Commit Graph

20 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Matt Jacob
b9a3993d60 +Match against T4000* for HP QIC quirks (not T4000S* where it doesn't then
catch a T4000s)
+ Set *some* kind of error at EOM if we're in fixed mode and have pending errs.
  Do not clear the ERR_PENDING bit if more buffers are queued.
+ Release the start_ccb in this case also, else we hang forever on rewinding.
+ Any kind of error for load to BOT in samount should then cause an attempt
  to use REWIND to come back to BOT. Do the initial load command quietly.
+ In samount, if we succeed, set the relative position markers.
1999-03-01 01:07:47 +00:00
Kenneth D. Merry
2a888f938e Add a prioritization field to the devstat_add_entry() call so that
peripheral drivers can determine where in the devstat(9) list they are
inserted.

This requires recompilation of libdevstat, systat, vmstat, rpc.rstatd, and
any ports that depend on the devstat code, since the size of the devstat
structure has changed.  The devstat version number has been incremented as
well to reflect the change.

This sorts devices in the devstat list in "more interesting" to "less
interesting" order.  So, for instance, da devices are now more important
than floppy drives, and so will appear before floppy drives in the default
output from systat, iostat, vmstat, etc.

The order of devices is, for now, kept in a central table in devicestat.h.
If individual drivers were able to make a meaningful decision on what
priority they should be at attach time, we could consider splitting the
priority information out into the various drivers.  For now, though, they
have no way of knowing that, so it's easier to put them in an easy to find
table.

Also, move the checkversion() call in vmstat(8) to a more logical place.

Thanks to Bruce and David O'Brien for suggestions, for reviewing this, and
for putting up with the long time it has taken me to commit it.  Bruce did
object somewhat to the central priority table (he would rather the
priorities be distributed in each driver), so his objection is duly noted
here.

Reviewed by:	bde, obrien
1999-02-10 00:04:13 +00:00
Matt Jacob
8410876eb9 quiet the alpha compiler 1999-02-05 08:49:34 +00:00
Matt Jacob
499d2a2a5c Extend unit numbers to a full 10 bits (split into sections
of the minor). Establish and use a control mode open. Control
mode opens may open the device without locking, but are prohibited
from all but some ioctls. MTIOCGET always works. MTIOCERRSTAT
works, but the clearing of latched error status is contingent
upon whether another application has the device open, in which
case an interruptible perip acquire is done. MTSETBSIZ, MTSETDNSTY
and MTCOMP also require a periph aquire.

Relative fileno and blkno are tracked. Note that just about any
error will make these undefined, and if you space to EOD or use
hardware block positioning, these are also lost until the next
UNLOAD or REWIND.

Driver state is also tracked and recorded in the unit softc
to be passed back in mt_dsreg for a MTIOCGET call.
Thanks to Dan Strick for suggesting this.

Reintroduce 2 filemarks at EOD for all but QIC devices. I
really think it's wrong, but there is a lot of 3rd party
software that depends upon this (not the least of which is
tcopy). Introduce a SA_QUIRK_1FM to ensure that some devices
can be marked as only being able to do 1 FM at EOD.

At samount time force a load to BOT if we aren't mounted. If the
LOAD command fails, use the REWIND command (e.g., for the IBM 3590
which for some gawdawful reason doesn't support the LOAD (to BOT)
command).

Also at samount time, if you don't know fixed or variable, try to
*set* to one of the known fixed (or variable, for special case)
density codes. We only have to do this once per boot, so it's not
that painful. This is another way to try and figure out the wierd
QIC devices without having to quirk everything in the universe.

A substantial amount of cleanup as to what operations can and what
operations cannot be retried. Don't retry space operations if they
fail- it'll just lead to lossage.

Not yet done is invalidating mounts correctly after errors. ENOTIME.
1999-02-05 07:32:52 +00:00
Matt Jacob
15da947cba Sascha Blank <blank@uni-trier.de> convinced me I was an
idiot about testing SA_QUIRK_2FM in samount. Fixed.

Removed the NORRLS quirk (to save quirk space) and left
the behaviour of being quiet about failed reserve/release
(failed due Illegal Request) the same.

Added a SF_QUIET_IR for prevent/allow for the same purposes.
1999-01-16 19:20:30 +00:00
Matt Jacob
54e609ba5c More bandaids. One important one from Sascha Blank
(<blank@fox.uni-trier.de>) about quirks being set as
arithmetic values, not as bitfields. Add HP, Kennedy
and M4 1/2" reel quirk entries.

