Commit Graph

14 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Kenneth D. Merry
955f7e7474 Fix 'camcontrol inquiry'. The inquiry data structure changes (increased to
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>
2000-02-20 04:42:44 +00:00
Matt Jacob
366f55288e Go for the gusto and do the full 256 bytes for inquiry data.
Obtained from:gibbs@freebsd.org
2000-01-25 17:37:02 +00:00
Matt Jacob
ab6eec3ad9 Increase size of the scsi_inquiry_data structure to it's nearly
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
2000-01-17 06:24:35 +00:00
Matt Jacob
121ac7c9a2 add SEND/RECEIVE diagnostic opcodes, SEND is a Mandatory command 2000-01-15 19:05:29 +00:00
Peter Wemm
664a31e496 Change #ifdef KERNEL to #ifdef _KERNEL in the public headers. "KERNEL"
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.
1999-12-29 04:46:21 +00:00
Peter Wemm
c3aac50f28 $Id$ -> $FreeBSD$ 1999-08-28 01:08:13 +00:00
Justin T. Gibbs
516871c613 Add a default async handler funstion to cam_periph.c to remove duplicated
code in all initiator type peripheral drivers.

scsi_target.c:
	Release ATIO structures that wind up in the 'unkown command queue'
	for consumption by our userland counterpart, back to the controller
	when the exception for that command is cleared.
1999-05-22 22:00:24 +00:00
Kenneth D. Merry
50711c71c9 Add a facility in the CAM error handling code to retry selection timeouts.
If the client requests that the error recovery code retry a selection
timeout, it will be retried after half a second.  The delay is to give the
device time to recover.

For most of these drivers, I only added selection timeout retries where
they were also retrying unit attention type errors.  The sa(4) driver calls
saerror() in a number of places, but most of them don't request retrying
unit attentions.

Also, bump the default minimum CD changer timeout from 2 to 5 seconds and
the maximum timeout from 10 to 15 seconds.  Some Pioneer changers seem to
have trouble with the shorter timeout.

Reviewed by:	gibbs
1999-05-09 01:25:34 +00:00
Matt Jacob
c7131a684c Add in named SID field revision names (including CCS).
Add in named defines for DEFAULT and NOCHANGE densities (for sequential
access devices).
1998-12-05 22:10:14 +00:00
Kenneth D. Merry
50642f180c Fix several potential buffer overrun conditions. These changes have been
tested both in the kernel and in userland.  Also, fix a couple of printf
warnings that show up when CAMDEBUG is defined.

Reviewed by:		imp
Partially submitted by:	imp
1998-10-15 19:08:58 +00:00
Kenneth D. Merry
696db22238 Modify the changer driver so it can handle (hopefully!) changers that need
block descriptors enabled on mode sense commands.

Basically, we try sending a mode sense with block descriptors disabled (the
previous default), and if it fails, we try sending the mode sense with
block descriptors enabled.  If that works, we note that in a runtime quirk
entry, so we don't bother disabling block descriptors again for the device.

This problem was first reported by Chris Jones <cjones@honors.montana.edu>
on one of the NetBSD lists, but I'd imagine that some FreeBSD users would
have run into it eventually as well, since our changer driver is derived
form the NetBSD changer driver.

Also, change some of the probe logic so that we do the right thing in the
case of a failure to attach.

Fix a memory leak in chgetparams().

Add a couple of inline helper functions to scsi_all.h to correctly return
the start of a mode page.

NetBSD PR:	kern/6214
Reviewed by:	gibbs
1998-10-02 05:25:49 +00:00
Kenneth D. Merry
e5b118dd3d In the bootverbose case, print out error messages for all errors that will
not be retried again, even if the SF_NO_PRINT flag is set.

Reviewed by:	gibbs
1998-09-29 22:11:30 +00:00
Kenneth D. Merry
37b9efd37b Fix the CAM code so that people can compile kernels with the CD driver but
without the DA driver.

The problem was that the CD driver depended on scsi_read_write() and
scsi_start_stop(), which were defined in scsi_da.c.

I moved both functions, and their associated data structures and defines
from scsi_da.* to scsi_all.*.  This is technically the "wrong" thing to do
since those commands are really only for direct-access type devices, not
for all SCSI devices.  I think, though, that the advantage (allowing people
to compile kernels without the disk driver) outweighs any architectural
purity arguments.

PR:		kern/7969
Reviewed by:	gibbs
1998-09-18 22:33:59 +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