freebsd-dev/sys/cam
Justin T. Gibbs 3501942bbe Lay groundwork in CAM for recording and reporting physical path and
other device attributes stored in the CAM Existing Device Table (EDT).
This includes some infrastructure requried by the enclosure services
driver to export physical path information.

Make the CAM device advanced info interface accept store requests.

  sys/cam/scsi/scsi_all.c:
  sys/cam/scsi/scsi_all.h:
	- Replace scsi_get_sas_addr() with a scsi_get_devid() which takes
	  a callback that decides whether to accept a particular descriptor.
	  Provide callbacks for NAA IEEE Registered addresses and for SAS
	  addresses, replacing the old function.  This is needed because
	  the old function doesn't work for an enclosure address for a SAS
	  device, which is not flagged as a SAS address, but is NAA IEEE
	  Registered.  It may be worthwhile merging this interface with the
	  devid match interface.
	- Add a few more defines for some device ID fields.

  sbin/camcontrol/camcontrol.c:
	- Update for the CCB_DEV_ADVINFO interface change.

  cam/cam_xpt_internal.h:
	- Add the new fields for the physical path string to the CAM EDT.
  cam/cam_ccb.h:
	- Rename CCB_GDEV_ADVINFO to simply CCB_DEV_ADVINFO, and the ccb
	  structure to ccb_dev_advinfo.
	- Add a flag that changes this CCB's action to store, rather than
	  the default, retrieve.
	- Add a new buffer type, CDAI_TYPE_PHYS_PATH, for the new CAM EDT
	  physpath field.
	- Remove the never-implemented transport & proto flags.
  cam/cam_xpt.c:
  cam/cam_xpt.h:
	- Add xpt_getattr(), which provides a wrapper for fetching a device's
	  attribute using the GEOM strings as key.  This method currently
	  supports "GEOM::ident" and "GEOM::physpath".

Submitted by: will
Reviewed by : gibbs

Extend the XPT_DEV_MATCH api to allow a device search by device ID.
As far as the API is concerned, device ID is a binary blob to be
interpreted by the transport layer.  The SCSI implementation assumes
it is an array of VPD device ID descriptors.

  sys/cam/cam_ccb.h:
	Create a new structure, device_id_match_pattern, and
	update the XPT_DEV_MATCH datastructures and flags so
	that this pattern type can be used.

  sys/cam/cam_xpt.c:
	- A single pattern matching on both inquiry data and device
	  ID is invalid.  Report any violators.
	- Pass device ID match requests through to the new routine
	  scsi_devid_match().  The direct call of a SCSI routine is
	  a layering violation, but no worse than the one a few
	  lines up that checks inquiry data.  Defer cleaning this
	  up until our future, larger, rototilling of CAM.
	- Zero out cam_ed and cam_et nodes on allocation.  Prior to
	  this change, device_id_len and device_id were not inialized,
	  preventing proper detection of the presence of this
	  information.

  sys/cam/scsi/scsi_all.c:
  sys/cam/scsi/scsi_all.h:
	Add the scsi_match_devid() routine.

Add a helper function for extracting peripherial driver names

  sys/cam/cam_periph.c:
  sys/cam/cam_periph.h:
	Add the cam_periph_list() method which fills an sbuf
	with a comma delimited list of the peripheral instances
	associated with a given CAM path.

Add a helper functions for SCSI commands used by the SES driver.

  sys/cam/scsi/scsi_all.c:
  sys/cam/scsi/scsi_all.h:
	Add structure definitions and csio filling functions for
	the receive diagnostic results and send diagnostic commands.

Misc CAM XPT cleanups.

  sys/cam/cam_xpt.c:
	Broadcast AC_FOUND_DEVICE and AC_PATH_REGISTERED
	events at the time async event handlers are attached
	even when registering just for events on a partitular
	SIM.  Previously, you had to register for these
	events on all SIMs in the system in order to get
	the initial broadcast even though subsequent device
	and path arrivals would be delivered.

  sys/cam/cam_xpt.c:
	Remove SIM mutex held asserts from path accessors.
	CAM paths are reference counted and it is this
	reference count, not the sim mutex, that garantees
	they are stable.

Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corporation
2011-06-14 14:53:17 +00:00
..
ata Do not report CFA devices as ATAPI, even though IDENTIFY data look alike. 2011-06-12 18:52:39 +00:00
scsi Lay groundwork in CAM for recording and reporting physical path and 2011-06-14 14:53:17 +00:00
cam_ccb.h Lay groundwork in CAM for recording and reporting physical path and 2011-06-14 14:53:17 +00:00
cam_debug.h Implement the usage of Report Luns as part of SCSI probing for SCP3 or 2010-06-08 16:17:25 +00:00
cam_periph.c Lay groundwork in CAM for recording and reporting physical path and 2011-06-14 14:53:17 +00:00
cam_periph.h Lay groundwork in CAM for recording and reporting physical path and 2011-06-14 14:53:17 +00:00
cam_queue.c MFp4: 2009-11-14 20:30:42 +00:00
cam_queue.h MFp4: Large set of CAM inprovements. 2010-01-28 08:41:30 +00:00
cam_sim.c MFp4: Large set of CAM inprovements. 2010-01-28 08:41:30 +00:00
cam_sim.h Fix a comment to reflect what really happens. 2008-12-22 16:58:47 +00:00
cam_xpt_internal.h Lay groundwork in CAM for recording and reporting physical path and 2011-06-14 14:53:17 +00:00
cam_xpt_periph.h MFp4: Large set of CAM inprovements. 2010-01-28 08:41:30 +00:00
cam_xpt_sim.h MFp4: Large set of CAM inprovements. 2010-01-28 08:41:30 +00:00
cam_xpt.c Lay groundwork in CAM for recording and reporting physical path and 2011-06-14 14:53:17 +00:00
cam_xpt.h Lay groundwork in CAM for recording and reporting physical path and 2011-06-14 14:53:17 +00:00
cam.c Add some FEATURE macros for various features (AUDIT/CAM/IPC/KTR/MAC/NFS/NTP/ 2011-02-25 10:11:01 +00:00
cam.h Add Serial Management Protocol (SMP) passthrough support to CAM. 2010-11-30 22:39:46 +00:00
README.quirks Commit for Nate his "guidelines for submitting quirks". 2007-06-10 04:31:55 +00:00

/* $FreeBSD$ */

                     FreeBSD Quirk Guidelines

                  Nate Lawson - njl at freebsd org

0. Introduction

FreeBSD drivers make every attempt possible to support the standards
behind hardware. Where possible and not in conflict with the standard,
they also attempt to work around hardware which doesn't strictly
conform. However, some devices have flaws which can't be worked
around while keeping the driver compatible with the standard. For
these devices, we have created a quirks mechanism to indicate to
the driver that it must avoid certain commands or use them differently
with a specific model and/or version of hardware. This document
focuses on identifying and committing quirks for storage hardware
involving CAM and UMASS but is applicable to other areas.

CAM provides a generic transport for SCSI-like devices. Many different
transports use SCSI command sets including parallel SCSI, firewire
(1394), USB UMASS, fibre channel, and ATAPI. For block devices (i.e.
hard drives, flash adapters, cameras) there are two standards, SBC
and RBC. SCSI hard drives are usually SBC-compliant and smaller
devices like flash drives are usually RBC-compliant. Multimedia
devices including CDROMs and DVD-RW are usually MMC-compliant.

Please follow these guidelines to get your device working as soon
as possible. If you are a committer, please do NOT commit quirks
directly but follow this process also.

1. Determing the problem

The first step is to determine what's wrong. If the device should
be supported but hangs while attaching, it's possible a quirk can
help. The types of things a quirk can fix are:
`
 * cam/cam_xpt.c quirks 

  o CAM_QUIRK_NOLUNS - do not probe luns other than 0 since device
  responds to all inquiries with "lun present".

  o CAM_QUIRK_NOSERIAL - do not send an inquiry for serial number. 

  o CAM_QUIRK_HILUNS - probe all luns even if some respond "not present"
  since device has a sparse lun space. 

 * cam/scsi/scsi_da.c quirks 

  o DA_Q_NO_SYNC_CACHE - The sync cache command is used to force a
  drive to write out all changes to disk before shutting down. Some
  drives hang when receiving this command even though it is required
  by all SBC and RBC standards. Note that a warning message on
  console is NOT sufficient to add this quirk. The warning messages
  are harmless and only a device or system hang is cause for adding
  this quirk.

  o DA_Q_NO_6_BYTE - The RBC spec (see Links below) does not allow
  for 6-byte READ/WRITE commands. Some manufacturers took that too
  literally and crash when receiving 6-byte commands. This quirk
  causes FreeBSD to only send 10-byte commands. Since the CAM subsystem
  has been modified to not send 6-byte commands to USB, 1394, and
  other transports that don't support SBC, this quirk should be very
  rare.

  o DA_Q_NO_PREVENT - Don't use the prevent/allow commands to keep a
  removable medium from being ejected. Some systems can't handle these
  commands (rare).

 * cam/scsi/scsi_cd.c quirks 

  o CD_Q_NO_TOUCH - not implemented 

  o CD_Q_BCD_TRACKS - convert start/end track to BCD 

  o CD_Q_NO_CHANGER - never treat as a changer 

  o CD_Q_CHANGER - always treat as a changer 

 * cam/scsi/scsi_ch.c quirks 
  o CH_Q_NO_DBD - disable block descriptors in mode sense 