Do a lot of gratuitous source changing.

Audit all functions that build ccbs for the tape driver
and decide whether each one can be retried or not.

Still to do is some more state management post errors.
1999-01-16 04:02:31 +00:00
Matt Jacob
26fd36dffa Clean up and fix quirk table (was missing necessary wildcards) and add a couple
from the old driver. Change format of quirk table to have a preferred block
size for devices that need to be QUIRK_FIXED- this is loaded into the
last_media_blocksize tag at saregister time and will be used in the first
samount case.

Change sasetparams to take a sense_flags argument so that probe time testing
can be quieter (e.g. with SF_NO_PRINT).

Fix a couple of silly bugs in the fixed/variable determination in samount- one
was where there was a check against 'guessing' AND the density code being
default density- *SMACK* - you're only guessing if you find the media code
to be *other* than default density. Second bug was a test against current
blocksize being zero- should be a test against whether current blocksize
is not equal to the last blocksize if you had wanted to be fixed (suppose
you came up in fixed, but not the preferred size?). And if you don't
know what the fixed size should be, select 512 as the starting point,
not BLKDEV_IOSIZE (reality wins). Finally, in doing the test set to variable
mode, make sasetparams non-chatty.
1999-01-12 08:15:47 +00:00
Matt Jacob
7439f1066e Make HP T4000S quirk to FIXED mode 1999-01-11 18:26:25 +00:00
Matt Jacob
656d1af535 Force ARCHIVE Vipers to be FIXED 1998-12-28 19:21:12 +00:00
Matt Jacob
5a4f8fa5a4 Add a quirk NORRLS (no reserve/release) which can (and
will) get set for the devices that don't actually support
reserve/release (so we don't keep trying it).

Add softc storage and manage storing last I/O and CTL
commands that had errors (for correlative purposes).

In saclose clear the 'MOUNTED' bit if we either rewind or
unload (yes, this shouldn't be necessary since the next open
should catch whether a tape change occurred, but I'm having
some questions about that actually working so this is
safer for the moment). Oh, forgot to mention in previous
commit messages that some of the failures particularly at
close time cause the tape to be ejected (for the sake
of safety)- all this prior to redoing the state machine
(which is in progress) which will try and handle this better.

Complete the addition of the setmark support
(from Martin.Birgmeier@aon.at).
1998-12-22 17:26:13 +00:00
Matt Jacob
990635d6e8 1) Fix some serious bugs (1 botch on my part which caused a filemark to be
written even it the tape was opened readonly- 2 botches in deferred error
handling for FIXED LENGTH mode which caused panic && hand resp.). Fixed
a memory leak in sa_mount.
2) Fixed an annoying bug when turning of compression to actually reflect
this for future status calls.
3) Implement the MTIOCERRSTAT call where latched control and I/O residuals
and sense data are returned to the application asking for them.
1998-12-19 23:33:21 +00:00
Matt Jacob
b5c6d4c555 Add in block position/block locate functions. 1998-12-18 04:31:43 +00:00
Matt Jacob
888bec0f0c Several changes having to do blocksize- mostly to force variable as the default.
Attempt to determine (at mount time if not done so already) via density code
whether a device should default to fixed mode or not. Attempts to set to
variable that fail will cause fixed to be selected.

Similarly, the '2 filemarks at EOM' quirk is now determined (or attempted to
be determined) via density code. Some as yet not entirely tested code for
coping with 2FM@EOD position is now also in place.
1998-12-17 18:56:23 +00:00
Matt Jacob
ed744c4e51 Some fixes to handle fixed mode and variable mode more sensibly- and also
incorporate some notion of which revision the device is. If it's < SCSI2, for
example, READ BLOCK LIMITS is not a MANDATORY command.

At any rate, the initial state is to try and read block limits to get a notion
of the smallest and largest record size as well as the granularity. However,
this doesn't mean that the device should actually *in* fixed block mode should
the max && min  be equal... *That* choice is (for now) determined by whether
the device comes up with a blocksize of nonzero. If so, then it's a fixed block
preferred device, otherwise not (this will change again soon).

When actually doing I/O, and you're in fixed length mode, the block count is
*not* the byte count divided by the minimum block size- it's the byte count
divided by the current blocksize (or use shift/mask shortcuts if that worked
out...).

