529 lines
15 KiB
Groff
529 lines
15 KiB
Groff
.\" Copyright (c) 1996
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.\" Julian Elischer <julian@FreeBSD.org>. All rights reserved.
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.\"
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.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
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.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
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.\" are met:
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.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
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.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
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.\"
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.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
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.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
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.\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
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.\"
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.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
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.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
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.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
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.\" ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
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.\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
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.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
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.\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
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.\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
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.\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
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.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
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.\" SUCH DAMAGE.
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.\"
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.\" $FreeBSD$
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.Dd November 3, 2021
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.Dt CAM 4
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.Os
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.Sh NAME
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.Nm CAM
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.Nd Common Access Method Storage subsystem
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.Sh SYNOPSIS
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.Cd "device scbus"
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.Cd "device ada"
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.Cd "device cd"
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.Cd "device ch"
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.Cd "device da"
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.Cd "device pass"
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.Cd "device pt"
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.Cd "device sa"
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.Cd "options CAMDEBUG"
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.Cd "options CAM_DEBUG_BUS=-1"
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.Cd "options CAM_DEBUG_TARGET=-1"
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.Cd "options CAM_DEBUG_LUN=-1"
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.Cd "options CAM_DEBUG_COMPILE=CAM_DEBUG_INFO|CAM_DEBUG_CDB|CAM_DEBUG_PROBE"
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.Cd "options CAM_DEBUG_FLAGS=CAM_DEBUG_INFO|CAM_DEBUG_CDB"
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.Cd "options CAM_MAX_HIGHPOWER=4"
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.Cd "options SCSI_NO_SENSE_STRINGS"
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.Cd "options SCSI_NO_OP_STRINGS"
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.Cd "options SCSI_DELAY=8000"
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.Sh DESCRIPTION
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The
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.Nm
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subsystem provides a uniform and modular system for the implementation
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of drivers to control various
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.Tn SCSI ,
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.Tn ATA ,
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.Tn NVMe ,
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and
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.Tn MMC / SD
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devices, and to utilize different
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.Tn SCSI ,
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.Tn ATA ,
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.Tn NVMe ,
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and
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.Tn MMC / SD
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host adapters through host adapter drivers.
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When the system probes buses, it attaches any devices it finds to the
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appropriate drivers.
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The
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.Xr pass 4
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driver, if it is configured in the kernel, will attach to all devices.
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.Sh KERNEL CONFIGURATION
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There are a number of generic kernel configuration options for the
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.Nm
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subsystem:
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.Bl -tag -width SCSI_NO_SENSE_STRINGS
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.It Dv CAM_BOOT_DELAY
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Additional time to wait after the static parts of the kernel have run to allow
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for discovery of additional devices which may take time to connect,
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such as USB attached storage.
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.It Dv CAM_IOSCHED_DYNAMIC
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Enable dynamic decisions in the I/O scheduler based on hints and the current
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performance of the storage devices.
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.It Dv CAM_IO_STATS
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Enable collection of statistics for periph devices.
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.It Dv CAM_TEST_FAILURE
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Enable ability to simulate I/O failures.
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.It Dv CAMDEBUG
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This option compiles in all the
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.Nm
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debugging printf code.
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This will not actually
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cause any debugging information to be printed out when included by itself.
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See below for details.
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.It Dv "CAM_MAX_HIGHPOWER=4"
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This sets the maximum allowable number of concurrent "high power" commands.
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A "high power" command is a command that takes more electrical power than
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most to complete.
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An example of this is the
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.Tn SCSI
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START UNIT command.
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Starting a disk often takes significantly more electrical power than normal
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operation.
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This option allows the
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user to specify how many concurrent high power commands may be outstanding
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without overloading the power supply on his computer.
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.It Dv SCSI_NO_SENSE_STRINGS
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This eliminates text descriptions of each
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.Tn SCSI
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Additional Sense Code and Additional Sense Code Qualifier pair.
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Since this
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is a fairly large text database, eliminating it reduces the size of the
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kernel somewhat.
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This is primarily necessary for boot floppies and other
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low disk space or low memory space environments.
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In most cases, though,
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this should be enabled, since it speeds the interpretation of
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.Tn SCSI
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error messages.
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Do not let the "kernel bloat" zealots get to you -- leave
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the sense descriptions in your kernel!
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.It Dv SCSI_NO_OP_STRINGS
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This disables text descriptions of each
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.Tn SCSI
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opcode.
