SATA ports and also
matches the behavior of the Linux driver.
Silence from: sos
MFC after: 3 days
If you just config KERNEL as usual there should be no apparent changes, you'll get all chipset support code compiled in.
However there is now a way to only compile in code for chipsets needed on a pr vendor basis. ATA now has the following "device" entries:
atacore: ATA core functionality, always needed for any ATA setup
atacard: CARDBUS support
atacbus: PC98 cbus support
ataisa: ISA bus support
atapci: PCI bus support only generic chipset support.
ataahci: AHCI support, also pulled in by some vendor modules.
ataacard, ataacerlabs, ataadaptec, ataamd, ataati, atacenatek, atacypress, atacyrix, atahighpoint, ataintel, ataite, atajmicron, atamarvell, atamicron, atanational, atanetcell, atanvidia, atapromise, ataserverworks, atasiliconimage, atasis, atavia; Vendor support, ie atavia for VIA chipsets
atadisk: ATA disk driver
ataraid: ATA softraid driver
atapicd: ATAPI cd/dvd driver
atapifd: ATAPI floppy/flashdisk driver
atapist: ATAPI tape driver
atausb: ATA<>USB bridge
atapicam: ATA<>CAM bridge
This makes it possible to config a kernel with just VIA chipset support by having the following ATA lines in the kernel config file:
device atacore
device atapci
device atavia
And then you need the atadisk, atapicd etc lines in there just as usual.
If you use ATA as modules loaded at boot there is few changes except the rename of the "ata" module to "atacore", things looks just as usual.
However under atapci you now have a whole bunch of vendor specific drivers, that you can kldload individually depending on you needs. Drivers have the same names as used in the kernel config explained above.
After I removed all the unit2minor()/minor2unit() calls from the kernel
yesterday, I realised calling minor() everywhere is quite confusing.
Character devices now only have the ability to store a unit number, not
a minor number. Remove the confusion by using dev2unit() everywhere.
This commit could also be considered as a bug fix. A lot of drivers call
minor(), while they should actually be calling dev2unit(). In -CURRENT
this isn't a problem, but it turns out we never had any problem reports
related to that issue in the past. I suspect not many people connect
more than 256 pieces of the same hardware.
Reviewed by: kib
Thanks goes to ITE who provided docs and feedback and made this possible.
Minor fixups to the Intel ICH code for bugs found while doing this.
(ITE8213 is very semilar to an Intel ICH)
MFC after: 1 week
This can be used to disable the 80pin cable check on systems which forget to
set the bit -- such as certain laptops and Soekris boards.
PR: kern/114605 (somewhat reworked)
Submitted by: marck
MFC after: 1 week
when it worked as generic IDE.
PR: 125422
Submitted by: Andrey V. Elsukov <bu7cher at yandex dot ru>
Approved by: imp (mentor, implicit)
MFC after: 1 week
Handle cases where dma function pointers may be NULL, and where
the max_iosize can't be derived from a DMA data structure. For
the latter, revert to the prior behaviour of using DFLTPHYS for
the max i/o size when there is no other data.
Reviewed by: marcel
No objection by: sos
So if we have channel 0..3 devclass_get_maxunit is 4.
It's never been a problem as devclass_get_device() has
catched a possibly bad input.
Discussed with: scottl
This avoids calling busdma in the request processing path which caused a traumatic performance degradation.
Allocation has be postponed to after we know how many devices we possible can have on portmulitpliers to save some space.
The problem is that the PM support is part of a much larger WIP here, but due to popular demand I decided to get some of it imported.
Also I forgot the mention:
HW sponsored by: Vitsch Electronics / VEHosting
Support is working on the Silicon Image SiI3124/3132.
Support is working on some AHCI chips but far from all.
Remember this is WIP, so test reports and (constructive) suggestions are welcome!
for a configurable number of seconds, spin the disk down. Spin it back
up on the next request.
Notice that the timeout is only armed by a request, so to spin down a
disk you may have to do:
atacontrol spindown ad10 5
dd if=/dev/ad10 of=/dev/null count=1
To disable spindown, set timeout to zero:
atacontrol spindown ad10 0
In order to debug any trouble caused, this code is somewhat noisy on the
console.
Enabling spindown on a disk containing / or /var/log/messages is not
going to do anything sensible.
Spinning a disk up and down all the time will wear it out, use sensibly.
Approved by: sos
set, announce BIO_DELETE capability and issue ATA_CFA_ERASE when we get one.
Once we issue more BIO_DELETE, this will improve lifetime, and
possibly write speed of Flash based devices which have usable flash
adaptation layers.
For now, about the only usage is the newfs(1) -E flag.
Approved by: sos
peoples code with irrelevant changes[1]:
Use bus_{read|write_*() instead of bus_space_{read|write}_*() for
purely stylistic reasons.
Due to compiler optimizations and inlining, this is for all practical
purposes without effect in the compiled code.
[1] NB: Approved by: sos
The HT1000 DMA engine seems to not always like 64K transfers and sometimes barfs data all over memory leading to instant chrash and burn.
Also fix 48bit adressing issues, apparently newer chips needs 16bit writes and not the usual fifo thing.
HW donated by: Travis Mikalson at TerraNovaNet
Revert the probe in atapi-cd.c to the old usage now its fixed on AHCI.
THis change also fixes using virtual CD's om fx parallels.
Still leaves the GEOM problem of telling media vs device access apart in the access function.
UDMA modes.
Please notice that Soekris NET5501 bios versions before 1.32f has a bug
that prevents this from working.
Approved by: re (gnn)
MFC: 2 weeks
detailed status on each of the backing subdisks. This allows userland
to see which subdisks are online, failed, missing, or a hot spare.
MFC after: 1 week
Approved by: re (bmah)
Reviewed by: sos
some false positives but at this moment it is better to add
support then to dont have it at all (comment from Soren).
PR: kern/111516
Submitted by: Thomas Nystrom <thn at saeab dot se>
Approved by: re (kensmith)
Approved by: imp (mentor)
OK'ed by: sos (With the comment noted above about false
positives).