Then when you *change* the blocksize via an ioctl, make sure this actually
propagates to the stored notion of blocksize (and update the shift/mask
shortcuts).

Misc Other:
	When doing a mode select, only use the SCSI_SAME_DENSITY (0x7f) code if
the device is >= SCSI2- otherwise just use the saved density code.

	Recover from the ripple of ILLEGAL REQUEST not being 'retried' in that
RESERVE/RELEASE is not a mandatory command for < SCSI2 (so ignore it if it
fails).
1998-12-11 07:19:36 +00:00
Joerg Wunsch
ae1b283631 ...nor does this old TDC3620 like to be asked for compression.
But well, now it's running again!
1998-11-26 10:47:52 +00:00
Kenneth D. Merry
22b9c86cfd Fix a few problems that Bruce noticed about a month ago, and fix oup one
other problem.

- Hold onto splsoftcam() in the peripheral driver open routines until we
  have locked the periph.  This eliminates a race condition.

- Disallow opening the pass driver when securelevel > 1.

- If a user tries to open the pass driver with O_NONBLOCK set, return
  EINVAL instead of ENODEV.  (noticed by gibbs)
1998-11-22 23:44:47 +00:00
Kenneth D. Merry
ee9c90c75c Fix a problem with the way we handled device invalidation when attaching
to a device failed.

In theory, the same steps that happen when we get an AC_LOST_DEVICE async
notification should have been taken when a driver fails to attach.  In
practice, that wasn't the case.

This only affected the da, cd and ch drivers, but the fix affects all
peripheral drivers.

There were several possible problems:
 - In the da driver, we didn't remove the peripheral's softc from the da
   driver's linked list of softcs.  Once the peripheral and softc got
   removed, we'd get a kernel panic the next time the timeout routine
   called dasendorderedtag().
 - In the da, cd and possibly ch drivers, we didn't remove the
   peripheral's devstat structure from the devstat queue.  Once the
   peripheral and softc were removed, this could cause a panic if anyone
   tried to access device statistics.  (one component of the linked list
   wouldn't exist anymore)
 - In the cd driver, we didn't take the peripheral off the changer run
   queue if it was scheduled to run.  In practice, it's highly unlikely,
   and maybe impossible that the peripheral would have been on the
   changer run queue at that stage of the probe process.

The fix is:
 - Add a new peripheral callback function (the "oninvalidate" function)
   that is called the first time cam_periph_invalidate() is called for a
   peripheral.

 - Create new foooninvalidate() routines for each peripheral driver.  This
   routine is always called at splsoftcam(), and contains all the stuff
   that used to be in the AC_LOST_DEVICE case of the async callback
   handler.

 - Move the devstat cleanup call to the destructor/cleanup routines, since
   some of the drivers do I/O in their close routines.

 - Make sure that when we're flushing the buffer queue, we traverse it at
   splbio().

 - Add a check for the invalid flag in the pt driver's open routine.

Reviewed by:	gibbs
1998-10-22 22:16:56 +00:00
Kenneth D. Merry
11021a1ab5 Clean up some unused variables.
Reviewed by:	ken
Submitted by:	phk
1998-10-15 17:46:26 +00:00
Kenneth D. Merry
9dfb44710e Patches from DES to create three new kernel config options to control
timeouts in the SA driver (timeouts for space, rewind and erase).  Folks
can lengthen the timeouts if their hardware is especially slow, or shorten
them if they want to be notified of errors a little sooner.

Also, get rid of two OD driver options.  The od driver has been made
obsolete by the da driver.

Reviewed by:	ken, gibbs
Submitted by:	Dag-Erling Coidan Smørgrav <des@FreeBSD.ORG>
1998-10-02 05:15:51 +00:00
Justin T. Gibbs
76babe507b SCSI Peripheral drivers for CAM:
da	- Direct Access Devices (disks, optical devices, SS disks)
	cd	- CDROM (or devices that can act like them, WORM, CD-RW, etc)
	ch	- Medium Changer devices.
	sa	- Sequential Access Devices (tape drives)
	pass	- Application pass-thru driver
	targ	- Target Mode "Processor Target" Emulator
	pt	- Processor Target Devices (scanners, cpus, etc.)

Submitted by:	The CAM Team
1998-09-15 06:36:34 +00:00