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This option, like the sense string option above, is primarily
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useful for environments like a boot floppy where kernel size is critical.
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Enabling this option for normal use is not recommended, since it slows
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debugging of
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.Tn SCSI
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problems.
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.It Dv SCSI_DELAY=8000
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This is the
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.Tn SCSI
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"bus settle delay."
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In
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.Nm ,
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it is specified in
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.Em milliseconds ,
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not seconds like the old
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.Tn SCSI
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layer used to do.
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When the kernel boots, it sends a bus reset to each
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.Tn SCSI
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bus to tell each device to reset itself to a default set of transfer
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negotiations and other settings.
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Most
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.Tn SCSI
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devices need some amount of time to recover from a bus reset.
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Newer disks
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may need as little as 100ms, while old, slow devices may need much longer.
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If the
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.Dv SCSI_DELAY
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is not specified, it defaults to 2 seconds.
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The minimum allowable value for
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.Dv SCSI_DELAY
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is "100", or 100ms.
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One special case is that if the
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.Dv SCSI_DELAY
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is set to 0, that will be taken to mean the "lowest possible value."
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In that case, the
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.Dv SCSI_DELAY
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will be reset to 100ms.
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.El
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.Pp
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All devices and buses support dynamic allocation so that
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an upper number of devices and controllers does not need to be configured;
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.Cd "device da"
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will suffice for any number of disk drivers.
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.Pp
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The devices are either
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.Em wired
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so they appear as a particular device unit or
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.Em counted
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so that they appear as the next available unused unit.
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.Pp
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Units are wired down by setting kernel environment hints.
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This is usually done either interactively from the
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.Xr loader 8 ,
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or automatically via the
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.Pa /boot/device.hints
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file.
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The basic syntax is:
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.Bd -literal -offset indent
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hint.device.unit.property="value"
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.Ed
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.Pp
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Individual
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.Nm
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bus numbers can be wired down to specific controllers with
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a config line similar to the following:
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.Bd -literal -offset indent
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hint.scbus.0.at="ahd1"
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.Ed
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.Pp
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This assigns
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.Nm
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bus number 0 to the
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.Em ahd1
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driver instance.
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For controllers supporting more than one bus, a particular bus can be assigned
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as follows:
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.Bd -literal -offset indent
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hint.scbus.0.at="ahc1"
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hint.scbus.0.bus="1"
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.Ed
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.Pp
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This assigns
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.Nm
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bus 0 to the bus 1 instance on
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.Em ahc1 .
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Peripheral drivers can be wired to a specific bus, target, and lun as so:
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.Bd -literal -offset indent
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hint.da.0.at="scbus0"
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hint.da.0.target="0"
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hint.da.0.unit="0"
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.Ed
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.Pp
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This assigns
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.Em da0
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to target 0, unit (lun) 0 of scbus 0.
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Omitting the target or unit hints will instruct
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.Nm
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to treat them as wildcards
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and use the first respective counted instances.
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These examples can be combined together to allow a peripheral device to be
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wired to any particular controller, bus, target, and/or unit instance.
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.Pp
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This also works with
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.Xr nvme 4
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drives as well.
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.Bd -literal -offset indent
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hint.nvme.4.at="pci7:0:0"
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hint.scbus.10.at="nvme4"
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hint.nda.10.at="scbus10"
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hint.nda.10.target="1"
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hint.nda.10.unit="12"
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hint.nda.11.at="scbus10"
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hint.nda.11.target="1"
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hint.nda.11.unit="2"
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.Ed
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.Pp
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This assigns the NVMe card living at PCI bus 7 slot 0 function 1 to scbus 10.
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The target for
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.Xr nda 4
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devices is always 1.
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The unit is the namespace identifier from the drive.
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The namespace id 1 is exported as
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.Em nda10
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and namespace id 2 is exported as
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.Em nda11 .
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.Pp
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For devices that provide a serial number, units may be wired to that serial
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number without regard where the drive is attached:
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.Bd -literal -offset indent
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hint.nda.3.sn="CY0AN07101120B12P"
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hint.da.44.sn="143282400011"
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hint.ada.2.sn="A065D591"
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.Ed
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wires
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.Em nda3 ,
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.Em da44 ,
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and
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.Em ada2
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to drives with the specified serial numbers.
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One need not specify an
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.Em at
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line when serial numbers are used.
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.Sh ADAPTERS
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The system allows common device drivers to work through many different
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types of adapters.