 * cam/scsi/scsi_sa.c quirks 

  o SA_QUIRK_NOCOMP - Can't deal with compression at all 

  o SA_QUIRK_FIXED - Force fixed mode 

  o SA_QUIRK_VARIABLE - Force variable mode 

  o SA_QUIRK_2FM - Needs Two File Marks at EOD 

  o SA_QUIRK_1FM - No more than 1 File Mark at EOD 

  o SA_QUIRK_NODREAD - Don't try and dummy read density 

  o SA_QUIRK_NO_MODESEL - Don't do mode select at all 

  o SA_QUIRK_NO_CPAGE - Don't use DEVICE COMPRESSION page 

 * dev/usb/umass.c quirks 

  o NO_TEST_UNIT_READY - The drive does not support Test Unit Ready.
  Convert to Start Unit. This command is a simple no-op for most
  firmware but some of them hang when this command is sent.

  o RS_NO_CLEAR_UA - The drive does not reset the Unit Attention state
  after REQUEST SENSE has been sent. The INQUIRY command does not
  reset the UA either, and so CAM runs in circles trying to retrieve
  the initial INQUIRY data. This quirk signifies that after a unit
  attention condition, don't try to clear the condition with a request
  sense command.

  o NO_START_STOP - Like test unit ready, don't send this command if it hangs the device. 

  o FORCE_SHORT_INQUIRY - Don't ask for full inquiry data (256
  bytes). Some drives can only handle the shorter inquiry length
  (36 bytes).

  o SHUTTLE_INIT - Needs to be initialised the Shuttle way. Haven't
  looked into what this does but apparently it's mostly Shuttle
  devices.

  o ALT_IFACE_1 - Drive needs to be switched to alternate interface 1. Rare.

  o FLOPPY_SPEED - Drive does not do 1Mb/s, but just floppy speeds (20kb/s). 

  o IGNORE_RESIDUE - The device can't count and gets the residue
  of transfers wrong. This is sometimes needed for devices where
  large transfers cause stalls.

  o NO_GETMAXLUN - Get maximum LUN is a command to identify multiple
  devices sharing the same ID. For instance, a multislot compact
  flash reader might be on two LUNS. Some non-standard devices hang
  when receiving this command so this quirk disables it.

  o WRONG_CSWSIG - The device uses a weird CSWSIGNATURE. Rare. 

  o NO_INQUIRY - Device cannot handle INQUIRY so fake a generic
  response. INQUIRY is one of the most basic commands but some
  drives can't even handle it. (No idea how such devices even work
  at all on other OS's.) This quirk fakes up a valid but generic
  response for devices that can't handle INQUIRY.

  o NO_INQUIRY_EVPD - Device cannot handle an extended INQUIRY
  asking for vital product data (EVPD) so just return a "no data"
  response (check condition) without sending the command to the
  device.

2. Testing a Quirk

After you have an idea what you want to try, edit the proper file
above, using wildcarding to be sure your device is matched. Here
is a list of the common things to try. Note that some devices require
multiple quirks or quirks in different drivers. For example, some
USB pen drives or flash readers require quirks in both da(4) and
umass(4).

* umass(4) device (sys/dev/usb/umass.c) -- this quirk matches an Asahi Optical device with any product ID or revision ID. 
* 
*         { USB_VENDOR_ASAHIOPTICAL, PID_WILDCARD, RID_WILDCARD,
*           UMASS_PROTO_ATAPI | UMASS_PROTO_CBI_I,
*           RS_NO_CLEAR_UA
*         },
* da(4) device (sys/cam/scsi/scsi_da.c) -- this quirk matches a Creative device with a name of "NOMAD_MUVO" and any revision. 
* 
*         {
*                 /*
*                  * Creative Nomad MUVO mp3 player (USB)
*                  * PR: kern/53094
*                  */
*                 {T_DIRECT, SIP_MEDIA_REMOVABLE, "CREATIVE", "NOMAD_MUVO", "*"},
*                 /*quirks*/ DA_Q_NO_SYNC_CACHE|DA_Q_NO_PREVENT
*         },

3. Filing a PR

All quirk submissions MUST go through GNATS. For information on how
to submit a PR, see this page.

Please include the following in your PR:

 * Subject: QUIRK: FooCo USB DVD-RAM drive 
 * Output of "camcontrol inquiry yourdevice" 
 * Manufacturer name, model number, etc. 
 * Transport type (FC, SCSI, USB, Firewire) 
 * Output from dmesg for failed attach attempts 
 * Output from dmesg for successful attach attempts (after quirk added) 
 * Output of "usbdevs -v" with device attached 
 * Valid email address 

Here are some examples of well-formed PRs: 

 * kern/43580 
 * kern/49054 

4. What happens next

I will review your submission, respond with comments, and once the
quirk is deemed necessary and ready for committing, I'll commit it,
referencing the PR. (Again, all quirks must be submitted as PRs).
Questions? Email njl AT freebsd.org.

5. Note to Committers

Please insert quirks in the right section in scsi_da.c, sorted by
PR number. Always include the name and PR number for scsi_da.c (see
above for an example.) Please sort quirks alphabetically in umass.c.
Follow the surrounding style in all drivers. Be sure to correspond
with the submitter to be sure the quirk you are adding is the minimum
necessary, not quirking other useful features and not overly broad
(i.e., too many wildcards).