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The adapters take requests from the upper layers and do
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all IO between the
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.Tn SCSI ,
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.Tn ATA ,
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.Tn NVMe ,
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or
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.Tn MMC / SD
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bus and the system.
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The maximum size of a transfer is governed by the
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adapter.
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Most adapters can transfer 64KB in a single operation, however
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many can transfer larger amounts.
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.Sh TARGET MODE
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Some adapters support
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.Em target mode
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in which the system is capable of operating as a device, responding to
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operations initiated by another system.
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Target mode is supported for
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some adapters, but is not yet complete for this version of the
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.Nm
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.Tn SCSI
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subsystem.
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.Sh ARCHITECTURE
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The
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.Nm
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subsystem glues together the upper layers of the system to the storage devices.
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PERIPH devices accept storage requests from GEOM and other upper layers of the
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system and translates them into protocol requests.
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XPT (transport) dispatches these protocol requests to a SIM driver.
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A SIM driver takes protocol requests and translates them into hardware commands
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the host adapter understands to transfer the protocol requests, and data (if
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any) to the storage device.
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The CCB transports these requests around as messages.
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.Ss CAM
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The Common Access Method was a standard defined in the 1990s to talk to disk
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drives.
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.Fx
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is one of the few operating systems to fully implement this model.
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The interface between different parts of CAM is the CCB (or CAM Control Block).
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Each CCB has a standard header, which contains the type of request and dispatch
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information, and a command specific portion.
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A CAM Periph generates requests.
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The XPT layer dispatches these requests to the appropriate SIM.
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Some CCBs are sent directly to the SIM for immediate processing, while others
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are queued and complete when the I/O has finished.
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A SIM takes CCBs and translates them into hardware specific commands to push the
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SCSI CDB or other protocol control block to the peripheral, along with setting
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up the DMA for the associated data.
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.Ss Periph Devices
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A periph driver knows how to translate standard requests into protocol messages
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that a SIM can deliver to hardware.
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These requests can come from any upper layer source, but primarily come in via
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GEOM as a bio request.
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They can also come in directly from character device requests for tapes and pass
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through commands.
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.Pp
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Disk devices, or direct access (da) in CAM, are one type of peripheral.
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These devices present themselves to the kernel a device ending in
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.Dq da .
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Each protocol has a unique device name:
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.Bl -tag -width 4
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.It Xr da 4
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SCSI or SAS device, or devices that accept SCSI CDBs for I/O.
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.It Xr ada 4
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ATA or SATA device
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.It Xr nda 4
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NVME device
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.It Xr sdda 4
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An SD or MMC block storage device.
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.El
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.Pp
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Tape devices are called serial access
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.Po
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.Xr sa 4
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.Pc
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in CAM.
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They interface to the system via a character device and provide
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.Xr ioctl 2
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control for tape drives.
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.Pp
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The
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.Xr pass 4
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device will pass through CCB requests from userland to the SIM directly.
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The device is used to send commands other than read, write, trim or flush to a
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device.
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The
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.Xr camcontrol 8
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command uses this device.
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.Ss XPT drivers
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The transport driver connects the periph to the SIM.
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It is not configured separately.
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It is also responsible for device discovery for those SIM drivers that do not
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enumerate themselves.
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.Ss SIM driver
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SIM used to stand for SCSI Interface Module.
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Now it is just SIM because it understands protocols other than SCSI.
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There are two types of SIM drivers: virtual and physical.
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Physical SIMs are typically called host bus adapters (HBA), but not universally.
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Virtual SIM drivers are for communicating with virtual machine hosts.
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.Sh FILES
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see other
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.Nm
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device entries.
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.Sh DIAGNOSTICS
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An XPT_DEBUG CCB can be used to enable various amounts of tracing information
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on any specific bus/device from the list of options compiled into the kernel.
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There are currently seven debugging flags that may be compiled in and used:
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.Bl -tag -width CAM_DEBUG_SUBTRACE
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.It Dv CAM_DEBUG_INFO
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This flag enables general informational printfs for the device
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or devices in question.
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.It Dv CAM_DEBUG_TRACE
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This flag enables function-level command flow tracing i.e.,
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kernel printfs will happen at the entrance and exit of various functions.
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.It Dv CAM_DEBUG_SUBTRACE
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This flag enables debugging output internal to various functions.
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.It Dv CAM_DEBUG_CDB
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This flag will cause the kernel to print out all
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.Tn ATA
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and
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.Tn SCSI
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commands sent to a particular device or devices.
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.It Dv CAM_DEBUG_XPT
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This flag will enable command scheduler tracing.
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.It Dv CAM_DEBUG_PERIPH
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This flag will enable peripheral drivers messages.
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.It Dv CAM_DEBUG_PROBE
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This flag will enable devices probe process tracing.
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.El
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.Pp
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Some of these flags, most notably
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.Dv CAM_DEBUG_TRACE
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and
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.Dv CAM_DEBUG_SUBTRACE ,
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will produce kernel printfs in EXTREME numbers.
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.Pp
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Users can enable debugging from their kernel config file, by using
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the following kernel config options:
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.Bl -tag -width CAM_DEBUG_COMPILE
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.It Dv CAMDEBUG
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This builds into the kernel all possible
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.Nm
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debugging.
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.It Dv CAM_DEBUG_COMPILE
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This specifies support for which debugging flags described above
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should be built into the kernel.
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Flags may be ORed together if the user wishes to
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see printfs for multiple debugging levels.
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.It Dv CAM_DEBUG_FLAGS
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This sets the various debugging flags from a kernel config file.
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.It Dv CAM_DEBUG_BUS
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Specify a bus to debug.
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To debug all buses, set this to -1.
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.It Dv CAM_DEBUG_TARGET
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Specify a target to debug.
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To debug all targets, set this to -1.
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.It Dv CAM_DEBUG_LUN
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Specify a lun to debug.
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To debug all luns, set this to -1.
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.El
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.Pp
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Users may also enable debugging on the fly by using the
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.Xr camcontrol 8
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utility, if wanted options built into the kernel.
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See
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.Xr camcontrol 8
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for details.
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.Sh SEE ALSO
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.Bl -tag -width 20
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.It Sy Commands:
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.Xr camcontrol 8 ,
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.Xr camdd 8
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.It Sy Libraries:
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.Xr cam 3
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.It Sy Periph Drivers:
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.Xr ada 4 ,
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.Xr da 4 ,
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.Xr nda 4 ,
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.\" .Xr sdda 4 ,
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.Xr pass 4 ,
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.Xr sa 4
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.It Sy SIM Devices:
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.Xr aac 4 ,
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.Xr aacraid 4 ,
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.Xr ahc 4 ,
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.Xr ahci 4 ,
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.Xr ata 4 ,
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.Xr aw_mmc 4 ,
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.Xr ciss 4 ,
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.Xr hv_storvsc 4 ,
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.Xr isci 4 ,
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.Xr iscsi 4 ,
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.Xr isp 4 ,
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.\" .Xr mmcnull 4 ,
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.Xr mpr 4 ,
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.Xr mps 4 ,
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.Xr mpt 4 ,
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.Xr mrsas 4 ,
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.Xr mvs 4 ,
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.Xr nvme 4 ,
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.Xr pms 4 ,
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.Xr pvscsi 4 ,
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.Xr sdhci 4 ,
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.Xr smartpqi 4 ,
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.Xr sym 4 ,
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.Xr tws 4 ,
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.Xr umass 4 ,
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.Xr virtio_scsi 4
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.It Sy Deprecated or Poorly Supported SIM Devices:
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.Xr ahd 4 ,
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.Xr amr 4 ,
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.Xr arcmsr 4 ,
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.Xr esp 4 ,
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.\" .Xr fslsata 4 ,
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.Xr hpt27xx 4 ,
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.Xr hptiop 4 ,
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.Xr hptmv 4 ,
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.Xr hptnr 4 ,
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.\" .Xr htprr 4 ,
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.Xr iir 4
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.Xr mfi 4 ,
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.\" .Xr osc 4 ,
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.\" .Xr ps3cdrom 4 ,
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.Xr sbp 4 ,
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.Xr twa 4
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.El
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.Sh HISTORY
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The
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.Nm
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.Tn SCSI
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subsystem first appeared in
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.Fx 3.0 .
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The
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.Nm
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ATA support was added in
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.Fx 8.0 .
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.Sh AUTHORS
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.An -nosplit
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The
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.Nm
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.Tn SCSI
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subsystem was written by
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.An Justin Gibbs
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and
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.An Kenneth Merry .
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The
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.Nm
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.Tn ATA
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support was added by
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.An Alexander Motin Aq Mt mav@FreeBSD.org .
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The
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.Nm
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.Tn NVMe
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support was added by
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.An Warner Losh Aq Mt imp@FreeBSD.org .
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